The Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 26 The University of Chicago Friday, January 8, 1971Candidatesfor comm.Twelve students have been nominated toserve on the new committee on Universitywomen, according to dean of studentsCharles O’Connell who is receiving thenominations.• A $500,000 grant from the Andrew Mel¬lon Foundation, and• a $556,000 grant from an individual do¬nor. Bookstore runs smoothly in text rushToday is the deadline for submittingnominations. O’Connel said, however, thathe would accept those received on Monday.O’Connell was asked by the six facultymembers of the committee to seek studentnominations from student government(SG), the faculty-student advisory com¬mittee on campus student life (FSACCSL),the student councils, and the deans of stu¬dents in all academic areas.Nominations will be reviewed by thecommittee, which will then submit a panelof names to President Edward Levi. Leviwill appoint three students.Although men are eligible to serve on thecommittee, only women have been nomi¬nated so far. O’Connell also said that eightof the nominations are from individual fac¬ulty members or deans of students, andonly three from students. No nominationshave been received from SG or the studentcouncils.Eight of the nominees are graduate stu¬dents, of whom three are from the lawschool, two from the humanities division,and two from the social sciences division.All nominations should be accompaniedby a short paragraph describing the candi¬date’s qualifications. It should also bemade clear whether or not the individualnamed has been consulted and has in¬dicated a willingness to serve if appointed.The council of the University senate ap¬proved the creation of a standing com¬mittee on University women last Novem¬ber. The faculty members of the committeeincluding its chairman Erica Reiner, pro¬fessor of Near Eastern languages and civ¬ilizations, were nominated by Levi and ap¬proved by the committee of the council.The institution of such a committee wasone of the major recommendations of theNeugarten report on University women.A balance of $592,000 toward the totalproject cost of $2,648,000 is still to beraised.The library consists of the existing thirdf 1 o or reading rooms in Harper andWieboldt and will be expanded into thethird floor of Business East. It will even-Steve AokiNEW HARPER LIBRARY READINGROOM: A reception will be held here to¬day nn its reopening The beginning of the quarter rush fortextbooks has caused few problems at therecently moved University bookstore, ac¬cording to manager Harlan Davidson.The bookstore added four cashiers andhired students to bag books to accom¬modate the anticipated large increase inbusiness at the beginning of the quarter, hesaid.There were “few long lines and it issmoother than it has ever been,” he added.Davidson said the lack of shelf space fortextbooks is a major problem. Books mustbe brought over from the bookstore ware¬house located in the building behind thebookstore when supplies of books are soldout.One problem was that there was no placeto take fall quarter books when winterquarter books were put on the shelves, headded. They had to be piled in the aisles inthe warehouse until room could be made.The University’s quarter system, withmore courses, requires more space forbooks than is needed at schools on the se¬mester system, Davidson noted.Plans presently call for an expansion ofthe bookstore to cover all five floors of thebuilding by fall 1972. Steve AokiREMODELLED HARPER LIBRARY: Renovation was made possible by grants from various foundations and doners.Davidson said, “Student reaction hasbeen almost universally favorable.” Healso noted a large increase in the sale ofgeneral books and gift items during theChristmas season.Continued nn page 5 Steve AokiUNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE: The usual beginning of the quarter squeeze and rushwere alleviated somewhat this quarter by the new facilities at the book store’s newIneatinn.Renewed college library opensAn open house will be held today from3:30 to 5 pm in the new undergraduate li¬brary on the third floor of Harper and Wie¬boldt.The undergraduate library is the firststep in the construction of a new CollegeCenter at the University. The center willutilize the currently vacant space in Har¬per.The space became available last summerwhen the books and offices in Harper weremoved to Regenstein Library.Renovation was made possible by fundsfor the total program, including the centerand humanities division offices and class¬rooms. Money came from the followinggrants:• A $1,000,000 grant from the KresgeFoundation, contingent on the Universityraising the balance needed; tually contain approximately 60,000 vol¬umes.Regenstein Library, while open to all stu¬dents , is designed primarily as a graduatestudent research center. The under¬graduate library will contain books gener¬ally used by undergraduates.In addition to the library, the new CollegeCenter is expected to contain on the firstfloor two large classrooms, 10 seminarrooms, and space for the Office of CollegeAdmissions and Aid.The second floor will have 42 offices forCollege administrative staff and faculty.There also will be a large conference cen¬ter and a staff lounge. The towers will con¬tain additional seminar rooms and facultyoffices.It is hoped that the main corridor on the first floor will be developed into a gallery,featuring pictures of past deans as well asexhibits of faculty and student activities.Space for College administrative and fac¬ulty offices in Gates-Blake is woefully in¬adequate, according to Lorna Straus, assis¬tant professor of anatomy and in the Col¬lege, and chairman of a special facultycommittee planning the College Center.“Many of our faculty have to share of¬fices,” she said. “Some of these offices con¬tain no more than 80 square feet.”Mrs Straus and her committee are work¬ing closely with a student advisory group inmaking plans for the College Center.The renovation of additional space for thehumanities division will take place in theformer bookstacks in Wieboldt hall andClassics.HAVE YOU EVER FELT A CALENDAR?C ooley J now has Oelt calendars in jive lanyuayeS. oriyinally fire do (far s now two-fifty._9n addition Cooley J annual Safe of imported and domestic pieces has heen cuffed the mostSelect on the drouth Side. Ohis year Cooley S is preSenhny the entire fine of £detty Fostermushroom waff pfayueS at half price • prices ranye from five to twenty-four dollars.Contemporary Candle holders from Omaha Idehrasha *- priced from two to twenty dollars.Scuda U'ord (fames of Soston priced from 503 are also half prue. Canadian (layJduherS from Ooronto oriyinully Seventeen dollars are now eiyht fifty. Suhurhan mushroomcandles from 325 to one sixty three. Sec retaria ( tUtU hall, room accessories fromhlianhallan priced from two to twenty do Kars. Oh ere are limi ted Selec tions of these and otherfine pieces to fit your fancy.cooley's corner in., 5211 s. harper courtChicago, illinois 60615 (312) 363*4477 MALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOWDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN UP TO $50 OR MORE DAILYWORK DURING SEMESTER BREAKSORDAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.PREGNANT? NEED HELP?PREGNANT? NEED HELP? Abortions are now legal in NewYork City up to 24 weeks. The Abortion Referral Service willprovide a quick and inexpensive end to your pregnancy. Weare a member of the National Organization to LegalizeAbortion. CALL 1-215-878-5800 for totally confidentialinformation. There are no shots or pills to terminate apregnancy. These medications are intended to induce a lateperiod only. A good medical test is your best 1st action toinsure your chance for choice. Get a test immediately. Ourpregnancy counseling service will provide totally confidentialalternatives to your pregnancy. We have a long list of those wehave already assisted should you wish to verify this service.COPY .OL'R NUMBER FOR FUTURE REFERENCE1-215-878-5800.| Contemporary European Films presentsIF| Sat. Nov. 9! 7 & 9:15! —sentsGoddard'sBand of Outsiders Sun. Nov. 10 !7 & 9:15STUDENT SPECIALSunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday1 - 10 through 1 - 146 PACK OF POP WITHORDER OR ANY LARGE PIZZAwith a University I.D.NICKY'S1208 East 53rd StreetFAirfax 4-5340Fri. DELIVERY ONLY 25' Sat. with any food orderand a University I.D.TODAY’S LIBRARIAN LOOKS TOTHE PAST AND THE FUTURE:THE WORLD’S KNOWLEDGE,TODAY’S NEEDS ANDTOMORROW’S CHALLENGEFind Out About Earning theMaster's Degree Requiredto Become aProfessional LibrarianWrite to or Phone:ILLINOIS STATE LIBRARYCAREERS CENTER35 East Warker DriveChicago. Illinois 60601(312) 332 3921 DESKS -BOOKCASESSWIVEL CHAIR - LAMPS - TABLESNEW & USEDC BRAND EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8440 So. South Chicago Ave.(Parallel to Chicago Skyway)Open Mon. -Sat. 8:30 -5:00RE 4-2111Imrnediate DeliverySpecial Discount for Studentsand faculty with I.D. cardELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E 53rd St288 iVOO2/The Chicago Maroon/January 8. 1971 Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.684-6856 Colberts Jasn/Ol?clearancePANT SUITSReg $28Reg $32Reg $40we do not carryfashions over . . .all winter fashionsreduced! come earlyfor bestselection!Final Sale On Reduced ItemsOper^Ar^Albert'^Chargt^^^UC begins recreation program at BoucherIda Noyes board formulated for winter quarter By JIM HAEFEMEYER andUSA CAPELLBOUCHER GYMNASIUM: The University has begun a year-round recreation program here for the community. Frank GruberIllinois Circle Campus evicts newspaperBy GORDON KATZThe Chicago Illini, student newspaper ofthe University of Illinois Chicago CircleCampus (UICC), has been denied a renew¬al of its lease of office space in the ChicagoCircle Center. The denial of office space, byUICC Chancellor Norman Parker, whichamounts to an eviction, has forced the Illinito move to an off-campus location.In notifying the Illini of the decision notto extend their lease, Parker stated that “itis in the best interests of both the Illini andthe university to establish in the clearestpossible manner the independent nature ofthe paper.”Prior to this decision made in late No¬vember, the Illini was leasing office space,desk, and files for $43.83 per month. Therental fee was necessitated by the June trustees not to subsidize any student news¬paper. .Although, according to one Illini staffmember, “the administration has never leton publicly what the problem was,” Parkersaid that the off-campus facilities would in¬sure the paper’s independence and free himfrom responsibility for its content.“The board of trustees held the chan¬cellor responsible for anything printed inthe Illini,” Vice-Chancellor Leonard Good-all said. The decision not to extend thelease, according to Goodall, came as an al¬ternative to exercising some form of cen¬sorship.Members of the Illini staff believe thatthe act on the part of Chancellor Parkerwas politically motivated and a contin¬uation of the harassment of the newspaper1968 decision of the chancellor and the which began last June. At that time, theChicago ILLINIBoard rejects student trusteeVolume 11Number 11January 4, 1971(extracted from the Daily Olini)by Polly AndersonThe. University Board of Trustees at itsDecember session unanimously opposed theidea of changing policy to allow placementof students on the Board.The Trustees had received the requestfrom the Illinois Board of Higher educationto consider the concept, which had beenrecommended by the higher board's Ad HocStudent Advisory Committee, though it hadnot actually been endorsed by the higherboard Itself.In other Trustee affairs it was decidedby Illinois Attorney General William Scottthat insurance millionaire Clement Stonecould be immediately replaced by newlyelected Hoard member Koger Pogue. Whilethe other new Board members will not takeoffice imtil March. Stone can legally bereplaced at this time, since he was onlyserving out the term of Harold Pogue, whopassed away last year.The Student Advisory Committee reportftirker finaliseiilLLIM eviction' IC( Chancellor Norman Parker denied requesting the extension. Vice Chancellor answered: “WeTl fight just as hard Ithe Chicago Illini’s request for a 30-day Leonard Goodall immediately added: “Be back on campus whether, or not we g<extension beyond the Decembe r 31 date he sure you state in your letter that it is also extension.” on Board membership had recommendedthat statutes be amended to provide thatstudent-body presidents of Illinois publiccolleges, universities, and junior colleges,or their designated representatives, serveon the governing boards of their collegesor universities.A report of the Trustees' General PolicyCommittee, headed by Peoria RepublicanTimothy Swain, stated: “Although the lawsof the State of Illinois do not prevent astudent from running for or serving on theBoard, we do not think it either wise oradvantageous to have individuals serve onthe Board in a student capacity or becauseof that capacity.”The higher board had stated, and theTrustees had agreed, that the proposal, itpassed, “could jeopardize the concept oflay sif>ervision and control", which wasimportant if the University was to remainaccountable to all people. “No universitycan operate in isolation,” the Trustees’report stated.Student membership on a lay board, thereport stated, “could involve conflicts ofinterest arising from dual accountability".F urthermore, the report said, a studentwould probably be serving 0.1 the Boardfor no more than two years, and would nothave time to gain the experience necessaryto make a good Trustee. A student wouldgraduate and leave the Board “at the pointat which he wquld be best able to serve theUniversity and the public*.The Hoard reaffirmed its policy, adopted university confiscated all copies of an issuewhich contained pictures of a nude swim.In the same issue, the results of a facultyevaluation poll conducted by the Illini waspublished. The results, according to a staffmember, were in a few cases quite criticalof some instructors, and included in the ar¬ticle were equally critical student com¬ments concerning unnamed faculty mem¬bers.Now that they are off-campus, membersof the Illini staff fear that they will not begranted permission to use on-campus dis¬tribution bins which, according to manag¬ing editor Stan Cygan, are vital to the dis¬tribution of the weekly newspaper.The Illini, however, has been promisedthe use of the bins until March 8 in a letterfrom James Overlock, director of auxiliaryservice.The Illini, an independent corporation,still hopes to return to its on-campus loca¬tion where it was closer to campus activity.The new offices, located two blocks north ofthe campus, has the added disadvantage ofcosting $300-a-month.The argument that the Illini’s move off-campus is “in the best interest of the uni¬versity” is sharply disputed by businessmanager Steve Sands. He termed the UICCadministration’s attitude “immature, con¬descending, and confusing.”In a front-page reply to Parker’s evictionnotice, Sands contended that “a qualitynewspaper is in the best interest of the uni¬versity,” and that the chancellor’s actionadversely affects the achievement of sucha newspaper.“A newspaper’s independence is definedby its content and source of funds,” Sandssaid. “Using such a yardstick,” he added,“the Illini’s independent nature has beenquite clear for over two years.” The University will begin a year-aroundneighborhood recreation program by open¬ing Boucher hall’s pool and gym to commu¬nity youth tonight.The facilities will be open Fridays 5 pmto 9 pm and Saturdays 10 am to 4 pm. Stu¬dents will be required to register, and topay one dollar toward accident insurance.Herb Smith, director of the “Summer70” program in Ida Noyes, has been ap¬pointed an assistant to vice-president Wal¬ter Walker specifically to direct the on¬going program.Smith said that the Boucher program willnot offer as many activities as the “Sum¬mer 70” program because of space limita¬tions. He said that once the Boucher pro¬gram gets under way he will direct his at¬tention to developing the program in coop¬eration with the YMCA and other HydePark organizations.“It will go on next summer, probablyback in Ida Noyes,” Smith said.The opening of the facilities was post¬poned from December 1 to allow time tomake physical changes at Boucher, accord¬ing to Walker.Smith said he could not anticipate howmany youths would register for the pro¬gram, but that the response of Universitystudents has been “very good.” SeveralBoucher residents have involved them¬selves in staff and voluntary work, he said.Smith is also trying to arrange work-studyprogram positions.“People have asked if they could volun¬teer,” he said. »However, Boucher house president JohnFenner 71 said that residents “panicked”when they saw in the Maroon that theprogram was to begin.“The house does not back it,” he said.Fenner said that after residents came tohim with concerns about security, he ar¬ranged a dorm council meeting with Smith.Later Smith spoke at a full dorm meeting.“Smith was proud of the fact that he firstorganized the program, and then consultedus,” Fenner said. “He just told us ‘the Uni¬versity will do this.’ We asked him ques¬tions but he didn’t ask us any.”According to Fenner, only two out ofsome 80 residents expressed positive inter¬est in the program. Smith said that thedorm residents had been consulted.Fenner said he had received no assur¬ance about security. According to Smith,the University will make no extra securityarrangements.One Boucher resident complained thatresidents had not been actively consulted,and said that he did not like the idea of 4community youths roaming the building.“We’ve had kids in here before andthey’ve just run all over,” he said.Another resident supported the program.“Even if there is a problem with security, Ithink they should have the program,” hesaid. “There are enough guards aroundhere, certainly.”Walker said that the program would cost$14,000, beyond Smith’s salary, for the re¬mainder of the school year. The fundscome from the University general fund.The Ida Noyes Program Board, a newstudent organization, is presenting a pro¬gram of weekly social events at Ida Noyescalled “Up Against the Icy Wall, WinterQuarter.”According to Skip (“Dan B.”) Landt, di¬rector of student activities and head of theboard, the program is designed to combatthe legendary brutalities of the Chicagowinter quarter, and to help make IdaNoyes into a legitimate student union.The program board was conceived of last month by Mike Buckner, chairman of theBandersnatch committee. A need was seento get more students over to Ida Noyes torescue flagging Snatch operations.Although the board is composed atpresent of only about six members, repre¬sentatives from all dorms are wanted. Ac¬tivities have been planned only for the sec¬ond and third weeks of the quarter so thatmore people can be in on future activities.The first activity sponsored by the boardfeatures a dance with the Siega! Schwa!! blues band Friday, Jan 15 at Ida Noyes.Beginning at 9 pm, it will also include a“gala light show” and experimental films.A bluegrass concert by the Lake CountyString Band will be held the following Fri¬day in the second “Up Against the IcyWall. . .” program.Landt hopes that this program will be aneffective means of checking student ennui,which, together with the Bandersnatchnight club, will provide guaranteed week¬end action. Frank GruberNEW COMMUNITY FACILITY: Boucherwill now serve the neighborhood people,contrary to the wishes of the residents.January 8,1971/The Chicago Maroon/3» » Mil I •» O VHYDE PARKSUPERMARKETAlinsky forclass actionFrank GruberSUN SHINES ON THE C-SHOP: A bright new remodelled C shop will have a gala opening January 15 with piped in FM music,new decor, and a new menu.$500,000 oil grantUC receivesA $500,000 grant by Standard Oil (In¬diana) foundation to the University wasannounced today by University PresidentEdward H Levi.The total includes a grant of $50,000 tothe Chicago Lying-In Hospital, and thefoundation suggested that the University al¬locate an equal amount from the grant tothe graduate school of business.Foundation president Robert Gunnesssaid, “These funds are unrestricted and may be used to support innovations inteaching and curriculum, research, facultysalaries, libraries, building programs, orany other purposes desired as long as theyare spent currently to improve educationand are not used for endowment purposes.”The present grant, payable over a periodof five years, brings the total of StandardOil (Indiana) Foundation support of theUniversity to more than $1.8 million. In accepting the grant Levi pointed outthat during the University’s recent $160million capital campaign, the Standard Oil(Indiana) foundation made the largest gift— $1 million — the University had everreceived from a corporate donor.Similarly, he said, the new grant repre¬sents the highest level of annual programsupport yet received from a corporatesource. Saul Alinsky, social agitator and commu¬nity organizer, whose students began TheWoodlawn Organization (TWO), is urgingthe people of Hyde Park-Kenwood to im¬prove their quality of life by creating“power-oriented middle-class groups.”Alinsky, currently organizing middle-class groups throughout the country, be¬lieves Hyde Park-Kenwood is ripe for or¬ganizing. He sees the community’s middleclass threatened by crime, angered by de¬teriorating public schools, anxious aboutair and water pollution and squeezed bytaxes and inflation.In a speech and question and answer ses¬sion billed “The Alienated Middle — Tin-derbox for Political Action,” Alinsky willshow Hyde Park-Kenwood how to organizeto effectively resolve urban problems in ad¬dressing an open meeting Monday at 8 pmin the First Unitarian Church, 5650 Wood-lawn.Alinsky thinks the middle class may seize“its share of power for probable reform”by organizing around what it cares about —taxes, gun control, pollution, schools andzoning.“In some ways the middle class is morealienated than the poor,” Alinsky pointsout. “They don’t have a special anything —special funding programs, special admis¬sions to universities. These people are justthrashing around in their own frustra¬tions.”Alinsky believes improving America’squality of life means organizing its middleclass. “Almost four-fifths of America ismiddle class economically,” he states, “soyou have to be blind not to see where orga¬nization has to go.”Alinsky has established Industrial AreasFoundation Institute whose graduates haveorganized, in addition to TWO, the Cam¬paign Against Pollution that forced Com¬monwealth Edison to reduce its pollution inChicago, and the efforts of Cesar Chavez.1346 E. 53rdIs Happy To AnnounceThe Opening Of Our NewStudent Operated StoreOpen 7 days a week 9-7 daily 9-2 SundayK*******w* ★ ★★★★★★★★★★*★★★★★*★★*★★★**★★★■****★★* ******This WeeksIO SPECIALS'1.29/ib. Red Potatoes -10 lb. bag 59c;.... 597*.- 7 Up 16 oz. pack 85';697*»• Lettuce 19c:597*.. Centrolla Bread 5 loaves ...$1.00:*.... 597ib. Wanzer Ice Cream • Vi gal.... 79* S*4 The Chicago Maroon/January 8,1971 Special For Students25* Refundon purchase of$5.00 or morewith this coupon 50* Refundon purchase of$10.00 or morewith this coupon25e Refundon purchase of$5.00 or morewith this coupon 50* Refundon purchase of$10.00 or morewith this coupon25* Refundon purchase of$5.00 or morewith this coupon 50* Refundon purchase of$10 OO or morewith this couponChicago police critic:gubernatorial hopefulSteve AokiDAN WALKER: Gubernatorial candidate discusses politics over dinner at Pierce Tower. By CON HITCHCOCKWhat type of politician announces hiscandidacy two years before the election?What type of politician attacks his partyleaders, refuses to accept their endorse¬ment and still expects to win?What type of politician plans to run agrass roots campaign based on the issuesand without deals?Is he a Don Quixote? Harold Stassen?Lardaly?No, he’s gubernatorial candidate DanielWalker, author of the controversial reportwhich criticized the Chicago police duringthe 1968 Democratic National conventionand more recently was Senator Adlai Ste¬venson’s campaign manager.Last night, expressing confidence that hewould win in the 1972 race, he explained hisreasons for running and his political beliefsto forty people in resident master WayneBoot! s Woodward Court apartment.Walker is an outspoken critic of ChicagoMayor Richard Daley’s control of theDemocratic party and the effect this hasboth on the state and the party.Woodward begins random roomingBy LISA CAPELLTentative approval has been given a stu¬dent proposal to institute random roomingin Woodward Court’s three co-ed houses.Under random rooming, men and womencan live next dor to each other on the samefloors instead of being segregated by floors.It is the first time that such an arrange¬ment has been initiated in a freshman dor¬mitory.The proposal was submitted to dean ofstudents Charles O’Connell the weekend be¬fore exams by the residents of Upper Rick-ert, and Upper and Lower Flint.The rooming proposal was initiated andcarried through by these students with theconsultation of their resident heads. WayneBooth, resident master of Woodward Court,dean of freshman, James Vice, director ofstudent housing, Edward Turkington, andO’Connell. Booth said, “It is not clear how soon thisis going into effect and it is not clear howmany would not like the new room assign¬ments.”Today is the deadline for the filing ofopinion on the arrangement. According toTurkington, if everyone responds favorablythe random rooming can be implementednext week.Turkington feels “the major issue wasand is whether this is in fact what thehouse wants to do, and the rights of theindividual students have been respected.”Dean of freshman James Vice, feels thatthe major issue “is the protection of indi¬vidual rights of those who might not wantit.”According to Edward Kifer, residenthead of Upper Rickert, there was “somefairly articulate opposition but it was dealtwith in a fairly sensitive and democraticZl C7~JSUN 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 disabilityifflili GETASUI way.” Gregory Hancock, resident head ofLower Flint, said, “There was no headlongrush into random rooming. There was agreat deal of discussion about it.”Hancock said this decision does not in¬dicate that floor by floor co-ed housing has«failed, but that random rooming is merely“a way of facilitating what was begun floorby floor.”“There is a genuine feeling on the part ofthe residents of the three co-ed houses thatrandom rooming will facilitate men andwomen getting to know each other better,”he said. “They desire more interaction tocompensate for the differentiated feelingthat had come about in floor by floor.”Hancock referred to the different inter¬ests of male and female residents con¬cerning house activities, thereby causing asplit in the house.According to Barbara Koelb, residenthead of Upper Flint, the approval of thisproposal is on somewhat of a trial basis.Turkington said he is not sure whether itwas temporary or permanent.“It will probably last until the end of thisyear depending on how students feel,” hesaid. “What happens next year depends onthe housing needs in relation to the ratio ofmen to women students. However, I pre¬sume if people who live under such ar¬rangements like them, then it will contin¬ue.”According to Booth, Hancock and Tur¬kington, action depends on the final respon¬ses from the students. Both Koelb and Ki¬fer heartily favor the proposal.Random rooming is not expected to alterhouse life. Men and women are alreadypermitted to roam unescorted in co-edhouses, therefore no change is foreseen insecurity. He illustrated his point by describingsome dubius events including a re¬cent period of dangerously high pollution,discovery of $800,000 in the office of the lateDemocratic Secretary of State Paul Pow¬ell, the defeat of Warren Bacon, a blackman, in his race for chairmanship of theChicago Board of education, and a whop¬ping pay increase which the state legisla¬ture voted itself in the closing minutes ofits final session.Walker said that the unwritten rule ofChicago is, “Unless something has to comeout, you don’t say anything about it” andcited as an example the Walker report. Af¬ter its publication, many friends told himthat what he said may have been the truefindings, but “you should not have said itpublicly.”“I disagree with this,” he said. “I plan totake my candidacy to the people in an openprimary, and I will have nothing to do withthe slavemaking process whereby peoplelike Paul Powell are selected.“It’s curious that in Presidential races,we urge the candidates to enter primariesso we can see what they have to say. Thisis commonly accepted, even in Illinois.When it comes to a primary for governor,however, this doesn’t apply.”He devoted some time to a discussion ofthe state’s problems, urging more localcontrol and improved state government.“For too long we’ve been saying, ‘let Wash¬ington do it.’ But we’ve come to realize thatmost of the action is at the local level. Itshould be more so at the state level. If wedon’t revitalize state government, it’s goingto atrophy.”In the ensuing question period Walkercondemned the type of spying which thearmy allegedly conducted against some Il¬linois public officials.Regarding the upcoming mayoralty andaldermanic races he said that he wouldmake an endorsement according to “wheth¬er Jesse Jackson is or is not going to run.”He later said that any endorsement ofJackson, were he to run, would depend onthe reasons and the basis of the Jacksoncampaign. He added that he would makeendorsements of specific aldermanic candi¬dates when the individual situation was fa¬vorable politically.Walker’s appearance on campus wassponsored by Student Government.Bookstore movesContinued from page 1Davidson pointed out that it takes amonth to get books after they are ordered.Spring quarter reading lists will be re¬quested from faculty members in a fewweeks, he said.The bookstore moved to its present loca¬tion in the former University of Chicagopress building, 5750 Ellis, in early Novem¬ber. It had been temporarily located in theStagg Field Labs on the 57th St side of theRegenstein Library. The original bookstoreburned down in autumn 1969.GOLD CITY INN**** MaroonNew Hours:lunch 11:30 AM - 2:30 PMdinner 2:30 PM - 9:30 PMCLOSED WEDNESDAY"A Gold Mine of Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559(near Harper Court)Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.) $$$$$$Earn money painlessly on campus bymarketing travel programs. For detailswrite with personal resume to:Travel Co-ordinator5 Boylston St.,Cambridge, Mass. 02138PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!i46C c. j3iu 643-28CCL WE DELIVER J |AA Printed5^IUU COPIES J* WHILE YOU WAIT!Letters, Forms, Reports. Bulletins.Daily 8 30 a m - 5 p mCash with order_ W- 667 2410UAV UTTER A PRINTINO SERVICEI9SU t«»l /'Jtn o. iJanuary 8, 1971 /The Chicago Maroon/5The Chicago MaroonSTEVE COOK DON RATNEREditor Business ManagerCON HITCHCOCK, Managing EditorPAUL BERNSTEIN, News EditorSUE LOTH, Executive EditorSTEVE AOKI, Photography EditorJUDY ALSOFROM, NANCY CHISMAN, GORDON KATZ, AUDREY SHALINSKYAssociate Editors•RICK BALSAMO, SARA BEEBE, LISA CAPELL, JOE FREEDMAN, ALLEN FRIEDMAN, JIM HAEFEMEYER,ELSA HERSH, MITCH KAHN, BARRY KELLMAN, LESLIE LINTON, ALBERTO LOPEZ, BILL MARGRAVE,KEITH PYLE, JOE SARTORELLt, FRED WINSTON.StaffCARL STOVALLContributing Editor CAROLINE HECKSenior Editor DIANA LEI PERAssistant Business ManagerFounded in 1892. Published by University of Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the regularschool year, except during examination periods, and bi-weekly on Thursdays during the summer. Offices inrooms 301, 303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3263.Distributed on campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail $8 per yearin the U.S. Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, III.Boucher opensto communityToday the gym and pool facilities of Boucher Hall are being openedto community youths. It is the second phase of a community youth pro¬gram began last summer with the Ida Noyes summer program. As withthe summer program, the University is footing the bill. The $14,000cost is coming from the general University fund. The money is goingto set up an ongoing youth program for the community, which we feelis a wise idea. Instead of simply opening the doors of Ida Noyes orBoucher, the University has decided that a comprehensive programwould do more for the participants. Herbert Smith, a former lab schoolinstructor and now assistant to vice president Walter Walker, believesin helping the participants help themselves by forcing them to organizetheir own activities after telling them what is available.Last summer there were few people on campus, and reaction tothe program was slight. In fact, before the July 23 Maroon publicizedthe Ida Noyes program, most of the reaction from the University com¬munity came from a handful of people upset at sharing the Ida Noyesfacilities with the community.Much of the impetus for opening Ida Noyes last summer came fromstudents interested in seeing the University share some of its facilitieswith the community. Now, Smith is using students, some of them volun¬teers, to help with the program. We hope that the Boucher program canserve as a vehicle for a better understanding among students of theproblems confronting community youth.By hiring Smith full-time expressly to run the program, by openingUniversity facilities and by subsidizing the program, the University hasentered the business of running a neighborhood youth program. TheUniversity has realized that, as the major private institution in HydePark and Woodlawn, it has a responsibility toward the fulfillment ofcommunity needs.An equally pressing need which is felt by University staff and stu¬dents as well as the community, is the need for a University-run daycare center. The day care center need has been a political issue for twoyears, and we are no closer toward having one than we were then.While the day care question is, for the present, a dead issue poli¬tically, the need is just as great now as it ever was. Across the country,private institutions, universities, and public institutions have establishedday care centers for their workers and students on a non-profit basis.The summer program was begun under pressure from radicals oncampus who were interested in opening the facilities. “One of the thingswe had to decide,” said Walter Walker last summer in a Maroon inter¬view,” was if we were going to spend money to defend a half-usedfacility.” Similar pressure from students on the day care issue resultedin the formation of a committee, also headed by Walker, to investigatethe possibilities of setting up a day care center. That effort ended lastsummer when the day care corporation was unable to raise a year’soperating funds. The requirement of the operating funds was establishedby Walker’s committee.Why not day care? Last fall the University found $190,000 for theblack students’ cultural center, and it has come up with the $29,000 tofinance the Ida Noyes program and the Boucher program, not includingSmith’s salary. Yet day care went down the drain for lack of the funds toguarantee a year’s operation.We support the black house and the community recreational pro¬grams. It is money well spent. Yet we wonder at the University’s priori¬ties when these programs are established and financpd, and day caregoes wanting.6/The Chicago Maroon/January 8,1971 ABOUT THE MIDWAYSAA grantThe Center for the Study of Welfare Pol¬icy in the school of social service adminis¬tration has received a $400,000 grant fromthe department of health, education, andwelfare.The grant is for research in the develop¬ment of an “integrated social service deliv¬ery system,” according to Harold Rich-man, dean of the school of social serviceadministration.Richman said, “It is clear that both qual¬itative and quantitative changes are neededin the social services and in our methods ofproviding services. The grant provides thecenter with the opportunity to give majorresearch support to efforts to develop in¬tegrated and effective socH services.”The Center for the Stud i Welfare Pol¬icy itself was established in June, 1969, toprovide systematic, multidisciplinary studyof issues in social welfare policy.In July, 1969, it was designated as one of11 regional research institutes by the De¬partment of Health, Education, and Wel¬fare (HEW). In its capacity as a regionalresearch institute the Center has focusedattention upon basic issues underlying so¬cial welfare policy.Faculty appointmentsEdwin McClellan, an authority on Japa¬nese literature, has been appointed the CarlDarling Buck Professor of Japanese liter¬ature.McClellan is chairman of the departmentof Far Eastern languages and civilizationsat the University, a position he has heldsince 1966.The professorship is being established inhonor of the late Carl Buck, one of the fiveoriginal faculty members who joined theUniversity when it opened in 1892. Buck re¬mained at the University throughout his ca¬reer until 1933 when he retired.A noted philologist of his time, Buck wasan authority on Indo-European languages.He died in 1955 at the age of 88.McClellan studied at the University of StAndrews, Scotland, where he received hisMA in 1952. He did his graduate work withthe committee on social thought at the Uni¬versity and received his PhD in 1957.He joined the faculty at the University inthe same year (1957) as an instructor inEnglish. He was appointed assistant profes¬sor of Japanese language and literature in1959, associate professor in 1963 and profes¬sor in 1965.• Dr John Malian, professor of neuro¬surgery in the division of the biological sci¬ences and the Pritzker school of medicine,has been named the first Seely professor ofneurological science. The professorship wasmade possible through a grant to the Uni¬versity from the Seely Foundation of Chi¬cago and the efforts and activities of thewomen’s council board of the University’sBrain Research Foundation (BRF). edwin McClellanCarl Darling Buck Professor of JapaneseLiteratureDr Mullan is chief of the section of neuro¬surgery in the University and is a fellow ofthe Royal College of Surgeons and theAmerican College of Surgeons.• Martin Marty, professor of modernchurch history, has been named associatedean of the divinity school.Marty is nationally known as an histo¬rian, editor, and writer and he is vice-presi¬dent of the American Society of ChurchHistory and co-editor of its journal, ChurchHistory. He is also a fellow of the Academyof Arts and Sciences.BRF functions to promote research onthe human brain including the preventionand cure of brain disorders; to further pro¬fessional and scientific education to the endthat there will be better understanding ofbrain related illnesses and ways to protectthe brain and to capitalize on its potentialand to establish brain research centers.• Lewis Kaplan has been named as pro¬fessor of meteorology in the department ofgeophysical sciences.Kaplan is noted for his discovery of watervapor, carbon monoxide, and low surfacepressure on Mars; for the detection of car¬bon monoxide and hydrogen halides onVenus; and for his contributions to the the¬ory and application of radiative transferand spectroscopy in the study of planetaryatmospheres.• George Kent has been appointed pro¬fessor in the department of English and inthe humanities collegiate division. He ispresently a professor of English and deanof the division of liberal arts at QuinnipiacCollege.• Gary Becker, Ford foundation visitingresearch professor of economics has beenappointed University professor of econom¬ics. Becker is a fellow of the American Sta¬tistical Association and the EconometricSociety and a founding member of the Na¬tional Academy of Education.Continued on page 7LETTERS TO THE EDITORSGarg lunch serviceI would like to draw your attention to theBlue Gargoyle lunch service. If you aretired of the lousy food and outrageousprices at the C-Shop and Hutch then theGargoyle will be a welcome change.Today I had lunch there for 80 cents;roast beef, mashed potatoes and corn. Thebread was free, and my appetite (which isbig) was satisfied.The Gargoyle has a “special” dinner likethis every day but they also have sand¬wiches which are pretty heavy; like a lot oftuna fish for 40 cents and a meat loaf sand¬wich for 50 cents. An overwhelming bowl oftasty chili sells for under 50 cents I believe.There are an assortment of beveragesand desserts. 1 have heard that tho Gargoyle makes no profit and pays no wages tothe people who work there. Tliey are volun¬ teers. The prices certainly reflect this situ¬ation.The atmosphere at the Gargoyle isfriendly and very informal. It is a goodplace to meet people or to bring friends forlunch or just coffee.This letter sounds like an advertisementfor the Blue Gargoyle, but it isn’t. I don’teven know the names of the people who runit.I have been going there for the last fewmonths and have been increasingly im¬pressed with the fact that the Gargoylereally serves the community. More peopleshould know about it and take advantage ofThe Gargoyle is located diagonallyacross from Mandel corridor. It opens at11:30 am for lunch.Try and dig it sometime.David Hartley ’73about the midwayContinued from page 6Margaret Chave Falters, a U-Highalumna, has been appointed principal ofthe University High School of the labora¬tory schools at the University. Mrs Fallerssucceeds Carl Rinne, wiho has resigned tobecome educational director of the environ¬mental simulation laboratory at the Uni¬versity of Michigan. She received a mas¬ter’s degree in anthropology at theUniversity. Mrs Fallers’ husband, Lloyd,is an anthropology professor at the Uni¬versity.Edwin Bridges, associate processor ofeducation, has been appointed director ofthe University’s Midwest AdministrationCenter. Bridges, who has been a Universityfaculty member since 1967, succeeds AlanThomas, professor of education, who wasappointed chairman of the department ofeducation and dean of the graduate schoolof education last July 1. The Midwest Ad¬ministration Center in the education schoolwas established in 1950 as a mechanism forresearch into the theory and practice ineducational adminh Lration. Bridges re¬ceived an MA and PhD from the Univer¬sity.Bartlett gymBartlett gym will be open Sundays thisquarter from 1 to 5 pm.The gym was kept open the last threeSundays of fall quarter to determine howmany students and faculty were interestedin using it. Because of the large response,it will remain open throughout the quarter.Tutors neededThe Hyde Park Neighborhood Club hasasked for student volunteers for afterschool and tutoring pr ograms.Tutors are needed in reading and math,on weekdays from 2:30 to 5 pm, or on Sat¬urdays from 10 am to noon. Volunteers arealso needed to coac' 6 to 21 year-olds indrama, creative writing, sewing, nature WINTER QUARTER: Inclement weather in Hyde Park during the winter months forces students to look for other means of trans¬portation when most vehicles’ motion is frozen.study, music, games, photography and art.Anyone interested in volunteering shouldcall Mary Kay Kreider at 643-4062.Liberated track team?Contrary to the report in the ChicagoSun-Times, the Uni 'n;*y did not recentlyachieve a breakthrc the sexist worldof competitive sports.The Sun-Times showed a picture ofMamie Rallins, who ran on the US women’strack team in the 1968 Olympic games,competing against men in the 440-yd dashat the University Track Club (UCTC) Openmeet, Saturday. According to track team Coach Ted Hay-don, this was not the first time that womenhave competed directly against men, onlythe first time it was photographed. He saidthat girls had been competing in UCTCmeets for years.Nixon AppointeeWilliam Kruskal, professor and chairmanof the department of statistics has beennamed by President Richard Nixon to hispresidential commission on federal statis¬tics.The commission is undertaking a com¬prehensive review of the federal statistics program, the first such review in morethan 20 years, and will report its findings tothe President by September, 1971.Kruskal has also been chairman of theMathematical Sciences Panel of the Behav¬ioral and Social Sciences Survey, sponsoredby the National Research Council and theSocial Science Research Council. The re¬port of the Behavioral and Social SciencesSurvey last year included a recommenda¬tion that a commission be established towork out details of a national data systemthat would make social data maximallyuseful for research while protecting theprivacy of individuals.MAKE ANAPPOINTMENTWITH OURDOCTORSCliff 's Notes are written byscholars who know how to helpyou study Authors (predomi¬nantly Ph.D.'s; are carefullyselected for their knowledge ofa particular play or novel - plusability to interpret its plot andcharacters so they will berelevant to your literature course.This careful attention to qualityhas made Cliffs Notes the most-used study aid on collegecampuses nationwide. (Pick thetitle you need today - you'll findit holds the key to efficientuse of your study time )$1 at your bookseller or write:Lincoln Nebraska G8501 ‘MORRY'S DELI(formerly Chicken-A-Go-Go)Announces aSpecialFor one week onlywith this adHot Pastrami Sandwich... *.50Chicken Liver Sandwich.. .50■ mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mi ■ ■■ ■■ mm mm m mm wm mm mm mm mm mm mm malso servingChicken, Hamburgers, HotDogs, Bar-b-q Beef,& Italian beef.atMORRY'S DELI !1603 E. 55th !Open to 7 PM Closed Mondays jRIPON SOCIETY PEOPLE WHO KNOWpresents its CALL ON8th Anniversary Dinner JAMESwith SCHULTEGovernor Richard Ogilvieat the Marriott Motor Hotel CLEANERSCUSTOM QUALITY8535 W. Higgins Road,ChicagoJan 0 7 PM CLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.Call 525-0970 - 329-7716 752-6933 j©AFTERINVENTORYSALEMens & Womensnow Y2 Togsregi ular priceMens alsoWomensBells-Flairs$ 4.00 Selected ParityHose$1.5042.001 ,Jeans$3.00 at Pot Pourri$1.00PLUS5225 S. Harperin harper court"January 8,1871/The Chicago Maroon/7Fleurette AntoinetteCatch a sparklefrom the morning sun.Hold the magicof a sudden breeze.Keep those moments alive.They’re yours for a lifetimewith a diamondengagement ring fromOrange Blossom. Chicago’s Finest. Most Unique Cinemafhanqri-iaaaMMp CONTINUOUSf PERFORMANCES222 No. STATE at Wacker Drive Plenty of PARKlNG at DoorKAMAISUTRATHE 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 I.. In colorI.. aauwo OKTtoCH • etasis >Huqint ■ atenaao aaao’T . eaiu math*»av*i saana . mam m kaihu* • aaaaaa* schom • (•iNium aaoMNf n • iai kumaaA CONTI FILM-•no Oiraciad by KOBI IAECER and RICHARD R RIMMELu.i.c t. IRMIN SCHMIDT • woaio salis Eiportfiim Biachott 4 Co .tiPehWJjj&THE PRACTICAL TIGERFeaturing the best in unfinished fur¬niture is holding a year end sale withreductions from20.. 50% OFFOne week only REG. SALE4 foot bookcase 16.95 - 14.95MARKS BROS.JEWELERS • SINCE 1895EVERGREEN PLAZA YORKTOWNH* pi WANT QUALITYCONTRACEPTIVES?-Once upon a time, the best male contraceptives that moneycould buy were in your local drugstore. That time is goneToday, the world’s best condoms come from England, andare available in America only from Population Services, IncPSI is the exclusive U.S' distributor i'or two remarkable i anahighly popular) British condoms— scientifically shaped NuFormand superfine Fetherlite—And we make them’ available throughthe privacy of the mails. Both are superbly fine and light-lighter than drugstore brands. They average 1.25 gms apiece inbe precise. These contraceptives are made by LR Industries otLondon, the world’s largest manufacturer of contraceptive prod¬ucts. They not only meet rigorous U.S. FDA specifications, butare made to British Government Standard 3704 as well Youwon’t find a more reliable condom anvwhere.Interested? Send $7.50 for deluxe sample condom package (3each of 7 different brands) which includes Planned Parenthood’sbooklet “What Every Man Should Know About Birth Control.”'Or write for full details without obligation.j This program is endorsed by the Community and Family Study\Center of the University of ChicagoPOPULATION SERVICES, INC.105 N. Columbia St., Dept. .J-:i , Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514flentlerr.en Plea=e ‘end me Sample package < remittance!enclosed Full details without obligation.W mmZip_ ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELSundayJanuary 10, 197111:00 A.M.E. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the Chapel“ABORTION:A Personal, Pastoral,and Public Concern”Weekday Chapel MusicTuesday. January 12. 12:15p.m.Organ Recital. Edward Ylondcllo.University OrganistWednesday. January 13. 12:15 p.m.Carillon Recital. Robert Lodine.University CarillonneurSouth Shore Drive ai 7vth bt. RE 1-37008/The Chicago M^oon/Jegijary 8,1971, KIMBARKLIQUORSWINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINEST^e^IMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to you!THE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC.1214 E. b3rd St.53-Kimbark Plaza HY3-3355 Storage chest 16.95-12.95Mates chairs 15.95-10.9516" Cubes 14.95-12.9510 drawer chest 51.95 - 39.957 drawer chest 39.95 - 29.955 drawer Hi-chest 24.95-19.95Record cab 25.95-19.953 drawer chest 26.95-19.95captains chair 23.95-18.95plus many one of a kind rugs, lamps,baskets, vases etc reduced to 1/2off. While they last.We also carry a complete line of paints,stains and antiquing kits.THE PRACTICAL TIGER was set upwith you in mind. Why not stop in andcheck Us out. It's the PRACTICAL placeto shop.THE FUN TO FINISHFURNITURE PLACEIN HARPER COURT5225 SO. HARPER667 6888Winter hours ....9:30to5:30Tuesday through SaturdayClosed Sunday and MondayP S We even have some expensive thingsA SUBSCRIPTIONTODAY KEEPS YOURPARENTS AWAYABOUT THE MIDWAY, Journalist on MidwayTen journalists — five newspaperwriters, four television reporters and awire service editor — have been named ur¬ban journalism fellows and are participat¬ing in a two-quarter program of urbanstudies sponsored by the Center for PolicyStudy.The 10 fellows, selected from some 200applicants across the nation, are:• Jesse Brown, 24, field producer and re¬porter for WFAA-TV (ABC) in Dallas.• Barbara Casson, 29, reporter for TheBirmingham (Ala) Post-Herald.• Abbott Combes, 26, editorial pagewriter and associate edigor for The Quincy(Mass) Patriot Ledger.• Robert Faw, Jr, 26, special assignmentreporter and producer for WNAC-TV(ABC) in Boston.• Jerry Kohler, 27, reporter for The Kan¬sas City (Mo) Star.• Peter Negronida, 32, reporter for TheChicago Tribune. city and regional planning, architecture,urban renewal, housing, zoning, trans¬portation, pollution control, race relations,education and public health.The fellowship provides full tuition fortwo quarters and a stipend of $4,800. Theprogram is supported by grants from theMarkle Foundation, the Ford Foundation,and other private grants.“Broadcast media reporters will beamong our journalism fellows for the firsttime in 1971,” said Paul Gapp, coordinatorof the program. “We believe there is anacute need for well-trained urban special¬ists within all of the media.”The Center for Policy Study was estab¬lished in 1966 as a forum to review andpublicly discuss major issues confrontingthe nation. The urban journalism fellowshipprogram was conceived in 1968 at a center-sponsored conference on “The Media andthe Cities,” when it became clear that ur¬ban affairs writers and broadcasters couldimprove their expertise substantially if of¬fered opportunities for specialized study inan academic setting. URBAN JOURNALISM FELLOWS: These ten journalists are participating in a programsponsored by the center for policy study.• Joanne Omang, 27, night New England"e^torforUnitedPress"onal BULLETIN OF EVENTSRobert Petty, 30, reporter for KOOL-TV (CBS) in Phoenix, Arizona.A specially priced 2-record setJanuary 8,1971/The Chicago Maroon/I• Valetta Press, 32, producer and writerfor NBC News in Chicago.• Arthur Rotstein, 25, reporter for TheWashington (DC) Daily News.Now in its third year, the program offersan intensive study for journalists wishing tospecialize in urban affairs. It is designed toimprove the newsman’s skills in analyzing,interpreting and reporting such subjects as Friday, January 8SEMINAR: Winter seminar series on solid earth dynam¬ics presents Peter J. Wyllie on "Chemistry and Miner¬alogy of the Earth's Interior," Henry Hinds Labora¬tory, 101, 1:30 pm.PARTY: Housewarming party for the college library,third floor reading room of Harper and Wiebolt, 3:30-5pm.SEMINAR: Geophysical sciences seminar, "Waves inthe Tropical Troposphere as Observed in the WesternPacific," speaker is Chih-pei Chang, Hinds laboratoryroom 101, 4 pm.DISCUSSION: "The Computer Culture," professor Wir-tenberger of Loyola University, Crossroads 5621 Black-stone 8 pm.■ TRAVELOGUE: International House Associationpresents "Travelogue to India, International House,students 50c, other $1, 8 pm.• CONCERT: English music for harpsichord and virginal,Laurence Libin, Bond Chapel, 8:30 pm.PLAY: The play of Herod presented by the AllegroConpirrto, University Church of the Disciples, 8:30 pm.Saturday, January 9FLICK: If, Quantrell, 7 and 9:15 pm.Sunday, January 10LECTURE: Dr. Tuvia Shlonsky on "Between Style and Theme: Introductory Remarks on Agnon's Fiction "K.A.M. Temple 950 E 50th street, 10:30 am.SERVICES: University religious services, RockefellerChapel, 11 am.DISCUSSION: "To Will the Future," Philip Anderson,Bonhoeffer House, 6:30 pm.MEETING: Students for Israel presents Cafe Mapiton,Ida Noyes third floor, 7-11 pm.LECTURE: "A Perspective on Student Drug Use,"Richard Horman counseling psychologist at I IT, for¬mer director of Drug Education activities at TempleUniversity, South Commons Community Center, 2831 SMichigan, 7:30 p.m.OPEN HOUSE: Gay Lib open house, 58101 S Harper,7:30 pm.FLICK: Band of Outsiders, Quantrell, 7 and 9:15 p.m.\ |Ooesuperb review might •be toojgoodtobelieve. So wefilled the page with them.Andrew Lycett said in the Village Voice,“It is simply the best album in the history of pop..But he was only one among many.In Rock magazine, David Reitman said:“The album is definitely a masterpiece ofcontemporary music. Soft Machine has takenrock playing, rejuvenated it, made it interesting,saved it for the future.”In Fusion, Pete Senoff wrote: “It’s withouta doubt one of the most powerful musical albumsof the year."“This is a hypnotic sort of record thatsustains interest through four sides equally, a featunmatched in the rock idiom and only rarelyachieved elsewhere," Bob Palmer said in hisreview in Changes.And not to be left out, Zygote said, “SoftMachine is one of the most dynamic andinnovative groups recording today.”Each new reviewer of Soft Machine's “Third”is making the point stronger. In one importantpublication after another, they’ve agreed that thealbum is a “masterpiece.” And, they don’t agreevery often. On Columbia Records*(THE ADVENT/SANSUI/GARRARD/SHURE SYSTEM: $500)You Save Money In Banks, Not In StoresStores are for spending money. And audio equipmentstores are sometimes for spending a lot of money. So whenyou go to buy a stereo system you want to know how to getthe system which will make you happier than anything elseyou could get at or near the price.Please read on. We describe a component systemwhich represents the best value available in home musicreproduction available anywhere in the country today. Youwon’t save money on this system, you’ll spend about 500dollars on it. But you will get a stereo system better than500 dollars has ever seen before.The speakers are by Advent Corporation, and thoughless than a year on the market, the Advent loudspeaker isalready famous for its clean sound, smooth bass response,and crystalline high-frequency performance. The speakerswere designed by Henry Kloss, formerly general manager ofAR, and until recently president (and “K”) of KLH. Henryintended the Advent Loudspeaker to compare with otherloudspeakers in the highest category of performance, to beequal in every audible and useful respect to the mostexpensive speakers now on the market.This speaker costs notably less than many of thespeakers we will match it against - and makes the value ofthe system. But it would not have been possible to use aspeaker such as the Advent in this system if SANSUI hadnot reduced the cost of amplifier power.A speaker with the low-bass reproduction ability of theAdvent requires a lot of power. You must push a lot of air togenerate low-frequency sound. And the new receiver pro¬vides that power 56 watts RMS (not the inflated IHF rating)continuous (not just at peaks) per channel. The power isyielded up with exceptionally low distortion, and at a costwhich is, again, hard-nosed. Recent advances in solid-statetechnology, new efficiency in assembly and quality control,and the pressure of increased competition have combined toincrease the value of this unit.Amplifier power is significant only in terms of theamount of music it sends through the chosen speakers. ThelOOOx can drive the Advent Loudspeakers at levels suf¬ficient to fill your living room-and your head-with music.(If your living room is olympic-sized or if you must hear music at real boiler-factory decibel levels, only then willyou want more power).But the SANSUI has more than strength - it hasfinesse. Its control layout is simple but sophisticated, andthe FM front end has an alert sensitivity which picks up andguards feeble stations that otherwise would be lost in a seaof static, or overpowered by a brawny neighboring station.But no component is an island, each is a piece of thewhole, and if your turntable rumbles, it rumbles for thee -there’s nothing your receiver and speakers can do exceptamplify the rumble. The GARRARD SL65 automaticturntable we have chosen for our $500 system assures thatno weak link will flaw the chain. Rumble, wow, and flutterare unthinkable - also inaudible. The SL65 automaticturntable simply adds no sound of its own to the musicbeing played.The tone arm is a precisely-balanced, low-mass affairthat submits without protest to the gentle guidance given itby the record groove. This means low record wear anddistortion-free tracking of even the most heavily-modulatedpassages. Very-low-friction pivot bearings allow trackingthe SHURE M44E cartridge (provided with the system)down to 1 gram stylus force, and anti-skate compensationkeeps the stylus running right down the pipe.Installing this system is about as complicated as brush¬ing your teeth, and we stand by to answer any questionsthat arise.If anything breaks, repairs ride free on the guaranteeof Musicraft & The manufacturers, which in all cases ismore than adequate - Ask us!What if you had just a little more to spend . . .Put your extra money in the bank - save it, really; oradd one of our excellent moderately priced tape decks toyour new system. You would have to spend at least $200more to improve audibly the sound of this system. Andeven then, you’d have to listen hard to hear the difference.The $500 system we are offering is, quite plainly, the mostrewarding way to spend money on sound reproduction,anywhere. And it is likely to remain so for a long, long timeto come.MutotfkafiON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. Oak 337-41505700 W. DempsterMorton Grove 967-6690 2035 W. 95th St. 779-65007045 W. North Ave.Oak Park 383-700610 The Chicago Maroon/January 8, 1971(The Maroon Classified Ads)» IF YOU KNOW MARY, COME TO HER PARTY ON SATURDAYCUP AND SAVE ;LOW COST, SAFE, LEGALABORTION iIN NEW YORK |SCHEDULED IMMEDIATELY j(212)490-3600professional SCHEDULING SERVICE. Inc.|545 Filth Ave., New York City 10017 jThere is a fee for our_semce_for sale70 Maverick-Automatic, radio, ex¬cellent condition. $1700. 753-0077.Keep trying.Broil-King electric broiler. Broils,bakes, roasts, fries. Dual element,removable tray oven-type glassdoor, chrome, 21xllv9J" high. $19new. x2353 or 374-5662.1948 Cad. Hearse. Eng. good, trans.linkage worn. Leave message withDiana. 753-3263.Viceroy Super 8 Movie Camera. 3.5fo 1 zoon, F-1.8, reflex, Cds, 18 x 24FPS, 10-400 ASA, Case, batteriesmany extras. $79. x2353 or 374-5662.Si45. Falcon '62 New valve, radio,heater, gd cond, 4 new ww tires onwheel. $14 each. 3-2714. Chris.Roth violin, box, case. $70. Originally $110. Call Joe Duba at 753-2249.Hurry-must buy books.Free Kittens. 955-0459Desk, rugs, bookcase, etc. Call Ann,373-0989.Free Kittens. 955-0459HOUSE SALE: ALL KINDS FURN.records, plants, kitchen utensils, pic¬tures, air cond., bicycle, typewriter,rugs, other misc. 752-0316 WANTED4th year fern needs rm in apt. nearcampus. 753-2233 Snell 33BLACKFRIARS needs musicalscripts. Will pay if we use. For In¬formation call 288-0659PEOPLE WANTEDWanted fulltime sitter-housekeeperfor 2 children in Hyde Pk. Call 955-8099 after 5 pm.Needed aggressive student withimagination and drive to sell lowcost student air travel to Europe.Lucrative. Interested? Contact Mrs.Mignon Eisenberg. 527-3550.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. 288-8343.HELP! Female roommate to shareapt. Keep calling BU8-1100, no. 304.Roommate wanted in an apartmentat 53rd & Kenwood. Rent is $77 amonth. Call Steve at 684-4017 eve¬nings.WANTED: Kinetic sitter. Humaneinventive person to care for 2 chil¬dren 2 or 3 mornings. $2-hr. 52nd &Kimbark. 684-6141.UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY684-3661FRANK PARISIproprietor5 rm. coop $10,000 full price. Asses61.25. 55-Wdln. 667-7009Head Shop. Call 363-2286 eves.DUAL Turntables, new. VERYCHEAP. Blank Tape. Bob Czeschin,BJ 836.Beautiful cat free. Weekdays call531-5851. Weekends and evenings,477-8409.Antique Bookcase, drapes, pictureframes, shelving, etc. FA 4-6538.Michael Harringtonwill speak on"Why We NeedSocialism inAmerica"Thurs. Jan 148:00 pmQuantrell - Cobb 206Admission $1.00,$.75 with I.D.Sponsored by the YoungPeople's Socialist League Qualified teacher for Sunday morn¬ing preschool class. Salary to be de¬cided. 955-1863 or 363-8142.Student to live in spacious rm w-bath in exch. for 15 hrs-wk baby¬sitting. Call 624-8363.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 —PEOPLE FOR SALEExpert typing service. 548-4251.Fulltime Babysitting in our home5725 S. Woodlawn. Call Gene andJudy Pearson. 955-3678.SPACELive in Frederika's famous building.Nearby unfurn. 3 rm. apt. pvt. bath,quiet, sunny, stm. ht. $119. Freeutils. 6043 Woodlawn. 5-7 pm. 427-2583 or 955-9209. Call anytime.2 rm apt, part turn, balcony 5845Blackstn. Avail to sublet $120. 288-4897. eves., late.HEY BOYS AND GIRLSYou can earn free tickets to thefolk festival in your spare time. IdaNoyes Library 8:00 Mon.CEF PRESENTSOn Saturday Jan. 9 at Cobb IF & onSunday Jan 10 at Cobb Band of Out¬siders. Both at 7 8. 9:15 See Alice inWonderland meet Franz Kafka andlose control.SKI STEAMBOATFly to Steamboat Springs, Colo Stayin condominum. Mar. 20 27. Call 324-8930 by Feb. 1BONHOEFFER HOUSE"To Will the Future" Philip Ander¬son 6:30 p.m. Sunday Jan 10. 5554Woodlawn. All Welcome!SCENESDo you crave felafel or not. Knowwhat it is? Either way Cafe Mapi-tom can fill your need! Don't missit. Tickets for Revitalization's Super-Concert go on sale next Wednesday,Cannonball and the Wolf. BOTH onone stage!Musical Society Benefit by L. Libin,harpsichord Jan 8, $1 BOND.Students for Israel present CafeMapitom Sun Jan 10 7-11 pm IdaNoyes 3rd fl. Israeli singing, danc¬ing, Felafel, humus, fun! $1.25."Gestalt therapy leadership trainingand communication skills trainingfor people helpers. Jan. 8, 7:30 pm.Jan. 9, 10 am to 1 pm. $25. Call 643-8538.Israeli Folk Dancing teaching byDeb and Nathan Thurs. Jan 14 7:30Hillel. 5715 Woodlawn.Cafe Mapitom returns Sun Jan 10.Don't miss it!Prof. Jeremy Azrael (Dept. Politi¬cal Science) will speak at HillelHouse tonight at 8:30 on SOVIETPOLICY ON JEWS AND ON IS¬RAEL: BACKGROUND FOR THECURRENT SITUATION. 5715 Wood¬lawn.Diane Berghoff-Reifler, GestaltAwareness & Creativity Teacherwho has taught at Esalen as part ofDr. Fritz Peris' W'shops and at oth¬er growth centers, is now teachingin Chicago. Demonstration group $4Info: 643-3627.THE COMPUTER CULTURE, dis-cussion by Prof. Wirtenberger, Loy¬ola, Fri Jan 8, 8 pm, CrossroadsStudent Center, 5621 S Blackstone.Ongoing GESTALT ENCOUNTERGROUP 7 weeks. One group is onFriday beginning Jan 15, 7-11 pm.The other group is on Monday, be¬ginning Jan 18, 7-11 pm. Each grouplimited to ten. $30 Lorrie Peterson,exp. leader. Has studied at Esalen.288-3541.This is Motke's last winter in Chi¬cago. Maybe it can be yours too!Don't miss meeting him. Come tothe Chug. Mon. nights.Organic Foods Co-op forming —free form — cheap — Call 288-2985.YOGA Poses Concentr. Meditatn.Quit drugs Single-group classes. SRINERODE OF INDIA DO3-0155Cannonball Adderly . . . Jan. 18Off the closets! UC Gay Lib OpenHouse Sun 7:30 pm. Y'all come!Howlin' Wolf. . .January 18!!!Bag lunch discussion: "South Af¬rica's Hostage States" led by SteveHeyneman Tues. Jan 12 12N Gates-Blake 321. African Studies Group,bring a lunch.Woodpusher? Expert? IGM! ChessClub meets Mondays 7:00 Secondfloor Ida Noyes.UC Gay Women's meeting 1-12, 8pm 1357 E 57 St. 3rd fl. SISTER¬HOOD IS POWERFUL! Lesbiansare beautiful.Revitalization presents two legendsin their own time on Monday,January 18 8 p.m.Chug Ivrit starts again Mon. Jan.11. Hebrew conversation 7:30 Israeldiscussion 9:00 at Hillel. 5715 Wood¬lawn.L. Libin, harpsichord, Jan 8 atBOND; don. $1 to benefit Mus Soc.Winter quarter got you down al¬ready? Cheer up at Cafe MapitomSun Jan 10, 3rd fir. Ida NoyesGAY LIB Open House 1-10 7:30 pm58101 S. Harper (rear) Everyonewelcome! GAY IS GREATCEF PRESENTSOn Saturday Jan 9 at Cobb IF & onSunday Jan 10 at Cobb Band of Out¬siders. Both at 7 8, 9:15 See Alice inWonderland meet Franz Kafka andlose control. GET CLOSELike white on rice, like spots on thedice to the folk festival. Find outhow to get free fix. Monday JB: 00Ida Noyes Library.MOVING?Licensed mover 8> hauler. Call ArtMichener. 955-2480THE PLAY OF HEROD To the Young Lady who helped thepoor lad with crutches off the iceafter his disastrous fall Tuesdayevening at 57th 8> Dorchester, Iwant to thank you publicly. To theother bastards who passed me by,sit on a hot one.ABORTION is legal in NY. For re¬ferral to accredited hospitals call212-633-9825 6 pm to 6 amHappy Birthday, Rae. I love you We are Jews who believe Jesus isthe Messiah. Jews come rap. Sat 7-9pm Bonhoeffer Hse. 5554 Woodlawn(Not sponsored by BonhoefferHouse.)Morgenstund Hat Lachs in MundFresh lox, bagels & creamcheez for2 delivered to your door Sun Jan 179:30-llam. Only $3 COD (or $4 withNY Times) To order, call HY3-9744.288-6545 or 288-8679. ENJOYISee, in all its medieval splendor,HEROD, as presented by AllegroConspirito, Jan 8 9,15,16, 8:30,Church of Disciples. Tickets $2 and$1. Call 753-3392.HEROD, a 12th century liturgicaldrama, sets the story of Epiphanyto music, Latin plain song andsimple dance tunes with recorders,rebecs, krummhorns, etc. Also, a 40candlepower star and a gothicmanger.SENSITIVITY TRAININGHuman relations lab. Jan 15-17 Ex-per. trainers. Fee: $35-$25 for room8< meals. Call 324-6824.PERSONALSSave money on any UC housing.Take over my contract. Cheaperthan going through housing office.Call Debbie, 363-4436 5520 Ellis.Lost: Soft fuzzy tan-gold wool cap,probably in Cobb, Wednesday. Re¬ward. 536-2225 eves.Sex can be a beautiful thing if prop¬erly administered.Lox Box is coming January 17!Goldie, what lovely lox! — The bet¬ter to eat with you. Jan 17Lost: Shorthaired grey tom cat nearCornell & 55th. 363-5918.God Bless Blake DavisAll others be damned!Breakfish in bed for 2 — $3 COD DR. AARON ZIMBtfROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363 HYDE PARKFIREWOODOak - Ash - Birch$45/TON DELIVEREDFOR IMMEDIATEDELIVERYCALL 955-2480ANY TIMESpecial Student RatesEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbork Plozo)1200 Eost 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 O.T.D.Watch Out!You may getaP.P.MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME. ADDRESS, PHONE.CHARGE: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75* perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fre^.Revitalization fANNONRAII ADOFRh f / |Presents vAlilivliDHLL HI/l/EliL 1Monday, Jan. 18 8 pm MANDEL HALL , / HOWLIN WULr |>1 Arthur Penn's doc films& CLYDECobb Hall tonight at5:30, 8, 10:30January 8,1971/The Chicago Maroon/llJANUARYWHITESALEEveryone Has A White Sale In January SoWe'd Feel Deprived If We Didn't Have OneThat Would Offer Rare ValuesWHITE WINES DRASTICALLY REDUCEDFrench Dry White Wine 80* Chateau Magendie Graves 1966 $150Liebfraumilch 95* Chateau Latour Entre-Deux-Mers 1967 $146Graves 1967 95c Imported French Chablis s201AND MANY MOREWHITE LABELstate CHAMPAGNEGOLD SEAL t 2 31fifthWARS WHITE LABEL half $ 1 042gallon X £mIDWEISER 12 oz. 24 cans $099Gilbeys Gin .... fifth$279Gordons VodkaCointreau LiqueurBeefeater GinBacardi White Rum i lalf gallon$779THE PARTYMART2427 East 72nd StreetRA 1-921012/The Chicago Maroon/January 8, 1971Volume 3, Number 11 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of the Arts Friday, January 8,1971Harper Dance 1971By Paula ShapiroWhat began in Hyde Park as theHarper Theater Dance Festival in 1965has developed into an annual danceseries which has revolutionized mod¬ern dance for the benefit of performersand viewers alike. This year, thegrowth of the festival prompted a moveto the Civic Theater at Wacker andWashington, where the festival openedthis week with the world premiere ofMurray Louis’s “A.D.” (see reviewelsewhere in this issue).The festival’s producer is JudithSagan, a University graduate, whoseidea for a dance festival was accelera¬ted by a real estate package thatincluded the Harper Theater (now theHyde Park II). Her husband, BruceSagan, who heads the nation’s largestchain of neighborhood newspapers,bought his first paper, the Hyde ParkHerald, in 1953 when it was a dyingconcern.'Over the years circulation grew andthe paper needed a larger physicalplant. The building the Sagans pur¬chased in 1961 came with the HarperTheater, an old vaudeville house. Whenit was refurbished, the Sagans pro¬duced two seasons of off-Broadwaytheater. (One of the productions in 1964was “The Knack,” with Jerome Ragniand James Rado, who were then writ¬ing something they called “Hair.” Noone in Chicago thought it was worthy ofproduction, so they went to New York.)The rising costs of importing actors toChicago eventually made the theaterventure financially infeasible.About that time, Time magazinepublished a story about the success ofAlvin Ailey’s Russian tour whichcaught Mr Sagan’s eye. Realizing thattheir small theater was ideal for mod¬ern dance presentations, and sincethere was no regular modern danceseason in Chicago, they began theirambitious -six-week Harper TheaterDance Festival.After its opening in 1965, Clive Barn¬es noted that it was a great festival“that any city anywhere would beproud to own ... If only New York hada theater as suitable for this kind ofdance attraction as Chicago’s Harper,and a management as adventurous asMr and Mrs Sagan we could lookforward to a New York season for theJoffrey dancers.” HARPER COMPANIES: From top; The Nikolais Dance Company, in theirtower formation; The Paul Taylor Donee Company dancing to Beethoven; andMerce Cunningham himself in Rainforest, his own creation Other companieswill also be appearing in the Festival. The new festival presented the Jof¬frey Ballet Company in one of its firstpublic appearances since its formationduring the reorganization of the Har-kness Ballet. (Previously they had onlyperformed in the outdoor DelacorteTheater in Central Park and at Jacob’sPillow, in Massachusetts.) The rest ofthe program that first year consisted ofNala Najan, the Alba Reyes Company,and the Paul Taylor, Merce Cunning¬ham, and Alvin Ailey troupes.The going wasn’t easy that firstseason. According to Mrs Sagan,“Sometimes the dance festival seemedto be a series of mishaps. The first yearour backer backed out. After agreeingto help defray the costs of a season ofdance, with verbal commitments hav¬ing been made with six companies, hebacked out when he saw the projectedbudget. With the verbal agreementsalready made, we felt we had to goahead with the season.”Technical problems provided themost difficulties. There was the eve¬ning that Daniel Nagrin’s sound tapewent from one work into anotherwithout a pause, and the frantic rush¬ing from one radio parts store toanother at 5:30 on opening night to tryto replace a burned out amplifier part.And Mrs Sagan adds, “we cannot evendescribe the scene when the Nikolaiscompany first saw our weak, under¬powered sound system.”In spite of some problems, the secondyear of the festival had a higherattendance rate than the first. Interestin the festival was growing, but so wasthe deficit. It wasn’t possible to comeclose to breaking even in the 538-seatHarper Theater. “After the secondyear, it became apparent that we couldnot sustain this as a private charity,”Mr Sagan said.At that point, Leonard Pas, executivedirector of the Illinois Arts Council andCharles Reinhart, producer of the CityCenter Dance Season and NationalCoordinator for the National Endow¬ment for the Arts (NEA) ResidencyTouring Program, met with the Sagansto discuss the continuation of theHarper Festival. The result was agrant from NEA and the Illinois ArtsCouncil which paid half of the talentcosts. Each of the four companies —Continued on Page SevenDANCEMurray Louis: A Vibrant BeginningThe Murray Louis Dance Company opened thesixth annual Harper Dance Festival on Tuesday withthe world premiere of “A.D., Opus XLIV,” at theCivic T heater in the Loop.Neither the title nor the dance had any deep“meaning.” Louis is not concerned with narrativecontinuity or emotionalism. Rather, he is interestedin pure movement. Often he will hold a position inorder to direct attention to one small movement thatmight ordinarily be overlooked. He is often motion¬less without being rigid and plays with his owntrajectory, weight and timing. His choreographicdesigns transform what might otherwise be meregymnastic feats into dance.“A.D.” was a two-hour piece in three acts:“Personnae,” “Continuum,” and “Disguise.” Eachof them displayed a different specialty of Louis, whois the featured dancer and choreographer of hiscompany. They could, I think, have just as easilybeen three separate works.“Personnae” began with a light show of multi¬colored vertical stripes accompanied by music fromthe Free Life Communications that had a JohnColtrane-quality to it. The four dancers, wearingwhite tights with circular patches of color, engagedin a series of unrelated movements.In his solos, Louis explored some of his dancevocabulary, particularly his bending, sorting andscooping motions; the latter motion could be de¬scribed as the transfer of an invisible ball from onehand to another. In the “sorting” motion, Louisappears to be putting items into little cubbyholes andthen giving them an extra tap to make sure they’re inas far as they can go.Louis’s very special muscular virtuosity and thequirky deftness that is uniquely his were displayedalong with his wit and humor when he stood on oneleg and moved the other as though it were a separateentity, and when he moved as though he were playinghop scotch. In his use of everyday movements andwalking stances he is very much a part of the avant-garde in modern dance, but he differs from themajority of the avant-garde who use laymen asdancers. Though this act was danced with three long¬time members of his company, even they could notalways execute the quirky gestures with the effort¬ less grace shown by Louis. But they did excell in thevery fast phrasing and human chain reactions thatrequire precise timing and a wide range of physicalcontrol. vThe second act featured slower, more sustainedmovements. The company wore white leotards withholes, except for Raymond Johnson who, dressed in arust-colored outfit, evoked visions of ballet jumpsand turns with his lyrical smoothness. “Continuum”offered interesting sculptural groupings and puredance movement against a background of subduedprojections and dimmed lighting. The atonal musicwas written by Corky Siegel and electronicallymodulated through a Moog Synthesizer by AlwinNikolais.The third act utilized the talents of Mark Jacobs,a young Chicagoan, who projected a collage of oldfamily album pictures, assorted nudes, and slides ofthe dancers as well as signs that served to introducethe various sequences. This was Louis doing histheatrical thing, which he does very well.Louis’s entrance in the last act — “Disguise” —was a showstopper. He wore a handle-bar mustache,black wig, and a fabulous costume of skin-tightleather bell-bottoms, studded with silver rivets, withsections cut out for his behind, and strings that madebands across his torso. It was a surrealistic mo¬torcycle leader outfit right out of Kenneth Anger’s“ScorpioRismg/^The^the^dancerswere^als^one^ up in campy Old Town-chic costumes. The move¬ments were humorous and appropriate for each ofthe stereotypic “characters” of the counter-culture.The dance ended with a sign announcing “the lastgroup”; the seven dancers posed for the “picture”and were faded out.These three acts provide a vehicle for Louis toexpress his familiar stock of movements and use ofthe theatrical, but are not his best work.—Paula Meinetz ShapiroMUSICCSO ConcertOn Saturday evening, January 16th, the Chicago"Symphony will present a concert, especially gearedto the interests of University students. The programwill be as follows: concerto for two trumpets byVivaldi; Petri Overture by Dukas; dances from TheThree Cornered Hat by De Falla; and Symphony No.5by Shostakovich.After the concert, a reception will be held inOrchestra Hall, for students, orchestra members,and music critics of the major Chicago newspapers,where free coffee and pastries will be served.Tickets are available at the Reynolds Club deskuntil Wednesday, January 13th, or at the box officeafter the 16th. Prices range from $2 to $5.CONTEMPORARYEUROPEAN FILMSWinter ScheduleJanuary 6January 9January 10January 23January 31February 6February 7February 14February 21March 6March 7March 13 The Wild BunchIfBand of OutsidersButch Cassidy & the Sundance KidThe Fixer*War & Peace (Part I)*War & Peace (Part II)M & Throne of BloodDiary of a ChambermaidThe Lion in WinterBlack OrpheusEasy Rider*Mandel Hall at 8:00 pm onlyAll other shows at Cobb at 7 & 9:1 52/Grey City Journal/January 8, 1971A MotleyOperettaThat hardy Hyde Park perennial, theGilbert and Sullivan Opera Co, present¬ed its annual production — this year,Yeomen of the Guard — in Mandel Halljust before Christmas. Probably themost important things to say about thiscompany are that it has maintained ahigh standard of production for manyyears; that it treats G & S with respectbut not with reverence, that it contin¬ues to recruit new and worthy talent;and that it annually gives a good dealof pleasure to local audiences and to itsown members, a motley crew unitedonly by their Savoyard devotion. Alto¬gether, Charles and Jean Walls, thisyear’s producers, ably sustained one ofHyde Park’s best theatrical traditions.Beyond that “criticism” is a series offootnotes.The Yeomen of the Guard is not themost inspiring of the works in the G & Scanon. On this occasion it received thekind of musically polished perform¬ance (even the orchestra was good!)that characterizes this company, butwas unevenly acted (also character¬istic) and distinguished by a set whichamounted to a minor disaster. Effortsto achieve an illusion of vitality bylighting changes called attention to thedifficulties rather than removing them.The somewhat slack conducting ofJohn Klaus, while not detractive, didnot help much; but there was elegantsinging by the chorus (and that in¬gratiating sub-chorus, the yeomen)and all the principal roles were morethan competently sustained — musi¬cally, that is. Unfortunately the im¬pressive ability of Hugh Crarey (Ser¬geant Meryll) as a singer doesn’t makean actor of him, and there are others ofwhom the same might be said. On theother hand, Helen Bailey’s sprightlyPhoebe, Eileen Watzulik’s winsomeand graceful Elsie, and Robert Hein-rikson’s properly romantical ColonelFairfax were skillful jobs by goodworkmen of the musical theater. And,of course, Ray Lubway’s genuinelymoving Jack Point is one of the reasonsfordoing Yeomen at all.Ernest Arnett’s contribution as setdesigner was somewhat redeemed byhis costume designs, which werelavishly executed by a host of dedi¬cated seamstresses. David Currie’sdirection hardly seemed to have hadmuch impact on anything, but thedifficulties of the script and the re¬markably inhibiting qualities of thatamazing set may have proved insur¬mountable. In any case the result was arather static drama. Also, somethingought to be done about the glacialhabits of the Mandel Hall curtain.There may be some dramatic situ¬ations for which its stately progressionis just the thing, but there can’t bemany.— Charles Wegener Swedish films including Harry Munter pictured abovewill be shown January 22-28 at the Lake Shore Theater, 3175 Broadway. The movies are being sponsored by theChicago Film Festival.So Who’s A Crooked Man?The first twenty minutes of Man-kiewicz’ There Was a Crooked Man (atthe Me Vickers Theater downtown) es¬tablish the multiple point of viewnarrative for which the director isjustly famous. A group of men is sent toa prison in the Arizona Territory in the1880s, each for a different crime.Simultaneously, we are introduced to abumbling sheriff (Henry Fonda), whois to become warden of the prison.Upon becoming warden, Fonda at¬tempts to institute a series of reforms(such as having the prisoners takebaths) with the cooperation of prisonerKirk Douglas. But the culmination ofthe reforms — a new dining hall —becomes the scene of a bloody riot andescape, which ends with Douglas’ be¬trayal of his fellow escapees. In a coda,we discover that the warden is perhapsthe crookedest man of all.There Was a Crooked Man has al¬ready been attacked by some critics,mainly, it seems, for excessive cynic¬ism. One reviewer was positively ag¬hast at the thought that Mankiewiczwas suggesting that prison reform is awaste of time. (This reminded me ofthe Sight and Sound review of TheWhisperers in which the critic’s maincomplaint was that it looked as ifBryan Forbes was attacking the wel¬fare state — but of course intelligentand sensitive man that he is, he simply couldn't!) Social consciousness andirrelevant criticism go hand and handhere.The movie is not about prison re¬form. The original title of the screen¬play by Bonnie and Clyde authorsDavid Newman and Robert Benton wasHellhole, and the film takes it forgranted that the prison is a hellhole,baths and all. The present title isprobably more revealing — who is thecrooked man? Is it prisoner Douglas —thief, liar, scoundrel, murderer? Or isit warden Fonda, who does not revealhis true character until the final se¬quence of the movie? The answer isthat we’re all crooked, a point Man¬kiewicz made in his first film, Some¬where in the Night (1946), in which aman’s amnesia is used as a metaphorfor moral uncertainty, and in his firstOscar film, A Letter to Three Wives(1948) (also one of Kirk Douglas’ firstfilms), in which mysterious letters tothree wives cause them to suspect theirhusbands, even though only one isguilty. There is more ambiguity thancynicism in Somewhere and Letter,and there is more cynicism than am¬biguity in Crooked Man. Mankiewiczhas been involved in films since 1929and at this late stage in his career,direct cynicism is a more appealingartistic posture than mystery and am¬biguity. Basically, the film is about two menwho have strong, forceful, and differ¬ent points of view. Each man mustfight to survive. Mankiewicz’ two bestfilms, The Barefoot Contessa (1954)and The Quiet American (1958) — twoof the great masterpieces of the Ameri¬can cinema, incidentally — are hismost direct treatment of interactionand conflict between strong-willedpeople with different visions of life. Theresult when characters attempt toimpose their visions on others, orattempt to act out their visions withoutregard to others, is always disaster.Besides the intellectual complexityone often finds in the late work of anartist, There Was a Crooked Man isalso vastly rewarding as an example ofclassical Hollywood moviemaking atits best. Mankiewicz actually usestracking shots instead of zooms; hiscompositons, cutting, and color controlare meaningful instead of muddled andmodish. The one unfortunate weaknessis that the dialogue lacks the feel forperiod and stylization that the Benton-Newman Bonnie and Clyde script has,and the whole screenplay is somewhatepisodic. But Mankiewicz makes thiswork for the film — and the film worksbeautifully.— Charles FlynnCulture VultureDANCEThe Harper Dance Festival has moved to the CivicTheater (Wacker and Washington) for its 1971 season, whichruns from January 5-31. Performances will be Tuesday,Friday, and Saturday at 8 30 and Sunday at 2:30 and 7:30;Student tickets are $2 for opening nights, and studentdiscounts are available for all performances except those onSaturday. The schedule:Murray Louis Dance Company, "A D." Tuesday Jan 5, SatJan 9, and Sun matinee Jan 10. "Chimera," "Land¬scapes," "Intersection,"and "Proximities," on Fri Jan 8,and Sun evening Jan 10.Merce Cunningham Dance Company, "Ob|ects," "Tread,""Rainforest," Tjes Jan 12. "Second Hand," "Signals,""Tread," Fri Jan 15. "Second Hand," "Winterbranch,""Tread," Sat Jan 16. "Second Hand," "Winterbranch,""Howto Pass, Kick, Fall and Run." Sun matinee Jan 17.YOU REMEMBER YOUR FAMILYGIVE THEM SOMETHING TOREMEMBER YOU BY...SEND HOME A MAROONSUBSCRIPTION NOW.NAMEADDRESSCITY STATE.ZIPONLY $6.00 Forthe remainder cfthe academic year. "Canfield," "Rainforest," "Objects," Sun evening Jan 17.Noplace to be Somebody has opened at the StudebakerTheater and will run through February 6. Tuesday throughSaturday at 8:30. Sunday at 7. Matinees Wednesday andSaturday at 2. Tickets $3 $7.50.The all male black musical Buck White is beingperformed at The Church, 5400 Blackstone. Thursday at8:30. Friday at 4 and 8:30. Saturday at 7:30 and 10:30.Sunday at 4 and 7:30. Tickets $2.50-$4.50 with $1.00 studentdiscount except on Saturday.At the Organic Theater, 2259 N Lincoln, Candide continuesthrough January. Tickets $2.50; students on Wednesday andThursday nights get a $1.00 discount.The Prodigal is presented by the Old Town Players at 1718North Park. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday at7:30. Tickets $2.The Play of Herod will be presented by Allegro Conspiritoon January 8,9,15, and 16 at 8:30 in the University Church ofthe Disciples, 5655 S University Ave. Tickets $2 and $1.MUSICThe Chicago Symphony, conducted by Claudio Abbadio,will perform works by Berg, Mozart, and Brahms today at 2and tomorrow night at 8:30.FILMTonight Doc Films will show Arthur Penn's Bonnie andClyde at 5:30, 8, and 10:30 in Cobb. In addition, there will bea free showing at 3 in Cobb of Gordon Douglas' The Doolinsof Oklahoma, a variant on the Bonnie and Clyde theme.Saturday night CEF will present IF in Cobb at 7 and 9:15.CEF will present Bank of Outsiders Sunday night, also inCobb at 7 and 9:15.Doc Films gives a free showing of DW Griffith's (Birth ofa Nation fame) True Heart Susie and The Musketeers of BigAlley (a short). 8 pm only. Cobb. Wednesday January 14 Doc Films offers the MarxBrothers in A Night at the Opera plus Buster Keaton ir. ThePlayhouse (a short). Both at 7:15 and 9:30. CobbThe Chicago Council on Foreign Relations offers a filmmeeting and discussion of such prominent leaders as Ho ChiMinh, HHH, LBJ and Curtis Le May, entitled In the Year ofthe Pig. Tuesday January 12, 7:30, Council Headquarters(Woodrow Wilson Room), 116 S Michigan Ave. Students$1.00. Non members $2.50. Members $2.00.ARTAn exhibition of architectural innovations of McCormickPlace will open at Glessner House, 1800 S Prairie Ave,Thursday, January 14, from 10 to 2. Hours are Tuesday andThursday 10 to 2 and Saturday and Sunday 2 to 5. The showwas prepared by the architects of McCormick Place. Runsthrough February 28.The Monroe Gallery, in the Champlain Building at 37 SWabash, presents a two man show of Barbara Baum (oiland mixed media) and Vivian Chapin (oil), throughJanuary 30. Weekdays 9 to 9. Saturday 9 to 4.The Museum of Contemporary Art at 237 E Ontariopresents "The Architectural Vision of Paolo Soleri,'through February 7."Georgia O'Keeffe Retrospective Exhibition" opens tomorrow at Gunsaulus Hall of the Art Institute throughFebruary 7.The Morton Wing of the Art Institute features "Edificesand Monuments by Jean Dubuffet" through January 31The Bergman Gallery in Cobb 408 presents TheVisionary Art of Paul Laffoley" through February 13.An exhibit featuring "Harris, Kowalski, and Lamantiaopens January 10 at the Hyde Park Art Center, 5236Blackstone. Hours are Tuesday through Thursday 1:30 to4:30 and Saturday 10 to 4.Far East KitchenChinese & AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen Daily 1 2 - 10Fri. & Sat. 12 -12Closed Monday53rd & Hvdp Park Rlvd955-2229 ENGLISHFOR FOREIGNERSIntermediate-level class:Tuesdays 7:15 to 8:30 pm.Foreign Wives class:Wednesdays 2:00 to 4:00 pm(Beginner and Intermediate levels)Nursery ProvidedCROSSROADSSTUDENT CENTER5621 S. BlackstoneMU 4-6060-FREE-January 8, 1971/Grey City Journal/3RECORDS ___ —Nyro, Lennen Sing ProblemsChristmas and the Beads of Sweat byLaura Nyro (Columbia KC 30259):On Laura Nyro’s last album, NewYork Tendaberry, she seemed headedin a possible wrong direction. In thetitle song, she lost much of her melodicstrains, destroyed all rhythm com¬pletely and relied on silences to carryalong the song. Luckily, New YorkTandaberry worked. On this album,“Christmas in my soul” fails. The songbogs down often and the lack of anybeat keeps it down. Laura “talks” partof the song, then at dramatic momentsreverts back to her high, emotionalwail which is effective when well-placed, but doesn’t work here.One melodic but empty song —“Upstairs by a Chinese lamp” — fur¬ther threatens the success of the al¬bum. Lacking emotion, great beat, andgreat singing, the song does not mea¬sure up to her successful material.The rest of this album, though, is acomplete success. “Brown earth”, therecord’s opener, might be the best songLaura Nyro has ever written. It drives,it builds, it wails and it says something.“God standing on the brown earth,Lovelight in the morning, Shoeflies inmy doorway, White doves gonna cometoday!” The last line, backed by aswinging yet emotive piano, is re¬peated many times.“Blackpath”, “Up on the roof” (yes,that old classic), “When I was afreeport and you were the main drag”and “Map to the Treasure” are allmelodic songs pointing up her vocalabilities. She croons, moans, and wailswithout pretension. Her complexrhythm changes and rapidly shiftingemotions might be hard to get used to,but they are accurate metaphors oflife.“Been on a train” and “Beads ofsweat” are the two most radically newsongs on the album. “Been on a train”is Laura’s most obvious message song:“You got more tracks on you baby,than the tracks of this train, You got noguts, no gospel and you got no brain.”This anti-hard drug song is much moreexplicit than any of Laura’s previousmaterial but it is so effective and somoving that perhaps her future workwill continue in this vein.“Beads of sweat” — Laura’s firstrock song — also shows a way for thefuture. Primarily a piano woman, sheis here backed by electric guitars andproves as good in the rock medium asanyone, Grace Slick included.If it weren’t for those two mediocrecuts, this album would be a master - Miss Nyro: “White doves gonna come today! ”piece. Hopefully, Laura will eliminatethe bad apples from her crop of songsand give us more like “Been on a train”and “Brown earth”.Plastic Ono Band by John Lennon(Apple SW 3372):This is a weird album. We alwaysknew that John Lennon had problems,but did anyone ever expect that hewould publicize them in plastic? Thisalbum goes into John Lennon’s in¬nermost problems and on many of thecuts, he shows how he has come togrips with the hard life he has led.Often this is painful, both for John andthe listener, but sometimes there ismutual catharsis.It is very hard, if not impossible, tosay anything definitive about this al¬bum, for every listener’s response willdepend on the state of his own mind. Ifyou can understand, sympathize withor identify with John’s problems, thisalbum will be a very moving ex¬perience. If not, much of this is rub¬bish.Musically, the album is not great.The tunes and lyrics are often repeti¬tive; the arrangements are sparse; thelyrics are void of imagery or sym¬bolism. But John speaks directly, par¬ticularly in his lines from the song“God”: “God is a concept by which wemeasure our pain.” Some of John’ssinging gets ugly, particularly in “WellWell Well” where he sounds like he ischoking to death. But his singing is alsovery emotional, and moving if you canget into it.Emitt Rhodes (Dunhill 50089), Tea forthe Tillerman by Cat Stevens (A&M SP4280), Wrong End of the Rainboy byRom Rush (Columbia C 30402) andClassic Rush by Tom Rush (Elektra74062): These three men are all fine song¬writer-singers. Emitt Rhodes is a newsinger, Cat Stevens is old but undisco¬vered, and Tom Rush is an old-timefolkie who has been admired for overseven years. Yet even with their differ¬ent backgrounds, all three have thesame gentle tone, folk sound andsmooth arrangement.Many have accused Emitt Rhodes ofsounding like the Beatles, PaulMcCartney specifically. Though Emittdoes capture the good-time, easy soundof the early Beatles, his music is hisown. He wrote, arranged and sings allthe songs on his album, and plays allthe instruments. (Emitt is popularlyknown for his song “Fresh as aDaisy.”) His voice is high, clear andsometimes whiney. Yet when he con¬trols his voice it is quite effective. Hissongs, all moving, capture a spirit ofinnocence and nostalgia that is unusualin today’s blase record market. Toquote Emmit, “I have to say the thingsI feel. I have to feel the things I way.”Cat Stevens is English, and fallsneatly into the English poetic tradition.His lyrics are impressive poeticachievements, and his songs seemmore like background music to hispoems than like true music. The tunesare good, and the guitar work precise.Cat Stevens’ voice is low, raspy, andoften unmelodic. Because of this, hissongs often sound like those old record¬ings of Robert Frost reading his ownpoetry. Yet once you get used to thevocals, the songs fall into place andbecome fitting testimonials to the poet¬ry of Cat Stevens.Tom Rush has stamina. He hasendured since the Peter, Paul andMary folk days, and has altered hissound only slightly in all those years. His music is still largely acousticvibrant and happy. Wrong End of theRainbow is Tom’s second album back¬ed by Trevor Veitch, an amazingelectric guitarist. Together they wrotefour songs on this album, a changefrom much of Tom’s past work whichwas largely written by others. Tom’slyrics are structured, yet good: “Likestarlight on dark water, My lovebrought life to me, Now I am dyingwanting her, And she is loving livingfree.” On this album, Tom does twoJames Taylor songs, which is fitting,for Tom was the first singer to doTaylor songs before he became apopular sensation. Tom’s version of“Sweet Baby James” is as good asJames’, and with Trevor singing har¬mony, the song is more intense.The Elektra album is a collection ofTom Rush’s best material before heswitched to Columbia. All of his bestsongs are here including his version ofJoni Mitchell’s “Circle Game.” Tomcaptures a unique vibrancy in thissong, making his version the bestinterpretation of Joni’s song, includingher own. Other fine songs are JamesTaylor’s “Something in the Way SheMoves”, Joni’s “Urge for Going” andTom’s “No Regrets-Rockport Sun¬day.” This album is the best way toexamine Tom Rush’s early days if youdon’t want to buy the three albums thatthis material comes from.A REAPPRAISAL:In the last issue before break, Ipanned Paul Kantner’s album, BlowsAgainst the Empire, calling it cacopho¬ny. I finally realized that there isindeed some fine music here. Particu¬larly good are the last two songs on thefirst side, “Let’s Go Together” and “AChild Is Coming.” The beauty of theinterlocking voices (Paul’s, GraceSlick’s and David Crosby’s) on thesecuts is profound. The songs are verycomplex and must be listened to anumber of times before you can ferretout all the different tunes, but the waitis worth it.I still maintain that the first cut is.cacophony, but cacophony with a pur¬pose. Kantner was trying to point outthe horror of our political situationtoday by backing up his political lyricswith discordant music. I don’t think hesucceeded, but the attempt is admirable. The second site of the album isthe flight of the starship (the albumtells the story of the highjacking of thefirst American starship in the 1980sand often bogs down. All in all though,there really is some nice music here.— The Great PumpkinFRIDAY EVENING PROGRAMSRETURN TO HILLEL HOUSEJan. 8Jan. 15Jan. 22Jan. 29Feb. 5Feb. 12Feb. 19 SOVIET POLICY ON JEWS AND CN IS¬RAEL: BACKGROUND FOR THE CURRENTSITUATION. Prof. Jeremy R. Azrael, Dept.Political Science.THE MORALITY OF VIOLENCE. Rabbi Nor-bert Samuelson, Hillel Director, Princeton.WHY I DON'T THINK THE DEAD SEASCROLLS WERE WRITTEN AT QUMRAN,AND OTHER OBSERVATIONS. Prof. Nor¬man Golb, Dept. Near Eastern Lang, andCiv.ANTI-SEMITISM AND AMERICAN JEWRY-.SOME SOCIOLOGICAL REFLECTIONS.Prof. Bernard Rosenberg, College.CHICAGO POLITICS AND CHICAGOJEWS. Mr. Lewis Kreinberg, Director, Chi¬cago Jewish Council on Urban Affairs.PROPHETS AND PROFITS-. ON MAXWEBER'S VIEWS OF RELIGION AND CAP¬ITALISM. Prof. Gerhard E. O. Meyer, Col¬lege.GROWING UP JEWISH: A WOMEN'SVIEW. Panel of U.C. Jewish Women,Names to be announced.5715 WOODLAWN 8:30 P.M.L 4/Grey City Journal/January 8, 1971 TRIPLE AWARD WINNER...— New York Film CriticsBest Picture of the Year...Best Director (Bob Rafelsoif)...Best Supporting Actress (Karen Black)...COLUMBIA PICTURES presents a BBS ProductionJACK NICHOLSONFIVEEHSEPIECESA WALTI* riaoe theatreDie [squireS8 C OAK STKKKT • 337-111: COLORTHEA. PARKSI .0031 E. CedarOur thing is your ring —"Nf fWflftS »OR 59 vfAtS119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZA CHICAGO DANCEFESTIVALHARPER DANCE’71Jan. 5 through Jan. 31CIVIC THtATREWacker &. WashingtonSpecial Student rate of S2.00 torTuesday night of each week!MURRAY LOUISDance CompanyJAN. 5-10MERGECUNNINGHAM& Dance CompanyJAN. 12-17PAUL TAYLORDance CompanyJAN. 19-24NIKOLAISDance TheatreJAN. 26-31Student programs with discussionperiod 1P.M. each Thursday $2.00Tickets at the box office &all Tieketron OutletsStudent Prices:S4.50. 3.50 (Orch.) S4.00. 2.75 (Bale.)Good every performanceexcept Saturdays.Call 924-1611 5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113^ ^foreign car hospitalInternational DiscussionSeries“SCIENCE,TECHNOLOGY, &CULTURE"every Friday, 8 - 10 pmat Crossroads StudentCenter5621 S. BlackstoneMU 4-6060Jan 8:"The Computer Culture"• Prof. Wirtenberger,Loyola Univ.Visions of Vertical CitiesAll of us who live in large cities have known thefeeling of entrapment that comes from urbanexistence. Especially in the northeast, but in otherareas as well, our cities have spread endlessly, untilthey are no longer isolated areas of high density in avast sea of countryside, but malignant, sprawlingorganisms. The current exhibition at Jhe Museum ofContemporary Art, “The Architectural Vision ofPaolo Soleri,” demonstrates one man’s attempt tohumanize the urban environment.Soleri points out, “Unloaded on man is theresponsibility for the whole planet, and the better¬ment of the condition of man and of nature con¬servation now depends, to a large degree, on ourability to create new and radical urban patterns.”Although 52 years old, trained as an architect, anda former student of Frank Lloyd Wright, Soleri hasbuilt very little. His designs, with few exceptions,exist solely in the form of lucite and cardboardmodels, blue prints, and sketches. Extremely beau¬tiful as art forms, Soleri’s models nonetheless aremerely suggestions and potential solutions for theproblems we face. With the exception of a seven acretest project near Phoenix, Arizona, none of Soleri’splans have been worked out specifically in terms ofmaterial costs, structural calculations, and finaldesigns.Although plans for dams and bridges (both withinternal dwelling areas) are included in this exhibi¬tion, the focus of Soleri’s work is toward creating acomprehensive plan for our urban environment. Inorder better to describe his work and ideas, Solerihas coined a new vocabulary. The key word here ist » ' t l i 1 ( . i i “arcology,” a word combining “architecture” and“ecology.” The arcological concept stems from theecological (ie, survival) viewpoint that we can nolonger afford to spread our species and the accom¬panying affluence over the surface of the earthwithout disastrous results — pollution, congestion,waste, and the unnecessary depletion of resourcessuch as raw materials, farm land and land forrecreation and the enjoyment of nature.In purely physical terms, the arcologies areimmense complexes which are more than just largebuildings housing a variety of functions. Theyconstitute entire environmental systems based onlong-term ecological considerations, high urban per¬formance, and the law of complexity-min¬iaturization. They are three-dimensional and dense,in contrast to the two-dimensional and essentiallyflat cities we have today.The concept of complexity-miniaturization is fun¬damental to Soleri’s vision. He explains, “In itsevolution from matter to mind, the real has beensubmitted to numerous phases of miniaturization soas to get more things in smaller spaces in shortertimes. This process, from haphazardness and dis¬location to co-ordination and fitness, has beenmandatory because each successive form of realitycarried within itself a greater degree of com¬plexity . . . This miniaturization process may well beone of the rules of nature.” _Man himself exemplifies compact complexity, inthat the human brain is an amazing miniaturizedsystem. The city in the image of man is Soleri’sconcern. In light of the population explosion, prolife¬ration of suburbia, creation of new cities attemptingto solve the social ills of the old, and despoliation ofthe natural environment by land “development,”Soleri believes that the city must miniaturize or die.In order to draw in and miniaturize the environ¬ment, most of the arcologies are several times higherthan our highest buildings today. Those living withinthem could relate diagonally across space, as well asvertically and horizontally. This is done by going uprather than spreading out, by building spaciousplatforms in the air and reducing distances bycutting out unnecessary space-eaters such as roadsand parking lots which must exist to service aninefficient flat system.As the industrial sector of the arcology is notspread over a large area, waste and noxious by¬products could be efficiently and economically col¬lected, reused, or neutralized, alleviating the prob¬lems of industrial pollution we face today. Theo¬retically, transportation within the arcologies wouldbe by elevator, escalator, moving sidewalk, etc.contained within the structure. Ideally, the dwellerwould be able to live without automobiles within thecity, although they could be stored in the lower levelsof the structure, awaiting use for travel of longdistances.Despite their great density in terms of humanpopulation, the arcologies would allow each family to have a dwelling unit 60 feet long by 35 feet wide by 20feet high, more than equal in cubage to the normalsuburban house.By confining the cities to a few square miles, thecountryside would once again be accessible to city-dwellers for recreation and available for farmingand land conservation. Soleri asserts that thearcologies present alternatives to the present urbanand suburban growth, but that their developmentwould not mean the destruction of our historic or vitalareas.Although appealing in concept, Soleri’s designshave not been developed to the extent that we canview them as realistic alternatives. “3-D Jersey,” anarcological project undertaken as a design for asupersonic airport with a population of about onemillion people illustrates both the positive andnegative qualities of Soleri’s work. The plan, pro¬posed for the Jersey marshes west of New York City,was developed under a commission from RutgersUniversity and a Ford Motor Company grant. Inlooking at the model for “3-D Jersey” certainquestions come to mind.Soleri has explained that a system of air snorkels,light tunnels and overhead louvres exist in thearcology and that these can be adjusted mechanical¬ly in order to achieve desired wind, temperature, andsun conditions in the interior. Soleri considers thesetechnical feats an advantage, “the potential of whichstaggers the imagination.” But who decides how thisartificial environment affecting so many lives is to beregulated? What kind of government can effectivelyrule such a dense structure without turning theexperience into a Machiavellian nightmare? Wheredo the poor live in the arcology, or does it exist onlyfor the affluent?Although its design allows for desirable physicalorganization of the urban area, none of the ordinaryfunctional problems of such a high-density structurehave been solved. While the favorable aspects ofSoleri’s arcology are many, so are its potential socialand political problems.—Susan LeffAct in Peer GyntAt auditions held during the last weeks of autumnquarter, Roger Dodds was chosen to play the titlerole in University Theatre’s winter quarter majorproduction, Ibsen’s Peer Gynt.Auditions for all other parts will be held Thurs¬day, January 7 from 7 to 10 and Saturday andSunday, January 9 and 10 from 2 to 5 in the ReynoldsClub Theatre. There are roles for seventeen men andfourteen women ,* actors and tech people arc urged tojoin what promises to be an exciting and rewardingtheatrical experience.January 8, 1971 /Grey City Journal/5* I « I ty»viWKmttttttMttttmtttttttt,ttttttttttH>JKttN>1K» »NMtt8BKttNtt$».nMN:¥BSrV.♦n», >:« »:«»>:< >>:< >>;« »:< »;< »;< »:< >>:< >>:< »>:« »:«>>:< >>:< >>:< *x* ‘IS* ‘ii4 4iS4 >isl4 ‘IS* *5S‘ ^ ^ k*2»4 k“r?:* £?« >y.* ^ »5r« »rs!« »rr« >:?« »sn »s;« »s?« »!*!« »8B« »i& rV« >T5n »5:« r^« rt^«»si«r:s:«».*.« >.♦.« ».*.« »-*-«•*-2Jl$at?WINTER QUARTERCOURSE BOOKSJUST A REMINDER: ALL WINTERQUARTER REQUIRED AND REC¬OMMENDED COURSE BOOKSARE AVAILABLE AT THE BOOK¬STORE 5750 S. ELLIS AVE. FORYOUR CONVENIENCE WE WILLBE OPEN SATURDAY JANUARY9th, FROM 9:00 A.M. until 3:00P.M.DON'T FORGET TO VISIT OURSECOND FLOOR FOR ALL YOURSTATIONERY AND SUPPLYNEEDS.UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5750 SOUTH ELLIS AVENUE mMmttttttttMttttHMttMttttMtt§MttttMttttttttM ask forCOLORPROCESSINGby Kodak fi>n»:H*ttuHttttttttttttttHKodacolorDEVELOPING AND PRINTINGAVAILABLE ATZmZ'P;«5gsg2"5 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTOREPHOTOGRAPHY DEPARTMENT5750 S. Ellis Ave.2nd floor5 n m, tt4>gng44K4ii:<‘a:**a:4ka<^i|‘a4,5£n2S4*2:4*a4,Kwai“Js4ks<,2^®’5s<‘is<*s4*a:“is4,i£rtK4,2;naJ4‘ss,*asns:4‘5S4,ai44s4*ss<*i!:oKwaJ4ia4*a<^i4,2;4‘K<*K4ii:4»j£“ss4,a*|2:‘*i£4ia,,JSMKMS'^<'al5I970's PULITZER PRIZE PLAYMACE TOl-H-MIM-mi“IS A BLACK PANTHER OF A PLAY, STALKINGTHE STAGE AS IF IT WERE AN URBAN JUNGLE.SNARLING AND CLAWING WITH UNINHIBITEDFURY AT THE CONTEMPORARY FABRIC OFBLACK WHITE AND BLACK BLACK RELATIONSHIPS!” — TIME MAGAZINE“CHARLES GORDONE ISTHEMOSTASTONISHING NEW AMERICANPLAYWRIGHT SINCE EDWARDALBEE."-Walter Kerr, NY TIMES 4 '%s*o .* %\SPECIAL STUDENT STAND-BY RATES2.00 OFFSTUDEBAKER THEATERTUES through FRI at 8:30 P.M.SUNDAY at 7:00 P.M.MAT WED A SAT at 2 00 P I NO DISCOUNTSAT NIGHT418 S. MICHIGANPHONE 939 3744 SOMEWHAT HIGHER PRICES A!\I)OSTENTATIOUS; UC FACULTY MAYBE FOUND IMBIBING HERE.if you’ve got it, ftaunt it!THE EAGLEcocktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks . . .5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM AVAILABLECARPET BARN WAREHOUSENew and Used CarpetsRemnants and Roll EndsOriental ReproductionsAntique French WiltonFur Rugs & Fur CoatsINEXPENSIVE ANTIQUE FURNITUREOpen Tues. thru Sat., 9-4Sunday 10-31228W. Kinzie 243-2271 HY 3-1933 INTRODUCTION TOBUDDHISMA 10 Week Lecture CourseConducted by theVen. G.M. KuboseWed. Eve's 7.30 - 9 PMJan. 13 thru Mar. 17Fees: Course $15,Single Admission $2BUDDHISTEDUCATIONAL CENTER1151 W. leland Ave.For Information &RegistrationCall 334-4661"BUT THEN the Soviet reality isit sell almost unendurable Thebest stories, poems and novelscannot be published; they circulate among the writer's Iriendsin manuscript The best paint¬ings cannot be exhibited,excellent films remain unseen,musicians play for small circlesof intimates And prison, laborcamp and Siberia arc everpresent possibil¬ities. The atmo¬sphere is literallyKafka." NATIONAL REVIEW, write DeptX, 150 E 35 Street,N, Y 10016TAhSAM-YfcNCHINESE-AMERICAN, RESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A M TO 8:30 P M. ‘SUNDAYS ANO HOLIDAYS12 10 8:30 P.M.Orders to take our1316 East 63rd HUd- StudentDiscountModelCamera1342 E. 55th493-6700Most complete photo shopon South side The Department of Nursing of the Universityof Chicago hospitals and clinics is offering aRefresher course for inactive R.N.'s.Graduation from an accredited school ofnursing required.There will be a charge for textbooks andlocker only. No registration fee.For information contact Judy Chastain, nurs¬ing in service department, University of Chi¬cago hospitals and clinics, 950 E. 59th Street,PO Box 416 Chicago, III. 60637. Or call 947-5741.I am interested in the R.N. Refreshercourse. Please send information to:Name....Address:Telephone:6/Grey City Journal/January 8, 1971 Cost: FALL SEMESTERISRAELBrandeis UniversityThe Jacob Hiatt InstituteStudy in Jerusalem, IsraelJuly-December, 1971(40 students from 25 universities enrolled in 1970)Juniors and Seniors eligibleFour courses/Hebrew not required/Earn 16 credits$2000/Tuition, room, board,round-trip travelSome financial aid available.Write today for informationapplication dealine March 1.The Hiatt InstituteBrandeis UniversityWaltham, Massachusetts 02145JESSELSON’ST^752-2170, 752-8190, 343-9184 • 1340 f. 53rdMTJSICHarper Dance Goes To TownTaylor, Nikolais, Cunningham, andTetley — spent a week in residence atthe Harper in 1967, and then spentanother week at various locations inIllinois.The residency requirement has beenregarded as a rewarding experiencefor all concerned. For the dancers, whowere traditionally booked into one-night stands, the NEA requirementthat grant recipients spend two weeksin one state, with a minimum of half aweek in one place, made life muchsmoother. The residencies also in¬creased contact between the dancersand their audience. There were mini¬concerts at the Harper Theater forschool children, lecture demonstra¬tions in the public schools, and masterclasses on this campus. In addition,Urban Gateways, a not-for-profit Chi¬cago organization, has sponsored con¬certs with question-and-answer ses¬sions for inner-city children and hassparked their interest in dance.In one week in Decatur, Illinois,during the first eight-week pilot pro¬gram, nearly 7800 children and adultssaw the Paul Taylor Company per¬form. The company was so well re¬ceived that the townspeople formed aband to give them a send-off at theairport. In Chicago, the resident com¬panies have used master classes as asource of new talent. The Taylor Com-MUSICDance withThe MastersIn conjunction with the HarperDance Festival, members of the dancecompanies performing at the festivalwill be teaching master classes inmodern dance technique at Ida NoyesGymnasium. They will be held onSaturday January 9, with members ofthe Murray Louis Dance Company; onJanuary 16, with the Merce Cunning¬ham Co.; on Jan. 23, with the PaulTaylor Co.; and on the 30th with theAlwin Nikolais Dance Co.Classes will be from 1-2:30 p.m.Registration fee is $1.00 for UC stu¬dents and $2.00 for others for eachclass. Register at Ida Noyes Hall,Room 201 before the Saturday. Formore information call 753-3574. pany’s two newest members, ErnestMorgan and Britt Swanson, are Chica¬goans who were first seen by Taylorduring these master classes.Six years ago, there were no resi¬dencies ; now 32 states have a total of 97weeks of residencies for modern dancetroupes as a result of the pilot programbegun in Illinois with the Harper Festi¬val.This year, the Sagans felt it was timeto move to the Loop. Although thismove has brought a 60 percent increasein theater and stage crew costs, theSagans felt that the audience at Harperhad grown, and they wanted a majorshowcase in a central location to dis¬play the companies and thus continueto build a modern dance audience. Byproviding the festival with a theater inthe Loop, they hope that modern dancewill be more accepted as a full-fledgedart form. >The 900-seat Civic Theater is a min¬iature of the Opera House. The twotheaters are on the ground floor of a 42-story office building that was built bySamuel Insull, the utilities baron. Hehoped to support the arts with therental income from the skyscraper.Unfortunately, the Depression did inthis scheme, along with Insull’s otherplans.At the Harper, the companies’ feesrepresented two-thirds of the costs,while at the Civic, these fees willaccount for 40 per cent of the costs.Since the second Festival, the IllinoisArts Council has been paying one-sixthof the dancers’ fees and the NEA hasbeen paying one-third. After ticketrevenues, the remaining costs havebeen met by the Sagans. This year,however, the Festival became a not-for-profit corporation, and on thisbasis, it has been given a $53,800 FordFoundation Grant, to be matched bylocal funds over a 3-year period.Although the Harper Theater is nowa movie house its dance legacy will bevisible around the nation as well as inthe Civic Theater. The existence of theHarper Theater Dance Festival wasimportant for the initial funding of NewYork’s first modern dance season.Charles Reinhart says, “I think thefact that the Harper Festival did existmade our point stronger in trying to getthe New York dance season because,after all, which city is the second city?I pointed out to everybody, My God,FILM look at Chicago and what they gotgoing.” What followed from the solic¬itation in New York was a $500,000grant from the Ford Foundation, whichbegan the City Center Dance Seasonand the Brooklyn Academy and BillyRose Theater dance seasons. Nowthese seasons are supported by theNew York State Arts Council as well asthe Ford Foundation. Although nofunds are coming from the NEA, theyown the ANTA Theater which they areproviding rent-free for the 1971 Ameri¬can Dance Season. In contrast to theHarper Festival, in New York the costof a week’s run is $40,000, whichincludes $11,000 for company fees; thisis about 26 per cent for companiescompared to 40 per cent at the Civic.The pilot program of residencies thatbegan in Illinois in 1967 with eightweeks of dance, had 22 weeks ofresidencies in 1968, mostly in midwest-ern states; in 1969 there were 67Vfeweeks, and in 1970-71 there will be atotal of 97 weeks of modern dancethroughout the US. This means $800,000in fees for companies, roughly one-third of which is provided by the NEAand the rest by local arts councils. Thelist of 35 to 38 companies for theresidencies was compiled by the DanceAdvisory Panel of NEA and includescompanies ranging from Alvin Nikolais to Meredith Monk.This has brought a new financialstability to dance companies, whosemembers still barely earn a livingwage. Salaries in the internationallyacclaimed Paul Taylor Company rangefrom $5560 to $6280, while MurrayLouis dancers average $3856 a year.The residencies are providing jobsand developing a modern dance au¬dience. At Harper, for example, PaulTaylor’s first appearance in 1965 filled40 per cent of the house, and insucceeding years his company playedto 51 per cent, 66 per cent, 70 per centand 77 per cent of the house.Since Taylor’s first year at Decatur,Illinois, the people have requested hisreturn every subsequent year, andthey also began their own communityarts council. A lagging fund drive for aMilliken University Theater went overthe top because of enthusiasm gener¬ated for the Taylor Company. Refer¬ring to the Taylor experience in Deca¬tur, Charles Reinhart says, “That’sreally what it’s about — not justbreezing into town and out, with every¬body going back to old ways, but rathershowing how exciting the arts can be.And if you can get them to take a lookat it, a certain percentage of commu¬nities and people will say, ‘My God,what have I been missing.’ ”Lean’s Newest Monumental RomanceRyan’s Daughter (Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer, at theMichael Todd) is the new film by David Lean,director of such films as Lawrence of Arabia, Bridgeon the River Kwai, Doctor Zhivago, and earlier, thetasteful adaptations of Dickens (Great Ex¬pectations) and Coward (Brief Encounter). Lean hasalways been a superlative technician, a man whoreally knew how to make movies. His problem hasalways been, “Why?” No other director ever tackledsuch ambitious projects with less evidence of person¬al involvement. His compositions were always impec¬cable even when his scenes were hysterical (likeLawrence revelling in his own blood atop the boxcars). Lean’s films had themes, but Lean was muchtoo fastidious to implicate himself with them — theywere merely there as evidence of intelligence, a factthat was sufficient to garner critical praises and twoAcademy Awards.Ryan’s Daughter has been dealt with harshly bycritics, I suspect because they are a little embar¬rassed at their unabashed praise of a few years ago.Ryan’s Daughter does indeed share the faults of theearlier films (and although, I found Zhivago prettyatrocious, I did enjoy most of the others), but it doeshave redeeming qualities that, I think, place itamong the better films of that year of the GreatMovip Draught 1970Ryan’s Daughter mixes the romantic futility ofBrief Encounter and Summertime with the epic scale of the later superproductions.Rosie Ryan (SarahMiles), the publican’s daughter, falls in love with alocal schoolteacher (Robert Mitchum) only to findthat life with O’Shaughnessy is a little more drabthan she anticipated. (“You expect too much, RosieRyan,” priest Trevor Howard clues her in a pre¬marital pep-talk). So when crippled and shell¬shocked British war hero Christopher Jones comes toman the garrison outside town, Rosie is ripe for adally. When an Irish revolutionary is betrayed, thelocal populace angrily punishes her and she and herhusband leave town.The film, shot in 70mm by Freddie Young, offersa sure cure for television eyesore. The first few shotsare so well-resolved, so bright, so beautiful that it ispainful. After a half-hour, the soul adjusts, but theentire movie is magnificently mounted, as one wouldexpect of David Lean. The grace and skill of thephotography is alone worth the trip, and the greatstorm sequence of the cast retrieving boxes of armsin the beating surf is excitingly staged and recorded.The picture has been damned for its outrageoussymbolism, courtesy of that master of ersatz allego¬ry, Robert Bolt (A Man for all Seasons). There is thetown mute-idiot, a grotesque John Mills looking likeLon Chaney, who always brings a Fellini ditty alongwith him on the sound track. And of couiac, theinfamous orgasm imagery. David Lean has at¬tempted to make a 19th century movie with the technology of the seventies, and while it isn’tprofound, it is fun, lovely, and moving in its crazy,eccentric way.While Lean has nothing to say (and why musthe?), he does have something he wants to do, and heunabashedly achieves it. The compositions are from19th century painting, Manet, Seurat; the music(much less successful) Beethoven; and the plotpretty good Edwardian. Ryan’s Daughter providespleasures of style, and of audacity. There are touchesof expressionism in the lighting and in the perform¬ances. The movie requires a wilful but worthysuspension of disbelief. In these days of grainypseudo-hipness, Lean’s craft is staggeringly good.The scale of the picture does get out of hand, (andsometimes I cried out for just a rough edge or two),but Lean never yields either his professionalism orhis determination. Ryan’s Daughter has major flawsas a work of art, and no pretense whatever to truth,but Keats notwithstanding, it does have beauty, andconviction, and that’s all I need to know.Incidentally, Robert Mitchum, although miscast,is still superbly modulated and expressive. Even hisaccent is better than that of the English actors. SarahMiles is a good actress, but she lacks the presence tosufficiently dominate the cliffs, sea and forests.Evci^unc else is guuu, sometimes in spiie of tilt;parts. Maurice Jarre’s score stinks.—Myron MeiselJanuary. 8, 1971/Grey City Joumal/7UP AGAINST THE ICYWALL! W1NTERQUARTER!!Yes neighbors, with rumours of a true Chicago Winter in the air, the memories of overheated classrooms andunderheated apartments return with a cold Hash, and we sometimes wonder - why, Chicago, Why?Weather notwithstanding, if you’ll pardon the hyperbole, a number of departments and student organizations areproviding social wind-breaks for those holding out against the season. The list provided below is preliminary, with specialemphasis on January and (yecch!) early February.Grand OpeningsFriday. January 8 todavy \KTV celebrating the opening of Harper Undergraduate Library. 3:30 - 5:00. third floor of Harper. Refreshments, free.Friday. January 15 (;r \\f> opening - fill NEW (SHOP Wall hangings, carpets, new lights, extended menu. FM tuner. Open evenings until 11 p.m.Every person visiting the f-Shop for the opening after 3:30 p.m. will receive a free chance to win - wow! - a full course roast beef or turkeydinner for six. specially prepared and served in the private dining room of Hutchison Commons.. ExtravaganzaFriday, January 15 | p %\jnst fnt |( v HALL dance/concert, with the Seigel/Schwall Band. Gala light show, experimental films. Ida Noyes Hall. 0 p.m. 50'.Sponsored by the new Ida Noyes Program Board.Health Food FeastsMonday. January 11 The Bandprsnatch presents an alternative to their usual menu this Monday in a succulent meal of anti-grease designed to tempt your jadedpalate, and clean out your system. 5:30-0:30 only 99fFolk MusicSaturday. January 16 Jim Post, folk-rock performer of Friend and Lover, coming to the Bandersnatch from the Quiet knight. Ida Noyes. 9-12 p.m. Free,and January 23Friday. January 29 I folk fFSTIVAl with New Lost Cits Ramblers. Lighlnin' Slim Blues Band. J.D. frowe and his kentuckv Mountain Bovs. Robert PeteSaturday. January 30 Williams. Morris Brothers. Joseph Pat Polka Band. Ray Calkins and his Wisconsin Lumberjacks. George Tucker. Barbara Edwards. Estil andSunday. January 31 ^rna Wainer and his Mountaineers. Mandel Hall. Admission charge.Art PartyFriday. January 22 As usual, the Shapiro “Art to Live with" Collection will be distributed: pick up numbered cards beginning 8:30 a.m. for 4:30 distribution.f);ii also PAINT VOI R OWN" party, for those who didn't find what they wauled in the collection. Paints, supplies available in Ida Noyes. 8 p.m.Refreshments. Free.And - AKf (HI NTV STRING BAND concert. 9:30 p.m. IdaNoyes. free. Both sponsored by the Ida Noyes Program Board.Classical MusicFriday, January 8 Laurence Liben at Bond Chapel. English Music for Harpsichord and Virginal. Admission charge. 8:30 p.m.Thursday. January 21 Lecture by Pozzi Escot composer in Lexington Hall. 3:00 p.m. Free.Friday. January 22 Contemporary Chamber Players with pieces by Babbitt. Haimo. Escot. Schoenberg. Mandel Hall. 8:30. Free.Sunday. January 24 Piano recital at Pierce Tower. Craig Worthington and Alan Chill. 3:00 p.m. Free with ticket from Pierce Tower.Saturday, January 30 Violin Recital by Alexander Diokic in Bond Chapel. 8:30 p.m. Free.Sunday. February 14 Pierce Tower Valentine Concert. John Klaus and Ellen Harris. 3:00 p.m. Free with ticket from Pierce Tower.Oratorio Festival in Rockefeller Chapel. Bach B minor mass. 3:30 p.m. Admission charge.Jazz MusicMonday.January 22 Revitalization presents annonhall Adderly and Howlin' Wolf. 8 p.m. Mandel Hall. Admission ChargeTuesday, February 2 Contemporary Jazz and Improvisational Ensemble concert. Mandel Hall. Admission charge.DancesFriday, February 5 Ijjti jSarii' (Blues-Rock-Sanlana Sound) 9 pm. in Ida Noyes Hall, sponsored by Black Colony. 81.00Dramatic ProductionsFriday, February 17.26 University Theatre presents’^ GV.NT. directed by Annette Fern. Admission.Saturday, February 18.27Sunday. February 19.28" lee skatingafternoons. North Field by Pierce Tower, bring l.C. I.D. card. Warming trailer. Free,evenings.Spring Interim Ski TripsMarch 20 - 27 Aspen trip, sponsored by Charter Flight Program. 8210 includes TWA to Denver, bus to Aspen, lift ticket, lodging, breakfast. x3598.March 20 - 27 Steamboat Springs trip, sponsored by l .C. Ski Club. Call 324-9830.8195 includes plauefare. lodging in 5 person unit.For additional information and events, see the VVinter Quarter Student Activ ities Calendar, available in Mandel corridor or Ida Noyes in hideouscolors. And watch this space for more events scheduled u Against the lev Wall.S/Grey City Journal/January 8, 1971