The Chicago MaroonVolume 9, Number 30 The University of Chicago Friday, January 22,1971E qua I ob-gyn to beginat Chicago Lying-In"l am onlyripping offHollywoodfor everypenny Ican get"—JaneFonda1000 hear Fonda denounce Viet warAn overflow crowd of 1000 was on handyesterday to hear actress Jane Fonda de¬nounce the Vietnam war, sexism andgovernmental repression.Miss Fonda, whose appearance was spon¬sored by Student Government, maintainedthat the war is being escalated, not wounddown, and that the US is in the process ofwithdrawing its forces simply because themen in the field are refusing to fight.She cited as evidence an increasing wide¬spread practice of “fragging” any com¬manding officers who try to put the lives ofthe troops in danger in any action againstthe “enemy.”The United States, she said, althoughwithdrawing its troops from Vietnam, is es¬calating the war in Indochina by increasedmilitary action in Laos and Cambodia. It isincreasingly fighting the war by proxy. Shetermed the Vietnamization program asbeing merely another name for “changingthe color of the corpses.”In her 50 minute talk Miss Fonda thencalled the audience’s attention to a peacetreaty which was negotiated by American,South Vietnamese, and North Vietnamesestudents. The major points of this treatyinclude immediate and total withdrawal ofAmerican forces, establishment of a provi¬sional coalition government, and the re¬moval of the current South Vietnam re¬gime from power. She argued that onlyafter those points have been agreed to canserious discussions on prisoner of war re¬patriation, safety of withdrawing troops,and a permanent post-war government beheld.Fonda also urged students to join the“spring offensive” against the Vietnamwar and to be in Washington May 1 for amassive anti-war demonstration.She emphasized, however, that this is notto be a one day affair, but “part of a con¬tinuing struggle” against “US foreign mili¬tarism and imperialism.”Fonda’s speech was followed by a 40 min¬ute question and answer period duringwhich her sincerity and credibility werechallenged by members of the audience.Asked how she could continue to work forwhat she called “right-wing motion pictureindustry,” she responded that she was only“ripping Hollywood off for every penny I Bruce Rabecan get” and that the money she was mak¬ing was desperately needed for Black Pan¬ther bail funds, anti-war activities, and oth¬er “movement” causes.Asked what system she would prefer tothe present American one, Fonda advo¬cated one that would not place “propertyabove human life,” and would not insure itsown success at the expense of the rest ofthe world. She added, “socialism is onestep in the right direction.”The session closed with reflections on theBy JIM HAEFEMEYERDespite a cold wind, more than 100 pick¬ets marched around the Everett Dirksenfederal building Wednesday to demonstratesupport for Eqbal Ahmad, who was receiv¬ing his indictment inside.US District Court Judge James Parsonsrecorded an order to transfer Ahmad toHarrisburg, in the Pennsylvania middledistrict, but stayed execution of the orderso that Ahmad can remain in the Illinoisnorthern district until his arraignment.US Attorney Sam Skinner told JudgeParsons that a Pennsylvania US attorneyadvised him that the arraignment probablywould be set for the first week of February.Ahmad, an Adlai Stevenson Institute fel¬low, will be arraigned with six others inHarrisburg on charges of conspiring to kid¬nap Presidential adviser Henry Kissingerand to blow up heating systems in govern¬ment buildings on February 22, GeorgeWashington’s traditional birthday.Judge Parsons said that he could notchange the restructions on Ahmad’s travelmade when bond was posted. Ahmad had topostpone indefinitely a speech for last Mon¬day in Toronto, since he must remain in theIllinois northern district and report weeklyto a marshal.Ahmad will speak tonight at 7:30 pm atan indoor rally in Cahn auditorium, 600Emerson, at Northwestern university,along with Richard Falk, professor of inter- By SUE LOTHA faculty proposal to establish a singlesystem of obstetrics and gynecology careat Chicago Lying-In hospital has been ap¬proved, according to Leon Jacobson, deanof the biological sciences division and thePritzker school of medicine.TTie changes were announced in the wakeof an autumn campaign by the StudentHealth Organization (SHO) to end whatthey called “the two-class system of caredelivered at Lying-In since its beginning in1931”., Under the new plan, a single obstetricsclinic and a single gynecology clinic willreplace the two present ob-gyn clinics.Other planned changes include remodelingof waiting rooms, expanded and improvedclinical areas, and individual booths forbirth control instruction.Continuity of care for each patient will beimproved by dividing the faculty, residents,interns, and medical students into threeteams. On successive visits, a patient willbe seen by members of the same team.The fee schedule for patients, now higherfor those attending the east clinic, has notyet been reworked.The renovation will cost at least $100,000,Jacobson noted, “although neither the ex¬act cost or source of the funds is yetknown. “We’re going to go ahead with it,regardless of where (the money) is comingpossibility of her being arrested on aframed up charge. She said that anyoneorganizing against government policy wassubject to such action, but that she waskeeping as “clean” as possible to avoid giv¬ing them a chance to do anything.Student Government collected $316 in ad¬missions. All of that amount will go to MissFonda, along with $184 more from SGfunds, to make up the $500 fee she charged.She promised to donate the sum to helpGI’s from across the nation come to Detroitto protest the war.national law at Princeton university and anexpert on war crimes.Ahmad will speak Monday at 8 pm at theFirst Unitarian church, 5650 Woodlawn.Before the hearing with Judge Parsons,Ahmad appeared before US CommissionerJames Balog to determine if Ahmad was from,” he said. “If we don’t get it fromsomeone, we’re going to deficit spend.”The plan will be implemented followingstructural changes, including relocation ofoffices into which the new clinics will ex¬pand, Jacobson added.Dr Frederick Zuspan, DeLee professorand chairman of obstetrics-gynecology,said of the announcement, “This really isthe culmination of three full years of workby faculty in ob-gyn. We are pleased thatthis embodies in principle everything thatwe hoped for.”Dr Zuspan added, “I am grateful to theSHO for helping the department to achieveits goals. The one thing that they were ableto achieve was to put this on a higher prior¬ity. But the idea came from the faculty.”When members of UC-SHO met withdeans informally last October, the deanssaid that money was unavailable for asingle obstetrics-gynecology ward, then es¬timated at $700,000.SHO called a public meeting in early No¬vember to make public its charges and todemand an end to the “two-class” clinicsystem, continuity of care, improved facil¬ities, a sliding fee scale based on income,and community “patient advocates” toserve as ombudsmen for visitors to theclinics.Members of SHO, most of whom aremedical students, subsequently began talk¬ing of disparities to patients in the less ex¬pensive West clinic.According to SHO, they were told toleave the clinic or face discipline for dis¬rupting “the doctor-patient relationship.”The group complained that patients in theWest clinic, unlike those in the East clinic,were subjected to a “train station” atmos¬phere of long wooden benches, enduredfrequent showings of birth control films,rarely saw faculty or even the same staffmember, and were more likely to be usedas “teaching material” for medical stu¬dents.Details of the approved faculty plan wereworked out during Christmas break.the same person named in the indictment.Ahmad's attorney Thomas Sullivan ob¬jected to the testimonies of Paul Tinnen-berg, the FBI agent who arrested AhmadJanuary 12, and of Skinner, who temporar¬ily withdrew from the case to testify.Continued on page 2Ken Firestone — The RooseveW TorchPROTEST: About 100 people demonstrated and marched in support of Eqbal Ahmadnear the Federal building Wednesday. Inside, Ahmad, under indictment for an allegedplot to kidnap Presidential aide Henry Kissinger, had an order to transfer him tePennsylvania stayed by Judge James Parson.Ahmad Pennsylvania transfer stayedJacobson reappointed bio, med school dean IDr Leon 0 Jacobson, 59, has been reap- riculum has been completely revised. New laboratory, on top of the chronic diseases* •pointed dean of the biological sciences divi¬sion and Pritzker school of medicine for afive-year term.Dr Jacobson is also the Regenstein pro¬fessor of biological and medical sciences.His reappointment, effective January 1,1971, was announced by President EdwardLevi, upon recommendation by the provostand after consultation with a faculty com¬mittee.Dr Jacobson first was appointed dean ofthe division on January 1, 1966. He is thefirst alumnus of the University’s school ofmedicine to serve as dean of the division.Commenting on the reappointment, Levisaid: “The last five years has been a peri¬od of great achievement in the biomedicalsciences .... The Pritzker school of medi¬cine was established and an affiliation withMichael Reese hospital was begun.“The pace of discovery in the basic biol¬ogical sciences as well as in the medicalsciences has accelerated. The medical cur- facilities have been built and others are un¬der construction.“We have been fortunate in having DrJacobson’s distinguished leadership in thisperiod of remarkable development. We aredoubly fortunate that he will continue toserve in the difficult years which lie imme¬diately ahead.“The discovery of new knowledge, theimproved training of physicians and biolog¬ical scientists, and the delivery of newmodes of health services must continue;there are many difficulties which must besurmounted.“I am delighted that Dr Jacobson willcontinue to devote his considerable talents,energy, and wisdom to the solution of thesecomplex and important problems.”As noted by President Levi, during DrJacobson’s tenure there has been consid¬erable expansion of facilities. Much renova¬tion has been accomplished in the olderbuildings. New quarters for the Ben MayYOU REMEMBER YOUR FAMILYGIVE THEM SOMETHING TOREMEMBER YOU BY...SEND HOME A MAROONSUBSCRIPTION NOW.NAMEADDRESSCITY.... STATE.ZIPONLY $6.00 Forthe remainder ofthe academic year.THE IDA NOYESPROGRAM BOARDpresents:1. ‘PAINT YOUR OWN’ -for those who didn’t findwhat they wanted in theShapiro “Art to Live With”collection.8 pmpaints & materials supplied,FREE2. LAKE COUNTYSTRING RANDCONCERT9:30 p.m. - FREETonight at Ida NoyesUP AGAINSTTHE ICY WALL DR LEON 0 JACOBSONReappointed dean of biological sciencesdivision and Pritzker medical school hospital, are expected to be completed thisspring. Emergency facilities of the hospi¬tals and clinics have been greatly ex¬panded.The A J Carlson animal research facilitywas opened in November, 1969. The Cum¬mings life science center now is under con¬struction and will provide modern labora „tory and classroom facilities in the basicbiological sciences. Plans are being dis¬cussed for the brain research institute-sur¬gery building.Three new departments have beenformed during Dr Jacobson’s chairman¬ship. They are anesthesiology, ophthal¬mology, and theoretical biology.Prior to his appointment as dean, he'served as chairman of the department ofmedicine and as director of the Argonnecancer research hospital, which is operatedby the University for the US atomic energycommission.Testimony 'based on hearsay'Continued from page 1Sullivan contended that their testimoniesidentifying Ahmad were based on hearsay,since neither of them placed a call to Phila¬delphia FBI special agent W B Anderson,who gave them the information. The callwas placed by a secretary.Balog ruled that hearsay evidence wasadmissible in what he called “a quasi-judi¬cial procedure, at best.”Sullivan then requested that Ahmad’s$60,000 bail be reduced, since bonds for oth¬er defendants had been reduced, but Balogdenied the request.Between the hearings, Ahmad ran acrossthe street to the Christ the King Church tospeak to some 60 people remaining fromthe protest.“I do not wish to carry on a discussion ofthe charges outside court,” he said. “I feelthat an emphasis on these ridiculouscharges would distract us from the most important issue, the increasingly mecha¬nized war.”“I must continue to expose the war withfacts, rather than be distracted by the pet¬ty details of my case.”Ahmad was working on a speech against,“Vietnamization” during the hearing withBalog.When a reporter asked him if his state¬ment that the charges were “ridiculous”sJmeant that he would plead innocent, he re¬plied, “As I told you, I do not want to dis¬cuss the details of my case. Of course I willplead innocent.”The protest was called by the ChicagoCommittee to Defend Eqbal Ahmad and theCommittee of Concerned Asian Scholars Agarbed priest, Bill Hogan from Clergy and,Laymen Concerned, and a frocked youthwith a censer led the pickets in a quietmarch.STUDENT SPECIAL 1Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday1-24 through 1-286 PACK OF POP WITHORDER OR ANY LARGE PIZZAwith a University 1.0.NICKY'S1208 East 53rd StreetFAirfax 4-5340DELIVERIES & CARRY-OUTS ONLY MALL-NIGHT SHOWPERFORMANCES FRIOAT & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREJAN. 22LION IN WINTERKATHARINE HEPBURN JAN. 23JOHN & MARYDUSTIN HOFFMANJAN. 29A STREETCARNAMED DESIREMARLON BRANDO JAN. 30YELLOW SUBMARINEFEB. 5HOUR OF WOLFINGMAR BERGMAN'S FEB. 6PUTNEY SWOPEFEB. 12ANGEL LEVINEZERO MOSTEL FEB. 13LET IT BETHE BEATIESFEB. 19TASTE THE BLOODOF DRACULACHRISTOPHER LEE FEB. 20MADWOMAN OFCHAIUOTKATHARINE HEPBURN| TKHT3 )l » 1 5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113^ ^foreign car hospital2/The Chicago Maroon/January 22,1971 Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The WorldM62E. 53rd St.684-6856pearing in the press concerning the detri¬mental effects of the minimum wage.Friedman said the minimum wage was de¬signed to keep industries in the Northeast.It prevents them from moving to the Southwhere they could utilize the labor force atlower cost, he said.The employee charged that young blacksin low paying jobs do not learn skills.Friedman said he did not know very muchabout that but he did know about the af¬fects of minimum wage on the rate ofunemployment of young blacks and whites.“Before minimum wage the unemploy¬ment rate of young blacks and whites waseight percent,” Friedman said. “After min¬imum wage was instituted, the percent ofyoung whites unemployed rose to 12 per¬cent and black unemployment was doublethat or around 24 or 25 percent.”He explained that it forced unemploy¬ment of young blacks and whites whowould have been hired otherwise. Theyprobably would be paid less than the cur¬rent minimum wage but he emphaticallysaid this was better than nothing.These comments caused many verbal as¬saults on Friedman from the audience. Forthe only time during the speech Friedmansnapped back, “I am not willing to tradeinsults.”The question and answer period reflectedthe general tone of the speech. Audiencemembers frequently interrupted the pre¬sentation. Friedman himself encouragedaudience response with statements like“there is a Grecian temple on ConstitutionAve and that’s where all complaints aboutinflation should be lodged.”Friedman is one of three scholars chosenfor attack by the SDS national interim com¬mittee last fall. SDS is demanding thatFriedman, who has tenure at the Univer¬sity, be fired.VISA volunteers help mental patientsBy FRED WINSTONVolunteer Institutional Service Activity(VISA), an organization of University stu¬dents, is helping to rehabilitate chronicallyretarded and behaviorally difficult children,aiding present and former mental patientsand comforting mentally disturbed or se¬nile senior citizens.VISA volunteers are currently working inone adult and two children’s wards in Chi¬cago State Hospital, visiting the childrenSaturday afternoons and the adults Mondaynights every week.Working for VISA “is a two-way oppor¬tunity,” said volunteer Gerry Farby 71.“Besides aiding the children, it gives onean opportunity to engeage in therapeuticoperations and see what the hospital situ¬ation is like.”Farby is trying to organize a BehaviorModification Program in the children’s ward he visits. The program, which hasbeen successful at other hospitals, uses asystem of awards such as candy for correctresponses to training.Farby hopes the program may trainsome of the children to the point where“they will be self-sufficient in adulthoodand may be able to support themselves.”With this new program, Farby said,“Volunteers get more of a sense of achieve¬ment and accomplishment” than in thepast when they only played with the chil¬dren.One main objective now, Farby said, is toget more volunteers. The lack of studentsseriously hinders the new program andcould cause it to close.This particular ward has recently beenremodeled to give the children more space.A professional staff has been hired and thehospital is trying to “improve the quality of the children’s lives,” according to Farby.The other children’s ward where volun¬teers work is not so fortunate, according toAuggie Tomanovich 71. Most of the 40 chil¬dren in this ward, who “are in because ofsevere emotional problems,” have little todo unless the volunteers are there, Toma¬novich said.She said the nurses are poor and al¬though the educational staff is concerned,they are understaffed.Student volunteers in this ward plan theirown program of children’s activities. If avolunteer wants to work with a child on anindividual basis, arrangements can bemade.Miss Tomanovich admits the work “canbe frustrating unless you like children.”A1 Eng 71 works in the adult geriatricsand admissions ward at the hospital whereContinued on page 4MILTON FRIEDMAN: At a lecture in Quantrell Thursday afternoon, the distinguishedeconomist discussed “how not to stop inflation” before an often hostile crowd. Angry questions and interjections punc¬tuated a speech given by Milton Friedman,Russell distinguished service professor ofeconomics Thursday afternoon.Friedman spoke on “How not to stop in¬flation,” before a capacity crowd in Quan¬trell auditorium. A question and answer pe¬riod followed.A member of the audience rose and at¬tacked Friedman for his alleged advocacyof unemployment. During the speech Fried¬man had said high unemployment was an“intervening period before the levelling offof the economy.” In reply to the questionFriedman retorted “I have no interest toserve by making people unemployed.”An unidentified University employee con¬fronted Friedman with his statements ap-Angry questioninginterrupts Friedman:iWr. Qu.s.CHOICERIBROAST89Vlk SWIFTPREMIUMBACON1 lb. package73eBig RollVANITYFAIRTOWELS3 for 89e—u.s.CHOICERBSTEAK9 8eA FRESHGREENCABBAGE97ib. BRENT HOUSE INSTITUTE forINTERGROUP COMMUNICATIONAnnounces its Winter Quarter Program:EDUCATION and the(real live) PERSONWeekend & Evening WorkshopsExploring People and How They LearnJanuary 29-31Four Thursday Evenings in FebruaryCall: Brent House5540 Woodlawn753-3392For Registrationnettle caeeK All BottomsSALE $8 - $10SAVE 20^ ON now$6.90COLOR COORDINATED BOTTOMS5222% Harper• BEDSPREADS hrs. 11-9 Daily• DRAPERIES PEOPIE WHO KNOWONLY FABRICS MARKED WITH CALL ONTHIS TAG ARE ON SALE JAMESSCHULTZCLEANERSCUSTOM QUAUTYCLEANING5211 S. HARPER COURT J T TAIT ond II 10% student discountCHICAGO, ILL. 60615 mmj 1363 E. 53rd St.(3 752-6933January 22, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/3 vrwuiViHVvw.Reuben's book 'vicious lies'Gay Lib member confronts sex book author on TVBy FRED WINSTON“They are vicious lies based on the scien¬tifically disgusting method of psychology,”UC Gay Lib member Murray Adelman saidof the chapter on homosexuality in Dr Da¬vid Reuben’s book “Everything You Al¬ways Wanted to Know About Sex — ButWere Afraid to Ask.”Adelman barged onstage during the tap¬ing of Howard Miller’s “Chicago” tele¬vision show January 14 to confront Dr Reu¬ben, who was a guest, on Miller’s show. Adelman and some 15 other Gay Libmembers attended the taping of the show,intending to question Dr Reuben about hisviews on homosexuality. Dr Reuben, how¬ever, stated that he would refuse to answerany questions concerning homosexuality.“My resentment just kept building up,”said Adelman. He said four people actuallyplanned to come onstage but “our commu¬nications broke through, and I was the onlyone.”Contrary to newspaper reports, Adelman said he intended no physical harm to DrReuben but wanted to “sit onstage andtalk.”Adelman, a graduate student in humandevelopment, said that Reuben came to hisconclusions on homosexuals on the basis ofhis sick patients, and “the evidence reflectsonly one percent of the homosexual popu¬lation.”Some of the “irresponsible and viciouslies” which Adelman cited from the bookwere Dr Reuben’s statements that it is im-Patients grateful for student interestContinued from page 3patients remain for at most four or fiveweeks, which means volunteers see themno more than fou/ or five times.“It is a challenge to establish a mean¬ingful relationship with them,” said Eng.The program for the adult ward consistsmainly of talking with the patients, dis¬cussing their problems and problems in the outside world of which they see so little.Most of the patients are not retarded butare reformed alcoholics or senile and aregrateful for the opportunity to speak withstudents, Eng said.Understaffing is also a significant prob¬lem in this ward. On a typical Monday eve¬ning only a doctor, his helper and a house-keeper are present. Only a few volunteers have been with the adults and more areneeded to keep the program going, Engadded.If sufficient numbers of students volun¬teer other wards could be opened for work,such as an adolescent ward which “couldbe the most challenging,” Eng said.Anyone interested in further informationabout VISA may call Eng at 667-5012. possible to have a decent homosexual rela¬tionship, and tnat homosexuals meet bycalling telephone numbers on bathroomwalls.Adelman said, “Reuben’s book is dan¬gerous because it will be in many casesyoung people’s first contact with homosex¬uality. If they have homosexual feelingsthey’ll repress them. If they follow the bookthey’ll only confirm the nonsense he statedas fact.”He also said there is a campaign in Chi¬cago to stop sale and advertising of DrReuben’s book. Bookstore manager HarlanDavidson has agreed to display a packet of15 Gay Lib articles anyplace Dr Reuben’sbook is displayed in the bookstore.Despite his failure to talk to Dr Reuben,Adelman said, “The action was successfulbecause it was the first time any gay actionin Chicago made the first page of any pa¬per or anything other than token public¬ity.”Adelman said the newspapers were “fullof misinformation” about his going onstage and never bothered to talk to him.THE CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERSOF THE UNIVERSITY Of CHICAGORALPH SHAPEY *Music DirectorElsa Charlston * Soprano SoloBabbitt • Himo • Escot • SchoenbergFRIDAY • JANUARY 22 • 8:30 P.M.MANDEL HALLAdmission is free The public is invited MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THt MAROON12121. S9«h St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME. ADDRESS, PHONE.CHARGE: SO' per line, AO' 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 $1.00 for your own hooding. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fre^.1—|—!—i—1—i— i 1 i i i ; 1 1 m ht1 I l 1 1 i 1 -1 —'1 l i . . 4 l —!— — H i* , t . t . , 1i j - 4 f 1 1 T ti i i ■-i i r i l 1 i f f T T * * 9L 1 1 1 1 1 L ♦ tl i .ill I—| | ! * 1i i 1,i i 1 1 T 1 ' ' ' IIIi.1**:i :i '1 1 1 1 1 1 LJ 1 i L 1 1 L— 1*1, TL.a -JJane Fonda in Roger Vadim'sBARBARELLADoc Films Sunday January 24 7:15/9:30 Cobb$lMORAY'S DEU(Formerly Chicken-A- Go-Go)No Other Eating PlaceLike It In The CityCorn Beef-Pastrami-Roast BeefChicken-Shrimp-PerchTHIS WEEK'SSPECIALNova Lox - Cream Cheeseon a Bagel — 75cVa pound Hamburger - Friesand Cole Slaw — 59<Steak Sandwich - Fries - Slaw — *11603 East 55th StreetOpen to 7 PM Closed Mondays4/The Chicago Maroon/January fcz, 1371 M. BERGCLEANER &FURRIERUNCLAIMED USED FURS$25 Up to $100Settle for charges, valuesup to $1,000. 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WabashChicago, III. 60602South Shore Drive ot 79th St. RE 1-3700 'I 'Hyde Park still as nutty as it always was;Rv CORDON KATZ -By GORDON KATZWhen Saul Alinsky spoke at the FirstUnitarian church last Monday night, it wasthe first time he had been back to HydePark since the days when he battled theUniversity in behalf of a newly-createdcommunity group called The Woodlawn Or¬ganization.It was a cold night, and his speech wasdelayed by the unexpected, overflowcrowd. “Well, after seeing all of you out ona night like tonight,” Alinsky bagan, “Iknow that I’m back home — Hyde Park isstill as nutty as it always was.” The onlyreason Alinsky showed up, he later admit¬ted, was because he had made a com¬mitment to the church’s pastor, Jack Men¬delsohn.To many in attendance Monday night,Saul Alinsky is sort of a folk hero in themovement to organize against injustice. Inthe 1930’s he organized the area made fa¬mous in Upton Sinclair’s “The Jungle” intothe Back of the Yards Council. After found¬ing the Industrial Areas Foundation in 1940,Alinsky and his staff have been trainingorganizers for work in communitiesthroughout the country.Alinsky spoke and answered questions forseveral hours, and when he stepped downfrom the speaker’s platform, he found him¬self surrounded by a combination of report¬ers and enthusiastic admirers.One lady grabbed his arm and said, “MrAlinsky, I’m a member of the ChicagoTeacher’s Union, and our union leaders areselling us down the river. What can wedo?” Although tired, Alinsky nodded as helistened sympathetically.A reporter from the Chicago Tribune in¬troduced himself, apologizing for his news¬paper’s critical treatment of Alinsky.Lighting a Benson & Hedges, Alinskysmiled and replied, “We do agree on onething — we’re both against syphillis.”A few minutes later Alinsky, myself, Ma¬roon photographer Bruce Rabe, and Mi¬chael Miner of the Sun-Times, made ourway to the minister’s office where Alinskyhad consented to an interview. Bruce Rabe"If a left wing group tried forcibly to steal the microphone from some¬one 'we'd do the same thing we did to the Minutemen and the Klan -we'd kick the shit out of them/ " —Saul AlinskyAlinsky said that he was optimistic aboutthe “younger generation,” but was criticalof the insincerity and irrelevance of someaspects of student political involvement.“You kids have come up with the saying‘get it all together’. You can’t get it alltogether unless you have the pieces to get ittogether. There is no shortcut to hard workand organization — I wish there was,” heremarked.“I have met 19 year olds who were se¬nile,” Alinsky said. He was at Harvard dur¬ing their strike in 1969, and he recalledseeing “kids, waiting on a street corner for the light to change, wearing t-shirts withthe red fist, while holding ice-cream conesin their hands.” “Then there was the head¬line on a college newspaper — I won’t men¬tion which one — that read, ‘Gay Lib sup¬ports auto workers.’ ”“These kids are not going for a revolu¬tion, they’re going for a revelation,”Alinsky declared.Alinsky was asked what he would do if aleft-wing group tried to forcibly steal themicrophone from someone at one of his or¬ganizing meetings. “We’d do the samething that we did to the Minutemen and the Klan — we’d kick the shit out of them,” hereplied.We talked about the Black Panthers.Originally sympathetic to the Panthers,Alinsky said that he considers the organiza¬tion “dead” after the Marin County courthouse shoot-out. “I think the Panthers areasking for it now. They’ve never been asstrong as the press had indicated, andthere’s a suicidal obsession now.“Here’s Huey Newton saying he can’t getjustice in an American court and all thetime he’s saying that he’s out on a reversalby a superior court,” Alinsky said.THE NEW ERA THEATRE presentsCobb Hall AuditoriumMon. Jan. 25 8:OOpmAll Tickets $1.00ATTENTION:VOLKSWAGEN OWNERSIf your Volkswagen needs bodywork, bring it into our shop andlet Peter Petersen repair it.Peter is a trade school graduatefrom Germany and is a crafts-iman from the old school. 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Jan. 27, 8-11 pmIDA NOYES LIBRARYF►►►►►►►►i Students' International Meditation Society"aTtTnTion"^ALL FEMALES \TRY IT! 4 HYDE PARKFIREWOODGroup & ^ Oak - Ash - BirchStudent Rates ^SLIMART, INC. 4FIGURE CONTROL CENTER1754 East 55th * S45/TON DELIVEREDFOR IMMEDIATEDELIVERYCALL 955-2480752-0200 i ANY TIMEAppointments. ^ Special Student Rates A TRIBUTE TO CHARLIE “BRD” PARKETa Black Colony presentationTHINKABOUT ACAREER INGOVERNMENTTALK TO ABORTIONS-Counseling andReferral Service-Abortions are now legal inNew York State. If youthink you are pregnant,don't delay.MEDICAL REFERRAL is adiscreet professional ser¬vice that handles you withunderstanding. We makeall arrangements and ap¬pointments with Board cer¬tified obstetricians, gyneco¬logists and anesthesiolog¬ists in fully licensed andaccredited hospitals.Costs range from $300. to$375. depending on per¬sonal need.MEDICAL REFERRAL142 Mineola Ave.,Roslyn Heights, L11-1577(516) 621-6701Call between 9 AM & 11 PMWE'LL BEON CAMPUSSOON low COST. SVE, LEGALABORTION iIN NEW YORK |SCHEDULED IMMEDIATELY j(212)490-3600 jPROFESSIONAL SCHEOUUNfi SERVICE. tac.|545 Fifth Avt., Now York City 10017 jmete is t fee tor ow setule*. <Contact yout campus placement officeJanuary 22,1971/The Chicago Maroon/5The Chicago MaroonSTEVE COOK DON RATNER* Editor Business Manager•CON HITCHCOCK, Managing EditorPAUL BERNSTEIN, News EditorSUE LOTH, Executive EditorSTEVE AOKI, Photography Editor•JUDY ALSOFROM, NANCY CHISMAN, JIM HAEFEMEYER, GORDON KATZ, AUDREY SHALINSKYAssociate EditorsRICK BALSAMO, SARA BEEBE, USA CAPELL, JOE FREEDMAN, ALLEN FRIEDMAN, ELSA HERSH,MITCH KAHN, BARRY KELLMAN, LESLIE LINTON, ALBERTO LOPEZ, BILL MARGRAVE, KEITH PYLE,JOE SARTORELLI, FRED WINSTON.Staff•CARL STOVALL CAROLINE HECK DIANA LEIFERContributing Editor Senior Editor Assistant Business ManagerFounded in 1892. Published by University of Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the regularschool year, except during examination periods, and bi-weekly on Thursdays during the summer. Offices inrooms 301, 303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E 59th St, Chicago, III 60637. Phone 753-3263.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.Rising rentsRent rates, according to the realtors in Hyde Park, are going togo up eight to 10 percent next year in Hyde Park, a neighborhood wherehousing has long been overpriced and difficult to locate. In the earlysixties, the high rents forced poor people into Woodlawn and Kenwood,or out of the area altogether.In the last three years, the prices for lower income housing haveforced students into South Shore, and other areas on the South Side.Many of those still in Hyde Park would like to move out to areas withbetter housing and lower rent, but lack transportation to campus. De¬spite rising inflation, fellowships and scholarships have not increased,but decreased, and high living costs, including high rent costs, imperilthe academic futures of many students.Few campus workers live in the campus vicinity, and often thereason is inadequate and high priced housing.In an effort^ to retain faculty, the University has in the past encour¬aged the construction of middle and upper middle class housing. As aresult, faculty housing conditions in Hyde Park have greatly improved,but lower income rents have steadily increased, until they were out ofline* with comparable neighborhoods in Chicago and other cities.Some of Hyde Park’s residents and students, familiar with risingrents and poor upkeep, have organized into tenant unions to demandtheir money’s worth from landlords. In many cases they have suc¬ceeded, but they have not stemmed the rising rents. Largely, that fail¬ure is due to the fact that they are not yet strong enough to opposethe will of the realtors.The realtors tell us that rising property taxes and inflated costsare the causes of the hikes. To some extent, they are right. The citybudget for 1971 is the largest in history, and most of the money iscoming from property taxes. The budget money is what makes Daley’smachine run, and much of it goes to useless payrollers and patronagehacks.We don’t believe the people of Hyde Park should be forced togrease the wheels of the machine or to underwrite the business prob¬lems of wealthy realtors. The proposed rent hike, the largest in recentyears, will hit the poor and the unemployed the hardest. And students,many of whom have no time to get a job or else can’t find one, getcaught in the pinch.New challengeOn May 8, 1970, President Nixon told the nation that US troopswould be out of Cambodia by June 30, and that South Vietnamesetroops would also leave by that date.In June, he said that “there will be no US air or logistics support”for South Vietnamese troops in Cambodia.When running for the Presidency in 1968, Nixon repeatedly pro¬mised to get us out of the war.Now, press reports from Cambodia indicate that US advisers andSouth Vietnamese officers are operating in that country despite a lawpassed December 30 prohibiting use of ground troops in Cambodiawithout congressional approval. Secretary of Defense Melvin Lairddisclosed Wednesday that the US was providing air, logistics, and navalsupport for the Lon Nol regime.It is time that the students, who in May forced the issue of Cambo¬dia upon the American public, begin thinking of ways to revive theanti-war movement and challenge Nixon again, Tomorrow, the StudentMobilization Committee is holding a strategy meeting at Circle campus.Monday, Eqbal Ahmad, the man J. Edgar Hoover wants to put in jail,will be speaking at the First Unitarian church on the Indochina situation.We urge that everyone who is conoprnpd about the war attendthose events and help to organize a new challenge to Nixon.6/The Chicago Maroon/January 22, 1971 LETTERS TO THE EDITORGood teachingTo Anthony Grafton’s excellent critiqueof the report of the Shils committee on aca¬demic criteria I would add some consid¬erations which strengthen his argument.Certain statements in the committee’s oth¬erwise persuasive document are indeed notconsistent with the position that the aims ofthe University of Chicago are excellent re¬search, teaching, and professional training.To aver that distinction in research mustbe a sine qua non of academic appointmentand that no appointee should spend most ofhis time on classroom teaching is to set upguidelines which, if faithfully followed, canclearly interfere with the pursuit of aca¬demic excellence — and not only in the Col¬lege.It is probably impossible to teach twocourses in one quarter properly withoutspending most of one’s time doing some¬thing related to those courses — readingfresh materials, planning the classes, con¬ferring with students, writing comments onstudent papers, as well as meeting theclass regularly.One can of course spend less time if oneprefers to stand up and spout conclusionsreached five years earlier, jazz with thekids about groovy happenings, take timeout to fly to conferences, and pay little at¬tention to the students’ oral and written ex¬pressions.To create a climate of intellectual ex¬cellence takes even more than outstandingand conscientious classroom teachers.Other essential inputs include curriculumevaluation and innovation, recruitment ofoutstanding students, providing help forworthy students with special problems, pro¬viding academic guidance of high quality,and the like.If these tasks are not regularly carriedout by committeed faculty, the quality ofintellectual life of the University suffers.It is self-defeating to make a string ofappointments where academic distinctionis clear and the capacities to provide thesekinds of services are lacking.“Distinction in research accomplishmentand promise” should probably be the pre¬eminent criterion for appointment at thisuniversity, but the usual narrow inter¬pretation of that criterion harbors manydangers.It neglects, the contributions of someonewho is brilliantly effective in stimulatingand guiding student research but is himselfreluctant or slow to publish. It puts pres¬sure on young scholars to publish pre¬maturely, and discriminates against thelate bloomer whose work may be of morelasting significance.It neglects the mission of the College —to think and think again about the nature ofthe disciplines and their interconnections —intellectual work which is not likely to berewarded by the gate-keepers of profession¬al research journals, and is* often not likelyto be written down at all, since its locus ofgreatest vitality and relevance is in theclassrooms and corridors where probingminds meet.Donald LevineAssociate professor of sociologyModest proposalOur principal concern as teachers, in thecurrent economic crisis, should be with thehealth of the universities, especially ofthose schools with the traditions, in¬tellectual resources and aspirations of theUniversity of Chicago.To permit a university such as ours torisk permanent damage from the lack offunds would be to betray both those whohave gone before and those who will followus.Where may funds come from? Contribu¬tions and tuition readily come to mind. Analready high tuition'is going up even more.The administration is no doubt makingall the efforts it can to secure funds fromprivate donors. Perhaps more funds wouldbecome available from donors, as well asfrom the government, if military ex¬penditures should be cut.But, however that may be thpre doesseem to be a critical immediate need —and the only remaining untapped source immediately available is obviously the fac-6ulty, the very faculty on which much, if notmost, of the university’s funds is spent yearin and year out.Is it not more important that the univer¬sity flourish than that its members shouldcontinue to be as comfortable as they havebecome accustomed to be? Does not moneyhave to mean more to an institution than it •need mean to the scholars who make up itsmembership?Are there not statutory means availableby which this academic community can im-»mediately legislate for the common good areduction of the salaries of all teaching, ad¬ministrative and research personnel by atleast five percent for the 1971-1972 academ-.ic year?If means are not readily available for thefaculty to act thus as a body, may not thisbe done by a serious campaign (conductedperhaps by the council of the Universitysenate) to secure from each one of us apledge to permit his salary to be reducedseven percent for 1971-1972, contingent onsimilar pledges being secured from (say) *70 percent of this academic community?This contingency would avoid the in¬justice and possible resulting bitterness ofa minority having been induced to subsi- ’dize the continued prosperity of the major¬ity of their colleagues.)Such an enlightened communal effortwould not only serve the University nobly vbut could also permit us to assure one an¬other and the country at large that thereare for us things far more important thanmoney. Would not this be instruction, by*'both precept and example, worthy of ourvocations as teachers?George AnastaploLecturer In the liberal arts.IndigestableThough last Friday’s editorial “G-Shop *reopens! Come and gorge” probablyseemed only frivolous, we as members ofthe Maroon staff were both surprised andannoyed to see it. *Last quarter the Maroon carried a storyon eating places close to Regenstein; thatstory looked forward to changes in the C-shop, but it somehow “forgot” to mention *that across the street the Blue Gargoylealso serves lunches daily.At the time we dismissed that omissionas an “error.” But by stating that thechoice is between Regenstein vending ma¬chines and the C-Shop, by again dis¬regarding the Gargoyle, last Friday’s edito¬rial made the “error” into editorial policy.We see no reason to give a free plug to a Jcommercial enterprise like the C-Shop, op¬erated by Stouffers, a Litton Industries out¬fit that owns three Loop and two suburbanrestaurants.The changes in menu and decor, featur¬ing Muzak, lend the C-Shop an even morecommercial flavor: student paintings can¬not disguise the dull taste of modern or¬ange walls accented by just a touch of or¬ange in the gold carpet, and down-homenames like “Midway Monster” or “Hutch-burger” cannot disguise the greasy taste offried commercial food.We hope these “improvements” will notturn customers from the Gargoyle, whosedecor is modern political poster, whose FM ,music comes out of a battered white plasticradio, whose home-made food makes a tas¬tier, healthier, cheaper lunch any day.To say that “fresh fruit isn’t fresh fruitunless it comes from the C-Shop, still thecheapest place on campus” ignores that anapple costs 20 cents at the C-Shop and adime at the Gargoyle (yes, it’s still anapple.) <The Gargoyle runs at a loss in order tobring a community together in countlesssocial and political activities.We should add that for the more am-,bitious “Regenstein scholars” the Band-ersnatch three blocks away also runs at aloss, sponsors student activities such as theNight Club, and should be endorsed longbefore the C-Shop.Jim Haefemeyer ’71Nancy Chism an ’73Lisa Capell ’74Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima cul¬pa — Ed.ABOUT THE MIDWAYBruce RabeHarper saleToday marks the last day of a sale of oldHarper library books, sponsored by StudentGovernment (SG).Bodes will be sold from 10 am to 4 pm onthe first floor of Harper. Most prices rangefrom 5 cents to $2.The books are rejects or duplicationsfrom the old library. SG will keep 15 per¬cent of the profits.GarbageThe Community Solid Waste RecyclingCenter, located at the Blue Gargoyle, willopen Wednesday at 12:30 pm.The center will collect all forms of glassbottles and jars, as well as aluminum andsteel cans.The activity is sponsored by Eco-Sex, aregistered University student group. Forfurther information, call 752-4077 or 753-2780.BlackfriarsBlackfriars, the student musical group,has chosen its script for this year’s produc¬tion.“The Democratic Way,” written by twofirst-year students, Mark Primack and Mi¬chael Dorf, is about a presidential election.Tryouts for the show will be held January25 and 26 from 7 to 10 pm in Ida Noyeslibrary. Copies of the script are on reservein Regenstein. For information, call 288-0659. Law appointment' Hein Kotz has been appointed visiting as¬sociate professor of law at the Universityfor the winter and spring quarters, 1971.Kotz studied law at the University ofMunich and received his master of com¬parative law degree from the University ofMichigan in 1963. The same year he obtained a doctor ofjurisprudence degree from the Universityof Hamburg on the basis of a comparativeanalysis of the Anglo-American trust andits functional counterparts in German law.Before his appointment at the Universityhe was research associate at the MaxPlanck Institute of Comparative Law and International Private Law in Hamburg.NSF fellowsFive University faculty members — thelargest group represented by a single in¬stitution — are among the 42 recipients ofsenior postdoctoral fellowships awardedContinued on page 9TRYOUTSMon. Jan. 25Tues. Jan. 26 BLACKFRIARS MUSICAL COMEDY"THE DEMOCRATIC WAY" TRYOUTS7:00 pmIda LibraryTHREE TOP COMPACT STEREO STYSTEMSFIRST TIME EVER AT SALE PRICES!KLH MODEL 20*349.95SAVE *50.00 SCOTT 2505*299.95SAVE *120.00KLH MODEL 24$279 95SAVE *40.00Mu&iOuxfiON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. Oak 337-4150 2035 W. 95th St. 779-6500January 22,1971/The Chicago Maroon/7Hung up aboutyour future?J i a r? l pvji \^OV'>OQ>^MV'<yi&uA xrAJcnxxU&iAA JkCJCJc\'(J&lAA MO\>\ Here’s a good- career to plan for —provided you’ve got what it takes.You have to like working on inter¬esting problems. And when you makeup your mind aboutsomething, you'vegot to stick by it. You must have inde¬pendence — be an individualist.If this kind of life appeals to you,read on.We’re talking about being a cer-bfied public accountant.The CPA is close to the mainswitch ... in business ... in govern¬ment ... in all sorts of groups plan¬ning for a better society.CPA’s in public practice work withcompanies of all kinds — television,aerospace, cryogenics, steel, realestate. You name it. They are at thefinancial center of an organization,advising on its economic affairs, dig¬ging out facts, analyzing the reasonswhy an outfit runs or stumbles.What other work offers so manychoices fora man to find exciting vari¬ety in the things he does.If you’d like to learn more about the workof a CPA, clip this coupon and mail to:ISCPA, 208 South La Salle Street, Chicago,Illinois 60604Name:.Address:4 Illinois Society ofCertified Public AccountantsGOLD CITY INN**** MaroonNew Hours:lunch 11:30 AM - 2:30 PMdinner 2:30 PM - 9:30 PMCLOSED WEDNESDAY"A Gold Mine of Good Food,/Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559(n«ar Harper Court)Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.)MIDWEST'S LARGEST DISPLAY OFNEW AND USED SPORTS CARSCONTINENTAL MOTORS INC.5800 S. LA GRANGE RD.LA GRANGE, ILL. 352-9200 BEST FILM OF YEAR!Siskel, Tribune**** 4 Stars!Ebert, Sun-Timesmy nightAftSTARRING JEAN-LOUIS TRlNTlGNANT AND FRANCOlSE FABIANWRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY ERIC ROHMER PATHE CONTEMPORARY FILMS2424 N. LincolnFree ParkingTel. 528-9126 3$H» Student Rate$1.50at al) times dress shirtsOur famous name dressshirts . . . including EXCEL¬LO, FREDERICO PIO, VANHEUSEN and others. All theinteresting solid colors andstripes. $5.883 for $16.50Gant shirts*8.50, three for *24Regularly $11 & $12Current styles from our extensive Gant collection. Thenewest collars . . . the neweststripes, in durable press fabrics.shoesFlorsheim, Dexter & Batesshoes. Discontinued styles,broken sizes.20% OFFSPECIAL GROUP of Euro¬pean importsregularly $35 $24.85sweatersregularly to $18 $13.88regularly to $22 $17.88regularly to $25 $20.88wash pantsover 1,000pair of wash pants20% OFF(WWWHyde Park Shopping Center55th & Lake Park Phone 752-8100KIMBARKLIQUORSWINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINEST^IMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to you!THE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC.1214 E. 53rd St.53-Kimbark Plaza HY3-3355PREGNANT?NEED HELP?your questions onABORTIONCAk ONLY BE FULLYANSWERED BYPROFESSIONALSCALL (215) 878-58002k hours 7 daysTOR TOTALLYCONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION.Legal Abortion! Without Dilay EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbork Plozo)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372[/The Chicago Maroon/January 22, 1971ABOUT THE MIDWAY♦!I Continued from page 7recently by the National Science Founda¬tion.They are:• Gerhard Closs, professor in the depart¬ment of chemistry and in the College• George Glauberman, professor in thedepartment of mathematics and in the Col¬lege• Richard Lewontin, Block professor inthe division of the biological sciences, inthe College, and chairman of the com¬mittee on evolutionary biology• Marc Nerlove, professor in the depart¬ment of economics• Sidney Verba, professor in the depart¬ment of political science and senior studydirector in the National Opinion Research algebra at the University of Oxford, Eng¬land.Lewontin will spend his fellowship yearconducting research in genetics at theschool of biological sciences at the Univer¬sity of Sussex, England.Nerlove, an econometrician, will remainon the University of Chicago campus.Verba, a social scientist and an authorityon comparative politics, will pursue his re¬search at the Institut d’Etudes Sociologiqueof the Sorbonne, in Paris. Applications acceptedApplications for two-year tours in thePeace Corps are currently being acceptedto fill over 360 separate job categories.The Peace Corps is seeking volunteersfrom a variety of backgrounds. Applicantswith summer job experience in such skillsas farming, construction, business or nurs¬ing are especially welcome.Students in the sciences, engineering,education, agriculture or business are also needed. Knowledge of a second language,particularly French or Spanish, is consid¬ered helpful.Volunteers serve abroad for two years.Housing, food, transportation and other ex¬penses are fully covered, with an additional$75 per month banked for them in theUnited States.Students interested in additional detailsabout Peace Corps opportunities shouldcontact their local Peace Corps office orwrite to Peace Corps, Department P,Washington DC 20525. ■BULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, January 22, 1971Center.The five were among 42 fellows selectedfrom 395 applicants from across the coun¬try. The fellowships are designed to permitscientists to pursue research and advancedtraining in their particular fields.Basic requirements for the applicants in¬clude the possession of a doctoral degree inscience, mathematics, or engineering for atleast five years and a demonstrated abilityand aptitude for advanced research.Closs, whose research involves both or¬ganic and physical chemistry, will study atthe University of Leiden, in the Nether¬lands. He will carry out theoretical studiesor reactions proceeding through excitedstates and will work in collaboration with LJ Oosterhoff, professor of chemistry at theUniversity of Leiden.Glauberman will pursue his research in LECTURE SERIES: (Graduate school of business). MrScarf, Business East 3:30 pm.LECTURE SERIES: (Walgreen foundation), Mr Wallis,Breasted Hall, 4 pm.LECTURE: Dr Sidney Cohen, microbiology club, "Gen¬etic and Physiological studies of Methicillin Resistancein Staphylococcus aureus." Ricketts 7, 4 pm.LECTURE: Norman Golb, "Why I Don't Think theDead Sea Scrolls Were Written at Qumran, and OtherObservations." Hillel house, 8:30 pm.CONCERT: Contemporary Chamber Players, scenefrom Macbeth; Verklarte Nacht, Mandel Hall, 8:30pm.ART DISTRIBUTION: Shapiro collection, numberedtickets available 8:30 am, Distribution 4:30 pm, IdaNoyes.RECRUITING VISIT: First National Bank of New York.Training program for prospective BA graduates incommercial banking.PARTY: "Paint Your Own" Ida Noyes 8 pmFREE CONCERT: Lake County String Band Ida Noyes,9:30 pm.FLICK: Hiroshima Mon Amour, Alain Resnais. DOCfilms Quantrell, 7:15 and 9:30 pm.SEMINAR: John Jamieson, "Physical Properties of theMantle and Inferred Temperatures" Henry Hinds Lab¬oratory, 101, 1:30 pm.SEMINAR: Dennis Moore, "The Separation of a Two- Layer Inertial Gulf Stream," Hinds Laboratory, 1013:30 pm.DISCUSSION: International Panel, "Technocracy andScience," Crossroads, 5621 Blackstone, 8 pm.VISA: Bus leaves for Chicago state mental hospital12:30 pm from Woodward parking lot.MODERN DANCE: Master classes in Modern DanceTechnique. Paul Taylor Dance Company Ida Noyesgym 1 pm.FLICK: Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, CEF,Quantrell, 7 and 9:15 pm.LECTURE SERIES: Miss Nathalie Babel, "Isaac Ba¬bel: His Contribution to Russian Literature." KAMTemple, 930 E 50th, 10:30 am.SKIING: Instruction trip to local area. Call Bill Diet-rich PL 2-9706.LECTURE: Mr Avraham Eitan, "The Old City of Je¬rusalem: In Antiquity and at Present — Illustratedwith Color Slides." Hillel, 7:30 pmFILM: Salt of the Earth. Sponsored by SDS. 3rd floorIda Noyes 4, 7, 9 pm. Donation $1.RELIGIOUS SERVICE: The Most Reverend MichaelDempsey, "Poverty and the Church." Rockefellerchapel, 11 am.January 22,1971/The Chicago Maroon/fSunday, January 24, 1971 GAY LIB: Consciousness raising groups. Ida Noyes eastlounge 3 pm. For more information call 493-5658.POT LUCK: Women's dinner and coffee shop. Blue Gar¬goyle, 57th and University, 6:30 pm.CONCERT: Musical Society with Craig Worthington andAlan Chill — romantic and modern piano music. Ad¬mission by invitation available at Reynolds club desk.Pierce tower, 3 pm.SEX TALK: Rev. Spencer Parsons, "Sexual Patterns:What We Can Anticipate." Bonhoeffer House, 5554Woodlawn, 6:30 pm.CARMINA BURANA: Rehearsal — last call for malevocalists, strings and double reeds. Chorus in BlueGargoyle, orchestra in Mandel, 2 pm.FILM: Directed by Palazzolo, at First UnitorianChurch, 5650 Woodlawn, 8:15 pm Donation $1.25. Beerand other refreshments free.FLICK: Barbarella, Roger Vadim. DOC films Quan¬trell, 7:15 and 9:30 pm.Monday, January 25, 1971Un-ECUMENICAL SERVICE: "Prayer for Christianity." Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 4 pm.TALK: Chavurat Aliya, for those interested in living inIsrael. Millel 7:30 pm. Ivrit group 9 pm.LECTURE: Eqbal Ahmad "Indochina: a rapidly chang¬ing military and political situation," Unitarian Church,5650 Woodlawn, 8 pm.FILM: Larry Frerk of AC Nielson, "Methodology atRating Television Programs," Rosenwald 2, 4 pm.PANASONIC$ 299 95RS-257SCOMPLETE CASSETTE/PHONO/RADIO HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTERAdd the elegant Essex to your home, and watch it become your leisure-time center. Enjoy unsurpassed performance from the 4-track stereo cassetteplayer/recorder, FM/AM/FM stereo radio, and 4-speed stereo record changer all contained in this rich, walnut designed unit. Two large, easy-seeVU meters and the AC bias/AC erase system assure perfect recording results. Safety-lock record button, fast forward and rewind, and a digital tapecounter provide complete convenience. "PANA-JECT" automatic cassette pop-up and end-of-tape shut-off complete the ultimate in carefreetape recorder performance. Record stereo sound quality is delivered by the precision automatic 4-speed changer. Panasonic's whisper-touchcartridge with diamond stylus tracks lightly with ultra-compliance and the sensitive tubular tone arm makes for perfect play. The superb FM/AM/FMstereo radio features an FET (Field Effect Transistor) tuner, AFC on FM. and a broad band AM tuner to lock in clean, clear reception on even theweakest or most distant stations. Dramatic blackout and illuminated dial face, stereo muting and stereo eye make stereo listening a breeze. And allthis Panasonic sound pours frommatched set of high compliancespeakers each containing a 6woofer and a 2\" tweeter. Fea¬turing sliding bass, treble, vol¬ume, and balance controls to letyou shape it to your personal lis¬tening taste. Complete withcassette storage compartment,stereo headphone jack, dustcover for changer, C-7 recordedcassette, microphone with stand,and 45 rpm adaptor. 4-speed stereo record changer Illuminated slide-rule dial PANA-JECT' slide-in cassette systemradio, television,high fidelity &industrial electronicssales & service HAVILT’S1368 EAST 53RD, CHICAGO 60615 • PL2-7800WHERE SERVICEIS A TRADITION'/45 years serving Hyde Park)>4 *..... V i <,».«.« * \t --J * i LV . Y ’ A v tV vohV M ;• »•'»Saturday, January 23, 1971J CLeara neelanuanjAll fall and winter merchandise reduced.FINAL MARKDOWNSOur Early Resort Merchandise Available Now.We also do alterations 1650EAST 53rd STREETHours 9:30 to 5:30 Monday thru Saturday PHONE 955-5291Form'sSemi-annualsaleof Scandinavianfurniture62ND ft HARPER • 324-9010in harper courtTUCSOAV. WEDNESDAY SAT S-6THUS*. FNI. 9-9 - CLOSED SUN. MONsorry, no phone or mail orders Follow this map to tre¬mendous bargains inScandinavian furnitureand accessories. Semi-Annual Sale now in prog¬ress. Save on a largeselection of discontinuedmerchandise, floor sam¬ples and some slightlydamaged pieces. 15% to40% reductions on uphol¬stered sofas and chairs,end tables, kitchentables, occasional chairs,bedding, rugs, lamps, andgiftwares. PIZZAplatter:Pino, Fried Chicken *Italian Food* •Compare the Price! J. 1460 E. 53rd 643-2800 JWE'DEUVER jCHICAGO DANCEFESTIVALHARPER DANCE’71Jan. 5 through Jan. 31CIVIC THEATREWacker & WashingtonPAUL TAYLORDance CompanyJAN. 19-24NIKOLAISDance TheatreJAN. 26-31Student programs with discussionperiod 1P.M. each Thursday J2.00Tickets at the box office Aall Ticketron OutletsStudent Prices:$4.50, 3.50 (Orch.) $4.00, 2.75 (Bale.)Good every performanceexcept Saturdays.ifn°fro &5 Ti&1 Call 924-1611 SUN INCOMESun Life’s new incomeprotection planCould you afford to stop working for a year?If not, talk with your man from Sun Life ofCanada about their new disability income plan... to keep the money coming in when you'renot able to.SUN LIFE OF CANADARALPH J. WOOD, Jr.GUIOne N. LaSalle St,Chic. 60602FR 2-2390798-0470CARPET BARN WAREHOUSENew and Used CarpetsRemnants and Roll EndsOriental ReproductionsAntique French WiltonFur Rugs & Fur CoatsINEXPENSIVE ANTIQUE FURNITUREOpen Tues. thru Sat., 9-4Sunday 10-31228 W. Kinzie 243-2271HYDE PARK THEATRE53rd & Lake ParkNO 7-9071“A winner!*'-PLAYBOYMAGAZINEA SIDNEY GLAZIER PRODUCTIONGENE WILDEROuACKSEROstmltsly In Ths Hitchcock Tradition.[gpJ® cao* ooc rORTUNE,R]«Sr s<M»eHYDE PARK THEATRE HO. 25238 S. Harper493-3493wood/todiyr JA pr < ^love ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELSunday January 24, 1971 11:00 A.M.ECUMENICAL SERVICEMICHAEL R. DEMPSEYAuxiliary BishopRoman Catholic Archdiocese of ChicagoPOVERTY AND THE CHURCHECUMENICAL SERVICE OF PRAYERFOR CHRISTIAN UNITYAn Ecumenical Service sponsored by the TheologicalSchools in Hyde Park will be held in Rockefeller Chapelon Monday, January 25 at 4:00 p.m. The public isinvited.Weekday Chapel MusicTuesday, January 26, 12:15 p.m.Organ Recital, Edward Mondello, University Organista wadleigh-maurice, ltd production • technicolor* from warner brosANDBLOOD FEAST DESKS -BOOKCASESSWIVEL CHAIR • LAMPS - TABLESNEW & USEDEQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8440 So. South Chicago Ave.(Parallel to Chicago Skyway)Open Mon. -Sat. 8:30 -5:00RE 4-2111Immediate DeliverySpecial Discount for Studentsand faculty with I.D. card THEEUROPERound-trip DC-8 JETfrom New YorkFor only $210* round trip,Icelandic Airlines flies you di¬rect to Luxembourg in the heartof Europe for best connectionsto everywhere. Daily jets. Nogroups to join. Stay one day orup to 45. Fly Icelandic—for low¬est fares to Iceland, Luxem¬bourg, England, Scotland. Nor¬way, Sweden and Denmark.Special fares for students andgroups remaining overseas morethan 45 days. Major credit cards—or Pay Later Plan. Mail couponthen call your travel agent.•Add $20 one way on Fri. and SatTo: Icelandic Airlines630 Fifth Ave., N.Y. 10020(212) PL 7-8585Send folder CN on Lowest JetFares to Europe □ StudentFares □Name-Street _CityState—My travel agent is -Zip_ICELANDIC AIRLINES$ lOf/wjUsiAIR FARESof any scheduled airline STARTSTONIGHT!Further Perils of Laurel &HardyplusDays of ThriHs & LaughterwithCharlie Chaplan, Houdini,Keystone Cops, Boris Karlof,Marie Dressier, & many others.THE BIOGRAPH THEATRE2433 N. Lincoln Dl 8-4123Plan to visit us soon. Admissionat all times is only $1.25. Bringyour Friends.TAl-SAM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Orders Co take out<maEast^3r^iMMUj^g4iDR. AARON ZIMMEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensasin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-636310/The Chicago Maroon/January 22,1971THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSTHE STRING-R-THIINCS SCHOOLMACRAME THE “WHArS HAPPE¬NIN’”AFRICAN ART FORMKNITTINGBEGINNINGADVANCEDWEAVINGPAINTING BEGINNINGADVANCEDVISUAL ARTSP.S. Check out the only All MaleMacro me Class in the World.TEXTILE ARTSUNLIMITEDCall 928-9208FOR SALEBOB'S NEWSSTAND, 51st & LakePark IMS UNDERGROUND COMIX,like ZAPI! & the Undergroup Presstoo. Come by and browse. HydePark's most complete newsstand.Altec-Lansing Bolero Speakers 4 mo.old, must sell. New $180 Sell for$145 each 20% off 493-9127.Fur Coats $5-$25 RADICAL RAGS55031 Hyde Park.Golf Clubs, bag and cart. Super 8Movie Camera, Table-top Broiler.Best Offers. X3-2355 before 7 pm,374-5662 after.1965 VW sedan. Last of the smallengines (32 miles to the gallon).Good condition. $650 288-4078 AfterSix.Winter Clearance Sale Now in Prog¬ress: Turtlenecks $1.99 John's MensWear 1459 E. 53rdDUAL Turntables, new. VERYCHEAP. Blank Tape. Bob Czeshin,BJ 836To Settle Estate: New, smart im-maculate mens clothing. Suits,slacks, sports jackets, sweaters.Size Medium to Large. Ph: D03-2400.Army Coats $12 at RADICAL RAGS,5503) Hyde Park Blvd.71ST OGLESBY4 Bedrooms — 21 Baths. Elegant2) Story Residence Gar. 8, SideDrive — Mid $30's.J. Cohn 955-4611SILVERWOOD, INC.PEOPLE WANTEDThe Democratic Way — Politics ForFun and Profit. Blackfriars IdaNoyes 7:00 Jan 25,26,28. Inf Call 288-0659. Scripts Avail.MENTIONTHEMAROON Part-time sec-bkpr. in HP office.Approx 8 hrs-wk. Must be efficientWrite 1030 East 50th St., 60615.SVNA PRESENTS THE JEFFCARP BAND IN MEMORIUM JAN28.Grad wanted to share Hyde ParkHouse. $56 & Util. Call 643-8184.Carmina Burana: LAST CHANCEfor singers, string players, anddouble reeds. Show up Sunday,BLUE GARGOYLE.Need someone warm and respon¬sible, pref. couple, to stay with ourdelightful 3 yr old girl from March12-19 in our Hyde Park apt. Phone955-4966.Students or Faculty with officeskills who have free time for earn¬ing Good Money are invited to ap¬ply atELAINE REVELL, INC.in the Hyde Park Bank Building.Minimum hours: 5 minimum workweek, 2 days. Call Marie Maury forinformation 684-7000.PEOPLE FOR SALEWe will paint your apt. expert quali¬ty. Call Vic 955-5014.Do you need baby-sitting? I'll do itat home any time between 8 amand 5 pm Monday thru Friday. Spe¬cial prices for full time. Call 363-8725.$ SDS BOOK DRIVE $SDS is in desperate need of moneydue to a recent Nat. Con 8, a 1500strong march against unemploymentin Chgo on Dec 30. To continue thefight (e.g. no layoffs at U of C) weneed money. If you have any booksor rummage to donate for an SDSBook Sale, phone Frank 753-0504.CEF ANNOUNCESThe coming of Butch Cassidy 8. TheSundance Kid this Saturday atCobb. Regular showings are nowscheduled for 7 8. 9:15; but if thesituation warrants a third showingwill be held. Season ticket holdersand their paying guests are guaran¬teed first seating, provided they ar¬rive at least 7 minutes before thescheduled show-time.The free showings of Fistful of Dol¬lars has been rescheduled for laterthis quarter.A special film showing for Seasonticket holders of a title not regu¬larly scheduled will also be comingup soon.Season tickets still on sale (now at$4)The CEF film board in no wayagrees with either Ten Best Listspublished in the last Maroon.ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E 53rd St288 2900WALGREENSNIGHTLY STUDENT SPECIALS All You Can EatMon: Shrimp Tidbits, French Fries, .Colesiaw, Roll & Butter $1.19Tues: Spaghetti with Meat Sauce, .Coleslaw, Garlic Roll $1.19Wed: Meat Ravioli & Sauce, Coleslaw,Garlic Roll $1.19Thurs: Chicken & Dumplings in Gravy,Coleslaw, Roll & Butter $1.19Fri: Macaroni & Cheese, Coleslaw .Roll & Butter $1.19"in the Hyde Park Shopping Center"Hours - Mon., Tues., Wed., Sat. to 7:30Thurs., Fri. to 9:00Sunday 10-6Free Dinner this week:DAVID A. HARRELL(to claim your dinner, bring in this ad & your ID by 1 -29) WANTEDWANTED: Loving homes for mili¬tant anti-specist puppies. (Trash-man's progeny) 752-3377 eves.WANTED: Double Bed. 955-1881.WANTED: Ride to U of I MedicalCenter, Monday thru Friday nights,around 11pm. Call K. Black 667-6130SPACESublet 1 bdrm. apt' on Lake PvtBeach. $130. S. Shore. Eve 978 0226.Nearby room rent or exchange ba¬bysitting. 955-7583 eves.Own room in lovely apt. From Mar.Close to Univ. $57-mo. 955-6921 pm.Room with private bath and use ofkitchen, off Woodlawn 8> 51 st.Please call 285-2697, aft 6 p.m.CHICAGO BEACH HOTEL5100 S. Cornell D03-2400Beautiful Furnished ApartmentsNear beach-park-I.C. trains U of Cbuses at door Modest daily, weekly,monthly rates.Call Miss Smith1 bedroom apt, 55 8< Everett AlsoFurniture for sale. Jeff, 285-7546 or667-1517.SAVE-Take over my lease in any Uof C dorm-thru June. 955-6587.Save on ANY UC Housing. Takeover my contract. Debbie 363-4436APT. FOR RENT6 rooms-$250-3 baths S.S. LandmarkOverlooks Lake Beautiful SpaciousLight Rooms Silverwood Realtors —955-4600.GAY LIBGAY LIB consciousness-raisinggroups Sun 1-24 3pm Ida Noyes Hall1212 E 59 St. East Lounge.GAY LIB Coffee House will openSat nite 1-23 at the Blue Gargoyle5655 S Univ, 7:30 pm to 1 am.A PEOPLES' LOBBYStudents-non-students to do clerical-research work for social action proj¬ect, organizing a Peoples' Lobbyaround mankind issues (pollution,poverty, nuclear war, etc.); per¬manent or temporary positionsavailable; hours, days flexible; sala¬ry negotiable, but not comparable tothat of commercial ventures in¬volving similar work. 955-5336. BUTCH CASSIDYThe best of the baddies ride againSaturday at Cobb. To make sureyou have a good seat by the timeButch kicks Ted Cassidy in thecrotch, get there early. 7 8. 9:15. aCEF film.SCENESCARMINA BURANAComing February 19, 20, 26, 27."TECHNOCRACY and SCIENCE"international Panel Disucssion,Tonight, 8pm, Crossroads StudentCenter 5621 S. Biackstone.Draft card, money 8< flag papersBambu, zig-zag 8> more. Glass,wood, 8, brass pipes all at RADI¬CAL RAGS 55031 Hyde Park.PIZZA!! PIZZA! PIZZA IS ATWHERE you can see JIM POSTwho is at the NIGHTCLUB in IdaNoyes this Saturday 9pm til somemorning hours.Prof Norman Golb will speak onNEW QUESTIONS ON THE ORI¬GIN OF THE DEAD SEA SCROLLStonight at Hillel, 8:30.Meet with Washington Journalistsand State Department officials todiscuss the Mid-East. Find out howat Reynolds Club at 4pm onJanuary 28.Is Technocracy the Queen of theSciences? Tonight Crossroads, 8p.m.Mr. Avraham Eitan, curator of Bib¬lical Archaeology, Israel Museum,Jerusalem, will give a slide illus¬trated lecture on "THE CITY OFJERUSALEM: IN ANTIQUITYAND AT PRESENT" on Sunday at7:30 p.m. at Hillel. 5715 Woodlawn.SUBTERRANEAN HOMESICKBLUES Reunion — Two Years Af¬ter — Jan 28 INH 9-1 Jeff CarpBand.Participate in the Democratic Way-Blackfriars musical. Tryout Jan 25,-26,28 Ida Noyes 7:00pm For Infor.Call 288-0659.Sexual Patterns What We Can An¬ticipate v Rev. Spencer Parsons Sun¬day Jan 24, 6:30 pm. BonhoefferHouse 5554 Woodlawn.7thChicagoInternational FilmFestival PresentsAn exhibition of Swedish film* presented byThe 7th Annual Chicago International Film Festivalin association with The Swedish Film Institute of Stockholm.THE WEEK'S PROGRAM:Fri. Jan. 22 6:00 pm8:30 pmSat. Jan. 23 1 30 pm3:30 pm6:00 pm8:00 pm10:00 pmSun. Jan. 24 3:00 pm5:00 pmMon. Jan. 25 8:00 pm6:00 pm8:30 pmTues. Jan. 26Wed. Jan. 27 6:00 pm8:30 pm6:00 pm8:00 pm10:00 pmThurs. Jan. 26 6:00 pm8:30 pm HARRY MUNTER—Director: Kjell Grede1970A SWEDISH LOVE STORY—Roy Anderson 1970THREE STRANGE LOVES—Ingmar Bergman 1949SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT—Bergman 1955HARRY MUNTER—Kjell Grede 1970MISTREATMENT—Lasse Forsberg 1969A SWEDISH LOVE STORY—Roy Anderson 1970OUT OF AN OLD MAN'S HEAD—Tage Danielsson 1969FARO: DOCUMENT (documentaryBergman) 1970. andTHOMAS GRAAL'S BEST FILM (Silent)1917MISTREATMENT—Lasse Forsberg 1969GIRL WITH HYACINTHS—Hasse Ekman1950OUT OF AN OLD MANS HEAD—TageDanielsson 1969IT'S UP TO YOU—Stellan Olsson 1969HERE IS YOUR LIFE—Jan Troell 1967THE FATHER—Alf Sjoberg 1969THE YANKEE—Lars Forsberg 1970EROTIKON (Silent) 1920 and THEMYSTERIOUS NIGHT OF THE 25TH(Silent) 1916LIKE NIGHT AND DAY—Jonas Cornell1969A BALTIC TRAGEDY—Johan Bergenstrahle 1970Tickets for all performances on sale at the Lake Shore TheaterBox-office. 3175 North Broadway (Broadway at Belmont). Chgo.,or write: The Chicago International Film Festival. 12 East GrandAvenue. Chgo. 60611. Phone: 644-3400. Price: $2.00 donation perticket. Series Ticket available for $10. includes 7 differentperformances. This event is part of the Chicago Film Festival'syear-round, cultural and educational program.jan. 22-28 “or° YOGA Poses Concentr Meditatn.Quit drugs Single-group classes. SRINERODE OF INDIA DO 3-0155A dance for EVERYONE! City-WideGAY LIB dance at UICC 750 S. Hal-sted 9pm. Live Band! For furtherinformation call 493-5658."I wouldn't lay and bets as towhere music is going tomorrow, butif it's not going where JIM POSTis . . . then it seems to me, afterhearing him that it's standingstill." Jo Mapes.The Shapiro Art to Live With Col¬lection is now on display thru Fri¬day Jan 22nd in the Cloister Club ofIda Noyes Hall. Rental from Jan toJune $2.25 8, I.D.. Distribution be¬gins at 4:00 pm Friday.The Night Club: Live Music, Foodand Soul-9-2 A.M. Ida Noyes.This Sat. 9-1 A.M. The Night Clubpresents JIM POST concert in IdaNoyes. Free entrance!PERSONALSPizza will make a debut Sat nightat Nightclub. Come and samplewhat you soon will be able to phoneorder-delivery from student-run foodenterprise. Bandersnatch-Nightclub.President by Prestige-The Demo¬cratic way. Tryout Jan 25,26,28 IdaNoyes. Scripts available. Cali 288-0659 BLACKFRIARS. Recommendedfor PoliSci. Majors, Rads, Libs,Jokers. 7:00 p.fn.KICK THE "KIT" HABIT PUTYOUR IDEAS INTO TEXTILESWITH CREATIVE EMBROIDERY,NEEDLEPOINT, CREWEL, BAR-GELLO. Call 752-4497 After 6:00 pm.Writers' Workshop. (Plaza 2-8377) Got Problems? Emotional crisisBad Trip? Want to talk to someone?Call "Changes". We're a bunch ofpeople who want to help otherpeople. 752-2707 or 363-5049.ABORTION is legal in NY. For re¬ferral to accredited hospitals call212-633-9825 6 pm to 6 amA pizza oven will spit pizza's intothe Nightclub Saturday — Wouldyou schizoids swallow that? JimPost Sings. You Eat.Tired of that embarrassing bulge inyour pants when dancing cheek tocheek? Heavy 13 button navy bells$600 at RADICAL RAGS.Lost Wiley! We are desperate!Young male collie-type dog lostnear 51st 8> Woodlawn Sat Eve.Mostly brown with white feet 8<throat. LOOKS FOXY. No collarVery friendly 8< fanatic retriever.Reward. PH. 924-9374.A Blast From the Past: Thurs. Jan28 Jeff Carp Group IDANOIZSTUDENT TRAVEL, trips, charters.Europe, Orient, Around the World.Write S.T.O.P 2150c Shattuck, Ber¬keley CA9-4704 — or see travelagent.Why not disguise yourself as a Chi¬cago Art Collector Get a Shapiroand Live With It.We are Jews who believe Jesus isthe Messiah. Jews Welcome to comeand rap. Bonhoeffer Hs 7-9 Sat.5554 S. Woodlawn (Not sponsored byBonhoeffer House)JIM POST live at the Night ClubSTRICTLY PERSONALSVNA - CARP - NOSTALGIA - TWOYEARS AFTER THE SIT-IN-GALAREUNION. Jan 28 Adenoids Hall-Celebrate.I don’t know who he isor what he looks likeor where he lives.But I am going to find himand kill him. ^TONIGHT1. Paint In - 8 pm2. Lake County StringBand Concert - 9:30Ida NoyesProgram BoardNOW PLAYINGMtfveuaoMn phone(jIPI—^ 944-2966January 22,1971/The Chicago Maroon/llv~«5*iSS*‘it"*ft!Si•si;:lifeWa£|S3*V*"•5H.sssw*»it(^5rp*L*~ There's not much to " ^ ,laugh about because the"Generation Gap"may¬be turning into anarmed conflict.WBBM-TV is doingsomething about it witha special program called"Nothin'Like Us Ever Was."A program that honestlyattempts to bring the gener¬ations back together again.The show couples a ,brilliant original music scorewith opinions of the few rareAmericans who've managedto cross the Gap. People likeKurt Vonnegut, Jr. (authorof "Slaughterhouse Five"),Alvin Toffler (author of"Future Shock"), NeilPostman (co-author of"Teaching as a SubversiveActivity") plus noted anthro¬pologist Margaret Mead.Watch our love storyof 1971.It might prevent arevolution in your homeduring 1972.Nothin’Like Us Ever Vlfas9:00 PM Wednesday January 27CBS® 212/The Chicago Maroon/January 22, 1971/The barrels of organic grain in Foods for Life, 2546 N. Halsted. —Scott CarlsonOrganic Food:Are You WhatYou Eat?By Wendy GlocknerA recent editorial on environment in the Satur¬day Review pointed out that during the processing offlour for white bread, most of the vitamin A, 80percent of the Vitamin B2, 81 percent of Vitamin B3,and 86 percent of Vitamin E are removed from thewheat grains. In fact, the wheat residue which isremoved and used for animal feed contains twenty-one times more Vitamin B1 than the finished productitself which is offered for human consumption.The shortcomings of white bread wdre notdiscovered recently. Still, the information is dis¬comfiting — and frightening — in light of therealization that white bread is only one of manynutritional-value-processed-out products which mostof us gobble down each day. A growing group ofconsumers, however, has rejected the wealth ofprocessed, refined, enriched, preserved, emulsified,improved products manufactured to relieve ourharried lives of the necessity of cooking and theworries of spoiled or worm-eaten foods: they havejoined the organic food movement.Why eat organic food? “Because it’s good for youand it tastes better” answers Paul Belserene, afourth-year College student in general studies inhumanities. “The American way of eating keeps usconstantly off balance” Paul explains. “We makethree mistakes: we eat the wrong things, we don’t eatin healthy amounts and we don’t think about what weeat. Did it ever occur to you that your personalitytraits may have more to do with the fact that you’vebeen eating calcium propianate, BHA weed killers orhormone-treated meat all your life, than with somechildhood incident?” Like Paul, most organic foodepicures stress the importance of thinking aboutwhat they eat.“Americans put so much junk in their stomachsthev can’t feel what thpir hndips do” says Paul"Once a person starts thinking about what he eatsand what he needs to live, he gets to feel what he wants and what he needs to eat.” Essentially, hecomes to know the needs of his body instinctively.The feeling which organic food buffs derive isdifficult to describe. “It’s a feeling of aliveness andvigor” states Linda Freedman, a resident of HydePark and organizer of an organic food co-op.“There’s nothing like waking up in the morning —your body feels vibrant.” Another described thefeeling as “a natural high.” And most organic foodextollers now experience more energy, less fatigue,and higher resistance to sickness than before theybegan eating organic.Organic food is not only “better for you and forthose around you” but also increases mental andspiritual well-being. “Organic food does a mainte¬nance job on your consciousness,” explains Linda.“It enables you to maintain a spiritual high.” Manywho are “exposed to the oriental philosophies” saysSue Hecht, a third year College student in psy¬chology, “combine it with meditation.” In fact,William, a north-sider, sipping beet and carrot juiceat a juice bar in a loop health food store andproselytizing for the Baha’i faith, asserted that heeats organic food “in search of Truth.”Eating organic food serves a social purpose also.“Meat takes a lot of land and expense to produce”explains George at the Foods For Life Store, 2546 NHalsted. “Producing cereal grains is much moreeconomically feasible” in terms of feeding the worldpopulation. A medical student here until recently,George is now studying the eastern religions, andeventually hopes to synthesize the teachings of bothwestern and eastern medicine in order to effectchange.“The organic food movement is growing con¬stantly” observed a north side elementary schoolteacher as she explained who eats organic food. “Iused to look both ways before I walked into a healthfood store. But now, most of my friends areeonverted ” Genrpp also explains that the movementis not only made up of the “anti-establishment.”Foods For Life serves many suburban families and several individuals who “were very sick and given upby western doctors.”Organic food consumers are many times “formerheads,” he adds. “They are people on drugs who areat the end of the line and want to purify their bodies.”Paul concludes that “the movement is no longer justcomprised of a lot of stereotypical raving lunatics.”The raving lunatics are still around, however. “Godown to a juice bar in a health food store,” headvises. “All the old men and old ladies will talk yourear off — telling you that their diet is the only onewhich will keep you alive.”Each individual’s diet is unique. Typical organiccuisine includes brown rice, vegetables and fruitswhich are not sprayed but are grown with organicfertilizer, honey, nuts, cheese, and fertile eggs fromchickens which are not injected with antibiotics. Ifmeat is eaten, it must be from cows raised in naturalsurroundings and not injected with growth-producinghormones. Meat is usually avoided however, becausethe body is put under strain to digest it. “Organicfood is digested in two hours,” explains William.“But a heavy meal of meat, potatoes, fruit andvegetables remains in the stomach for seven or eighthours during digestion. The fruit ferments and losesits nutritional value. It also is a ridiculous strain onthe body.”Avoidance of meat is central to both the vegeta¬rian and the macrobiotic disciplines. Vegetarian SueHecht explains her philosphy: “I don’t want toassume the responsibility which comes with eatingmeat. There’s really no reason to kill for food. Youcan get all the nutrients you need without eatingmeat.” Sue eats fruit, vegetables, grains, cottagecheese, honey, and eggs.The macrobiotic diet stems from the dietarydiscipline of the Zen Buddhists and is rooted in theoriental philosophy of Lao Tze. Brought to thiscountry by George Ohsawa, the diet enables man toachieve har mony in his bodv between the animal andvegetable world. Vegetable and animal food areContinued on Page SevenBig Time: Dedication, ConfrontationSeveral years ago Big Time Buck White openedin New York, causing considerable controversy andexcitement. The reason for this lies partly in thesubject matter — blacks, whites, and blacks andwhites together — and partly in the character ofBuck White (big, powerful, aggressive, and black)and the methods by which the play gets its messageacross (verbal confrontation with whites in theaudience). Principal parts of the play consisted ofverbal duels prompted by questions supplied bywhite plants in the audience and answered by BigTime. Big Time is the driving force around whicheverything revolves, and nobody pushes Big Timearound.Now Buck White has arrived in Chicago as amusical adaptation of the play by Oscar Brown, Jr.who also produces and stars. Buck White has gainedgood music and lyrics but it has lost some of itsoriginal drive and direction.As the musical begins, we are introduced to themembers of B.A.D. — Beautiful Allelujah Day — an“inner city social club.” The irony is obvious whenwe see its members — ghetto blacks such as Weasel,a sharp, slick, hip looking con man; Hunter, theproverbial gay ; Honey Man, who looks as if he’s in apermanent daze; Rubber Man, enamored withstrength and violence, and Jive, officer of the cluband determined to keep his position. All of them areof course subservient to Big Time, whose arrival theyand the audience await.We are told by Honey Man that we are in for aconfrontation, and trapped, since the theater doorsare locked. Before Big Time’s arrival, the musicalreveals the political games being played by themembers among themselves. There are several goodsongs here — one by Jive and the company entitled“Head Nigger in Charge.’’ The accompanimentsupplied by a trio, is also good and the cast has oneexceptionally vibrant, dynamic voice — that of GavinChristopher (Rubber Man.) The climax arrives asBig Time makes his entrance.The rest of the musical is dominated by BigTime — played by Oscar Brown, a powerful andauthoritative presence. He mounts the podium and answers questions from the audience plants. Thefirst question, asked by Whitey, “Do you like whitepeople?”, receives a predictable response — BigTime pauses and answers “Next question.” Thequestions that follow reveal Whitey’s fear of blackpeople — do black people want to dominate whites?The last part of the play is exclusively BigTime’s. We understand that he is all black people, butas revealed in a powerful, moving, and strangelypoetic speech he is all people, universal man. Thequestions he poses are fundamental: can man gainhis world and keep his soul? The musical ends with avibrant and exuberant song and dance as the castlets loose.But the confrontation never really materializes,if by confrontation one means a dialogue, soul searching and reckoning, leading to a real spirtualchange. Big Time neither increases our knowledge ofthe black experience, nor treats that experience asmeaningfully as, say, LeRoy Jones or CharlesGordone (No Place to be Somebody) — perhapsbecause the musical has less impact than the“original” play.Also, there is something specious about anpieces for all white people. A play or a musical is aform difficult to alter gracefully and successfully toachieve special ends. After all, the audience is thereto see a play, just as the performers are there toperform; it is awkward to place us in a position ofpotential participation in the play when that positionis intended to be filled by plants.A few words about the company. It is young,energetic, enthusiastic and very dedicated. It istrying to do something exciting. The Church Theatre,as the company is called, has taken over the HydePark Methodist Church and plans to become aresident company. The theater is covered withposters of black leaders and the slogans on the wallreflect the black consciousness that the company isfounded on and wants to dramatize in the productions 1which it will bring to the community. Futureproductions include plays by young playwrights aswell as musicals and other types of theater. And oneof the most exciting things about Buck White is its *audience. It is that rarity — fully integrated in age,race, and class. All this made possible by a policy oflow prices and student discounts designed to makethe theater accessible to all members of the commu- *nity. The company decided to establish itself in HydePark for several reasons — first it is a kind ofhomecoming for Oscar Brown who had previouslyproduced and acted in the neighborhood (Summer inthe City, Summer ‘66); second, the company feelsthat its message should be heard especially byresidents of Hyde Park.Finally, I recommend Buck White as an enjoy- ’able and significant experience, and also believe thatwe, the community, should support the commitmentthat the Church Theatre has made to all of us.— Marina Baraldini \\1<1v FNDKHi : SPRINGCASH BOX/TALENT ON STAGESeptember 19, 1970McKENDREE SPRING. . .They've just had their second album releasedwhich is good. But live they are so far above therecord that it's a joke. They display a firmknowledge of dynamics in music, an important,nay vital, part that most groups tend to ignore.They know the meaning of fortissimo andpianissimo and all the subtle variations in betweenand use the knowledge to chilling effect. Thegroup's foundation lies in Fran McKendree'ssensitive acoustic rhythm guitar. Twin prongscreating the melodies are Marty Slutsky'stextured electric guitar and Mike Dreyfuss'astonishing electric violin. Along with bassistLarry Tucker, McKendree Spring lays downbeautiful lacy curtains of sound that are bothdelicate and powerful at once. They are a talentof major proportions who must be seen becauseas good as their LP's are, they just don't dothem full justice.BILLBOARD/ALBUM REVIEWSSpecial Merit PicksMcKENDREE SPRING-Second ThoughtsMcKendree Spring, one of the most sensitive. CONCERT McKendree Spring has just finished playing hereat Alfred University. I can't describe the reactionseveryone had. Most of them went in because they'dnever heard of McKendree Spring. They all leftsaying they'd never heard such a unique sound.After Mike's(violin solo in tribute to JimiHendrix, everyone was stunned for a moment, andthen gave him a standing ovation. It was the sameway with each solo, first hardly believing, and thena standing ovation. . .Sincerely,Kurt MesedahlAlfred UniversityIThe ''McKendree Spring” has come and goneand our campus will never be the same.. .Thank you for recognizing this unique talentand sharing it.Sincerely,Diane F. DreherStudent Activities advisorUniversity of MinnesotaFor further information contact: Michael Brovsky40 West 55th Street/New York City/(212) 765-3750BLUE GARGOYLEDisciples of Christ Church56-55 So. UniversityWED. JAN.27th 8pmDOCOCI T ICKET S: $1. FKL: 324-3005 AT YQUR LOCALRECORD STORE2/Grey City Journal/January 22,1971 iMTJSXC' 1ij,if The Paul Taylor Company with Taylor at frontS5BJ5BTaylor: Vitality and PolarityThe Paul Taylor Dance Company,which opened the third week of theHarper Dance Festival at the CivicTheater on Tuesday, strikes an inter¬esting counterpoint to the Merce Cun¬ningham Company in terms of musicand movement.Neither choreographer is as depend¬ent on musical rhythms as were thoseof the Martha Graham generation. ButCunningham, who performed at theHarper Festival last week, considersmusic as a separate entity from hischoreography, while Taylor carefullyselects music that is suitable for hischoreographic efforts. Yet he will oftenchange the music during or after thecreation of a new work. Perhaps thisconcern for music dates back to thevery beginning of Taylor’s career,when he danced with Cunningham for aseason and then was a soloist with theGraham Company for a year. In someways Taylor sits between Cunninghamand Graham, but in many ways PaulTaylor is off by himself.The Taylor Company is an inter¬nationally acclaimed group of dancerswho have responded well to his intenseinterest in them as individuals and asdancers. Taylor combines a clean cho¬reographic approach with some theat¬rical elements, and he uses modern aswell as ballet movements.The program his company offered onTuesday (and again on Saturday nightand Sunday afternoon) reveals Tay¬ lor’s somewhat limited dance vocabu¬lary as well as the choreographicintelligence that he brings to bear onthat vocabulary. The result is a variedand interesting repertoire.His dances have a modified balletposture and frequently use largeswinging arm movements for accents.In contrast to Cunningham, Taylor’swork is choreographed frontally. Until1968, when he created “Public Do¬main,” Taylor followed the traditionalmode of placing the most importantdancers for any particular momentnear the center of the stage. In severalrespects, Paul Taylor straddles thefence between the avant garde and thetraditional in dance.The first work on Taylor’s openingprogram was a revised version of“Lento,” which premiered at the Har¬per Dance Festival in 1967. The com¬bination of blue background and light¬ing, and the pure dance movementsaccompanied by Haydn’s op. 51 resultsin an almost classic ballet. The soaringleaps and jumps are there, but so arethe Taylor accents: he made use of thefloor — though I thought there was toomuch pulling of people across thestage. And he had his jokes and a littlesimulated ficky-flick. The use of thefloor, jokes, and sex were present inthe other two pieces also.In “Lento” and the other dances,Carolyn Adams is a joy to watch. She has a happy contained femininewarmth and is technically superb andgraceful in all her movements. She andthe sinewy Daniel Williams were lith¬esome partners in “Lento” and “BigBertha.”“Big Bertha” is Taylor’s newestpiece, danced to selections of bandorgan music from a collection of Gay‘90s melodies. The set and mufti cos¬tumes by Alex Sutherland are effec¬tive. The piece features Bettie De Jongas the automated dancing doll on acalliope that is activated when a familydeposits a nickel. Gradually she as¬sumes control of the family that hadcontrolled her. The piece is chock full ofhumor and sex: the father letches afterhis daughter, the wife tears off herclothes, and what began as a pleasantfamily scene ends up as pretty grimstuff.“Churchyard,” is a medievalparable danced to music by CosmosSavage derived from medieval pieces.It is an excellent example of thepolarities that mark Taylor’s work:piety (perhaps feigned?) that becomesevil; classical balance that becomeschaotic assymmetry at the end of thedance; and young love that becomescarnal. Costume designer Alec Suther¬land has dressed the dancers in brownand blue tights and added white headand neck bands to effect a nun’s habitfor the girls. As the dance progresses,the costumes are replaced withsmudged tights filled with hideouslumps, reflecting the development inthe choreography.The work has some fast and excitingchoreography for the men, includingan energetic three-man somersaultacross the stage that looked like ahuman caterpillar tractor tread. Dan¬iel Williams, Nicholas Gunn, and Ear¬nest Morgan were exceptionally adroitin this and other movements. Morgan,a Chicagoan and the newest member ofthe troupe, is developing into a stunn¬ing performer.Paul Taylor isn’t performing in Chi¬cago because of torn ligaments, but hiscompany is carrying on admirably. IfCunningham and Cage were a little toomuch for you, and even if they weren’t,you should see the Taylor Company.The Taylor Company will be at theCivic Theater through Sunday, whilethe Nikolais Dance Theater opens nextTuesday. There are student tickets for$2.00 on Tuesday and there is a studentdiscount of $2.00 for all other perform¬ances. Regular ticket prices rangefrom $3.50 to $6.50.— Paula Meinetz ShapiroThe City Center Joffrey Ballet Company is returning to Chicago for a two-weekrun hogging Jan 27 at the Auditorium Theater. The young, jaunty companywill present a varied program of modern dance and ballet works. The newworks are “Solarwind,” “Trinity, ” “Stillpoint" and “Petrouchka. ” CCP andHaimoOriginalThe Humanities Division of the Uni¬versity has often been accused ofoveremphasizing critical abilities andstifling creativity. A brief survey of thecourse catalogue shows, for example,only one English course intended foraspiring student authors. The creativeartist, however, is not yet an extinctspecies among students. Tonight’s con¬cert by the Contemporary ChamberPlayers will feature the world pre¬miere of “Scene from Macbeth,” com¬posed by Ethan Haimo, a third-yearundergraduate music student.Like many contemporary works,“Scene from Macbeth” is scored forsoprano solo and an instrumental en¬semble. The orchestration, however, israther strange and original. The pro¬portionately large percussion section,requiring three players, includes abroad array of blocks, gongs and tam¬tams, as well as a string drum whichcan imitate the sound of a lion’s roar.The text for the soprano’s part comesfrom Act IV, Scene I of Shakespeare’splay — the witches’ scene. With themagical atmosphere set by eerie stringharmonics, piano rumblings, and theunique percussion section, the singerwill interpret the witches’ incantationusing a wide variety of vocal tech¬niques — speaking, whispering,sprechstimme (a method of speech-song invented by Arnold Schoenberg),as well as the familiar sound of naturalsinging.According to the composer, “Scenefrom Macbeth” is tightly constructed,though not according to any standard¬ized, classical form. “I believe that adisciplined structure is necessary torelease and control the expression in apiece of music,” Haimo states.“ ‘Scene From Macbeth’ opens with achord composed of eight notes. It isfrom these eight notes that all of themelodic material derives. Variation isachieved by rhythmic rearrangementand by the techniques of inversion,retrograde, (arranging the notes inreverse order), and transposition. Thelistener will probably not be con¬sciously aware of the permeation of thewhole piece by the eight note row. Heshould, however, get a sense of recur¬rent themes and melodic fragments.”Ralph Shapey will conduct the per¬formance, with Elsa Charleston inter¬preting the solo soprano part. Theprogram will include Shoenberg’s tone-poem Verklaerte Nacht (TransfiguredNight), and also works by Pozzi Escot(who gave a lecture on campus yester¬day), and Milton Babbitt. The concertbegins at 8:30, in Mandel Hall. Admis¬sion is free.—Mark BlechnerHaimo (at left) and ShapeyJanuary 1971/Qrey, City Journal^iChabrol’s Murderous MasterpieceClaude Chabrol’s This Man Must Die(at the Carnegie, Rush at Oak) is acomplete must-see masterpiece, a filmof great beauty and almost unbearablyperfect cinematic precision.The movie begins with a long shot: aspeck on a beach that a zoom-in revealsto be a boy. A few moments later, theboy (Stephen di Napoli) is run over bya car, the progress of which has beenintercut with the child’s movement upfrom the beach. The child’s father,Charles, (Michael Duchaussoy) deter¬mines to track down the hit-and-rundriver and kill him. Keeping a diary ofhis progress, he discovers the manthrough a pure coincidence. The driverPaul, (Jean Yanne) turns out to be acrude, cruel, obnoxious bully, hated byhis wife and son. When Paul is murder¬ed by his son the would-be avengingfather, Charles, is arrested on theevidence of his diary, but the sonfinally confesses.The plot itself contains a certainmeasure of subtlety, complexity, andambiguity on the moral level. Charlesclearly intends to murder Paul, butPaul’s son gets there first. Is intentionto commit a crime morally equivalentto its actual commission? But thegreatness of the film lies in Chabrol’streatment of the story. Paul’s wifeJeanne (Lorraine Rainer), in manyways the most pathetic character,attempts a “literary” conversationwith Charles — who has identifiedhimself as a writer — by saying of theNew Novelists (Robbe-Grillet, Butor,Duras), “you may despise their style,but they’re profound.” The standardcritical line on Chabrol (up to, say, LaFemme Infidele) was a reversal ofthis; you may despise what he has tosay, but his style’s great. Unfortunate¬ly, with the puritanical distaste ofAnglo-American critics for “style,” theresult was that Chabrol didn’t come offtoo well. However, with the intelligentreviews of This Man Must Die by RogerEbert in the Sun-Times and GeneSiskel in the Tribune, Chabrol is finallygetting his measure of recognition andappreciation.Charles describes his search for thekiller in terms of artistic creation:when he locates Paul’s sister-in-lawHelene (Caroline Cellier), whom heuses to lead him to Paul, he tells her Michel Duchaussoy and Caroline Cellier get acquainted in Claude Chabrol's newfilmthat he is writing a film screenplay forher to act in. When Paul finds his diary,Charles tells him that it contains notesfor a novel. The diary itself is aninteresting example of Chabrol’s fasci¬nating manipulation of iconography,the artistic connotations physical ob¬jects have in different contexts.Godard’s Pierrot le Fou and Bres¬son’s Diary of a Country Priest bothuse the diaries kept by the centralcharacters as records of their spiritualodysseys toward death. Like Godardand Bresson, Chabrol uses occasionalclose-ups of the pages of the diary topunctuate the film. For example, thefirst shot we see in This Man Must Dieis a close-up of “I am going to kill aman” being written in the diary byCharles. The difference is this: Godardand Bresson stress the intellectual,philosophical content of the respectivediaries. Chabrol’s Charles uses thediary as a record of his search, withoffhand comments like “I have all thetime in the world.” Of course, hedoesn’t. None of us does. One is struckby the futility, the hopelessness ofCharles’ quest for the man. There areno clues, no paint flecks on the boy’sclothing, none of the standard Dick Tracy-Sam Spade things for him tofollow up on.He finds Helene and, ultimately,Paul by a total coincidence — his cargets stuck in the same mud puddle asPaul’s the day of the killing and thesame farmer helps Charles — thatChabrol makes us accept totally andconvincingly by the brilliant trackingshot that introduces the farmer. It is amovement from left to right that isrepeated when a police detective ques¬tions Charles after Paul’s death, andthat links Helene and Charles. The filmis the story of a continuous process:with none of the direct philosophizingof Godard’s and Bresson’s films, Cha¬brol shows us Charles’ progress to self-knowledge and acceptahce of responsi¬bility for Paul’s death.This brings us to the relationshipbetween Charles and Philippe, Paul’sson, which is developed with greatcomplexity. The idea of a mutual guiltbetween them for the murder is Hit¬chcockian, but Chabrol’s images comeclosest to Fritz Lang’s in their geomet¬rical construction and inevitability.The shot in which Philippe guesses thereal purpose of Charles’ visit to theirhome is a beautiful track and zoom-in. Again, the two are linked together: “Ifyou don’t kill him, I will,” Philippesays. The economy with which Chabrolestablishes their relationship in threeor four scenes is admirable. It is like aLang plot: Man 1 kills Man 2’s son,Man l’s son kills him; Man 2 killshimself.There is humor in the film, too,mostly that of savage irony. Anothericonographic element Chabrol uses asa partial joke is the car Paul uses torun over Charles’ son: it is a FordMustang, scene of lyrical love rompsthrough the French countryside in AMan and a Woman and Vadim’s LaCuree. Charles calls Paul “a carica¬ture of evil.” It’s true; Paul is soloathesome it’s comic. The long (atleast five minutes) shot just beforePaul’s first entrance perfectly catchesthe pauses, hesitations, and banalitiesof a boring upper-middle class conver¬sation.The end of This Man Must Die is atonce beautifully clear and bafflinglyenigmatic. Charles leaves Helene, andfloats out to sea in a small boat, neverto return, his self-punishment for Phil¬ippe’s murder of his father. The lastshot is a zoom away from the boat untilit is just a speck on the ocean (return¬ing us to the imagery of the first shot),as Charles quotes one of Brahms’“Serious Songs”: “The beast must die,so the man must die, yea, both mustdie.” Charles has acted out the final,fatal act in the drama that the hit-and-run sets in motion.Like most cynical satirists, Chabrolis at heart a romantic idealist. Runningthroughout most of his films is a desireto return to a state of childlike in¬nocence. Charles through his contactwith Philippe, finally achieves thisstate. In adults — if there must beadults — Chabrol prizes honesty andself-awareness. In this sense, bothCharles and Paul are admirable.When it becomes definitively clearthat Chabrol is the greatest of the NewWave directors, as I suspect he is (itbecomes clearer with each succeedingfilm from him and from his colleaguesGodard, Truffaut, Rohmer, et al), Ithink it will be because of the per¬fection of his visual forms and theintensity of his vision.—Charles FlynnContemporary European Films Sat. Jan. 23BUTCH CASSIDY & the SUNDANCE KIDCobbCAFE ENRICO1411 East 53rd St.ANNOUNCINGWe Now Handle Augsburger DarkBeer. 75c Discount with Coupon for 64ounce pitcher.Good 'til April 1 STUDENTTICKETS ARE AVAILABLE FOR THE NEW PLAY"THE NIGHT THOREAU SPENT IN JAIL"-a relevant and timely drama about this country's first dissenterStudent tickets are available at up to 15% off theregular box office price -- if purchased in advance- or a 50% discount on a stand-by basis (ticketsoffered for sale half hour before curtain).Goodman Theatre200 S. Columbus CE 6 2337SALT OF THE EARTHThe exciting movie of Mex-Am Men & Women— How they defeated male chauvinism andwon a militant strike. The famous workingclass movie that was blacklisted for yearsSun Jan 24, 4:00 & 6:30 & 9:00 pm3rd floor Ida Noyes Don. $1.00 7 8c 9:15TRIPLE AWARD WINNER...— New York Film CriticsBest Picture of the Year...Best Director (Bob Rafelson)...Best Supporting Actress (Karen Black)...COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents a BBS Produd'onJACK NICHOLSONFIVEERSEPIECESCOLORJESSELSON’S m7S2-2S70. 792-SI90,342-91M- 1340 S. 53*14/Grey City Journal/January 22, 1971■Ilf( Keach Pulls the SwitchThe Traveling Executioner (at neighborhoodtheaters, on a double bill with the atrocious DirtyDingus Magee) is an American Gothic movie. This isat least partially because it’s by a director, JackSmight, who likes American Gothic material. Some¬times his AG movies are pretty good (The IllustratedMan, No Way to Treat a Lady) and sometimes* they’re pretty bad (Harper). But he does have a giftfor dealing with character relationships in offbeat,perverse situations. The Traveling Executioner is hisbest film to date, partly because of its brilliant scriptby 21-year old USC film student Garrie Bateson.Stacy Keach, who came to movies via off-Broadway and the wretched End of the Road, playsJonas Candide, an itinerant executioner who travelsaround Alabama in 1918 with an electric chair in abrightly-colored van. The movie’s plot complications,involving a beautiful lady (Marianna Hill) who keepsgetting stays of execution, are pretty contrived, butSmight, Bateson, Keach, Hill, and Bud (BrewsterCannonbalVs Dazzling SaxesMcCloud) Cort keep the film going. The one unfortu¬nate directorial decision was to mute some of theblack humor implicit in the script. Smight seemsmore interested in the period atmosphere and in theKeach-Hill-Cort relationship, both of which he han¬dles very well. But the film could have beenconsiderably more vicious.This is most clear in a superbly written scene inwhich Keach takes Cort, who is his assistant, to awhorehouse. The Gothic connection between death(Keach and Cort’s profession) and eroticism isimplicit in the scene, but Smight and Bateson justaren’t together. The scene plays well, but doesn’t doall it could in terms of the tradition the film fits into.Smight has dealt, by implication, with sadomasoch¬ism (Harper), homosexuality and fetishism (No Wayto Treat a Lady), and physical mutilation (Illus¬trated Man), but I guess necrophilia was a bit toomuch for him.—Charles FlynnMandel Hall was filled Monday night for thecampus debut of the Cannonball Adderly Quintet andthe return of Howlin’ Wolf, in a concert sponsored byRevitalization. It was an evening of contrasts: vigorvs weariness, education vs down-home experience,inventiveness vs repetition.The standing ovation that the Wolf received wasmore for his great recovery after long illness than forthe excitement of his music. Wolf’s back-up group ofdrums, bass, guitar, piano, and tenor sax started offtight on the opening “Route 49” but soon began tosputter and fell into a tired imitation of a blues group.Their zombie-like playing and appearance stifled theusual hand-clapping exuberance that has filledMandel at blues sessions in the past.Only the Wolf’s extra-large personality saved theday. His constant interchange with the audience andthe poses, stares, prowls, growls, barks, and howlsbrought on immediate rapport. Howlin’ Wolf sings astrange mixture of dated country-style lyrics in anurban blues mode.As those tired men in their 1950’s suits filed offstage, we were struck by the dazzling presence of theAdderly Quintet in leather and satin, representing adifferent era and attitude. The sheer physical size ofCannonball Adderly says power and it’s no lie. Thesextet (coronetist Nat Adderly’s son, Nat Jr., madehis Chicago debut on piano) is full of energy, skill,and imagination. In addition to Nat Adderly, Jr., thegroup is made up of Walter Booker on bass, RoyMcGurdy on drums, Sonny Sharrock on guitar, NatAdderly on cornet, and Julian “Cannonball” Adderlyon alto and soprano saxes. Cannonball and Nat stillhave that earthy sound that started them on theirway, but the addition of Sharrock has added a newintricate, though very emotional, feeling to thegroup.In the opening “Rumplestiltskin”, Sonny’s solostarted out as if each note were being pulled from hisguitar — very disjointed and atonal — and worked upto a battle as he tore his guitar apart as if beingelectrocuted. Cannonball in older timesThe final number, “Mercy, Mercy, Mercy,”offered a refreshing change in that Sharrock’s guitarwas the lead, instead of the usual alto and cornet.Cannonball played a very mellow soprano sax on“Country Preacher” (dedicated to the Rev. JesseJackson in a very tedious introduction — Cannon¬ball’s preaching throughout the whole concert wasthe only weak point.) McGurdy and Nat Jr. kepteverything very together; and the dynamics of the“were perfect.The Adderly group can’t be topped for ex-nent and musicianship. Every member of theip is beautiful But watch that Sharrock; he’sn,too. MUSICA SymphonicWonderlandClaudio Abbado, in his second appearance asguest conductor of the Chicago Symphony last week,presented the difficult Third Symphony of GustavMahler. Although Abbado’s reading of the work wasmarred by some disconcerting flaws, the perform¬ance, on the whole, was quite moving.Mahler’s Third is a symphony of extraordinarylength and complexity. The six movements takealmost one hour and forty minutes to perform;moreover, the work requires hot only a largeorchestra but also a children’s choir, a women’schorus, and a contralto soloist.The symphony can be viewed as a joyfulexpression of Mahler’s almost obsessive pantheism.Mahler, in fact, provided titles for the movementswhich, although he later withdrew them, can yetserve as guides to the work.Most of Abbado’s problems appeared in the firstmovement, at one time subtitled “Summer MarchesIn” by the composer. Mahler intended this lengthymovement to serve as a prologue to the fivemovements which follow, in his attempt to expressall his great love of nature, the composer stuffed themovement with an excessive number of themes.Forging these themes into a coherent whole is aherculean task, and, unfortunately, Abbado is notHercules. As a result the transitions from section tosection were somewhat rough, especially passageslinked by the harp, for Abbado and the harpistseemed to clash over interpretation. The movementwas redeemed, however, by the forceful, masculineplaying of the brass and by the sensitive violin solosof Sidney Weiss.In the second movement, a relatively gentle minuetcalled “What the Flowers Tell Me,” Abbado hadgreater control of the orchestra. Quite effectively, hecaptured both the reticence in the opening of the littledance and the soaring, pleading lyricism of the stringpassages. The third movement, a scherzo entitled“What the Animals in the Forest Tell Me,” was bothwhimsical and sufficiently raucous.Contralto Helen Watts was soloist in the fourthmovement, called “What Night Tells Me (Mankind)”by the composer. In the movement, a setting of anexcerpt from Nietzsche’s Also Sprach Zarathustra,Miss Watts conveyed the inherent mystery andintrospection of the text with great understanding. Inthe following fifth movement, “Morning Bells,” theGlen Ellyn Children’s Theatre Chorus and the womenof the Chicago Symphony Chorus joined Miss Wattsin a joyous and masterly performance. Specialcommendation must go to Barbara Born, director ofthe children’s chorus, and Margaret Hillis, directorof the Chicago Symphony Chorus.The sixth movement, “What Love Tells Me,” wasindeed an uplifting performance despite some minormistakes. Abbado did not pause between the fifth andsixth movements; as a result, the intense, reflectivemood of the opening bars was disrupted by rustlingas the choir members took their seats. Occasionallythe brass did not enter on time in this movement. Yetthe soaring, quasi-religious confidence of the mas¬sive adagio overcame the difficulties. Abbadograsped the true essence of the work, and, despite theminor errors, the performance was a memorableone.—Jim LeakHelp FOTAThe festival of the arts committee (FOTA) hasheld several organizational meetings and hasplanned an impressive list of programs for thisspring.Tentatively planned are: a pop art colloquiumthat would bring together a number of nationallyreputed artists from various disciplines; for theclassical music lovers, a program to draw uponuniversity talent, and bring concert musicians fromother cities; a mini-opera, possibly involving a well-known professional company; several happenings inmodern dance including a workshop, a premiereperformance and a foreign dance group; fine artsexhibits and workshops; a photography contest andexhibit; a film festival; and a drama program toinclude University and New York off-Broadwayproductions.FOTA hopes to attract more interested partici¬pants since all the programs are still in formativestages. We are seeking original suggestions orimaginative ideas for these two events. Anyoneinterested in these or other events should contactIsaac Finkle (843 BJ, ext. 2261) or Tom Jahnke (209Blackstone,ext. 3773).ti Atfli ■ i im v' »*'v> a • % • • 4 * .* .* ■** * *• .-«<• A * .*■ A -• „*.,* • * (_*_.■ ,* .' S January 22, 1971/Grey City Joomal/S .*iSI!S«;3<5lijMM I**!MHWRm««>••» i»:Wl ;£><«*.4* 'a*i Jj.,Sh»»*«»', •£■ I«... 1“*> \Clnms For Your ConvenienceTHE BOOKSTORE WILL BE OPENTOMORROWSATURDAY, JAN. 23, 9:00 - 1:00(The Food Department will be CLOSED on Saturdays)Come in tomorrow morning - we won’t,be busy,and it will be a pleasant time for browsing andshopping.% „TEXTBOOKS GENERAL BOOKS PAPERBACKSSALEBOOKS GIFTSPHOTOGRAPHY SUPPLIESTYPEWRITERS CANDY & TOBACCOSCHOOL & OFFICE SUPPLIESTHE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE58th & EllisMALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOWDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person ot 120 E. 18th St.EARN UP TO $50 OR MORE DAILYWORK DURING SEMESTER BREAKSORDAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.Far East KitchenChinese & AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen Daily 1 2 - 10Fn. & Sat, 12-12Closed Monday53rd & Hyde Park Blvd955-2229Our thing is your ring —/Hsllha^b"HI »o* y>119 N Wabash at Washingtonsnouwooc tVIRORKN RUiK The Renault 10doesn’t racelike a Ferraribut it brakeslike one.braking without fading.They are used in the R<10 for the same reason.Disc brake pads are alsoto replace.And with disc brake:won’t have to worry about gettingthe water.One more thing, since 4-wheeldisc brakes are standard equipmentthe Renault 10 will still only costyou under $2,000.If you can’t afford to race likea Ferrari, youcan afford tobrake like one. ROAD1BVEHfflUH-Heshjm ports,3nc.2347 So. MichiganTel. 326-255091/GfrkyCity Journal/January 22, 1971 EUROPE 1971 annual flight programuniversity of Chicagocharter flightsCHARTERS weeks payment date71A AIR CANADA June 25Sept. 9716 EL AL June 18Israel Airlines July 1671C TWA Aug. 9Sept. 11710 AIR CANADA Sept. 1Sept. 30 Chicago/London 11London/ChicagoN.Y./Paris 4London/N.Y.Chicago/London 5londcn/ChicagoChicago/Paris 4London/Chicago March 9 $255March 2 $189April 6 $236April 13 $219applications can be made in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th,Rm. 306, 1.00 - 5:30, 753-3598, 753-3272.A $50.00 deposit is required for each seat reserved.of 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.IIIIIIIlIIIL. UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY684-3661FRANK PARIS IproprietorI am interested in the R.N. Refreshercourse. Please send information to:NameAddress:Telephone; StudentDiscountModelCamera1342 E. 55th4V3-6/UUMost complete photo shopon South sideA Natural, Physical, Spiritual HighContinued From Page Oneclassified respectively under the principles of Yinand Yang — Yin representing centrifugality, ex¬pansion, and space and Yang representing centripe-tality, contraction and time. Since man belongs to theYang animal kingdom, he must depend upon the Yinvegetable kingdom to maintain biological harmony.Man’s spiritual development can begin only afterhe has achieved physical and mental harmonythrough his food. Since brown rice contains the idealratio between Yin and Yang, it is the staple of thediet, which also calls for cooked vegetables, beans,fresh vegetables, seasonal fruits, nuts, and dairyfood. Because macrobiotics avoid meat, Georgeexplains, “our personalities are less violent andaggressive. Because of the fear-producing enzymesinjected into cattle before slaughter and still presentin the meat we eat, and the nature of the food itself,meat breeds a hunter’s mentality. A macrobiotic dieton the other hand, balances the disposition.” Never¬theless, several former macrobiotics have rejectedthe diet because of its deficiencies in Vitamin C andprotein.In addition to meat, organic food consumersavoid refined sugar. “We all have a sweet tooth,”explains Paul. “Well, natural honey and fruits areboth sweet and also some of the best foods you caneat. Fruit contains fruit sugar which is easilyconverted and gives energy, plus vitamins and all thetrace elements you need. Unfortunately industry-takes the sweet flavor, reduces it to one molecule —sucrose — and manufactures it without the rest of thenutrients which a natural food with the same flavorwould also contain. Sucrose is also harder to digest.”According to a pamphlet called “The Sugar Story,”put out by the Organic Merchants, refined sugarabsorbs vitamin B from the body, disrupts the Weighing organic graincalcium metabolism and is deleterious to the nervoussystem.Fortunately, an ancient, nutritious, sweet, choco¬late-tasting natural food called carob — from whichcakes and brownies can be created — satisfies the“sweet teeth” of countless organic food buffs.Up until now, the growth of the organic foodmovement in Chicago was stifled by the paucity oforganic food stores in the area. Although the loopand north side abound in health food stores (general¬ly over-priced and of poor quality), Chicago has onlyone true organic food store. Located at 2546 NHalsted, Foods For Life offers numerous hugebarrels stocked with millet, buckwheat, whole oats,corn meal, soybean, peas, lentils — even popcorn.Other products include exotic chicory root anddandelion root, and sesame butter — in case youdon’t like peanut butter. As a member of the Organic Merchants — anationally growing association which sets the stan¬dards for organic food stores — Foods For Life willnot sell white sugar, synthetic sugar, productscontaining preservatives or emulsifiers, or grown insynthetically fertilized soil. Right now fruits andvegetables are flown in by west coast organic fooddistributors and whole grains by east coast dis¬tributors. However Foods For Life — in an attempt tocreate a greater market for organically grown foodin Chicago and the midwest — is building a compostsoil farm in Iowa and will soon grow their own grainthere and distribute it throughout the midwest. Evennow, Foods For Life is able to charge less than thehealth food stores because it carries large quantitiesat low profit.Still, 2500 N Halsted is several miles from HydePark. And although the 400 epicures who turned outfor the Bandersnatch Organic Food Feast last weekis evidence enough of the growing interest in themovement here, most Hyde Parkers are preventedfrom regularly pursuing a diet because of the lack ofstores in the area. A common complaint is “I can’tafford to each organic because I live in Hyde Parkwhere they really rook you.” Happily, severalperseverent natural food consumers hope to remedythe situation. Hyde Park resident Linda Freedman isorganizing an organic food co-op and hopes eventual¬ly to open a store. Similarly Carlo Van Zandt soonplans to open a health food store which will carryprimarily organic food products.So the trend continues. Possibly because, as oneextoller stated, “People are finally realizing thatthere’s a lot of shit in regular food,” or, as anotherexplained, “as long as I’m going to be living in mybody for another 50 or 60 years, I may as well make ita better place to live.”Culture VultureSPECIAL EVENTSBirdland. a play about the late Charlie "Bird" Parker,one of this era's greatest jazz artists, will be presented inQuantrell auditorium Monday night at 8 pm.The performance, sponsored by Black Colony, will featurethe New Era Theatre, a southside black theiter groupproduced and directed by Rodney Graham who is currentlyproducing the Chicago production of the Pulitzer Prizewinning play "No Place To Be Somebody," now at theStudebaker TheaterBirdland, a tribute to Parker, combines music, dance, anddrama to tell the real-life story of a music man "who comesfrom the Kansas City 18th 8. Vine Streets Hotel Blue Roomto New York Harlem Minton's with he be bop, his blues, hissoul, innovation that has greatly influenced much of themusic world", according to Chicago's Daily Defender.For more information about the performance Monday,call Angela Lee at 324 7305.John Berryman, world renowed poet, will speak at the lawschool auditorium Wednesday at 7 30 Berryman will readselections of his poems. Admission to the reading is free andwithout ticketBerryman has received numerous literary honors, hasbeen published in book form and in literary journals and isrecognized as one of the greatest living poets in the Englishlanguage This is an opportunity not to be missed!McKendree Spring, one of the rock world's up and comingnew groups, will perform in the Blue Gargoyle Wednesdaynight at 8 for only $1. The show promises to be entertainingand relaxed, combining the friendliness of the Gargoyle andthe spirit of McKendree SpringThe group's albums on Decca also deserve a listen,especially if you want to know something about the group'smusic before you see them in concert. Besides, for only $1,what have you got to lose?DANCEThe Harper Dance Festival is at the Civic Theater(Wacker and Washington) for its 1971 season and runsthrough January 31 Performances will be Tuesday, Fridayand Saturday at 8:30 and 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:The Paul Taylor Dance Company will perform "Lento","Big Bertha" and "Churchyard" Jan 19, 23, and (matinee)24 "Post Meridian," "Public Domain" and "Sea to ShiningSea" Jan 22 and 24The Nikolais Dance Theatre performs "DivertissmentII", "Structures" and "Tent" Jan 26, 30, and (matinee) 31"Divertissment I", "Echo" and "Tower" Jan 29 and 31.In conjunction with the Festival a master class in moderndance technique will be taught in Ida Noyes tomorrow from1 2:30 Si fee for students with the Paul Taylor Company.Student discounts may be purchased at the box office forall performances except Saturday. They are $2 off theregular price.The City Center Joffrey Company returns to Chicago for a2 week run from Jan 27 to Feb 7. Prices are $10 $2.50 at theAuditorum Theater. Jan 27 they perform "Petrouchka"(new), "Confetti" and "The Green Table" Jan 28,"Trinity" (new), "The Still Point" (new), and "The GreenTable" Evenings at 8:30.ARTExhibition of 5 large works by Chicago artists at theSchool of Social Service Administration, 969 E. 60th St.,through Feb 9 Open to public daily except SundayArmor from the George F Harding Museum at the ArtInstitute January 23 through March 21. Located in the AMontgomery Ward Gallery.Through Feb 6, the Hyde Park Art Center exhibits Harris,LaMantia, and Kowalski. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday 1:30 4:30. Saturday 10 4.Museum of Science and Industry: "Leonardo da Vinci:Inventions and Drawings" through Feb 3 in the HomeLounge. McKendree Spring, at the Gargoyle Wednesday for $1Jacques Baruch Gallery has Russian icons on exhibit Jan12 31. Suite700,920 N Michigan (Walton Street Entrance).Richard Gray Gallery has Saul Steinberg's watercolorsand drawings. Mon Fri 10-5:30; Sat noon 5. 620 N Michigan.The Chicago Gallery of Photography has opened up at 3742W Irving Park Road, open every Sat Sun from noon 8.An exhibition of architectural innovations of McCormickPlace has opened at Glessner House, 1800 S Prairie Ave.Hours are Tuesday and Thursday 10 to 2 and Saturday andSunday 2 to 5 The show was prepared by the architects ofMcCormick Place. Runs through February 28The 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'Keefe Retrospective Exhibition" opens to¬morrow 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.The Joseph Shapiro "Art to Live With" collection will beon display in Ida Noyes til Jan 22.DRAMABirdland, a play about the late Charlie "Bird" Parker, agreat black jazz artist, sponsored by Black Colony,featuring the New Era Theatre. Quantrell Auditorium.Monday at 8 pm. .The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail opened last night at theGoodman Theater and will run throuqh February 21. WithJerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee.The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Mari¬golds opened at the Ivanhoe, 3000 N. Clark, 8 pm. Runsthrough Sunday March 14.Man of La Mancha continues to run at the CandlelightDinner Playhouse, 5620 S Harlem, Summitt. Dinner isincluded, and in fact required. Tuesday through Thursday, $5, Friday $6; Saturday $6.95 for the first performance and$8 for the second, Sunday $4 50 and $6. Call theater fortimes.No Place 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 studentdiscount except on Saturday.At the Organic Theater, 2259 N Lincoln, Candide continuesthrough February 25. Tickets $2.50, students on Wednesdayand Thursday nights get a $1 discountThe Prodigal is presented by the Old Town Players at 1718North Park. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday at7:30. Tickets $2.The Free Theater Company will perform William Russo'sJazz Opera Antigone Jan 23 at 8pmMUSICThe Contemporary Chamber Players will perform 8:30 inMandel Hall Friday. Featuring the World Premiere ofEthan Haimo's "Scene From Macbeth" and music byEscot, Schoenberg and Babbitt.Friday and Saturday the Chicago Symphony Orchestrawill play Bartok and Bruckner, conducted by ClaudioAbbado.Pierce Tower and the University Musical Society willpresent the first of a series of chamber music concerts.Craig Worthington and Alan Chill will present Romantic andmodern piano music at the home of Kenneth Northcott,resident master of Pierce, Sunday at 3 pm. Due to limitedspace, admission will be by invitation. Non residents maypick up invitations prior to the'concert at the Reynolds ClubDesk.McKendree Spring at the Blue Gargoyle, Wed, Jan 27, 8pm,$l.Arlo Guthrie, Pat and Victoria Garvey will perform at theQuiet Knight through Sunday.Free, Siegal-Schwall Band, and Hammer in the SyndromeJan 23. Yusef Lateef will perform at the North Park Hotel Jan 24.Chicago Historical Society will feature Art Hoyle SextetJan 24.Roberta Flack, Edmonds and Curley will perform atMister Kelly's throuoh Feb 7Spider John Koernes and the Gasveys will perform at theQuiet Knight Jan 27 through 31.POETRYJohn Berryman, contemporary poet, will deliver theWilliam Vaughn Moody lecture in the Law School Audito¬rium. Jan 27 at 7:30. *FLICKS, FILMS, MOVIES, AND CINEMAHTonight Doc Films shows Alain (La Guerre Est Finie)Resnais' Hiroshima Mon Amour at 7:15 and 9 30 in CobbTomorrow CEF (in a rare departure from their non profitpolicy) shows George Roy Hill's Butch Cassidy and theSundance Kid, with Paul Newman and Robert Redford asthe supercool superheroesAfter seeing Jane Fonda in the flesh yesterday, you canreally see her in the flesh in Barbarella, Roger Vadim's op-pop version of Jean-Claude Forest's erotic comic strip,Sunday, in Cobbat7:15and9:30.Tuesday, at 8 pm only in Cobb, Max Ophuls' beautifulevocation of love lost, Letter from an Unknown Women, areal masterpiece of the American cinema.And Wednesday, at 7:15 and 9:30, a Doc Films triple-bill:Mae West in She Done Him Wrong, her first movie. This isthe one where Mae sings "Where Has My Easy RiderGone?" and "I Like A Man That Takes His Time." Costarring Cary Grant. With it are two short subjects: BusterKeaton's The Playhouse and an amazing surrealistic 1933Betty Boop cartoon. All for 75 cents. •Sunday there are two more films on campus: Salt of theEarth at 4, 7, and 9 in Ida Noyes, presented by SDS, $1. and adocumentary on Red China's cultural revolution of 1966-67,at 7 and 9:30 in Mandel. also $1.Off campus, Peter Hall's Perfect Friday, a caper moviesendup opened Wednesday at the Playboy (1204 N Dearborn). Stanley Baker, David (Morgan) Warner, and UrsulaAndress (now you know why its at the Playboy) star.But the best off-campus film event of the week is theChicago film festivals Swedish Film Week, which opens thisweek at the Lake Shore Theatre, 3175 Broadway (take theClark St. bus north, or the el to the Belmont stop). Call 6443400 for more information or see ad somewhere else in thisissue.Be a BlackfriarBlackfriars, the student-run, stu¬dent-written musical group will holdtry-outs for its show this year, TheDemocratic Way, Monday and Tues¬day at 7 pm in Ida Noyes library.All persons interested in musicalwork, — singers, dancers, actors, techpeople, etc — are urged to try out forthis show.Anyone with questions can call P.Stafford at 667-1185.From the Maker of "La "La Guerre Est Fini" and "Last Year At Marienbad"ALAIN RESNAIS'HIROSHIMA MON AMOUR Tonight7:15/9:30Cobb $1Doc FiimswmmiM.M.v.uv.vi MUMS<maw iW/G&UNEW SHIPMENT OFCOLUMBIA RECORDSNEWRELEASES!TOM RUSHWRONG ENDOFTHE RAINBOWINCLUDINGJAZZMAN WRONG END OF THE RAINBOWSWEET BABY JAMES GNOSTIC SERENADEC 30402*SLY & THE FAMILY STONEGREATEST HITSi WANT TO TAKE YOU HIGHERTHANK YOU Falettmme Be Mice Elf AginDANCE TO THE MUSIC STAND' EVERYDAY PEOPLEand moreKE 30325 Christmasand the beadsof sweatLaura Nyroincluding:Up on the roofChristmas in my soulbeads of sweat' blackpatchMap to the TreasureKC 30259 CR 30259CT 30259 CA 30259BLOOD,SWEAT& TEARSincluding:SymphonyFor The Devil - Sympathy For The DevilSomethin Comm On The Battle40.000 Headmen Hi-De-Ho*KC 30090 CR 30090 includingSing A Mean Tune Kid/What Else Can I SayI Don't W:-.nt Your Money/Free CountryWhen All The Laughter Dies In SorrowFree/MotherC2 30110 C2R 30110PEARLNEWJANIS JOPLIN BOB DYLAN"NEW MORNING"INCLUDINGSIGN ON THE WINDOWIF NOT FOR YOU / THREE ANGELSWENT TO SEE THE GYPSY IF DOGS RUN FREEKC 30290*SANTANA/ABRAXASincluding;:Black Magnc Woman Gypsy QueenKC 30130 40%OFFLISTSPIRITTWELVE DREAMS OF DR SARDONICUSINCLUDINGNATURE'S WAY MORNING WILL COME /MR SKINWHEN I TOUCH YOU: ANIMAL ZOOE 30267/EA 30267/ET 30267SimonandGarfunkeiBridgeOverTroubledWaterKCS 9914BESSIE SMITHANY WOMAN'S BLUESiikluUmi;\ , as You When You re Di'vm And Out• !H .^eBiues/rmGoni^ELiiY '"M, Used T Be•, V, ^ Blues /I m Wild Ai.nut Th.it They,G 30126JOSEPH I. and JOHNNA LEVINEMY SAPOUTAB0Ba»/?AVTHE TWO AND ONLYBOB RAYELLIOTT GOULDINGBOB ELLIOTT and RAY GOULDINGDirected byp JOSEPH HARDYV J Scenery Deeigned by_ 4 WILLIAM RITTMAM 1—*Lighting Designed by y - lTHOMAS SKELTON ;.)■» ] ASSOCIATE PHOOUCEB >-T'>*nrBEN GERARDS 30412 SALE PRICESMFG. LIST LOWE'S PRICE4.98 2.995.98 3.596.98 4.199.98 5.9811.98 7.18 and Music from the SoundtrackPussycatComedyHitfhlrghts byJSStGwrge Segalfrom theScreenplay byMusk Performed byUm^SwuiS 30401 *tHl OWIGINOL SOurwoTir^-grCO^r^.COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents h BBS ProductionJACK NICHOLSONFIVE EHSU PIECESferttun/ig Songs byTAMMY WYNETTEPutno Selections byPEARL KAUFMANIncludmq Dictloque front the SoundtrrichKE 30456*WE ACCEPT MASTERCHARGE & BANKAMERICARDCHARGEWITH Bank AwericardiA-l,G.l RECORDSOPEN SUNDAY 12 TO HYDE PARK1444 E. 57thMU 4-15058/Grey City Journal/January 22, 1971