The Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 42 The University of Chicago Friday, March 5, 1971Budget forces closingof counseling centerwhether or not B-J became coeducatednext year.The inter-house council (IHC) committeeon coeducation is expected to submit itsrecommendations for next year to Turking-ton before the end of this quarter. Lastyear the committee’s recommendations re¬sulted in coeducation in Greenwood hall,Blackstone hall, and houses in Woodwardcourt. “It has been providing a good service intraining students and to the whole commu¬nity. I hate to see it go — I think they’lllose something,” she said.Jan Allen, a graduate student in psy¬chology and a counselor at the centercalled the closing a “terrible thing.”“I’m disgusted,” she said. “It’s an out¬rage.”She cited the psychology department’slack of interest in training clinical workersand the financial burden of the center asthe most likely reasons for the closing.Dr Howard Moltz, chairman of the psy¬chology department was hesitant to saywhy the center is closing but acknowledgedthat a budget cutback was “one of them.”Starkey Duncan, head of the center andassistant professor of psychology said thecenter has been “losing a fantastic amountof money.”David Wexler, another graduate studentin psychology and a counselor at the cen¬ter, said the closing is “unfortunate be¬cause places like the counseling center aredesperately needed.”“A lot of good academic thinking hasbeen stimulated by this place,” he said. “Itcertainly, undoubtedly serves an academicfunction, a training function, a servicefunction. It will be a serious loss to theUniversity.”One fourth year student who has been go¬ing to the center for more than a year saidthe closing of the center “is really too badbecause there’s a lot of people who needhelp.”“What I’ve learned from being there,”she said, “is the most valuable knowledgeI’ve learned at the University.”Miss Ellinwood said she does not knowwhat the graduate students who came tothe University because of the center willdo.Moltz said the University’s obligation tothe graduate students will be fulfilled.Miss Ellinwood said that students cur¬rently at the center will be referred to stu¬dent health and various agencies in Chi¬cago.to SalisburySteve Aoki By FRED WINSTONThe counseling and psychotherapy re¬search center will close as of June becauseof University budget cutbacks, according toRobert Adams, dean of the division of thesocial sciences.“There was very heavy financial pres¬sure on the (psychology) department,” saidAdams. He also said the adminstrationmade the decision.The counseling center, which began in1948, has been counseling approximately250 people a year, 45 percent of whom werestudents and 55 percent of whom were com¬munity residents, according to CharlotteEllinwood, child therapy coordinator andcounselor at the center.The center has also been used to trainstudents in clinical psychology, a programwhich is currently being phased out of thepsychology department.Both Miss Ellinwood and Bruce Allen,adult therapy service coordinator of thecenter, speculated that the closing of thecenter might be partially because little re¬search has been done there in recent years.They said that the center, once stronglyresearch-oriented, either failed to replacefaculty members as they left or did not re¬new faculty appointments.Miss Ellinwood said there was “a shift inemphasis of departmental needs awayfrom the clinical and more to the academ¬ic.”Library union to request recognitionSnell residents were given the option tobe released from their housing contract forthe spring quarter, or to move elsewhere inthe housing system and pay half the Snellrate.Turkington said that the largest group ofresidents was moving to the Broadview ho¬tel, a graduate men’s dormitory. Otherswill live in Woodward, Breckinridge, EllisAve apartments, and Harper Surf.BURTON-JUDSON COURT: Former all male bastion, Salisbury house, will be inte¬grated this spring with displaced Snell girls.With nearly 50 percent of the libraryworkers registered with the union “We areready to ask for recognition by the libraryadministration,” said Pat Coatsworth,chairman of the Chicago Library Staff Or¬ganizing Committee of the National Councilof Distributive Workers of America(NCDWA).“We feel that there is a certain momen¬tum and enough people interested so thatwe would like to be recognized very soon.We have a timetable in mind that it will bewithin a week,” she said.The University local of the NCDWA heldits first business meeting at the First Uni¬tarian Church last Thursday. Seventypeople attended.Organizing committee member StanleyIrvine said, “We hope the University willdeal with us in good faith because that’show we plan to deal with them.”Mrs Coatsworth postulated that upon re¬questing recognition from the library ad¬ministration “the most likely responsewould be ‘I’m in no position to respond.’But that’s anticipated and we’ve antici¬pated an answer. We will ask them to go totheir supervisor.”Mrs Coatsworth said that after they re¬ceived the administration’s response amembership meeting will be held to deter¬mine the next course of action.One option is to go to the National LaborRelations Board (NLRB) and have themFriedman to talkon campaign hereRepublican mayoral candidate RichardFriedman will speak on campus today at 4pm in Cobb hall’s Quantrell auditorium.Friedman, 41, a Democrat who resignedas head of the Better Government Associ¬ation to make the race, has sharply criti¬cized incumbent Richard Daley for “cor¬ruption, pollution, racism, substandardhousing, deteriorating schools, inadequatepublic transportation and the last politicalmachine in America.”The talk is sponsored hv Student Govern¬ment. Nine women residents of Snell hall willmove to all-male Salisbury house in Bur-ton-Judson courts for the spring quarter.All Snell residents were forced to moveout at the end of this quarter by plans foran extensive renovation of the dormitory,to begin April 1.According to director of student housingEdward Turkington, the move to B-J wasproposed by a group of Snell residents whopreferred rooms in B-J to places elsewherein the housing system. It represents thefirst coeducation of an undergraduate B-Jhouse.Turkington said that the second floor ofSalisbury became available through aseries of room changes both within thehouse and the B-J system. He added that ina few cases Salisbury residents had chosento double up in single rooms rather thanleave the house.Turkington explained that this coeduca¬tion was only a one-quarter arrangement,and noted that it would have no effect onLast ragBecause of the approach of exam week,the Maroon will publish only on Fridaynext week. There will also be a Grey CityJournal.Advertising deadlines will be the same:Wednesday at 4 pm for classifieds, Thurs¬day noon for display ads.supervise an election where all libraryworkers participate to decide whether theNCDWA will be the official bargainingagent for them.“It will be a question of whether themembership wants to do something inplace of the NLRB election, to do some¬thing without it, or something in addition toit,” said Mrs Coatsworth.The NLRB has not decided whether stu¬ dents may vote in this election. However acase is pending before the New York StateLabor Relations Board concerning thisquestion.Mrs Coatsworth said however, “Studentsmay belong to a union. In this case underany circumstances, irregardless of anNLRB decision, the student may belong toa union and take full part in a meaningfulway.”9 Snell women will moveSTUDENT GOVERNMENT PRESENTSRICHARD FRIEDMANCNADIDATE FORMAYOR OF CHICAGOCOBB HALL, QUANTRELLTODAY 3:30 25 Chicago's Finest. Most Unique CinemaShangri-LaTHEATRE222 No. STATE .it W.ickpr Drivo CONTINUOUSPERFORMANCESPit ntv of PACKING at Door Chicago’sOnlyCraftsGal leryIll IISSII imniiDelationsTHE LOVE STORY FROM DENMARKNICKY'S PIZZAAND RESTAURANT'ROYAL PIZZA BY NICKY THEUNCROWNED PIZZA KING"Fast Delivery Hot from the Oven5 p.m. until closing1208 EAST 53RD STREETWhether you relax in the friendly atmosphere of our restaurant or inthe comfort of your own home, you'll always find the folks ot Nicky's«oger to serve you with a pizza that is a gourmet's delight andstill the "Crown Delicacy of Hyde Pork." Drop by or give us ocall and see for yourself. We appreciate your patronage.PHONE FAIRFAX 4-5340OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK — HOURS 11:00 A.M. TO 2:00 A.M.SUNDAYS — 12 NOON TO 2 A M. Now Playing I Cuti'i till: Irifi!! liCOIOI weavingsceramicsglassjewelrysculptureEDWARDSHERBEYNGALLERIES737 North Rush787-3115U. of C.Woman Student Wanted$2.50 per hour and upAverage of 10 hours per week, WILL EVER GETIT TOGETHER?Park Shore Cleaners1649 E. 50th St.324-7579 S\£UlIDA NOYES PROGRAM HOARDwith contemporary european filmsPRESENTSA NEW FILM SERIES SPRING QUARTERAT SPECIAL LOW PRICESMonday March 29 Gunga Din 7 & 9:15Wednesday April 7 Dr. Caligari/The War Game 8:00/9:00Thursday April 15 New Cinema One(Truffaut, Lester, Polanski) 8:00Wednesday April 21 Anatahan 8:00Thursday April 29 Children of Paradise 8:00Wednesday May 5 Bay of Angels 8:00Thursday May 13 Orpheus (Cocteau) 8:00Thursday May 20 Winter Light (Bergman) 8:00Thursday May 27 Shoot the Piano Player 7 & 9:15Thursday June 3 Jules and Jim 7 & 9:15ALL FILMS 25eALL AT IDA NOYESpwh If. iy:-.jtf'J ,dX fTE! rbv;?/2 The Chicago Maroon/March 5, 1971Food cheaper through co-op buying clubsBy JUDY ALSOFROMEverybody in Hyde Park eats — the onlydifference is where they buy their food andhow much they pay for it.About 150 Hyde Parkers and variousSouth Side residents have stopped buyingproduce, grains, and dairy products at lo¬cal grocery stores by forming food coopera¬tives.Cooperative-purchased food, bought inbulk, is up to 40 percent cheaper, and thequality of the food is good, according tomembers.There are now five Hyde Park coops, orbuying clubs as they call themselves, all ofwhich deal through Dave Yankovich at theSouth Water Market, an outdoor producemarket.Middleman Yankovich, employed by theLutheran welfare services of Illinois, ad¬vises potential coopers, “to keep it not toosmall, not too big — about 15-20 people, andsome sort of vehicle for transportation,preferably a station wagon or microbus.Call me down at the market, and I’ll setyou up.”However, it is not that simple, as manymembers of area coops warn. According toStephanie Judson, of the Quaker house buy¬ing club the rationale behind a food coop isthat you save money, “in that the itemswhich get the highest markup in the retailstore are the produce — retailers make upto 30 percent profit. But we’re not savingon time and labor. Still, it is a good chancefor the community to come together.”There are three basic jobs, common toall the coops, which are rotated from mem¬ber to member each month.An order taker compiles the master or¬der form. Such items — as bananas andtomatoes are ordered in 10-pound units, on¬ions and powdered milk in 50-pound units,cheese in 5-pound blocks (comparison shop¬ping in the Mr G’s showed a 30 cent perpound saving here).Bruce Ratoe Bruce RabeQUAKER HOUSE BUYING CLUB: Members of this Hyde Park food coop pick up their weekly order at South Water market.Fowler meets with McGovern in D CThe master order is called in to Yankov¬ich who gets the food at the South WaterMarket.A copy of the master order is then givento the pick-up person, who collects andpays for the produce on a designated day.Food is then unloaded in some area thecoop members have set aside for store¬keeping.The packer-storekeeper obtains individ¬ual order forms, which all the membershave made out. He checks quantity of pro¬duce received against the master orderProduce is sorted into individual orders,and individual costs are calculated forbills, which include the sales tax.A sales tax order form is about the onlylegal complication involved in the set-up.According to Slade Lander, Quaker houselegal adviser, it can be remedied simply bygoing to the Illinois State building for anapplication which must be sent intoSpringfield. One coop member said therewas another touchy legal point. “Sooner orlater the retail stores are going to catch onthat we are not union members (such aslifting crates and moving food) and that weare competition.”Coops do pay off, and the word is spread¬ing, so much so, that Yankovich’s volumeof sales has steadily increased to the pointthat “it’s a real hassle to go down to themarket on Tuesday mornings fighting allthe other coopers and retailers.”The tentative solution is to set up a Southside distribution center, which could be lik¬ened to an enormous coop. Only one personwould go down to the market to pick up thefood for the five existing Hyde Park coop,instead of the five who go down now. An¬other incentive for this South side dis¬tribution center is that Yankovich couldservice more people, bring his overheadcharges down, and thus lower the price ofthe food even more.All the coop member concurred that thebasic and only problem in the cooperativesystem of buying is in the time and laborconsumed and expended.Is the effort worth the time?''Sure, it’s a meaningful task — man, likefeeding yourself.” Hoping to “dispel the current delusion”that calm prevails among the nation’s col¬lege students, Student Government presi¬dent Mike Fowler was in Washington DCMonday talking with federal officials.Fowler was one of a dozen student bodyand student government presidents fromcampuses across the country who went toWashington to meet with Administrationrepresentatives, including Presidential ad¬visers Robert Finch and Henry Kissinger.SAUL BELLOWUC professor and winner of national book-award. Although Fowler missed these meetings,he did speak with Senator GeorgeMcGovern (D-South Dakota) in addition totalking with staff members from the officesof Illinois Senators Charles Percy and Ad-lai Stevenson.“People on Capitol Hill tend to live in aworld all their own,” Fowler said. “If theyrespond to the public at all, it’s with glacialslowness. In order to prolong the war inVietnam, the government is destroyingNovelist Saul Bellow, a professor of Eng¬lish and chairman of social thought com¬mittee, yesterday received the NationalBook Award for Fiction for his latest work,“Mr Sammler’s Planet.”Bellow, 55, who won two previous awardsfor “The Adventures of Augie March” and“Herzog” accepted the $1000 award in Al¬ice Tully hall in New York’s Lincoln Cen¬ter.Author John Cheever, a member of theawards selection committee, reported thatthe selection of “Planet” was “unanimousand enthusiastic.”The four other novels nominated wereJohn Updike’s “Bech: a Book,” EudoraWelty’s “Losing Battles,” Shirley Haz-zard’s “The Bay at Noon,” and JamesDickey’s “Deliverance.”Bellow, in New York, was unavailable forcomment to the Maroon.Among Bellow’s earlier novels are “TheVictim,” “Henderson, the Rain King,”“The Dangling Man,” and "Seize the Day.”He has been at the University since 1963. whatever base it may have had with thepeople.“Underneath the ostensibly quiet surface,tensions are building, and because they’resuppressed, they’re all the more dan¬gerous” he added.“McGovern was refreshing. He realizesthat students are still concerned, andshares our sense of urgency. He recognizesthat it’s important for government officialsactively to speak out against the war andthe system that furthers it, not just voteagainst it,” Fowler said.Asked if he felt his trip to Washingtonwas worthwhile, Fowler said, “Yes, al¬though I doubt if we changed anyone’smind about the war. The most valuable as¬pect of the trip was that we were able tomeet other students like ourselves againstthe war.“It gave us a chance to start organizing,which is what we really need. With organi¬zation we can wield some of the politicalpower that is rightfully ours.“We plan to go to Washington again inthe spring, and hope to get through to seethe President. Although we’ll probably nev¬er convince Nixon that a military victory isimpossible, we can convince him that it’spolitically impossible without damaging thefabric of our country,” Fowler said.“We have to use every means availableto oppose the war, including talking to sen¬ators,” Fowler said. “We have to work totranslate the change in public opinion to achange in government policy. Besides fight¬ing the war, we’re also fighting the systemthat allows such a war to continue evenwhen the public is against it. The peopleare realizing the impossibility of carryingon the impossible policy of a military victo¬ry, and they won’t buy this deception bythe government much longer.“The problem now is overcoming thealienation and frustration fostered byWashington’s unresponsiveness. With thepeople behind us, victory is in our grasp, sowe can’t give up,” Fowler added.Bellow receives book awardfor 'Mr Sammler's Planet'" *a raivii ittiuncin j ru * » 4m ma **«■ * > '..*i** v***»».*.*** March 5, I97l/Tbe Chicago Maroon/3\ W’i'N-i r t'.'f'r i" <rf"«’ ■*lx*.?' C '»Wf‘l^AY>V .jv<'dr *•The Chicago MaroonSTEVE COOK DON RATNEREditor 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 Editors#LISA CAPELL. JOE FREEDMAN, ALLEN FRIEDMAN, FRANK GRUBER, ELSA HERSH, BARRY KELL-MAN, LESLIE LINTON, ALBERTO LOPEZ, BILL MARGRAVE, KEITH PYLE, BRUCE RABE, FRED WINSTONStaff•CARL STOVALL CAROLINE HECK DIANA LEIFERContributing Editor Senior Editor Assistant Business ManagerFounded in 1692. 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 oncampus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail S8 per year in the U.S.Non-profit postage paid at Chiacgo, III.College curriculumThe College curriculum is a sort of conglomeration of post-Hutchinscommon core, which is a sad approximation of what once was a revolu¬tionary concept in liberal education, and specialization within majors,to ready students for graduate work.It often does a bad job of both teaching liberal arts and preparinggraduate students. Third and fourth year courses often get hung up inthe abstractions of the common core, and common core courses borestudents who have had it all in high school.In an effort to make sense out of the College, President Levi isconsidering instituting a two-year BA degree program followed by aperiod of work outside the University. Then students planning to go onto graduate studies could return to campus.We think the idea of shortening time in the College is a good one.The two years after the common core are presently a sort of transitionalperiod between college and graduate work that is in many cases a wasteof time.By letting students outside the University between college andgraduate studies, graduate schools will develop a more pragmaticframework toward problem-solving. The two-year program is remini¬scent of work-study programs at schools like Antioch college. Perhaps,as at Antioch, a student will be eligible for academic credit for workoutside school after the two-year general education period.The student not interested in going on to graduate work will befreed two years earlier. The plan would end the boredom that oftensets in third year.In the interview published in Tuesday’s Maroon, Mr Levi speculatedon rearranging the entire College curriculum around those lines. Thegreatest problem with the College is the lack of specific orientation andthe overriding emphasis on abstract thought. We would rather spendthe time learning useful knowledge relevant to specific problems.At the pointThe point will finally be freed from those ugly radar towers thathave marred the landscape since the 1950’s.In a long-overdue move, the Army announced Wednesday that theradar installations at Promontory point and the Nike site in Jacksonpark will be removed by June.Now the point’s rightful owners, the people of the neighborhood,have access to every inch of the rocky lakefront. Perhaps by coincidence,the removal of the base comes after the radar site had become a targetfor anti-war groups in Hyde Park who don’t want the military sittingon the nicest part of the people’s park.Anyway, it’s an omen that a good spring is around the comer.MarchMelting, melifluous, melodic, mellow. March is all of these andmore. As the snow begins to turn into water and slush, the sound ofrunning water is like music to our ears. The mushy moistness is soothing,but March means something more than this; in this month of waterand new warmth, thoughts of birth and newness abound. The flushingof the old, grey snow signifies the beginning of a new year, a newrefreshness.As we watch March progress we wonder what this year will bring.But no matter what comes with the washing of Mother Earth. Marchwill end, April will come and the sun will shine.4/The Chicago Maroon/March 5, 1971 ABOUT THE MIDWAYPhysicist appointedOne of the world’s leading high energynuclear physicists, James Cronin, has beenappointed University professor in the de¬partment of physics and in the Enrico Fer¬mi Institute.Cronin’s appointment, effective October1, 1971, was announced by University Presi¬dent Edward Levi.Cronin, a University alumnus, was a sen¬ior member of the team of Princeton physi¬cists who in 1964 conducted the experimentwhich upset the concept of time reversalinvariance, which held that physical lawsremain unchanged when the direction oftime is reversed.The results of the experiment, nowknown as the Fitch-Cronin effect, suggestedthat in some cases some physical laws areviolated when the direction of time is re¬versed.Cronin and Val Fitch, professor of phys¬ics at Princeton, were awarded the Re¬search Corporation Award for 1967, an an¬nual award for outstanding achievementsby scientists “who have made notable con¬tributions to human knowledge, but whohave not already been accorded major hon¬ors.”Cronin, a native Chicagoan, is currentlyvisiting professor at the University of Chi¬cago, on leave from Princeton and workingat the National Accelerator Laboratory inBatavia, Illinois.Pancake saleThe Hyde Park Neighborhood Club willhold its eighth annual benefit pancake andbake sale Sunday, from 9 am to 2 pm atthe club, 5480 Kenwood.For $1.25 ($.75 for children), you get allthe pancakes you can eat.Women's daySouthside women from the Chicago Wom¬en’s Liberation Union are sponsoring a cel¬ebration of International Women’s Day to¬morrow, Saturday at the Hyde Park UnionChurch (56th and Woodlawn).The schedule of events includes work¬shops on “Childcare in Chicago”, “Womenand the War in Indochina”. “Gay Liber¬ation”, “Socialist Feminism”, “AlternativeLifestyles: Differing Styles for Liberation”, and a group for men. The workshops beginat 5 pm.There will be a potluck dinner at 6 30pm. People should bring salads and casse¬roles; dessert and beverage will be pro¬vided.After dinner at 8 pm, the SouthsideDance Collective will perform “Games”and “Dance Celebrating the Launching ofthe First Chinese Satellite” as well as newchoreography including “Birds” and “Ge¬runds”.The Women’s Liberation Rock Band willperform at 9 pm.Donations of $1 are requested for theband. All are welcome, and childcare willbe provided.Mikva and NikeRepresentative Abner Mikva disclosedTuesday that the Army’s Nike site locatedat the Point, 55th St. and the lake, is to bephased out by June 30.The Nike site has long been the target oflocal protest and was the focus of July 4demonstration last year. At that time. Mik¬va expressed the view that the site was “asymbol of what is wrong with America.”“Its technology and thinking is outmodedand its cost is exorbitant,” Mikva said. “Nocountry in the world today is buildingmanned bombers zeroing in on the city,”he added.Yesterday Mikva said that he thought it“paradoxical” that the major item on theArmy intelligance dossier kept on him,which also was released Tuesday beforethe Senate subcommittee on Constitutionalrights, was the report of that July 4 speech.Bernadine's sisterJennifer Dohrn, sister of Weathermanleader Bernadine Dohrn, will speak on‘‘Capital Punishment: A Prelude toSpring,” Tuesday at 7:30 pm at the BlueGargoyle, 5655 University.She will discuss what she calls the ex¬citing new methods of “rational discourse”with the establishment to be tested out thisMay in the country’s streets, parks, andpublic plazas.Jennifer Dohrn recently returned from atrip to Algeria and the Middle East whereshe visited with Timothy and RosemaryLeary, and Kathleen and Eldridge Cleaverof the intercommunal section of the BlackPanther party.BULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, March 5TRACK: Twenty-first Chicago and Midwest Conference,Field house, 6:30 pm.CONCERT: Contemporary Chamber Players, RalphShapey, director, Mandel hall, 8:30 pm,FLICK: The Devil Is A Woman, Quantrell auditorium,7:15 pm and 9:30 pm.GEOPHYSICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR: Man-Kin Mak,University of Illinois, "Inertial Effects in the Plane¬tary Boundary Layer," room 101, Hinds laboratory,4 pm.SOCIETY OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE: sponsored by de¬partment of radiology, two day conference on thethyroid, open to those in the field, for informationcall X3185.WINTER SEMINAR SERIES ON SOLID EARTH DY¬NAMICS: J R Goldsmith, "Surface Loading andErosion, Phase Transitions, and Mantle Convection,"room 101, Hinds laboratory.TRAVELOGUE TO IRAN: students, 50c, others, $1,International House, 8 pm.RECRUITING VISIT: Washington DC public schools,K-6 and secondary math, science, reading and others,call x3286 for appointment.TALK: Author Sidney Lens, "The Crisis of the MiddleEast," Church of St Paul and the Redeemer, 4945Dorchester, 8 pm, adults, $1, students, 50c.Saturday, March 6FLICK: The Lion in Winter, Quantrell auditorium, 7pm and 9:15 pm.CONCERT: Univeristy Symphony Orchestra, GeneNarmour, conductor, Hayden, Symphony No 101,Hindemith, Noblissima Visione, Verdi, Te Deum,Mandel hall, 8:30 pm.GAY LIB COFFEE HOUSE: Blue Gargoyle, 7:30 pmto 1 am.Sunday, March 7UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Rev SpencerParsons, Rockefeller chapel, 11 am.FLICK: Black Orphans, Quantrell auditorium, 7 pmand 9:15 pm.MUSICAL SOCIETY CONCERT: Alexandre Djokic,violin, and Bruno Reop, piano, Mandel hall, 8:30 pm.CHE9S MATCH: vs Northwestern University "B" team,Ida Noyes hall, 3 pm.PIERCE TOWER SERIES CONCERT: Instrumental en¬sembles, free tickets at Reynolds club desk, 3 pm.CANCELLED: Latke-Hamentosh Symposium.PANCAKE BRFAKFAST- Wy He P»rVClub, 5480 Kenwood, adults, SI.25, children, 75c, allthe pancakes you can eat, 9 am to 2 pm.MEETING: Gay Lib, Ida Noyes library, 3 pm. TALK: Dr Theodore Nickel, second vice-president,Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod, chairman of corn-mission on theology and church relations, LOW'S,"The Future of the Institutional Church," Bonhoet-fer house, 5554 Woodlawn, 6:30 pm.HEHEARSAL: Shir, Hillel House, 4:15 pm.Monday, March 8DISCUSSION: UC Baha’i Fellowship, "The NascentNew Order," Ida Noyes hall, east lounge, 7:30.MEETING: Students for Israel, Abraham Sneor, "FineArts in Israel," Hillel house, 7:30 pm, Ivrit meeting,9 pm.Tuesday, March 9SPEECH: Jennifer Dohrn, sister of Bernadine, BlueGargoyle, 7:30 pm.SPEECH: Tom Kahn, executive director, league torindustrial democracy, "A Marxist View of AmericanWorkers," Ida Noyes east lounge, 7:30 pm.CHAPEL MUSIC: Edward Mondello, 12:15 pm.Wednesday, March 10SOUTH ASIA SEMINAR: V C Joshi, Nehru MemorialMuseum, New Delhi, "Organization of Archives mIndia," Foster hall lounge, 4:10 pm.WOMEN'S POLITICS AND THE WAR IN INDOCHINA.Marge Witty, sponsored by the Hyde Park-UC chap-ter of the Chicago Women's Liberation Union anothe Southside Women's Center, University Churcn.57th and University, 7:30 pm. .SCIENCE FOR THE PEOPLE: Jim Cohen, Ira Rosotsky, "Education," Rosenwald 2, 8 pmLECTURE: Richard Mayne, "Wyndham Lewis: hisSocial Ideas.'l' Social Sciences 122, 7:30 pm.MEETING: AAUP election meeting followed by discus-sion on academic freedom, Richard Lewontin, Don¬ald Levine, Eckhart 133, 7:30 pm.Thursday, March 11SOUTH ASIA SEMINAR: Hanna Papanek, the Univer¬sity, Sylvia Vatuk, University of Illinois, Peter Betocci, Oakland University, "Sex Roles in IndiaHindu and Muslim," Foster hall lounge, 4:10 pm-OPEN NIGHT FOR WOMEN: Volleyball, badminton,Ida Noyes hall, 7 pm to 9 pm.LECTURE: Edi Kami, "Segregation and the VoucnerSys*?'*\" Quertrt!! auditorium, !.3C pm.LECTURE: Davd Orlinsky, "Life Cycle Structures anoFunctions: Is Reconstruction Possible?" Quant eauditorium, 11:30 amLocal churches source of political activitiesBy NANCY CHISMANNew demands on religious institutionsare integrating the roles of religious andpolitical expression, according to someneighborhood clergymen.“Nowadays the line blurs between the sa¬cred and the secular,” said Rev Jack Men¬delsohn of the First Unitarian church.“Both permeate each other, so there hasbeen a major change in the practice of reli¬gion in the world.”In recent months Hyde Park’s religious“institutions” have been some of the mostfertile sources in the community for politi¬cal and social activity.The University Disciples of Christchurch, which sponsors the Blue Gargoyleand Hyde Park peoples organization(HYPPO); the First Unitarian church,which operates a center for runaways andis conducting experiments in education;and the non-denominational Clergy Con¬sultation Service on Problem Pregnancies(CCS), show innovative attempts to reeval¬uate the role of religion and the clergy insociety.Rev Charles Bayer, a minister at the Dis¬ciples of Christ church, feels “Politics haveas much to do with religion as Sundayschools. Religion has got to be involved inpolitics up to its neck and without anyshame.”For Bayer, activism and tradition are notmutually exclusive. “If the society has sta¬bility, the pepple will articulate their heri¬tage,” he said. “When people lose con¬sciousness of their roots, they are in realdifficulty.”By challenging their parishioners with avareity of political and social ideas, Bayerand his colleague, Jack Mendelsohn helpcreate open articulation among their con¬gregations.Mendelsohn believes that the churchshould be used as a platform for expressionof challenging and dissenting ideas.In light of the church’s evolving politicalrole, Mendelsohn sees new functionsemerging for today’s clergyman. “He is an Steve AokiE SPENCER PARSONS: Dean of Rockefeller Chapel, has spoken out recently againstabortion. He is serving as vice chairman of Illinois Citizens for Medical Control ofAbortion and helped organize the Clergy Consultation Service on Problem Pregnancies.enabler,” Mendelsohn explained, “helpingothers to realize their goals.” In addition,he is a resource and public person. He isable to move and create public contact,taking time to deal with public issues suchas war and peace, repression, justice andreform.Mendelsohn himself is active in the Al¬liance to End Repression, a newly formedChicago organization.Emphasizing the role his congregationplays in political involvement, Mendelsohnadded, “There used to be a tension overministers getting involved in controversialissues — it’s freer now. This congregationexpects its leaders to be doing that.”Perhaps the most public person amongthe University ministry is chaplain ofRockefeller chapel, Rev E Spencer Par¬sons.Parsons was one of the organizers of theChicago area CCS and now serves as vicechairman of Illinois Citizens for MedicalControl of Abortion (ICMCA). In the lastALL STATEINCOME TAX• it wmt'.ltt tti umnh WtimiAll STAtfMawiMrtM', T” r-T.r-l?gg-•MUTT MAHT Of MCILECO SERVICES, UNLIMITEDTim 6 East Garfield Blvd.(55th 4 State Street)Chicago, Illinois 60615285-1725FOR OTHER OFFICES(312) 775-0722 EYE EXAMINATIONS University TheatreFASHION EYEWEAR Auditions for an evening ofCONTACT LENSES plays with a focus on WOMANMaterial by Brecht, GertrudeStein, Tennessee Williams, andDR. KURT ROSENBAUM others.OPEN CASTINGOptometrist Saturday March 6, 12noon, Reynolds ClubTheatre(53 Kimbark Plaza) 5706 S. University1200 East 53rd Street or callHYde Pork 3-8372 Ann Beckerman 955-1 71 7Elaine Cohen 667-4011 four months he has presented more than100 speeches on the issue of abortion re¬form.Parsons, outlined the far-reaching effectsof repeal of the outmoded abortion law.“We are going to use the abortion questionas a wedge into the whole question of quali¬ty health care,” he predicted, speaking ofCCS’s future role.“The network of consultation servicesnow has the power to turn off referrals toout-of-state hospitals not meeting our stan¬dards,” he said. “Once abortion becomeslegal in Illinois the network will act as anadvocate for patients, demanding goodcare at low cost.“We will monitor hospitals and clinicsand use whatever resources available, in¬cluding the media, to get satisfactory con¬ditions.”Parsons enthusiastically explained howCCS’s monitoring service could be extendedto form a medical consumers’ union. Everypatient would have a monitoring card onwhich to describe any bad conditions ortreatment. A complaint board, independentof hospitals would act on complaints atwhatever level necessary to make correc¬tions.“The whole medical system is inadequatefor human needs,” Parsons said grimly. “There is no reason why people have to besilent about poor health care.”More bound to the student body and lessventuresome into the problems of the ex¬ternal community are the student centers,Calvert house (Catholic), Brent house(Methodist and Episcopalian), and Hillelhouse (Jewish).Fr Rollins Lambert, a priest at Calverthouse, explained, “Catholic students arenot interested in activism — they’ve neverattempted political activity.”He noted, however, that an ad againstabortion reform which appeared in the Ma¬roon several weeks ago originated with thestudents at Calvert.“Calvert house has always moved aheadof the Catholic church, but in the directionthe Church is going. “We just get therefirst,” he said.Lambert’s personal stance on the issue ofabortion reform is “inclined to be very con¬servative.” He feels that the issue pertains“to human life, when and if it may be tak¬en. The Illinois law needs rewriting to pre¬serve the common good and to be en¬forceable, but I’m not sure how this can bedone.”Rev Phil Dripps, a minister at Brenthouse, thinks religion and politics must beseparate in practice. “Religion forms thefoundation of society,” Dripps said slowly.“It should nourish the soil of political liferather than specify public policy.”Elaborating his theory, Dripps said,“Without a religious foundation, societywill not have the stability that yields jus¬tice.”Synthesis of religious and political activi¬ty or degree of political expression yieldsno consensus among the community clergy¬men. Yet the variety of their views is sim¬ilar to the description Rabbi Daniel Leifergave of activity at Hillel house.“There are a number of sub-groups here,a constellation of groups, some religious,some political or cultural, dealing with dif¬ferent aspects of Jewish life,” he said.The attitude of Jews toward political ac¬tivity has changed since the six-day war,Leifer explained.“We get the clear perception that whenthe crunch comes, if Jews don’t look out foreach other no one else will,” he said.“There is a feeling of support for the Jewsin Israel that says, ‘We won’t be quiet likewe were in World War II.’ ”Smokey’s friendsdon't playwith matches.ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELSunday March 7, 1971 11:OOA.M.E. Spencer ParsonsDean of the Chapel"THY WILL BE DONE"Sunday SeminarRockefeller Memorial Chapel Undercroft, 9:45 to10:45 a.m. Coffee and Rolls and a discussion of CivilReligion in America: Its Promise and Threat, led byPhilip M. Dripps, United Methodist Chaplain at theUniversity of ChicagoWeekday Chapel Mu$icTuesday, March 9, 12:15 p.m.Organ Recital Edward Mondelle University Organist VERDITe Deum• HAYON• HINDEMITH UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY684-3661FRASK PARISIproprietor HEALTH FOODSNatural ViaminsThompson's Health Foods2519 East 75th Street731-5939StudentDiscountModelCameraI1342 E. 55th493-6700Most complete photo shopon South sideUniversity JJIrchestraUniversity Chorus Saturday March 6Mandel Hall8:30 p.m.ADMISSION FREEEugene Nap^our, Cotiductoc \Josef von Sternberg’sTHE DEVILIS A WOMANDoc Films Friday March 5 7:15 & 9:30 Cobb Hall $1 GOODYEAR TIRES -DELCO BATTERIES• Auto Parts at Mechanics Prices• Seat Covers Installed• Locksmith Service• Complete Auto Repairs on all Cars• Discount to Faculty, Students, &University EmployeesCASTLE AUTO DISCOUNT STORE4401 S. Cottage GrovePhone DR 3-4400Hours 8 to 7; Sat. 8 to 6; Sun. 8 to 2March 5, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/5i»Mt ?*w »:«►;*;« »:«>:♦:< >>:« i-^gi >;<i»;«»;♦;< »>:i »:<»:« »;■»;« »:•;« »:«»;«:« *21' ‘jS1,*.'5?» »5I< »5!» (Si i5!i t5!» »I5!« »5I«5!« »T5!e »!5!e »5Ii >K« i5!<HMMHMMHMmH SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER Mon the World's FinestAudio CassetteMEMOREX| Buy One! Get One Free! |mM%%M¥¥¥¥MMH¥¥¥¥M:¥:lr«MHM¥Sr *M¥M¥MMM Memorex Tape has been designed and engi¬neered to deliver the best possible music fromyour recorder.superior fidelity exacting reliabilityFRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLYBuy one Memorex C-60 Cassette at the RegularPrice (2.19) and receive one C-60 free! (LimitTwo per Customer)Photography Department - Second FloorUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5750 South Ellis m¥M¥¥¥¥¥¥nM¥¥¥M¥¥¥M¥¥¥¥9 9¥¥MAbortionInformation(212) 271-4401We believe that if you think you arepregnant, you should be able to findout what to do.We believe that if you have con¬firmed your pregnancy, you shouldbe able to call someone to help youdecide what to do.We believe that if you want an abor¬tion, only the most qualified boardapproved gynecologists should per¬form it.We believe that you should have theright to decide whether your abor¬tion will be performed in a hospitalor outpatient facility.We believe that in all cases, thefacility used should be perfectlyequipped and staffed.We believe that you should under¬stand exactly what an abortion pro¬cedure is.We believe that transportation ar¬rangements to New York should bemade for you, as well as accommo¬dations if they are needed.We believe that all of these thingsphould be done at the lowest pos¬sible cost to you.We believe you feel the same wayWe know we can help you, even ifit's just to talk to someone.IV^ Medref Inc.58-03 Calloway StreetRego Park. New York 11368(212) 271-4401 DIArCCr’S ALL-NIGHT SHOVPERFORMANCES FRIDAY k SATUROAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREMAR 5 MAR 6MORE BATTLE OF ALGIERSMar. T2 Mar. 13WEST SIDE STORY AROUND THE WORLDNatalie Wood IN 80 DAYSDavid NivenT2 4 2:30 1242Mar. T9 Mar. 20THE LANDLORD MAD, MAD, MAD, MADWORLDBeau BridgesT2&2 12 4 2:30AAarch 26 Mar. 27SOLDIER BLUE THE GRASSHOPPERCANDICE BERGEN JACQUELINE BISSET1242 1242Apr. 2 Apr. 3THE PEOPLE NEXT DOOR GETTING STRAIGHTEli Wallach Elliott Gould12, 1:45 a.m. 12, 2:30 a.m.1 nans si %TAELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E 53rd St288 2900 PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONJAMESSCHULTZCLEANERSCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933 DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center15)0 E. 55th St.363-6363 22N0 CENTURY PRESENTSSTEPPENWOLFMC WGLD'S JOHN RYANFRIDAY MARCH 5 8 00 PMSYNDROMEPOCO/LINDJIRONSTADTMC —WCFL's BOB DEARBORNSUNDAY, MARCH 7—7 00 PMAUDITORIUMJAMES MODCAROL KING ft JO MAMAMC WGID'S JOHN PLATTFRIDAY MARCH 12—8 00 PMSYNDROMEAn Evenino with TheGRATEFUL DEADFeaturing New Ridersoi The Purple SageMC- WGLD s JOHN RYANFRIDAY, MARCH 19 — 8 00 PMSYNDROMEBLACK SABBATHHumuie Pie/DreamsMC— WGID'S DIGBY WELCHSATURDAY, MARCH 20 8 00 PMSYNDROMEJOHNNY WINTERwliii special guest starsme Allman Bros.MC—WGLD s SCORPIOFRIDAY MARCH 26—8 00 PMSYNDROMEJETHRO TULLBrethrenMcKennree SpringMC WGLD's GWEN JOHNSONFRIDAY, APRIL 2 8 00 PMSYNDROMEJAMES BANSMC—WGLD S JOHN PLATTFRIDAY. APRIL 9—8-00 PMSYNDROMETHREE 00BII6HTMC—WCFL's LARRY 0 BRIENSUNDAY, APRIL 18—7 00 PMAMPHITHEATRE8BUDFUIKmfutimnBtoodrockMC—WGLD'S LARRY HIMMELSATURDAY, MAY 1—8.00 PMSYNDROMEFRANK ZAPPA i THEMOTHERS OF INVENTIONMC —WGLO'S JOHN RYANFRIOAY, MAY 28—8 00 PMSYNDROMESyndrome Audio by Century SoundLighting by Noel TetrevAttractions at the Auditorium Theatre andAmphitheatre are $6 50. $5 50. $4 SO $3 SOTickets are available at Ticketron OutletsFor locations nearest you dial T I C K E T SThe Syndrome is located in the ChicagoColiseum at 15th & Wabash Tickets are$5 00 general admission and available atyour neighborhood Ticket Dealer up untilthe evening preceding the day of the showThe Syndrome bon office opens at 1 00 p mthe day of the showTicket Dealer locations are Flip Side 3314W Foster Chicago 732 Elm Street, Winnetka Pants Enplosion 1532 N Wells StChicago. 2016 1st St Highland Pk 126 NGennessee Waukegan Grammaphone. 2663N Clark St Chicago Music & Books FordCity Shopping Ctr Yorktown Music. Yorktown Shopping Ctr . One Octave Higher 1730Orrmgton Evanston J 8 J Records RacineEars 2201 N Sedgwick Chicago TriangleTapes 8 Records 1032 S Ked/ie, 6616 SPulaski 3203 W 59th St , Pants Eiplosion1512 Miner St in Oes PlainesMail orders to 22nd Century Inc , 70 WHubbard Chicago, III 60610 Enclose a selladdressed, stamped envelope WHEN YOU HAVE THATAWFULFEELINGBEFORE THATBIG OCCASION ..."I haven't athing towear!”.. .The correctjewelry can makeyour oldest ensemblelook like new!Supreme JewelersI 152 E. 53rd Si.cat 643-0599 .•VACAPULCO$197MARCH 20-27Round Trip AirDouble OccupancyYacht CruiseWater Skiing(tax included)Escape International869-0322FREEPORT$183MARCH 20-27Round Trip Air7 Nights * Freeport Inn2 Hour FreeHappy Hour Daily(tax included)Escape InternationalMembership Required$12.50call:Escape International869-0322DAYTONABeachApt's & RoomsCall:Escape International869-0322PREGNANCYPROBLEM?THERE IS NO CHARGEFOR OURABORTIONREFERRAL. WHY SPENDMONEY NEEDLESSLY?OUR PROFESSIONALSERI/ICES ARE FREE.CALL (215) 722-53607 DAYS 2h HRS. JUST PUBLISHEDIn the Countryof the Youngby JOHN W. ALDRIDGE"One of the most profoundstudies of contemporaryAmerica." —Jerty Kosinski.A Perennial Paperback.P/207 95<The Story of Rockby CARL BELZ"Competent, sensitive, andintelligent. Who could ask foranything more?"—Jon Carroll,Rolling Stone. A ColophonPaperback. CN/213 $2.25To End WarAn Introduction tothe Ideas, Organizationsand Current Booksby ROBERT PICKUS andROBERT WOITOA guide to war/peace issues,with resources for practicalaction. A Perennial Paperback.P/201 $1.50At your booksellerHarper &) RowIkP Paperback Dept 6249 E. 33d St., New York 100165424 KimbarkMl 3-3113^ ^foreign car hospitalIWfVRVRVRsPIZZA •PLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price! |1460 E. 53rd 643-2800 [J WE,DE UVER _ „ 4THE BURNING SHAME COFFEE SHOP9 am • 4 pm, Monday • Friday“TiGr'wTS / ,! w (O-k., SO you missed our gorilla coffee; come anyway)6/The Chicago Maroon/March 5, 1971THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSFOR SALEQueensize Beautyrest Bed 1 yr old$100; 2 desks $10, $15. Call 375-5684evenings, weekends.Fender Bandmaster-Fender ReverbSlingerland Drums Life Rhythms1701 East 55th StreetGET THE OUNCE YOU PAY FORPrecision pocket postage scaleweighs letters and small packagesup to 4 oz. Satisfaction Guaranteed$1.98 HAMPCO, RD NO. 2, Ithaca,NY, 14850Water Beds, King Size (6'x7'l $45Call Bee — Evenings, 327-9043.Save $$ on Dual KLH, Scott, AR,Dyna, at MUSICRAFT. On CampusBob Tabor. 363-4555.We buy and sell used instrumentsLIFE RHYTHMS 1701 E. 55thWaterbeds. King-size $50. Fullyguaranteed for 20 years. Must See.528-8798.10% OFF ANY PURCHASE WITHTHIS AD. RADICAL RAGS. OPENSUNDAY, TOO! 55031 Hyde ParkBlvd. University faculty member needswell-furnished apartment to subletfrom March 20th till at least June20th. Can consider a six monthlease. Please all 753-4712 (days) or288-7030 (evenings & weekends).RIDE WANTED to Miami 2 wayAFTER 18 Call Bob 753-2249 Rm2412SPACESUBLET: 2 rooms. Furn. 5330 S.Harper. Apr-Oct. $115 with util. 684-5956 after 7 p.m.41 rm apt, nice, safe, $175. 643-7887.Take over my dorm contract —Now or spr. qtr. Call Will 753-3773CHICAGO BEACH HOTEL5100 S. Cornell DO 3-2400Beautiful Furnished ApartmentsNear beach-park-I.C. trains U of Cbuses at door Modest daily, weekly,monthly rates.Call Miss SmithGARAGE FOR RENT5508 CORNELL. $150-year. $15-mo.JWILSON. 288-5381 12-2p.m.PEOPLE WANTEDMidi Madness, Heavenly Hotpants,Georgeous Get-ups. Student Disc.Alhambre Boutique. 1453 E. 51st.RUMMAGE SALEFor March 20th Demo in Wash, DCvs. Racist Unemployment. Lots ofgood items Fri. 5-8pm. Sat All dayto 5:30. 5458 S. Harper 1st ft. Dona¬tions needed 288-3009RECORD SALEDAVID CROSBY LPand everything else, is ON SALE atCoop Records Reynolds Club base¬ment. 2.96 3.59 4.04WANTEDPeople wanted for psychodramaThursdays at 7:30 Multi-Media The¬ater 5210 S. Harper ID Disc.Wanted: 1 rm. w-bath & kitchen fa¬cilities April-Sept. Reese HospitalEmployee. 536-2641 THE COFFEEHOUSEneeds more people who can singand-or play. If you can help in anyway, call Henry Russell, BJ 351 orDan Simoncini BJ 360-BMale roommate wanted. Own roomin Ig two-floor apt. 667-3734See Sartre's No Exit Saturdays at8:30 Multi-Media Theater in HarperGalleries 5210 HarperYoung, lively person to help motherwith 2 children and chores. 71hours, 2 days a week, $25. 7206 S.Oglesby, near 1C 8, school bus. Call363-5112 after noon.STAFF, STUDENTS. Participate inan experiment on the perception ofspeech. $1.75 for an hour's work. Oncampus. Call X3-4710 for an appoint¬ment.PART-TIME typist (65wpm) forroutine office work. Hours 8:30-1 or1-5. Pleasant office. Campus loca¬tion. 753-2078. Male Gd. Stud, wanted to share 5rm furn apt sp quarter-67,50-mo538.Dorch-Call Allan 955-3889Fern roommate wanted. 54th & Har-er. $87.50, 643-7887Male Gr S wntd to share Ig cln SShore apt w-2 same. Own roomcampus bus at corner 1C near $60-mo Start Apr 1 Call 947-5068 —Days, 374-7864 after 6 pmSitter wanted for baby girl 4 mos.Blk student pref. Weekdays to fityour schedule. Call 955-3611.Fern std to share 7 rm apt beginpr qtr $50mo 3247431 5-7:30pmMother's Helper wanted to live inFaculty Member's house. Board androom for aft. help with 2 children.Flexible. Call Mr. Zonis 3-4548, 548-4196BLUES BAND FORMINGYoung Musician wishes to meet oth¬er experienced musicians to formnew Blues Band. Call RABOVSKY.752-3800.PEOPLE FOR SALERUSSIAN INSTRUCTION by nativeteacher. Trial lesson, no charge.236-1423 or 363-2174.Guitar and drum repair work.LIFE RHYTHMS 1701 E. 55thTYPING SERVICE HY 3-3755MOVING?Licensed mover 8. hauler. Call ArtMichener. 955-2480SCENESDance March 12 Ida Noyes 9 pmLIFE RHYTHMS is also a school ofmusic. Open 11 am-7 pm, 7 Days.Theodore Nickel "The Future of theInstitutional Church." March 7 Sun¬day, Bonhoeffer 6:30 p.m. 5554 S.Woodlawn.Latke-Hamantash Symposium can¬celled. Will be rescheduled for Fall'71 COMMUNITY HUMAN RELATIONSINST Growth Groups — Large,Small, Ongoing. Tori, Gestalt, Psy-chosynthesis. Encounter. Ex¬perienced, trained leaders. Call 588-1606Purim. Megillah reading and partynext Wednesday night at Hillel.GREECE: Summer study travellive on Skopelos Island w-Grk fami¬ly, study class. Greek civ 8, art,Mod. Grk, folk dance. Trips to Ae¬gean Islands June 23-Aug 4. $370 fortuition, rm 8. bd. Write Prof. Christ-ides, Class. Dept, U. of Minn, Min¬neapolis or 955-1094Yoga Poses Concentr. Meditatn.Beg-Adv. Single-Group Classes SRINERODE OF INDIA DO3-0155.GESTALT ENCOUNTER GROUPfor women. Focus will be: "Whoare you?". March 5, 6, 7. Limitedto ten. $25. Lorrie Peterson, ex¬perienced leader. 288-3541.WILDERNESS ROAD at the Gar¬goyle, Friday.James Hawk March 12 Ida NoyesBring Your Own CansMULTI-MEDIA THEATREis located just north of Hyde ParkNo 2 Theater in Harper Ct. in Har¬per Galleries 5210 S Harper.Thursdays Psychodrama at 7:30Fridays Hypnosis at 7:30 SaturdaysSartre's No Exit at 8:30FREE CONCERTUniversity Orchestra & Chorus:Haydn, Hindemith 8< Verdi. MandelHall, Saturday, March 6 8:30 pmADMISSION FREEGAY LIBGAY LIB Coffee House 3-6 BlueGargoyle 5655 S Univ 7:30 pm-1 am.GAY LIB Dance at UICC 3-6, 750 SHalsted 9 pm-$2. GAY LIB openmeeting 3-7 Ida Noyes, 1212 E. 59thSt. 3 pmFREE FILMS!CEF presents 2 free films just foryou: Fistful of Dollars, Wed. atCobb 7 & 9:15 and Fire on thePlaines. Ida Noyes, Thurs at 8 ABORTIONS9 pin - THE BANDEBSNATCHNIGHTCLUBpresentsSTEVE GOODMANFolk Stylistfrom the Quiet KnightOne Night only - Sat. March 6lam TRY OUR PIZZA!The Ida Noyes Program Board presents —THE PHANTOM CREEPSor,Bela Lugosi Night at Ida NoyesSix episodes of the dusty creepies, starring lovely Dorothy Arnold,and the less lovely Robert Kent and Edward Van Sloan, allcaught in the lunatic machinations of the fiendish Bela Lugosi.Further episodes in April.In chilling black and white.Monday, March 8th, 8 p.m. Ida Noyes HallAnother Iced-over event Join thecraftsrenaissance• Macrame• Weaving• Knitting• CrochetingClassesnow forming928-9208Textile ArtsUnlimitedKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.684-6856 WHY PAY for abortion counselingyou can get FREE in Hyde Park?NY abortions from $150 Call ClergyService, 667-6015LO QUE ESTA PASANDO!BALINESE THEATER REBORN byReincarnation Auditions Unltd CoUNM Albuquerque 3-26 8. 27. 8:15GARIN NEGBACome create a community with us!We are a group of college studentsplanning to settle in Kibbutz Urimstarting Sept 1972 Nat'l conventionChicago area April 2-4 Call Barbara973-0494 Will discuss role of profes¬sional on Kibbutz.ALEXANDRE DJOKICViolin Recital at Mandel, 8:30 Sun,Mar 7 Handel, Bartok, more. HYDE PARKFIREWOODOak - Ash - Birch$45/TON DELIVEREDFOR IMMEDIATEDELIVERYCALL 955-2480ANY TIMESpecial Student RatesCEF SPECIALOne of the most acclaimed films ofthe '60s — The Lion in Winter atCobb Sat. at 7 8. 9:15 and one of themost beautiful films of the last Dec¬ade "Black Orpheus" at Cobb Sun.at 7 8. 9:15.RUGBYThe UC Rugby Club will have abrief but important meeting on Sun¬day Mar 7 at 7 PM 5611 Blackstone.Spring Schedule, Tnmnt plans andother impt business make up theagenda. Former players and anyoneinterested in participating should at¬tend.HAPPY BIRTHDAY, WIT!PERSONALSInterested in exploring new lifestyles in Israel? Call Motke aboutour new program 465-6681. Studentsfor Israel"Caught him beatin' his meat,Sarge!"Writers' Workshop. (Plaza 2-8377)Blow your mind with good music.Lowest prices on all stereos at MU¬SICRAFT. On campus, Bob Tabor,363-4555.Shake your snake with James HawkFor the Seamy Side of Your LifeHOTPANTS. Student Disc. Al¬hambre Boutique. 1453 E. Hyde Pk.BlvdFIND OUT! Introduction to Hyp- To all those who wear size 32pants: Pants reduced to $4.99 John'sMens Wear. 1459 E. 53rdOVERLAND EXPEDITION TO IN¬DIA Leaves London mid-June. $490ENCOUNTER OVERLAND 753-0411Students for Israel offers an ex¬citing new summer program in Is¬rael for those seriously consideringliving there. Jul-Aug $50 8< trans.(Will offer cheap flights) Will bebased on Kibbutz and will visit vari¬ous Kibbutizim, development towns,urban collectives, etc. ContactMotke 465-6681 for more info.Open 7 days a week. Life RhyihmsMusical Supplies. 1701 E. 55th .DON'T MISS SUPER RECORDSALEGet Hyde Park's best buy thruquarter ends. STILLS, HENDRIX,JOPLIN and ANYTHING ELSE2.96-3.59-4.04. Co-op records, Rey¬nolds bsmt.LOST: Sm. B8.W M. dog, part cock¬er. Chain choke collar, red collar,rabies tag. 53rd 8< Lake Pk. 2-22.Reward. 753-2492 or 363-4716.To all Students planning to takeSoc. Sci. 272 ( Pol. Sci. 282) TheAmerican Legal System in theSpring Quarter 1971: Please call753-4142 or 753-2772 as soon as pos¬sible.Explore settlement possibilitiesMeet friends to settle with in Israelthis summer. Call Motke Yehezkeli.465-6681PACK YOUR KNAPSACK FOR AD¬VENTURE. Bicycle and camp InEngland. 30 day tours $566 fromBoston. Competently equipped.Write: Bicycle-Campers Inter¬national, Box 13927, Gainesville,Fla., 32601.RIDE BOARD — Need a ride? Needa ilder to share expenses? Call 334-7668. Donation $1.HY.P.P.O. Brings you WILDER¬NESS ROAD, Fri at the Gargoylenosis Fridays at 7:30 Multi-MediaTheater. Student Discount15% Discount for University of Chi- CAMPINGcago people. Tuesday nights atEfendi. 955-5151FREE INFORMATION> SAFE. LEGAL !i M hAHTIAAl i EQUIPMENTRENTALS: ABORTION:| IN NEW TOM ! Tents, Sleeping Bags,Stoves, LanternsI SCHEDULED IMMEDIATELY t Matsj (212) TR 7-8562 ]i MRS. SAUL i•CERTIFIED AIORTION REFERRALI Hickory 324-1499j All Inqulriei Confidential Ja masterpiece. A DrHliant,tunny, moving IRm."AndyWarholpresentsJoeDallesandroinWw«a»a «ncM kt Pul Akntat;NOW PLAYING\ \ Xtv**.** 'aKvnmsHraT.i March 5, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/7. I *44 t t t * * t* • 14 t.m* * t«,«.*•*.* I ».% AM“Shostakovich's banned 'BabiYar' Symphony in OriginalVersion. RCA captures withperfection Ormandys totallyinspired performance." wroteHigh Fidelity. LSC-3162BEETHOVEN The Five Middle QuartetsOpus 59. Nos. 1-3 (Rasomovsky)* ^Opus 74 (Harp) * Opus 95THE GUARNER! QUARTET witemhardt Dalles „ Sover • CeiJo Tree1st Violin 2nd Violin ‘ - .. ViolaThe Guarneri Quartet’s firstvolume of its planned com¬plete Beethoven quartets. Viof regular Red Seal price. 4L.P.s. Dynagroove.VCM/VCS-64154 for 11.98THE POINT1Nilsson LSPX-1003 flC/1 rtEO sealHEIFETZVttUi*TCHAt*0V$*V • ftftAMMS WCWDCLSSOMKUnsurpassed Heifetz perform¬ances of the three mostpopular Romantic violin con¬certos. Heifetz at his peak. A2-L.P set. VCS-7058 “The great American quartetof the era” commemorates theBeethoven Year with the FiveLate Quartets and “GreatFugue.” 4 L.Ps. VCS-64182 for 6.98 4 for 12.98IYC/1 RED SEAL■ rut grcat HvoaircsMOONLIGHT SONATAfarcyto SonatasMoonlight Path6tique Aoo&*siorvitaARTUR RUBINSTEINMOONLIGHT SONATA-THREEFAVORITE BEETHOVENSONATAS—MOONLIGHTPATHETIQUE ANDAPPASSIONATAArtur RubinsteinLSC-4001 “Pianistic elegance on a su¬perior level” wrote the N.Y.Times about Weissenberg.These Haydn performancesbear this out. LSC-3111MFG. 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... 7.18 nc/iRubinsteinThe FiveBeethovenPiano ConcertosBoston SymphonyLeinsdorfTHE FIVE BEETHOVENPIANO CONCERTOSArtur Rubinstein/BostonSymphony Orchestra/LeinsdorfVCS-6417BEETHOVEN/THE NINESYMPHONIESBoston Symphony/LeinsdorfVCS-69037 for 21.98The Original Broadway CastRecording of America’s love-rock musical features HairFrank Mills and more. Dyna-groove. LOC/LSO-1150SOLID! DON'T FORGET THE HEAVIESSKYSkyISP-4457 BLOWS AGAINST THE EMPIREPaul KantnerLSP-4448 SHARE THE LANDThe Guess WhoLSP-4359 FAB!WE ACCEPT MASTERCHARGE & BANKAMERICARDCHARGEWITH BankAme uicaro(fUjGAs RECORDSOPEN SUNDAY 12 TO HYDE PARK1444 E. 57thMU 4-150558 The Chicago Maroon/March 5. 1971THE GREY CITYTalking with Fischer - DieskauVolume 3, Number 19 Fri ay arch 5,1971Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, at 45, is one of the bestknown and most outstanding baritones of his time,having appeared with every major orchestra andopera company throughout the world. With thecompletion of a massive two-volume recording ofover four hundred Lieder by Franz Schubert, incollaboration with Gerald Moore on DeutscheGrammophon late in 1970, Fischer-Dieskau is re¬puted to be the most recorded artist in the history ofthe phonograph. This conversation was arrangedduring Fischer-Dieskau’s all-Schubert recital, whichwas given at the Auditorium Theater on January 15.The interview was conducted by Peter L Ratner ’71,member of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s juniorboard.After having collaborated with Gerald Moore inmaking possible this vast Schubert Lieder under¬taking, what immediate plans do you have, as far asrecording is concerned ?There are plans for a complete Hugo Wolf cycle,with Daniel Barenboim; a complete Brahms songcycle, with Wolfgang Sawallisch at the piano; anearly complete Mozart song anthology, with Baren¬boim; and a complete Schumann anthology, withJeorg Demus. Already recorded is a choice from theViennese School, with examples of Schoenberg,Webern and Berg, with Aribert Reimann at thePiano. In the field of opera, a new recording ofRichard Strauss’ Capriccio with Karl Boehm is soonto come out.As, perhaps, the most versatile baritone of thiscentury, having disseminated your talent amongMozart opera, Wagnerian musikdrama, Bach ora¬torio, Schubert-Schumann-Mahler Lieder, and theworks of Beethoven, Berg, Schoeck, Verdi, Orff,Brahms, and Benjamin Britten, to name a few, 1should like to ascertain some of the particularreflections that you must experience upon dealingwith such a varied repertoire. How does an artistmanage to handle seeming stylistic antinomies suchas Wagner and Mozart, or Schubert and WernerHenze, in the same career,,and do justice to both ? Doyou agree with the notion of specialization in music ? for exclusivity — in all senses of the word — notcommercially, and certainly not spiritually!Being interested in musicology, I try to dig intodifferent times and to explain them in my way. Partof this involves studying as precisely as possible theAnweisungen — the instructions penned in the musicby the composers — and the comments given by thecomposers themselves in letters and articles. Then, Ilike to read autobiographies and documentary bio¬graphies.And this brings me almost automatically intodisagreement with the specialization of today. Onehas only to think of the multi-faceted singers at thebeginning of the century. There was, for instance, theHeldenbariton Franz Betz, who could sing the Barberof Seville to perfection one night, and Hans Sachs thenext night. Or, think of Lilli Lehmann, whoserepertory spanned from the Queen of the Night toIsolde! I sympathize with the wish of most actors:They don’t want to be categorized into only one field;many-sidedness is considered a virtue in the actingworld.Is there any particular music with which you feelmost at home?Yes. The one in which I started. And that is Bach,as well as Schubert. My first teacher, Georg AWalter, was a specialist in Bach, a famous Evange¬list soloist. He introduced me — I was sixteen at thetime — to much of Bach’s work. My second teacher,Hermann Weissenborn, came from the old school ofLieder singers such as Brahms’ friend Julius Stock¬hausen.Both my teachers were pupils of Manuel Garcia,and I had the chance to grow up musically in thetradition of two of the greatest Lieder singers of thepast century. Many of their interpretive details weregiven to me by my teachers. Nevertheless, longbefore I began my singing studies, I used to makeexpeditions into the great cosmos of Schubert’ssongs, playing them on the piano for myself. It wasSchubert’s Winterreise, which formed the programof my first public appearance when I was still in highschool.It is just the antimony which appeals to me.There is so much involved in style: history, singingtechnique of the time, the musical atmosphere inwhich the composer grew up, the chronologicalposition of the work in the composer’s output, thecomposer’s response to the text in question, the styleof the time in general. And just because of thesebackground studies, I love versatility. I was never Of all the many opera roles and characterizationsyouhave assumed, are there any with which you feel aspecial identification or sympathy?I have always felt special sympathy for difficult,neglected, or complicated characters, or operas. Ithink, in all modesty, I have done a good deal to helpBusoni's Dukiur ruusius, which I List sang on stage in 1955, and Hindemith’s Mathis der Maler, which Isang in 1957-8, as well as Hindemith’s Cardillac, in1957. The complexity of music and charactersreflects so many musical struggles for developmentof musical material — it fascinates me. I should alsomention Dantons Tod by Gottfried von Einem, or thefirst performance of Hans Werner Henze’s operaElegy for Young Lovers, and its wonderful maincharacter, Gregor Mittenhofer.What is your view of the latest trends evident inmodern music today? For example, how will thevocalist, with his non-electronic music-making de¬vice, fit in with the trend towards electronic music ?If this question would be valid for the humanvoice, it would also be valid for all instruments in theorchestra. The human voice can make at least asmany varied and unusual sounds as, for example, aviolin, and certainly, a piano. The basic element ofsinging-music will always be a melodic one. If futuremusic feels it hus to dispense with the voice, it musteventually dispense with all orchestral instrumentsbased upon the natural tone system.Jennie Tourel, during her lecture-demonstration andresidence at the University of Chicago in November,described how it was necessary for her to learnthoroughly eight languages or more, in order toenhance her understanding of the repertoire. Do youfind this true?I am sorry to say that I cannot compete with MissTourel’s extraordinary language abilities. Besidesmy own language, I have an acceptable knowledge ofthree other languages.The nature of language — its treatment by thecomposer — is vital to the Lied, even more than inOpera. In general, the Lied as international Begriff(concept) encompasses only French, German, Rus¬sian, English, and the Scandinavian languages. Forthe interpretation of the Lied, one must be able toform the singing out of the words — special sounds ofvowels and consonants must be mastered so com¬pletely that transparency and the true sense of thewords is guaranteed. One should be able to expressthe essence of the language. Perhaps that is thereason why I spend most of my Lieder-singing time inmy own language.How do you initially approach learning and develop-ing a role of a piece to be sung ?Continued on Page Sevenw/#Arms Control LectureSUPERPOWER POSTURESIN STRATEGIC ARMSLIMITATION TALKSRichard N. PerleMember of the Professional staff of the UnitedStates Senate Sub-Committee on NationalSecurity and International Operations.THURSDAY, MARCH 11,19713:30 P.M.Breasted Hall Oriental Institute1155 East Fifty-eight StreetMr. Perle will deliver the sixth in a series ofpublic lectures in connection with the ArmsControl and Foreign Policy Seminar sponsoredby the Center for Policy Study of The Universityof ChicagoNo admission charge Tickets not required RIGHT ON CAMPUSFOR YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS LARGE ORSMALL - AIR, STEAMSHIP, TOURS, RAIL¬MIDWAY TRAVEL SERVICELOBBY" AD” BUILDINGTEL. 753-2301-02-03NO CHARGE FOR OUR SERVICESEXCEPT NOMINAL FEE FOR RAIL TICKETSWE WANT YOU TO JO IN 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 weda, to join us in the holy search for Truth. We believe thatall men should seek Truth by all just means. 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Harper 493-3493CATCH-22OH WHAT A LOVELYWARBUCK ROGERSReturns Again Next Wednesdayand Thursday in the LastEpisodes of this QuarterThe Jack Mulhall Fan Clubmeets and eats Pizzaduring the showing.Ida Noyes 9 pmFREE KIMBARKLIQUORSWINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINEST£®«&ss§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 HY3-33552/Grey City Journal/March 5, 1971Experimental Rock & New SingersEmerson, Lake and Palmer (CotillionSD 9040), McDonald and Giles (Cotil¬lion SD 9042) and King Progress byJackson Heights (Mercury SR 61331):Almost all the experimentation inrock music is going on in England, asthese three albums prove. The Niceand King Crimson were probably thetwo most innovative groups in rockduring the last two years. Keith Emer¬son of EL&P and Lee Jackson ofJackson Heights are from the Nice,and Lake of EL&P and McDonald andGiles are from King Crimson. Thesethree albums carry on the tradition ofthese two groups.EL&P are an innovative, mainlyinstrumental group. Keith Emerson isan amazing organ and piano playerand the group’s sound revolves aroundthis. Greg Lake plays a good guitar andPalmer’s drumming is adequate. Thebeauty of this album lies in the group’sversatility. They can play soft acousticmusic like “Lucky Man” with as muchproficiency as they play hard, loud,jazz-oriented rock, as in “Tank.”Emerson can make his organ an in¬tegral part of these two diverse areasof music.McDonald and Giles have made ahappier album than have EL&P, but itis not as satisfying musically. Some¬times it seems that EL&P take them¬selves too seriously but McDonald andGiles make it clear that they enjoyplaying music. This group also is veryversatile with soft “Is She Waiting?”and loud “Suite in C.” Mike Giles is afine drummer and his superb sense ofrhythm underplays the group’s entiresound. Ian McDonald, however, is theresident genius. He plays at least seveninstruments and wrote all but one ofthe songs.The Jackson Heights album is lessinteresting than the other two, becauseit doesn’t try as many different things.This group experiments almost totallywith acoustic music and thus has asofter sound. But sometimes it seemsthat they have limited themselves inthis sound and I can’t help but thinkthat Jackson Heights could use some ofEL&P’s and McDonald and Giles’ ver¬satility. However, in what they haveset out to do, Jackson Heights is justfine.Fire and Water by Free (A&M SP 4268)and Highway by Free (A&M 4287):To prove that not all English music isexperimental, here is Free. They arean old-time, hard rock band, with verylittle imagination, but enough talent tosucceed in their hard rock sound. On athree-minute single, they can play hardand fast and pet their lead singerscream without becoming boring.Their two hits, “All Right Now” (from Fire and Water) and “The Stealer”(from Highway) prove this admirably.With their singles, Free makes AMradio a little bit better but it’s hard tolisten to 35 minutes of straight singleswithout getting terribly bored.Jack-Knife Gypsy by Paul Siebel(Elektra 74081), Carly Simon (Elektra74082) and If I Be Your Lady by CarolHall (Elektra 74078):Elektra has found three good solosingers. Only Paul Siebel has releasedan album before and his added ex¬perience shows. The two women’s al¬ bums are hesitant and unsure. Both ofthem appear to have some talent, butthey need to develop more. CarlySimon in particular seems promising.Her songs have a universality thatCarol Hall’s lack and her voice is muchmore adaptable. Carol Hall is grating,nasal and phony, but her title song is sogood that even her voice cannot ruin itand in time, you get used to hernasality and pretentiousness.Paul Siebel hus been called a newBob Dylan. That is going a bit too far;he may be a new Tim Hardin, a new Eric Anderson. Paul writes relativelyinteresting songs, sounds a bit toomuch like Dylan at times and plays anadequate guitar. Every now and then,though, one of his songs works per¬fectly such as “Jasper and the Miners”where he tells a story of a madman whokills some miners because they mightdig too deep. His voice captures theright distance in this largely unbeliev¬able tale. Paul Siebel too needs moretime to develop, but he could besomeone to watch in the future.—The Great PumpkinFILMImitations, Good and BadPaul Mazursky’s Alex in Wonder¬land (at the Roosevelt) plays a lotbetter than it sounds. Basically, it’s animitation of Fellini’s 8V2. Donald Suth¬erland, in a fantastic performance,plays the director-figure (readMazursky) who has just come off of abig hit (by implication, Mazursky’sown abominable Bob & Carol & Ted &Alice, which has grossed about $20million) and can’t come up with anoth¬er idea. He has mother problems, wifeproblems, kid problems, money prob¬lems, newhouse problems.Fellini made a great movie out of thismaterial, and Mazursky has comeclose. Despite the basic thinness andlack of variety in the script (Mazurskyand co-author Larry Tucker reallycouldn’t come up with another idea)most of the sequences come off beau¬tifully, in a low-key hang-loose tone.There is an hilarious encounter be¬tween director Sutherland and a com¬pulsively with-it producer, played byMazursky himself. After Love Story ,Hollywood may be swinging away fromits hip-mod phase, andAIex in Wonder -land may become an historical recordrather than a decription of a per¬manent change. But it is a fas¬cinatingly effective and accurate pic¬ ture of the whole Southern Californialife style.Alex doesn’t strain for its laughs, theway B&C&T&A did, like a televisionsituation comedy in danger of beingcancelled. It bears the same relation¬ship to the earlier Mazursky-Tuckerfilm that Altman’s Brewster McCloudbears to his earlier M*A*S*H. In eachcase, the lousy mass-audience successgave the director the opportunity tomake a more personal, more relaxed,more graceful film. I highly recom-mendAIex in Wonderland .Investigation of a Citizen Above AllSuspicion , on the other hand, offers anevening as glum, tedious and dreary asDiane Gray, a soloist with the Mar¬tha Graham Company, and a memberof the Helen McGhee Company, willoffer a master class in Graham tech¬nique from 10:30 to 12 tomorrow in theIda Noyes Gym. Students $1, others $2.Miss Gray is presently completing amonth’s residence with the Dance De¬partment at the University of Wiscon¬sin at Milwaukee. its lengthy title. If it were possible to goto the film and experience only Gian-maria Volonte’s hilarious comic per¬formance and Ennio Morricone’s tensemusic, sans Elio Petri’s dull directionand script, it’d be great. But alas, it’s apackage deal.Investigation (at the Playboy) is es¬sentially an Italian imitation of Z, andwhile it lacks the mawkish sentimen¬tality of Z , it just about compensateswith sustained unpleasantness. Not theunpleasantness of a Bunuel or a Hitch¬cock, but the contrivances of a third-rate directorial mind that considersnastiness a substitute for honesty.—Charles FlynnMartha Graham has said, “Everydance is a kind of fever chart, a graphof the heart. My dance makes theinterior landscape visible.” The studyof primitive ritual confirmed her beliefin the natural expressiveness of move¬ment. The basis of her technique is theact of breathing: in exhalation, thetorso contracts; in inhalation, it islifted, released.DANCEA Graham Master Classthe OTIS PLUM BAND*ROCK DANCEFriday, March 5 9 p.m. - 12 p.m.75c admission with I.D. Ida Noyes HallIDA NOYES PROGRAM ROARD*from the same euphoric talent company who brought you Wilderness Road andthe Euphoria Blimp Works.w~ '" March 5, 1971/Grey City Journal/3ARTGloom & Naturein German Art“German Painting of the 19th century”, at the ArtInstitute is an extremely important exhibition and afair representation of a whole century of Germanpainting, from Caspar Friedrich to Lovis Corinth. Itis a personally exciting experience, since the showforces the viewer to make a complete transvaluationof what he had thought about German art. It containsboth the death of romanticism and the beginnings ofGerman Expressionism. Several things strike usfrom the outset. German painting is inferior toFrench painting of the same period. The Germanpainter is unable to confront nature directly, beinghindered by conventional notions of melancholy orthe sublime, so that the portraits are always superiorto the landscapes. Moreover, obscure painters likeWasmann and Leibl are better than the more famousones like Arnold Bocklin and Friedrich.The German School of the nineteenth century wasthe neo-Gothic idealism of the Nazarene painters andtheir followers, forerunners of the Preraphaelites.They are a school because they all congregated inRome and looked vaguely back to Durer and theEarly Renaissance for their inspiration. Like allimported or regressive movements, this was anartistic mutation interesting to the historian butaesthetically sterile. There is a splendid exhibit ofDurer engravings in another room and the briefestcomparison will reveal the poverty of the nineteenthcentury compared to the real thing.The main 19th-century tradition, which flourishedin France, was the confrontation of the artist withvisible external nature. This did not agree with theGerman temperament, which derived its energyfrom its own psychological depth and anguish, andfrom a tradition of idealism that renounced thatnatural world as unreal. In Germany it was thecentury of Hegel, of the world as Idea, and that wasnot conducive to a respect for the play of light andshadow in a forest of real trees. So there are manyindividual achievements here but no clear nationaltendency. The good paintings are as random anddisconnected as was the German Political Structureitself.The clear dialectic between the academy and theRefuses that marked French Painting had nocounterpart in Germany, since its Romanticism wasessentially a literary movement and not authentical¬ly viable in painting. The Romantic Idea, like theSymboliste idea in France, led so directly out of thevisible world and into the spiritual aether that nopainting based on such principles could live. Witnessthe decline of Gauguin as a painter after he found out that he had been adopted by the French symbolistes.With a couple of exceptions, the show can beunderstood in the simplest scheme: the portraits arevivid and expressive, and the landscapes are blandor absurd. Caspar David Friedrich applies Ossianicnotions of the melancholy sublime to nature andarrives at a slick and silly gloom that is surpassed byany of the illustrations of Great Expectations . Suchnotions kept these painters both from real psy¬chological expression through nature and from anyfertile contact with the natural world.In Joseph Koch we see the blandest imitation ofClaude and Poussin, classical figures fashionablyoverpowered by mannered landscape. The literaryencroachment on real landscape painting reaches itsnadir in his “Macbeth and the Witches.”Overbeck and Peter Cornelius represent the fa¬mous Nazarene school, regressive neo-Renaissanceattempts at simplicity and idealism but essentiallyimpoverished, being neither of the fifteenth nor of thenineteenth centuries. The Nazarenes and their schoolexiled themselves both from their country and theircentury, growing like hydroponic plants in the watersof Venice and Rome.In contrast, the small portraits and landscapes ofFriedrich Wasmann are of great beauty preciselybecause he is not influenced by any of the forms ofidealism or romanticism. They exhibit the utmostdelicacy of light and shade and they are untouched byconceptions of the sublime. Compare them with thepretentious Carl Carus, who could not work withoutgloomy Gothic ruins out of the Ossianic tradition:ideas about nature and not nature itself.Adolf von Menzel’s work is the best in the showbesides the portraits. His interior, “Room withBalcony,” is a view within his own house. His interestis in the effects of light in the real world, in theatersand outdoor crowds, and until 1870 (“The Wall of theStudio”) he holds out heroically against the fashion¬able gloom to which he finally succumbs. AnselmFeuerbach is a compelling portraitist, combiningbeyond all tradition a hypersensual interest in thefemale face with a classical, monumental figure anddrapery. But when we come to the famous ArnoldBocklin we are profoundly disappointed, the more sobecause he is an expert technician. Even in hisearlier paintings such as “Blue Venus” or “Self-Portrait with Death as Fiddler” the Idea overwhelmsthe sense of the painting and leaves the picture dead.In all these paintings the only visible life is in the eyesand expressive faces of the portraits, where the Ideais properly located in the sitter and not in thelandscape. The only life in Bocklin is in his own self-portrait, if we can detach it from that fiddlingskeleton.The portraits by Leibl, Thoma, and Sohn arebrooding and powerful, so expressive that we seedirectly into the minds of those characters, eventhough their bodies are vague and lifeless. Thoma’smoving portraits should be contrasted with hislandscapes, which are quasi-impressionistic andstereotyped. Wilhalm Trubner and Max Liebermann Menzel’s “The Room with a Balcony”are the “German Impressionists” but it is animpressionism of the brain only, after the amputa¬tion of the heart. Of Trubner’s four large canvassesonly the eyes of that lady are live, not looking out atthe world but inward, with visionary intensity, onsome inner life that the painter is incapable yet ofexpressing.The six paintings by Lovis Corinth are a perfectending to the show. In Corinth the latent ex¬pressionism of all the portraits becomes explicit andconscious. He gives us a self-portrait next to askeleton that somehow seems related to him as if itwere his own. He anticipates Egon Schiele and OscarKokoschka with such nervous brush strokes in theportrait of his father that the very nerves seem to belaid bare on the surface of the skin. His “RecumbentNude” is a powerful vision of the guilt and ecstacy ofsexual desire. Corinth represents the full self-discovery of the authentic expressionistic traditionwhich is latent in the whole show. With incursionsfrom Switzerland, Norway, and Austria, that spiritwould burst into the Bridge and Blue Rider move¬ments of the 1900’s.It is in short the painting of a nation which is sodisappointed with the difference between the realand the ideal that it simply could not deal with thereal world at all. Santayana read Hegel and pre¬dicted the rise of the Third Reich. In these pictureswe can see the psychic torment, the disbelief in theactual and present world, which would lead a nationto wage a suicidal war on that world in order toimpose the shape of some distorted and half-forgotten ideal upon it. The self-destructive anxietywhich flourished as art in German expressionismgerminates through the whole nineteenth century inthe eyes of these portraits, and those by LovisCorinth stand at the beginning of the true ex¬pressionist movement.— William CarpenterTAl-SAM-YANCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESQPFty !>A»LY11 A M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Orders tu tske eui(!3l^£asti63rMJU4j|J|^ THE CONTEMPORARYCHAMBER PLAYERS OF THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGORALPH SHAPEY • Music DirectorElsa Charlston • SoparanoStockhausen • Boulez • Nono • Xenakisfree Friday • March 5 • 8:30 P.M.Mandel Hall freesispmTrinity CollegeRome CampusJUNE 9 TO JULY 29 —$960 INCLUSIVESTIMULATING CURRICULUM • OUTSTANDING FACULTYETRUSCAN ARCHAEOLOGY PROGRAMSend for new 1971 brochureTrinity College/Rome Campus, Hartford, Conn. 06106Our thing is your ring —% Shjhm^bfWfifRS »OR sv *fAf$119 N Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZA ST. PATRICK'S SHOWFRI. MAR. 12, 8:30 • OPERA HOUSETickets: $6.50, 6.00, 5.50, 4.50, 3.50Tickets NOW at Box Office, or at all Ticketron outlets,H Montgomery Ward and Crawford Stores or dial T-l-C-K-E-T-S. ByMail send check or money order with self addressed envelope toOpera House, 20 N. Wacker, Chicago. III. FIRE SALE ATDESIGN INDIA, LTD!We’ ve Burned Down in Pipers Alley.We Must Pay Our Bills!No Insurance!SAVE!SAVE!EVERYTHING BELOW COST!All Merchandise is Top Quality50% OFF ON ALLMERCHANDISE:Indian DressesAfghan CoatsJewelryand many other vlauable items.50% SAVE 50%Pipers Alley is Closed Due to FireOther two locations open.DESIGN INDIA, LTD.2461 N. ClarkChicago525-3200 8058 North LincolnSkokie, Illinois676-25104/Grey City Joumal/March 5, 1971MUSICThe Best Rock Concert EverLast weekend I saw the best rock and roll concert Ihave ever seen. I have not forgotton concerts by theJefferson Airplane, the Who, Joe Cocker’s Mad Dogsand Englishmen, the Band, Crosby, Stills, Nash andYoung, Janis Joplin, Cream, or the GratefulDead. But all of these performances somehow seemunsatisfying, for now I have seen the Faces playgood, hard rock and roll.The Faces are led by Rod Stewart, the old leadsinger with the Jeff Beck Group who has recentlyrecorded two great solo albums on Mercury Records.Ron Wood, who used to play bass with Beck, is now onlead guitar. The other three Faces, Kenny Jones ondrums, Ron Lane on bass and Ian McLagan on organare all members of an old English group, the SmallFaces, who had moderate success.The group released a good rock album,First Step ,on Warners last year, but my interest in them waswhetted because of the beauty of Rod’s solo albums.But none of the group’s recorded material comesclose to the beauty of the music I heard in theAuditorium last Friday night.The Faces began with “You’re My Girl” and as themusic swelled bodies began swaying. Rod Stewart isa great showman. He flounces, prances and struts allover the place, constantly pushing his body with thebeat. He walks around as though he owns the stage.Even when he isn’t singing, you can’t take your eyesoff him for he dances like a madman, crawls aroundand plays humorous little pranks on the othermembers of the group.But even if you are watching Rod, you can’t helpbut hear the music that the other four members of thegroup are playing. Ron Wood is a magnificentguitarist, in the Eric Clapton-Jimi Hendrix category.He played a guitar solo that was so creative, so loudand so energetic that he audience watched with theirmouths hanging open. His slide guitar playing, particularly on “Around the Plynth,” was just asamazing. Ron can play fast, as fast as Alvin Lee, buthe also has as much taste and creativeness asClapton and Hendrix.Ian McLagan, hidden behind his immense organ,was less obtrusive than Wood, but he played sobeautifully, that he became more and more notice¬able as the concert progressed. He did not demandthe long solo spots that most instrumentalists seem tothrive on; instead he built the group’s sound to ahigher plane, backing up the guitar and voice withclarity and skill.As good as McLaughlin and Wood are, the group’smost talented instrumentalist is Kenny Jones, thedrummer. His breaks are amazingly clean andimmediate.Ron Lane on bass was hard to hear above the restof the group, but he did sing lead a few times and hisharmony bits were professional pleasant.While the basis of this group is indeed in¬strumental, what sets them off from everyone else isthat strutter, that great dancer, Rod Stewart. Rod issimply the best rock and roll singer I know. He oncecalled Joe Cocker “the gov’ner” — but Rod is now thepacesetter. He croons, wails and shouts so loudly, sogravelly and so intensely that you are sure he is goinghoarse. But instead, he gets better and better. Histrademark is a falsetto “ooooh” and every time hedelivered it, the audience “ooooh”ed right back athim, to Rod’s obvious amusement, complimentingwhat must be recognized as the voice of theseventies.On stage together, the Faces really enjoy them¬selves. But the audience was as important to thisconcert as the group. As the music got more andmore exciting, the entire first floor of the ornate,sedate Auditorium Theater became full of pulsatingdancing bodies. This spirit pushed the group on to Ron Wood and Rod Stewart in concertbetter and better music until, exhausted after twohours, the Faces stumbled off stage to tumultuousapplause. They got called back for encore afterencore until it was obvious that the group could playno longer.The faces have a new album,Long Player , out onWarners. If this album captures one-eight of theFaces on stage excitement, it will be a great album.The Faces may not have the name or popularity ofthe Rolling Stones, but they are rock’s best band in1971. And that’s saying a lot.— Mitch BobkinFILMGimme Shelter: An Apocalypse?Gimme Shelter, at the Esquire, is impressive.The directors, Albert and David Maysles and Char¬lotte Zwerin, previously made the near-masterpieceSalesman , and their new film is even better. AdrianMosser’s color blowup from 16mm to 35 is impec¬cable, as is the soundtrack. The Maysles and Zwerinhave developed a shooting style that iscinema-veritewhich at the same time imposes a meaningful formon the events being photographed. This brings theMaysles and Zwerin closer in style to Jean Rouch andChris Marker in France than to their Americancolleagues, the Ricky Leacock Don Pennebaker andGerry Temaner Gordon Quinn teams.Gimme Shelter started out as a straight accountof the Rolling Stones’ American tour of November -December 1969, and to judge from the January 21,1970 Rolling Stone , when the directors hit Altamont,they still thought they were shooting another paeanto the Woodstock Nation. But they and their cam¬eramen did have the presence of mind to catch thetransformation of the festival into a bummer.Altamont was not the Apocalypse, or even anapocalypse, and to call Gimme Shelter an anti-Consciousness III movie would be to slant it morethan its directors intend. But the film is structured ina way that coldly examines the premises of thecounter culture. The directors begin the film byforcing Mick Jagger to examine his public person¬ality, as he watches footage in an editing room.Jagger remains an enigma throughout the film, bothin his mesmerizing, prancing act on stage and in hisglazed response to the film he is shown.Appropriately, as he leaves the editing room atthe end, the frame freezes and we move into his eyes, until the film grain becomes an abstract pattern ofcolors.Jagger’s pose as the incarnation of ultimate eviland androgynous sexuality seems more a stagedevice — though a pretty powerful one — tiiananything else, and what I find most appealing abouthim is his sly sense of humor. At one of the pressconferences in Gimme Shelter , a reporter askswhether he is “more satisfied now — musically,sexually, and philosophically.” Jagger replies, “Se¬xually, yes,” in a tone reminiscent of early MarlonBrando and late James Dean. What Altamontdemonstrated more than anything was that most ofthe people who came to see and hear the Stoneswanted the public and pubic version of Jagger. Sowhen he pleads with the crowd to cool it, they don’t.Concerned, rational, peaceful Mick Jagger justdidn’t fit in with their image of him. It’s the point atwhich an idol loses control of his public by steppingout of character.It’s easier to talk about Gimme Shelter as filmthan as social-cultural document. One of the moststriking shots is of Dick Carter, owner of thespeedway, watching Jagger on stage. Carter oc¬cupies the right of the frame, in the background, andJagger is on the left, in the foreground, and the focusshifts back and forth between them. The shotbeautifully expresses many of the tensions in thesituation and in the film. As in the press conferences,new phenomena refuse to fit into old forms. Havingold-line reporters ask Mick Jagger questions at aregular press conferences, new phenomena refuse tofit into old forms. Having old-line reporters ask MickJagger questions at a regular press conference is idiotically useless; predictably, the results arefunny. Similarly, Dick Carter would obviously like tounderstand what is happening at his speedway, butcan’t.Unfortunately, the Stones were not at theirmusical best during the concerts filmed (principallyMadison Square Garden), although in the course ofthe film we hear “Jumpin’ Jack Flash,” “Love inVain,” “Sympathy for the Devil,” “Under MyThumb,” “Satisfaction,’’“Gimme Shelter,” and“Honky Tonk Women.” There’s also a brief side tripto Muscle Shoals where we hear a new song, “WildHorses,” the most interesting of the lot. The warm-upappearance of Ike and Tina Turner at Altamont wasthe musical high point of the film, just as surely asthe appearance of the Jefferson Airplane was the lowpoint.Like Tom Wolfe’s Radical Chic and NormanMailer’s Armies of the Night, Gimme Shelter is anexamination of the connections between the super-star sensibility and the power of violence. It’s a studyof what happens when various components of theGreat American Melting Pot (hip people, Hell’sAngels, straights) get together. It’s about the strangefascination we feel when something awful, that wehave no power over, is about to happen.Gimme Shelter ads its final coup de grace when itends with shots of people walking to Altamont thatmorning, implying that we will continue to wanderblindly and helplessly into things like Altamont. Isaid earlier that Altamont was not the Apocalypse,and it wasn’t. But what it meant is infinitely moreimportant than what it was. It’s just shot away.—Charles FlynnUNIVERSITY ORCHESTRAUNIVERSITY CHORUSEugene Narmowr, ConductorSymphony No. 101 HaydnNobilissima Visione Suite HindemithTe Deum Verdi graphicsprivate saleexceptionally priced etchings, lith¬ographs,serigraphs - signed, numbered,vasarely, clave, hartung, pomodoro,ortega, zadkine, soto, etc.call evenings, Sunday 955-8353Mandel HallSaturday, March 6, 19718:30 p.m.ADMISSION FREEi 'ii March 5, 1971/Grey City Journal/51Call TheWi ngs of ManMan.Peggy JohnsonEastern’s Campus Representative can put itall together for you. When you want to followthe team. Sun, ski, surf, or celebrate. Or gohome for a change.Our Representative can handle your flightreservations. Or get you an Eastern Youth IDCard good for 25% off regular coach fare to anycity Eastern serves in the U.S.A. and Canada.(And that gives you reserved space, no stand¬ing by, to cities like Atlanta, Tampa, Birming¬ham, Charlotte, Nashville, Nassau, and SanJuan!) Or arrange a Charters Unlimited deal foryour whole group where you take over a wholejetliner!493-5543Just ring up and wing out.The Wings of Man'THE WINGS OF MAN" IS A REGISTERED SERVICE MARK OF EASTERN AiR LINES, INC. 13SUN 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.CUIOne N. LaSalle St.Chic. 60602FR 2-2390798-0470^1^GOLDCIT Y INNMaroon****it* New Hours:& lunch 11:30 AM - 2:30PM* dinner 2:30 PM - 9:30 PM* CLOSED WEDNESDAY* "A Gold Mine of Good Food"** Student Discount:^ 10% for table service* 5% for take home| Hyde Park's Best Cantonese Food* ******************** DO NOT ENTER» » You like people»» ► Are willing to listen totheir problems■» ► Want to learn how tohelp them» * Are not looking for com¬pensationsRR > But are willing to pre¬pare for a life of dedication toothers by bringing to them the“good news” of Jesus' life,death, and resurrection. Thismeans prayer, work, study, andcontinued self-giving,lifeof theContact:Bro Kevin O'Malley, C PPassionist Community, Dept A5700 N. Harlem AveChicago. Ill 60631493-25591(near Harper Court)* Eat more for less. ** (Try our convenient take-out orders.) **5228 Harperh PREGNANT?Need Help?For assistance in obtaining alegal abortion immediately inNew York City at minimal cost24 hours a day, seven days aweek tor confidential and per¬sonal service.Cell:(215) 878-5800ABORTION REFERRALSERVICE (ARS), INC.Contemporary European Films Lion in Winter Mar. 6Black Orpheus Mar. 7THE LION IN WINTER/BLACK ORPHEUSCobb Hall 7 & 9:15STARTS TODAY!The DaydreamerandThe Strangerwith Marcello Mastriani(in French with English subtitles) DESKS -BOOKCASESSWIVEL CHAIR - LAMPS - TABLESNEW & USEDCOMING 2/19WINGSwith Clara Bow,Richard Arlen,Buddy RogersOne of the greatest silent motionpicture's ever made. Check youriocal papers for listing.THE BIOGRAPH THEATRELincoln Dl 8-4123Plan to visit us soon. Admissionat all times is only $1.25. Bringyour Friends ^ cUUIPMcNIC BRAND Jeil &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. card6/Grey City Journal/March 5, 1971 SHORE AUTOREBUILDERS,INC.1637 EAST 75th STREET. CHICAGO, ILL.643-8066SOUTH SIDE'S FINEST BODY SHOPQUALITY WORK AT COMPETITIVE PRICESOUR I7TH YEAR IN BUSINESSDONALD J. ROLLHEISERVarious Notes on A Versatile VoiceContinued from Page OneMostly by reading first the words and then themusic. Many things have to be taken into consid¬eration at the same time. I try to get a photographicpicture of the music first, to be able to work out quitefreely everything with which the work is concerned.Have you any observations about concert audiencesas they are now, in relation to what they were whenyou began singing publicly? How do audiences varyby country or region ?The percentage of young people in the audienceshas changed considerably. A very good example isJapan. At the beginning of my career, more thanthree quarters of the audience were older people.Today, I observe more than half of the audience asbeing under thirty.A propos Japan, they have an incredible power ofconcentration, and sit for two hours of music withouta move, but they are anything but uninvolved. As acontrast, French audiences are most temperamental— intellectual, but also inflammable. However, thetension has to be constantly nourished to be kept up.In other words, there are no two publics in the worldwhich arealike.Do you believe that with increasing costs of produc¬tion and operation, and corresponding increases inticket prices — with the United States as an extremecase here — classical music is pricing itself out of themarket, and discouraging attendance by its potentialfuture audience, young people?There is more than a grain of truth in your words,I am afraid. Of course, it is most difficult to make anypredictions. In any case, I am hoping for a change.And I wish I would be able to convince managers of Fischer-Dieskau as Dr Schoen in “Lulu”the necessity to arrange for at least two to three rowsin each concert performance at lower prices foryoung people and students.How do you evaluate the crop of new vocalistsemerging today, particularly baritones?We have never had such a large number of greatbaritones as today. Among them are many Ameri¬cans. This is due partly to the methods of training.Relatively recently, the workshop was introduced asa training ground, which has helped a lot to enlargethe student’s experience long before he is ready toappear on a really professional level.Of the many halls in which you have sung, which, doyou feel, are the best acoustically? The American and Japanese halls. And, withoutwanting to flatter, I must mention as especially goodby these standards the Auditorium in Chicago, aswell as Carnegie Hall in New York. The Japanesehave basically one great concert hall, which com¬bines the best features of the two I just mentioned,and this is not to be bettered, to my mind.Have you ever tried your hand at composition ?No, and I never will.When the rigors of tours and operatic engagementsare lessened, how do you spend your free time?Mostly by studying new pieces or appreciatingthe opportunity of listening to works which havenothing to do with my professional career. Free time,in the sense of a Riviera vacation, does not suit mytemperament. I do spend my two months at home,when not studying, with painting and writing. At themoment, I am writing a book about the history of theSchubertlied.Are you generally optimistic about the future ofserious music throughout the world — about thefuture of the world in general — and does this haveany effect on your art ?Let me start backwards. It has no effect upon myart. And basically, if I did not have the experience ofenthusiastic, hopeful, and trusting young people, Iwould also not be able to have much faith in thefuture of serious music today, as tone material ispretty much exhausted. I certainly see no answer inpolitical involvement as a way out. New forms, newcontents must be found in order to keep up a creativeforce which drives the course of musical writing tonew life.Culture VultureMUSICTonight, the Contemporary Chamber Players will perform Boulez' "Improvizations sur Mallarme" Stockhausen's "Kreurspiel," Nono's "Polifonica Monodia Rlt-mica" and Xenakis' "Atrees". Ralph Shapey will conduct.Mandel Hall at 8:30.The University of Chicago Symphony Orchestra andChorus, conducted by Richard Narmour, will performworks by Verdi, Haydn, and Hindemith. Tomorrow at 8:30in Mandel Hall.Giulini will conduct the Chicago Symphony Orchestra inworks by Mozart this weekend.The Fine Arts Quartet will perform Monday, March 8 atthe Goodman Theater at 8:15. Works by Arriaga, Mozart,Beethoven and Boccherini.Sunday, March 7, the Pierce Tower Series Concert willfeature instrumental ensembles at 3 pm; free tickets atReynolds Club.Also March 7, at 8:30, Alexander Djokic will give a violinrecital in Mandel Hall; free, sponsored by the MusicalSociety.POPSteppenwolf will be at the Syndrome, 1513 S Wabash,tonight at 8 They will be appearing with Flash (?) and'Giant City (?). Tickets S5.Poeo and Linda Ronstadt will present a country rock showat the Auditorium Theater Sunday at 7 pm. Tickets $3.50$6 50James Taylor, the cover boy of Time last week, willappear at the Syndrome next Friday with Carol King and JoMama 8 pm, tickets $5. A sure sell-out.Rick Nelson will be at Mister Kelly's through Sunday. Ifyou want to see him, go to the late show and you won't haveto pay for the expensive dinner.Seals and Crofts will be at the Quiet Knight, 953 Betmont,through Sunday. Doc Watson will start on Wednesday.Every Monday — Mctan Forrest Stage Group EveryTuesday —Siegal-Schwall Blues Band Reservations —3489509.The Second Coming will perform at Circle Campus'sCircle Center, 750 S Halsted, March 6at 9 pm. Admission $2.ARTThe Art Institute will exhibit photoserigraphs by LarryStark from March 6 through April 25, in Gallery 106.Be a MurdererUniversity Theatre is holding opentryouts for its major production ofspring quarter, “Little Murders”, writ¬ten by Jules Feiffer and directed byRobert Hopkins.“Little Murders,” writes Feiffer, “isa post-assassination play, set in the ageof urban paranoia where motivelessmass-murder is as much a part of theatmosphere as air and noise pollution.”The play “blisters the hell out of sex,marriage, religion, psychiatry, law,and last but far from least, a troubledAmerican family struggling for surviv¬al in the world wild with violence.”The tryouts will be held Sunday,March 7th, 2 to 5, and Tuesday, March9th, 7 to 9 in Reynolds Club Theatre,3rd floor, 5706 University Avenue.Scripts are available in the UT office,Room 304 of Reynolds Club. If youcannot make the tryout times or wishfurther information, please cal! Uni¬versity Theatre, 753-3581. A selection of Japanese prints will be on exhibit at the ArtInstitute, in Gallery 114, through March 25.An exhibit of Japanese hanging scrolls and handscrollsfrom 14th through 19th centuries continues in Gallery 116 atthe Art institute.Drawings and Lithographs by Jean Dubuffet continues atthe Art Institute in Gallery 107.The Art Institute also features an exhibit of Etchings andLithographs by Paul Klee; Gallery 107Paintings by Miuoko Ito are on display at the Hyde ParkArt Center, 5236 Blackstone.Jesus Raphael Soto's optical constructions at the Museumof Contemporary Art, thru March 28. Also, "Four ArtistsPaint Their Outdoor Murals Inside the Museum": the publicmay see the work in progress and converse with the artists.German Paintings of the Nineteenth Century at the ArtInstitute through March 28.Black Experience at the Bergman Gallery featuresdiverse black artists' works, thru Mar, 20.The Renaissance Society Gallery in Goodspeed Hallshows "Venice in Peril" and "Views of Venice: Canaletto,Whistler and Masson."Oil paintings by artists from Midway Sutdios now hang inthe C Shop. The changing displays will feature works by UCartists; they are for sale and the artists can be reached•through Midway Studios.Armor from the George F Harding Museum at the ArtInstitute through March 21. Located in the A MontgomeryWard Gallery.The Chicago Gallery of Photographs 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.Art after Art, an exploration of modern and contemporaryprocessing of past art, at the Renaissance Society,Goodspeed Hall, 1010 E 59th, March 9 through April 17.GUITAR LESSONSThe Spring Series of guitar and banjo lessons forbeginners and other levels begin at the Old Town School ofFolk Music, 909 W Armitage. For info call 525-7472 or 5257621.DANCEA master class in Graham technique will be giventomorrow from 10:30 til noon by Diane Gray, a soloist withthe Martha Graham Company,, in the Gym at Ida Noyes.Students $1,,others $2. For additional information call ElviMoore, x3574 (See box in this issue).Judy Joseph, Ken Brelsfoard, and Dance Theater Company. Third Floor Theater, 22 E. Van Buren, "Eros Smith,"last performance this Sunday at 4 pm. Students $1, otners $2.(Reviewed in last week's Journal.)Ballet of Sybil Shearer. National College of Education 2840Sheridan, Evanston. Saturday at 8:30. (This was soldoutbefore the newspapers announced one of Miss Shearer'sinfrequent concerts. She is expected to perform here duringFOTA week.)American Ballet Theater. Auditorium Theater, March 17-28. Show student ID at the box office before eachperformance to obtain one of the limited number of seatsavailable to students at $3 off the top three prices. Theseseats were made available by the American Ballet TheaterFoundation of New York.See the March issue of Dance Magazine for a story aboutthe Chicago Dance Festival, produced by Hyde Parker JudySagan. The story is written by the Journal's inimitablePaula Meinetz Shapiro.DRAMAMarching Song has opened at the Goodman Theater andwill run through April 4. Tuesday through Thursday andSunday at 7:30. Friday and Saturday at 8:30. Thursdaymatinee at 2. .Waiting For Godot will be performed by the LoyolaUniversity Theater Department, 6525 N Sheridan. Fridayand Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday at 7:30.A Delicate Balance will be presented at the Beverly ArtsCenter Auditorium, 2153 W 111th. March 5 and 6at 8:30.The Goodman Theater Studio Company will presentMemorandum through March 6. Friday and Saturday bothat 8:30. Theater is at 220 S Columbus Dr.The Free Theater company o! Chicago is ending its run ofAchilles, a rock canata by Robert Perrey. Sunday at 7 and 9and Monday at 8, through March. In March, Aesop's Fablesby William Russo opens, Sundays 7 8, 9 and Mondays 7:30and 9. Wednesdays in March a» 7:30 and 9 their first work,Civil War, which they did for FOTA last year. The theater Islocated at 3257 N Sheffield, Phone 929-6W0Oh Coward: Will continue the Happy Medium, 901 N Rush.Second City revue this month is Picasso's Moustache.Mrozek's Tango will run at The Playhouse, 315 W North,through April, 751-9643.The Me Nobody Knows continues at the Civic Theater,Washington and Wacker. This is the Chicago production ofcurrent Mew v’n>'V Ohi* award-winning rock music*!based on the creative writings of school children from theghotto. Tickets $4-7.50. Call 726-7890. Grease, a 1950's rock musical, has opened at the KingstonMines Theater, 2356 N Lincoln.The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds at the Ivanhoe, 3000 N Clark, 8 pm. Runs through April25. Irene Oailey, star of The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon-Marigolds, will conduct seminars about theplay and about theater in general after performances,interested groups should call 248 6800.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.The all male black musical Buck White continues at TheChurch, 5400 Blackstone. Thursday at 8:30. Friday and 4 and8:30. Saturday at 7:30 and 10:30. Sunday at 4 and 7:30.Tickets $2.50-$4.50 with $1 student discount except onSaturday.At the Organic Theater, 2259 N Lincoln, Candide continuesthrough March 27. Tickets $2,50; students on Wednesdayand Thursday nights get a $1 discount.Making Monday and 19 Other Very Short Plays andSilence, by New Chicago City Players, 615 Wellington.Chicago premiere of works by William Saroyan and HaroldPinter, respectively. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 andSunday at 7:30. $2.50. Students, $2.00. Void Where Prohibited by Law. A satire of commercialtelevision. Performances at the Video Lounge of the RushUp, 907 Rush, Sunday through Thursday at 9 and 10:30$2.50), and Friday and Saturday at 9, 10:30, midnight and1:30 ($3.00).TALKIESOn campus, DOC will present Josef von Sternberg's TheDevil is a Woman, tonight at Cobb, 7:15 and 9:30.CEF will present Harvey's The Lion in Winter Saturday at7 and 9:15; also Sunday, same times, Camus' BlackOrpheus.A series of films on the Venceremos Brigade and theCuban Revolution will be shown at the Blue Gargoyletonight from 8 to 12.The 3-Penny Cinema, 2424 N Lincoln features inter¬national prize-winning films every Sunday at 1 pm. ThisSunday will feature Henri-Georges Clouzet's Wages of Fearand Jim Hall's Packingtown, USA.ROCK DANCEThe Ida Noyes Program Board will sponsor a rock dancetonight in Ida Noyes Hall with the Otis Plum Band. Thedance will start at 9 pm and admission will be 75 cents with aUniversity ID card.A dance might be just the thing to get you out of the winterdoldrums, so give it a try.OOP RECORD(Sells the Cheapest Records Aroundand we gottaSALE!Records in stock and anything orderedfrom the Schwann Catalogue10% OFFUsual SaleUst Price Price4.98 3.29 2.965.98 3.99 3.596.98 4.49 4.04From Now to the End of the QuarterSTUDENT COOPieynolds Club Basement,March 5, 1971/Grey City Joumal/7' ( *. 1i ...... . ..... .. ........tLAST CHANCE!TO BUY WINTER QUARTER TEXTSWinter Quarter TextbooksThe bookstore has made every effort to have a sufficient quantity of required andrecommended titles in stock for this term. Because of the limited amount of space we mustbegin returning texts no later than March 10, 1971. Please make every effort to purchaseany needed texts before then. After the 10th we can not be responsible for courserequirements for the Winter quarter. We will be open Saturday, March 6th, 9:00 AM - 1:00PM.If you do not have a charge account with our store, you are invited to open one now,purchase your texts, and pay for them within thirty days.UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTOREcontemporary european films 6:30 8:30 10:30c , „ ,,, YELLOW SUBMARINESaturday March 13 CobbBecause we believe it, watching thefilm is very much like taking part insome encounter group- there’s noway to escape the image on thescreen, nor to deny its truth. ' TEST POWER!Cowles*\ •*4 ' TEST PREPARATIONBOOKSDental Aptitude Test•] : h- I hs ■. WHEN there’s so muchriding on the results, gointo that exam in completecontrol. Plan ahead with theonly study guides that ac¬curately simu'ate the testyou’ll soon face — in bothformat and level of diffi¬culty. No clutter. No frills.Just the facts you need topass. Confidence gives abig edge.Insist on QualityInsist on Cowles Grad. BusinessSchool AdmissionLaw School AdmissionMedical CollegeAdmission**Miller Analogies TestG.R.E. Aptitude TestNTE Common ExamReg./Grad. NursingSchool Admission81/2"x 11"* Paper • *$4.95 **$4.45, all others $3.95 eachSee these and many others atyour local bookstoreCOWLES BOOK COMPANY, INC.The Rolling StonesSHELTERDirected by David Maysles Albert Maysles Charlotte Zwerin4-TRACK STEREO SOUND SYSTEM w [squire |t OAK STREET ■ Far East KitchenChinese & AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen Daily 1 2 - 10Fri. & Sat. 12 -12Closed Monday53rd & Hyde Park Blvd955-2229 SEX IS YOUR BUSINESS(BIRTH CONTROL IS OURS)We believe you’re entitled to your privacy when it comes to buyingcontraceptives. We’re a nonprofit family planning agency and weoffer you contraceptives through the privacy or the mails. Wespecialize in men’s products (including two new European im¬ports)—but we have nonprescription foam for women, too. And awide assortment of books and pamphlets to answer your questionson birth control, family planning, the population problem andecology.Interested? Sendfive condom brands,for full details. $4 for package of mixed samples (3 each ofds, including both British imports) or writeThis program is endorsed by the Community and Family StudyCenter of the University of Chicago.■ POPULATION SERVICES. INC.I 105 N. Columbia St.. Dept. J-6 , Chapel Hill, N. C. Z7514I Gentlemen: Please send me Sample package (remittancei enclosed Full details without obligation.j Name -City Zip8? Grey City Journal/March 5. 1971