Budget tightness not to affect tenure decisionsCentrex at a glanceBEFORE AFTER reappointment to another three year term.After this year term, he is considered fortenure.Provost John Wilson said Thursday thatthe size of the faculty has increased at anaverage rate of 4.4 percent from 1965 to1970.In the current year, the faculty size re¬mained constant, following a recommenda¬tion from the deans’ budget committee thatthe size not increase.Wilson said that “we are still discussing”the size of the faculty for 1971-2, and that“the committee contained no recommenda¬tion about faculty size this year.” The fac¬ulty is currently 1108.Deans have only received preliminarybudgets to date, so it is hard to determinehow large the faculty will be, one ex¬plained.The squeeze is particularly bad in theCollege where Dean Roger Hildebrandsaid that “approximately no one” will re¬ceive tenure in the College this year. Aboutsix did last year.Hildebrand said that between two andthree dozen people are up for tenure andreappointment this December 15. Tenuremust be decided for slightly less than halfof these.Hildebrand added that between one andtwo dozen were likely to receive reappoint¬ment. There are about 300 people who arebeing paid by the College, and approxi¬mately another 200 who teach in but are notpaid by the College.“It’s bad,” Hildebrand winced. “We’vebeen forced to terminate people who arevery good, and it’s a great loss to the Col¬lege and to the divisions that some of thesepeople have to be terminated. The qualityof the people is so good it’s painful.”“There will be a fair number of termina¬tions,” he added, “too many.”Humanities Dean Robert Streeter esti¬mated that the faculty size of 132 will de¬crease to 115 to 120 next year, and 10 peoplewill be considered for tenure or re-appoint¬ment this year.Streeter said that he could not tell nowwhether the faculty cut would come fromdenying re-appointment and tenure, hiringfewer new faculty, or not replacing facultywho resign or retire.Dr Leon Jacobson, dean of the biologicalsciences division and the Pritzker medical 'school, said that he expects the facultysize, currently 412, “to remain about evennext year.“No one up for tenure or re-appointmentis being looked at from the standpoint ofthe fiscal situation. I have not issued anymandate to the associate deans saying thatthey have to let x number of people go.“If the size of the faculty is to decrease,it will be because someone resigns and heis not replaced. I don’t expect the size ofthe faculty to be reduced.”Dr Jacobson said that 53 instructors andContinued on page 9Main number — Ml 3-0800Hospitals — 684-61100FROM OUTSIDE LINEMI 3-0800, ask for specific extension684-6100, ask for specific extensionON CAMPUSDial specific four-digit extensionDial four-digit hospital extensionDORMITORIESBroadview FA 4-8828Burton-Judson MI 3-60001-House FA 4-8200Pierce Tower FA 4-9500Hitchcock-WU xPfifiWoodward BU 8-6610 ‘753-12349474000753-then dial specific extension947-then dial specific extensionFor 753 numbers, dial 3 and old extentionFor 947 numbers, dfel 7 and old extension753-2220753-2261753-2270753-2240753-2233753-2249 Steve AokiCENTREX DEMONSTRATION: New direct dialing system Mill go Sate effect Saturday,December 19.Dean of students Charles O’Connell iscurrently seeking nominations of studentsto serve on the newly-created committee onUniversity women, in response to a requestfrom faculty members of the committeeand the committee of the council of theUniversity senate.O’Connell has asked Student Government(SG), the student councils, the faculty-stu¬dent advisory committee on campus stu¬dent life (FSACCSL), and deans of studentsin all academic areas to submit nomi¬nations by January 8, 1971.All groups or individuals have been askedto nominate only one student each, with theexception of SG which may nominate sev¬eral. Nominations will then be reviewed by thecommittee on University women, whichwill submit a panel of names to PresidentEdward Levi. Levi will appoint three stu¬dents.The six faculty members of the new com¬mittee were nominated by Levi and ap¬proved by the committee of the council lastweek. The committee’s chairman is EricaReiner, professor in the department ofNear Eastern languages and civilizations.O’Connell said that student nominationsare not limited to women. He added that inaddition to willingness to serve, studentsnominated should have a superior academ¬ic record.According to Miss Reiner, all committee members are appointed to two-year terms.She said, however, that this would not hurtthe chances of a candidate graduating thisyear or next year.Nominations should be accompanied by ashort paragraph describing the candidate’squalifications. It should also be made clearwhether or not the individual named hasbeen consulted and has indicated a willing¬ness to serve if appointed.The institution of a standing committeeon University women was one of the majorrecommendations of the Neugarten reporton University women, which was approvedby the council of the University senate No¬vember 16,1970.Centrex to revise campus phone system• breve aokiJOHN WILSON: The provost Says the size of the faculty for 1971-2 5s stBl “bringdiscussed.” Until this year the faculty had grown at an average of 4.4 percent annually. By CON HITCHCOCKDespite a committee recommendationthat the University budget be trimmed fivepercent next year, most academic deansindicate that they will not terminate peopleup for tenure or reappointment on Decem¬ber 15 in order to stay within their budget.Many estimate that the size of the facultywill be substantially the same as this year,although an overall decrease seems likely.One exception is the College where DeanRoger Hildebrand expects “approximatelyno one” will receive tenure this year.Most deans indicated that they wouldlook upon the December 15 tenure andreappointment decisions with more scrut¬iny than usual, though.December 15 is the deadline for tenureand reappointment decisions. Usually, aperson serves a three year term as assis¬tant professor and is then considered forOn Saturday, December 19, the Univer¬sity, including the quadrangles, hospitalsand clinics, will put its new Centrex tele¬phone system into operation.Under the Centrex system, each phonewill have its own direct line into and out ofthe University.Persons calling from outside the Univer¬sity will not have to go through the mainswitchboard.Initially, University operators will inter¬cept all calls to the old Midway 3, PLaza 2,NOrmal 7, FAirfax 4 and MUseum 4switchboards, inform callers of the new di¬rect number, advise them to redial with nocharge for the first call.Here is how Centrex works: your presentextension will become the last four digits ofyour new direct line. The new prefix for theUniversity will be “753.” The hospitals andclinics’ new prefix will be “947.”Consequently, if your present extensionnumber at the University is 4509, for ex¬ample, your new Centrex number will be753-4509.If your hospitals and clinics extension isnow 6678, your Centrex number will be 947- 6778.Callers who want general information, orare not sure with whom they want to speak,can call the university’s new switchboardnumber: 753-1234.For the hospitals and clinics, the newswitchboard number is 947-1000.Both numbers will go in effect on Decem¬ber 19.In many cases, you will be the first con¬tact a caller will have with the University.By answering a call with your name anddepartment the caller will know if he hasreached his intended number or party.In the event you have to switch a call,transferring will remain basically thesame: press the cradle button once andrelease it. By pressing down too long, orpressing the button quickly many times,the call may be disconnected.One firm push is enough to start a ring¬ing sound which indicates the call is on itsway to the operator’s console.When the operator answers, tell her theextension to which the call is to be con¬nected. Your phone will then be free tomake or receive calls. There is something new for calls madewithin the University and the Hospitals.With Centrex, dial five digits, instead of thepresent four. The extra number determineswhether the call will reach a phone in theQuadrangles or in the Hospitals.All Hospital extensions will be precededby a “7” — the last number of the 947 hos¬pital prefix.All other University phones can bereached by dialing “3” — the final digit ofthe University prefix — plus the extensionnumber. If a wrong number is reachedhang up and dial again.To make calls outside the University, dial“9” and the seven digit number. There willbe no second dial tone.The change to Centrex at InternationalHouse will not be effective until Monday,December 21. All other dormitories willhave their numbers radically changed.The Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 24 The University of Chicago Friday, December 11, 1970Nominations to women's unit askedCourse evaluationThe College teaching and course eval¬uation group has asked that studentsundble to receive evaluation questionnairesin class pick them up at Gates-Blake 132jefore the end of examination week. All forms should be returned to Gates-Blake 132 by the end of the quarter, be¬cause processing will begin during interim.The evaluation group hopes to have acomplete evaluation of autumn quartercourses available to students before pre¬registration in the spring. Maroon drive over $500The Maroon’s legendary fundraising-drive-to-pull-us-out-of-the-red has passedthe $500 mark and is now closing in on $600.The drive is an attempt to pay off an olddebt that has prevented the Maroon fromprinting larger issues that could covermore news.Business Manager Don Ratner said, “I’mglad to see that the Maroon has so manyfaithful supporters who are willing to do¬nate money to improve its quality. The to¬tal to date is encouraging, but I wish thatsome more people would give. We’ve got a long way to go, and the more money wereceive, the better we will be able to func¬tion as a community newspaper.”For those unfamiliar with the drive, agift of up to $10 makes the donor a patron,and all giving $10 or more become a ben¬efactor. Gifts are tax-deductible becausethe Maroon is a non-profit organization.Our offices are Ida Noyes 303, 1212 E 59thSt, and we are open daily from 9 am to 5pm.Latest donors are:BENEFACTORS: Joan Glaukerman, Ger¬trude Martin, Miriam Perloff, F MarottSinex.BULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, December 11LECTURE: Enrico Fermi lecture series, Emilio Secure,professor department of physics, University ofCalifornia, Berkeley, on "Highlights in the Develop¬ment of Nuclear Physics," Eckhart 133, 2 pm.LECTURE: A/Wcrobiology club presents Dr SeymourCohen, department of Therapeutic Research, Uni¬versity of Pennsylvania on "Microbial Physiologyand Polyamines," Ricketts 1, 4 pm.SEMINAR: George Veronis, Yale University, on "Useof Hydrographic Data in Oceanography," Hinds 176,3:30 pm.PARTY: Wassail Party; brass choir, lighting theChristmas tree, official UC Santa Claus, readingoriginal poems, caroling, hot wassail and refresh¬ments, free, Ida Noyes, 6:30-9 pm.CONCERT: University Chorus presents "A RenaissanceTravelogue," Joseph Bond Chapel, 8 pm.MESSIAH: Rockefeller Chapel Choir and Chicago Sym¬phony, Rockefeller Chapel, 8 pm. Woodlawn, 6:30 pm.CONCERT: University Chorus, "A Renaissance Travel¬ogue," Joseph Bond Chapel, 8 pm.Monday, December 14LECTURE: South Asia Seminar presents, PrakashTandon on "The new Managerial Class in India,"Foster Hall Lounge, 4:10 pm.FLIC: Free, "Fisitful of Dollars," Cobb, 7 and9:15 pm.DISCUSSION: UC Ba Hai Fellowship, East Lounge,Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.Tuesday, December 15RECITAL: Organ Recital, Edward Mondello, universityorganist, Rockefeller Chapel 12:15 pm.Wednesday, December 16Saturday, December 12FLIC: CEF presents "Alice's Restaurant," Cobb, 7and 9:15 pm.DANCE: Gay Lib dance at the Blue Gargoyle, 9 pm.Sunday, December 13Hyde Park Shopping Center55th & Lake Park Phone 752-8100 vweekdays & Saturdays 9 to 6Thursdays 9 to 9 Fridays 9 to 7 SERVICES: University Religious Service, Rev ESpencer Parsons, dean of chapel, "The Question fromPrison," 11 am.DISCUSSION: Gay Lib consciousness-raising groups,58101 S Harper, 2 pm.MESSIAH: Rockefeller Chapel, 3:30 pm.FLIC: The American Museum of Natural History film,"The Time of Man," Bonboeffer House, 5554 S. RECITAL: carillon recital by Robert Lodine, Uni¬versity oafillonneur. Rockefeller Chapel, 12:15 pm,LECTURE: Microbiology dob presents Dr RomanPakula, department of microbiology University ofToronto, on "Physiological Aspects of DNA MediatedTransformability of Streptococci," Ricketts North1, 4 pm.LECTURE: South Asia Seminar presents Hanna Pa-panek on "Purdah: Separate Worlds or SymbolicShelter," Foster Hatl Lounge, 4:10 pm.Thursday, December 17COLLOQUIUM: Professor Gene Golub, department ofstatistics, Princeton, on "Some Modified EigenvalueProblems," Research Institutes, C >13, 4 pm./The Chicago Maroon/December 11, 1970West ob-gyn clinic object of SHO protestHr * ,f ■ ■ m 1- iattorn*EAST OB-GYN CLINIC: |SHO charges community poor jnot told about this clinicwhich they say provides better service. By NANCY CHISMANUsually filled with patients and now withcontroversy too, the west office of the gyne¬cology-obstetrics clinic lies at the end of amaze of corridors if one starts out fromGyn-Ob East. For the patients served bythe west one, the distance separates differ¬ent worlds. Few patients at either clinicknow about the existence of the other.Early in the morning, when the majorityof obstetric appointments are held, the longbenches and waiting-room decor chairs inwest office are crowded with bored, blank¬faced women and an occasional twitchinghusband.Two or three women sit crumpled in theold chairs as if they already have beenwaiting for hours. A table covered with un¬disturbed piles of Planned Parenthood liter¬ature creates no diversion.Periodically the heavy silence is brokenby a nurse who pokes her head from behindthe examination room door, revealing aflash of its sterile white interior, to chant aname. With the exception of one or two, allthe women in the waiting room are black.At the same time in the morning, thesmall sun-lit waiting room at east office is virtually empty. Two husbands in their fif¬ties wait patiently for invisible wives. Thereceptionist at the desk said, “No, therearen’t special hours when patients are seei— they come when they have an appoint¬ment with their doctor.”Three doctors or residents who must bein their second year are usually present irthe west office. Women coming in for regu *lar pre-natal examinations are supposed tcbe scheduled for the same doctor, but ;few seem to be shuttled to a different doctor each visit.Patients who have heard of east officeand few have, tend to be more critical 01West. A woman pregnant with her seventh4child said, “I would like a private doctoibut I guess they cost about $100 more thaiit costs here, and I don’t have the money.’She admitted skipping several appointments because she could not pay the fee.The initial visit at West costs $18 and subsequent examinations — which becom<more frequent as pregnacy 'advances — i:$15. Total cost at West for care and delivery is $840.50. Most women at West use insurance, GI allocations or welfare to paj*for care.Wilson explains nepotism regulationsProvost John Wilson has sent all Univer¬sity faculty members an explanation of thecurrent status of nepotism rules in facultyappointments, in response to a request bythe council of the University senate.The council recently made the request inrelation to its action on the Neugarten re¬port on University women.Wilson sent to faculty the recommenda¬tions of a faculty committee on nepotismchaired by James Lorie, professor of busi¬ness, which he says reflect “the policy theUniversity has been following since thetime of (their) issuance” December 21,1967.At that time, the committee recom¬mended that• “there should not be a statute dealingwith the problem of nepotism or the ap¬pointment of close Relatives to the facultyThe student, faculty and administration(SFA) court will convene January 6 forthe first time in three years to consider asuit filed by the National Student Associa¬tion (NSA) delegation against the commit¬tee on recognized student organizations(CORSO).The SFA court has not met in three yearsbecause of vacancies of student seats. The“Comrades, my comrades. In a revolu¬tionary struggle as such we have a veryimportant task. It is not so much an Ameri¬can revolution but a world-wide revolu¬tion,” said Bobby Rush, Black Pantherdeputy minister of defense.Rush spoke at the Fred Hampton me¬morial rally at Rockefeller chapel Sundayafternoon, a year and two days after Hamp¬ton and Panther Mark Clark were killedby Chicago police in a pre-dawn raid.Big Man, deputy minister of informationand Masai Hewitt were scheduled to ap¬pear. Rush, filling in for the two said someproblems compelled them to go to Califor¬nia.The revolution is “intercommunal”, Rushsaid. “We are all communities „of oppres¬sion; oppression by American imperialistsand we must vr A\ in that light. In orderto be an effo - world-wide revolution we *must not be . ked at as oppressed nationsbut oppressed communities,” he added.Rush sounded a call for unity among revo¬lutionaries. “We must subvert all smallgroup interests to the whole world becausehistory has given us the task of freeing theworld of imperialism and capitalism, andall its side effects. We must unite in inter-communal solidarity and stop the petty • “the current policy or tradiaion of theUniversity has proved to be generallysatisfactory. The committee hesitates tospecify the policy or tradition in detailfor fear that such specification would beinterpreted rigidly or assume the forceof statute• “in considering the appointment ofclose relatives on the recommendation ofappropriate chairmen and deans, the Pro¬vost may wish to have the advice of anad hoc committee appointed by him• “the problems are likely to be great¬est if one relative directs or evaluatesanother. Problems will be greater if therelatives are in the same department orschool, less if the appointments are in thesame division but in different departments,and least if the appointments are in differ¬ent schools or divisions. The College shouldStudent Government (SG) assembly lastweek elected five students to fill the seats.The NSA suit, filed August 5, 1969 byJohn Moscow ’69, charges that CORSO vio¬lated the SG constitution by not funding thedelegation’s trip to the annual NSA con¬vention at El Paso in 1969.The suit asks the court to compel CORSOto pay $1,689 to NSA for its travelling ex¬bickering inside the community here in Ba¬bylon.”Rush also defined the role and characterof the Black Panther party. “The BlackPanther party is not an urban guerrila or¬ganization. It is an armed propaganda unitwhich goes out and educates people aboutpigs,” he said.Rush feels that the party cannot becomean urban guerrilla unit until they revolu¬tionize the masses so they may “form pro¬tective layers around the guerrilla unit.”The guns of the Panthers “are for defen¬sive purposes,” he said.Referring to the day Fred Hampton andMike Clark were killed, Rush noted, “theoutcome would have been very different ifthere had been nine VC in that apartment.There might have been nine dead VC but900 dead pigs.”Rush now claims that more revolutionarycommitment and supporters were gainedbecause of those killings, and the BlackPanther party is stronger than ever.Rush’s closing remarks to the 150 peoplewere, “The Black Panther party is takingthe position that we lay no claims to nation¬hood,international^ m— inter-communalism is the sole philosophy to de¬stroy America as conceived by the impe-ualists of the world." be considered in this context to consist ofseveral departments or schools.”Speaking of the recommendations, Wilsonsaid “The policy recognizes the possibilityof inherent problems in the appointment ofrelatives to the faculty that are not presentin the appointment of non-relatives . . .“At the same time, the policy does notprescribe the appointment of close rela¬tives to the faculty. Although warning ofthe potential problems inherent in such ap¬pointments to the same academic unit . . .the statement suggests a mechanism toadvise the Provost in the event that recom¬mendations for such appointments aremade to him.”Wilson added that during his service asprovost there have been three cases of ap¬pointments recommended to him which in¬volved the question of nepotism.penses. At the time, CORSO had allocated$50 to NSA from its fund.Moscow maintains that according to theSG constitution, CORSO cannot reduce itsexpenditures to the serious detriment of arecognized student organization. CORSOhad allocated over $1,000 to NSA for everyyear since 1965.New student members of the court areRhea Bensman ’74; Edward “Skip” Kifer,graduate student in education; and Martha•Carpenter ’74, elected to serve two-yearterms; and Ted Nash ’74, and Tim Miller’74, elected for one-year terms. Also on thecourt is Jerry Webman ’71.Lennard Wharton, associate professor ofchemistry, was appointed to a vacant facul¬ty seat on the court by the council of theUniversity senate Tuesday.Other members of SFA court are Marga¬ret Perry, assistant dean of students andassociate director of admissions; and Ed¬mund Kitch, associate professor in the lawschool.Levi to appearPresident Edward Levi will make a raretelevision appearance tonight when heappears on “Chicagoans” on channel 2 at7:30 pm.Lsvi will be interviewed by Miss LeePhillips, a WBBM reporter.The program will last one^half hour onWBBM, the CBS affiliate in Chicago.'It is expected that Levi will discusseducational reform. Earlier this week atthe annual Phi Beta Kappa dinner Levirepeated his suggestion that colleges shouldgrant a bachelor’s degree in general edu¬cation.Taping look place Wednesday. East office charges a total fee of $965 fo]pre-natal examinations and delivery. All Gldependents and welfare recipients are sento the west office.Student Health Organization (SHO), zgroup of radical medical students harcharged that the difference in cost at thetwo clinics has produced not only a raciadivision, but a difference in the quality otreatment.While many women in the west waitingroom were satisfied with their treatment oiexpected nothing better, a few were indignant about the impersonal attitud«shown by West doctors.“When you ask them a question, they jusseem to close up,” said a woman sever ’months pregnant with her first child. Anear-by woman agreed. “I come here witla list of 20 or so questions I want answeredbut the doctor hurries me through them obrushes them off.”A third woman whose small son wa:swooping up and down the aisles betweerbenches said she usually received brusqu<two or three word answers to her questions“I guess I’m old fashioned, but I like do(tors who treat you like human beings,” shsaid. “I tell myself that maybe I shouldn’blame them — maybe they’re short of helpbut I think they could give better care.”Nurses and Planned Parenthood personnel who could answer questions are usuallyin the examination room but one patientexplained, “You know, you really don’‘want to ask anyone but the doctor abousome questions.”The two women sitting together frankl;expressed their irritation at treatment b;examining doctors who, they both saidwere foreign and difficult to understand.“I usually know if I’m getting enoug;rest and not doing anything strenuous,’said one, “but whenever I tell the doctoiabout anything he says, ‘Get more rest.’I have a heart condition that’s been giving me trouble for years. I told him abousome pains I’d been having and he said iwas because I’m pregnant.“I said, ‘Doctor, what about when I wa;a little girl? I wasn’t pregnant then.’ H<just said, ‘Get more rest.’ A person can geContinued on pageon TV tonightPRESIDENT EDWARD LEVIOn TV tonightDecember 11, 1970/The Chicago MaroonSFA court to meet on NSA-CORSORush asks Panther supportersto fight repression, imperialism, V CAFE IENRICO I1411 East 53rd |FIGHT |INFLATION |Student Discount =10% on Food |3 pm to 2 am 5With ID Card |iiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiii4/The Chicago Maroon/December 11, 1970 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 243-2271ABORTION COUNSEL, REFERRAL AND ASSISTANCEPrompt termination of pregnancy by licensedObstertricians and Gynecologists at accre¬dited hospitals. Reasonable fees - Completeprivacy - Advanced professional methods.Write - phone - or visit.ABORTION ADVISORY SERVICE, INC4 East 12th StreetNew York, New York 10003PHONE 212-249-4205 or 212-428-2029* »* * y y i t MALTERNATIVES SPRING TERM 1971EDUCATION JANUARY TO APRILA series of seminars aimed at finding ways to free society from schooling. Thewill be the core of the program. Enrollment is separate for each course of eight course led by Everett Reimersessions.Feb. 1 - Apr. 30 ALTERNATIVES IN EDUCATION EVERETT REIMERFeb. 1 - Apr. 30 FREE SCHOOL MOVEMENTS DENNIS SULLIVANFeb. 1 - Apr. 30 RADICAL EDUCATIONAL LITERATURE: THE SIXTIES JORDAN BISHOPFeb. 1 - Apr. 30 HISTORY OF MEASUREMENTS IVAN ILLICHDec. 28-Jan. 8 WHITEHEAD: "PROCESS AND REALITY" JORGE ENJUTODec. 28- Jan. 15 EDUCATION AND AGRARIAN REFORM LUIS RATINOFFDec. 28-Jan. 28 THE SCHOOL AND PSYCHOLOGY EDUARDO RIVERADec. 28-Jan. 22 HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE ON ALTERNATIVES IN EDUCATION... JOEL SPRINGJan. 4-Jan. 17 EDUCATION IN MEXICO PANDAL, MARQUEZ, MARTINEZJan. 4-Jan. 17 EDUCATION: REFORM IN PERU AUGUSTO SALAZAR BONDYJan. 11 - Jan. 23 RURAL EDUCATION FOR FREEDOM PAULO FREIRE jJan. 11 - Jan. 22 ALTERNATIVE GOVERNANCE OF EDUCATION.. DAVID L. KIRPJan. 11 - Jan. 23 CUBA AND FIDEL A DOZEN YEARS LATER LEE LOCKWOODJan.11-Jan.23 EDUCATION & THE FILM EDGAR MORINJan. 18-Feb. 12 EUROPE AND ALTERNATIVE TO SCHOOLING... MARCKRAVETZFeb. Mar. Apr. SCHOOLING AND NATION BUILDING KISH SAINTFeb. 1-Feb.13 SUMMERHIIL AND BEYOND JOHN HOLTFeb. 11-Feb. 26 EDUCATION IN AN ANARCHIST TRADITION... H. A. STEGERFeb. 11 - Feb. 26 U.S. EDUCATION CLARENCE FAUSTFeb. 15-Feb. 27 THE DISAPPEARANCE OF MUNICIPAL LIBERTY. MILTON KOTLERFeb. 22-Mar. 6 YOUTH AS A SOCIAL CATEGORY EDGAR FRIEDENBERGFeb. 22-Mar. 6 DE-SCHOOLING: DUROPE HARTMUT V. HENTIGFeb. 22-Mar. 26 SIMPLIFICATION PAUL GOODMANMar. 1 - Mar. 13 THE EDUCATIONAL ENTITLEMENT PLAN CHRIST. JENCKS & D. COHENMar. 5-Mar. 16 PARENTAL CONTROL OVER EDUCATION JONATHAN KOZOLMar. 15-Mar. 27 THE POLITICS OF EDUCATION GEORGE BROWNMar. 29-Apr. 10 LAW, ACCULTURATION AND PLURALISM LAURA NADERMar. 29-Apr. 16 DECOLONIZING EDUCATION IN AFRICA DIDIER PlVETEAUApr. 5-Apr. 17 SCIENTIFIC THEORY AND THE GROWTH OF SCHOOLING NORETA KOERTGE. Apr. 19-Apr. 30 WHAT IS TEACHABLE? CARL BEREITERApr. 19-Apr. 30 ORGANIC VS. ARBITRARY ORDER GEROGE DENNISON«There will be a $30 tuition charge for each seminar, in addition to the $25 yearly registration fee requiredof all CIDOC participants.While at CIDOC, students can also take INTENSIVE INSTRUCTION IN SPOKEN SPANISH ($135 per month) as wellas courses on contemporary Latin America ($30 per course). El Ciclo, a series of daily lectures on a widevariety of topics ($30 per month) serves as a permanent forum for all CIDOC participants.j To enroll in any of these WRITE TO:I programs or to obtainI further information, CIDOC -SPRING 19711lllllllllllllllllllllllll APD0.479, CUERNAVACA, MEXICO PRE-ENGAGEMENT DIAMOND RING14kt WHITE OR YELLOW GOLD$24.95SJEWELERS • SINCE IBS'SKVKRGREEN PLAZA YORKTOWNshedideverything...andvice' versa!DIRECT FROM COPENHAGEN . .DANISH BLUEALSO PLAYING . . .“THE MILLION DOLLAR PICK-UPft\anqri-LaTHEATRE222 No. STATE at Wacker Drivr Plenty of PARKING at DoorMALE 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 DAILYWORK DURING SEMESTER BREAKSAND HOLIDAYSDRIVE A YELLOWAPPLY NOW - START WORK WHEN THEHOLIDAY BEGINS OR START IMMEDIATELYDAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.What are you doingNEW YEAR’S EVE?Celebrate |with SONNY & CHER! jOnly $35 per person |includes EVERYTHING. . . even champagne!call Fred, RA 6-7500EMPIRE ROOM*Palmer House/Chicago LREGENSTEIN: Traffic problems have arisen with the opening of llegenstein. Anestimated 2400 people cross 57th St in midblock daily.NPAC plans spring antiThe National Peace Action Coalition,(NPAC), an umbrella coalition of anti-wargroups, is planning a massive spring offen¬sive in April 1971.NPAC, which met in a national con¬vention last weekend at the Packinghouselabor hall, 4859 Wabash, approved a pro¬posal of the NPAC steering committee call¬ing for the spring demonstrations.The proposal calls for a week of anti-wardemonstrations beginning April 18 and cul¬minating in massive marches in Washing¬ton DC and San Francisco on April 24.The convention, attended by some 1300students and pepce movement supporters,also reaffirmed the single issue position ofNPAC calling for immediate withdrawal ofall US troops from Vietnam.In order to build support for the demon¬strations, NPAC will hold regional confer¬ences and local organizational meetingsacross the country.. Members of SDS and Progressive Labor(PL) proposed that NPAC support labordemands in order to build support for theanti-war movement. The proposal wasvoted down in the second plenary session ofthe convention Sunday afternoon.“We see the best way to involve orga¬ nized labor is to draw them into the ranksof the anti-war movement through legaldemonstrations centering around the NPACposition”, said Fred Loregren, a spokes¬man for the student mobilization com¬mittee, one of the member groups ofNPAC.The delegates also voted down a proposalpresented by Sidney Lens, a coordinator ofthe national mobilization committee to endthe war. Lens’ proposal called for:• NPAC support of negotiations betweenthe National Student Association and “com¬parable elements” in Saigon and Hanoi fora peace treaty. The negotiations are al¬ready under way.• Endorsement of the treaty when it isfinished.• A major action April 3 and 4 com-menorating the death of Rev Martin LutherKing.• An international action in conjunctionwith the Stockholm conference on May l or8.The proposal for the King demonstrationwas retained, while the rest of Lens’ pro¬posal was voted down.Many of the 1300 delegates to the con¬vention were housed in Hyde Park. Work-'Nuclear technology to remain'“Neither nuclear technology nor nuclearinsecurity is going to disappear,” saidLeonard Beaton, international affairs ex¬pert, in a speech delivered Tuesday at theUniversity.Beaton, visiting professor of internationalaffairs from Carleton University, Ottawa,Ontario, Canada, gave the inaugural lec¬ture of the three-year arms control semi¬nar, sponsored by the University’s centerfor policy study.The seminar, made possible by a $264,000grant from the Ford Foundation, is aimedat increasing international understandingof the complexities of arms control.In his lecture, entitled “The Effect ofSecondary and ‘Almost-Nuclear’ Powers onStrategic Arms Limitation,” Beaton saidstrategic arms are not and will not be aSoviet-American monopoly.Because nuclear technology is growingdaily through world-wide research, it can¬not be contained, he said. Likewise, nuclearinsecurity is also international in scope,and omnipresent.Although France and Great Britain areinterested in what comes out of the Strate¬gic Arms Limitation Talks jSALT), theyhave largely ignored them* Historically,they know that “no alignments have everproved immutable,” Beaton said, and inthe past “they could be forgiven for con¬cluding that inferior nuclear forces werenot entirely irrelevant.”“Clearly,” he said, “nuclear weapons will continue to be important and will comeslowly within the technical and financial re¬sources of an increasing number of coun¬tries.”The flirtations of Japan, Israel, India andAustralia with nuclear weapons are al¬ready obvious, Beaton said. For other coun¬tries, such as the Federal Republic of Ger¬many, Sweden, Switzerland, and South Af¬rica, changing circumstances will bewatched and debates once settled may wellbe revived.If the two lesser western powers, GreatBritain and France, have an interest in get¬ting into the SALT negotiations at somestage, the question is likely to be a diffi¬cult one for the Soviet Union.“One of the attractions of SALTto the Russians is that it proclaimsSoviet-American parity and allows them topersuade themselves that they are half ofsame kind of world condominium,” Beatonsaid.“The probability is that the Rus¬sians will be prepared to do withoutUnited States,” Beaton pointed out. In thepresent phase, most of the important agree¬ments can probably be made without GreatBritain or France, he added.Beaton said one of the subtle implicationsof SALT is that it could greatly increase theidentification of nuclear weapons with polit¬ical status.pB99EK<*vv.- **«*■*■♦ . *M *r\T+** *'# Traffic problem seen atRegenstein, Hull gatesPedestrian safety and traffic organiz-tion on 57th St and at Hull gate have be¬come serious issues since the opening ofRegenstein library.Naphtali Knox, director of physical plan¬ning and construction, said that congestionproblems have developed at the midblockpedestrian crossing outside the library on57th St and at Hull gate.A recent survey showed that 2400 peopleper day cross 57th St between Ellis andUniversity, according to Calvert Audrain,University planner in physical planningand construction. Traffic, which does nothave to stop between Ellis and Woodlawn,has created a potentially dangerous situ¬ation.Knox suggested closing 57th betweenEllis and University to normal vehicle traf¬fic, opening it only to emergency vehiclesand pedestrians. He cited the closure ofGreenwood between 60th and 61st Sts forthe law school and the closure of Kenwoodbetween 58th and 59th Sts as precedents.However, the cost of closing 57th St makesthis idea temporarily unfeasible, Knoxsaid.A stop sign and a midblock crosswalkwar protestshops on various aspects of the anti-warmovement including the labor movement,women, black people, and students wereheld Saturday night in the Lutheran Theo¬logical Seminary and Chicago Theologicalseminary on campus.The three day convention opened Fridaynight with a rally. Speakers inqluded DickGregory, labor leaders Patrick Gormanand Harold Gibbons, Alderman AA “Sam¬my” Raynor, and Carol Lipman, westcoast co-ordinator for the student mobiliza¬tion committee. will be proposed to increase pedestriansafety, the director said. The city has pre¬viously denied step signs in this area be¬cause of a lack of sufficient cross vehiculartraffic to warrant the sign.According to Knox, the city does not con¬sider pedestrian traffic in determining thevalue of a proposed stop sign. Crosswalksare generally disliked by the city, he said,because they allegedly give pedestrians afalse sense of security while crossing mid¬block. ,Hull gate is congested because 4400 pe¬destrians and 470 cars use the narrow en¬trance per day. In addition to danger topedestrians, vehicles exiting from* Hullgate have a dangerous turn onto 57th St.Knox has proposed closing the gate to ve¬hicle traffic. Most' private cars comingthrough the gate go to the south end of;campus and could use the 58th St entrancejust as easily, he noted.The service vehicles which use the gateto reach the science buildings would haveto go around to 58th St, because largertrucks already go that way because theyare too big for the gate. Knox felt this in¬convenience would not be significant.Cutting off Hull gate would not sig¬nificantly increase traffic on University,the director continued. Whatever vehiclesuse the quadrangle presently could use thesurrounding streets without severe con¬sequences to traffic patterns.The inconvenience to drivers now usingHull gate and the fear of delaying emergen¬cy vehicles are objections raised againstthe idea. Also, some people involved in thescience labs who use the gate for deliveriesobject to its being closed.The front doors to Regenstein libraryhave remained closed due to the fact thatthe threshold was improperly constructedand would have caused the doors to warpover a period of time.UC psych professor sues forjob at Mental Health CenterDr Sheldon K Schiff, associate professorof psychiatry, has filed a suit against theChicago board of health for the return ofhis job at the Woodlawn Mental HealthCenter, an institution which he foundedand coordinated for the past seven years.He was dismissed last June.Dr Schiff developed an experimental pro¬gram of treating children and their parentsin attempting to prevent mental illness. Ac¬cording to the suit, pressure from certainblack individuals and some members of theWoodlawn Organization (TWO) led to hisdismissal from the board of health. Thesuit cites TWO members accusing him ofdisrepsect to black persons.Results of a survey taken by Dr Schiff’sstaff of parents participating in the projectshowed 98 percent favoring the program.Dr Schiff feels it might have been some ofthe other two percent which led to the TWOstatements which, in turn, possibly led tohis firing. He does not feel that the issuewas in anyway related to race.The stated reasons for the firing were hisalleged difficult relationships with otherstaff of the mental health division. DrSchiff said in response, “I don’t know whatthat means.”Schiff’s suit claims that his rights wereabridged when he was refused a hearing toanswer charges. Whether a public employ¬ee is entitled to a hearing before being fired is, as of yet, legally undetermined. DrSchiff feels it is a simple case of the rightto procedural safeguards.According to Dr Schiff, during the periodbetween the first criticisms of his work andhis firing, he never spoke to the board ofhealth commissioner responsible for firinghim.At no time was he asked to respond toany charges nor was he ever informed thatthere were charges against him, he claims.For this reason, he says he does not knowprecisely why he was fired. Dr. Sciiiff’s po¬sition with the University will be termi¬nated this June. He is presently appealingthis decision with the University.He does not feel that the two dismissalsare necessarily related, and he said hehopes for better treatment from the Uni¬versity than he received from the Board ofHealth.The project thait he started in Woodlawnis no longer being operated there. However,the program is currently being tried in twoschool districts in Iowa and Philadelphiaand others may Start in another twothroughout the country.Dr Schiff said his biggest dis¬appointment in this controversy is the factthat the children of the Woodlawn area donot have a chance to participate in his proj¬ect.Levi turns down invitationPresident Edward Levi declined to ac¬cept an invitation to appear before the Il¬linois Joint Senate-House Committee onCampus Unrest during that commission’shearings in Chicago earlier this week.The committee, headed by Senator G Wil¬liam Horsley, (R, Springfield), has been in¬vestigating student unrest stemming fromlast May’s Cambodian invasion. Among the reasons for Levi’s decision,according to administrative sources, were;that the University is a private institution;;,that the University has never had any*trouble with the National Guard* around?which the investigation is supposedly cen¬tered; and that the University had de¬clined to participate in the investigationsof similar committees. |jitDecember 11, 1970/Tbe Chicago Maroon/5The Chicago Maroon SH0 charges Lying-in HospitalSTEVE COOK DON RATNER with twin standard of practiceEditor Business Manager ■CON HITCHCOCK, Managing EditorPAUL BERNSTEIN, News EditorSUE LOTH, Executive EditorSTEVE AOKI, Photography EditorJUDY ALSOFROM, NANCY CHISMAN, GORDONAssociate Editors KATZ, AUDREY SHALINSKYRICK BALSAMO, SARA BEEBE, USA CAPELL, JOE FREEDMAN, ALLEN FRJJEDAAAN, JIM HAiEFEMeYER,ELSA HERSH, MITCH KAHN, BARRY KELLMAN, LESLIE LINTON, ALBERTO LOPEZ, BILL MARGRAVE,KEITH PYLE, JOE SARTORELLI, FRED WINSTON.StaffCARL STOVALL CAROLINE HECK. DIANA LEIFERContributing Editor 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. 60537. 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.Quarter's endThis is the last Maroon of the quarter, and the Maroon staff, likeeveryone else, is calling it quits and hitting the books.The most controversial news story of the quarter was the cancella¬tion of the social sciences dinner. We never did get a chance to printthe flood of letters we received on the issue, but tried to present allviewpoints we heard.The acceptance of the Neugarten report on University women, thesituation of special students, and the national elections were all impor¬tant stories, but the financial situation of the University is> in our esti¬mation, the quarter’s most important development.A combination of factors, including an unanticipated drop in thenumber of returning graduate students, have made the situation worsethan anticipated when the budget for the University was approvedlast summer.The full effects of the tight budget haven’t been felt yet, but itis a good guess that the size of the faculty will be smaller next year.Next year’s budget will be between five and 10 percent less thanthis year’s, which means that present departmental budgts are goingto get cut across the board.We are awaiting the President’s state of the University addressnext quarter for a fuller indication of the financial crisis.Ob-gyn clinicsIt is time that the University hospitals end the double standardwhich exists in the obstetrics and gynecology clinics of Billings.We urge that plans for amalgamating the two clinics be givenutmost priority.Radicals on this campus have for some time been complainingabout the de facto segregation of the clinics into two wings, one forthe wealthy and the other for the poor. They hold that the doublestandard is but a manifestation of general racist policies.We don’t agree, but the reasoning continuing the two clinic set-upescapes us. It is a fact that patients in the west clinic, which is less ex¬pensive that the east clinic, often have to wait for hours while the eastclinic is empty. By JIM SCHWANKE and JIM WRIGHTAs you may be aware, the Student HealthOrganization, other interested students,. and community people have been seekingchange in the Lying-in-Hospital out-patientclinics. These efforts, while productive ofinformation about undesirable conditions inthe clinics, have met with considerable re¬sistance from the University and the de¬partment of gynecology.After a three week period of refusing todiscuss the issue, ie not sending any repre¬sentative to a public meeting on November12, refusing comment to the Maroon andSHO on several occasions, and being gener¬ally slow to arrange a meeting time, DeansJacobson, Ceithaml, Ferguson, Vermeulen,and Dr Zuspan finally met Thursday, De¬cember 3 with representatives of our groupincluding observers from The WoodlawnOrganization.At this meeting they expressed no signifi¬cant disagreement with our goal of merg¬ing the two separate clinics and our otherdemands for improvement. They did, how¬ever, state that none of these changes couldbe made because of lack of funds. The levelof priority given change seems adequatelysummed up by Dr Zuspan’s statement, “Ifthey don’t like their care, they can gosomeplace else — it’s a free country.” Un¬fortunately our medical school does notconsider dignified patient care, particularlyof community women, to be a priority.Even the simple expedience of randomiz¬ing the patients and staff between the twoclinics was rejected as too costly. All shortrange changes were rejected in favor ofawaiting a general renovation of the hospi¬tal as originally planned by Dr Zuspan in1968. This plan would require $750,000, asum Dr Zuspan considers unlikely to be ob¬tained in the near future.At the same time two other points havebecome clear: first, there are significantproblems in the clinics — especially thewest; secondly, the administration wishesto silence criticism and has done so on twooccasions.Not only is the west clinic characterizedby over-crowding and de-personalized hur¬ried style of care, but also many of thepatients who supposedly “choose” the lessexpensive west clinic are not informed theyhave a choice. In addition to patients onwelfare and city funded programs forwhom no pretense of choice is made, manypatients who pay for their own care andothers with Blue Cross or military insur¬ance are sent directly to the west clinic.These patients discovered in our clinic vis¬its, were invariably black, though not nec¬essarily poor.It is interesting to note that the west of¬fice really isn’t all that cheap either: theprenatal package in west is $845.50, in theeast $914; gynecology service in west $29.50initial visit and $15 for repeats, in east$44.50 and $15,' respectively (fees accordingto Lying-In admitting office, December 8.1970).Medical students on the gynecology rota- GADFLYtion see patients only in the west clinic-very few medical students ever seepatients in the east clinic. The Ob-Gyn de¬partment thus continues to use the poorand black preferentially for teaching mate¬rial.Periodically, the lights in the west officewaiting room are turned out and birth con¬trol movies are shown. The west clinicpatients are not asked if they wish to seethe movies. The movies are not even shownin the east waiting room. Dr Zuspan statedthis policy would continue until $1,000 canbe obtained for individual video viewers.There is a difference in continuity ofcare. East clinic patients generally see thesame doctor on each visit. West clinicpatients are assigned a doctor on their firstvisit and although his name appears on theappointment card, many patients only oc¬casionally see their assigned doctor.While there is not an absolute separationby race between the two clinics, the eastclinic is predominantly white and the westoverwhelmingly and increasingly (evenover the past two to three years) black.This separation and conditions in the westclinic constitute de facto racial dis¬crimination.Instead of moving to correct the prob¬lems in the clinics, the medical school hasmoved to silence those exposing the prob¬lems. Attempts to quietly inform and inter¬view patients have been declared dis¬ruptive.On two occasions (November 24 and De¬cember 4), medical students and othershave been ordered to leave the west clinicwaiting room or face disciplinary action.On both occasions the students had onlybeen talking quietly with patients and in noway interfering with normal procedure.Thus the medical school has taken theposition that medical students talking topatients about policy or health delivery isdisruptive.The unwillingness of the administrationto define “disciplinary action” prior to ahearing at which the student would alreadybe charged makes the threat all the moreominous — especially in light of previousuniversity suspensions and expulsions.The University and the department ofgynecology seem intent on ignoring the ob¬vious problems in the out-patient depart¬ment, and seem equally intent on pre¬venting open discussion of the issues withthose involved.If these problems are going to be re¬solved, other members of the Universitycommunity, students and faculty alike, aregoing to have to join us in a stand againsttwo class medical care and re-assert theright of open communication with patients.Jim Schwanke and Jim Wright are me¬dical students and members of the Stu¬dent Health Organization.No other clinic in Billings is similarly divided. Obstetrics andgynecology must end the two-clinic practice, and equal service be LETTERS TO THE EDITORSmade available to all.WinterDecember.Dank, dark, drab, dreary, deadly. When the cold bite of the Chi¬cago hawk hits the grey University campus, when the leaves fall fromthe trees leaving the sky barren with empty limbs, when the grassturns a dull brown, then life in Chicago is more chore than joy. Yetwe weather the winter, holing into Hyde Park, hibernating, hidingfrom the wind, the rain, the snow.Life in the Grey City is no pleasure, but we stay, we survive, wepersist. In December it is doubly hard to bear it. The bareness, theemptiness breed a palor of death, depression.“I will shake off depression” said Eustacia Vye in Thomas Hardy’sclassic novel, Return of the Native. With the approach of quarter break,we too will leave Chicago, our depressor, but in January we will return.Hopefully the ground will be covered with snow, white with purity,brilliance, lustre.C/TIic Chicago viaroon/December 11, 1970 Advisers and blacksThough I was disappointed and, dis¬couraged by many of the statements thatwere made and implied in the three arti¬cles on black student programs (Maroon,December 1), I was especially disheartenedby the statements that could have beenmade and were not made in the same arti¬cles. I write simply to clarify a few pointsas illustrations of what I mean.The articles seem to imply that no re¬sponse was forthcoming from the advisingstaff when the black students ad hoc coali¬tion for action stated their dissatisfactions.The fact is that the advisers, who makeno claim to perfection, asked me to proposeto the spokeswomen for the ad hoc com¬mittee that a meeting — or a series ofmeetings — be arranged between' blackseniors and advisers for purposes of explor¬ing dissatisfactions and misunderstandings.The format for these meetings was left tothe ad hoc committee and the goal was to gain better understanding and to improveservices where possible.After two rather extended conversationsbetween Miss Ingrid Johnson and me, andafter she had consulted with other students,she reported that they chose not to havethese meetings, for their dissatisfactionswere not that serious and that for the im¬mediate future they would be satisfied withMr Levine’s committee to try to centralizeand organize information with respect tograduate, fellowship, and work opportu¬nities.In response to the specific claim “thatthere are cases where students have pur¬sued an academic program which theywere led to believe would satisfy all gradu¬ation requirements in four years, only todiscover, in the last quarter of their lastyear, that this was not so,” I can only statethat I know of no black student in the pastfor whom this was true.O n the few occasions where dis¬crepancies have occurred the case hasContinued on p»gp 7LETTERS TO THE EDITORSContinued from page 6 -been referred to the committee on academ¬ic standing (a representative faculty com¬mittee, for degree requirements are set bythe faculty and only the faculty can miti¬gate them) and in each case when the ad¬viser was at fault the committee has ruledin behalf of the student.So far as I know, only one black studenthas been involved in such procedures andthe ruling was made in a manner satisfac¬tory to him.Concerning the statement that studentshave had to rely on “grapevine advisers”to learn about opportunities for minoritystudents, I can only point to the many no¬tices on bulletin boards in Gates-Blake.Most of those notices have been placedthere by advisers.I think that one of the problems we haveis that the adviser’s role and power aremisunderstood and, as a partial con¬sequence, advisers are particularly vulner¬able to unfair attack.They are in most cases the student’sprincipal anchor in the College; they de¬vote their entire energies to helping indi¬vidual students; they are advisers only, notprescribers nor dictators and especially notparents.They are not responsible for course andcurriculum content. Yet when things seemto go wrong it is easy to place blame onadvisers for not having been what theywere never intended to be.Advisers do not know everything; theirsis a tough enough job to know most of thethings they need to know in this complexand ever-changing University.I would only repeat what I said to yourreporters: much more will be gained bystudents if they will but talk to advisersrather than talk about them. Advisers wantto help and they can best help when misun¬derstandings are cleared up.George PlayeDean of undergraduate students| ENJOY! A FREE| COCKTAILJ along with your meal upon■ presentation of this advertisement! BAMBOO ROOM\ CO UNTR Y CL UBi BELCREST| RESTAURANT! Attended Free Parking1 Offer limited to one drink per meal purchasedDukker replyI would like to take this opportunity tosay that I was absolutely appalled at thegross misinterpretation, and misquotationof statements made by me during an inter¬view with one of your reporters on the topicof computers.This article changed what I spoke aboutfrom a general appraisal of problems in thecomputer field, to an attack upon the pro¬fessional competence of the University ofChicago computer center staff.What I was trying to say (which nevercame across in the article) was that in thepast few years, the technical advances incomputer design, has not been associatedwith a corresponding change in utilizationoutlook, or programming techniques.I chose for point of clarity to representthe case of the comp center as reflective ofthe general problem. I said that in fact justabout all University computing centers suf¬fered from this problem, which in simplestterms was non-optimal use of the comput¬ers for. consumer oriented problems.This problem is not to be dumped all onthe backs of the comp center personnel dueto the fact that IBM is one of the primecauses of the problem in the nature of theircomputer systems, which do not optimallyuse the resources of the machine, i e the 40percent system overhead of the system cur¬rently running at the University computercomplex.The article purported to turn this ex¬ample into a seemingly vicious attack onthe professional competence of the comput¬er center staff. I think that the problem Ispoke about is suffered by almost all of thecomputer centers in the country. Both com¬mercial and non-commercial alike.This article presents as its major themewhat was a five minute example for clarityin a three and one half hour interview. Ispoke of a small group of people who didknow how to use computers optimally and vable. That this University would forsakethose students to whom it is committed toeducate is unconsionable. The fact thatthese students are in academic troubleshows the failure of the University. Thestudents have not failed. It is the Univer¬sity.Not only is the University derelict in itsacademic responsibilities. More important,the people who are responsible for the situ¬ation that these students find themselves inhave demonstrated a moral failure as well.To admit as students those who society hasrefused to educate — and then refuse toeducate them once again is to perpetuatethe horrible moral failure which this Uni¬versity is supposedly trying to rectify.If this University is to take the com¬mendable step of accepting the responsi¬bility of educatiing those people previouslydenied education, it cannot take a “sink orswim” attitude. The goals are too impor¬tant and the stakes too high to permit theacademic and moral dereliction which thissituation seems to indicate.Geoffrey W Layton, MBA ’72Black furyThe plight of the Black, special studentswas disheartening to say the least. Thegreat U of C with all its superior brainpower and finances could not find a way tohelp 21 academically disadvantaged stu¬dents.Those teachers who did not want the pro¬gram should really congratulate them¬selves for their supreior wisdom and fore¬sight. But while you’re congratulating your¬selves, please don’t forget to mention howyou tricked them niggers again. Tell howwhite folks have always been tricking blackfolks. Tell how you tricked their grand¬parents when you set them “free.”But when you see that tidal wave of blackfury heading straight for you, please don’tlose your sense of humor.Cecelia M Kelly, SSAIt's not too late to select a fine print orposter for Christmas giving ...Visit the Waller Gallery soon5300 BlackstoneDO 3-7446said that I was hoping to learn from thesepeople (many of whom I have had the plea¬sure to work for) and from the problems ingeneral of most computing centers, howany comp center could be run using its ca¬pabilities to the utmost.The problem with the article (the com¬plete perversion of the content of the inter¬view) could be attributed to one of the fol¬lowing, 1) The misinterpretation of techni¬cal terms, which I tried my best to defineduring the interview, or 2) this was donedeliberately following what has been thegeneral trend of the Maroon's reportingstaff ( and editorial board) which seems tobe more interested in attacking each andevery facet of the University of Chicagosystem, than reporting the facts accurate¬ly-Unless the Maroon starts to report thefacts in an intelligent and responsible man¬ner, without misquotations, taking state¬ments out of context to pervert their mean¬ing, or other misrepresentations (followingthe general non-constructive reportingtechniques of the Maroon), then I feel thatit would be better for the Maroon not to*report at all.Finally, I would like to publicly dis¬associate myself with the article publishedin the Friday, December 4 edition of theMaroon. (I am not even a transfer stu¬dent).Steven Dukker ‘74Nancy Chisman replies:I regret Dukker felt he was misquotedor misrepresentated in the article. Thearticle was based on a straightforwardconversation, mostly supplied by Mr Duk¬ker, and presented as one of interest tothe University community, not as a publicrelations release on Mr Dukker’s talents.Special studentsThe revelation of the situation of theblack “special students” is almost unbelie-"★★★★! A MASTERPIECE!DAVID LEAN IS A GENIUS. HIS ARTISTICACHIEVEMENTS REACH THE APEX IN 'RYAN SDAUGHTER.’ A BEAUTIFUL PICTURE!"— Wanda Hale, New York Daily NewsRom MGM, producers of David Leans‘Doctor Zhivago" A 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. 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There are no plans to reduce facul¬ty salaries, he said.In the social sciences division, Dean Rob¬ert Adams is "trying to maintain the cur¬rent faculty level” of 170, though the “sizewill depend a lot on December 15 decisions.Any new appointments will all be scruti¬nized carefully, and it wouldn’t surprise meif the size were cut back somewhat. It isunlikely that it would be as much as 10percent.”Adams said that if there is a forced cut-Continued from page 3only so much rest — you can’t stay in bedall day!”Her companion related a similar episode.“Once I asked the doctor why my handsshook and he brushed the question off.They still shake sometimes,” she said,holding out a trembling hand.The first woman quickly brought up an¬other subject. “First the doctor told me I’dcome to term in February. The second timehe said, *Oh, you’re going to have a babyaround Christmas.’ The next time he toldme January. I’ll be sitting around here allyear.”Administration assistant of out-patientclinics, Victor Morris admitted there wasoften a “double communication gap” be¬tween foreign doctors and black patients.“In situations when a communication bar¬rier could arise,” he pointed out, “a nursewho can translate for the doctor and thepatient is always present.”Two mornings later, Ob-Gyn West wasless crowded. A projector, operated byPlanned Parenthood, stood in the middle ofthe room aimed at-the wall under the clock. back, it would come from resignations,fewer new appointments, and less tenureand reappointments. He added that therewould be no emphasis on cutting back fromany one of these areas. Six people are upfor tenure and 25 for reappointment.A Adrian Albert, dean of the physical sci¬ences division, expects the number ofpeople in that, division, currently 129%, toremain the same, although “we may dropone person,” he said.(Some divisions list fractions of peoplebecause of joint appointments. For exam¬ple, if a man has an appointment both inthe College and the physical sciences divi¬sion, each divison counts him as one-halffor the purpose of determining their bud-The organization has been showing educa¬tional films on birth control and pregnancyfor a short time.“I think the films are a good idea,” saida woman with a four year old boy. “Thereshould be films or music or something inhere.”A woman who had been waiting 45 min¬utes for her name to be called had a sim¬ilar opinion. “The films keep the husbandsbusy. They’ll be sitting out here wonderingwhat’s taking so long — when films areshown, they get interested in them.”A nurse came out and started the proj¬ector. An animated workless film with“subtitles” in five languages, depicting dif¬ferent birth control devices flashed on thewall. Four or five of the 15 women in theroom seemed to be looking at the film.About 1000 obstetric examinations aredone in West each month, but it is the feel¬ing of the patients that the impersonalityand lack of privacy in the West exam¬ining room may be due to the doctorsthemselves.‘i’ll be lying on the examining table, andyou know how you don’t like people to see get).He added, “We can’t let people go even ifwe want to (because the small number ofpeople whose terms expire this year issmall.” Only six people are up for tenure inphysical sciences this year.The business school should remain at itspresent size, estimates Associate DeanGary Eppen. “I don’t anticipate any realincrease, but I am not sure where exactlyit will end up.”One person will be re-appointed an assis¬tant professor, he said, although he expectsno one to receive tenure. One person hasalready resigned effective the end of thisquarter.There are 123 people who are on the busi-your body,” a young woman began ner¬vously, “but the doctor leaves the dooropen. Once he left the room and I was lyingon the table for 15 minutes with the dooropen.”A different woman described a similarincident. “Once the doctor was examiningme and another doctor came in and starteda conversation. They stood there talkingabout their friends and someplace theywere going to go.”A remodeling project, according to one ofthe demands made by SHO in a MaroonGadfly published four weeks ago, could domuch to improve the crowded conditions atOb-Gyn West.The Lying-In out patient committee,recently reactivated to explore ways ofamalgamating the two clinics is makingreal progress according to Dr JamesBurks, associate professor in the gynecolo¬gy and obstetrics department and chair¬man of the committee. Still in the talkingstages is a remodeling project and how itcan be for ob-gyn West and how funds canbe obtained. ness school faculty, Eppen said, of whomabout 80 hold the rank of at least assistantprofessor. The rest are research associates.Don Swanson, dean of the library schoolexpects that the school will' continue tohave about seven or eight faculty mem¬bers. No one was up for tenure or reap¬pointment this year, and one man is replac¬ing another who resigned recently.Dean Harold Richman of the social ser¬vice administration school, “can’t give agood projection yet, and I don’t know aboutthe budget.As for a possible cutback in faculty size,he said “I don’t know. I’ve just been read¬ing what everyone else has been readingabout the deans’ budget committee recom¬mendation.”J Alan Thomas, dean of education, saysthat the faculty of 18 “will be substantiallythe same next year.” The four reappoint¬ment and one tenure decisions are “stillunder discussion,” he added.Phil Neal, dean of the law school, alsoexpects that the law faculty will remainclose to this year’s figure, which is between20 and 24.He declined to comment on how manypeople are up for tenure and reappoint¬ment.Joseph Kitagawa, dean of the divinityschool, was in meetings all Thursday andcould not be reached for comment.ROBERT STREETERHumanities faculty cut 10 percentPatients relate incidents at west clinicStation JBD Restauranthappily announces a new(5500 S. Shore Drive) andfreshly decorated location( Flamingo Hotel).Our Roast Prime Rib ofBeef has pleased the HydePark community since 1944.Our Red Snapper in capersor wine sauce is only one ofour fish specialties. HotCrabmeat au Gratin willreally challenge your appe¬tite AND your taste buds.(If you know a GOODcocktail when you taste it,you only need to tell us howyou want it.)Reservations are recom¬mended, but not always nec¬essary.ti ^—^STATIONTHE BESTFOOD AND DRINKSIN TOWN Call BU 8-9241 « « HAIRSTYLISTSARE HAPPYTO ANNOUNCEMR. CHRIS”has returned to ourSTAFF,‘Call now for yourholiday appts.SINCE 1937appointmentsDO S-0917BU 0-33*3Buss BartoStation JBD M.BERGCLEANER &FURRIERUNCLAIMED USED FURS$25 Up to $100Settle for charges, valuesup to $1,000. Also fabulousmink jackets and stoles. Tre¬mendous value. We alsoclean suede coats andknitted goods.1619 Cast 55th StreetHY 3-9413 STARTS TONIGHT!MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS(1945)withJudy Garland&SINGING IN THE RAIN(1952)withGene KellyStarting December 18San Franciscowith Jeanette McDonaldOn the Townwith Frank SinatraStarting December 26A Tale of Two Citieswith Ronald ColemanPride & Prejudicewith Greer GarsonSPECIALNew Year's EveMidnight Party“YELLOW SUBMARINE"prizes and giftsstarting January I, 1971Let It Be andYellow SubmarineTHE BIOGRAPH THEATRE2433 N. Lincoln Dl 8-4123Plan to visit us soon. Admissionat all times is only $1.25. Bringyour Friends.PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONJAMESSCHULTZCLEANERSCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd Si.684-6856December 11, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/9GRAND OPENINGDe ShoppeCOMMISSARYCOSMETICS— SUNDRYS & HEALTH AIDS1519 E. 53rd STREETFriday, December 11 Thru T uesday December 15$1.00 GIFT WITH PURCHASE OF DOLLAR OR MOREOPENING COUPON SPECIALSYOU MUST PRESENT THIS ENTIRE ADAll ITEMS LIMITED TO ONE PER ADULT CUSTOMER ONLY1.65 REGULARS.U.P001 g* 1.07 REGULARBAYER KllOaspirin rigi79‘ REGULAR5-DAY 006DEODORANTPADS WW 69- REGULAR^ AlKA S(lTZ|R(J& 3QC25's89' RegularLACTONIA AHANATURAL KUVBRISTOLToothbrushes 1.19 REGULARPOLIDENT AAhPOWDER |I|IT89‘ REGULARWILKERSON 4 AhSUPER SWORD | UVSTAINLESS ■ mMSTEEL BLADES ■ 1.79 REGULAR0 -1 &Q*y SHAMPOO VW1.69 REGULARCONTACTIDs f | 79' REGULARMURINEEYE WASH1.39 REGULARPLAYTEX CQpLIVING GLOVE 79' REGULARMAGIC OQ0TURBANS99< REGULARWILLIAMS 4A(|PRE-LECTRIC 1.59 REGULARLAVORIS iQv{■r MOUTH WASH f 9LJ 20 oz.49c REGULARCOTTON SWABS 4 Afc60 SWABS | zfW M JUSTrj WONDERFUL AHair Spray|g| IMPERIAL SIZE1 6 oz.1.69 REGULARfi ixSS*.!"DEODORANT ■ . 1.09 REGULARFAMILY SIZE ATOOTHPASTE DO1.39 REGULARDRISTANMs f fALL ITEMS ARE LIM R»«ci WOOLITE fllkAill REGULAR MKIM6 V150 onITED TO QUANTITIESTHERAGRAN VITAMINSs .^vr lOO's-30 free .| Plain 9.80 3*79| Ms 10.30-3.99 Reg. 1.99 Madcap First QuaNYLON PANTY HOSE 7All SizesOPAQUE PANTY HOSE ityQepairAll Colors991 Maffick leads state oppositionto retention of death penaltyBy GORDON KATZ“There is absolutely no concrete evi¬dence to support the retention of the deathpenalty,” says Hans Mattick, chairman ofthe Illinois Committee to Abolish CapitalPunishment.Mattick, a sociologist and a co-director ofthe law school’s center for studies in crim¬inal justice, has long been involved in themovement to abolish the deaith penalty,serving as either secretary or chairman ofthe Illinois organization since 1958. From1955 to 1958 he was assistant superintendantof the Cook County jail.Mattick takes an unsentimental view ofcapital punishment. “The true sentimental¬ists,” as he calls them, J‘are those whohave strong sentiments which they do nothesitate to substitute for hard-headedfacts.”In advance of the December 15 referen¬dum on capital punishment, Mattick is at¬tempting to make the public distinguish be¬tween “rational research on capital punish¬ment” and “irrational arguments based onstrong feelings.” Tonight he will be a gueston Howard Miller’s “Chicago” show.Capital punishment, Mattick maintains,“is the scapegoat function for the homiciderate.” He points to the fact that there is noevidence Lo believe that the death penaltyhas any effect at all towards deterring po¬tential homicides.“People assume' that murder is a morerationalizing crime than it is — most mur¬ders are family affairs or crimes of pas¬sion.”“The most vocal proponent of capitalpunishment, J Edgar Hoover, has neverbeen able to put together one iota of evi¬dence that the deaith penalty has had anyeffect on homicide rates. Of 2000 studies,the only thing that is shown is that capitalpunishment does increase the absolutenumber of murders,” he said.Mattick is also critical of the role that thedeath penalty plays as an instrument of in¬timidation in the district attorney’s office.A prosecutor, he points out, can “cop aplea” of guilty on a lesser offense from adefendant when capital punishment threat¬ens the defendent’s life.The application of the death penalty, hesaid, “resembles a lottery.” Those who areexecuted are not usually “well-to-do, ade¬quately represented, or wealthy.” Of theone in every 6,047 capital offenders whosuffers the death penalty, over 50% areblack, he commented.Mattick also notes that the presence ofthe death penalty contributes to a generalclimate of violence. Historically, stateswith capital punishment have had morelynchings than those without it. “Everymass murder or assasination in recentyears” Mattick points out, “has occurredin a capital punishment state.”Mattick also refutes the argument that itis cheaper to execute a man than it is tomaintain him in prison. “In fact,” hestated, “it costs on the average $15,000more to execute a capital offender than itdoes to keep him in jail for the rest of hislife.”“Most defendants in capital cases are in¬digents, and the state has to pay for boththe defense and the prosecution. The print¬ing cost alone, in one case I studied in 1958was $40,000. A few years ago, a county inCalifornia went bankrupt seeking the deathpenalty in a complicated capital case,” hesaid.“If we were sincere about capital punish-MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO INK MAROON1212 K. 59th St., Chicago, 6063?DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: 5t per line, 40* per each line if the ad it repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Nan-University people: 75* perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are frou.—1—’—|—1—'—i—J ! |—| ' * r-T1 t 'T »—j— —|—|—|—j—j—, i 1 . i : l 1 , 1 J —| f-—r 'T T ~ » > T • 1 T' '! " '»■ "* * T 1 T ‘T f '■ ' 1 T- * * 1. 14--r « t y f * f f f f ♦ * ■ ♦ a +•••-+ ■ ♦ — 7— j' I ! * f ' 1 ' I 1 * " 1 ’ * * • T t 7 1 L— —i—L——■—i—i—r t t t * t ; ' <—•—I—► -t~', 111. i j *LL! I | ' i ; r t- i • ii M ' i i T LLp* t ! f ♦ t t t * f * * * • * t ■ f f- t i—i—*— 1 !~!HANS MATTICKChairman of State Committee to AbolishCapital Punishmentment, we should put executions in SoldierField and broadcast them on television intothe home,” Mattick suggests. “Instead, wetreat it as the shameful thing that it is.”In addition, Mattick argues that thedeath penalty represents a negative sym¬bolism which is detrimental to the attitudeof society in general. “If the ultimate sym¬bolic direction of the criminal justice sys¬tem is negative, how can criminals be di¬rected toward positive rehabilitation?”“Capital punishment is the most deliber¬ate form of murder. Do you know anycriminal who announces to the public in ad¬vance that he is going to murder some¬one?”Despite Mattick’s dedicated position, heconcedes that “there are some people whoare for capital punishment for quite honor¬able reasons.” He recalls how NathanLeopold, of the Leopold and Loeb case, hadtold him that in retrospect he would havepreferred death over the torture of life inprison.Presently 37 states, including Illinois, re¬tain some form of capital punishment. Moststates, if not all, however, have been reluc¬tant to invoke the death penalty.No executions have occurred in the pasttwo years in the United States, and Illinoishas executed only three persons since 1953.The average length of time that a con¬demned person is confined between the sen¬tencing to death by the trial court and theactual execution varies greatly.Illinois, according to Mattick, “has theshameful distinction of holding the longestcase in the country.” Charles Townsend,who was sentenced to death on April 7,1955, has been on death row for 15 years.Despite the renewed drives to end capitalpunishment throughout the nation, Mattickfeels the public is about evenly divided onthe subject. “You can't make political capi¬tal on the issue, you can only makeenemies,” Mattick observes.“The society or community that main¬tains capital punishment and believes in itsefficiency as a deterrent to homicide, maybest be compared to a primitive and super¬stitious tribe of savages who credulouslyengage in a rain dance to produce the rainthey need and desire.“Their beliefs are erroneous, their activityis irrelevant and when the rains come theyare the product of entirely different causesthan those that the savages thought impor¬tant,” he concluded.10/The Chicago Maroon/December 11, 1970(The Maroon Classified Ads)YOU CAN CALL A HORSE NAME DAL MURRAY, BUT IT'SSTILL A HORSEMAROON BUSINESS OFFICEHOURSWe will be closed for the quarter break, andwill open Monday, January 4, with our nor¬mal irregular office hours. If necessary, leaveus a message at extension 3591, or you canalways shove your ads ... under our door.HAPPY HOLIDAYSfromDon & Diana•KITTENSAre you lonely at night? Would youtike something warm, soft and cud¬dly to hold in your arms? Tell youwhat I'm gonna do. For you, causeyour eyes are blue, I've got theworld's most adorable kittens (ifyou were expecting something big¬ger, sorry). They've got the cutestfaces and they purr right into yourear What could be nicer? No com¬ments from the peanut gallery?(Move away son you bother me.)Tell you what I'M gonna do. For$1 98 they're yours. Too much, wellhow about $1 and a lint coveredsour ball. No, I'll take even less;nothing, for free! Such a deal! Callnow before they're all gone. 955-0348is the lucky number. Ask for Wen¬dy, but if a cat purrs you'll knowyou've got the right number.PumpkinFOR SALE'BMW-)967, 2 door, Ziebarted, Anti¬sway bars, Blaupunkt,. Semperitradials, meticulously maintained. C.Nelson x4285 or home 684-8377.Head Shop. Call 363-2286 eves.■ HOUSE SALE: Dec 12. Begin 10 am1455 East 54th Place — 3rd floorBed, EVT Speaker, Dishes, etc.Final Week SPECTACULAR Sweat¬er Sale. John's Mens Store. 1459 E53rd.2 For 1 Bargain Book on Sale at theMaroon Office or 2nd Floor of Book¬store. Only $10.Snow Tires 6-50x13 little used $30per pair incl. rims, phone 643-5710.Skis, Boots, Poles. All in good con¬dition. $48. Call Don Cremin 288-9530.Air conditioner — Almost new. 6600BTU-Price Negotiable. Call MikeX8192 or 684-4946HICKORY CAMPINGEQUIPMENTTents, sleeping bags, stoves, etc.t Reduced interim rates 324-1499.FANTASTIC BARGAIN1 We are offering you the chance of aI lifetime. A special book with somef/great 2 for 1 savings. It's on sale at| the Maroon Office and at the Book-1 store, 2nd floor. For you, a specialdeal, only $10.00.SPACEr 5-Room (2 bedroom) apt. AvailableJan. 1. $i70-month. Location nearCoop. Call: 752-44243 rm apt. 51 8< Drexel, some turn,$90-mo„ sublet from 1-4. 493-1465Furnished room available for rentin January in 5 room apartmentOne block from International House.References necessary; call around6.00 p.m. 324-7104Hyde Pk apt to share, own room,male g. stud. Call 363-1822Sgl. rm. avail Hitchcock. Cali Ian.Hitchcock 82Sunny airy well-kept 31 rm apt. 538. Kimbark. Available Jan. 1. Call493-6349. Keep trying.Apartment avail. Dec. 23. 3 rm. 5843Blackstone. 955-3152. Call after 6pm.Effic. Apt. 12th fl. 5100 CornellEully furnished-just bring clothes.Avail, immed or Jan. 1. 643-4670, 5-10 pm or D03-2400 days.ap* *115 mo. Available Jan1. 5730 S Blackstone Apt 3E-King.Come by evenings or Sunday.Apt. to share $47-mo now or win.occ. 54th Si Dorch. ph: 643-4821.moving?[►Licensed mover 8. hauler. Call ArtMichener. 955-2480PEOPLE FOR SALE Female student will do house¬cleaning. Mornings or afternoons $10for 5 hours. Good references. ReplyBox HK Maroon. Can start January2.Key-punch Service — Available im¬mediately. Reasonable rates. 493-7118.PAINTING &DECORATINGReliable, quality painting and deco¬rating. Special student rates. CallArt Michener, 955-2480.DELIVERY MAN WANTEDThe MAROON needs a delivery manto deliver papers one day a weekExcellent pay. Must have Volkswa¬gen Bus or similar type van ortruck. Call x3263 — Don or Diana —or drop us a line over quarterbreak, giving us your phone & ad¬dress 8< type of car.PEOPLE WANTED2 girls to share Ig. lux. apt. beg Janor Feb. $70 & $55. 752-0316Wanted: UC student not now indorm to take over Blackstone con¬tract. Call 363-2958.Fern Roommate-grad, student oremployed-to share large apt. Ownroom. $82.50-mo. 667-3621Roommate wanted wtr. qtr Ownroom, Ig furnished apt nearcampus. $46-mo plus utilities. Call493-2540 after 5 pm.5-room (2 bedroom) apt. AvailableJan 1. $170-month. Location nearCoop. Call 752-4424Fern roommate wanted. Own room.56th 8. Blackstone 363-2403.New Group Meeting — anyone inter¬ested in communal living call TREAevenings. 348-5486.Director for newly developed daycare center. Background desired:early childhood education or relatedsubject; supervisory experience, andexperience in day care or nurseryschool. Please call Hyde Park Ken¬wood Community Conference. 288-8343Needed: aggressive student withimagination and drive to sell lowcost student air travel to EuropeLucrative. Interested? Contact Mrs.Mignon Eisenberg. 527-3550.MAGAZINE WRITER-EDITOR forpart-time position, experienced, ca¬pable of heavy editing and rewritingof technical manuscripts, research¬ing and developing stories Knowl¬edge of layout, keyline and offsetproduction an advantage. Send re¬sume to R. Ball, American PublicWorks Association, 1313 East 60thSt„ 60637. No agencies. An equal op¬portunity employer.Room Board exchange BabysittingSome Help. Conditions cheerful en¬joy children. Call 955-7583 pm.College students needed 7 days aweek, 4-0. Experience preferTfed.Call DELI DALI DELICATESSEN.643-0500, 1522 E. Hyde Park.F E MALE ROOMATE WANTEDOwn room in big apt. 54th-Harper$65 per month. 752-7442.Female roommate wanted to share6-room apt in Hyde Park. Con¬venient location for shopping andtransportation. $60-month. 373-7890.Female Grad to share pleasant apt.57th 8. Kenwood. 363-2391Resp babysitter needed for charm¬ing 20 mo old girl 8 am to 4 pmwkeys My home or yours. 955-2887X4494Share expense for drive aroundWest Winter quarter 363-0551Need a place to stay over Christ¬mas? Babysit witn our apartments,TV, stereo, and cats for free. Call363-5092 or 288-1385.FREE DINNER. Test your emotion-a I sensitivity in a unique ex¬periment. Call Stuart, 288-5589.Sitar player looking for rock group• interested in an Indian sound. Stud¬ied yr. in India. Rm. 11010. FA 4-9500. Leave message. CATSITTER NEEDEDfor Xmas vacation. Willing to paysmall fee. 288-4234Typing, elec , papers, theses, tapetrans. Northwest. 673-5839. WANTEDTvnin0 Service AvailableMU 4-7394 R.M. Davidson fciue fO Prl nee iuii Nj Xilids voe.Call Ginger X5198; eve 978-0275 Ride wanted to New York, Miami,or Mexico or Riders wanted to Mex¬ico. Share Driving 8i expenses.Leaving around Dec 24. ContactSam at 684-2452. Lv. messageWanted: Xmas ride to Cleveland.Share $$. 684-6322.Ride to and-or from Florida. Xmasvacation. Call 324-1537Ride for 2 wanted to OMAHA dur¬ing interim. Dates flexible. Perhapsround trip. Will share costs 8< driv¬ing. Call 684-5327Wanted: 2 bedroom apt for family,starting Feb 1 667-6251Ride needed to Lou, Ky„ leave any¬time. Call Andrew 955-8952West to Cal. after Fri. 12-18. Both ofus will share driving 8< all expenses.We're nice people to travel with.Sue 8. Mike 752-2707Ride wanted to Wash-Bait after Dec20. Call Bob 288-6610 rm 2412.I need a ride to Colorado, 18, 19, 20,share expenses Phone 664-2628. PERSONALSSCENESFilms at 7 & 9 Mondays at only$1.00 Multi-Media TheaterThe same planes that take Ameri¬can Airlines' passengers to Fiji,New Zealand, Hawaii and Acapulcocan take you to Detroit, St. Louis,and Hartford. They might evenserve you the same peanuts (a bitstale). Have an exotic trip home.Call Campus Rep Jim Sack, 684-6667. FOUND: male German Shepherd,about 6 mos old in vie of Ida Noyes,Sunday 12-6. Call 324-0056.Do you really want to spend 24hours in a VW on wet roads drivingback to Boston? Fly American Air¬lines and get Americana Service (noChicken Kiev) Call Campus RepJim Sack, 684-6667.We are Jews who believe Jesus isthe Messiah. Jewish people welcometo come and rap at BonhoefferHouse 5554 Woodlawn. Sat. Dec 12,7-9 pm. Not sponsored by Bonhoef¬fer House.Fly to NYC 12-24 to 1-1 $75 RT. CallCrawford x4172 or 643-1976.Unadvertised Penguin Sale contin¬ues. 25c each with any other bookpurchase at Book Center Say! only14 of the 18 missing UC Studentsshowed up. Are you one of the other4?To the woman who called me lastThursday and her husband: My pro¬fuse apologies. Call me if you wouldlike an explanation. JV.LUTHERANS: COME TO LAKEGENEVA JANUARY 8-10. Call 363-8272 for more information.Schoo! gets out late this year. Saveyourself endless hours at O'Hare,get accurate stand-by informationbefore you go to the airport fromAmerican Airlines Campus Rep.Jim Sack 684-6667.Found: Kitten, black and orangewiith red collar, bell 643-3627. Eve¬nings. Kitten is cute, hungry. Big B, call BU 8-8556Well-hung male desires to meet BigB. Call 288-9310 at 7 pm Sat.Big B: I am not a male-female, andI am not both. I certainly hopemale will do. Box X, Maroon.RUNAWAY?Family Problems? Call the Depot.955-9347.POLLUTION FILM"The Time of Man," Sunday, De¬cember 13, 6:30 pm, BonhoefferHouse, 5544 S. Woodlawn. HYDE PARKFIREWOODOdk - Ask - Birch,S4S/T0H DELIVEREDFOR IMMEDIATEDELIVERYCALL 955-2480ANY TIMESpecial Student RatesGESTALT ENCOUNTER GROUPWeekend Dec. 11, 12, 13 Fri. 7-11pm Sat. Sun 10am-6pm. Limited to10. $25. Lorrie Peterson, ex¬perienced leader, has studied atEsalen. 288-3541. Albee's American Dream Tonite atMulti-Media Theater 8:30 pmWant out of yr. single at Snell orBkrdg? Write Linda 424 S. FairfieldLombard, III. 60148.YOGA single/group Exerc. Mdtn.Contrn. Sri Nerode. DO 3-0155. A STUDY CONFERENCE ATLAKE GENEVA??? CALL 363-8272.Y'all Come! Tenor Tuesdays at 8P.M. Multi-Media TheaterCRAFT COOP now o,-en at the BlueGargoyle Mon-Wed-Thurs Fri 11:30-2:30 Thur ev 7-10 pm.Join GAY LIB's semi-annual closet¬burning ceremony 12-12 at the BlueGarg 5655 S. Univ. 9 pmAspen is dead! Ski Alta for the fi¬nest powder in the world Fly there(Alta is near Salt Lake City,strangely enough) on American Air¬lines. Call Campus Rep Jim Sack.684-6667.Find out about a different kind ofeducation. Open House at Coopera¬tive School No. 3. Dec. 11 from 7pm. 2242 E. 75thSee 'so'me of your best friends" atGAY LIB'S dance 12-12 at the Gar¬goyle Y'all come now!Be kind to your baggage. Check itat the curb at O'Hare at AmericanAirlines. At least it will get there ontime. Call AA Campus Rep JimSack 684-6667The Program of African StudiesStudents' Organization at North¬western University cordially invitesgraduate students from Universityof Chicago to a Christmas Socialdance, to be held on Friday, Dec.11, at Dryden Hall, 1570 Oak Street,Evanston, beginning at 9 pm. Bothmen and women are welcome.MULTI-MEDIA THEATERis located in Harper Galleries 5210S. Harper. MU 4-1173WASSAIL PARTIESTONIGHTOriginal 1916 Wassail Recipe, BrassChoir, Santa Claus, and Caroling bythe Ida Noyes Tree. First (and last)recital of original Xmas Poem —All Welcome. 6:30-9:00 Tonight. IDANOYES Make sure you'll get on stand-by.Fly American Airlines 747 Astroli-ners to LA, San Fran, and Phoenix.Call Campus Rep Jim Sack 684-6667for detailsAct your tning!!! PsychodramaThursdays at 7:00 pm. Multi-MediaTheater! Hurry!!!!!Writers' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)ABORTION is legal'in NY. For re¬ferral to accredited hospitals call212-633-9825 6 pm to 6 amGreat gift — Anarchist Calendar1971 at the Book Center.SHH!! I Something Unspoken WedsMulti-Media Theater 7:30 and 9:00P.M. Right on! Mothers!!!Do your own thing at the GAY LIBdance 12-12, Blue Garg 9 pmKey-punch Service Available imme¬diately. Reasonable rates. 493-7118.Why waste your money on food?You acn read a book twice. TheBook Center. MERRYCHRISTMASFROMTHESHOP CREWCH, GK, EHREPLIES TO BIG BBig B: Male, only partly liberated,but willing to learn. Dig? Big D. af¬ter 5:15. 363-8272.Big B: Please Call Bill at DO 3-5820.Big B, are you serious? You've gotto be kidding. Call me at 277-7757anytime after 7:00 pm. If no an¬swer, call after 10:30 pm. I'm sureto be home then. R.C. EH PAISANOCheeses and spices and everythingnices—that's what our pizzas aremade of.Introducing"The Rebel Pizza"[Italianpineapple-peperoniliestabzzena We DeliverMU 4-32621919 E. 71sr StreetSDS NAT'LCONVENTIONDec 27-30 100s will be in Chgo forSDS convntn & Demo against racistunemployment. They need sofas orfloors to sleep on. Help! 924-9374 orI House x517.WHPK-FMMusicians of all sorts wanted forseries on music in Hyde Park. Call324-5758 or. x3588 & leave name,phone no.We were disorganized like everyoneelse this quarter, but we'll have acomplete program guide out veryearly next quarter. Honest!Anyone who wants to join WHPK ismore than welcome. Get in touchwith Heather or Phil at the abovenumbers or 288-4365.By the way, we wMI sign off for thequarter at 3 am Sat., 12-18. We'll beback at 7 am on Monday, 1-4-71.SKIIERS ATTENTION"International Skiiers for Peace"Multi-colored Ski Patch and BronzeMedallion with chain. Both haveISP insignia and are available nowfor the first time in U S„ onlythrough Student Travel ServicesSpecial International Student priceof 50c for patch and $1 for Medal¬lion. Far out gift idea! Join ISP to¬day! Mail to: Student Travel Ser¬vices, PO Box 19384, Sacremenfo,Col!'., 73819. uuou Ski¬ing * Peace." IF YOU'RE SO SMARTwhy don’t you look into graduate work in the Department of Radiation Biologyand Biophysics at the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry?More than 60 full-time faculty are eager to help you develop your thing throughinterdisciplinary research: advanced degrees in Biophysics, Radiation Biology, andToxicology including many aspects of Environmental Science.Facilities? We’ve got ’em. Over 314 acreas of floor space devoted to research andteaching in our Department alone. And our equipment array is impressive too:NMR, FSR, A A, and IR Spectrometers, ORI), Cl), I M and microprohe, half adozen X-ray machines of assorted outputs, high level and low level irradiators, ourown Departmental computer center and numerous special purpose computers tosay nothing of the usual run of lab equipment. We’re a large, vibrant Department,attacking many of today’s environmental problems.If you qualify (and our standards are pretty high) you can join with us in exploringany of these exciting areas. Stipends are generally available for U.S. citizens; youwon’t get rich on them, but they sure beat trying to go it on your own.For detailed information about our Department andour degree programs, write now to:Dr. Irving L. Spar,Associate Director for EducationDepartment of Radiation Biology and BiophysicsUniversity of Rochester School of Medicine & DentistryRochester, New York 14620December 11, 1970/Tbe Chicago Maroon/11SAVEon all Spirits and Winesfor your vacation needsyLOWEST PRICES IN THE\MIDWESTCHOOSE FROM THE TREMENDOUS WINESELECTION - 1400 DIFFERENT WINESVINTAGES FROM 1856 TO 1969All nearby states have much higherprices. Stock up before leaving Chicagoand save as much as $200 per fifthon all spiritsThe Party Mart2427 East 72nd StreetBA 1-9210WE FEATURE ONLY NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS12/The Chicago Maroon/December 11, 1970Volume 3, Number 10 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of the Arts Friday, December 11,1970CSO’sGuest Conductor:Carlo Maria GuiliniCarlo Maria Guilini, the principal guest conductorof the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, was recentlyinterviewed by Peter Ratner, a student in the collegeand a member of the CSO junior board. This isGuilini’s second year with the CSO and recordings ofhis work with them have just been issued on AngelRecords. In the following interview Guilini speaks ofthe CSO, the future of orchestral music, and hisfeelings for modern music.Signor Giulini, what would you say are the strengthsand weaknesses of the Chicago Symphony Orches¬tra?I shouldn’t speak about weakhesses because I musttell you very sincerely that I don’t know theweaknesses of this orchestra. The qualities of thisorchestra are of a high technical standard. This is avery intelligent orchestra; their reactions are veryquick, very sensitive, and very colorful. It is possibleto have a lot of colors and altogether, it is a strongorchestra, a masculine orchestra.The Chicago Symphony Orchestra has traditionallybeen recognized as an orchestra specializing inAustro-German works of the nineteenth century, avery massive, complex type of work. After con¬ducting a number of diverse genres of music with theChicago Symphony Orchestra, do you think that thisgeneralization still applies?Now this is what T tnlH you ahout colors Of course,the orchestra has a strong and deep knowledge of thegeneral repertoire (Beethoven, Brahms, etc). But, I have also played impressionistic music with thisorchestra, and in doing so, found it possible to havethe orchestra perform unbelievable nuances ofpianissimo, of delicacy. I find that it is as possible todo Ravel and Debussy’s genre of music as it is to doBrahms, so I can’t say absolutely that it is anorchestra only for the music of the romantics.How do you evaluate the latest trends or accom¬plishments in modern music today, compositionparticularly, over the past forty years?I think that over forty years there has been a breakwith traditional music — by traditional, I mean themusic which is written with the traditional notes, C,D and so on. I am not speaking about tonality oratonality, but the conception of the note. The newconception of sound is a kind of abstraction, like youfind in the way the notes live for themselves as acolor can live for itself. This is, I think, the break, thedivision between one conception and another.What this kind of music will bring and where it willgo is very difficult to say today, because, besides thisabsolute modern music, the younger generation hasalso made a break. In general, the young generationgoes from the traditional music directly to jazz, pop,rock ; they don’t listen to very modern, serious music.So it is difficult to say what will happen in the future,and where serious music will go.In general, I am optimistic for humanity, becauseI think that humanity will always find a way toresolve its problems — its life problems, it spiritualproblems and its artistic ones, of course. But now allthe intelligence, all the genius, is concentrated in the sciences, more than in the production of the arts. Atthis moment perhaps art in general needs to rest alittle, after the great effort that it has been makingfor centuries.Is there any composer alive today, other thanStravinsky, whom you would consider a great man —along with say, Beethoven, Bach, or Wagner? If not,do you see any composer who has the potential todevelop into a really great composer of his time ?It is a difficult to say today. The answer is in therepertoire. Look at the repertoires in all the concerthalls in all the world, and you will see whichcomposers are performed regularly. This is the life ofthe music, because, to play a composition once here,once there means nothing. The music starts to livethe moment it becomes a durable part of the body ofmusic, the moment it starts to go into the veins. Lookat the repertoire— the answer is there. There you willfind Stravinsky, Bartok, Prokofiev, but few others.The place of a great composer like Hindemith in thehistory of music is a question mark today.How do you feel about the development of Americanmusic since Charles Ives and, do you plan to conductmuch American music in the next couple of years ?Yes, I plan to present, in this season and next year,two young American composers in whom I believevery much. They have something to say, which Ithink, is the important problem for a composertoday: really to have something to add to humanconsciousness, something which he can «ay in a hpwway.Continued on Page 11theaterTalent, Imagination and TeamworkBefore I start talking about Jacquesou la soumission, an excellent produc¬tion performed last weekend, I want tosay something about a situation whichnearly spoiled it for me. I am growingincreasingly tired of being kept waitingin theaters, both professional and ama¬teur, by people who are inconsiderateenough not to come to the theater untilanything up to a quarter of an hourafter the scheduled curtain time. Thissort of rudeness (and this is the onlyword for it) presents the director of aone-act play with a serious problem. Heneeds the audience’s attention and does not want them distracted by lateco¬mers. On friday evening at the openingof Jacques only some twenty-fivepeople were present at the advertisedcurtain time, though the curtain roseon a virtually full house. Perhapsdirectors should form a union, notadmit anyone after the scheduled cur¬tain time and refuse refunds. Thewhole thing is grossly unfair to theactors, for it plays on their nerves andalso puts that section of the audience,which was there on time, into a badmood.My personal bad mood was, fortu¬ nately, dispelled at once when thecurtain rose upon the set and costumesof the opening tableau of Jacques.Congratulations to Caroll, Toscas,Star, and Seaton. Here was somethingwell designed, simple and well exe¬cuted. Here was talent, and imagina¬tion at work and not a vast financialoutlay. Yet it was utile as well as dulcefor it served to help distinguish the twofamilies for those whose Frenchneeded this additional prop. MichaelIssacnaroff, the brain behind the pro¬duction, maintained the stylizationthroughout and his actors served him well in their outstanding concentration.None of them dropped out of characternor was too obvious .The masks andmake-up, superbly fashioned by JudithAronson and Gwen Dietman, helpedthem, of course, but care and attentionto detail played their necessary andproper part.Issacharoff’s introduction of thestrobe sequences surprised me for amoment, but they heightened the anti-theatrical mood of the play and werevery effective. This is the sort ofimaginative innovation which is sodifferent from the gimmickry all toooften foisted upon us in the “profession¬al” theater.It is almost invidious to single outindividual actors for praise in an effortwhich is so clearly the result of closeteamwork, but I have to give specialcommendation to Roberte (I and II!)who was beautifully played by Marga-rete Ynetena and to John Tsafo-yannis’s Fernandel-like Jacques, forthe way in which they sustained thatdifficult climax (they could not becalled tyros!!) of sexual acrobatics.Of the other parts, I must mentionMichel Tousignant whose grandfathermaintained just the right level ofsenility without degenerating, as itcould so easily have done, into mereover-acting.To achieve this standard of produc¬tion with an international polyglot castand to hold the attention of the au¬dience in a play which relies so heavilyupon verbal play is a rare achievementon this, or any other campus. Mesfelicitations. We shall look forward tomany more Issacharoff offerings.I am still puzzled as to the signifi¬cance of the omission of “c” from“Jacques” on all the posters.— Kenneth NorthcottUT’s Latest: Four Dancer’s PlaysUniversity Theater’s last production of the quarteropened last night in Ida Noyes library (59th &Woodlawn): Yeats’ Four Plays for Dancers, directedby Chris Lyon.The first two plays, At The Hawk’s Well and TheOnly Jealousy of Emer are the first and last plays ina cycle which Yeats wrote about Cuchulain, acharacter roughly equivalent to Achilles in Greekmythology. The third play is The Dreaming of theBones and takes place right after the EasterUprising of 1916. It also concerns mythical figures:two spirits who originally betrayed Ireland to theNormans. The last play is Calvary, a lovely littlecomedy.The plays use music, mime, and masks, but focuson Yeats’ verse in order to explore more fully theirdramatic content. Yeats’ original intent was tocreate an aristocratic theater, where admission was“by preference and never to many.” For this show,admission is only $1.50, but audience size is beinglimited in order to create a more intimate relation¬ship between actors and audience.Saturday and Sunday performances will be at 8:30,and tonight’s show begins at 9, in deference to theWassail Party. PoemPlsxsFOBDaocefismC( B VeacsDIRECTED BY (^HRlSTOPHER LyonDecember 10,12, 13 at 8 00 pnDecember 1 1 at 900 p mIda Noyes Hall Library 1212 E 59th Streettickets,$1 50 at Reynolds Club desk or at doorIntroducing Priscilla Solomon, Thconita Browning and The Source.Priscilla Solomon and Theonita Browning wereboth born, brought up, and schooled in Chicago.Priscilla from Rogers Park and Theonita fromHyde Park met while teaching elementary schoolin the inner city. While teaching Priscilla wasstudving design at The School of the Art Instituteand Theonita had just received her Master inGuidance and Counseling. The girls became friendsdiscovered their mutual knowledge and interest infashion, and thus the idea of the boutique wasconceived. The Source, a new fashion boutiquefor women at 1509 East Hyde Park Boulevard,has geared itself to the new generation ofyoung Chicago women. Women wlare from all walks of life lookingfor clothes that reflect their intelli¬gence and style of life, but withoutbeing cither bizaare or outrageous¬ly priced. Both Priscilla and Theo¬nita had long been dissapointedbecause they couldn’t find excitingmodern clothes with flair whichwere sensibly priced within their IU uvumeans, iney cieaucu me only waycome this gap was to do it themselves, set u]their own shop and provide it. They begaiworking on it about a year ago making a stud;of all aspects of the business carefully. The;delved into marketing and even though the;have experience in retailing, fashion design, itmodeling they made several trips around th<country compiling fashion information and selecting the best merchandise at the most sensible prices for their store. The shop that the;have created is casual, comfortable, and friendly. There is an avoidance of stuffiness, formality, and gimmickery. It is a store foactive young thinking unpretentious womenWomen who are hip enough to know exactly what they want but have tioperate within a budget. It ifor women who think clotheare important but not th<most important thing in lifePhone667-5366667-5367 HoursMon. 12-6Tues., Wed., Sat. 10-6Thurs., Fri. 10-7THE SOURCE 1509 E. HYDE PARK BLVD.2/Grey City Journal/December 11, WODecember 11, 1970/Grey City Journal/'i< «t ftf *m 11>'WWH? *9*:*-* *V.Featuring Chicago's Largest Display of KLH Music SystemsWe have gifts of every size, shape, hue and textureto fill the creative minds in your family with joy this Christmas.You will be joyous, too, because we've reducedthe price on items in keeping with old fashioned yuletide values.Which has to be jolly good. Ho! Ho!FAVDR-RLIHLArt, Craft, Drafting Supplies14 South Wabash, Chicago, Illinois 60603 (312) 782 5737.We have a way of fulfilling your needs.NOW IN STOCKTHE NEW STEREO TAPE DECK USINGTHE DOLBY NOISE REDUCTIONSYSTEM ONE OF THE TWO NEWGREAT LOUDSPEAKERSFROM KLH —PRICEDFROM 55.00 TO 190.00 INBOOK SHELF UNITSNEW319”THIS KLH IS THE BEST BUY IN INI AUDIO INDUSTRYOLD! BUT STILLTHE BEST PORT-ABLE YOUR MONEY CAN BUVGIVE LAUGHTER FOR CHRISTMAS 1 AluiiCiaftON CAMPUS CAU BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. Oak St.—OE 7-4150 3035 W. 95th St. ■779-650^"THE TWELVE CHAIRS”is“ONE OF THE FONNIESTFILMS IN YEARS!”- SHOW MAGAZINE“A COMPLETE JOY! A COMEDYTO WARM THE HEART ANDLEAVE THE RIBS ACHING.”- Judith Crist NBC TV Obeys no rules except those gov-erntng the lost art of pure comedya cast ot superlative clowns, ledby Ron Moody the memorable Fagmol Oliver'RATIO* EMUUMf“***★ «*■*••* A GEM! ...A CAUSE FDR REJOICING!■ Mkka roan uit wkUMItmIuFiImRON M000Y'The TuieJv* Chairs”.PyjfrJJS^ fit. ana. - ’ * WOO IAMB UDHil Wlt/MVUP HrIN COLORCINEMA horP*rfeorcourt1rPerj\ 'EY DUCKY! GETYOUR THANG TO-GETHA'ONSTUDENT NITESMON., TUES., WED. FROM 5 PMALL DRINKS WITH I.D. 25*Special Export 40' mixed drinks 50HUGE!K.wccanrf PITCHERSof Schlitz Light[& Dark-Bass Ale-iGuiness Stouton TapFISH & CHIPSChicken, Pizza,Steakburgers,Spaghetti & Chile.Ye.f All the peanuts you can eatcompliments of the House. rCMICAOO AT MICMIOANTELEPHONE 787-87339AM NIAIIT STARTS FRIDAYDEC. 18thCUT OUT4/Grey City Journal/December 11, 1970 FOR THE CONVENIENCE AND NEEDSOF THE UNIVERSITYRENT A CARDAILY—WEEKLY—MONTHLYNOVAS • MAVERICK • FULL SIZED CHEVROLETSAS LOW AS $4.95 PER DAYPLUS 13c/mile (50 mile min.)INCLUDES GAS, OIL, & INSURANCEHYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd Si. Ml 3-1715 The #1 Bestseller now anNAL paperback and agreat Paramount motionpicture starring Ali Mac-Graw and Ryan O'Neal.95«Wherever paperbacks are soldNAL sooratru15424 KimbarkMl 3-3113^ '"foreign car hospitalJazz, Acid and CacophonyHis Band and the Street Choir by VanMorrison (Warners 1884):Van Morrison is English, jazzy andgreat. His last album, Moondance, wasa masterpiece, and the one before that,Astral Weeks, was called the bestalbum of 1969 by more than' oneprominent critic. This new album fol¬lows in the Van Morrison tradition — atradition of great arrangements, effec¬tive instrumentation and knowl¬edgeable engineering — so well, that itseems to be an extention of Moondance,the second record in a Moondancedouble set, rather than a completelynew album.Van Morrison used to sing with them(remember “Gloria” and “HereComes the Night”? and then did somesolo work that was highlighted by“Brown Eyed Girl.” Finally, Van wassigned by Warners and since then hehas shown himself to be a consistentlyfine songwriter-singer and a greatarranger-producer.The producer on most albums is theman in the background who mixes thevoices and the instruments together toget the best results. Van however, isthe man in front and in back, so he hasa doubly hard time. When he mixes theinstruments to drown out the voice, it ishis own voice that is being eliminated.In this position, many musicians ego¬tistically mix their albums to be thebest possible vehicle for their ownspecific talents. Luckily, Van Morrisonis not an egotist. The mixes on thesesongs are perfect — the instrumentsbuilt to a crescendo when they areneeded even if Van Morrison’s voicesuffers consequently. But it takes morethan loud instruments to kill VanMorrison’s vocal talents.Van Morrison is a good singer. Heknows how to inflect words to get themost out of them, how to bend noteseffectively, how to improvise, and howto make his voice show true emotion.This is saying more than one wouldthink, for most pop singers do not knowhow to use these basic vocal toolseffectively, though many try. VanMorrison knows what he is doing,especially when he improvises. Jazz¬like scat singing is a technique that fewmaster well today. Ella Fitzgerald isone, but she’s been learning how for 40years. Yan is another and he is so goodnow that in forty years, if his voiceholds up, he’ll be amazing. Scat singingis floating along with the melody, KU;lfe\doesn’t need solos to prove he can play.Others are :Jack Schroer on alto,son on trumpet and organ, JohnPlatania on guitars and mandolin,Platania on guitars and mandolin,John Klingberg on bass and Alan Handon piano and organ.Van, besides being a great singer,arranger and producer, is also a su¬perb songwriter. His songs deal witheveryday situations though he looks atthem through his own perspective. Onthis album, “Domino” is my favorite.It bounces and builds and than ends inthe scat singing mentioned earlier. Thesinging, the writing, the arranging, themixing, the choir, the instruments, andall the rest make this album a realwinner.improvising words, throwing them offhard and fast. In “Domino”, Van endsthe song in straight scat singing, usingsome of the exact phrases that he usedon Moondance. Yet here they arelooser, ending the song in easiness andrelaxation.The instrumentalists Morrison gath¬ered around him on this album arerelatively unknown, but they sure canplay. Dehaud Elias Shaar, the drum¬mer, plays easily and smoothly, neverbeing too obtrusive or .pushy. He American Beauty by the Grateful Dead(Warners 1893):The Grateful Dead is the best rockband in America. They have put outmore good albums, played more ex-,citing concerts, written more goodmusic, and inspired more musiciansthan anyone else. And besides all this,they continue to grow and to put outgreat albums five years after theirformation.American Beauty is the second Deadalbum in their new countryish sound.Workingman’s Dead preceeded Ameri¬can Beauty and though it was a greatalbum, there were still faults with theDead’s new sound. All the problemsthat were evident on Workman’s Dead,however, have been ironed out, for thisalbum shows no faults at all.Harper Dance TicketsThe Harper Dance Festival hasmoved to the Civic Theater (Wackerand Washington) for its 1971 season,which runs from January 5-31. Per¬formances will be Tuesday, Friday andSaturday at 8:30 and Sunday at 2:30and 7:30; there are student discountsfor all performances except those onSaturday. The schedule:Murray Louis Dance Company, “A.D.”Tues. Jan. 5, Sat. Jan. 9, and Sun.matinee Jan. 10. “Chimera,”“Landscapes,” “Intersection,”and “Proximities,” on Fri. Jan. 8,and Sun. evening Jan. 10.Merce Cunningham Dance Company,“Objects,” “Tread,” “Rainforest,” Tues. Jan. 12. “SecondHand,” “Signals,” “Tread,” Fri. Jan. 15. “Second Hand,” “Win-terbranch,” and “Tread,” Sat.Jan. 16. “Signals,” “Win-terbranch,” “How to Pass, Kick,Fall and Run,” Sun. Matinee Jan.17. “Canfield,” “Rainforest,”“Objects,” Sun. evening Jan. 17.Paul Taylor Dance Comapny. “Lento,”“Big Bertha,” and “Church¬yard,” Tues. Jan. 19, Sat. Jan. 23,Sun. matinne, Jan. 24. “ForeignEschange,” “Agatha’s Tale,”and “Sea to Shining Sea,” Fri.Jan. 22, Sun. evening Jan. 24.Nikolais Dance Theater, “Tent,” “Di¬vertissement II,” and “Struc¬tures,” Tues. Jan. 26, Sat. Jan. 30,Sun. matinee Jan. 31. “Echo,”“Tower,” “Divertissement I,”Fri. Jan. 29, Sun. evening Jan. 31. Even though the Dead is now high¬lighting their vocals, there is no reasonto worry about their instrumental tal¬ent. When they break loose of the vocallines, they still play harder and fasterand stronger than anyone. Of course,the music now has country overtones,pedal steel guitar and all, but under thetwang is the basis of the Dead sound —the driving bass of Phil Lesh and theexcellent drum work of Mickey Hartand Bill Kreutzmann. Besides there isstill Pigpen on organ to liven things up.Prior to the Dead’s country souhd,their songs were not songs. They weremerely jumping off points for theimprovisational talents of the Dead.Now however, you always can tell thatthey are playing by the notes, leadingto something particular. This has ham¬pered them somewhat; but since thesongs are so good, something has beenadded in return. I especially like “Can¬dy man” and “Ripple,” on this album.The Dead may change, but they arestill the Dead. Even when they arecountrified, they are still San Fran¬cisco freaks, mixing sunshine and acid.If such a concoction appeals to you, theDead are it.Lola versus Powerman and the Money-goround by the Kinks (Reprise 6423):After more than a year of waiting,the Kinks have finally put out a newalbum, including their great single,“Lola.” I must admit that I am prej¬udiced in favor of the Kinks. I havefollowed them for seven years, eversince “All Day and All of the Night”and though they have lost the popu¬larity they once had, they have gaineda talent and a finesse that qualifiesthem for popularity more than theirraunch rock ever did.When the Kinks exhausted the possi¬bilities for variation in raunch rock,they discovered that Ray Davies, theleader of the group, was a great songwriter. So, Davies began writingsongs and the other Kinks backed himup with the funkiest, smoothest in¬strumentation coming out of England.While they may have lost some of theiraudience in making the big change,they acquired great critical acclaim.Hopefully, Lola (short for the newalbum) will increase the circle of Kinksfans. %Ray Davies has a unique talent forcapturing the feeling and life of theBritish Isles. He is the most British ofall songwriters and he has capturedsome of the Isles most fascinatingpeople in his song-character sketches.“Lola” is just one of these songs. Onthis album he has also captured a bigboss in “Powerman” — “I know a man,he’s a powerful man, He’s got people inhis power, in the palm of his hand. Hestarted at the bottom and he workedhis' way up, Now he’s never going tostop.” Other sketches on this albumare just as good. 1The Dead was never a vocal group.Before they turned countryish in fact,they rarely used harmonies and theirlead singing was kept to a minimum toallow irtore time for the classic Deadinstrumentals. Now, however, they de¬velop vocal lines, let the instrumentstake a back seat for awhile and singout. Crosby and Nash helped them outwith the vocals and their influences isapparent, from the progression chordsto the “do-dos” that Stills has used sooften. And amazingly enough, some ofthe Dead’s members have turned out tobe good vocalists. Jerry Garcia espe¬cially captures the ranch and drive ofcountry music. Much of the rest of the albumanalyses the music scene in GreatBritain. In “Top of the Pops”, Daviessatirizes how a record goes up thechart.s “Denmark Street” pokes fun atthe capitalists who don’t understandrock but are afraid of losing money ifthey don’t put out rock records.Davies is not a good singer technical¬ly, but he has the right emotional pitchfor his character sketches and heknows how to force his small voice upthe scale to just hit those high notes.The other Kinks play loud and hardbehind him; especially good is DaveDavies (Ray’s brother) on guitar.Have a HappyThe staff of the Grey City Journalwishes everyone in the University avery happy holiday season. We will bebdek ill January bringing you news ofChicago’s cultural happenings, andother bits of fun. See you then.December 11, 1970/Grey City Joumal/5 iThe Kinks deserve a listen, especial¬ly if you haven’t heard anything bythem except “Lola” in all those years.“Lola” is good but so is all the rest ofthe Kinks music.Blows Against the Empire by PaulKantner (RCA LSP-4448):This was supposed to be a goodalbum. Paul Kantner of the JeffersonAirplane gathered some of this coun¬try’s best musicians including GraceSlick, Jack Casedy and Joey Covingtonof the Airplane, Jerry Garcia, MickeyHart and Bill Kreutzmann of the Dead,David Crosby and Graham Nash ofCSN&Y and other around him and putout a super-album that is a super-flop.Albums that are too political are asbad as people who are too political:they both lack humor and depth. Onthis album’s first cut, the lyrics actual¬ly read: “HEY DICK, Whatever youthink of us is totally irrelevant, Both tous and to you, We are the present, Weare the future, You are the past, Payyour dues and get outta the way.” Ifthis is not enough, how about: “Youunleash the dogs of a grade B moviestar governor’s war, while you sit inthe dark — insane with the fear ofdying, We’ll ball in the parks — insanewith the flash of living.” If the lyricsaren’t bad enough, the song is not evenmusic. Cacophony is a good word for it,Kantner doesn’t sing most of the song,but shout-talks it backed by blearing,ugly guitars and unrhythmic drums.Ugh! 4tThe rest of the album varies betweenbad political mess and innocuous shortsongs. This album is so bad, in fact,that I haven’t been able to listen to allof it at one sitting yet without gettingviolent and pulling the record off thephonograph.— The Great Pumpkin»#*% * «O',(A it cj'jM'j'/i 't'.fVjcA \»V>CapitolMost RecordsAvailable In TapesSAY CAPITOL FOR GOOD LISTENINGATLOWE’S Capital*POPULOSION!...HERE, NOW, AT A POPULOW NEW PRICE!THE BANDTHE BAND: The second album bythe finest of groups. Includes TheNight They Drove Old Dixie Down;Up On Cripple Creek; Rockin’Chair; Look Out Cleveland; KingHarvest (Has Surely Come); more.THE BEATLESAbney BondABBEY ROAD / THE BEATLES:Undisputable, unforgettable. Great¬ness The album includes ComeTogether; Something; Here Comesthe Sun; She Came In Through theBathroom Window; and moreLINDA BONSTADTSilk PurseSILK PURSE/LINDA RONSTADT:Soulfully funky and full-of spree;music the Linda way. IncludesLong Long Time, Lovesick Blues,Will You Love Me Tomorrow?; HeDark The Sun; much more.STEVE MILLBINumbersNUMBER 5/STEVE MILLER: Bluesand ships and sealing-wax, withsuch as Good Morning; Going tothe Country; Hot Chili; Going toMexico; industrial Military Com¬plex Hex; more.JIMIHENDBIXBand oi fiypsysBAND OF GYPSYS / JlMl HEN¬DRIX: Recorded live at the Fill¬more East, New Year's Eve 1970.includes Who Knows; MachineGun; Changes; Power of Love; WeGotta Live Together; and more.MCCARTNEYPaul McCartneyMcCARTNEY/PAUL McCARTNEYPaul's first solo album includes 13original songs written, performedand produced by Paul himself. Hiswife Linda sings with him Songsinclude; Junk; Oo-You; much morel SNOWBIRDAnne MurrayA delight of many moods, includ¬ing the hit title song; Fire AncfRain; Break My Mind; Just Bidin’My Time; Get Together; I'll BeYour Baby Tonight; and more!, I*-,-; THE PINK FLOYDUmmagummaUMMAGUMMA/THE PINK FLOYDThe most fluid, inventive album yetfrom one of England’s top "under¬ground" groups. This two-disc setcontains a live performance and astudio recording, and ranges fromvery gentle music to abstract, free¬form electronic wizardry.* * *W' THE BANDStage FlightSTAGE FRIGHT / THE BAND: Anever-present joy Includes Straw¬berry Wine; Time To Kill; Just An¬other Whistle Stop, All La Glory;The Shape I’m In, The W S Wal¬cott Medicine Show, yes, morey$ $ BBAND FUNKRAILROADCloser To HomeCLOSER TO HOME/GRAND FUNKRAILROAD: Funkily flying for flipand fulfillment! Includes Sin’s AGood Man’s Brother; Nothing IsThe Same, Get ItT ogether, HookedOn Love; I’m Your Captain; moreLIST 5.98 special *3.59GRIND FUNK R.R.-LIVE ALBUMIn a set of down-home tracks,Grand Funk makes it throughtheir own funky paces, paradingthe magnetic fertility-like ritualthat sets their always SRO con¬cert audiences on end. The powertrio is ushering in a “New Cul¬ture" with genius . . . combininggood melodic feeling with anhonest harder-than-rock sound. 2Records . . . Specially Priced.GRACIOUS!Not-to-be-quickly forgotten groupfrom England! All originals.- Intro¬duction; Heaven; Hell; Fugue in‘O’ minor; The Dream. LIST 5.98*3LIST 4.98*2ALL THINGS MUST PASSGeorge HarrisonA new, six-sided skyrocket adven¬ture from George Harrison ... forone low price! Includes My SweetLord; Isn’t It a Pity; I’d Have YouAnytime; If Not For You; Beware OfDarkness; All Things Must Pass;even ever wonderfully more.PINK FLOYDAtom Heart MotherCHARGEWITH Bank Awt hicaro/JMRL records HYDE PARK1444 E. 57thMU 4-1505OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 56/Grey City Journal/December 11 1970Three Ref uges from HungerEating is as much an art as theater, music,movies or dance. In its own way, a fine meal is moreentertaining than the best acting, especially if therestaurant is a little out of the way or unusual. Threesuch establishments are located in new town —Frances at 2453 N. Clark, Ratso’s at 2464 N. Lincolnand Grandma’s Receipts at 2837 N. Clark.Eating at Frances is like eating at home. A small,sterile cafeteria, Frances can hold only about fortypeople, but its intimacy helps build the homeyatmosphere. Paper napkins, flowers on the table,formica tabletops and mounds upon jnounds of foodactually make you think that Mama is in the kitchen,skimming the soup.The food is simple, but bountiful. A man behind acounter takes the food out of steam trays while heshows you how rare the meat is, how green the beansare, how light the potato pancakes are. As I waited toorder, a kid from one of the Clark Street head shopsordered roast beef, noodles and mashed potatoes.“And vhat kind vegetables?” the cook asked. “Skip’em” the kid answered. “Carrots or peas” theemployee insisted. “Hey man, no vegetables.” “Lookkeed, no vegetables, no roast beef.” As he dejectedlyaccepted the peas, I’m sure the kid thought howmuch eating at Frances was like eating at home.After your food is dished out, a woman comesover to the counter and carries your plate to a table,brings bread and drinks and makes sure yotr’reeating. The kid who was forced to take the peas musthave thought he could skip them once he sat down,but the woman came over, looked at his full plate andsaid “Eat your vegetables ; they!ll make you big andstrong.” In exasperation, he stuffed all the peas in hismouth, satisfying both the woman, the man behindthe counter, and his own mother back in Winnetkawho must worry about his health.Almost all meals at Frances are less than $2;especially good are the lox dishes, all sandwiches andthe potato pancakes. But more than the food, eatingat Frances is like a quick trip home.If Frances is like home, Ratso’s is like thecommune you always wanted to go to, but never did.Chicago’s weirdest collection of freaks inhabit Rat¬so’s and most of them are the waiters and waitresses.If you go to Ratso’s, expect your waiter to be spacedout and if he isn’t, you’ll be missing a treat. A spacedout waiter ambles over to your table slowly, stares atyou for a minute and asks rather tiredly, “What’ll itbe man?” Usually, he’ll sit down at your tablewhile taking the order, ask if you’ve read the latestissue of The Seed, ask about the good movies you’veseen lately, and idly chat for awhile. Then he’ll leave,only to return with the best bread you’ve ever had.Ratso’s specialty is home baked bread, and if youthink your aunt’s rye was good, wait til you taste thethick, soft crust and spongy, still-warm interior ofRatso’s bread. The bread itself is worth the trip, butalong with it you’ll get some of the best onion soup, if Frances may have big portions, but. . .you’re lucky enough to go one of the nights it’savailable. Vegetables, chunks of onion and gobs ofcheese float in the soup and if you buy the bowl (90cents), you’ll get enough to float a battleship. Thesoup and bread are enough for an entire meal.The entrees are good, though often a bit skimpy.Coq au vin especially is not worth all they ask for it,so avoid. However, the baked chicken in cream sauceis big, good and unbelievable spicey. Dunk the breadin the cream sauce. Yumm.The cheese cake for dessert is a must, though thepieces tend to be a bit too small. However, the cheeseis just the right consistency, smooth and creamy andthe crust is delightfully crunchy. The coffee is goodtoo and you can sit there all night if you want; sincethe place is so nicely decorated, you might do justthat. The tables are beautiful hard wood shaped liketelephone cable spools and the walls are burlap, oftendisplaying photos and original art work. The music isperfect too; one night, they played Tom my from startto finish. Prices for full dinners range from $3 to $5(some a bit more) but for the spaced out employees,the great bread and the relaxed atmosphere, theprice is more than worth it.After home and the commune, what could bemore natural than Grandma’s? Just a few blocksnorth of Frances, Grandma’s Receipts is as quaint asyour own Grandma’s dining room, lace, tiffanylamps and all. The menu is small with just about asmany choices as you get when you go to see your ownsweet granny, but this Grandma makes all deliciousfood — none overflowing with grease, none too well-done, none cold.For me, one of the best parts of eating at Grandma’s is that they leave a big, cold pitcher ofice-water on the table. Whenever I go out, I alwaysrun out of water and it gets to be embarrassingasking your waiter for water three or four timesduring one meal. At Grandma’s,you may run out, buta fresh pitcher will appear before you can finish offthe last of it.The food is a bit overpriced, especially thesandwiches. The corned beef is way too expensive,near $2, but there is so much beef that it may beworth the money, especially if you haven’t had anygood corned beef since the last time you were onFlatbush Avenue. Chicken and dumplings is a goodmain course and the dumplings are light and fluffy,when dumplings have a tendency to get hard andheavy, especially when they’re in your stomach.For dessert there is no choice — hot apple pie.The pie is piping hot, full of ripe, spicy apples andcovered with the flakiest crust. Sometimes they runout of pie, especially if you get there late, so it’s agood idea to ask your waitress to reserve a piece foryou when you arrive.The pace is a bit quick at Grandma’s. It would behard to sit around after you finish eating like atRatso’s. But the food is good, the pie is great, andthere is all that water. Besides, don’t you owe yourGrandma a visit?All three restaurants are easily accessible fromHyde Park. You can either take a Howard Street Elto Fullerton (2400 N) and walk east, two blocks toLincoln, six to Clark, or go downtown and take aClark Street bus north on Dearborn. If you’re afterexciting meals in interesting places, these threerestaurants are don’t misses.BobbinTHE GREY CITYHere is no continuing city, here is no abidingstay.Ill the wind, ill the time, uncertain the profit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late,and rotten the year ;Evil the winter, and bitter the sea and grey thesky, grey grey grey—T. S. Eliot, Murder in the CathedralEditorsMitchell Bobbin, Christine Froula and Wendy GlocknerTheater: Associate Editors T , ^ .John Del PeschioFilm: Charles FlynnArt: Susan LeffDance: Paula ShapiroMusic: Mark BlechnerPhotography: Scott CarlsonStaffJack Markowski. Bob Purricelli, MarkSwedlund, Harvey Shapiro, Myron MeiselSOMEWHAT HIGHER PRICES ANDOSTENTATIOUS; UC FACULTY MAYBE FOUND IMBIBING HERE.If you’ve yot it, flaunt it!THE EAGLEcocktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks . . .5311 BLACKSTONI BANQUET ROOM AVAILABLE HY 3-1933, WIG SALEandAs low as $19.95Professionally StyledTHE LOOKING GLASS LTD. 1513 Eul Hyde Peik'Blvd// qhxW'6061; / Phone 9SS-5SSS DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometrist•ye examinationscontact l«ns«s* in theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363TAKCAM-Y&NCHIN ESE-AMERI CANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. YO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS| 12 TO 9 P.M.I Orders to take outImj^Eas^r^lUAH^S A VINGSSA VINGSSA VINGSSA VINGS.S A VINGSSJohn's Mens Wear1459 E. 53rd.s jz GIFT IDEATurtlenecks - $1.99B“!1SAIEell BottomPea Coat SaUHoliday-GreetingsSAVINGSSAVINGSSAVINGSSAVINGS S A VINGSS*’ * ** * ’ <!•*** jAjk* .* U.’ »hr A' .% V •' t,' * 6 *. * . A j h *' A * A -J. » James CagneyinRaoul Walsh'sWHITE HEATdoc films friday, Dec. 11 8 pm $1.00— .... December- Jlf 1970/Grey City Joumal/7Ci'G U vj(!j t >0Culture VultureSPECIAL EVENTSThe traditional Wassail Party will be held in Ida NoyesFriday from 6:30-9, with the brass band, refreshments,caroling, and the tree trimming.MUSICThe Rockefeller Chapel Choir presents Handel's Mes¬siah tonight at 8 and Sunday at 3:30, with 28 members of theChicago Symphony. Admission $2.50 for UC students, $3.50for UC staff, faculty, and alumni.The University Chorus, directed by Frank Tirro,presents "A Renaissance Travelogue," Friday and Sundayat 8:30 in Bond Chapel. Free.George Solti conducts the Chicago Symphony inMendelssohn's 4th Symphony (Italian), Chopin's PianoConcerto No. 1, Stravinsky's Orpheus and Rossini's Barberof Seville overture, in Orchestra Hall today at 2 andtomorrow at 8:30. Tickets are ! 3.50-8-The Lyric Opera presents Bartok's "Bluebeard'sCastle" and Puccini's "Gianni Schicchi" tomorrow at 8 atDo A PlayAnyone interested in directing a playof his own or one by another playwrightis asked to contact Anne Clary at 373-1179 to submit a proposal for itsproduction to be considered by Univer¬sity Theater’s student board.An evening of plays by new directorsis scheduled for the fifth weekend ofwinter quarter. One-act plays, shortpieces of mime or dance, or whateveryou’ve got in mind are all suitable foran evening that is conceived as ashowcase for fledgling directors. Play¬wrights who would like to have some¬thing of theirs produced, technicians,and actors are also invited to get intouch. the Opera House, Wacker & Madison Tickets: $3.50-14.Birgit Nilsson performs at Orchestra HaM Sunday at 3.Ramsey Lewis is at the London House thru Dec 20,followed by the Audrey Morris trio. Call AN3-6920 for moreinfo.Leo Kottka and Jim Post are now at the Quiet Knight,953 Belmont. Loudon Wainwright III and Jim Post startWednesday and will appear through Sunday, December 20.Wildchild Butler and the Sam Lay Blues Band will be therestarting Wednesday, December 23 through Sunday, the 27th.DANCEThe Dance Troupe of Columbia College performs"Fossills" every Wednesday thru Dec 16, and from Jan 6-27,at 8 pm, 3257 N. Sheffield. Donation $1.THEATERUT's last production of the quarter, Yeats' Four Playsfor Dancers, will be performed at 9 tonight and at 8:30tomorrow and Sunday, in Ida Noyes Library. Admission$1.50.Dame Judith Anderson plays Hamlet at Civic TheaterDec 28-Jan 2. Tickets: $9-4.Disney on Parade at the Amphitheater Dec 26- Jan 3. SeeSnow White live on stage.From Matter Comes Man, presented by the ColumbiaCollege Theater department, at the Performing ArtsCenter, 1725 N. Wells, 944 3756. All performances are free,previews are Dec 10 and 13 at 8 pm.Oscar Brown's "Buck White," the black Broadwaymusical, will open Christmas Eve at the Church, 54th andBlackstone.The Free Theater will perform William Russo's jazzopera Antigone Fri and Sat nights at 8, Dec 11-12, 18-19.Free, at 3257 N Sheffield. 929 6920.An experiment in multi-media, Multiples of Man, openeda two week tour on Monday, Dec 7, at 7:30,1428 N Orleans.Location of performances changes nightly, so call 793-3520for info. Continues thru Dec.21.The Prodigal is presented by the Old Town Players at1718 North Park. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday at7:30 through Dec 20. $2.A folk rock play, Horatio, can be seen at the JaneAddams Center of Hull House, 3212 Broadway. Friday andSaturday at 8:30 through Dec 19. $1.50.Twelfth Night. Goodman Theater. Playing throughDecember 20 and again December 29 through January 30.Tuesday through Thursday and Sunday at 7:30; Friday andSaturday at 8:30; Thursday matinee at 2. $3.25 to $4.90.The Poor Theater at 925 W Diversey presents Rites-OneThru Four Friday and Saturday at 8 through Dec 19. $1.Arthur Miller's A View from the Bridge is at LincolnPark Theater, 2021 N Stockton Friday and Saturday at 8:30through Dec 19. $1.Val's Multi-Media Theater in Harper Galleries, 5210 SHarper continues a second cycle of presentations. Mondaysat 7 and 9 pm, films by Kartenquin Films Ltd for $1.Tuesdays at 8 pm, songs by tenor John Gahagan, $1.50.Wednesdays, Tennessee Williams' Something Unspoken, at7:30 and 9 pm $1. Thursday, a psycho-drama from 7 til 10 for $2.50. Friday,s Edward Albee's An American Dream at8:3Qfor $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. Fridays andSaturdays at7:30. More info: 467-0300.Gargoyle Cartoons by the Kingston Mines Theater, 2356N Lincoln. Wednesday through Sunday at 8:30, $2. Sat $2.50.Reservations: 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 into: 467 0300.Hair is in its last 4 weeks at the Blackstone, 60 E. Balbo.$2.50.At Organic Theater, 2259 N Lincoln, Candida, admission$2.50 continues through January. Student tickets — $1.50 forWednesday and Thursday nights.Myrna Loy and Jerome Kitty star in Dear Love, thestory of Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning at theStudebaker, 418 S. Michigan. Through Jsn 2. Nightly at 8:30,matinees Wednesday and Saturday at 2. $3 to $7.Oh Coward, a musical review drawn from the works ofNoel Coward, Happy Medium, 901 N Rush, Fri 8. Sat, 8 and11, Sun 4 and 7:30, andTues8:30.ARTSculpture and Drawings by Virginio Ferrari, are ar theSchool of Social Service Administration, 969 60th, until Dec22, Mon Sat 9-5; Sunday 12-5.Shu Takashashi has a one-man show in the Deson ZaksGallery, 226 Ontario, Tues-Sat 10:30-5:30 through Dec 15.Max Kahn paintings are at the Fairweather HardinGallery, 101 E Ontario, 642 0007.The Bergman Gallery offers the photography ofRosalind Moulton and a "Drawings of France" show byPhilippe Levanthal through December 22, 4th floor, CobbHall.Paintings and drawings by Hilson, Bushman, andNichols of Hyde Park Art Center, 5236 Blackstone. Galleryhours :Tuesday — Thursday 1:30 4:30; Saturday 10 4through Dec 19.Art Institute, "Edifices and Monuments by JeanDubuffet," December 19-Jan 31.Robert Rauschenberg's "Graphics and Sculpture,"Museum 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. "The ArchitecturalVision of Paolo Soleri" follows, Dec 19 Jan 31.Ryder Gallery, 500 N Dearborn, displays a New Yorkexhibit (Gilbert Advertising Agency), Dec 1 through Dec 31;weekdays 11:30 — 5:30.The Paintings and Drawing of Walter Sanford will beshown through Dec 18, Monday through Saturday, at theFaculty Club of 11T.3241 S Federal.An Art for Young Collectors Sale at the RennaissanceSociety's Gallery will last through Dec 22; graphics, Art by Walter Sanford, now at the IITFaculty Clubpainting, sculpture $2 $300, Goodspeed Hall, 1010 E 59Monday through Friday, 10-5, Saturday-Sunday 1 5FILMCEF presents Alice's Restaurant Saturday in Cobb $1and another free film on Dec 19: Leone's Famous Italianpasta dish, Fistfull of DollarsRoger Ebert, film critic of the Chicago Sun-Times talksabout "Filmmakers and Filmgoers" Sunday at 8:15 at FirstUnitarian Church. Refreshments (doors open at 7 30)donation $1.25.A Godard Festival is in progress at the Three Penny, 5289126. rDavied Lean's new film, Ryan's Daughter opens Dec 18 atthe Michael Todd\y Wild and WonderfulCombinationsby CantShirt/tie sets never before seen by man ... Gantmulticolored stripe shirts and color coordinated ties.Shirts $11 and Ties $8.50-$12.50. Fun.Hyde Park Shopping Center55th and lake Park 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.CLUOne N. LaSalle St.Chic. 60602FR 2-2390798-0470 llffliMi The new film from the director of M-A-S-Hmay be over yoor head.nnwivntmt*ANOMCTOCOUMSEE IT DOWNTOWN THIS HOLIDAY SEASONX DEG. 18Continuous Performances a be GREAT STATESUNITED ARTISTSRANDOLPH NR DEARBORNHAROLD’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 SOChicken Sandwich SO Order of Livers 1.45Order of Gizzards 1 25 Wl Order »f liv* $ W KIMBARKLIQUORSWINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINEST^IMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to you!THE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC.1214 L 53rd St.53-Kimbark Plaza HY3-3355 "If you see nothingelse this year,you must seeIt will not, I think,$ ever fade frommemory!”—RICHARD SCWCKH. LMCOLUMBIA PICTURES Presents a BBS ProductionJACK NICHOLSON - FIVE EASY PIECES ...»Karen Blackand Susan AnspaCh ■ Screenplay bv Adntn Joyce ■ Story by Bob Aa'enc- and Adrian JoyceP'Oduced by Bob Raleiion end Rcnard Wnrn.ior t.nrut.ve Producer Be t Sc»"ederDirected by Bob Rate'eon COLO* — ——nrV)THEA. PARK $1.0033 E. CedarS/Grey City Journal/December 11, 1970filmNew Films Come to ChicagoPierrot Le FouJean-Luc Godard’s 1965 Pierrot le Fou will be atthe Three Penny Cinema through December 15th.Pierrot is in my opinion, unquestionably the greatestfilm ever made; even though you may be lessenthusiastic, I urge you to see it. The performancesof Jean-Paul Belmondo and Anna Karina, and RaoulCoutard’s sunny photography are beautiful in them¬selves: under Goddard’s direction, they express anextraordinarily powerful sense of pain and loss.A man and a woman run away together. The manis intellectual, contemplative; the woman is restlessand active. Their idyll in the South of France, a totalrejection of all outside society and influences, is asuperb culmination of the film’s movement towarddoom. This is Godard’s most romantic film.So much of what is good and great about Pierrotis inexpressable that I can do little except repeat:you must see this film. And, in particular, watch forSam Fuller’s appearance at a cocktail party in thebeginning: “The cinema is a battleground: love,hate, action, violence, death — in one word, emo¬tion.” Fuller is speaking to Godard as much as to us:in destroying Belmondo and Karina at the end ofPierrot, Godard destroys his world, himself, us.—Charles FlynnRio LoboIt should not be necessary at this point in time tohave to repeat that Howard Hawks is a greatdirector. Even a casual acquaintance with his workover the past 40 years — Scarface, Bringing up Baby,Only Angels Have Wings, The Big Sleep, Rio Bravo —reveals a consistent quality of achievement andpersonal concern.Hawks’ latest film, Rio Lobo, opens Friday,December 18, at the Oriental Theater. As befitsHawks’ rigidly classical art, the star is John Wayne,the plot a tale of Western revenge. The movie openswith an expertly staged (and funny) train robbery,but Hawks soon settles down to guide his playersthrough a near-ritualized odyssey of Western rou¬tines: the shootout in the saloon, the showdown, theland-grabbing baron.Hawks directs with charm, humor and grace, butthis is counterpointed with several viciously effectivemoments of violence. Hawks, like Shakespeare, has avision of life which encopipasses both tragedy andcomedy, and manages to summarize them in singleactions and movements. Wayne is the hero, and heoccupies the center, but even the least significant badmen (including Paris Review editor George Plimp¬ton) have their hour upon the stage, and then areheard no more. Rio Lobo may not be a great film, butit is a very, very good one.— Charles FlynnScroogeCharles Dickens’ The Christmas Carol has beenbrought to the screen some six times, but NationalGeneral Pictures’ Scrooge (at the Michael Todd forone more week and thereafter at the Marina TowersTheater) is the first version with music, and the onlyone with Albert Finney. Finney, of Tom Jones andCharlie Bubbles fame, gives the richest, mostDean Goss check* out Sally Kellerman in McCloud Albert Finney and Kenneth More in the new movie based on A ChristmasCarol, Scrooge.satisfying slice of good ham acting in many years.While it may not rank with the ham masterpiece of alltime — John Barrymore’s Oscar Jaffe in Hawks’Twentieth Century — Finney’s Scrooge is so adornedwith more ridiculous realism, that the more modesthe tries to be, the more blatant his exaggerations.Finney is utterly believable, though, becauseScrooge is a perfect ham role — there’s never been abigger mountain made out of a molehill of moralchange. Scrooge is likeable from the start; he simplyneeds to learn how to enjoy himself. It’s a pleasantprocess to watch, and Dickens’ flamboyant meta¬phors, like Jacob Marley’s chain, make the storyricher without weighting it down with any depth. AlecGuinness and Kenneth More valiantly try to upstageFinney with pork of their own, so the whole thing iswonderful hokey fun. Scrooge really isn’t very good,but it’s certainly enjoyable.The songs by Leslie Bricusse are servicable ifunmemorable, and Oswald Morris’ (Oliver, TheTaming of the fhrew) photography is fair, althoughnot as good as his brownish fruit salad generally is.Ronald Neame, the director, is characteristicallysluggish, but unobtrusive. He has never learned toblock, and he makes elementary editing errors, suchas cutting away from intense moments. But Neamedoes a creditable job with the technology of theproject, and he has an affinity for Dickens (twentyyears ago he wrote the screenplays for David Lean’sGreat Expectations and Oliver Twist.) Bricusse’sscript retains a good deal of Dickensian vinegar, anda daring scene of the mob dancing on Scrooge’s coffinis inspired. Much of the film is rather terrifying inthis funhouse way. The final reel, Scrooge’s regene¬ration, is the most upbeat and exhilarating finish ofthe year.Basically, the film mixes equal portions of trueand false sentimentality. Still, half a loaf of goodsentiment is better than none, and I’m getting sick ofTerry Southern.— Myron MeiselBrewster McCloudBrewster McCloud (opening next Friday at theUnited Artists Theater) is Robert Altman’s first filmsince M*A*S*H. The film is populated with actorsfrom M+A*S*H — Bud Cort, Sally Kellerman,Michael Murphy, Rene Auberjonois — but that’swhere the similarity ends. In fact, Brewster is somuch better than M*A*S*H that I, for one, wouldn’tguess that they’re the work of the same director.M*A*S*H was much overrated by most film critics.As the French film magazine Cahiers du Cinemanoted, it is an “ultra-reactionary” film, posing as ahip black comedy; as for director Altman’s work,much of the film’s humor is fumbled with trickyzooms, selective-focus shots, and overlapping dia¬logue. Brewster McCloud (Bud Cort) is a young manwho lives in the fallout shelter of Houston’s Astro¬dome stadium, and who wants to fly. That’s about allhe wants to do, but he becomes involved in a series ofmysterious murders — including that of a little oldlady played by Margaret Hamilton, the immortalwitch of The Wizard of Oz. The murderer’s signatureis bird droppings, which appear at strategic placeson his victims’ bodies. This is also the film’s badrunning gag, which fails to amuse at every point.But much of the film is funny, in a low-key,deadpan sort of way. Cort’s performance is sublime,and Brewster’s three lady friends — Miss Kellerman,Jennifer Salt, and Shelley Duvall—are delightful.There are zoom shots — unnecessary ones — inthe film’s first three shots, which raises anxietyabout Altman’s direction. But he soon settles down totell the amusingly disjointed story, via cross cutting(cutting back and forth between two simultaneousscenes), the main visual device in BrewsterMcCloud.On a more serious level, Altman has attempted acritique of 1970’s American rudeness and insanity.The representatives of the Establishment — cops, anageing miser played by off-Broadway’s Stacy Keach,a stadium guard — are caricatured to a degree thatpermits comedy but prevents depth.Brewster McCloud (like Otto Preminger’sSkidoo, which is also the work of screenwriter DoranWilliam Cannon) is a cartoon, populated with flat,funny pop-art cutouts. It will no doubt be attacked asa “betrayal” of the “promise” Altman showed inM*A*S*H, but I, for one, vastly prefer the relativelygraceful wit and sensibility of Brewster to a good ole1940’s service comedy dressed up in mod clothing.— Charles FlynnTwo MusicalsIf you plan on going to any movie this week ofweeks, check out the double at the Biograph. Therehas never been a better double bill than VincenteMinnelli’s Meet Me in St Louis and Stanley Donen andGene Kelly’s Singing in the Rain. As both art andentertainment, these are masterpieces. Louis starsJudy Garland in a turn-of-the-century valentine toyouth, love and beauty. It mixes sharp observationwith gentle humor, and Minnelli’s graceful cameramakes the most of Judy’s songs (“the Trolley Song”,“The Boy Next Door”) and little Margaret O’Brien’suniquely accomplished performance.Singing in the Rain, quite simply the greatestmusical ever made, is a satire on Hollywood’stransition to talkies. Scrooge wouldn’t have neededthe three ghosts if he had only seen this. It can cheeranyone out of any depression. I can’t think of a betterbreak for finals week.— Myron MeiselContinued on Page 13December 11, 1970/Grey City Joumal/9*Nine dollars, Ninety-five Cents!... 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(12.95 IF PAID BY CREDIT CARD) SEND $5.00 & COUPON TO:NameSTUDENT MARKETING ASSOCIATES Address5555 SOUTH EVERETT AV.CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60637 School _ 01-0Judy Collins"Whales and Nightingales"Reg. 5.98/3.00Steven StillsReg. 5.98/3.25Derek and the DominosReg. 8.98/5.50George Harrison—All Things Must PassReg. 11.98/8.00John Lennon Plastic Ono BandReg. 5.98/4.00The Kinks—LolaReg. 4.98/3.00Grateful Dead—American BeautyRea. 4.98/3.00ARSfor the musicrecords/tapes/ancl so forth2201 north sedgwickChicago 60614/312-528-9828just around the corner. ROCKEFELLERMEMORIALCHAPELSundayDecember 13, 197011:00 A.M.E. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the Chapel"The Question FromPrison"Weekday Chapel MusicTuesday, December 15, 12:15 p.m.Organ Recital, Edward Mondello,University OrganistWednesday, December 16, 12:15p.m. Carillon Recital, Robert Lodine,University Carillonneur THINK SUMMER DURINGWINTER BREAKPLAN NOW FOR A SUMMER OFCREATIVITY AND SELF EXPRESSIONIN ISRAELISRAEL SUMMER PROGRAMSKibbutz, Archaeology, University,Tours, Arts, Dance, Drama, HebreworSHERUT LA1 AM—A year program com¬bining a study of Hebrew and teachingor working on kubbutz or in a develop¬ment town.CONTACT: ISRAEL PROGRAMS220 S. State StreetChicago, Illinois 60604(312) 939-6427JESSEISON'ST &7S2-at70, 753-tlfO, 3A3-91M. 1340 C. SM 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,curt oliR NUMBER hUK FUTURE REFERENCE1-215-878-5800.Guilini on Musical ModesContinued from Page OneWith concert seasons getting longer every year, thetask of music direction seems to be getting moreonerous, and there seem to be fewer and fewer peoplewho can handle it. Do you think we ’re going to see theend of the permanent music director in the future?It depends a lot on the person. I am full ofadmiration for music directors who manage so wellas conductors and organizers at the same time, but Iam not able to do this. But if there are musicians whohave the capacity and the quality and the energy totake the responsibility of conductor and musicdirector, then, why not?Are there any composers, or is there any period ofmusic, for which you feel a special affinity, under¬standing, or sympathy?A difficult question, and almost impossible toanswer. I think that when a musician plays orconducts a work, it means that he is completelyinvolved in this composition. That means that, in thismoment, this composition is the composition, the onethat he must like. If you are really honest withyourself, you conduct the music which you reallybelieve in and understand.Which, do you feel, of the body of classical works, arethe most difficult symphonies or operas to perform?And for what reasons?I will answer you with a kind of joke, yes? If youknow an easy work to perform, tell me! I should bevery grateful to you. It seems to me that everythingabout performing music is difficult. I never find apiece of music which is easy to do. I have just finishedrehearsing a Haydn symphony; it is so difficult thatwe are getting crazy.There are a few compositions which are especiallydifficult, for example the Missa Solemnis by Beetho¬ven, because there are so many problems involved inthe composition. The composer himself seeks toresolve many problems in the Missa. Also, manycompositions are difficult for technical reasons, but I don’t speak about technical reasons now, I speakabout musical reasons.What do you think about the future of grand opera? Itis a very expensive medium, and there seems to be amore self-limiting repertoire every year.The problem brings us back to the first questionthat you asked me about the future of music. Untilnow, until the last forty years, as I said before, musicwas concentrated on aspiration, on the word-melody.The human voice was the most beautiful instrumentto express the melody. You see, from Gluck, fromMonteverdi, to Verdi, to Wagner, and so on, you seethe development of this beautiful instrument, thehuman voice, which gave the grand opera themelodrama, its great development. Now, the end ofthe conception of melody, and of tonality, has broughtan end to contemporary opera in the old meaning ofthis word. But the old repertoire will go on and on; how long? How long will we listen to La Boheme andto Trovatore, and so on?What is your impression of electronic music and itscombination with traditional instrumentation andsonorities?I spoke about this problem with a very intelligentcomposer from Holland, who is also an electronicsengineer and has worked on electronic music. He saidour big mistake is that we perform the tapes whichwe did as experiments, so everybody thinks it isalready an artistic result. But he said to me that theelectronic instrument is now, in comparison with art,like the first primitive words of primitive man were,in comparison with great poetry.But this presents a big question: if electronic musicis absolutely primitive, then, must we wait onehundred or two hundred years to know what willhappen? When the first man made the first noises 'with his voice, we didn’t know what Dante orShakespeare would produce!How do you feel about conducting, the music ofGustav Mahler, a composerwho indulged in a lot ofmusical autobiography in his work?I feel very strongly his human drama, his me¬lancholy, his doubt and his human feeling. And I feelalso very much — perhaps, because I spent a lot ofmy life in the South Tyrol — this kind of smilingnostalgia that is sometimes in his thematic folkparts.Do you have any particular guiding philosophy whichhas motivated you throughout your conductingcareer, and, if so. what is it?Only one. Just never to ask anything fromanybody, never to push, and to wait until everythingcomes from themselves. Work very hard, study.Never in my life did I write a letter to ask somethingfrom somebody. I was never in a hurry. I alwaysthought it was better for something to come threeyears later than to come three minutes too early.rCONTEMPORARYEUROPEAN FILMSWINTER SCHEDULEWednesday, January 6Saturday,January 9Sunday,January 10Saturday, January 23Sunday,January 31Saturday, February 6Sunday, February 7Sunday, February 14Sunday, February 21Saturday, March 6Sunday, March 7Saturday, March 13* V* 't'lVt VtV* Vt*4 VvV* 4'4VfcV*Vi'iV4'4'*'« * V* 4|. The Wild HunchIfRand of OutsidersRutch Cassidy & theSundance KidThe FixerWar & Peace Part IWar & Peace Part IIThrone of Rlood & MDiary of a ChambermaidThe Lion in WinterRlack OrpheusTo Re Announced(Yellow Submarine/Satyricon/Easy Rider) IDecember IJ, 1970/.Grey City. 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All you have to do to light the fire ismaiUhis coupon.^Admissions Officer - Postgraduate StudiesHoneywell Institute of Information SciencesLa Salle Wacker Building221 North La Salle StreetChicago, Illinois 60601 (312) 368 0bts8□ I would like additional information on yourprogram□ I would like to arrange an interviewV on — at(date) (time)t Honeywell will call you to confirm this date andi’ time.f Name: .College Address: - _Phone: _Home Address:Phone:Approved for veterans JTlie Other Computer Company:HoneywellKAMA □SUTRATHE MOTION PICTUREKAMA SUTRA SEEN BYMILLIONS OF MEN ANDWOMEN IN EUROPEAND ASIA IS NOWFREE TO BE SHOWNIN THE UNITED STATES...ANSWERS QUESTIONS EVEN A MAN ANDWIFE DON’T DARE ASK EACH OTHER!COME TO THEKAMA SUTRAI WANT TO SHOW YOU SOMETHING!..in color8.UNO DKTRtCH ■ Pf.SIS KMAUBATTA . AiCMA.D AB.OTT . PRIM NATHFARVAL KARIM • MARIN KAIHIIR • BARBARA SCMONI ■ f-ANZISKA BRONNIN • IAI KUMARA CONTI-FILM — Proofed .«a D.r.ci.o b» KOBI JAEGER and RICHARO R RIMMElM„„c IRMIN SCHMIDT * world sal is Eiportfilm Bitchoff * Co782-8230WALGREEN'S GRILLNightly Student Specials!Mon: $ QftChili Mac roll-butter »mmTues: QQ2 pcs. Chicken, fries, roll • mmWed: QQBeef Chop Suey & Rice, roll, butter *mmThurs: qqSpaghetti-Meat Sauce, Garlic Roll •mmFri:. ooFish Dinner, fries, roll, butter •mm"in the Hyde Park 5>hopping Center"Open Mon., Tues., Wed., & Sat. to 7:30 Thurs Fri tnP OflSnn 10-6 ~Yauthentic* Dinners• Late Snacks• Private PartiesMake yourreservations for NewYear's Eve PartyDistinctive, 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. 53idS»Jwt Off Oute BrineAlep DaHycW Fork tor* MgMSTAUtAMT A I0UNM955-5151Efen$Tuesday Nigl15% DiscountFor the U. of C. Students;Faculty Members and Per¬sonnel. Bring this ad fordiscount. "ALBERT FINNEY MAKES SCROOGE AGE FROM 30 TO 60AS ONLY A GREAT ACTOR CAN!” ^“Albert Finney turns Scrooge into e marvelous tour de force e —Parents Magazine“Albert Finney s award-quality performance is beautiful.” “Albert Finney is absolutely marvelous.• 1 * r —ChAf'es Champhn Los Angeles Times —Seventeen Mag*/nr‘Albert Finney is fascinating.” "Albert Finney, a masterful performance. "Albert Finney has a high old time.—Good Housekeeping Magazine" SCROOGE’ IS A BRILLIANT MUSICAL!”n I <r’>s t>rsentaioNow through December 17th atthe Michael Todd Theatre.Starting Friday. December 18th atChicago and suburban neighboihoodtheatres. ALBERT F1NND "SCROOGE" EDITH EVANS and KENNETH mOREAlso Siarig l ament e m» rvw* Mrd»» , ff fcg mjMfCg « "vnuMyl* irvr Hr«Oevitl txiAngA ArUtn Hmtgr* Suza<»ir Neve BOO elLX.V VIVJIl »1 1 LOO (>**»►. i >n iu*v. A C t«.ii<w*- ( .«, .Musa ana iy<* by lev* br<uvs»- Muvr laavjui wu and Sajervtrr1 tty hml.aM- { hi iAmt r. rw K.fmrtxfn! by ffut«e,i H Sok> 0*« wxJ tty RrmaklNwamr Pan»v*%«jn* 1#i rm« .a«' a 1 v[Orig.fygi Soundtrack Album AvWfcte on Cotumfen Ne« j ' ■ t;LET THE FOLKS BACK HOME KNOW WHAT YOU RE INTO.In touch with a Maroon subscription foronly $8. This sends all issues forthe academic year.CHICAGO MAROON 1712 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637Name...Address.Z'PKOSHER PADSAVAILABLEOver the Interim BreakNO CHARGECall Avraham 478-7057COMES M* Willi TOd WAIT!Letteri, Form*. Report*. BuHrinhDaily 8 30 am ~ 5 pmCrPi with ordera- Vj- M7-2410AY UTTIB A FtinTino SIBVICI1950 EAST 75th St (At Jeffery)(■'Ei-- = ----- Ji L HAyfcOri ALL-NIGHT iHO»VPFRFOftMINCES FRI04T 4 S4TURD4T FOFIO.INC UFSr REGULIfi FFIIUBFDEC.11“THE STERILECUCKOO" DEC.12“ME NATALIE"18 19“THE OUT Of TOWNIRS" “KING OF HEARTS"(12:00 4 1:45) (12:00 4 2:00)25 26“BARBAREUA" "THE WILD BUNCH"(12:00 41:45) (12:00 4 2:15)PIZZApLATTZKPizza, Fried Chicken .Italian Foods JCompare the Price! I1460 E. 53rd 643-280o|WE DELIVER IL- ---J JAN. 1DADDY'S GONE A HUNTING'(12:00 4 1:45) JAN. 2“MONTEREY POP"(12:00 4 1:30 4 3:00)JAN. 8“TELL THEMWILLIE BOY IS HERE'(12:00 4 1:45) JAN. 9"CHARLEY"(12:00 4 1:45 4 3:30)nans si so4RJ for YOUNG COLLECTORSNOVEMBER ZJ - DECEMBER Z2,1970GRAPHICS ‘ PAINTINQ 'SCULPTURE fZ to #300Renaissance Society a! the university f ChicagoGOODS PEED HALL , TOW EAST 59 th ST.MON. mi. W ; SAT. SUN. i-5 DESKS-BOOKCASESSWIVEL CHAIR - LAMPS - TABLESNEW & USEDequipment&SUPPLY CO.8440 So. South Chicago Ave.(Parallel to Chicago Skyway)Open Mon. -Sat. 8:30 -5:00Wed. -9:00 p.m.RE 4-2111Immediate Delivery12/Grey City Journal/December 11, 1970Imported and Domestic Film FareContinued from Page NineAt Maud’sThe best foreign film of the year is unfortunatelycoming during break, but it should still be here whenwe get back. Eric Rohmer’s My Night at Maud's wasthe unqualified hit of the New York Film Festival afew years back, and it fully deserves all its praise.Jean-Louis Trintignant (of Z) gives an incrediblysubtle and amusing performance as a devout Catho¬lic with fixed ideas on girls and marriage — he pickedout a girl in church from a distance — who spends aneye-opening overnight with equally intelligent butphilosophically divergent Maud The plot is delicious¬ly ironic and comic.But better yet, this is a film which featuresconservations — people really talk about things thatconcern them, and their talk is uniformly intelligentand fascinating. Intelligence is also the keynote ofRohmer’s direction; he lets us see clearly through hiscamera’s genius for observation. His use of geomet¬ric figures during a discussion on Pascal, probabilityand God, is inspired. Rohmer, an older critic onCahiers du Cinema when the New Wave boys werethere (he co-authored a book on Hitchcock withChabrol), has received little attention here until now,although Maud is the third of a projected series of SixMoral Tales.We owe a debt to Contemporary Films and theThreepenny Cinema for offering Maud. It opensDecember 23. If there was ever a film made for theshy and slightly self-conscious academicians we allare here on the Midway, this is it. We can see andenjoy intellect in Maud, where both mind and heartare funny, bright, and compassionate.— Myron MeiselDowney’s PoundRobert Downey’s Pound, which will be at theThree Penny December 16 to 22, is the best comedy ofthe year. Downey has done something that is rareboth in movies and in his own canon (which includesthe wretched Putney Swope): a comedy that is bothfunny-strange and funny-ha-ha. Briefly, Pound operates on the premise that thedogs in New York’s pound become humans. We spendmuch of the movie in the pound, as the dogs-peopleget to know each other, in ways that are frequentlyobscene and hilarious.Of course, we’re all in the pound, and the successof the film derives from Downey’s finding such aunique, terrifying and funny metaphor for life andcivilization. And making us laugh at it.Putney Swope had some good comic ideas, buttheir execution — except for the film’s openingsequence — was miserable. In Pound, backed by a$400,000 budget from United Artists, Downey hascleared up many of his directorial problems, and,happily, has gone into new territory.Pound is loaded with good and funny things: apair of spaced-out dogcatchers, an amorous tryst atthe restaurant at LaGuardia airport that results in amessy tussle, and Downey actor par excellenceLawrence Wolf hamming it up as the chief hound ofthe pound, a washed-up vaudeville actor.Whether Pound means that Downey will go oijmaking good movies, or whether it’s just a one-shotwith a great story idea remains to be seen. But sodoes the movie. And you should.— Charles FlynnTwo WarholsTwo of Andy Warhol’s latest products, Flesh(directed by Paul Morrissey) and Lonesome Cow¬boys, are currently on display at the World Theater(410 South Michigan). There is much misunder¬standing and misinformation around about Warhol’sfilms: people seem to think they’re all eight-hourtime studies of the Empire State Building or peoplesleeping. But those date from Warhol’s “Edison”period (1964-65); lately, he’s been turning out “real”movies. Real in that they employ actors, dialogue,editing, and all the other devices that we fastidiousaestheticians consider esssential to the cinema.I once tried defending Warhol’s films to theeminent director Fritz Lang, and wound uphopelessly enmeshed in a network of verbal con¬fusion. Warhol, in some ways, is like Hawks: it’s all A dead Stacey Keach in McCloudthere on the screen. Either you see it or you don’t,and there’s little point in attempting to convince thecommitted. But if you haven’t seen a Warhol film,Lonesome Cowboys is the one to see.First, it’s really a western: much more so thanHigh Noon, or True Grit, or other vapid, impersonalexercises that flaunt their contempt for and superior¬ity to the genre. It has three great performances, bythe immortal Taylor Mead, Viva! and FrancesFrancine, who plays a transvestite sheriff.Warhol’s world may be bisexual, but it is neverperverse. Indeed, Lonesome Cowboys is the clearestand purest example of the homosexual basis of malecompanionship in the Old West; AC-DC is less anoperative concept than are nostalgia and regret.Warhol and Company shot the film on location inArizona, but then returned to currupt old New York,where Flesh takes place. Joe D’Alessandro (who alsois to be seen in Cowboys), plays a (presumably)heterosexual young man who becomes a hustler inorder to earn money to finance an abortion for his girlfriend’s best friend. If you find this situationamusing, you’ll probably like Flesh. It’s a beautifullymade film, and D’Alessandro is perfect, whethergiving advice to would-be young hustlers, or cavort¬ing with a lecherous art historian.— Charles Flynn“ Wine is one of the most civilized things inthe world, and one of the natural things ofthe world that has been brought to thegreatest perfection, and it offers a greaterrange for enjoyment and appreciation thanpossibly any other purely sensory thingwhich may be purchased.”Le Bourguignon invites you to explorethe full range of sensory possibility towhich Hemingway alludes in the preced¬ing statement. A free bottle of Bordeauxto anyone ambitious enough to begin.Restaurant Le Bourguignon, located inthe former Country Club Hotel, 6930 S.Shore Drive. Telephone PLaza 2-2200.Attended Free Parking HELD OVERSpend a marvelous evening with eight of the boys.Mart Crowley’s“THE EOSIN THEEIANE”A Gncmd Cent?! Films ftesentdtonA NatcrW Grvul Pctmes ReteavCob b, DrW j R/today's childis Christine.NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURESPresentsHYDE PARK THEATRE53rd and Lake ParkNO 7-9071Student Discount-Sunday Matinee $1.50 Consideryourselfa crateof eggs.As a crate of eggs, there’salways the danger of becom¬ing an omelet. But in aRenault 16 you wouldn’t haveto worry. It has a unique 4-wheel independent suspensionsystem that has caused RoadTest Magazine to write: “theride of the Renault 16 can becompared only with that ofthe Rolls Royce, Mercedes, orCitroen.”Which should be of greatcomfort to any crate of eggs,let alone ahumanbeing.say"i love youwith a diamond frorr?I FINE JEWELERS FOR 60 YEARSUS K. Wabash ai WasmngtonI ENGLEWOOO EVERGREEN PLAZA -jCeilu9mnorti,J.nc.2347 So MirhigonTel. 326-2550December 11, 1970/Grey City Joumal/13HOW TODECORATE10HOLIDAY TREESWITH GIFTSFOR UNDER$50FATHERMOTHERSISTERBROTHERBOYFRIENDS(1) Eric(2) RubensteinGIRLFRIENDS(1)Zelda(2) Cassie Wine Rack $10.00Fondue Set 7.95Designer Candle 7.00Light Machine 9.95Touch Me 2.00Ego Card Game 3.00Sensitivity Poster 1.50Nut Cracker Set 4.00Total $45.40cooley's corner inc., 5211 s. harper courtChicago, Illinois 60615 (312) 363-4477 1971LUTHERAN STUDENTSTUDY CONFERENCEKKYNOTER* Mv. Robert KeriUnUNIVERSITY PASTOR, WITTENBERGGeorge Williams College CampWilliams Bay (Lake Geneva), WisconsinFor more information:call 363-8272363-3518 Cost: $26.00 (Subsidies areavailable through localcampus ministry agencies)ADDED ATTRACTIONS:SkatingTobogganinglit1January 8"10 COMPARE PRICESHelp beat the Establishment!Corrib Pinto Vrikswagen Vega*1942“ *2292” *2334** ’2628”(Volkswagen 1970 price; all others 1971 price)The Corolla price includes only stan¬dard equipment; the other prices in¬clude options whLli must be added tobare cars to make them equal to theCorolla, such as whitewall tires, wheeldiscs, tinted glass, reclining seats,opening rear vent windows, bumperguards, tool kit, etc.ISSSSMON WESTERN INC6941 SO WESTERN -776-4016kl i • OrEverything's New!The MidiGaucho Pants...JumpsuitsThe Complete Longeur LookTotal Look AccessoriesWE INVITE INQUIRIES FOR FASHION SHOWSHours 9:30 to 5:30 Monday thru SaturdaySundays, 11-4, starting Dec. 6 thru X-mas 1650EAST 53rd STREETPHONE 955-5291wnvuk$E)OF owe* «e*BiH>B6U4'T I AWIbS1BRW*"4 HMSkH RISC' 17 ^CHICAGOLANDS \ LARGEST SELECTIONOF SLACKS & JEANSTIHIE GKTaVFPANTS EXPLCSICNCHICAGO HIGHLAND PARK WAUKEGAN DES PLAINESOLD TOWN 2016 First Street 126 N. Genessee 1512 Miner1532 N. WellsThe Maroon Staffwishes itsreadersA Merry Christmas14/Grey City Journal/December 11, 1970 rRwRt »“«»*• r5« »!En AiWE 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 os 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 s6nd you 12 blank forms to use whenyou wish to ordain others. Your ordination is completelylegal and valid anywhere in this country. Your moneybock 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 60204i* fXwXuXi »Xi m AA k SHAPIROCOLLECTIONDUEWEDNESDAY-DECEMBER169 to 5 ROOM 209 IDA NOYES25‘ per day overdueStereo TapeCassette Systemby Bell & Howell• 2 Walnut Speakers• Delivering 20 watts perchannel• Records and plays instereo• Push Button Controls• Pause, Tone, andinterlocking controls• VU Meter• 2 OmnidirectionalmicrophonesOpen Evenings,Dec. 14 to ChristmasSunday, Dec. 20 12-5493-6700BOTTOMSGOTBOTTOMS*5.90and UpBut Worth More5222V? S. Harper Ave.Near Harper Court authentic• Dinners• Late Snacks• Private PartiesMake yourreservations for NewYear's Eve Party]Distinctive, 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.Juft OH Out*. Dn««Atop Tti*RESTAURANT a LOUNOf955-5151EfendiTuesday NiantTuesday Nig15% DiscountFor the U. of C. Students;Faculty Members and Per¬sonnel. Bring this ad fordiscount.WHO !SBIG B?MUSICmphony’s AutumnThe formula for a memorable con¬cert should include not only competentplaying and talented direction, but alsoa listerable, well-planned program.The concert given last Saturday, by theUniversity Symphony Orchestra, con¬ducted by Gene Narmour, met bothrequirements. The selections includedMendelssohn’s Hebrides Overture, TheSuite from Pulcinella by Stravinsky,and Mahler’s Fourth Symphony; inter¬estingly, each of these works came at atransitional period of the composer’scareer.The Hebrides Overture, composed in1829, can be called a forerunner of theimpressionistic music in the tonepoems that followed. Mendelssohn wasdeeply impressed by the sea, andexpresses in the Hebrides Overture thetheme of the loneliness of man in thevastness of nature. It is interesting tonote that he used leitmotives wellbefore they were made into a commonmusical device by Richard Wagner. series of contrasting pictures, regret¬tably, the quality of the performancewas also rather contrasted. The stringsection, particularly the violins, was abit squawky in their playing of thearpeggiated figures that being thework, and this performance did notbring out the overture’s aura of etern¬ity and the endless dominance of thesea. Rather, the sea seemed constantlychoppy.The second piece, the Suite fromPulcinella, has an interesting role inStravinsky’s music: it began what canbe called his neo-classical period,bringing to an end the era of the balletscomposed in the Russian style.The rhythms are important in theSuite; Stravinsky himself stated thathe picked sections of the music of the18th century Italian composer, Per-golesi not for their melodies but ratherfor their rhythms, in which this workexcels. Stravinsky frequently createspercussive effects without using the ing, instead, cellos, for example.)In Pulcinella, Stravinsky makes useof the concertante style of in¬strumentation, giving the solo mem¬bers of the orchestra an opportunity toshow their virtuosity. Special praise ismerited by the solo trombone and oboeplayers who produced a marvelouseffect in their solos.The direction of this work, however,was unsatisfactory. Abrupt breaks inthe tempi, and displaced accents re¬lieve the squareness of the rhythm; toooften, inaccurate playing slurred theserhythms over, inhibiting the spritelycharacter of the music.The last work on the program wasMahler’s Fourth Symphony, also atransitional point in the career of thecomposer, since from the Fifth Sym¬phony on, Mahler was to change hisstyle of composition greatly. Thiswork, one of Mahler’s less bombasticsymphonies, brought the Universityorchestra to life. The Fourth Sym- existence; the orchestra’s perform¬ance was truly heavenly. All the dis¬parateness in the string section dis¬appeared; the last two movementsparticularly resulted in some wonder¬ful playing. Narmour seems at his bestwhen conducting a more expansivework, such as this one.The soprano soloist for this sym¬phony performance was Barbara Pear¬son. In the work itself the human voiceis called upon to intensify the ecstacyof the music, singing the praises of thelife in heaven. Singing music takenfrom the songs of Das Knaben Wunder-hom, Miss Pearson sounded like a trueangel.The University Orchestra concertwas a study of contrasting and some¬times conflicting elements due to thechallenging compositions and the un¬even playing. The overall impression,however, was quite satisfying and sureto bring the audience back for more.—Thomas SokolowskiContemporary European Films 7 & 9:15 FREE 7 & 9:15ALICE'S RESTAURANT Fistful of DollarsSat. Dec. 12 Cobb Monday Dec. 14 CobbFar East KitchenChinese & AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen Daily 12- 10Fri. & Sat. 12 -12Closed Monday1654E 53rd955-2229 THE UNIVERSITY CHORUSFrank Tirro, DirectorpresentsA RENAISSANCE TRAVELOGUEHoward M. Brown, GuideFriday, December 11 & Sunday December 13BOND CHAPEL, 8:30 P.M.Free and open to the public. ART SALEBARGAINS! BARGAINS! BARGAINS!Works of Atricobra Artists & Guest. Paintings, Drawings,Weavings, Prints, Leather Crafts, Blown Glass, Pottery, &Clothing Designs for the family.Weekends only in the month of December.Saturdays, December 5th, 12th, 19th.Sundays, December 6th, 13th, 20th.Noon to 6 p.m.Art Auction each of these days 2-3 pm.WJ STUDIOS1521 E. 61st Street Off Stony Island Ave. Chicago493-4552ANY OCCASIONStudents & Faculty remember your20% discount on gifts at R.L.Brooks Interiors - with prices tofit every budget!Leather Coaster SetCheese BoardsWine SetsSoaps • Colognes • Candlesfree gift wrappingR.L. BROOKS Interiors1604 E. 53rd Street 684-3574Free customer parking one door East at the Prado GarageStore Honrs: Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs., Sat. 9-JO to 5J0Fri. 9-JO to 9:00Ptti liffl 1 ‘ jj ^TL'-tfeSh'-fe1 w*.r x .t t .t' A'cr v-x xIUM *¥ 0)Q —A "TjM ;:§§B Radio's,>•»•<>;♦;<>;«;<>;»:«>: — -M _>1 »!♦!( *!*!« •!•!« »!5T« »5!i i5!« iJCi »!•?« »5!« *51* *JArt Objects, Unique Glassware, Camera's'«!7« >!♦% »!*!« »7I«5!i »!5t« »!•!« »I5!« »!5% ►!•!« »5!« »,♦.«».*-! »!♦% »•♦•« •»K«5!«Rw»:«>>'« >;»;< >>;i »•< >v« >;«■« ri■?« »5!j i!J!i »T5T« >3|h1fagre vM </>M0ft a>2#5 »-m a>MM tomM *■>$1/1i®m,9"MO.M“itf</>M Oat? oycoS»*\sMKHM <-fl MMKMmHMM?1f5HmM¥MMNH:¥:2i*¥888MHMM¥!k*MM¥¥r«¥meBBSir? oc MMBM!>«,*<♦K*.Dmm¥:ri:♦«♦:2k 4Hat?UMu"B¥:r o M*2¥re¥¥ OH X¥ uHJ»H 0)NM ifres.,3mreMat?• 4HH»_jp The University of Chicago Bookstore reminds all students,faculty, and staff, to visit our new store for your Christmasshopping.We have hundreds of new book titles in stock, many 20%to 40% off list price.In addition, our supply, gift, and photographicdepartments have made every effort to display manyinteresting and unusual items.Season's GreetingBest Wishes for 1971The Bookstore5750 S. Ellis AveJ‘Sr^,S“S*'S,‘S,‘S,,SwS“SnSl‘S0SnSnSrtS<‘S“5sn^0s»2:«B^«a:«a*,!£«a«ss«s£«a(*2:«2:«K«a:»v«v«v4w«v«v«vir.w«»'.Children's Books, Graphic Prints, Reference BooksI >!•!! !!•! 4 l'A'4 l'4'4 S'4*ik'**i k*A*i k*A*i 4*4*4 4*4*4 k*4*J 4*4*i k*A<ik<A<4k«A*i A A. A A (D></>m$HUMH|M88H¥ mcq’o'v.*.« ».M i.mi.m M.1 ».*.« (Ki |5I< i5!i »!5!o!3I« (5!, ,!5!, ,^1 i5!i »S( »7j »5Ii »5!< »5!!*Ri rKi iSi r5Ii »!5!» iJEmSb *5!i 1H1 »5*, »5Si *16/Grey City Journal/December 11, 1970