The Chicago MaroonVolume 79, NumberjK v The University of Chicag0 Friday, February 5,1971Lying-In awaits UCdecision on abortionsThe committee on recognized student or¬ganizations (CORSO) has appealed a stu¬dent-faculty-administration (SFA) court de¬cision requiring CORSO to fund the Nation¬al Student Association (NSA) delegation’sattendance of their national convention thissummer.Last week, the court ruled that CORSOhad violated the student government con¬stitution by reducing its allocation to theNSA delegation to an extent “detrimental”to the organization.CORSO is asking the court to set asidethis decision and dismiss the NSA com¬plaint on procedural grounds.The University people’s peace treaty co¬alition has called for a boycott of classestoday to protest the escalation of the In¬dochina war into Laos.The group has scheduled a meeting fornoon today in Mandel hall, to be followedby workshops which will discuss possibleanti-war actions.The coalition claims that despite a tightblackout on news, reports indicate a groundinvasion of Laos by South Vietnamesetroups backed up by US military personnel.The coalition contends that the newsblackout is part of a Nixon administrationstrategy to prevent the widespread demon¬strations that occured after the announce¬ment of the invasion into Cambodia lastyear.They have called for a continuing, mas¬sive anti war campaign to combat thisstrategy. Steve AokiCORSO submits that the defendants inthe suit filed by NSA were the members ofCORSO, 1970-71, but that no notice wasserved inviting them to testify.It also claims that the nominal plaintiff,John Siefert ’71 had no standing to sue forNSA, as he had resigned his position as amember of the delegation at the time of thehearings.CORSO maintains that these are bothgrounds for a “motion to dismiss” underthe rules of the SFA court.CORSO also claims that sessions of thecourt were not announced, that participantsin the case were not notified in advance ofAt a Student Government meeting lastnight, the assembly voted to study thepeace treaty in an emergency meeting in afew days. Because of the varied and con¬fusing nature of the proposals, no positionwas taken on today’s boycott, explainedone SG representative.(In other SG business, Eugene Goldberg‘71 was elected to replace John Siefert ‘71as chairman of the election and rules com¬mittee.(A speech by Julian Bond, a blackGeorgia legislator, was cancelled becausethe assembly lost its quorum before theamount of Bond’s honorarium could be de¬termined, according to Siefert.(SG also voted to give Students for Vio¬lent Non-Action $1500 grant and a $500loan for its Lascivious Costume Ball.) By SUE LOTH„ Abortions have not yet been performed atChicago Lying-In, pending a decision fromUniversity legal counselors.No decision is expected before the end ofthe week. Meanwhile, the waiting list ofwomen desiring abortions at Lying-Ingrows, and the Chicago Clergy ConsultationService continues to refer women out ofstate for legal abortions.“We’re not trying to put any roadblocksin the way,” one source at the Universitylegal'office said. “But with a situation ofthis kind, we ought to take time to considerthe legal implications of what the Univer¬sity plans to do.”Last weekend, hospital physicians dis¬closed plans to perform abortions for wom¬en less than 12 weeks pregnant at Lying-Inand through the student health clinic.The disclosure followed the decision of aUS District Court panel Friday, whichruled unconstitutional Illinois’ 97-year oldabortion law. The law prohibited abortionexcept to save the life of a woman.Terming the law “vague” and an intru¬sion on women’s rights, the judges con¬cluded that the state may not “prohibit, re¬strict, or otherwise limit” women’s accessto abortions performed by physicians in li¬censed facilities.Among the questions University coun¬selors wish to consider is what might hap¬pen to the hospital if it began to performabortions and, on appeal, the federal judg¬es’ decision is not upheld by a higher court.Chicago Lying-In is not the only Chicagohospital to hesitate before offering abor¬tions on a large scale. Lindy Saint-Victor,the issues and charges, and that the courtdid not publish copies of its majority opin¬ion.According to CORSO, these represent vio¬lations of articles in . the student govern¬ment constitution.The NSA suit was originally filed nearly18 months ago, when CORSO cut its alloca¬tion to the NSA delegation from $1200 forthe year 1968-69 to $50 for the year 1969-70.NSA argued that this constituted a viola¬tion of the student government constitutionwhich states that “CORSO shall be guidedby previous activities budgets and shall notinitiate major changes which would be det¬rimental to any organization.”Since the SFA court did not convene lastyear, the case was not resolved until lastweek. The court is expected to meet nextweek to consider the CORSO appeal.REV E SPENCER PARSONS‘Ww ahead of where we were two yearsago...’ executive secretary for the Chicago ClergyConsultation Service for Problem Preg¬nancies (CCS), said of the situation, “Sofar we don’t have any hospital that hasreally opened up (for abortions).“Physicians are waiting for approvalfrom hospital boards. Even the physicianat Grant hospital (where a 23-year oldhousewife received the first legal abortionunder the new ruling) has been referringwomen to us (the CCS).“Even though some hospitals thoughtthey were geared for immediate action,”Mrs Saint-Victor continued, “they werethinking only in terms of about five abor¬tions a day.“They didn’t anticipate the response.We’ve been getting 200 calls a day;Planned Parenthood has been getting 150.“We are hoping that things will ease, in aweek or so,” she added. “Some hospitals,however, have flatly said that they will notgo ahead until legislative action is taken.”Lying-In and Wesley Memorial hospitalsare keeping waiting lists of women desiringabortions. Between Monday and Wednes¬day, Lying-In collected more than 150names.A legal source outside the University of¬fered another explanation for the hospitals’hesitancy. “Possibly it is a public relationsproblem because (the hospitals) are afraidof criticism if the case is reversed,” hesaid.Even if hospitals began performing abor¬tions now, and the judges’ decision was lat¬er overruled by the US Court of Appeals,they would not be liable for criminal prose¬cution, he added.“As far as I’m concerned, the law is asthe first court determines it, unless some¬one changes it,” he said.State’s attorney Edward Hanrahan hasappealed the US District Court ruling.Opponents of abortion have also proposedrestrictive laws before the state legislature.The Hyde Park-based Illinois Citizens forMedical Control of Abortion and other pro¬abortion groups are still working to con¬vince legislators to enact laws consistentwith or more liberal than the federal courtruling.Rev E Spencer Parsons, vice-chairmanof the ICMCA and chairman of Chicago’sCCS, is hopeful that the state legislaturewill pass more liberal abortion laws withinthe next six weeks.“In terms of public acceptance and legis¬lative acceptance, I think we are wayahead of where we were two years ago,” hesaid last January, one day before the sur¬prise federal court decision was announced.DR FREDERICK ZUSPANChairman of obstetrics-gynecologyCORSO appeals SFA court's rulingBoycott protesting Laoscalled by treaty coalitionUP AGAINSTTHE ICY WAIL.WinterquarterFriday.February 5Saturday.February 13Friday-SaturdayFebruary 27.28Friday.February 20Saturday.February 6Sunday.February 14Sunday.February 14Sunday.February 21Wednesday. ThursdayFebruary 17.1824.25. etc.Monday.Marrh 8Friday. Saturday. SundayFebruary 19.20.21.26.27.28 ‘Wednesday.February 24Daiiv DancesBlack Colony danre. Image Band. Ida Noyes Hall. 9 p.m.(admission charge)Lascivious Costume Ball, sponsored by SVNA. Ida Noyes Hall. 9 p.m.(admission charge)Watch this weekend for another Icy Wall spectacular!Grand Opeing (well, almost)Le Drugstore, a startling small selection of toothpaste, shampoo, soap,mouthwash, deodorant, rhapstirk. kleenex. razor blades, and otherpersonal necessities, hidden in the recesses of the Ida Noyes checkroomfor the mystification of all. Open 3 p.m. to midnight every night, forthose suddenly struck with the dreaded ahhva mudra. or fear ofpersonal offense.Details of festivities to be announced.An lev Wall event.ConcertsPhil and the Faslbacks. in concert at Bandersnatch Nightclub, co¬sponsored by Ida Noyes Program Board. Tunes of the 1950's presentedbv your favorite greasers. 9 p.m. to 2 a.m.. Ida Noyes. Free. An IcyWail event.note: Mike Buckner, the Pizza King, invites you to try his authentic,simulated New York Pizza.Balfour Brothers Cajun Band, presented by the Folklore Society andthe Ida Noyes Program Board. 8 p.m.. Ida Noyes 75c. An Icy Wallevent.Valentine Concert. John Klaus and Ellen Harris. Pierce Tower series. 3p.m. Free with ticket.Iniversity Chamber Orchestra, conducted by Roger Solie. LexingtonStudio. 4 p.m. Free.CuriositiesThe original Burk Rogers serials, starring Flash frabbe. Buck Rogers,his friend and companion Miss Wilma Derring. and associate Dr. Huerare featured in an exciting 25th century adventure from 1936. Oneepisode a week, on Wednesdays and Thursday at 1ft p.m. Ida NoyesProgram Board. Free. An Icy Wall event.BELA LEGftSI NIGHT. The Phantom Creeps, episodes 1-6. in chillingblack and white. 8 p.m. Ida Noyes Program Board. An Icy Wall event,(episodes 7-12 to be shown April 5.)DramaPeer Gynt. by H. Ibsen, experimental production, dircted by AnnetteFern. Mandel Hall. Admission charge.Bake SaleDames Club Bake Sale. 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. Mandel corridor.ice Mating on North Field bv Pierce Tower. Cniversitv Avenue near55th Street. Bring l'. of C. I.D. 753-4693 for details. 4 TIIEPIANO MUSIC OFSCHUBERT. Uande/,'tfa//PAUL BADURA-SKODA23, > Hair A / and 9trdAJORG DEMUS. KtncA iO(f /mnd±).ft+tmtt/md Ay /km V/Wr^tWy ofV’ktmpo f r/rt*MfmfJicbet information 753-3139Series tickets (four recitals)SI2 Faculty: Staff; Alumni:Fine Arts Program StudentsS."> University of Chicago Students Single ticketsS4.00 Faculty; Sta-'f: Alumni;Fine Arts Program Students$2.00 University of Chicago StudentsS3 EDby CAR repairs/SOr/fcA tfe...BRIGHTONFOREIGN AUT043ERABCS4401 S. ARCHER. ME.call254-3840 254-5071 254-507?ATTENTIONVOLKSWAGENOWNERS!!!$52.00$65.00$9.50 ~$11.50~$28.00$34.00Complete clutch installed 1200 - 1300V.W.1500- 1600 V. WShocks installed 1200V.W1300- 1500 - 1600 V.WMufflers installed 1200 - 1300 V.WMufflers transporter installed 1500 - 1600."Brake service with our modernmachinery" all four wheels 100%guarantee $42.00 on 1200 - 1300 - 1500V.W. sedan transporter brakes $46.00King link pin replaced - Front wheelsaligned $44.00Steering damper installed $11.50* TUNE-UP SPECIAL $16.00(Includes parts & labor)NOWGasheaters for '67 VW installed $130.For Do-it-yourself fans $85.Bright ofi_ _AwV*'£a*viecSPECIAL TIRE SALEFirestone Champion Tires560x15 blackwallContinental Tires560x15 blackwall $15.76 plusexcise tax $1.58$22 00 plusexcise tax $1.74GOOD TIL END OF FEBRUARY lifesaversClift s Notes have bpen lifesavers for millions of studentsby helping them understand ditficult literature assignments Beprepared Get the ones you neednow and use them as you studyNearly 200 titlesalways available at your dealer sJJliff&Notes-Lincoln. Nebraska 68501UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY684-3661FRANK PARISIproprietorcur ANO SAVEI LOW COST. SAFE, LEGALi ABORTION| IN NEW YORK! SCHEDULED IMMEDIATELY(212)490-3600liI PROFESSIONAL SCMOUUNS SMVICC Inc| S4S Fifth Avt .Ntw York City 10017I There is a lee tor our service2/The Chicago Maroon/February 5,1971200 library workers discuss forming unionUNIONIZING: Some 200 library employees met at the First Unitarian Church*Monday to discuss the possibility of forming a union. A near capacity crowd of about 200 li¬brary employees attended the first publicmeeting of the University of Chicago Li¬brary Staff Organizing Committee (UC-LSOC) at the First Unitarian Church yes¬terday to discuss the formation of a libraryworkers union.A1 Evanoff, organizing secretary of theNational Council of Distributive Workers ofAmerica (NCDWA), the national affiliate ofthe local union, gave background informa¬tion on the NCDWA and answered libraryworkers’ questions.Organizing committee member PatCoatsworth told the crowd that “the re¬sponse to the card campaign has been fan¬tastic.” The National Labor RelationsBoard (NLRB) requires that 30 percent ofthe workers express interest in unionizingby signing membership cards.Mrs Coatsworth also told the library em-Departments will study joint degreesSeveral departments are studying waysthat might allow college students to receivea bachelor’s degree and an advanced de¬gree in a shorter period of time.The College and the Pritzker school ofmedicine have set up a committee to studythe feasibility of awarding a joint AB-MDdegree. The department of economics isalso studying whether a joint AB-MA canbe awarded within five years, College DeanRoger Hildebrand reported.He added that the anthropology depart¬ment is also discussing the possibility of ajoint degree. At present there are college-professional options in the business and li¬brary science schools.In a letter to the student-faculty com¬mittee to study the AB-MD proposal, Hilde¬brand and Dr Leon Jacobson, dean of thebiology division and Pritzker school ofmedicine, said that “students receiving anAB in biology from the College are well prepared for medical training and thatmost of those who do go on to medicalschool ... have the equivalent of at leastone year of medical school training.”The committee has been asked to reportbefore the end of spring 1971 and by De¬cember 31, 1971 have a detailed plan readyfor implementation in fall 1972.According to Hildebrand, the economicsdepartment has voted in favor of studyingthe joint degree proposal, and it is possiblesuch a program would be implemented infall 1971.The AB-MD committee will be chaired byWilliam Baker, professor and chairman ofbiology; Dr. Frank Fitch, professor ofpathology; Donald Fischman; assistantprofessor of biology and anatomy, Dr.Godfrey Getz, associate professor of path¬ology and biochemistry; and Arnold Ravin,professor of biology and evolutionary biol¬ ogy and master of the college biology di¬vision.Also Paul Sigler, associate professor ofbiophysics; Dr John Ultmann, professor ofmedicine, and two students, William Dock-en, medicine, and John Strausser ’71. ployees, “The union is all of us. What it willbe is what we will make it be. Decisionswill be made democratically on policy de¬mands or anything that comes up.”Evanoff told the crowd, “I think we aregoing into the kind of situation where weare morally right.“We have a big task and it is not going tobe easy. I assume the institution is going toput all kinds of obstacles in our way.”Evanoff added that he is “shocked by thewages that exist.”He assured the workers that the localunion will be autonomous. He said the localunion will have its own constitution and willnot be affected by other local unions.Mrs Coatsworth said, “We will not haveto check with the national union before tak¬ing any action.”When questioned about the possibility ofthe University forbidding students fromjoining the union, Evanoff said, “The Uni¬versity doesn’t stand a chance to say stu¬dents are not allowed.”The 50,000 member NCDWA is affiliatedwith the United Auto Workers, the Team¬sters union, and the International ChemicalWorkers, in the Alliance for Labor Action.Lothar Meyer is dead at 64Lothar Meyer, 64, professor of chemistryand in the Franck Institute, died at 8pm Monday, February 1.Services will be private.A distinguished chemist, Meyer madesignificant contributions to low tempera¬ture research; to research on liquid heliumand other rare, condensed gases; and toresearch on the structure and properties ofmolecular crystals. He was born in Breslau, Germany, onJuly 13,1906. He did his collegiate and post¬graduate work at Breslau’s TechnischeHochschule, earning the PhD degree in1930. He served on the faculties of the Uni¬versity of Gottingen and the University ofLeiden before joining the faculty of TheUniversity of Chicago as a Research Asso¬ciate in 1946.Meyer is survived by his wife, Marion.THREE TOP COMPACT STEREO STYSTEMSFIRST TIME EVER AT SALE PRICES!SCOTT 2505$2QQ Q5SAVE $ 120.00KLH MODEL 20$349.95SAVE $50.00 KLH MODEL 24$27QSAVE $40.00MudOaftON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. Oak 337-4150 2035 W. 95th St. 779-6500..‘JJ .vi; ",'u ' February 5,1971/The Chicago Maroon/3*ff-j» •Ji ojjCviC aV..*TEht tfntocrsitg of ChicagoROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL59TM STREET AND WOODLAWN AVENUE . CHICAGO, ILLINOISX 0. Bad)JWaste m B MinorTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRwith 31 members ofTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRARICHARD VIKSTROM, Director of Chapel MusicEDWARD MONDELLO, ContinuoSUSAN NALBACH LUTZ, Soprano BARBARA PEARSON, SopranoPHYLLIS UNOSAWA, Contralto DONALD DOI©, ConorSTEPHEN SWANSON, Bar/tone ARTHUR BERG, BassSunday * February 14, 1971 * 3:30 p.m.Tickets: Reserved $5.00 General Admission $4.00UC Connected/Alumni $3.50 UC Students $2.50On Sale: All TICKETRON outlets including Marina Citydial T-l-C-K-E-T-S for informationWoodworth’s Bookstore, 1311 East 57th StreetCooley’s Corner, 5211 Harper AvenueReynolds Club Desk, 5706 University AvenueMail Orders to: Chapel Music Office, 59th Street and Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago 60637Please make checks payable to The University of Chicago and enclose stamped, self-addressed envelopeSUN 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 2-2390798-0470 MmJESSELSON’S752-2170, 752-SIfO, M3-91U - 1MOK. Slitf *!?!« i* m mmmilWE WANT YOU TO JOIN OUR FAITH AS ANORDAINED MINISTERwith a rank ofDOCTOR OF DIVINITY"And ye shall know the truth and the truthshall make you free"John 8:32We want men and women of all ages, who believe as wedo, to join us in the holy search for Truth. We believe thatall men should seek Truth by all just means. As one of ourministers you can:1. Ordain others in our name.2. Set up your own church and apply for ex¬emption from property and other taxes,3. Perform marriages and exercise all other ec¬clesiastic powers.4. Seek draft exemption as one of our workingmissionaries. We can tell you how.6. Some transportation companies, hotels, the¬aters, etc., give reduced rates to ministers.GIT THE WHOLE PACKAGE FOR $10.00Along w4h your Ordination Certificate, Doctor of Divinityand I.D. card, we'll send you 12 blank forms to use whenyou wish to ordain others. 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Box 1393, Dept. 66Evanston, Illinois 60204>>:< »:•:« >>:« »-t >:♦:« »:.:i »•« >:•:« >:*:< »>:<»>:«>-•;« UlAYfcCri ALL - MIGHT SUCH |PERFORMANCES FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATURE 1FEB. 5HOUR OF WOLFINGMAR BERGMAN'S FEB. 6PUTNEY SWOPEFEB. 12 FEB. 13ANGEL LEVINE in IT BEZERO MOSTEl THE BEATLESFEB. 19 FEB. 20TASTE THE BLOOD MADWOMAN OFOF DRACULA CHAILL0TCHRISTOPHER LEE KATHARINE HEPBURNFEB 26 FEB. 27END OF THE ROAD TRILOGYTRUMAN CAPOTE'S TRUMAN CAPOTE'SMAR. 5 MAR. 6MORE BATTLE OF ALGIERSrnomtiM 1MIDWEST'S LARGEST DISPLAY OFNEW AND USED SPORTS CARSCONTINENTAL MOTORS INC5800 S I A GPANC.F PD.LA GRANGE, ILL. 352-9200 COLD CITY INN**** MaroonNew Hours:lunch 11:30 AM - 2:30PMdinner 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 Food522# Harper 493-2559(near Harper Court)Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.)4/The Chicago Maroon/February 5, 1971Aldermanic candidate feels problem is VietnamBy KEITH PYLE“The whole thrust of our campaign is thenecessity to break with the Democratic andRepublican parties in order to achieve anykind of change,” explained Cynthia Burke,21, candidate for fifth ward alderman in theFebruary 23 election.Miss Burke, a former Chicago Circle stu¬dent, is a member of the Young SocialistAlliance and the Socialist Workers Party and is active in the National Peace ActionCoalition.. Commenting on the issues involving thefifth ward, which includes Hyde Park, MissBurke said, “We think the problems of thefifth ward aren’t just chuckholes in thestreet. Basically the problem is the Viet¬nam war, because the money spent thereshould be going for community projects,such as day care centers. “All the candidates on our slate are ac¬tive in the anti-war movement, in additionto women’s lib and community controlIf elected, one thing I would call for wouldbe a city-wide referendum on the imme¬diate withdrawal of all troops from Viet¬nam.”Speaking on the issue of community con¬trol, Miss Burke said, “We feel that thepeople of the community should have com-Pallett aiming for 725 new studentsADMISSIONS DIRECTORANTHONY PALLETTHoping for 650 freshmen next year. The new freshman class should beslightly larger than the current freshmanclass, director of College admissions andaid Anthony Pallett said Thursday.The admissions and aid staff are aimingfor a class size of between 625 and 650, withsome 75 to 100 new transfer students. Thecurrent class size is about 600.By admitting 725 new students, the Col¬lege should stay about 2200, though a slightdecline is possible. College enrollment atthe end of December was 2194 students, hesaid.Applications to the College are runningsome 200 behind the level of 1500 that ap¬plied last year. Pallett pointed out that thisdecline in number of applications has beenthe trend for the past five years, and as aresult it is becoming harder to find asmany qualified students, he said.Pallett is hoping to admit as many black students as there were this year, but addedthat it would be “hard to surpass” thisyear’s level, which is 13 percent of the totalsize of the freshmen class.He also said that he hoped to have a pro¬gram similar to the so-called “special stu¬dents” program run this summer. Taking30 students who did not possess the usualqualifications for admission, the studentsspent the summer here improving theirreading and mathematics skills.Pallett said that 30 was “too many” be¬cause staff members felt they could notadequately teach this large a number. Hesaid that he was unsure how the programwould be set up next year. plete control over the institutions that af¬fect them, such as police, schools, housing,and businesses.“If I were elected alderman, the way Iwould go about changing conditions in thefifth ward is by working to mobilize thecommunity around their demands, such asfree day care centers and community con¬trol.”Miss Burke explained that she is runningfrom the fifth ward primarily because shelives here, but also “to pose an alternativeto Despres, who’s given us no change in 15years.”Leon Despres, the incumbent indepen¬dent fifth ward alderman, is one of MissBurke’s opponents, seeking re-election tohis fifth term. The third candidate in therace is John Washington, a black indepen¬dent.“I’ve challenged Despres and Washing¬ton to debate, which they accepted. We’dlike to have it here on this campus. StudentGovernment has agreed to sponsor the de¬bate, and SG president Mike Fowler hasagreed to chair it. We’re still trying to set adate,” Miss Burke added.Miss Burke, appraising her chances inthe February 23 election, concluded, “Ithink that if we were able to get the samekind of coverage on television and in thepress as our opponents, we’d stand a verygood chance of winning.”BULLETIN OF EVENTSFounded in 1*92. Published by University of Chicago students on Tuesdays ana 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 oncampus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S.Non-profit postage paid at Chiacgo, III. Friday, February 5 Sunday, February 7PREGNANCYPROBLEM?THERE IS NO CHARGEFOR OURABORTIONREFERRAL. WHY SPENDMONEY NEEDLESSLY?OUR PROFESSIONALSERVICES ARE FREE.CALL (215) 722-53607 DAYS 2*t HRS. DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363 PlfZA~~;platter:Pizxo, Fried Chicken 'Itolian Foods II Compare the Price! |1460 E. 53rd 643-2800j £EOEUVER__ _ j MEETING: Discussion of responses to the escalation InLaos, People's Peace Treafy-NUC, Mendel,noon.SEMINAR: "Petrology of Oceanic Ridges, with Implica¬tions for Spreading Models," Robert C Newton, Hindslab 101, 1:30 pm.SEMINAR: "Solar Oblateness: What Do the DataMean?", Andrew P Ingersoll, Cal Tech, Hinds lab 101,4 pm. (tea at 3:30, room 176).TALK: "The Parainfluenza Virus Envelope and ItsRelationship to the Cell Membrane," Purnell Choppin,Rockefeller Unlv, Ricketts 1, 4 pm. (tea at 3:30, room7)TRACK: North Central College and Wayne State Unlv,field house, 7 pm.TRAVELOGUE: Argentina and Brazil, 1-House, 8 pm,students 50 cents, others $1.LECTURE: "Chicago Politics and Chicago Jews,"Lewis Kreinberg, director Chicago Jewish Council onUrban Affairs, Hillel, 8:30 pm.UNIVERSITY THEATRE: "Six Plays in Search of anAudience," Reynolds club theatre, 8:30 pm.DANCE: Sponsored by Black Colony, Ida Noyes, 9 pm. UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Sermon: "Visionsof Hope," Rev Jitsuo Morikawa, associate executivesecretary, American Baptist Home Mission Societies,Rockefeller chapel. It am.CHORAL GROUP: First meeting of SHIR, Hillel, 4:30pm.DISCUSSION: "The Future and the Arts," RichardBenter, actor and thinker, Bonhoeffer house, 5554Woodlawn, 6:30 pm.LECTURE: "The Jewish Defense League: Some Ques¬tions of Self-Identity," David F Singer, professor ofhistory, Chicago State College, Hillel, 7:30 pm.FUCK: "War and Peace, part II," Mandel, 8 pm.UNIVERSITY THEATRE: "Six Plays In Search of anAudience," Reynolds club theatre, 8:30 pm.Monday, February 8Saturday, February 6Chicago’s New Musical Smash! tonight 8:30"ROUSING, RASCALLY MUSICAL THATHAS EVERYTHING." "w" LM“r< Tr,w"*1u ,DAVID MERRICK prtxnH (promises;PROka.skSby NEIL SIMON—IURT IACHARACH—HAL DAVIDrunnraT wi««» "I’ll NEVER FALL IN LOVE AGAIN" and other hitsSHUBtNl Theater e EVES. 1:30 (exe. So*.) • Elevators to 1st I. 2nd late.22 W. Monroe, CE *-$240—Mots. Wed. fc Sat. 2 P.M. VISA: Bus leaves from Woodward court parking lot,12:30 pm.SWIMMING: U of Wisconsin at Whitewater, Bartlett,1:30 pm.BASKETBALL: Trinity College, field house, 2 pm.COFFEE HOUSE: Gay Lib, at Blue Gargoyle, 7:30 pm.FILMS: Germany's contribution to modern art. Black-stone branch library, 49th & Blackstone, 3 pm.PUCK: "War and Peace, part I," Mandel, 8 pm.UNIVERSITY THEATRE: "Six Plays in Search of anAudience," Reynolds club theatre, 8:30 pm.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 TAKCAM-YBtNCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Orders Co Cake out1318 E ast 63rd MU4-1MOTORS AUTO SERVICESpecialists in VOLKSWAGEN repairs, body &paint, modern mechanical work. Also special¬ists in American cars. Quality service workdone for less than the dealer.1536 East 71 st Place288-3434 MEETING: With Mary L Fisch, assistant dean of theCollege, for all those interested in advising on themanagement of the new Harper coffee lounge, CobbB-23, 9 am.TALK: "Biogenesis of Pox Viruses," Dr Samuel Dales,Public Health Research Institute of New York, Rick¬etts 1, 3 pm (tea at 2:30, room 7).SPEECH: Ramsey Clark, rebroadcast of his January 31speech here, WHPK, 5:30 pm.VISA: Group leaving from Woodward south sitting area,5:45 pm.TALK: "Can a Jew Assimilate in Israel?" Hillel, 7:30pm.CORRECTION: The NUC film "The China Story — OneFourth of Humanity" will be shown next Thursday,February 11, at 7:30 and 9:15 In Quantrell, not yester¬day as erroneously announced in Tuesday's bulletin.Our thing is your ring -»'Nf '(WfiftS *Ot 5* vfAtS119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZADOES SWEDEN OFFER ANSWERS TOU.S. PROBLEMS?Find out at SUMMER INSTITUTE, DALARO COLLEGE(seaside resort 1 hr. fr. Stockhom) for students,teachers & professionals. CREDIT COURSES (in Engl.)inch Social & Political Problems, Swedish Arts, SpokenSwed. Relevant non-credit study circles. Participantsfrom U.S., Sweden. OUTSTANDING FACULTY, GUESTLECTURERS. JULY 22-AUG. 18. $450 - FEE covers:tuition, room & board, course-related field trips, social& cult, events. For info & free counseling write to:INTERNATIONAL SUMMER INSTITUTFS 31 inStreet, San Francisco 94123. CARPET BARN WAREHOUSENew and Used CarpetsRemnants and Roll EndsOriental ReproductionsAntique French WiltonFur Rugs & Fur CoatsINiXPfNSIVI ANTIQUE FURNITUREOpen Tues. thru Sat., 9-4Sunday 10-31228W. Kinzie 243-2271VALUABLE COUPONSPECIAL STUDENT PRICESUPON PRESENTATION OF THIS ADLIBERAL TRADE IN ALLOWANCESAT THE WORLD'S LARGEST GUITAR STOREALSO FEATURING OURTRUMPET CENTERHA 7-5327BOTH l)IVIMON< ofPRAi'.LR & RlTTfR, INI.GIBSON’S, FENDER’S - REWIRED FOR•FUNKY’’ OLD SOUND. REPAIRS ANDREFRETTING |■■ mm mm mm mm mm mm mFebruary 5,1971/The Chicago Maroon/5IHMMKaMnKM>u[:MHMMMMmnmHNMMKHMm:¥:NHMM ||K<ta*tK<tK<tKl>Wwy<>WwKnKl>SS<>K<tM<t?t<>iS<>ai<tii!ift«i»<^l5£<^w5S,lK<^£ltK<tSS02ii iSC« >5!» »!5!« »%<•!!!« »!Ci »!5Ti >T« *T5!« rS« »!5fc r!7ii5!«»5>!« »Ti »!33*I5?« >T3!« »T5?« »5It >5IiTHE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTOREEis 8158thOpen 9 AM - 1PM Saturday—Food Department closed)Books by the hundredsSupplies,Unique Gifts,Records,Stereos,Tape Decks,andRental Equipment.Camera and completefilm processing. UM* *MMMMnmHmr'cMHMn¥MMHM:*K<HHn&M¥m;»;i >;♦;« >;»;< »;•;« tvt »;♦;« >;*;« >;«;< »;«;<2jj2i!2u5l£il5!li2iSSi!2iuSiiSi!Ss!51iiSfiiABORTIONS-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 $250 to$375 depending on per¬sonal need.MEDICAL REFERRAL142 Minoolo Av«.,Roslyn Heights, U 1-1577(516) 621-8000SEVEN DAYS A WEEKAll Bottoms$8 - $10now$6.90BOTTOMS522216 Harperhrs. 11-9 Daily ¥itm¥tt¥nKKKR»:« »>:« >:•:< »:< >>:< »:i >;.ri »:i »:< »>:*i»!?!« »T5!« »!5!« »75!« »!5!«»!5!« r!5T«»T5TROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELSunday February 7, 1971 11:00 A.M.JITSUO MORIKAWAAssociate Executive SecretaryAmerican Baptist Home Mission SocietiesValley Forge, PennsylvaniaVISIONS OF HOPESunday SeminarRockefeller Memorial Chapel Undercroft, 9:45 to10:45 a.m., Coffee and Rolls and a discussion of CvilReligion in America: Its Promise and Threat, led byPhilip M. Dripps, United Methodist Chaplain at theUniversity of Chicago.Weekday Chapel MusicTuesday, February 9, 12:15 p.m.Organ Recital, Edward Mondello,University OrganistELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E 53rd St288 2900 SANDLERK YOUNG FEHUNTEi HRSaturday, February 207:30 p.m., Opera House * Saturday, March 68:30 p.m., Opera House$6.50, $5.50, $4.50, $3.50Tickets are available at Chicagoland Montgomery Ward storesand all other Ticketron outlets. For the locations nearest you,dial T I C K E T S.Mail Orders to 22nd Century, 70 West Hubbard Street, Chicago.Illinois 60610. Enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope ABORTIONCOUNSELING SERVICEIf you have a problem pregnancy and are con¬sidering abortion as a possible alternative, wecan provide information and make arrange¬ments for a safe, legal abortion in the UnitedStates, performed by certified physicians. Im¬mediate arrangements can be made withoutthe delay of a hospital board of review andpsychiatric certification. Call:24 hours a dayDenver, Colorado303/447-8340Chicago, Illinois312/664-0350BIOT RACKCLOTHING SUE♦am curs*us six /Stregularly to $110 .2★ SUITS*$50regularly to $125★ SUITS*$75regularly to $175IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER • 55TH & LAKE PARK6 The Chicago Maroon/February 5. 1971 UNWANTED PREGNANCYLET US HELP YOUAbortions are now legal in New York.There are no residency requirements.FOR IMMEDIATE PLACEMENT IN ACCREDITEDHOSPITALS AND CLINICS AT LOW COSTContactWOMEN'S PAVILION515 Madison AvenueNew York, N.Y. 10022or call any time(212) 371-6670 or (212) 371-6650AVAILABLE 7 DAYS A WEEKSTRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL. We will makeall arrangements for vou and heln vonwith information and counseling. authentic• Dinners• Late Snacks• Private PartiesDistinctive, handsomeroom atop the Hyde ParkBank Building.Exceptional anddelightful selection ofMid-East food, delicacies,cocktails, and wines.Ample parking. Tues. -Sat. 5 to Midnight; Sun.1-11.1525 E. 53rd St.Jmt OH Otrtsf DrtvgAtop ThsSTAUt ANT A LOUNGE955-5151EfendiTuesday NiqntTuesday Night15% DiscountFor the U. of C. Students;Faculty Members and Per¬sonnel. Bring this ad fordiscount.5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113^foreign car hospitalPEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONJAMESSCHULTZCLEANERSCUSTOM QUAUTYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbork Plaza)12UO fcast 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSfor saleCamera Mamiya Sekor Super Delux$50 Leave your number at 955-0691.i'll call you2 pairs of Austrian skis, step-inbinding, straps, poles, used 2 weeks,57" and 6'3", for $50 each. Phone753-8127."Scrieu Thieu" Poster. $2. 4-H Asso¬ciates, 420 Market Street, San Fran¬cisco, 94111. Wholesale rates.35mm Kodak Signet 40 Camera,Remington cordless 800QC shaver.Bob or Pam at 288-6218. Offer.Free Cat. Black 8. white longhair.Needs a home. 667-6371Ski-style jackets $8 Winter warm-wear cheap. H.I.S. Bells $5.50.Leather Vests $9. We have yoursize. Call David, x33773.Portable Stereo-684-2668 eves.Save $$ on Dual KLH, Scott, AR,Dyna, at MUSICRAFT. On CampusBob Tabor. 363-4555.Water beds from $70. Health foodold furs, and other discoveries atPRESENCE, 2926 N. Broadway. 248-1761.DUAL Turntables new VERYCHEAP Blank tape. BOB CZES-CHIN, BJ 836.COOP APT FOR SALECoop Apt. Ray Dist. 55-56 Wdlawn 7rms, Garage, Yard, 2 Fireplaces,Assess $84 mo. Pr. $23,000. 684-3105.SPACECHICAGO BEACH HOTEL5100 S. Cornell D03-2400Beautiful Furnished ApartmentsNear beach-park-1 .C. trains U of Cbuses at door Modest daily, weekly,monthly rates.Call Miss SmithSAVE-Take over my lease in any Uof C dorm-fhru June. 955-6587. ROOMMATE WANTEDAVAIL. IMMED.Quiet courteous considerate room¬mate to share with one other inspacious 12th floor apt. 52nd 8,Blackstone. Call Greg PL 2-2820,x3774 eves.DRIVERPART-TIME, EVENINGSIndependent contractor has imme¬diate opening for part-time driver, 2or more evenings per week, from9:15 or 10:00 pm to 1 am. Will drivestation wagon delivering passengers.Hourly rate $2.75. Must be reliableand have valid Illinois driver's li¬cense. Must be able to drive duringsummer. Call Mr. Marfus at 264-8005 after 7:00 pm.City getting to you? Join us! Feb.19-21. Camp Chi, Wise. Call 346-6700,X421. Cost: $15.Singers for new choral group atHillel. 1st meeting, Feb 7, 4:30 pm.752-1127.Need 1 or 2 fern. rmts. Close tocampus. Own rm. $67. Judy M. 955-4545 days.Need gay roommate to share aptand try new games. Call 288-8856Qualified Life Guards needed forLCB nude swim. Call 493-3410 after7:00 (two free tickets)Fern rmmt nr emps cheap 493-5695Bookkeeping 8< sales Woman want¬ed part-time for interesting position.667-7000.Qualified life guards needed forLCB nude swim. Call 493-3410 after7 (two free tickets)Coming in May: Fota's student artexhibition! Paintings, prints, col¬lages, 3-D ... all non-professionalsinvited to enter recent works.Prizes for the best. Bring entries toPierce Tower in April. More exactinformation later.IntroducingFKAST #4PIZZA FEASTMon. Feb. 8 5:30at theBA!NDERS!NATCHPEOPLE WANTEDWANTED: Part-time help to do rou¬tine office work. Campus location,flexible hours. Students welcome.Call 753-2078. Ouroitn new rea Italianpizza, cheese, sausage,mushroom, onion, pep-peroni. el. al.LOTSA PIZZA!uoii < an i’iiI$ 1.25/personNOW PLAYINGAT A SELECT THEATRE NEAR YOUIS A RIP-SNORTER. A TRIUMPH!” -Judith Crist Student to share South Shore apt $708< util. On campus bus rte 10-2x3581;after 6, 374-6073.Qualified life guards needed forLCB nude swim. Call 493-3410 after7 (2 free tickets).Editor wanted part-time for weeklypublication. Write Maroon Box MS.Young couple urgently need studentto care for children 4-6 hours daily,flexible hrs, good pay. Call 955-3245.Qualified Life Guards needed forLCB nude swim. Call 493-3410 after7 (2 free tickets)MUDDY WATER'SBLUES SCHOOLMembers of Muddy's band nowteaching harp, piano, guitar, bass.Call OA4-3641 for information.MOVING?Licensed mover 8< hauler. Call ArtMichener. 955-2480PEOPLE FOR SALECello-Teacher of long experiencegives lessons. Reasonable rates.South Shore — Call Evenings. SA 1-1010.Experienced baby sitting in myhome. Full or part-time. Reason¬able. 5410 Ridgewood 363-4858.Will do typing in my home. Call776-8989.Experienced baby-sitting done in myhome full or part-time. Kind, con¬scientious young mother. 56th 8cMaryland. 667-7269TYPING SERVICE HY 3-3755MACARONI MAFIAMakes mad meat sauce, garlicbread etc for IVI Spag. Dinner, Sun.Feb 7,5-8:30 Hyde Pk Union Ch.568. Wood. $2,$1-kids, 6-12, othersfree. At door or Ml 3-7459WANTEDStrobe lights, black lights, and bush¬el baskets needed for LCB. Call 493-3410 after 7:00.Kittens want unfrantic space. Moth¬er has oiue aura. 324-2016SCRAMBLED BRAINSThe Avant Garde Rock GroupWHPK called "Some of the mostbrain damaged people in HydePark." The Jazz-bo Syncopators atHyppo, Blue Gargoyle, 7:30 Tonight.Free. TWO FOR THE ROADAlbert (Tom Jones) Finney, Audrey(Charade) Hepburn 8. Eleanor(Help) Bron in Stanley (Bedazzled)Donen's Two for the Road, musicby Henry (Hatari) Mancini. Sunday7:15 8. 9:30 DOC (Fun) FilmsSCENESHave a Lascivious Ball with I AmCurious (Yellow) Sat. Feb 13.OVERLAND EXPEDITION TO IN¬DIA. Leaves London mid-June. $490ENCOUNTER OVERLAND 753-0411Last Annual Lascivious Ball Satur-day, February 13.Bag-lunch discussion: "Church Aidto Liberation Movements: Reportfrom South Africa" Dick Sales,Gates-Blake 321 Feb. 9 12 Noon.Bring a Lunch."THE ARTS 8. THE ARTIST IN ATECHNOLOGICAL AGE" discussionwith Chicago Sculptor Egon Weiner,Fri Feb 5, 8pm Crossroads 5621Blackstone. Weldome!GESTALT ENCOUNTER GROUPSat. Feb. 6 noon to midnight. Sun.Feb. 7 noon to 6 pm. Limited to ten.$20. Lorrie Peterson, experiencedleader. Has studied at Esalen. 288-3541.Escape and Revitalize: 2-19-21 CampChi, Wisconsin Dells. Call F16-6700x421. !15'SHIR-New Choral Group at HillelHouse. 1st meeting. Sun 2-7, 4:30pm.5715 Woodlawn.Feast No. 4 PIZZA All you can eatonly $1.25 at 5:30 BANDERSNATCH.Tonight Mr. Lewis Kreinberg (Di¬rector, Chicago Jewish Council onUrban Affairs) will speak about"CHICAGO POLITICS AND CHI-CAGO JEWS" at Hillel, 8:30 pm.Prof. David Singer (History, Chi¬cago State College) will talk on"The Jewish Defense League: SomeQuestions of Self-Identity." 7:30 pm,Hillel House.Last Annual Lascivious Ball Satur-day, February 13.PIZZA-Best 8. least expensive atTHE NIGHT CLUB,w. The Fast-backs.Strobe lights, black lights, 8< bushelbaskets needed for LCB. Call 493-3410 after 7:00.Qualified Life Guards needed forLCB nude swim Call 493-3410 after7:00 (2 free tickets).PHIL and THE FASTBACKS, Sat.9-1 The NIGHT CLUB. PIZZA, PIZ¬ZA!Last Annual Lascivious Ball Satur-day, February 13.Richard Benter "The Future andthe Arts" Bonhoeffer House, 5554 S.Woodlawn Sunday Feb 7 6:30 pm.ALL YOU CAN EAT!NIGHTLY STUDENT SPECIALSMon: Shrimp Tidbits, French Fries,Coleslaw, Roll & ButterTues: Spaghetti with Meat Sauce,Coleslaw, Garlic RollWed: Meat Ravioli & Sauce, Coleslaw,Garlic RollThurs: Chicken & Dumplings in Gravy,Coleslaw, Roll & BlitterFri: Macaroni & Cheese, ColejlpwRoll & ButterWALGREENS GRILL"in the Hyde Park Shopping Center"Hours - Mon., Tues., Wed., Sat. to 7:30Thurs., Fri. to 9:00Sunday 10-6 $1.19$1.19$1.19$1.19$1.19“★★★.★BRILLIANTLY CONCEIVED.BRILLIANTLY DONE! DEVASTATINGLY FUNNY!”—Kathleen Carroll. New York Daily NewsDENNIS FRIEDLAND AND CHRISTOPHER C DEWEY PRESENT A CANNON PRODUCTIONSTARRING PETER BOYLE AND DENNIS PATRICK IN JOE WITH AUDREY CAIRESUSAN SARANDON K CAllAN PAT MCDERMOTT MUSIC COMPOSED ANDCONDUCTED BY BOBBY SCOTT EDITED BY GEORGE T NORRIS 'WRITTEN BYNORMAN WEXLER • PRODUCED BY DAVID GIL DIRECTED BY JOHN G AVILDSENCOLOR BY DELUXE- TTY,; Aii^CTTTb^ on Mercury RecordsPpT 1 A CANNON RELEASE V#|JbCj • • •«• IDictrihiitoH by TpitpI Pilm Porn■M Special For Maroon ReadersThis coupon entitles bearer to 20%)Off. on any dinner. Mon 2-8 thru Fri.2-12.KIMBARKLIQUORS<WINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINESTIJf^s^IMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to you!THE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC.12141.53rd St.53-Kimbark Plezc HY3-3355 CARMINABURANAComing February 19, 20, 26, 27.YOGA Poses Concentr Meditatn.Quit drugs Single-group classes. SRINERODE OF INDIA DO 3-0155GAY LIBThe GAY LIB Coffee House is aliveand well at the Blue Gargoyle 5655S. Univ. Sat 2-6, 7:30 pm to 1:00am.ABORTIONSDON'T GET RIPPED OFF by out-of-state abortion referral services.Abortions under 12 wks are now le¬gal in Illinois. Or for FREE referralservice right in Hyde Park, call theClergy Consultation Service forProblem Pregnancies, 667-6015.CEF PRESENTSBondarchuk's War and Peace l&lI.The Russian adaption of Tolstoy'snovel will be shown in two parts inMandel Hall on Feb 6 & 7. Eachpart will be shown only once at8:00. $1.00PERSONALSDon't you deserve a good time?Laugh with Two for the Road SunFeb 7; 15 8, 9:30 Cobb DocLOOKING FOR MEANING?Try a weekend at Camp Chi.Feb. 19-21. Fi6-6700, x421.Remember when your Hum Classwas on page 1348 in War and Peacewhile you were beginning 64 andthought Natasha was one of Napo¬leon's generals. Find out what hap-pened. Feb 6 8. 7 8:00.Blow your mind with good music.Lowest prices on all stereos at MU¬SICRAFT. On campus, Bob Tabor,363-4555.Chess like love, like music has thepower to make men happy. Monday7:00 pm. Ida Noyes.The best and least expensive PIZZAin HYDE PARK served Sat. nightsat the NIGHT CLUBStrobe lights, black lights and bush¬el baskets needed for LCB. Call 493-3410 after 7:00.Last Annual Lasciyious Ball Satur-day, February 13. 'All you can eat; Pizza of all vari-eties; only $1.25, 5:30 Mon.Writers' Workshop. (Plaza 2-8377)YOUR SAFE, LEGAL NEW YORKCAN BE DONE TOMORROW! Mfcl-W inter Student Special-20% dis¬count on ready-made leather 8<suede items. 10% discount onMADE TO ORDER sandals (53 dif¬ferent styles). Effective Feb. 5 thru13. Ad Lib Studio, 5210 Harper Har¬per Crt , 752-3945.Strobe lights, black lights, and bush¬el baskets needed for LCB. Call 493-3410 after 7:00.Happy Birthday Lisa Dear. Love,Newt, Lem, Frank, Al, Mameless,Tom Dooley, and New One.Dorm Residents: The PIZZA SYS¬TEM delivery; this Sun. night Orderbefore deadlines!!Do They Really Do It In Trees? IAm Curious (Yellow) — In the Spir¬it of the Lascivious Ball.Last Annual Lascivious Ball Satur¬day, February 13.PIZZA: Our own delicious pizza. Allyou can eat Mon Feb 8 5:30Strobe lights, bla'k lights and bush¬el baskets needed for LCB Call 493-3410 after 7:00.A DAY IN THE LIFE OF THEIDIOT KING (CONTINUED)The Idiot King is talking to one ofhis friends:IK: Hey, man, like how about a cupof coffee.FRIEND: Are you sure I'll gelenough cream?IK: Heavy.Tune in next time for more adven¬tures in the ever-ongoing saga ofthe Idiot King, same time, samestation.Ride Wanted to New York onSunday, Feb. 7. Will share drivingand expenses. Call Jessica! at 493-2540.HYDE PARKFIREWOODOak - Ash - Birch$45/TON DELIVERED(212) 222-6023 or 222 6025Mon.-Fri., 9-5(212) PL7-3170 24 hrj.. 7 daysA registered nurse schedules you atlowest available cost, FOR IMMEDIATEDELIVERYCALL 955-2480ANY TIMESave ad for future reference Special Student RatesOD<■“3 ME jc=>A NEW ROCK MUSICAL“IT STUNNED CRITICS AND PROMPTLY WON AN AWARDFOR BEST MUSICAL OF 1970“ LIFE MAGAZINE“T0DAYTHE ME NOBODY KNOWS IS ONE OF THE BESTMUSICALS ON BROADWAY—AND UNEQUIVOCALLY THEMOST MOVING, THE MOST POIGNANT.CLIVE BARNES N.Y. TimesSPECIAL STUDENT PREVIEW PRICES $3.00 per seatFEBRUARY 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 15, 16, 17 ONLYMonday thru Saturday Nite at 8:30SEATS AVAILABLE NOWPIl/IP TUCATDC 20 N0 PACKER DRIVE,UIVIU IflLMIrAL CHICAGO-PHONE 372 4814MALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOWDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN UP TO $50 OR MORE DAILYWORK DURING SEMESTER BREAKSORDAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from ooroge near home or schoolFebruary 5,1971/The Chicago Maroon/7IT'S BOSS?CURVED AIRAIR CONDITIONINGJOHN RENBOURNOne of Pentangle’s two quiet guitarists,Renbourn is something of a folk heroin England. This, his second solo al¬bum, features rearranged and revita¬lized English and Italian folk songsand his inimitable guitar. The albumis titled after Renbourn’s compositionThe Lady and the Unicorn (RS 6407). HELLO DEAHA 40% OFFSALEWARNER-REPRISE PRESENTSMFG. LIST VS. LOWE'S PRICE2.98... 1.793.98 ... 2.394.98 ... 2.995.98 ... 3.59 6.98... 4.197.98 ... 4.899.98 ... 5.9811.98... 7.18tyarnttf KENNY ROGERS&THFIRST EDI"GREATES DN'HITS*6437 Ruby, Don't Take Your Lova to TownSomething's BurningJust Dropped InTell It All BrotherHeed The CallReuben JamesBut You Know I Love YouMomma's WaitingI Believe In MusicLove WomanNOT TO MENTION OTHERGOODIES SUCH AS THE KINKS, THEGRATEFUL DEAD, NEIL YOUNG,JETHRO TULL, GORDON LIGHTFOOT& JONI. REAL HEAVY... ABOUT300 lbs. WELLTHE*YIT!THE END DF THE GATOPETER GREENLong famous as the lead guitarist withFleetwood Mac and before that withJohn Mayall, Peter Green recentlyventured forth on his own. The End ofthe Game (RS 6436) is written and pro¬duced by Peter and re-confirms hisguitarist reputation.&ignd Sound "fcdi how dw Motion FVemFames* Soap by® Jason Robards and Katherine RomWE ACCEPT MASTERCHARGE & BANKAMERICARDCHARGEWITH BankAvericardJjL-VC*/$Web RECORDS HYDE PARK1444 E. 57thMU 4-1505OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 58/The Chicago Maroon/February 5,1971Arts Friday, February 5,1971Jerry Lewis: Humor, Pathos & ArtBy Charles FlynnJerry Lewis was interviewed on campus by membersof the Documentary Film Group on January 26. GCJfilm critics Charles Flynn and Myron Meisel werepresent.Why Jerry Lewis? To assert that he is the onlygreat director of comedy working in Americanmovies at the moment is perhaps foolhardy, maybedangerous to one’s critical reputation. Most of usremember Jerry from Saturday matinees in theearly and mid-1950s. He was then teamed with DeanMartin in a series of funny but forgettable farces,and cultural prejudice continued to operate as Lewismoved into the sixties with a series of great filmsdirected by Frank Tashlin (Cinderfella, It’s OnlyMoney, The Disorderly Orderly) and by Lewishimself.That many French film critics are far fonder ofJerry than most American critics could be taken aseither an argument for the completeness of Frenchfilm criticism or an argument for the bad taste orplain insanity of French film criticism. Lewis himselfis aware of the paradox: he has found far moreappreciation in France (and elsewhere in Europe)than here in America . . .You know that your films are now taken seriouslyand discussed seriously by a certain segment of thecritical population —Cahiers du Cinema and Positifin France, film groups here in America. Has thismade you self-conscious?But you’re not talking about film critics now!You’re talking about certain interested people, whomI must look at with respect and regard, no matterwhat they say. But when we come to critics, let’s besure that we don’t generalize, and be certain that youknow who I am so negative about. Anyone who caresabout film is a film examiner. But when you talkabout Joyce Haber led. note: a leading Hollywoodgossip columnist) you’re talking about Rudolph Hess. . she’s one of the most destructive people I know.And there’s a good couple dozen like that — who don’tknow what film is or what it represents . . .When Lewis speaks of “film examiners” he isspeaking of people like Jean-Louis Comolli of Cahiersdu Cinema, who had this to say about a 1966 Lewisrelease:“Three on a Couch presents itself as the last andsynthetic phase of a dialectical operation whose firsttwo terms could appear contradictory and unre¬solved — The Patsy, bitter interrogation on thenature of comic entertainment, and The FamilyJewels, disenchanted exploration of the very powersand duties of the entertainer toward his privilegedspectator.”Comolli’s application of Hegelian dialectics andintricate Parisian prose to a movie that was mostlyseen and enjoyed by and (seemingly) intended fornine-year-old American kids appears a little in¬appropriate. But Comolli has, in fact, approached thecore of Lewis’ art: the multiplication of identities, ofgags, of certain comic sequences and events . . .In your films, and I’m thinking especially of TheFamily Jewels, The Nutty Professor, and Three on aCouch, you play several characters: why do you dothis?I think it’s the most natural, simplest approach tocreative writing if you’re writing about people. Ithink that most writers sorely need to understandthat there’s a schizod in all of us — that, people havedouble personalities. Now here’s a group of people,very pleasant, congenial, courteous. I wouldn’t like tosee the ugly sides, the various sides of all of them.But I have those various sides. Most people prefer toshow the best side.But in doing so, you miss some of the value that isthere in the negative side. I’ve always felt that way,and it’s reflected in my work, but it wasn’t until Ireflected on it that I realized that I felt that way. Youdon’t sit down and say, “I think like this, so I willwrite like this.” You just sit down and write, andwhat you write reflects your whole psyche. That’swhy writers are always tipping their hand: althoughthey’d like to live in anonymity, the moment theywrite they tell you what they’re all about. The core ofcomedy is the human being . . .Lewis’ films are usually explorations of failure, Bruce RabeJERRY LEWIS: Top: The comedian strikes various poses during his interview.Bottom: Charles Flynn, with pipe, asks Jerry a question.of disappointment and disenchantment. His insist¬ence on multiple personal roles (seven in The FamilyJewels, four in Three on a Couch, two in The NuttyProfessor) is a desperate attempt to escape from thisunhappiness.The world which Lewis creates in his films is onewhere objects are constantly at war with people. Andthis has resulted in some of the most intricatelyconstructed gaps in the history of the Americancinema. One need only recall the airplane — flyingsequences in The Bellboy and The Family Jewels, forexample. In each scene, Jerry takes the controls ofan airplane, with hilarious results.Of course, the term “hilarious” implies a judg¬ment of personal taste: many people don’t find JerryLewis funny. The meanings in Lewis’ films areconcealed in his uniquely baroque visual style, and inthe structure of his gags, which are always balancedin a moment of lucid grace between absurdity andfarce...What about timing ?Timing is not something you can learn. Being acomedian is like being a major-league ballplayer;you both do about the same thing. You have to bepretty much in shape — timing and rhythm, the eye.Coordination is vital. And we usually have a bornballplayer, a man who knows by instinct that hewants to be a major-league ballplayer. What he needsto be taught is the application of the ground rules ofballplaying. But no one’s going to teach him how tostand in the box and keep his eye on that ball andswing at the right time. You can teach pace, to refinebasic timing. A director can’t put anything in aperformer, but he can extract what is already there.A good actor, the most professional actors, literallypray for a good director, because they’re the first toadmit that they’re incompetent without a good manin the chair. . &Jerry Lewis now considers himseli as much adirector as an actor, and he clearly plans to go on» i elaborating the screen persona he has spent the lastten years creating. Like them or not, his films standas uniquely original visions of a world in which bodiesno longer connect to heads, objects no longer performtheir natural functions, and the laws of gravity andrelativity no longer operate. The genuinely feltfunny / sad quality of the best Lewis films (especial¬ly The Family Jewels, his best film so far and one ofthe great American comedies) is the creation of anactor / director who is committed to making peoplelaugh before they think.Films directed by Jerry Lewis: 1960: TheBellboy, 1961: The Ladies’ Man; 1962: The ErrandBoy; 1963: The Nutty Professor; 1964: The Patsy;1965: The Family Jewels; 1966: Three on a Couch;1967: The Big Moutf\and 1970: One More Time, WhichWay to the Front?. . .When you’re both acting and directing in thesame film, do you have to divorce yourself?Absolutely. It makes no difference to me whetherI direct or act (or both), because I see Jerry aseverybody sees him; I may not see him at the sametime everybody else does, but he pleases me as hepleases others, and destroys me as he does others. Iha’ve to treat Jerry as I do any other actor. I look atthat video I play back immediately after doing ascene, to check if he’s getting loose.Do you find that both acting in a film anddirecting it slows down the shooting ?Oh, no. On the contrary, it speeds it up some¬times.In your latest film, Which Way to the Front?, thecharacter you play is introduced by a tracking shotrather than by a cut (or by a series of cuts). Why didyou construct the sequence that way?That’s just comic delivery. You just delay theentrance, or do it with a long tracking shot. Youfigure, in the amount of time available, that it’s bestcommercially if you do it in the first couple minutesof the film.*miU9.iy>vviTyAtrun%u\mnaKi 'r~-9•sssitvS!Srfii3L*=Jfc#-s5SW=er»—-— Brando,Politics,and BurnGillo Pontecorvo’s Burn opens today at the WoodsTheater (Randolph and Dearborn) and if you plan tosee it, you’d better go soon. It hasn’t lasted more thana week elsewhere, which is unfortunate, since Burn isa fascinating and complex political film. This isn’t aslick, phony movie that wears its rigor on its sleeve,with the politics a matter merely of plot combinedwith being on the right side — like the shamefullyoverpraised Z. Burn is radicalism on the rocks, akind of Franz Fanonian view of history conveyed inepic and dramatic terms.Quemada is an island in the Antilles, dominated bythe Portuguese, who, in order to subjugate its slavelabor, have been forced to burn the island out. TheBritish, who are trying to corner the sugar market,send out a super-CIA-type agent provocateur, SirWilliam Walker (Marlon Brando), who cons somenatives into a robbery and then uses their outlawstatus to foment a rebellion to oust the Portuguese.The black leader, Jose Dolores (Evaristo Mar¬quez), finds he cannot govern and turns over thegovernment to the local Europeans, who serve as asurrogate government for the British. Years later,Jose Dolores raises a revolution aginst the whiteoligarchy, and Walker finds himself forced to burnsystematically the island again, destroying the sugarcrop. What began as oppression rationalized byeconomic imperialism ends up a brutal militaryoperation rationalized by white racists. Throughoutall, the character of Walker rolls off rhetoric onhistorical forces and fails utterly to understand thehuman strengths that can alter those forces.There are, of course, intended parallels to theAmerican military involvement in Vietnam, but thefilm is no tame cautionary fable. Burn is much moredocument than documentary, an attempt to expressan archetypal version of the Third World struggle.Pontecorvo has an extraordinary ability to handlepeople as masses in a noncondescending manner —“the people” are not just an amorphous body but abreathing, bold and striking protagonist set againstthe cool strategy of Brando’s adventurer.The images in Burn are sensuous, intoxicating, andsomewhat frightening. If only a madman wouldattempt to film massive deterministic analysis ofhistory in the first place, he is even more audaciousto frame his analysis in an epic that seeks also toimplicate the viewer emotionally in the battle.Pontecorvo doesn’t really achieve either goal — andBurn is ultimately an unsuccessful film — but hebrushes greatness so often that I find Burn morementally stimulating and emotionally involving thanany other movie now, in Chicago.Part of Pontecorvo’s problem lies in the Brandocharacter, whose colossal cool and nimble adapt¬ability to the rapid changes of power and interestdominate the film. For one thing, he’s funny in thatidiosyncratic way of his (he mumbles to his horse atone point, “Giddyap, you fool,”), the one grace notein a heavy symphonic tragedy. He’s charismatic butenigmatic. Although he’s meant to represent thecapitalistic rationale, he also has a deep sympathyfor Jose Dolores and the Revolution. Because heunderstands the workings of an imperialist systembetter than his allies or adversaries, he despises boththem and his work (like some ad executives). Sincehe maintains this quality of “otherness” (andwithout him, the movie would be unbearable, didac¬tic), the function of his role Within the politicalanalysis is blunted and confused. He gathers toomuch of our sympathies for being the biggest motherin a f ker’s world.The whole structure of the film eventually col¬lapses under the weight of its contradictory im¬pulses, and the last twenty minutes are lamely pacedand far too schematic to satisfy after the rathercareful work that preceded. But if the parts neverfinally come together, I like nearly all of those partsvery much.Burn comes at just the right time, when theromance of revolution has worn off, and the businessof it beckons. Working things out to their inevitableconclusion can take a long time. Nonetheless, thesteel will of the imperialist, the icy professionalscrewing of the CIA, cannot ever extinguish the wildexotic image of an executed rebel’s widow silentlycarting his decapitated body up into the mountains.That is Pontecorvo’s point, above all — that though itbe costly, and far from over, it is in the struggle forfreedom that the strength to win resides.—Myron Meisel The Goodman: Max Howard and Ann Casson in “ThoreauGoodman’s Relevant ThoreauGo to the Goodman and meet the man who wasone of the first few to choke on the still-distant smog,to pay the cost of refusing to fight an unjust war, todespise the man who removes himself from nature,and to maintain this idealism even when it cost himhis only friend (Ralph Waldo Emerson, no less) to doso. With The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail, JeromeLawrence and Robert E Lee have painted a portraitof a nineteenth century man so attuned to the valueswhich (we are now realizing) are the fundamentaland precious given of human life, now beingbargained away for money and polluted lakes, that,except for his funny clothes, he could be your ownbrother.It’s not quite a three-dimensional picture of theman that we get in Thoreau (few enough dramaticportraits are), but that doesn’t really matter. Whatdoes matter is the well-made, well-done play drama¬tizing an idealistic stand against problems of whichevery twentieth century sensual being is aware —through a familiar character, legendary though real.Whatever else Thoreau might have been, his flamingidealism and painful sensitivity to the wrongs mandoes to the world and himself are the qualities whichbring him alive for us now.Much of the source of the play’s liveliness anddramatic tension is found in its very structure:thrown in jail for not paying his taxes and for certainother reasons, Thoreau spends a night of mingleddreams, reveries, nightmares and dialectics withcell-mate Bailey, an innocent-seeming, down home-type, alleged barn burner still awaiting his trial afterthree months. The richly-textured substance of theplay dramatizes episodically everything from theschool he and brother John open to orations by Emerson, from a battle scene of the Mexican War to“huckleberrying” with Waldo’s son. (Well — perhapsnot everything. As a friend of mine always says,Thoreau never talked about the bugs.)Well above the calibre of much modern theater indramatic interest, wit and substance, Thoreau hassnappy, humor-sparkled dialogue (John: What’reyou going to do now that you’re home from Hahvahd?Henry: I think I’ll think for awhile — that’ll be achange from Hahvahd.) which flags only rarely aswhen Henry gets carried away on a transcen¬dentalism spiel, addressed to a girl in a boat, thatwould read much better than it plays. Lawrence andLee, called “the thinking man’s playwrights”, havetaught play writing at NYU and UCLA respectively;authors of Inherit the Wind, they researched Thoreaufor seven years and even wrote part of it on the banksof Walden Pond.The Goodman’s is one of the few professionalproductions of Thoreau thus far; the play has neveropened in New York. Any one inclined to nitpickingwill find a few flaws, but they are certainly minor.We can single out Christopher Walken, a handsomeand impish Henry, and familiar Goodman favoriteDouglas Campbell (Waldo) for delivering fine per¬formances in the major roles, but the fairly largecast is on the whole, excellent. The same can be saidfor the technical aspects of the production. All in all,The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail is an exciting one, amoving one, and a bright night to remember in thisbrighter-looking season of Chicago’s theater world.Tickets are available at the Goodman box office,with student discounts every night except Saturday.The production runs through February 21.— Chris FroulaAUDREYHEPBURNALBERTFINNEYin STANLEY DONENSTWOtheROADDoc FilmsSundayFebruary 77:15 & 9:30Cobb Hall$1 Fromthe Directoryof Bedazzledand Charade Far East KitchenChinese & AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen Daily 1 2 - 10Fn. & Sat. 12-12Closed Monday53rd & Hyde Park Blvd955-2229STARTS StudentTONIGHT DiscountTHE ANNIVERSARY Modelwith CameraBette Davis‘ 1342 E. 55th493-6700FOUR CLOWNS Most cosnplete photo shopwith on South sideBuster KeatonTME BIOGRAPH THEATRE HEALTH FOODS2433 N. Uncoln M 8-4123 Natural ViaminsPlan to visit us soon. Admission Thompson's Health Foodsat all times is only $1.25. Bring 2519 East 75th Streetyour Friend*. 731-59392/Grey City Journal/February 5, 1971A Festival of Folks and Folk MusicFestivals come and festivals go andthe University of Chicago Folk Festivalcontinued for the eleventh time to beone of the campus’s finest traditions,“the only good thing about WinterQuarter,” as one person put it lastweekend. The Folk Festival is success¬ful because the Folklore Society, whichorganizes it, understands the meaningof folk music. They present folk musi¬cians: Appalachian gospel singers andcity blues singers, bluegrass banjopickers and Chicago-Polish polkabands, who are unself-conscious per¬formers of their different people’smusic.Folk music is not dependent merelyupon the unamplified condition of musi¬cal instruments. Groups of people usefolk music to express their feelings andtheir way of life. Folk music is not anindividual’s expression from his owninspiration, but the product of a groupwith a “culture.” (When George Tuck¬er, a disabled coal miner from Ken¬tucky who is “naturally a gospel sing¬er,” was younger people would gettogether to sing gospels around thefireplace. George Tucker’s music is nothis individual creation; he sings thesongs of all those people who wouldgather together Sunday nights to sing.)Folk musicians are generally “ordina¬ry people,” usually anonymous andidentified closely with the present real¬ity, heritage, or aspirations of thegroup from which they come. Thoughmany folk musicians make their livingwith their music, most live by othermeans.Besides the Folklore Society’s superbprogramming arrangements, the per¬formers’ apparent honesty and lack ofpretention made the festival exciting.Scott Carlson They acted and performed like backhome playing for or with their neigh¬bors. This goes for everyone, whetherthe more “traditional” folk musiciansor those who many in the audiencewere surprised to see performing at afolk festival, such as Joe Pat’s PolkaBand or J.D. Crowe’s slick, polished,“professional” bluegrass band. No oneseemed to change their routine or theirsongs for the benefit of the sophis¬ticated, intellectual, middle-class au¬dience, so different from the neighborsback home. The openness of the musi¬cians, Bill Williams, George Tucker,Estil and Orna Ball and everyone else,made the festival much more than fourconcerts where intellectual sophis¬ticates could gawk at alien culturesand feel enlightened and liberal.Yes, a festival is people together,and, though the concerts were joyful,the real festival was people closetogether at the workshops and thegeneral socializing that went on. Musi¬cians, folklorists and the people whowere around talked about music, folk¬lore and people. There are few betterthings to talk about, and few betterpeople to talk with than those whocame from Kentucky and Louisianaand other places last week. The infor¬mal conversations were even moreenjoyable than the workshops. I’llnever forget Bill Williams talkingabout his garden and the twenty-onegallons of tomato wine he made lastyear.In contrast with the openness andcandor of the performers, the audienceseemed slippery and pretentious. Ifound it hard to trust the people aroundme; everyone was trying to be toohomey, too state-of-nature, even thebabies crying during the shows seemeda “reverse-affectation” flaunted bytheir parents. It was strange, everyonewas trying to change his culture for aweekend, or even for his lifetime, notrealizing the impossibility of beingwhat he’s not. Individually everyonewas so nice, so friendly — yet I feltmuch distrust, pettiness, and arti¬ficiality. Yes, the Folk Festival wasjoyous, I liked everyone I met there.But sometimes it was so depressing,especially at intermission.George Tucker lamented at his firstperformance that no one got togetherto sing anymore. We thought that byCulture VultureMUSICThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra will play works ofMozart, Beethoven, and Berg, conducted by Schmidt-Isserstedt, this weekend.Sunday at 7 pm Andrew Foldi will give a song recital atTemple Isaiah Isreal 1100 Hyde Park Blvd.Chamber music by Beethoven and Josephs will beperformed Monday at 8:30 at Orchestra Hall.Stan Kenton will appear at the Quiet Knight throughMonday David Rea and Jim Glover will be at the Quiet^T'ghnA/ednesday through the following Sunday.The City Center Joffrey Company continues through Feb,', pTices are $10-$2.50 at the Auditorium Theater. TonightPetrouchka" (new), "Confetti," "Astarte." Saturdayma;.- ,Feb 6: "Petrouchka" (new), "Sea Shadow," "Cake¬walk." Saturday eve., Feb 6: "Trinity" (new), "Theclowns," (3rd to be announced). Sundayimat., Feb7: "Celloconcerto," "Solarwind" (new), "Sea Shadow," "The Green. .?ie " Sunday eve., Feb 7: "Petrouchka" (new), "Con¬fetti," "Astarte."artThe Renaissance Society Gallery in Goodspeed Hallsnows "Venice in Peril" and "Views of Venice: Canaletto,whistler and Masson."..1Op Paintings by artists from Midway Studios now hang inme c Shop. The changing displays will feature works by UCartists; they are for sale and the artists can be reachedthrough Midway Studios.Exhibition of 5 large works by Chicago artists at theschool of Social Service Administration, 969 E. 60th St„through Feb9. Open to public daily except Sunday.Armor from the George F Harding Museum at the Artinstitute through March 21. Located in the A Montgomery Ward Gallery.Through Feb 6, the Hyde Park Art Center exhibits Harris,LaMantia, and Kowalski. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs¬day 1:30 4:30. Saturday 10-4.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 continues 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 28.The Museum of Contemporary Art at 237 E. Ontariopresents "The Architectural Vision of Paolo Soleri,"through February 7."Georgia O'Keefe, Retrospective Exhibition" now onexhibit at Gunsaulus Hall of the Art Institute throughFebruary 7.The Bergman Gallery in Cobb 408 presents "TheVisionary Art of Paul Laffoley" through February 13.DRAMAThe Night Thoreau Spent in Jail continues at the GoodmanTheater through February 21. By Jerome Lawrence andRobert E. Lee.The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Mari¬golds at the Ivanhoe, 3000 N. Clark, 8 pm. Runs throughSunday March 14.Man of La Mancha continues to run at the CandlelightDipner Playhouse, 5620 S. Harlem, Summitt. Dinner isincluded, and in fact required. Tuesday through Thursday$5; Friday S6; Saturday $6.95 for the first performance and$8 for the second; Sunday S4.50 and $6. Call theater fortimes.No Place to be Somebody at the Studebaker Theater willrun through February 6. Tuesday through Saturday at 8:30. Matinee Saturday at 2. Tickets S3 $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 discount.The Prodigal is presented by the Old Town Players at 1718North Park. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday at7:30. Tickets $2.Coco with Katherine Hepburn has opened at the OperaHouse (Wacker and Madison). Tickets $3 8. Two moreweeks only.CINEMAHSaturday and Sunday night, at 8pm only, Mandel Hall,CEF presents par I (Sat.) and part II (Sun.) of SergeiBondarchuk's massive War and Peace. In color, with theRussian Army.On Sunday, also, Doc Films presents Stanley Donen'sestraordinary Two for the Road, one of the great films of thepast ten years. At 7:15 and 9:30 in Quantrell.Tuesday, Frank Borzage's 1927 silent Seventh Heaven, at8 only and free, and on Wednesday, Buster Keaton'sresolutely classical comedy Steamboat Bill, Jr„ at 7:15 and9:30 pm, with Chaplin's short Easy Street.An extraordinary double-bill at several neighborhoodtheaters opens today: John (Manchurian Candidate) Frankenheimer's I Walk the Line, which would be worth seeing forTuesday Weld alone, and Jack Smight's Rabbit, Run, fromthe Updike novel. Gillo Pontecorvo's Burn! opens today atthe Woods (Randolph near Dearborn); Pontecorvo didBattle of Algiers. — Scott Carlsonsinging choruses and wearing flannelwork shirts and playing banjos andfolk-dancing we could revive a culturedying in Kentrucky. The New Lost CityRamblers, three of the finest, friend¬liest, most talented people you couldfind, and many others, try to saveother peoples’ old traditions by singingtheir old songs .But folk music is the antithesis oftradition. The festival was full ofpeople trying to live before they wereborn, trying to forget the dirty cityaround them, wash themselves of ur¬banity, ignore the shopping-center sub¬urb from which they came. They didn’tnotice that Bill Williams said he likesrock and roll and plays it at home inGreenup, Kentucky. We felt self-right-eously liberal because we applaudedthe poor mountain people and theblacks who played for us, yet we laughat Southern drawls and we dismiss soulmusic as too commercial.— Frank Gruber UT PlayletsExperimentUniversity Theatre’s winter ex¬perimental weekend will bow in Rey¬nolds Club Theatre tonight, tomorrowand Sunday at 8:30 pm. The program,entitled “Six Plays In Search of anAudience,” features short plays by fivedifferent playwrights including RobertHopkins, ’72.Slawomir Mrozek’s play Karoi(Charlie) combines comic elementswith tragic themes in a semi-absurdmanner and thus is not easily placed instandard theatrical categories. Karolis directed by Mary Bassan.Chat, by Rodrigues, is a short visualjoke involving a telephone call. Chat isdirected by Bob Hopkins and starsAnita Sandke.Passion, Poison and Petrification orThe Fatal Gazogene is George BernardShaw in the best tradition of St. Joanand Androcles and the Lion. It hassomething for everyone: adultery(passion) murder (poison) and exis¬tential ennui (petrification). Passion isdirected by Gwen Deitman.The Last of the Spode by EvelynSmith is THE story of the post-atomicend of the world which makes On theBeach seem like an overblown narra¬tive of doom. Spode, directed by Hop¬kins, stars Kenneth Northcott, EllenWetherell and Ananda Wood.The last two “plays” are sonovisualsby Hopkins. The essence of the sonovi-sual is lack of spoken communication.Both are experiments in emotionalresponse and theatrical technique.The casts include Jeff Howard, Rob¬erto Gambini, David Chase and SteveSimmons.THE IMAGE BAND DANCE$1.00 Fri. Feb. 5, Ida Noyes Cloister Club7:30-1:00 4*1971 B.C.Contemporary European Films\Ai A 1 3 AKIH DCArC 1 Q Feb. 6 -1IIL WAIMandel Hall < AND rcALc - 1 at II8:00 Only.February 5, 1971/Grey City Journal/3“First it was justlollipops and candy,but as the music built,oranges hit the air,then whole bags ofpotato chips • -ZygotePOCO."DiUViRIN’.”A LIVE, NEW ALBUM.ON EPIC RECORDS AND TAPES. vWII///*.,Poco’s music turned theShea Stadium SummerFestival into a carnival. That’s why Poco’s newalbum is live. And new. Whilemost live albums have only oldsongs, Poco’s has five newsongs. Plus two Buffalo Spring-field tunes that they’ve neverrecorded.There’s also a new acousticversion of “You’d Better ThinkTwice.’’ And then two or three ofthe other songs that turned thesummer festival into a picnic.iua Zygote magazine also said,“People were so refreshed bytheir music, so awakened bytheir sheer exuberance, that thestands erupted in freaky joy.People started throwing thingsto each other.”But every time Poco per¬forms, there’s some specialexcitement. They bounce. Theylaugh. They pull audiences intotheir fun. And part of their funis always new songs. That’swhat excites them so they canexcite you.STUDENT SPECIALORDER 3 & GET A4th FREE!PIZZAS orChicken Dinners orPoor Boy SandwichesFor Delivery & Pick-up OnlyDuring Month of FebruaryMonday thru Thursday,with University I.D.NICKY'S1208 East 53rd StreetFAirfax 4-5340 SHORE AUTOREBUILDERS,INC.1637 EAST 75th STREET. CHICAGO. ILL.643-8066SOUTH SIDE'S FINEST BODY SHOPQUALITY WORK AT COMPETITIVE PRICESOUR 17TH YEAR IN BUSINESSDONALD J. ROLLHEISER^Jemple J}5 at a l 3sraelProvcffy PresentsANDREW FOLDI in concertBASS-BARITONE ThebalancedmachineABORTIONI NFORMATI ONANDASS I STANCECALL (215) 878 • 580024 hours 7 daysFOR TOTALLY CONFI¬DENTIAL INFORMATION.w, recommend only:tti• most reputable physicians- doc-tori ottering fair and reasonableprices: services which will be com.pletely within the 'aw; services per¬formed at accredited hospitals.Lsfal Abortions Without DelayARS INT.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientami Around I tie World1462 E. 53rd St.684-6856 HYDE PARK THEATRE53rd & Lake ParkNO 7-9071Student Discount - Sunday Matinee $1.50f A rip-snorter. A triumph!-Judith Crist, New York Magazinejoe •8COLOR "SrA cannon releaseHYDE PARK THEATRE NO. 25238 S. Harper493-349320th Century Fox presents AnIngo PremingerProduction«.Color by DELUXE*Panavision’: In His Triumphant Return FromLa Scala, San Carlo, Vienna State OperaDR. ROBERT LODINE, AccompanistSUNDAY. FEBRUARY 7th. 19717.00 P. M.Presented AtTEMPLE ISAIAH ISRAEL1100 East Hyde Park BeiilevardCALL WAgner 4-1234 General Admission S2.S0Student Admission SI.SOsessCHICAGO:A school system with a goal: Teaching$8,400 starting salary (10 months)10 days paid vacation • 10 days sick leavePaid hospitalizationThe Chicago Public Schools will have a representative on campuson February 23, 1971 please arrange for an interviewwith the Placement Office. You’ve out-grown your two-seater sports car and hate thethought of a gas-eater sedanNow, for you, there’s a fourseater sports car that gets 30miles per gallon. The newPeugeot 304. The perfectlybalanced machine.New Peugeot 304$2425* tp.o.e. :jZtslyimports, nc.2347 30. MICHIGAN AVE.CHICAGO, ILL. 60616TEL. 326-25504'Grey City Journal/February 5. 1971