Volume 79, Number S3 The University of Chicago Friday, April 30, 1971The Chicago MaroonFunding part two: private sourcesBy SUE LOTHMoney is the grease that lubricates life ofthe mind at the University. Although gov¬ernment funding accounts for some 25 per¬cent of the University budget, another fifthof the budget is represented the gifts andgrants solicited from private foundations,businesses, and individuals through the of¬fice of development.In contrast to declining federal support,more private money is coming in than everbefore. Since a ten-year fund drive beganin 1965-66, the University has raised $220million of its $360 million goal.Even making corrections for inflation,the amount of money brought in has in¬creased steadily over the last five years.Still, as President Edward Levi noted inthe State of the University address lastFebruary, additional dollars “do not, bythemselves, directly solve the particularbudget problems” faced this year.Basically, the problem is to collectenough “unrestricted funds”. These re¬sources are used to finance student aid(this year about $5.5 million), faculty sala¬ries, the housing deficit, and such odds andends as relocating the bookstore and UCPress, converting the boilers from soft tohard coal burners, reseeding the quad¬rangles in spring, and keeping the lightson.The University received $22,300 million ingifts and pledges between July 1 1970 andMarch 31 1971, $1.5 million more than thatcollected during the same period last fiscalyear.1116 amount .of unrestricted funds, how¬ Steve AokiVICE PRESIDENT FOR DEVELOPMENT MICHAEL CLAFFEY: Claffey hopes corporations will provide $1.5 million in un¬restricted funds.ever, dropped sharply from $8,443 millionin the first nine months of 1969-70 to $1,605million so far this year.The source of the drop is easy to spot:The Ford Foundation’s $25 million chal¬lenge grant accounted for $7.1 million ofthe unrestricted funds in 1969-70.The challenge grant program was in¬ stituted to help good universities get better.It worked, according to vice-president fordevelopment Michael Claffey. He cited thegraduate department ratings compiled bythe American Council of Education (ACE).“The truth is, we have moved up in thoseratings,” he said — as have two other Fordchallenge grant schools, Stanford and New York University (NYU).The challenge grant program wasdropped, according to Claffey. becauseMcGeorge Bundy, present head of theFoundation, adamantly opposed the pro¬gram. “The problem is to replace Ford,”Claffey said.Continued on page 5Affelder wins in SGelection by landslidebruce KaDeNEW STUDENT GOVERNMENT MEETING: New president Dave Affelder and newmember of CORSO Eric Ruhin in rapt (attention.National moratorium planned May 5By JOE FREEDMANIn commemoration of the deaths at Kentand Jackson States and the outcry againstthe Cambodian “incursion” May 5 has beendesignated a day of moratorium and com¬memoration nationwide.Activities here on campus are beingplanned by the Ad Hoc May 5 Committee,chaired by Barry Kellman ’74, new vicepresident of student government (SG).In a press statement the committee de¬clared “a moratorium on all business asusual”, and urged “professors and studentsto postpone classes in order to free them¬selves for memorial services.”Rev Spencer Parsons, dean of Rockefel¬ler Chapel, has offered the chapel as aplace to conduct memorial services for theslain students, in addition to the services,beginning at 1 pm, there will be speakers,music, and guerrilla theater.At 2:30 pm buses will leave from Rock¬ efeller Chapel to take people to a downtownrally. Demonstrators will march from theCivic center down State St to the FederalBuilding.University demonstrators will be joinedby those from Northwestern, University ofIllinois, Circle Campus, and Loyola Univer¬sity.May 5 will also be the concluding date forthe May “actions” in Washington, DC. The“actions” sponsored by the May Day Col¬lective, a group of anti-war groups, willfocus on disrupting business as usual in thecapital. The omjective is “to stop the gov¬ernment”, if “the government won’t stopthe war”.Activities in Washington will begin May 1with a “people’s festival” in Rock CreekParK. May 2 win feature a mass raiiy oiseveral organizations arriving in Wash¬ington from across the country in an at¬tempt to convince President Nixon to ac- By STEVE STRAHLERDavid Affelder ’72 was elected presidentof Student Government (SG) by an over¬whelming margin at its first meeting fornewly elected representatives Tuesdaynight.Affelder gained 66 votes, handily de¬feating former SG vice-president, GerardLeval ’72, who got 26 votes, Jonathan Ro-senbloom ’73, nine votes, andlSteve Froiken’73, one vote. His term will run through the1971-72 academic year.In a speech before the assembly, Affelder,who has been affiliated with Students forViolent Non-Action, said SG’s main prob¬lem was its present irrelevancy to the stu¬dent body, which opinion was expressed bythe other candidates.He said he wanted to “encourage cauc¬uses” in order to enlarge student body par¬ticipation in SG. In conjunction with this hecept the People’s Peace Treaty.The main part of the actions, on May 3-4,will be the disruption of traffic and block¬ing of entrances to government buildings,in an attempt to impede the functioning ofthe government.Other activities planned locally for Mayinclude a May Day Rally at WashingtonPark. The rally, to begin at 1 pm, is spon¬sored by the Black Panther Party (BPP),and is being held “in support of chairmanBobby Seale and all political prisoners.”Speakers at the rally will include BobbyRush, deputy minister of defense, BPP;Yvonne King, communications secretary,BPP; Mike James of Rising Up Angry;Jackie Robinson of the movement for ademocratic military; Mickey Leaner, An¬gela Davis defense committee; and LeonPerry, of the University Front for Cairo,Illinois. repeated his proposal to hold SG meetingsat noon on the quads. He said that such apolicy would “encourage skeptics of SG tocome and air their ideas”.Affelder also favors student bail funds tobe supplied by SG. When asked from wherethe money would come, he replied thatSVNA is preparing to appropriate an initialsum of $800 for the project.Asked whether he favors an enlargedprogram of inviting political speakers tospeak on the campus under SG sponsor¬ship, Affelder replied that he “favors anenlarged program of anything”.In other elections, Barry Kellman, ’74,Hitchcock, was elected vice-president, andToodie Connors ’73, of Blackstone, waselected treasurer.Secretary of the undergraduate house forthe coming year is Evie Hutt ’74, whileCliff Marbut, medicine, will become secre¬tary of the graduate house.Members elected to the committee onrecognized student organizations (CORSO),which disburses funds to campus groups,are Carlos Dabezies, anthropology, chair¬man; David Moberg, anthropology; EricRubin ’72; Vinton Thompson, evolutionarybiology; and Alex Zagarell, Humanities.Members of the election and rules (E&R)committee include Cynthia Ward ’73, chair¬man, Tom Campbell ’73, Amos Bien ’72,Amy Ryan ’72, and Joseph Hopkins, anthro¬pology.Also elected to office were members ofthe SFA court, John David Stone ’72, ChiefJustice, and Robert Bixby, law.Other committee elections were post¬poned due to the length of the meeting.In other business, the assembly endorsedthe May 5 national moratorium honoringthose killed at Kent State and JacksonState, 61-2.In other SG business, the Student-Facul-ty-AdminiStration iSFAj couFt ruled Thurs¬day night that the election of seven assem¬bly members whose candidacy forms wereContinued on page 4OSA S!S«A Mere $3.59 PRESENTS40% OFFLIST STS i 5131—44 Records$7.16BELLININORMASUTHERLAND/HORNEOSA 1394 JOAN SUTHERLANDLUCIA DILAMMERMOORNrsiM? < 'i-ROBERT MERRi:■>/ vjlt'f':MN PRITCHARD Hi*4*AT#ftALL OF THE ABOVE 3 RECORDS SETS: $10.77 EachTHE ART OF THE PRIMA DONNAJOANSUTHERLANDr066 1214CM tire MFG. LIST vs. LOWE'S PRICE2.98 1.79 6.98 ...4.193.98 2.39 9.98 ...5.984.98 ....2.99 10.98.... ...6.585.98 ....3.59 11.98.... ...7.54t * ,V»NTHE MIKADOTHE D OYLY CARTE OPERA COMPANY jOSA 120! XPAS 71046• TtMO ft£\ ,*VMAIMTOVAIMI’SGOLDEN HITSCHARGEWITH Gash A vf »icA»oRECORDSOPEN SUNDAY 12 TO HYDE PARK1444 E. 57thMU 4-150552/Tbe Chicago Maroon/April 30, 1971limited for graduatesUNIVERSITY THEATER DIRECTORAnnette Fern as she appeared in last (summer’s production of Under Milkwood.Steve Aoki By LISA CAPELLGraduate students will face a more com¬petitive job market this year. Jobs do exist,though the chances for getting a firstchoice job are not very good.Popular geographic areas such as SanFrancisco, Boston and Seattle have espe¬cially tight job markets. Stringent statelegislatures and budgetary problems poseobstacles to PhD’s applying for teachingposjtions.Candidates for graduate degrees “willhave to be more mobile and willing to workin other parts of the country,” said AnitaSandke, director of career counseling andplacement.“It’s not a question of not getting a job,but a matter of being more flexible. Butbecause of his (a University student’s)training he can get a job,” she said.Gerald Poggi, of business-placement,concurred with Mrs Sandke concerning thegeographical flexibility necessary thisyear. “People will literally have to wearUT director contract allowed to expireDean of students Charles O’Connell willnot renew Annette Fern’s contract as Uni¬versity Theatre director when it expires atthe end of the summer.Miss Fem, who took over as director inSeptember, said she felt “the decision wasmade too soon.“I haven’t had a chance to show what myideas are about the theatre.“Mr O’Connell made the decision basedon factors not connected with the theatre.“His concept of what the theatre shouldbe and my concept of what the theatreshould be are quite different.” Miss Fern added that she “was sur¬prised” at O’Connell’s decision.O’Connell declined to comment on hisreason for not renewing Miss Fern’s con¬tract but did say that he would appoint anew director after consulting with the Uni¬versity Theatre board and the faculty advi¬sory committee of University Theatre.The two University Theatre productionsMiss Fern has directed this year are Ib¬sen’s Peer Gynt and Schnitzler’s La Ronde.Prior to being selected as UniversityTheatre director last June in a procedure that involved interviewing large numbersof candidates by a student-faculty com¬mittee, iMss Fern served as assistant ref¬erence librarian and bibliographer for theperforming arts at the University.She began acting in 1952 with the Play-makers in Detroit. She first directed in 1958while at Reed College, Portland, Oregon.Miss Fern has been active with Univer¬sity Theatre and Court Theatre since 1964.On campus she also has appeared with theRenaissance Players and the CollegiumMusicum. out their shoes. They have to pound thepavement, be aggressive, and have theirresume in order,” he said.“I think if you are aggressive and assertyourself you’ll get something,” Poggi con¬tinued.He stressed that one should “assert one’sassets and this is done by resumes and per¬sonal interviews.” Poggi felt it is very im¬portant to read the want-ads. “They haveto be read with regularity and carefully”but the opportunities do exist, he said.Both Poggi and Mrs. Sandke emphasizedthat a degree from the University of Chi¬cago is a good one. “There is no need tofeel inferior,” said Poggi.Jobs for PhD’s are tight especially in sci¬ences, said Mrs Sendke.Sidney Verba, professor of political sci¬ence said a PhD in political science is alsofacing a tight job market. “People who fiveyears ago would have no trouble getting toplevel jobs today will have to settle for adace less prestigious,” he said. He saidthere was a cutting back in schools acrossthe country.“One thing is clear. It is a nationwidephenomena,” Verba stated.Most attribute the competitive job situ¬ation to the state of the economy. NicolasBosen, director of placement for the lawschool said however, “It is definitely tight¬er this year. Whether the economy is af-fecting it is something I don’tknow.”“I don’t think there is reason for studentsto panic. There are some small signs that itmay be picking up a bit. I don’t feel it’s ahopeless situation that can’t open up quick¬ly,” Bosen said.“Here at the law school it’s more of aproblem of students taking a second choiceContinued on page 5Available job marketIt was a mandate from the people: AffelderChris HoneymeiRISING TO MEET THE CHALLENGE: Newly elected SG president David Affelderassumes his position.By JUDY ALSOFROM“It was a mandate from the people,”said David Affelder ’72 about his recentlandslide election as Student Government(SG) president. Affelder has been inter¬ested in SG for about a week and a half orever since he won a position in the generalSG elections with 11 votes as a write-in can¬didate in the other College constituency.“Here you have my basic qualification,”he said as he sprawled out on his back con¬templating the ceiling.” It is a total lack ofunderstanding of how SG has worked in thepast. I’d also like to slip in a mention of theNeo-Dadaist Coalition (of which he is amember). Its name implies being loose andflexible.”It would seem being loose and flexiblewill be the touchstones for the new SG re¬gime and its constituency, as is indicatedby Affelder’s intended followups of hiscampaign promises.PROFILEThe new president explained his intention(or the implementation of potential andproposed but defeated projects brought be¬fore SG.“The ideal situation would be if a smallgroup of people came to SG with a function¬ing idea or a small demonstration projectwhich they have put into effect during thetime period which SG normally arguesabout putting such projects into effect.“Further funding would be provided forworthwhile projects, or if the idea were tru¬ly ideal, the group would have figured outhow to do it without money.”As an example of his idea, Affelder hasalready met with James Vice, assistantdean of students, about an idea for a bailbond project, which he will eventuallybring before SG. He hinted that in his ca¬pacity as a member of the hierarchy ofSVNA (which he calls his only conflict ofinterests), SVNA would put up a substan¬tial sum tor the project from its own cof¬fers.As for plans to be initiated in the imme¬ diate future, Affelder is extremely inter¬ested in the problem of the proposed stu¬dent activities fee.“Specifically, how to pay for student ac¬tivities, and generally the way to stop wast¬ing money on student activities or prove topeople that it’s possible to use the moneywithout wasting it.“I think it’s being wasted by continuingproduction of traditional student activitiessuch as last year’s Wash Prom and thisyear’s shell of FOTA. It is certainly pos¬sible that such institutions can be revived./ But that takes people and this is what weare looking for.“Ask me next,” he said from his relaxedposition, “exactly what I’m going to doabout the fee.” He answered his own in¬quiry with the information that he is meet¬ing next week with Skip Landt, director ofstudent activities, and Charles O’Connell,dean of students.“As it stands now, I see no way of havinga required student activities fee. To haveuoe collected by the University would re¬quire approval by the board of trustees...“It therefore seems that the CORSO fund¬ ed type of activity will need about $50,000to operate next year and that’s pretty bare.The University is raising our tuition $50 aquarter, they should be able to give ussome of the money.“If all else fails, I’ll put on dark glassesand carry a tin cup around campus,” hequipped.Such a fatalistic attitude was reminiscentof one of the SG presidential candidate’splatform that if elected he would abolishSG. Did Affelder think SG was obsolete?“I’ll see for myself perhaps next year ...then I can give a more accurate answer tothe question. It is good that the anti-NSAdelegation got elected as I always saw NSAas an incredible waste of money. Also theprospects for the SG body in general isgood.“Most of the people have never been onSG before and I consider that to be to ev¬erybody’s advantage. Their basic makeupis that of a large group of people who cancommunicate with each other and that isgoing to help us a lot,” he said.Affelder intends to hold the first SGmeeting in two weeks, prior to which therewill be an informal session on the quads.He hopes people will drop into this sessionand “talk, yell, drink, etc.”He carries this same flexibility and will¬ing acceptance of everybody’s ideas in hisattitude on what he calls the politics of SG.“I think we shouldn’t discourage anymembers from political activities. It is upto the full body of SG as to whether or notthey want to fund political activities, suchas voter registration drives. Personally,I’m opposed to throwing leaflets and peti¬tions around; they’re a waste of time.“I’d rather see some sort of speakers’panels set up. I’m going to ^courage thatwe bring speakers to campus such as Buf¬falo Bob and Abbie Hoffman, or J EdgarHoover and Allen Funt, because they’re in¬teresting in that they’re both snoops intheir own way,” he said.Before he left, he responded to the tradi¬tional winner’s question of how he felt afterbeing elected.“With my hands” said the new studentleader on campus.April 36, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/3ABOUT THE MIDWAYSteve AokiSPRINGTIME: John seems to be turninghis fancy. Scientists chosenJoseph Fried, professor of chemistry andbiochemistry; physics professor RobertSachs; and biology professor Hewson Swifthave been elected to the National Academyof Sciences.They are the only Chicago area scientistsamong the 50 whose election to the acade¬my was announced Tuesday. Only 50 mem¬bers can be elected to the academy eachyear.CAPThe Campaign Against Pollution willsponsor the Steel Fighters Party, Sunday,May 2, 2-6 pm at the Eagle, 5311 Black-stone. Tickets are $1.50, $2 at the door.Proceeds will be used in the fight againstU S Steel’s air pollution and alleged $12million tax break.Harper firesTwo fires in Harper library this weekcaused little damage to the building, al¬though one fire destroyed course evaluationforms filled out by undergraduates over thelast three quarters.The first fire, reported at 8:12 am Mon¬day, was confined to a few dozen furnacefilters in the Harper basement.The second fire, reported 8:45 am Tues¬day, was in room W-41 of the west tower.According to A1 Shpuntoff 71, chairmanof the College Course and Teaching Eval¬uation Group, “In W-41 we were storingevaluation forms of courses taught at theCollege last spring and this fall and winter,plus a number of copies of our publicationof spring 1970 evaluations. The actual re¬sponse forms represented our currentwork, and are irreplaceable.“Practically everything from spring 1970was destroyed, along with most of the fall1970 responses,” Shpuntoff said. “All ofwinter 1971 was lost.you can hear yourself think ... and if you don'twant to think, there's good booze.Bass ale and Schlitz beer on tapTHE EAGLEcocktails . . . luncheon dinner . . . late snacks5U1 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933OASISPersonal Growth ThroughHumanistic GroupsA public lecture byDOUGLAS HARDINGCelebrated British Zen Ex¬pert, Philosopher, and Ar¬chitect. MEDITATION, ZEN,and LIBERATION - the doorto self-realization. FRIDAY,MAY 7, 7:30 p.m. $5 at thedoor, Students $3Mr. Harding will also con¬duct a seminar on Satur¬day, May 8, from 10 a.m.to 10 p.m., limited to 36persons. Fee $17.50. Schol¬arships available. Writealso for our catalog ofweekend workshops andencounter groups.Reservations 922-8294OASIS20 East HarrisonMtdwrt Center for Human Potential ARE YOU LISTENINGFor weeks now we've been telling you aboutthe bargains and the relaxed atmosphere atthe Hyde Park Supermarket, 1346 E 53rd St.Yet you still haven't tried us. Why not? Please,come in just once and we guarantee thatyou'll come back again. Here are some entic¬ing specials:Green beans n>29*Indian orange 10/49*Ripe celery 19*Yogurt..... 29*Oscar Meyer bacon n>69*Oscar Meyerall-meat weiners 69*Imperial margarine .. .39*Ground beef »,59*Chicago Maroon/April 38, 1871 “It was very discouraging,” Shpuntoffcommented. “We did lose a lot of thingsthat would have been valuable, both to stu¬dents and faculty. An awful lot of facultywere interested in evaluations of theircourses for the winter quarter.”Summaries of the autumn 1970 courseevaluations have already gone to press andwill be available May 7.“Both fires are currently still under in¬vestigation,” explained Lt Nicholas Juric ofUniversity security. It is not yet knownwhat may have caused either of the fires.SVNAStudents for Violent Non-Action (SVNA)have announced their budget and intentionsfor spring quarter. The collective Frank Malbranche sub¬mitted to the Maroon a proposed outline forthe distribution of funds, totalling approxi¬mately $1500 accumulated through variousactivities in the previous quarters.There will be a competition for the Mal¬branche prizes of $49.95 each. The prizeswill be awarded for “The Single Most Out¬rageous Public Act” and “The Best En¬try.”For the first prize the winner will be se¬lected from a list made up from mailedentries, acts witnessed by the collective,Continued on page 107 elections ruled invalidContinued from page 1forged was invalid, and that the seven beremoved from office.“We have decided unanimously that thesignatures on the seven documents present¬ed to us tonight are not those of the peoplenamed, and that the certification by theelections and rules committee of their elec¬tion is not valid.” stated Chief JusticeJohn David Stone at the close of the three-and-a-half hour court session.“We further declare their seats to be va¬cant and open, and recommend that the SGassembly fill them in the usual manner.”The seven removed from the assemblyare David Bintinger, Michael Buckner,Lauren Chudnoff, Joseph Mancini, Fred¬erick Rayfield, Jerry Reisig, and DanielWintz. Bruce RabeSG PRESIDENT AFFELDERNew president speaks from podiumEmily Bronte’sdefiant young loverslive again in anew and differentlook at animmortal classic.JAMES H NICHOLSON and SAMUEL L ARKOIF pre-afllANNA CALDER-MARSHALL TIMOTHY DALTONas Cathy as Heathcliffm EMILY BRONTE’SHntheiUg HeightsAlso starring C1970 American International Ptctuma, IncHARRY ANDREWS - HU6H GRIFFITH- IAN OGILVY - JUDY CORNWELLScreenplay by PATRICK TILLEY-From the nonel by EMILY BRONTE- Produced by SAMUEL 2 ARKOFFfcltn> JAMES H N10nO*-SON • Executive Producer LOUIS M HFYWARO-Muw by MICHEL IEGRANDL-J Directed by ROBERT FUEST- COLOR by MOVIELA8 • An American International Picture mmlg*KilNAL SOUNDTRACK ALBUM AVAILABLE ON AMERiOLNTNTCRNAfgNAL REC5S5S1NOW at THEATERS & DRIVE-INSALLOVER CHICACOLAND Makeyour ownTIESENROLL TODAYJoin our small intimate classes andwe’ll show you how easy it is to learnweaving, macrami, rugmaking, cro¬cheting, knitting and other textile artsAnd how much fun! In addition to pro¬fessional instruction from prize-win¬ning artists, we offer congenialatmosphere, colorful classrooms, crea¬tive associates-and free refreshments!Call for phone enrollment today, orwrite tor descriptive literatureNEXT SESSION BEGINS MAY 3rdTEXTILE ARTSUNLIMITEDCRAFTS SCHOOLPhone: 928 920813739 SO. LEYDEN STREETRIVERDALE, ILLINOIS 60627 CSTARTS TONITEThis is where it's at in carpetingTHE RUG BARN LTD.View our selections of:-Antique Type & Oriental Type Rugs-New & Used Orientals - Fur and Area Rugs-Second Hand FurnitureUse your cash & carry power or try oureasy lay-a-way planOpan Deity10:30 AM-7:30 PMSat. A Sun.10:00 AM-5:00 PM 643-0403245 W. North Ave.010 TOWN AREA MILDRED PIERCEwith Joan CrawfordplusTHE JAZZ SINGERwith Al JolsonTHE BIOGRAPH THEATRE2433 N. Lincoln 0444123Plan ta visit u* soon. Adwiawnat all time* it only $1.25. kingyourCoffee shops popular gathering place at UCNONESUCH: Even Professor Northcott can be found snacking in the coffeeshop on Wieboldt’s fourth floor.Unlawful Assemblage initiates FOTAThe 17th annual Festival of the Arts(FOTA) begins its month long schedule ofevents tonight. The Festival will be kickedoff by the Unlawful Assemblage, per¬forming “Tom Swift and his Buzz-BombReport Card”. The Assemblage will appearat the Lutheran School of Theology, 1100E. 55th, at 8:30 pm.FOTA is organized and run by students,and is funded by the University and privatedonors. This year’s chairman is IsaacFinkle 73.Tomorrow’s events begin at 2 pm with aworkshop directed by the Unlawful Assem¬blage, at the Ida Noyes Cloister Club. At 3James Vice, assistant dean of students,has announced 16 candidates for positionson the Faculty Student Advisory Com¬mittee on Campus Student Life(FSACCSL).Students are restricted to voting only forthose candidates who are registered intheir academic area; that is, students inthe College may only vote for candidates inFew jobs nowContinued from page 1job and going to a second or third choicecity,” he said.In specific areas Bosen said that largefirms who used to hire five people may hirethree to none at all. The Federal govern¬ment appears to be tight and Bosen couldnot tell about legal services because theirbudgets have not come out. However, manysmall cities do have job openings, he said.“More and more students are competingfor fewer spaces,” he said. This seemed tobe the general trend. “You have got to try.That’s what’s important,” said Poggi.Overall, most conceded that the hardestfield in which to find a job is teaching.Medical students’ being placed as internswill not be affected by the overall economicand job situation said Judy Harris, admin¬istrative assistant to Joseph Ceithaml,dean of students, biological sciences andPritzker school of medicine. pm, Albert Reyes will give a piano recitalin Mandel Hall, as part of FOTA’s YoungArtist Series. The Unlawful Assembly willperform again at the Theology school at8:30 pm.Sunday will feature a Roger CormanFilm Festival, 2 pm, in Quantrell. Operaticensembles of the Cameo Opera Company ofKenmore College will perform in Mandel at3:30.All these events are preliminaries to theofficial opening of the Festival. Mondaynoon, Roger Hildebrand, Dean of the Col¬lege, will give a speech proclaiming thestart of the festivities. The traditional May-pole celebration will then ensue.the college, etc. Ballots will be mailed tothe student body this week.There are eight students on FSACCSL.Three are from the college, two from theprofessional schools, and one each from thehumanities graduate division, social sci¬ence graduate division and the biological-physical science (natural science) graduatedivision.The candidates in the College are:Charles Anderson 72, Thomas Brandt 73,John Brogan 74, Allen Goodman 73, Lau¬rence Hyman 73, Michael Lindsay 74, Oli¬ver Long 73, Lee Margerum 74, RichardMathers 74, Joseph Morris 73, and PaulYovovitch 74.Only three students in the graduate divi¬sions have been announced. They areDouglas Adams, linguistics; Irvin Kauf¬man, John Laing, natural sciences.College elections will start today whilevoting in the graduate divisions and schoolswill not begin until Monday.Members of the committee attempt tocontribute their opinions and efforts to theimprovement of the University community.During the past year FSACCSL has beenconsulted and made recommendations onsuch subjects as campus security, studentpart time and summer employment,campus coffee shops, and the career coun¬seling program.Current members of the committee areThomas Biersteker 72, Gary Makarado 71,and Eugene Goldberg 71 in the college;Howard Smithson, business and WilliamSullivan, law, in the professional schools; Following the celebration at 1:30, will bea lecture in Mandel by Tom Wolfe, authorof the Electric Kool-aid Acid Test, andRadical Chic and Mau-Mauing and FlakCatchers.Film director Roger Corman win showone of his films in Quantrell at 3 pm, andspeak afterwards. At 8 pm will be the “PopCulture Colloquium, featuring Tom Wolfe,Roger Corman, Norman Pfeiffer, andFranz Schulze.Upcoming FOTA events include concertsby university students from across thecountry, poetry readings by Danish poetVagn Steen and Irish poet Richard Murphy,Handel’s oratorio “Theodora” in its Mid:west premiere, a ’50’s sock hop featuringPhil and the Fastbacks, and a FOTA craftfair with live music and fireworks.Art exhibits, movies, workshops,speeches, lectures and demonstrations, bal¬lets, and plays are also scheduled. Admis¬sion to most of these events is free. By JUDY ALSOFROMNeither Ripple, or Pabst’s Blue Ribbon,or Teacher’s Scotch for Tuesday can beatout old fashioned coffee for liquid beveragepopularity on this campus.In the area between Business East andCobb Hall there are six coffee shops, not tomention the countless number of small cof¬fee urns that perk away in various officesof Gates-Blake and Social Sciences.The Mandala Coffee Shop in Cobb base¬ment has the largest trade of all servingbetween 500 and 600 people daily between 8am and 4 pm. Manager Mike Rainey 71,who also runs Swift coffee shop says des¬pite the volume of business he runs at aloss.“It’s a marginal business. We make verylittle off of the cookies and sweet rolls(they order 19 dozen sweet rolls, seven doz¬en bagels, and six dozen cookies to com¬plement daily the coffee, hot chocolate, tea,lemonade, juice and oatmeal).“By the time we pay salaries of $1.85 anhour there is very little left over. It costs$50 a day to run Swift and it only brings in$20 or thirty dollars daily.”Rainey will close down Swift Hall coffeeshop next week (but leave a coffee urn asa service for the student body) which wasmainly frequented by the divinity schoolstudents and secretaries.The Mandala, however has a much moreheterogenous clientele which consists ofpeople between classes, professors, acouple of established floating bridgegames, and several faithful dogs.The Mandala comes closer to resemblinga student union than any other institutionon this campus. There are informationalnotices on a bulletin board, student art onthe walls and tables lining the walls atwhich to study.You can always find copies of the Sun-Times, Da Daily Granite or the latest SDSor May Day circular lying on the tablealong with empty styrofoam cups and amyriad of cigarette butts.One worker claimed that some people arejust as much a fixture as the Jewel andColombian coffee they serve. “They’re hereexcept for mealtime.” A devotee and regu¬lar of the shop said “You can always find afriend here, or someone to talk to. After alleveryone has a class in Cobb.”And if they don’t have a class in Cobb,they’re probably in Harper library, feast¬ing on the fare of its coffee shop, The Burn¬ing Shame, fledgling enterprise of theNonesuch, Wieboldt’s Swedish speciality.Both The Nonesuch and The BurningShame are run by Gary Engels, a graduatestudent in humanities, and both shops servemuch the same fare and have the sametype of incestuous relationship as exists be¬tween the Mandala and Swift hall.One can find at both these places, besidescoffee and the inevitable hot chocolate andContinued on page 8Hospital quotas for interns are deter- Manuel Cavazos-Lerma in social sciences, jon Yuenmined by the American Mediral A^ori- Douglas Adams in humanities; and Irvin MANDALA COFFEE SHOP: A member of the regular clientele selects his fare foration and do not vary with the job market. Kaufman in natural sciences. the morning.April 30, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/5 1FSACCSL candidates1WI OK f'tuA'noinwf/ oyj-)icD jfiT'AThe Chicago MaroonPAUL BERNSTEIN, MITCH BOBKIN, CON HITCHCOCKCo-editorsDON RATNERBusiness ManagerJUDY ALSOFROM, Managing EditorFRED WINSTON, News EditorNANCY CHISMAN, Executive Editor SUSAN LOTHSenior EditorAUDREY SHAUNSKY, Executive EditorGORDON KATZ, Contributing EditorSTEVE AOKI, Photography EditorLISA CAPELL, JOE FREEDMAN, KEITH PYLEAssociate Editors•RICK BALSAMO, FRANK GRUBER, LESLIE LINTON, BRUCE RABE, STEVE STRAHLERStaff•STEVE COOK DIANA LEIFEREditor Emeritus Assistant Business ManagerFounded m 11W. 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, 304 In Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 50637. Telephone (312) 7S34263.Distributed on campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail 96 per yearIn the United States. Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, Illinois.SG presidentThe election of David Affelder as the new Student Governmentpresident fills us with a curious mixture of bemusement and hope: be¬musement because of Affelder’s notable activities in the past, hope be¬cause we feel that he is uniquely qualified for pulling SG together andmaking it a viable forum for student interests.His leadership of the infamous Students for Violent Non-Action andmarching band, reveals a creative and talented brand of activism whichhas gone far to brighten an all-too-often dull student life. It would bodewell for SG if he uses his talents to make life here a bit more livable.Certainly it will be an interesting year and one which we relish watch¬ing.Affelder’s proposals for allowing students to carry out their ownideas under SG sponsorship and his pointed opposition to the pettypolitical posturing which has characterized past SGs strike us as basical¬ly sound and of the sort that would help make SG a bit more respectedamong students.". . . we feel he is uniquely qualified for pullingSG together and making it a viable forum forstudent interests ...It would bode well for SGif he uses his talents to moke life here a bit morelivable. Certainly it will be an interesting yearand one which we relish watching."His ideas to date, which include establishing a bail fund from SVNAfunds and carefully scrutinizing traditions which appear to be a wasteof money, are reasonable, and we hope that these are indicative of whatis to come. We are also glad to see thaUhe favors a student activities feeand hope he can be successful in getting it implemented.In the past we have editorialized for an SG that takes more of aninterest in student services and improvement of campus life. We wouldhope that the new SG is able to work together to this end, and we wishthe new officers and .assembly the best of luck in their efforts.UT directorUniversity Theatre serves an important role on this campus. TheUniversity of Chicago does not have a drama department, nor does itrecognize the need for academic courses on the techniques of acting.Therefore, UT serves as the only center for students interested in act¬ing, directing or technical work. Also. UT can and often has providedinteresting, creative and stirring drama for the campus audience.Because we feel so strongly about UT’s place in student life here,we are distressed to learn that Annette Fern has been fired as UT direc¬tor after only having seven months in which to exhibit her talent. Werealize that Miss Fern’s directorial efforts this year did not receive favor¬able critical response; but we do not feel that it makes sense to firesome one who went through as rigorous a selection procedure as MissFern did after only seven months.Weeks of discussion by a student-faculty advisory committee pre¬ceded her appointment to the post, and the competition was quitestrong. Rather than believe that the committee used all its time to makea poor choice, we feel that the decision to dismiss her might be prema¬ture.Obviously, Charles O’Connell will not rehire Miss Fern after havingmade his decision. But we hope that the selection of her successor will beconducted with the care and effort that are needed to produce a directorwho will last more than one year. Such an appointment could provideUT with some continuity, increase the training its actors receive, andimprove an activity that can ‘"nke a vital contribution to campus life.6/The Chicago Maroon/*' 1. lfl\ w(5b0 Tt'AOKlftAAAEl iHUSH. I'M TRACKING THE ENEMY.LETTERS TO THE EDITORSa ‘ f - .0 .. v*j .. J . t> *M‘VV I 'SFA courtQuestion: when is a court not a court?Answer: when it is the SFA Court. The SFACourt, an adjunct of SG, is composed of 9power hungry justices who, with possiblytwo exceptions, do not have the foggiestidea what is law. The Court pretends tointerpret the Constitution strictly, .yetbends its own rules whenever it wants to.What court, except the SFA, ever took ju¬risdiction over a case in which no one wasinjured?The Court’s cast of jesters: The Courtconsidered itself lucky when professor Ed¬mund Kitch, professor of proc< are at theLaw School, was appointed an associatejustice. Does he really know legal proce¬dure? He specifically dismissed the ideathat the court could not consider a case inwhich no one was injured. The Court alsostars Professor Leonard Wharton in chem¬istry who still cannot forget what it waslike to be on a disciplinary committee. Hewants to run a court like a disciplinarycommittee. The Court also has 4 freshmenwho don’t have any of the common knowl¬edge that judges are so often called upon toknow. John Seifert’s machination still lives.This is a court?The Court permits people to change thebasis of their complaints verbally withouteven giving defendents an adjournment toprepare a new defense in response to thesechanged grounds. The Court doesn’t hearthe facts presented before it — plaintiff canlet the Court present his case for him.The Court’s rules and the Constitutionstrongly urge all parties in cases to obtaincounsel, i.e. law student aid. Yet if a plaint¬iff refuses to request such aid, the Courtsacts as counsel for him. To complete thejudicial folly, where else but in the SFACourt can a person or committee be suedor deprived of his civil rights without evenbeing so informed? due process? The Court should be enjoinedfrom dispensing ‘justice’ until it decidesthat it is a court of lavv, not an inquisition.Abuses are precedent for more abuses.Be a Court or be impeached.Eugene Goldberg '71Former chairman of Election and Rulescommittee, FSACCSL,Phy Sci Advisory CouncilGay office?For two years, since its formation, GayLiberation has requested office space fromthe university. At different times this year,we have asked for space at Ida Noyes,space in Harper, money from CORSO foran office and telephone, and space any¬where else. We have been repeatedly de¬nied by Skip Landt and others because “nospace is available.”For two years we have tried every avail¬able alternative, from every church in thearea to the YMCA. We have even tried us¬ing member’s apartments for offices. Thishas been difficult for all and has been dis¬continued. We desperately need a placewhere Gay people in the university commu¬nity may call, drop in for literature, or justrap to another gay person. At least 200 UCstudents have been to Gay Liberation meet¬ings, but lack of a central office has madeit almost impossible to build a feeling ofcommunity among these gay people.After all this frustration we found thestrange situation of the University charterflight office. As an understatement, wewanted to puke. This organization, a oneperson affair, is just an extension of stu¬dent government, yet occupies an officelarge enough for two groups and is open forfour hours a day in the months that it isopen at all.We believe that we deserve more thanjust parity with the charter flight service.Charter flights serve about 700 people peryear: last year Gay Liberation dancesalone attracted more than 2600 people.Consider the services the two organiza-The Student bill of Rights grants to stu¬dents ‘‘the right to fair and impartial trialwith all due processs of law”. Shades of tions offer Gay T ib offers counselling,Julius Hoffman, is what the Court provides Continued on page 9donationsMICHAEL CLAFFEY: “The stronger the University becomes ac ademically . . . the easier it should be to raise money.”Gay Lib asks use of Ida Noyes 306Gay Liberation has asked the Universityfor the use of Ida Noyes 306, currently thecharter flights office, as a central locationfor gay people in the community.In a letter sent to dean of studentsCharles O’Connell and student activities di¬rector Skip Landt (appearing in today’sMaroon) members of Gay Lib request toshare the room with charter flights whichoperates from 1 pm to 5 pm week-days.Murray Edelman, 70, and Kevin Burke,72, state in the letter “we desperately needa place where gay people in the Universitycommunity may call, drop in for literature,or just rap to another person. At least 200UC students have been to Gay Liberationmeetings, but lack of a central office hasmade it almost impossible to build a feelingof community among gay people.”The letter also states that Landt has de¬nied Gay Lib requests for office space inIda Noyes, and that the committee on rec¬ ognized student organizations (CORSO) hasrefused to give them money to rent an of¬fice and use a telephone.Landt said that he had not received aformal request from Gay Lib for officespace, but that he had discouraged them inconversations from asking for the charterflights office.“There are real problems in having twodifferent operations share the same office,”he said.The Gay Lib letter calls the charterflights office “a large office ... being usedthe entire year by only one person on alimited schedule for a service of limitedvalue to the community.”It claims that the services offered by GayLib “are far more important than the few-dollars that (University) charter flightssave over other charter flights for thepeople rich enough to spend a couple ofmonths in Europe.” “Gay Lib offers counselling, small rapgroups, open forums on sex roles, andspeakers to classes, education, and medi¬cine. From personal experience we can saythat Gay Lib has helped us develop a reallypositive conception of our homosexuality —from something to be suppressed and hid¬den from the world — to something positiveand beautiful about ourselves.”Landt questioned Gay Lib’s need for of¬fice space. “If they’re talking about a placewhere people can meet, then they can usethe lounges in Ida Noyes.”He added “If it is a question of officespace, I’m not sure that the priority shouldgo the Gay Liberation.” He said that othergroups who had sponsored more eventsthan Gay Lib needed office space, such asthe Ida Noyes Program Board. “I don’tthink it’s fair to assign rooms on a first- *come first-served basis,” he said!PREGNANT?Need Help?For assistance in obtaining a legalabortion immediately in New YorkCity at minimal costCHICAGO (312) 922-0777CAU: PHIIA. (21S) I70-SI00MIAMI (305) 754-5471ATLANTA (404) 524-4781NEW YORK (212)5124740I A.M.-10 P.M.—7 DAYS A WIIKABORTION REFERRALSERVICE (ARS), INC. StudentDiscountModelCamera1342 E. 55th493-6700Most complete photo shopon South sideDIDYOU EVER STOPTO THINK tS?• y*-*GOD-GIVEN RIGHTS? BLACKFRIARifaktSCNTSiTHEDEMOCRATICWAYAmericans do not want a phony for President"- F. Jackson CraigContinued from page 1The University can raise money becauseit is a good university, and “the strongerthe University becomes academically andintellectually, the easier it should be toraise money,” he continued.Nevertheless, difficulties are still evi¬dent. “One reason is that the country is ina very unsettled state,” Claffey said. Therecession economy has stumped greaterfundraising success, he noted, as have“repressed feelings against private univer¬sities” and against higher education in gen¬eral.Another problem is that although thereare a limited number of very rich people,“There has been an enormous increase inthe number of people going after them toraise money,” he said. “Our job is topresent the University’s case so that (thedonors) make us number one.”The development office is structured toseek gifts and pledges in a variety of ways.Faculty and trustees play an importantrole in soliciting funds for several of theoffice’s seven sections.The office works with them to encouragedonations for the corporate giving pro¬gram, especially important because Claffeyhopes corporations will provide $1.5 millionin unrestricted funds, or half this year’s $3million goal.Together with the officers of the Univer¬sity, faculty and trustees also solicit moneyfor the major ($100,000 and over) and spe¬cial ($10,00 and over) gifts section.In addition, faculty collect most of themoney from foundations. Used mainly forindividual faculty projects, cash from foun¬dations during the last three years has av¬eraged $13 million.Another part of the office, the deferredgiving section, handles trusts, bequests,and annuities. An outstanding gift this yearcame from the late Muriel Forsland, a re¬tired Chicago high school teacher whoContinued on page 9nmnnPlatter:■) Di««m Cki^lf All ®* ■ I ■April 30, 8:30May 1,7:00 & 9:15 May 8, 8:30May 8, 7:00 & 9:15Tickets at Box Office or Reynolds Desk$2.50 & $1.50 50* off with I.D. Pizza, Fried ChickenItalian Foodsj Compare the Price! |J 1460 E. 53rd 643-2800 *L £EMUVER jcfflaryShaversIN CONCERTORCHESTRA HALLJAMES SPENCER, CSB,A TALK ONCHRISTIAN SCIENCE MAY 6 (Thors.)4:00 PMIDA NOYESLIBRARYSponsored by theChristian Science Organization at theUniversity of Chicago MALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOWDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St. ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E 53rd St288 2900 SAT., MAY 8—8:30 P. M.Tickets: 5.50, 4.50. 3.50For Preferential SeatingMail orders onlyBex Office OpensThurs., April 29220 S. Michigan 60404. EncloseSelf-Addressed, Stamped EnvelopeDESKS-BOOKCASESSWIVEL CHAIR - LAMPS - TABLESNEW & USEDUNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP PREGNANCYPROBLEM?THERE IS NO CHARGE1453 E. 57th ST. FOR OURCLOSED MONDAY ABORTION684-3641 REFERRAL. WHY SPENDMONEY NEEDLESSLY?FRANK PAR1SI OUR PROFESSIONALSERVICES ARE FREE.proprietor CALL (215) 722-53607 DAYS 2k HRS. EARN UP TO $50 OR MORE DAILYWORK DURING SEMESTER BREAKSORDAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWoik from yuiuyc neui iiumc ui School. EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8440 So. South Chicago Ave.(Parallel to Oiicago Skyway)Open Mon. -Sat. 8:30 -5:00RE 4-2111Immediate DeliverySpecial Discount for Student*and faculty with I.D. card ’ .April 30, 1371/The Chicago Maroon/7i«*>\. \\iiJ 4Burning Shame created for undergradsJon YuenSOCIAL SCIENCE TEA: One can always find a friendly smile here along with thecoffee. Continued from page 5lemonade (the chocolate here, though, is aSwedish variety), yogurt, Swedish pastries,and a larger variety of cookies than you’llfind in Cobb. The cuisine at these shopsserves a more select and quieter clientele.My observation about the clients can onlybe a truism: those people who work in Har¬per library go to the Burning Shame, andgraduate students in the humanities andtheir professors are found munching underthe sign of the striped pugilistic prisoner inthe Nonesuch.The Burning Shame was created by theUniversity to have a specifically under¬graduate emphasis, and as such it is runonly by undergraduates, who are ferventlyloyal to their establishment, and protect itin its youth (The Burning Shame only cameon the caffein scene last quarter, amidstthe fanfare for a gorilla passing out freecoffee.)Said one worker “Our coffee is betterthan any other place on campus, ten timescleaner than Cobb, and then people whowork behind the counter are friendlier.”This could possibly be due to the fact thatBULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, April 30 Saturday, May 1UNIVERSITY THEATER: "Little Murders," ReynoldsClub Theater, $2, 1.30, 8:30 pm.FLICK: The Trial, 7:15 and 9:30 pm, Quan+rell.THE EVOLUTION DISCUSSION GROUP: Round TablesDiscussion leader Vinton Thomas, "Eucaryote ViralTransduction? Convergence and Parallelism by Des¬cent," bring your ideas, Hinds Geophysical SciencesBuilding, Room 176, 8 pm.FOTA: The Unlawful Assemblage, Lutheran School ofTheology, improvisational group similar to secondCity in "Tom Swift and his Buzz-Bomb ReportCard," 8:30 pm.SLIDE PRESENTATION: "Life Styles In the Domi¬nican Rep*A>lic", by Luis Inglesias, Crossroads Stu¬dent Center 5621 Blacks tone, 8 pm.WHPK: Verdi's "Simon Bocanegra" with LawrenceTibbett, Elizabeth Rethberg, Ezio Pinza, GiovanniMartinelli and Leonard Warren, 5:30 pm.LECTURE: Zeev Eytan, "The Israeli Army: A Po¬litical Science Analysis Of Its Structure and Func¬tion.", HMIel, 8:30 pm. FOTA: Wordshop by the Unlawful Assemblage, Cloisterclub, Ida Noyes halt, 2 pm; young artists series,piano recital by Alberto Reyes, Indiana University,works by Beethoven, Liszt, Chopin, Mandel Hall,3 pm; the Unlawful Assemblage, Lutheran School ofTheology 8:30 pm.GAY MAY DAY PARADE AND PICNIC: Meet onquads at 11:30 am.OPEN HOUSE: Gay open house, at Gay communitycenter, 171 W E1m, 1 pm to 6 am.FLICK: "They Shoot Horses, Don't They," Quarrtrellauditorium, 7 and 9:15 pm. trell auditorium, 8 pm, $1.STUDENTS FOR ISRAEL: will sponsor a celebrationof Israel's Independence Day, Hillel house, 4:30 pm.UNIVERSITY RELIBIOUS SERVICES: Ross Terrill,China scholar and lecturer in government at HarvardUniversity, "China and The World — A NewPhase?" Rockefeller Chapel, 11 am.WOMEN'S COFFEE SHOP: Pot luck dinner and openpoetry reading. Blue Gargoyle, 6:30 pm.Monday, May 3Sunday, May 2Satellites" and "Mask of the Red Death," Mandelhall, 2 pm; Cameo Opera Company of KenmoreCollege, operatic ensembles including Gian CarloMenotti's "The Telephone," Mandel hall, 3:30 pm.GAY LIB: gay youth meeting, Ida Noyes east lounge3 pm, for information call 493-5658.FLICK: gay Mb move, "Sweet Bird of Youth," Quan- FOTA: Maypole celebration, dance and song, speechby dean of the College Roger Hildebrand, Harperquad, noon; Tom Wolfe, "The New Journalism,'Mandel hall, 1:30; Roger Cor man showing one ofhis films and speaking afterwards, Quarrtrell, 3 pm;Pop Culture Colloquium author Tom Wolfe, moviedirector Roger Corman, architect Norman Pfeiffer,art critic Frank Schulze, Mandel hall, 8 pm.LECTURE: V Mac Farlane, professor at the Univer¬sity of Adelaide, "Functions of Aboriginal DesertNamads in Summer," sponsored by the biologydepartment. Zoology 14, 4:30 pm. they are also the highest paid workers inthe coffee dispensing business.The Nonesuch can be characterized bvthe enormous table which occupies most ofthe room located on the fourth floor ofWeiboldt. There are a few deeply luxuriouschairs scattered around the room, thoughmany bodies can be found lounging on thefloor.Ever hear of the B-School? Well, that ishow Business students refer to the Gradu¬ate School of Business, which has its owncoffee shop, in Cox lounge in the basementof Business East. It is a very small oper¬ation not making more than $30 a day on agood day, serving only coffee and sweetrolls at 15 cents each.In true business school fashion its coffeeshop is a concession from the Business clubrun by Paul Kelly, a business student, whoserves his clients Electra perk MaxwellHouse (good stuff) and pays his workers $2an hour.It is a going concern, with a regulargang who can often be heard quoting theirlatest job offer and salary, what they sawon TV the night before, or proudly showingoff their latest computer output. Their ma¬jor complaint is that they have to pay toomuch for coffee and then get stuck againon the refill.Business East coffeeshop has only beenfunctioning for a quarter or so, after hav¬ing suspended operation for a couple ofquarters due to its operation at a loss.That’s what business school teaches you.some say.The sixth official coffee shop on campusis actually a tea room on the second floorof Social Sciences and is open in theafternoon. It serves small tea cookies be¬sides the usual offering of coffee and tea.Due to a slight case of indigestion atpress time, I was not able to stay longenough at Social Science coffee shop to de¬termine the demeanor of its clientele. Tea-dious (sic) perhaps?■sniEUErTHE IIIH1DOC FILMS FRIDAY APRIL 30 7:15 k 9:30 COBB $1SHORE AUTOREBUILDERS,INC.1637 EAST 75th STREET, CHICAGO, ILL.643-8066SOUTH SIDE'S FINEST BODY SHOPQUALITY WORK AT COMPETITIVE PRICESOUR I7TH YEAR IN BUSINESSDONALD J. ROLLHEISERBdls for )m^We by Male (f crushed cottonvelvet ir> red or block *17.Hang-ou+ i% a part of Cohn $ sternHYde Park Shopping center/55** $ Lake ParkJESSELSON’SFRESH FISH & SEAFOOD732-2070. 752-0190, 3eJ-e 186-13401. SM8/The Chicago Maroon/April 30, 1971 UNWANTEDPREGNANCYHAVE A LEGAL ABORTIONPERFORMED IN NEW YORK STATECOSTS RANGE FROM $110CALLLEGAL ABORTION PROJECT312-743-3640or312-743-3388Monday through Saturday9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ABORTIONpregnancies up to 12weeks terminated from$175.00Medication, Lab TestsDoctors fees includedHospital & Hospitalaffiliated clinics.(212) TR 7-88032k hours-7 daysPHYSICIANS REFERRALWe know we can help you, even ifit's just to talk to someoneCANOE TRIPSPlan an exciting canoe trip intothe Quetico-Superior Wildernessfor the highpoint of your summervacation! Rates you can afford.For information write DILL ROM'SOUTFITTERS, Ely, Minn. authentic• Dinners• Late Snacks• Private PartiesDistinctive, handsomeroom atop the Hyde ParkBank Building.Exceptional anddelightful selection ofMid-East food, delicacies,cocktails, and wines.Ample parking. Tues. -Sat. 5 to Midnight; Sun.1-11. .152S E. 53rd St.Just Oft Outer DriesAtop TitsRESTAURANT A LOUNOf955-5151EfendiTuesday & WednesdayNights15 % DiscountFor the U. of C. Students,-Faculty Members and Per¬sonnel. Bring ibis ad fordiscount.Jt\aooiBM ogfciiiD sifi MT8I M IhqA mi m m-jMICHAEL CLAFFEYEmphasized importance of alumni fund. Steve AokiLETTERS TO THE EDITORS^ ’Continued from page 6small rap groups, open forums on sexroles, and speakers to classes, education,and medicine. From personal experiencewe can say that Gay Lib has helped usdevelop a positive conception of our ho¬mosexuality — from something to be sup¬pressed and hidden from the world — tor something positive and beautiful about our¬selves. caters to straight, white upper-class Amer¬ica.Certainly these human services are farSmore important than the few dollars that* charter flights save over other charterflights for the people rich enough to spenda couple of months in Europe. There are amyriad of charter flight organizations forUC students to take advantage of. but gaypeople don’t even have an office. How much longer can this university ex¬ist relating only to existing privilege, notquestioning its basis? If but all of us couldescape the harsh realities of being sur¬rounded by a ghetto or a society which con¬sciously and systematically oppressed Gaypeople by escaping for a few romanticweeks in Paris at UC bargain rates. Thismay work for bored academicians, butblacks and gays have no way to escape.Now we are only requesting that weshare the office with the charter flight per¬son. We would use this office the entireday, as opposed to the present four hoursper day for which it is now used. It wouldbe especially important in the evening. We’would provide literature and a person man¬ning the phone until the building is closed. Obviously the university is anti-gay, butthis seems only another manifestation of itsurge to perpetuate existing privilege, how¬ever rotten it is, to preserve academic ex¬cellence, to preserve the mission of the uni¬versity, and to preserve the way all thisexcellence in practice causes all oppressedminorities to be swept under the rug andkicked in the ass. *It would be the only place on campuswhich gay people, acting as gay people,could call their own. The only thing gaymen have had on this campus is a gayjohn. which the university has discretelyignored. Perhaps the university considersthis an appropriate service for gays. Byrefusing us an office, the university is giv¬ing de facto approval to the dehumanizingways in which Gay people of the university•community are forced to meet each other. Last year when we were denied per¬mission to have dances, we were forced touse the only language the university seemsto understand — force. We announced agay guerilla dance around the time of Cam¬bodia and suddenly when confronted withhundreds of people breaking into the build¬ing, the university quietly gave us per¬mission. This year the black students hadto use the same language — TAKE theiroffice. To get a place for gay people, is theonly alternative for Gay Liberation to takeover the charter flights office?Str It also seems worth noting how the use ofa double office by charter flights shows theuniversity’s values and priorities. Ourblack sisters and brothers had to take theoffice next to the charter flight’s becausethere was no space for them. This was noplace for them as there is no place for GayLiberation. Clearly the university caters tothose who already have privilege, whetherit be economic or social. In other words, it ~ Traditional means seem to have failed.Landt has repeatedly denied us an officewhile knowing that this large office wasbeing used the entire year by only one per¬son on a limited schedule for a service oflimited value to the community.In this great liberal institution where atradition of reason and logic prevail, mustwe always resort to force when such pre¬vious forms of inequality prevail?Murray Edelman* Kevin Burke Alumni fund sourceof financial strengthContinued from page 7willed $2 million to the University.The section also handles living trusts, forwhich the University will invest a donor’sgift and send him the income accrued dur¬ing his lifetime.The development office handles donationsto the Pritzker school of medicine and thebiological sciences division through a spe¬cial section.A sixth section, the donor relations sec¬tion, keeps in touch with potential donors.The office’s computer programmed data ondonors more efficiently charts who’s givenwhat.Of particular importance for this yearand the future is the alumni fund, the an¬nual giving program. Though composedmainly of small gifts, it is important be¬cause the money is largely unrestricted.A subprogram is the President’s fund, anannual $1000 club also used for unrestrictedfunds.Claffey sees the alumni fund as a sourceof potential financial strength. Althoughbudgets for other development offices sec¬tions were cut back this year, the alumnifund section’s budget increased.Several factors can account for the dis¬parity. The University’s status as primarilya graduate school “results in divided loyal¬ties,” Claffey said — and the undergrad¬uate schools often benefit more.Another theory is simply that Universityof Chicago graduates’ average incomedoesn’t equal that of Harvard or Yalegrads.Still, Claffey emphasized the importanceof the alunni fund. Although the averagegift is small, it keeps a donor in touch withand feeling a part of the University, hesaid.“The alumnus who donates is generallyone who realizes he has profited from theUniversity,” Claffey said. That realizationmay take 10 or 15 years, he contined, but itcan result in sizeable contributions. “You find a lot of your important donors amongyour alums,” he said.In general, money-raising is a Univer¬sity-wide affair. During the campaign forChicago, phase one of the University’s 10-year fund drive, Claffey noted that thenumber of faculty-sought foundation grantsdecreased. He speculated that faculty mayhave taken a “let-the-campaign-take-care-of-funding” attitude during this time.“There is now a greater understandingamoung faculty and deans that they haveto find money for their own programs,” hesaid.For all the specialization of sections andcomputerized data, the vice-president fordevelopment knows that “fund raising isnot a science, by any means.“It still boils down to finding the rightprogram for a donor and convincing him toinvest in the University,” he said.Are the tax breaks an incentive to con¬tribute? Not primarily, according to Claf¬fey. “(Donors) give because they want todo something for the University.” he said.The monies secured through the develop¬ment office represent only one source ofUniversity income (government funding,income from the University’s stock port¬folio, tuition, and patient fees are others).Yet continued private support is crucialto the success of the University, Claffeypointed out.“Over the next four years there is a bigquestion as to whether the University canraise from private sources the kind of mon¬ey that it needs,” he said.Even if there is not sufficient private sup¬port, Claffey is not worried that the Univer¬sity will fold — “but there is a real dangerthat the character of the University maychange,” he said.Inadequate private funding eventuallycould lead the University to look for statesupport. And whoever thinks that’s okayshould consider the University of Califor¬nia.GET YOURAPARTMENTRENTEDuse the maroonclassified adsectionsee the formon the classifiedpageKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.684-6856t'1 Is being vulgarnecessarily a signof perversion? A bicycle puts youclose to nature - Thusspake ZarathustraTurin in, Turin on,drop joggingV for velocipedeCheapest prices for Car¬lton, Raleigh, Robin Hood,Falcon, Peugeot, Citane,Mercier, Radius and Daws.Factory trained mechanics.Used bicycles spasmod¬ically. Fly-by-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N dark LI 9-8863Fret Delivery«30tSftSMMF !2.-<MMk30; 5AS 10-8The e*rpe<haM'r~ fro» OM Town ROCKEFELLER MEMORIALSunday CHAPELMay 2, 1971 11:00 A.M.ROSS TERRILLChina Scholar and Lecturer in GovernmentHarvard Universtiy"China and The World - A New Phase?"Weekend Chapel MusicTuesday, May 4, 12:15 p.m. Backstage at the Organwith Edward Mondello, University Organist, a tour ofthe Instrument.Wednesday May 5 19-15 pm Rark<taga a*Carillon with Robert Lodine, University Cdrillonneur, atour of the instrument. Interested persons must be inChapel Office no later than 12 noon. UVE AND STUDYIN MM/ATHNSIRS SOMMERCoordinated study of history, arts,literature and architecture.Six week program offers three courses... up to 10 credits. All creditstransferable.Includes special weekend tour fromRome to Naples, Herculaneum,Pompeii, Paestum and Capri.Includes special weekend tour fromAthens to Delphi, Hagios Loukas,Mycenae, Tiryns, Nauplion, Epidaurus.Special low cost student tours(optional) to Florence, EtruscanItaly and Greek Islands.Students free to tour Europe during10 day Intersession.Specially selected Pace Faculty.Program begins June 11 and endsAugust 1-All inclusive cost: $1,300.For more informationWrite or call Dr. Harold Lurier, DirectorPace Summer Sessions AbroadTelephone: (212) 285-3453pace collegePace College Pla/a,New York. NY 10038April 30, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/0ABOUT THE MIDWAYContinued from page 4and any other rumors it picks up.All entries should include a description ofthe event, the results, a photo if applicable,and/or court summons and Group Hospi¬talization receipt. Signed or forged state¬ments from witnesses can help.For “The Best Entry” prize, the collec¬tive simply wants the best entry you canthink of. For inquiries call 667-7472 or 493-3410.Send all entries to SVNA, Ida Noyes Hall,1212 59th St. All entries should be in by thelast week of May as the results will be an¬nounced June 1.The rest of the budget is allocated as fol¬lows: $49.95 each to Eco-Sex, Women’s Lib¬eration, and FOTA (for a production of Pe¬ter Pan). Da Daily Granite gets a $9.98bribe plus 50 cents handling charges. COR-SO will receive a $10 loan.SVNA would like to give $800 to a bailbond fund to free students, staff and friendsfrom jail. The remaining $300 plus is re¬served for punch and other ideas.Friedman appointment STUART RICENew chairman of chemistry departmentMilton Friedman, Russell distinguishedservice professor of economics, hasrecently been appointed a member of thecommission on White House Fellowships.The announcement was made April 2 byPresident Richard Nixon at the westernWhite House, San Clemente, California.The President’s Commission on WhiteHouse Fellowships was established by ex¬ecutive order on October 3, 1964. Its 17members annually recommend to the Pres¬ident a group of outstanding young peopleto serve as White House Fellows.Friedman was one of five persons namedto the commission.Phy Sci student wantedThe physical sciences collegiate division student advisory committee will appoint astudent to the University disciplinary com¬mittee panel this spring and the advisorycommittee is seeking nominations.People who wish to nominate themselvesor other students should submit nomi¬nations to the collegiate division office,Gates-Blake 128, by May 10.The committee will interview nomineesand appoint one student to join the panel of32 students from which students for Univer¬sity disciplinary committees and reviewboards are randomly chosen. Appointmentsare for one year.The May 12,1970 disciplinary procedures,sections 4, 5, 7 and 8 (printed in the studenthandbook) describe the disciplinary com¬mittees and review board.Ross Terrill,Ph.D., Lecturer in Government - HarvardUniversity, Author, Visitor to China, will speakon:ON UNDERSTANDMG CHINAInternational House, Home Room,Sunday, May 2, 7:30 pmif you need anABORTIONyou’ll need compassion.All you need do it call us. We’ll tell you everything youshould and may want to know about a safe, legal abor¬tion in N.Y. and if you wish, arrange for the finest medi¬cal care at the lowest possible cost for such services.Private chauffeured limousine, a modern suite whereyou may relax and enjoy refreshments are all part of ourfee, which covers everything. Your peace of mind isour foremost concern.CALL 212-779-4800 212-779-48028 A.M. to 9 P.M. Weekdays9-5 Saturday, SundayFree literature will be sent upon requestWOMEN'S REFERRAL SERVICE, INC.Jackson Heights Medical Building40 14 • 72nd Street, Jackson Heights, N.Y. 11372 LET US HELP YOUCall us now (collect) andone of our dedicated staffwill answer your questionsabout placement in Clinicsand accredited Hospitalsin New York City.LOW COSTSTRICTLY CONFIDENTIALAVAILABLE 7 DAYS A WEEKCALL ANYTIME (collect)(212) 371-6670or(212) 759-6810WOMEN’SPAVILIONINC.. 515 MADISON AVENUE. N.Y. .loonSTUDY SOUNDSIMPROVE GRADESImprove Gridoo Whilo DevotingThe Seme Amount Of Time To StudyUSE STUDY SOUNDSIncroaoo Your Concentration And ImproreTour Comprehension Study At A Festor RoteC.LC.G i nunK.AU.T mtuuuctu soundsCAUSE THIS TO HAPPENRteeee Specify. • T'*ck Tape. Cassette. Or IP RecordSend Check or Money Order — ROSS EachInclude 75c Handling end PoetegeSound Concepts. Inc.. — Bos J«52Chertott os Villa. Va 22902 LOOKING FORSOMETHING REAL?Than take another look at JesusSunday, 10:00 a.m.CORNELL AVENUEBAPTIST CHURCH8200 South Cornell Avo.Call 667-7632 for and*. WATER LOVERSWaterLJ, - Sluiiftluf. fun, wise. Canyau /tunu/r iC Cunn jk/Drom $40. 752-270710/The Chicago Maroon/April 30, 1971 L/C film wins prizeA color film about the University has wonfirst place in the fund-raising category atthe 1971 international US Industrial FilmFestival held in Chicago yesterday.The 24-minute production, “A Very Spe¬cial Place,” received the Gold CameraAward.” There were 450 films from 19 na¬tions entered in 24 categories of the fourthawards presentation.Filmed by Nye-Curtis Associates of LosAngeles during the summer of 1970, “AVery Special Place” features interviewswith economist Milton Friedman and cri¬minologist Norval Morris. It includes anews conference where physicist Al¬bert Crewe announced that his scanningelectron microscope had enabled his re¬search group to see single atoms for thefirst time.Michael Claffey, vice-president for devel¬opment, had overall responsibility for theproject. Details relating to scheduling,script evaluation, filming and final editingwere handled by Nancy Levner, director ofdevelopment publications.The award-winning film was shown inFebruary on WMAQ-TV (Channel 5) in Chi¬cago.Winning entries also will be shown in anationwide National Educational Televisionseries, according to J W Anderson, chair¬man of the festival. WTTW-TV (Channel11) is among the stations planning to showthe 13-week series beginning May 11.Rice appointmentStuart Rice has been appointed to athree-year term as chairman of the Chem¬istry department at the University. The ap¬pointment, effective July 1, was announcedby University President Edward Levi.Rice, Block professor of chemistry in theFranck Institute, the chemistry depart¬ment, and the committee on mathematicalbiology, succeeds Norman Nachtrieb aschairman.Nachtrieb, professor in the chemistry de¬partment and in the Franck Institute, has served as chairman since 1962. Nachtriebwill return to full-time teaching and to hisresearch in physical chemistry.Rice, 38, is a theoretical and ex¬perimental chemist whose research centerson the study of liquids and solids, the inter¬pretation of the bulk properties of matter interms of the behavior of constituent mole-c u 1 e s , the elementary processes inphotochemistry, and the electronic proper¬ties of liquids.He earned the BS degree from BrooklynCollege in 1952 and the AM and PhD de¬grees from Harvard University in 1954 and1955.He came to the University in 1957 as as¬sistant professor of chemistry and in theInstitute for the Study of Metals (nowcalled the James Franck Institute). He be¬came associate professor in 1959 and pro¬fessor in 1960. From 1962 to 1968 he servedas director of the institute.In 1969 he received a named professor¬ship, the highest honor the University canbestow upon a member of its faculty.Bruce Rabe n$Considerthesource I IWhjSKmalt liquorThe firstmalt liquorgood enoughto be calledBUPWEISER;ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS1(Maroon Classified Ads)SORRY, WE'VE BEEN CENSOREDCLASSIFIEDSClassified ad deadlines are 10:00AM Monday for Tuesday's Paper,and 4:00 PM Wed. for the FridayThe cost is 50c/l'n« th« first ro°-ning and 40‘ for repeated in¬sertions for University people,-75‘/tine and 60t/repeat line fornon University people.Strictly Per¬sonals are run for everyone at30’/line. .. . .Ads must be paid in advance sobring them to our office, Rm 304Ida Noyes, or mail them in with acheck.for saleFOTA: Roger Cormen's "The Trip"Starring Peter Fonda and DennisHopper screenplay by Jack Nichol-h son music by the Electric Flag. Ro-r ger Corman will speak after theflick. 3:00 pm, Quantrell, May 3.FOTA: Norman Pfeiffer: Pop Ar¬chitecture Law School May 4 4:00p.m.DUAL Turntables New Cheap BASFBlank Tape Bob BJ836 753-2261FURNITURE SALE Cheap StuffCall 324-8891 all day Sat-Sun 5471 S.Everett.SAAB '68 2 cycle Red StationWagon, Radio $800. Call 536-10391968 OLDS Cutlass, air cond., allpower, ex condition $1875 Nego¬tiable. Gerry 667-3191Eccentric but impecunious Britishstudent wishes to sell inimitableanomalous British Taxi. I willhaggle around $1200. 493-2237.- FOTA: Saturday May 1st 2 PM —Unlawful Assemblage I.N.H. 3 — Al-J>erto Reyes piano recital 8:30 —Unlawful Assemblage.MOVING — Selling overstuffed liv.rm. furn, chairs, tables, king bed,dresser, kitch. set, assorted Itemsold 8< new (some pewter, silver,etc) 493-3858.'68 VW Bug — One Onwer — exc.cond. Call 324-2457 after 6 pmUsed furn — Ivng rm — misc tables— Bgt New 324-2457.Water beds from $70, health food,old furs, and other discoveries atPRESENCE, 2926 Broadway. 248-1761.Save $$ on Dual KLH, Scott, AR,Dyna, at MUSICRAFT. On CampusBob Tabor. 363-4555.'60 Dodge Sed. $75. Quinn FA4-7400.Portable typewriter. Traveler. Madein Holland $35. 643-2649RUMMAGE SALEHyde Park Neighborhood Club5480 Kenwood AvenueMay 1st 8< 2nd 10- pm.STERO AMPLIFIERFisher X100C, 50 Watts, excellentShape $100. 324-3151.RECORD SALEThe CCP's new LP recording ofworks by Allen Schindler (UC stu¬dent) and Francis Thorne is special¬ly priced for UC at $2.50; and isavailable at Music Dept., 5835 Uni¬versity. Hurry! The supply is limit¬ed!PEOPLE WANTEDGym Shoes and Blue Jeans ship¬ments have just arrived. Low dis¬count prices. John's Men's Wear,1459 East 53rd Street. Need 2 people to share sublet w-stereo, bike 8. girl. Mid June-mid-Sept. 6) big rooms-$l 85 53rd 8,Woodlawn. 363-8835.Used Nikkormat FTN with 1.4 lens.$215. Model Camera, 1342 E. 55th,493-6700CHEVY '65 Imp Covt, new top, Iknew tires 8. snows, p.s., radio, re-cond eng, good cond. Best offer. 324-6817.Filing cabinets, steel-$15; Lthr.Briefcase-$6; Toaster-$12; Elec. Cof-“ fee Grinder-$12; 477 8846. FOTA: "Tom Swift and his Buzz-Band Report Card" The UnlawfulAssemblage 8:30 pm Friday April 20Lutheran School of Theology ORSat. April 31 and-or May 1 8:30 PM(same place)Briar Pipes: Straightgrains, Free¬forms; All Dunhill quality Gentlysmoked. 477-8846.BALDWIN, ACROSONIC, Spinet pi¬ano Black ebony, exel. condition$450 or offer. 324-6083 eveningsFOTA: Roger Corman films: "Maskof the Red Death" & "War of theSatellites" Sunday 2 pm Cobb GESTALTGROUPSWeekend & evening groups newforming for personal growth &learning. Experienced leaders.Scholarships available.INTERCHANGEHOUSE>53-2707Free tocollege seniorsand graduates:a Honeywellcomputer careerseminar.If college didn't prepare you for a place in the real world, may¬be Honeywell can.Come to Honeywell's computer career seminar and learnabout exciting high-paying careers in computer programming.Learn how you can apply computer technology to your ownfield of concentration.Learn about Chicago s most outstanding computer institute.The Honeywell Institute of Information Sciences. It s the onlyschool of its kind offering a course exclusively for collegegraduates.Saturday, May 1,10:00 A.M.HIIS in Chicago is located on the second floor of the La SalleWacker Building, 221 North La Salle Street.Approved for veterans.Approved by the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction State of IllinoisDirector of AdmissionsHoneywell Institute of Information Sciences221 North La Salle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60601Phone: (312) 368-0688I will not be able to attend Honeywell's Career Seminar. Pleaserush pie full information about the Honeywell Institute of Infor¬mation Sciences.Name: , i—— - -College: -College Address:Phone:Home Address:Phone:—-The Other Computer Company:Honeywell NEEDED: One rummate, May 1 forSUMMER $50-mo 8> utils. 54th 8, In-gleside. Eves. 667-0664Adult male white actor to auditionfor Oscar Brown Jr.'s BUCKWHITE. Minimal pay. 373-7347.Quiet Fem undergrad seeks 1 or 2same for roommates next yr. Helpme find apt Call 955-0691Need fem rmmt 2-bdrm apt 54th 8,Harper mid-June to October, optionto renew lease 493-6711Native or longtime resident of Kan-to or more northern areas to pro¬vide familiarization in Tokyo or re¬lated Hogen on a weekly basis. Call667-5944 or after 3pm 686-2124.Receptionist-typist with light book¬eeping for warehouse showroom.Call 667-7000 Mr. RanvikFOTA Tuesday May 4th4-Norman Pfeiffer Slide Show8-Sibyl Shearer8:30-Trio luventus RecitalRoommates (3) wanted for largeapt. 2nd floor with front porth 3 re¬frigerators, whatever. 61st and Ken-Wood. Safely secured. Rent $30apiece-month. Call JT or Bill at 752-6422.FOTA: Get your FOTA Calendar ofevents A masterpiece ready to beglued taped or hung over everymantelpiece Appearing soon.Female Roommate Wanted 684-7275Roger Corman Shows "The Trip"Monday 3pm Cobb — A FOTA eventSTAFF, STUDENTS. SUBJECTSNEEDED FOR SPEECH EX¬PERIMENT. ONE HOUR'S WORK,$1.75 Cash. On Campus. Call x3-471Cfor an appointment.Fem grad student to share w-same.Summer or longer. Own room &bath. $75-mo. Call MI34894 eve.MEN of all trades to NORTHSLOPE, ALASKA and the YUKON,around $2800.00 a month. For com¬plete information, write to Job Re¬search, P.O. Box 161, Stn-A, To¬ronto, Ont. Enclose $3.00 to covercost.Females wanted for summer subletwith option for fall, air cond. 667-6977.Part-time sales job 752-7011 Gent.Men & Women with time, money &desire to break into amateur mo¬torcycle racing call Ed 493-4052eves. Will supply advice & blessing.Will sell equipt.MONEYFIGHT POLLUTIONEARN EXTRA MONEYPART-TIME FULL-TIMECALL 472-2168PEOPLE FOR SALEBelly Dance lessons 8< Dance atBanquets. Kahraman 493-8626.Reed college drop-out desires ap¬prentice work-study relationshipwith UC prof., any field, beginningnext fall. I will do research, what¬ever if mutually profitable. Call 684-3308 before May 31. Randall.Have your papers, reports, thesis,manuscripts, plays, letters, exams,and resumes, TYPED PROFES¬SIONALLY. Reasonable rates. CallMiss Jones at 842-6934,Babysitting — Days Call 752-2290MASSAGE FOR MALE & FEMALEHawaiian, Scandinavian, and Mid-Eastern massages — all three com¬bined into one very satisfying mas¬sage. Call BOB, 326-4739 anytimeTHE FOTA Pop Colloquium withTom Wolfe, Roger Corman, NormanPfeiffer, Franz Schulz and John Ca-welti. Monday 8 pm MandelExper Flute-Recorder teacher. Privlessons 667-0988 Fri-SunMOVING?Licensed mover & hauler. Call ArtMichener. 955-2480WANTEDQuiet, reliable adult seeks 4-6 rms.One child. 548-4251.Norman Pfeiffer shows slides ofSkidmore, Owings 8. Merril as ex¬amples of what NOT to do. See hisfast-moving slide show on pop archi¬tecture. Tues. Law Aud.WANTED: Men's lightweight, 3-speed bicycle, used, in good condi¬tion, cheap. Call Don, x3-32 63 days,288-2859 evenings.RIDE WANTED: to Near North —Lincoln Pk area, Thursday after¬noons, around 4:30 p.m. Call Diana,X3-3263 days.SUMMER SUBLETFOTA: Unless otherwise stated —FOTA is FREE FOTA is FREELarge AIR CONDITIONED apt forSummer. Own Room. 731-1417.SUBLET Ig studio apt $119. 53rd &Dorchester. Call Mrs. Martin FA4-0200.June — Sept. 2 Bedrm. apt. inMadison Park, furnished. $180 924-2362, evenings.Female Subletters wanted:June thru Sept., 3 bedrms, 2 bath 568c Univ. Mod kitchen. Clean, cool,quiet. Call 955-0194.Furnished, nice apt. to sublet June5, Sept 30, $110 mo, 324-6083SUBLET Sum Qtr $135, Lge 2 bdrmfurn »pt nr lair* nn rampua But rteAir cond. Prefer grad couple x3-4014day, 978-0642 evenings Summer Sublet 7 room apartment 4bedrooms. Call 324-3787 7-10 pmFOTA takes you in THE TRIP withFonda, Hopper, Nicholson, the Elec¬tric Flag. Roger Corman will dis¬cuss it afterwards. Monday May 3rdQuantrell.3 bdrms 2 baths new ktehn faculty,housing $65 mo Ph 288-7985Live in Berkeley for Summer!!2-3 bdrm house. Sublet $180-mo sun¬ny, yard, nr. campus. Write T.Wolfe, 1524 Hearst, Berkeley, CA.94703.FOTA: The Unlawful AssemblageFri 8c Sat at Lutheran School ofTheology. 8:30 pm.Roommates or sublet starting June1, option to lease in Sept spaciousSouth Shore apartment 3 bdrms, 2baths. Close to 1C. Call George 752-1429SUMMER SUBLET w-possible Faitoption. Avail, around June 12-Oct. 1.Prefer male grad to share w-same,own bdrm in Ig 51 rm apt. $65-month. Near 57th 8c Maryland —convenient. Ralph at 643-6247, orleave message.SPACESTUDENT ROOMATE WANTED forapartment close to campus. Rentreasonable; Kosher available. Don'tcall after 11 pm. 324-3060FOTA: Sibyl Shearer Tuesday May4th, 8 pm Ida NoyesCHICAGO BEACH HOTEL51 CO S. Cornell DO 3-2400Beautiful Furnished ApartmentsNear beach-park-I.C. trains U of Cbuses at door Modest daily, weekly,monthly rates.Call Miss SmithSingle rooms with or without mealcontract Call BU8-9870Roger Hildebrand and a MaypoleMonday, Noon, Harper Quad, FOTAGroovy Studio for 1 or 2. June 1, E.Hyde Pk. hi-rise lease ends Aug 72$134 mo. Furn for sale — optional(rugs-drapes-huge bed-kitchen) Call324-7334 evenings.FOTA: Young Artists Series: Pianorecital by Alberto Reyes, Indiana UWorks by Beethoven, Liszt, Chopin.3:00 pm, Mandel May 1.6 large rm 3 bdrm 2 bath near 1CMay 1 $225 So Shr 978-1636FSACCSLNeatly tear your FSACCSL ballot inhalf and send it back to O'Connellin the enclosed self-addressed enve¬lope.YOM HAATZMAUTHillel is having a barbecue and in¬formal party in honor of YomHaatzmaut. Will include Israeli folkdancing and singing. 4:30 Sundayafternoon. Hillel backyard.BLACKFRIARSTONIGHT AND TOMORROWNIGHTBLACKFRIARS PRESENTSTHE DEMOCRATIC WAYCHILDREN'S SUMMERART WORKSHOPAges 4-7 Arts-Crafts Music andDance. In Harper Court. Call UPS-5267 or 955-3544.SEXISM UNVEILEDThe April Sexist of the Monthaward will be conferred TODAY!Watch for it! Midway chauvinists,quake, quakeSCENESA time to be happy, a time to re¬joice . .. and time to fly Kites!The South Side School for JewishStudies invites all to fly kites inhonor of Israeli Independence DaySun. May 2, Hyde Park Neighbor¬hood Club, 5480 S. Kenwood, 11:30AM Also: families interested in join¬ing our school next year are invitedto Visit the School. Dynamic Teach¬ing! Our Staff is from the U of CFour undergraduates, two medicalstudents, three social science gradu¬ate students, one grad student ineducation. Come fly with us! Forinfo call Fred, 288-3946.FOTA: Sibyl Shearer dances andtalks on Tuesday at 8 Ida Noyes Great Balls of Fire! All the bigboys are laying on their tans for theFOTA SOCK-HOPInformal Bible Study, Sunday Eve¬nings at 8 pm. Call 667-7632Mr. Zeev Eytan, Graduate Studenti n Political Science will speaktonight at 8:30 on "THE ISRAELIARMY: A POLITICAL SCIENCEANALYSIS OF ITS STRUCTUREAND FUNCTION." Hillel House.Faculty Chaperones at Sock-HopWant to make like Marlon Brando,Little Fauss, Danny Lyon, Bad BartMarket, Carol Noss, & that wholecrowd? Call Ed aft. 7 pm. 493-4052.FOTA: Roger Hildebrand at theMaypole Dance Monday May 3, highnoon, Harper Quad.FOTA's Super Pops Monday 8 PMCRAFT COOP features prints, tiedye, leather, macrame, and otherhandcrafts, all done by local artists.Visit us Mon-Fri 11:30-2:30 ThursNite 7-9 in the Blue Gargoyle 57th 8<University.Yoga Poses Concentr. Meditatn.Beg-Adv. Single-Group Classes SRINERODE OF INDIA DO 3-0155FOTA: FREE for a limited timeonly! Slides of a herd of cows on anairplane and a collosal sculpture ofMoby Dick in the Law Auditorium.Pop Architecture lecture with slidesby Norman Pfeiffer. May 4 4:00pm.Follow the sun with Eastern. PlanNow: Nassau June 14-20 7 days and6 nites, 2 meals a day. Round tripplus single room $258.00, share adouble $207.00 each. For reservationcall Peggy. 493-5543.Tired of long hair, blue jeans 8<bra-less broads?? You can weargreased hair 8< leather at the FOTASock-Hop May 8th.INDIAN- COOKING CLASSES. Con¬tact 955-9812 — morning before 10am, or evenings.FOTA presents. "Spoon River An¬thology" May 6th 8 pm, INHZEN MEDITATION GROUP SittingMon and Wed 5:00 Ida Noyes 2ndfloor East lounge 288-7485.FOTA: "The New Journalism" —Tom Wolfe 1:30 May 3 Mandel"LIFE IN DOMINICAN REPUB¬LIC" Slide talk by Luis Iglesias, FriApr 30, 8 pm. Crossroads StudentCenter 5621 Blackstone.FOTA: Spring Sun Song DanceFOTA: Sunday May 2nd2-Roger Corman Film Festival3:30 Cameo Opera Co.FOTA: An Unlawful Assemblage issort of like a Second City.MEDIUM COOLCEF is proud to announce the addi¬tion of Wexler's Medium Cool to ourregular Spring Schedule on May 16.Further details to be forthcoming.GAY LIBGAY MAY DAY march & picnicMeet on quads (58St & Univ) 11:30am, 5-1 also big GAY OPENHOUSEGAY YOUTH meeting for Gaypeople to 22 yrs old Sun 5-2 IdaNoyes 1212 E 59 St. East Lounge 3pmTennessee Williams' Sweet Bird ofYouth Sun May 2, 9 pm Cobb $1THEY SHOOT HORSESCEF shows the Oscar winning dra¬ma They Shoot Horses Don't They?at 7 & 9:15 this Sat. at Cobb. WithGig Young, Jane Fonda, Red But-tons, Michael Sarrazin.FOLK DANCES ~Hungry Jim says folk dancingtastes best on Sundays at Ida NoyesHall, 8-11:30 pm 50 cent donation.total” extravagenceTSee the pretty FOTA calendar. It isnice work. It should be. It costs al¬most $1500 Big name concert? Bigname dance? No money says FOTA.Who is kidding whom?ABORTIONSWHY PAY for abortion counselingyou can get FREE in Hyde Park?NY abortions from $150 Call ClergyService, 667-6015PERSONALSVery Cheap flights to Europe 8.Asia. Contact 922-0723.ASTRO L 0 GY— Personal con¬sultations are now offered to stu¬dents at a special student fee. Con¬cerned about career selection, jobopportunities, love, and your realself ... Call 723-1363 Jo Mitchell,D.F. Astrol. S. CUSTOM CRAFTEDJEWELRYWedding BandsIndividually DesignedSilver from $20Cold from $40You are welcome to visit me at myworkshop for a unique gift forMOTHERS' DAY or any other spe¬cial occasion, at a price that suitsyour needs.CALL BASH A 337-0715Days or EveningsFOTA FREE FOTA FREE FOTAFREEFOTA: Opera! Cameo Opera Com¬pany of Kenmore College: operaticensembles will include "The Tele¬phone" by Gian Carlo Menotti. 3:30pm, Sunday, May 2, Mandel.FOTA: Sat. May 1 Cloister ClubINH Workshop by Unlawful Assem¬blage.Soft baby kitty desires warm per¬sonal relations. 324-4843.GAY LIB PRESENTSSWEET BIRD OF YOUTHwithPaul Newman, Geraldine Page,Ed Begley, Rip Torn & ShirleyKnight.SUNDAYMAY 2 8:00 PMCOBB HALL $1FOTA: DOUBLE FEATURE: RogerCorman films; "War of the Satel¬lites" "Mask of the Red Death"May 2 Sunday 2:00 pm Quantrell.Shishkebob, bachlava, rice pilau.Ahmad's serves Middle Easterncuisine. 1450 E. 57thInterested in starting your own busi¬ness this summer with a new na-t i o n a I I y-known product WriteR.A.H. Distributing Company, Suite14, 4820 Sahler Street, Omaha, Nebr¬aska, 68104 or call 402-455-3995 (nocollect calls)Students — Europe for Christmas,Easter or summer? Employment op¬portunities, charter flights, dis¬counts. Write for info (air mail)Anglo American Association 60aPyle St., Newport I.W., England.LIKE LOX??? We will deliver a de-licious lox & bagel breakfast to yourplace on Sun. May 16 $2.00 for two;$3.50 for four. Call 3A1-2004 beforeMay 5th.Have you bought the CCP recordingof Allen Schindler's String Sextet Ifany remain at $2.50, they'll be atthe Music Dept. Hurry!Roger Corman Film Festival "Maskof the Red Death" with VincentPrice 8, "War of the Satellites"Sunday 2 pm CobbYou don't have to be Jewish to bepregnant, but if you are ... Callthe "Ark" 463-4545 4-10 pmFREE CAT — adult, female(spayed) needs affectionate ownerto save from SPCA 684-7753 or Ext.4562.Blow your mind with good music.Lowest prices on all stereos at MU¬SICRAFT. On campus, Bob Tabor,363-4555.Unlawful Assemblage Workshop onimprovisational techniques INH 2pm Saturday FOTA$25 REWARD for 1, 11, or 2 rmunfurn apt avail beg May; pref old¬er apt, sunny, porch, etc. near lakeor campus. Call Henry, 493-7118 11am-l:30 pm or Fri. or Sat.Budding Bike Bashers. 493-4052The Cops have promised not to bustThe Unlawful Assemblage till aftertheir performance for FOTA at theLutheran School Friday 8, Saturdayat 8:30.LOST: Large Leather Green HatREWARD Darius Baer 753-3773.SUPER PERSONALSJorge, You're the Best.Another FOTA tradition broke!! TheMaypole Celebration will be on May3rd Noon-Harper QuadSnap, Crackle, POP (Colloquium).FOTA: Mixed Media Art ExhibitFrim I IT, Soc. Serv. Bldg May 3-14FOTA: Art Exhibit and ContestPierce April 28-May 14.Mary, I'll come chew on your leganytime. Kozmic KidHUM YOUR CLASSMMD TO THE MAROON12121.59thSt., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE 50* por lino, 40* por oach lino if tho ad la repeated in asubsequent, consocutivo issue. Non*University people: 75* porlino, 60* por ropoat lino. There aro 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a lino. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCEIHEADING: Thoro is an oxtra charge of $1.00 for your own hooding. Normalon os (For Sales, etc.) aro free.r~ 1'U-— 1April 30, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/11j < L r . ; . ; > ’ A Ii’1*"- i‘- ; -vi it. UJ. V\.NFOTAISHERE!Friday April 3l(hA Saturday May 1st.Lutheran School ofTheology 8:30 PMSaturday May 1stIda Moves Hall3 PMMandel3 PMSunday May 2ndQuantrell2 PMMandel3:30Monday May 3rdHarper Quad .NOONMandel1:30Quantrell3 PMMandel8 PMTuesday May 4thLaw School4 PMIda Moves Hall8PMMandel8:30 PMThru May 14thPieree Tower The Inlawful Assemblage "Tom Sv* ift andHis Buzz-Bomb Report Card”Workshop with The l nlanlul AssemblageYoung Artists Series: Piano Reeital b\ Al¬berto Reyes. Viorks by Beethoven. Liszt. &Chopin.Roger Corman Film Fesli\al "The Mask ofthe Red Death” "Viarof the Satellites”Cameo Opera Co. Cian Carlo Menotti'-"The Telephone” and other operatic en¬semblesTraditional KOTA Mavpole Celebration.Song, dance. KOTA Opening Speech by Ro¬ger HildebrandTom Wolfe speaking on "The .New Journal¬ism’*Roger Corman will be showing "The Trip*and speaking afterwards.The Pop Colloquium: Tom Wolfe. Roger(lorman. IMorman Pfeiffer. Franz Schulze. &John Cawelti.Norman Pfeiffer: a fast moving, multiplescreen slide show on pop architecture.Sibyl Shearer: Lecture-demonstration onmodern dance.Young Artists Series: Trio luventus. SylviaCazeau. violin; Christoph Henzel. violin-cello; Francoise Regnat, piano. Works byBrahms. Havden. and Ravel.FOTA Art Exhibition and Contest. Jk12/The Chicago Maroon/April 30, 1971 HAYLCr’i ALL-NIGHT SHGWVPERFORMANCES FRIDAY l SAFURDAY FOLLOWING IASI REGULAR FEATUREApr. 30WUSAPaul Newman 12,2.00a.m. May 1LITTLE FAUSS AND BIG HALSEYRobert RedfordMay 7THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR12:15,2:00 A.M. May 8THUNDERBALl YOU ONLYLIVE TWICE12:15.2:30 A.M.May 14IF12:15,2:00 A.M. May 15LIT IT BEHARD DAY'S NIGHT12:15, 2:00 A.M.May 21PUTNEY SWOPE12:15,2:00 A.M. May 22KING OF HEARTSTOM JONES12:15 A.M., 2:00 A.M.May 28MAGIC CHRISTIAN12:15, 2:00 A.M. May 29MONTEREY POPDON'T LOOK BACK12:15,2:00 A.M.B ncsmiiM |JUST PUBLISHED!WK• -•».****BY JERRY RURINMWttO MWN»CN/245 • $1.95At vour booksellertfiHarper RowMl1 Paperback Dept. 62 ustc CO-OP17a EAST-55*95S-22JOrrwc instructionimtrumrYts NEWond USED and accessoriesgutex and drum repo<TAKCAM-YKNCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOff N DAILY11 A.M. TO 1:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOUDAYS12 TO t:30 PMOrders to take out1318 East 63rd MU4-1062 DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363f* “Cut out and save this ad ■ “ 1Don'tCall YourTravelAgent!When you want the mostcharters available forSummer 1971, Call212-697-3054As a student at thiscollege, YOU may beeligible for our low, lowcost fares. Flights fromNew York to all majorEuropean Cities.Weekly departuresFlights under the auspicesof World StudentGovernment OrganizationSend coupon ... call, writeor visit.W S G O. please send□ Travel bulletins□ Application tor InternationalStudent I D C/aName-AddressCityStale -Zip-School.Charter & GroupTraval Specialist*60 East 42nd StreetNew York 10017Call (212) 697-3054Volume 3, Number 25 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of the Arts Friday, April 30,1971Moviemaking on CampusBy David Nnfer“I haven’t watched 3000 films for nothing.”—CharlesFlynn, on the set of The Boarding House, explainingthe construction of an elegant shot.“This University shows little academic interestin film. However, it does seem to be largelydependent upon films as a spiritual antidote.”— RonMcAdowFilm is perhaps the most popular art on thiscampus; student interest elicits almost daily show¬ings from one or another of the campus film clubs. Itis not an accessible art form for the student artist,though. Last weekend saw the premiere of TheBoarding House, the biggest UC student film produc¬tion of the year. In its wake I talked to its director,Charles Flynn, and several other student filmmakers — T C Fox, Andy Gurian and Ron McAdow —about making films.In explaining the genesis of his film Charles said,“When I came here I got involved in Doc Films,which was one of the major influences of my life. Docfilms is total immersion in films if you’re a member.But I didn’t actually think about doing a film untilabout six months ago. The inspiration came fromseeing the student films at the Chicago film festivalfor three years. The student films were so awful thatthey were driving me to do one myself. I couldn’tbelieve that student films had to be as awful as theones I saw.“I chose the Joyce story The Boarding Housebecause it was a very visual story with almost nodialogue, and I wasn’t going to be able to affordsynchronous sound. I wrote a three-page screen playand then set about raising money to shoot it. Ioriginally thought that it would cost about $600-800.We shot it one weekend in January.” (A good 16mmcamera rents for $35-50 a day, but Sundays are free;so student films with rented equipment are almostalways frenetically shot on weekends.) “We startedto work at seven Saturday morning, and didn’t finishuntil after midnight, totally exhausted”. Twenty-fourhours work on the set produced twenty-two minutesof 16mm color footage, which was eventually cut to aseven minute film.Explaining the difficulties of shooting, Charlessaid, “The big time waster is lighting. Every timeyou move the camera from one set up to another youhave to change the lighting and run through theaction again.” Terry Fox expanded upon the samesubject ; “For a minute of screentime you work fromone to five hours, and that’s working fast. You’ve gotto set your lighting for every shot, and you may set akey light, but you’ve got to vary it for each shot, andtry to make it look like it’s the same light coming.“Actors, theater actors, hate it, for they have togo on cold for twenty seconds, and then sit around fortwo hours before the next shot. They have no time towarm up, or to develop the character.”Charles found that working with actors for thefirst time was one of the most instructive aspects ofhis first film. “Acting is a key problem in moststudent films. The people who make them don’t wantto work with actors. The people who make films frequently have difficulties dealing with otherpeople, and many actors have the reputation of beingrather highstrung. At least half of the student films Isee have no acting in them at all — either the personjust goes out and shoots used car lots, or sewers, orhe gets people and just has them stand there.”Charles did little of the technical work during theshooting. Rather, he directed the fifteen actors andtechnicians. On the subject of expertise, Charlessaid: “For the last two years I was very obsessedwith technique, learning how to do technical things.And I learned a lot about cameras and lights andexposures and what sorts of films to use. It’s usefulfor two reasons: it helps to know what’s going ontechnically; and also, so that other people can’t cometo you and say, ‘you can’t do that’, becausetechnicians love to do that. Not just in films — peoplein general love to say to other people, ‘You can’t dothat!”’His own evaluation of his first work was: “I feelthat the pacing is rather off, which is entirely myfault, but I think it moves too slowly. I think theproportions are right. I don’t think there are anyindividual scenes that are wrong, but it could havebeen perhaps a minute and a half shorter.“One of the things that I learned in this film isthat the basic idea is much more important thantechnical prowess and if you don’t have a clear ideaof what you want to do, there’s really not much pointin going out and making a film.”A somewhat different tack is taken by AndyGurian, who has made about fourteen films in 8 and16mm. Andy typically shoots over a long period oftime, and in some of his “impressionistic” films,“there is originally a plot, but in its development itbecomes so complicated that no can ever figure itout.”The twenty-two minutes of raw footage of TheBoarding House was cut to a finished film of seven minutes. In comparison to Charles’ 3:1 cuttingration, Terry shot 4:1, or two hours film, for thethirty minutes of Bring Down Darkness. Andytypically shoots about 4:1, and Ron McAdow, whenanimating, shoots about 10:9, or ten minutes filmshot for nine minutes used. The Boarding Houseeventually cost about $1400, almost $600 of whichwent into its superb sound track, featuring KennethNorthcott on one track, and Claude Debussy on theother.One of the major difficulties of making studentfilms is the economically imposed limitation onlength. Most filmmakers are aesthetically andemotionally tied to the feature length film, and inmany cases the length restriction of a low budget filmbecomes a Procrustean bed, lopping off developmentand proportion, and eventually bleeding the film todeath. Charles says, “The reason so many films arenever finished is simply for lack of funds. I simplyhad to understand the limitations involved, and find astory that could be told in seven or eight minutes. It’sdirected like a feature.”Terry’s case: “I guess that writing screenplaysis partly a defense against that (not being able tomake feature length films), for it lets me work outthe longer forms on paper.”Ron McAdow’s solution to this problem hasdetermined the shape of most of his work: objectanimation. Much of his work consists of wildlyimaginative animated peanuts playing football andhunting tigers. Ron explains, “It’s very difficult,given financial limitations, for students to producefilms that are fun to watch. I think from the verybeginning I was very responsive to my audience.“Animation is fun to watch. It opens the way forthe director-animator to have complete control overwhat he puts on film. He completely constructs eachframe, which strikes me as a very good way to learnabout cinema. One does the editing in the camera,which dissolves the shooting-editing distinctioh andmakes movie-making one continuous expression ofyour vision.“The complete control makes the filmmaker avisual artist to a greater extent than a dramaticartist. Whenever you’re filming people in a realroom, you’re stuck with the real world, and somesense of naturalism. In my animations I have apeanut moving around, which for some reason thehuman imagination will accept as a personality; andthe humor in the films comes from the fact that theydo is invariably in sharp contrast to what they are.”“A lot of people complain about how arduous it isto make films, and what a drag editing is, but I don’tthink anyone makes films unless he enjoys it.Otherwise it’s just a pain,” says Andy Gurian. Thesefilmmakers have other motives as well though. Theywould like to make directing their profession.The process by which one gets people to stakesmall or large fortunes upon one’s vision and skill asa director is an arduous one. Artistic success dependsupon career opportunity, rather than vice-versa.Only a small number of feature films are made in thisContinued on Page ThreerCCP: Problematical Mixed^Media/. ,The Contemporary Chamber Players presentedone of their most interesting concerts to date lastFriday. The program included two recently-writtencompositions, as well as one twentieth-century workthat has achieved the status of a classic.The concert began with Trobar Clus (1970) byBarbara Kolb, a work refreshingly different frommuch of the music written today. Without resorting toa reactionary harmonic language, Trobar Clusmanaged to be melodious and peaceful. An air ofdelicacy and tenderness hovered over the piece; theatmosphere was set right from the start by a group of“soft-sounding” instruments — flute and guitar —which supplemented the more expectable sections ofstrings and brass.' There were many beautiful passages in TrobarClus, notably a wistful trumpet line and a tendersection played by the strings near the end of thepiece. Sadly, the work was rather uneven; there weremany sections of disappointing quality, such as thehackneyed use of glissandi, which rarely signifymore than a lapse of concentration during the actualcomposition of the piece. And while the in¬strumentation seemed to show a familiarity withBoulez; Marteau Sans Maitre, the rhythmic hammerhere seemed too much oppressed by an unvaryingmaster. Nevertheless, there was enough fine mate¬rial in Trobar Clus to suggest that, with a little moreselectivity, Miss Kolb could add some very importantworks to the musical literature.The second work of the evening was the worldpremier of Quadruplum by W. Thomas McKinley, aprofessor in the UC Music Department. This workfeatured four soloists, including a soprano “singing”pretty big words such as “war,” “hope,” and “God.”The piece was loud and thick, with the din augmentedfrom time to time by a tape of muttering voices. Thisnoise from the speakers functioned less for what itwas than for what it wasn’t, being most effective forthe sudden sense of silence it created when it stopped.The visual element seemed quite important in thispiece, though it is uncertain whether this wasintended by the composer. The appearance of theperformers’ movements stood out most when theycould not be heard clearly (which happenedfrequently), such as the long sections when the soundof the piano was lost, as well as the pianists half¬hearted banging on the body of his instrument. As the The two hens in Stravinsky’s Renard.first violinist muttered inaudibly on, his facialexpression seemed very comic. And the soprano’sstars-and-stripes dress — were all these thingsintended by the composer, or were they worked up bythe interpreters to add to (or distract from) themusic?The main problem of the work lay in itsproportions; it maintained its high intensity toounceasingly, both in volume and texture. There weresome very well-written sections, such as when theflute played sharp, disjointed notes along with thepiano, violin, and percussion, but unfortunately theseinspired moments too often gave way to unbridledchaos.The concert was crowned finally with a perform¬ance of Stravinsky’s Renard (1917). The text of thiswork was adapted by the composer himself from anold Russian folk-tale about the fox and cock. Itessentially involves the “seduction” of the cock fromhis perch by the sly, hungry fox, and the subsequent rescue of the cock by his animal friends. The wholesequence occurs twice, making the victim’s errorseem ludicrous as well as inevitable.Renard is supposed to be performed by anorchestra and singers, with a group pantomiming theaction on stage. The singing of the four soloists wasgenerally good, though the voices sometimes did notmanage to project above the sound of the orchestra,especially in the very low passages of the baritone.The original score of Renard calls for a cimbalon, astrange Hungarian instrument that resembles thedulcimer, though it has a much more strident, full-bodied tone. The zany touch added by this instrumentwas unfortunately absent in last Friday’s perform¬ance, though understandably so, since both cimbalonand cimbalon-playei s are hard to come by. Especial¬ly in light of this, I would have wished for a somewhatmore exaggerated interpretation of the score to bringout the burlesque character of the music. Forexample, when the fox, disguised as a nun, fakes agreat concern for the cock’s polygamous practices,his voice wavers, droops, and slips back up by wholetones, with the tempo varying, half-seductively, half-satirically. Much more freedom of tempo would havebeen welcome at this point.The story was acted out by the Claud KipnisMime Group with plenty of buffoonery. The spectaclewas enjoyable, and the group gave a unique inter¬pretation of the story. Stravinsky’s fox is anaggressive, smart seducer who also happens to befemale. The fox’s prey is a vain and coquettish male.The situation thus distorts the traditionally-expectedcharacters of the sexes. The pantomimists enlargedon this theme, turning the cock into a real dandy, whoflirts revoltingly, more out of narcissism thanpassion, with two groupie hens (not called for byStravinsky).The pantomime was skillful, though the individ¬ual movements and gags were often too expectable. Aspecial section, unaccompanied by the orchestra,was added after the cock took his second moronicjump from the perch ; the antics of the fox, setting upher cooking utensils, with the cock squirming andshuddering, brought some laughter from the au¬dience, but at this time it became obvious that theperformance’s success was directly dependent uponthe music.—Mark Blechner• C0luUBi« fljuARCASMC PBlNTCDIhuS*OH COUMUU RECORK « AM WESMUSIC OF OUR TIME FROM THE MUSIC COMPANYPeople stomp their feet,clap their hands and shout theirheads off on Johnny Winter’snew live album with an intensityyou won’t hear on other livealbums.And with good reason:Johnny Winter And’s perform¬ance on those nights was someof the rockin’est music everplayed.About the greatest tributea group can receive can beheard on this album.Except for maybe bringingtheir music into your home. i*fo y, rt :rn f *• ' • t j\r.X\AArchitecture by Pfeiffer:The Popular EnvironmentNorman Pfeiffer, of Hardy Pfeiffer Associates.Park Avenue, New York City, commented on hisfirm’s latest custrm residence:“It’s like a pin-ball machine.”Pfeiffer is bringing his irreverent and wittyapproach to architectural design to the U of C thiscoming Tuesday at four o’clock. His talk, entitled“Mirror Sighted,” will be accompanied by a fast-moving slide show flashed from two projectorssimultaneously. The slides, assembled over a periodof several years, include not only examples of workdone by Pfeiffer's firm, but also many scenes fromthe everyday “popular” environment — things likerailroad bridges, rocket-launching pads, ferry-boatdocks and highway overpasses Pfeiffer believes thatthese kinds of environment can teach the architect agood deal about, design. “Non-architects have de¬signed a great many structures that should make usthing about our regular geometric buildings differ¬ently,” he says.Hardy Holzman Pfeiffer, one of the fastest-growing architectural firms in the contry, hasrecently been getting a lot of attention from thePink plastic hair curlers, children’s building blocksand Brillo boxes make up Pfeiffer’s model of hisShaw University expansion. popular and professional press. Both media peopleand clients find the firm’s ideas new and provocative,and their translation of these ideas into actualbuildings imaginative and effective.A particularly interesting recent project in¬volved the development of a master plan for aprojected multi-million-dollar expansion of ShawUniversity in Raleigh, North Carolina. The planaimed to express the urban character of the campusby encouraging new university-community relation¬ships. Dormitories were envisioned as low-rentalhousing for both students and the community, andcommercial activities beyond normal campus-sup¬ported ventures are encouraged. The plan also isstructures to provide for interaction between variouslearning activities. Dormitories, classrooms, eatinghalls, libraries and laundromats would be inter¬mingled to emphasize the relationship between livingand learning.A similarly radical design solution can be foundin another of HHPA’s recent projects, a blackcommunity theater in Harlem. The New LafayetteTheater, in view of the architects, would provide “anenvironment for exploration and participation.”In order to unite artist and- audience into thetheatrical event as one total community, an archi¬tectural cohesion between the event of the productionand the life of the audience must be found. Thiscannot be accomplished within traditional forms —they are too well known, too redolent of things past.”The final form of the theater involved frag¬mented seating so that action could go on around,between, below and above the spectators. Theinterior is designed so that the audience focuses onthe whole space rather than on a single stage. Thearchitects chose a rich assortment of materials forthe design in order to create an image of the vitalityof the Harlem streets outside.Design solutions like this reflect a new andincreasingly influental way of thinking on the part ofyoung architects This new orientation emphasizesacceptance of the complexities and fragmentation ofour present urban scene. As Norman Pfeiffer statesit “In the twentieth century we no longer have theopportunity to move about an environment whichallows an isolated view of things. Rather than seeingbuildings, forms or whatever in completed stages, wesee pieces of things in collision and opposition to oneanother — fragments of buildings, reflections, bits ofsigns, structures being demolished or erected. Sincewe don’t see things in their total isolated form in ourdense urban environment, maybe this is a newvocabulary for ordering architecture.”—Virginia WexmanCool and Precise NudityNude dance arrived in Chicago last weekend, anddidn’t arouse an awful lot of interest. Had thepublicity stressed the superb technical virtuosity ofthe Netherlands Dance Theater, perhaps there wouldhave been fuller houses for their five performances.(And when will the Auditorium Theater learn aboutstudent rush tickets and regular student discounts?)Glen Tetley, an American, and Hans van Manen,a Dutchman, have choreographed the major part ofthe company’s repertory since its founding twelveyears ago. Three of Van Manen’s works were onFriday’s program, “Situations,” “Grosse Fugue,”and “Symphony in Three Movements;” the fourth,“After Eden,” was by John Butler.In all of Van Manen’s works, which weregenerally too long, the superbly trained and attrac¬tive dancers glided through the modern and classicalmovements with skill and precision. But either theywere thoroughly engrossed in what they were doingand unself-conscious, or they were trying to be so cooland aloof that they appeared to have forgotten aboutthe audience. This apparent lack of involvementcaused pieces that could have been entralling to bemerely interesting.Some spectators voiced disappointment on Fri¬day when they noted that the ramp wasn’t up for“Mutations,” which has some nude sequences in it.But if that was their main concern, they shouldn’thave been disappointed since the costumes werescanty and the movements alluded to a vast array ofsexual encounters, with an assortment of partners.Throughout the evening, the decor, costumes andchoreography for the pieces exhibited fine designs.The company also offered four performances of“Mutations ” with its film rhoroography by VanManen and live choreography by Tetley. Eachchoreographer began with musical compositions byKarlheinz Stockhousen and a similar idea of what the work should be, and they proceeded independentlyfrom there.As “Mutations” begins, there are periodic,synthetic sounds and a stage set with thin chromepipes and bordered by five wide pieces of whitematerial from the ceiling to the floor. Then a figureappears on the four foot-wide runway that juts outtwenty-five feet from the stage over the orchestra.He’s clad in white tights with rings under his joints,and you think it’s a Nikolais piece, (though Tetleyhas denied being influenced by Alwin Nikolais).Tetley says of “Mutations,” “I liked the idea ofmutations — of a sense of movement where one thinggoes into another, with a new form evolving. I wantedspecifically in this work to get out of the prosce¬nium.”He tried to keep a progression of movement witha ’’feeling of tension,” and create a “cool elevatedpiece.” Putting the dancers in foot-high cork shoeswas, according to Tetley, “a mutation: it makesthem move very slowly, and with a great deal ofdanger ... I did want, in every way I could, to accentthe actual mechanics of moving. ”The three film sequences, two of which werefilmed in twenty-five seconds, were shown in slowmotion for four and one-half minutes, creating a verybeautiful impressionistic effect which gave themovements an added dimension.Two of the filmed sequences and the final livesegment featured nude dancers. For those of you whomay be wondering about the parts of the body thatcontinue to move after the movement is completed,well, the dancers didn’t exactly jump around likerabbits, so it wasn’t a problem, and the nudity waswell presented, although the curtain calls with somenude, some clothed and some dancers in their plasticsee-through jump suits were amusing.—Paula Meinetz Shapiro Terry Fox on the set of “Bring Down Darkness.”Easy Filmmaking:Press ButtonsContinued from Page Onecountry each year, and there are a lot of people whowant to make them. Terry Fox, after graduating lastspring/became one of them.“It’s certainly easier now to be a director incontrol of a film than it’s ever been,” he says, “andyet it is still very hard. So much of it is economics.Film is a luxury industry. There are no jobs to be hadin the industry anywhere now.“I was working with Nicholas Ray for a while onhis film of the Conspiracy Trial, until it fell throughfor lack of money. I met him last spring when Docfilms had him here. Then I was at a demonstrationlast summer and he was shooting, and handed me thecamera, and said, “Shoot some footage, I’ve got toget some film. Look for shadows, get in tight, I’ll beback in ten minutes’ and so I started to work on thefilm.”Terry continues, “I’m still tied to the narrativepicture. It’s clear that I have to get some backingthat is rather large (to work out a narrative).Meanwhile, I’ve got to keep shooting something, andJ’m working on screenplays. One is a witchcraftyscreenplay which is very commercial and is beingwritten for that reason, and one is a romanticscreenplay which is very uncommercial and which isbeing written because I like it. I’m also thinkingabout a suspense picture, which I’d really like to do.“It is very clear to me that one way that you don’tget to direct in this country is to go up the ranks fromproduction assistant to assistant director and allthat. The camera man or scriptwriter or film editorgets to direct”.“One needs the first break to get started” saysRon. These four filmmakers are going after theirbreaks in different fashions. Charles hopes to get ajob after graduation making commercials. Having avery polished first flick will probably help. Andy mayget a film distribution job in New York. Ron hopes todo more animation work, or go into TV. Terrycontinues work on his screenplays, as do the others,and will continue to shoot and edit on other people’sprojects where possible, as he did on the Ray film.Q: Why did you switch to film from painting, Andy?Andy Warhol: Well, it was easier, 'Q: What do you mean, easier, Andy?Andy Warhol: Well, you know, you just have to pressthe button. mApril 30, 1971 /Grey City Journal/3rNWPKlPCulture VultureGay Lib presents “Sweet Bird of Youth” Sunday.MUSICFOTA recitals: May 1 at 3 in Mandel, Albert Reyes, University of Indiana atBloomington, plays Liszt, Chopin, and Ginastera. May 4 at 8.30, the JoventusTrioperforms Brahms, Haydn and Ravel in Mandel. May 5 at 4, Santiago ERodriguez, University of Texas at Austin, gives a piano recital includingBeethoven, Bach, Prokofiev and Chopin, also in Mandel.The Chicago Chamber Orchestra will present a concert May 4 at 8 in GalvinMemorial Hall, Mundelein College Learning Resource Center, 6339 SheridanRoad. 262 8100, ext. 231.The Chicago Strings, May 6 at 8:30. Members of the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra are led by Francis Akos in music by Tartini, Geniniani, Telemann andVivaldi. Orchestra Hall, $1.50-5.At 3-30 in Mandel on Sunday, FOTA presents the Cameo Opera Company ofKenmore College, performing Menotti's The Telephone and others.ARTThe Renaissance Society Gallery will show "Chinese Painting at Mid-Century"May 4 through June 12.108 Goodspeed Hall.The Bergman Gallery presents "Erotic and Fantastic Drawings'by NineArtists" (arranged by GCJ art editor Susan Left) May 4 through June 5. Cobb 418.FOTA's Art Show will be held in Pierce Tower through May 14.Tuesday at 4 in the Law School, Norman Pfeiffer will give a slide show-lectureon pop architecture (FOTA).A Figure Drawing Workshop with Bob Williams will be held on the 3rd floor ofIda Noyes on Thursday, 7-9:30pmFriday, May 7, or May 10 if it rains, there will be a Chalk-In and Music at noonin Hutch Court.Paintings and Prints by John Carlander at the Lutheran School of Theologythrough May 15; 1100 E 55, weekdays 9-6; Saturday 9-noon; closed Sunday.The 3lst Society for Contemporary Art Exhibition at the Art Institute continuesthrough May 30; Montgomery Ward Gallery.Paintings by Daniel Lang are at the Fairweather Hardin Gallery and willcontinue through May 22, 101 E. Ontario.Paintings by Mary Kenna at Center for Continuing Education through May 16.Irish artists Patrick Hennessy and H Robertson Craig are at GuildhallGalleries, Ltd.) 406 S Michigan, through May 22.The Hyde Park Neighborhood Club will have a Teen Art Fair April 24-25 from 1-6pm. Further info M13 4062."Multiple Art" by Karl Gerstner at Deson Zaks Gallery, Inc., 226 E Ontario St,through May 15.The Cezanne Exhibit a', the Art Institute will run through May 16Color Photographs in Israel, an exhibit by Robert M. Lipgar is at Hillel Housethrough April 30."49th Parallels," an exhibit of New Canadian Art, will be at the Museum ofContemporary Art April 3 May 16.The Art Institute will exhibit photoserigraphs by Larry Stark from March 6through April 25, in Gallery 106. Harriet M Harris Center offers very inexpensive courses in drawing, painting,leathercraft, macrame, etc. begun April 12. Call 955-3100 for info.DANCEThe Dance Troupe, a company affiliated with Columbia College, will present"Journey" and "Three Folk Pieces" every Wednesday, beginning April 28 andthrough May 26, Columbia College Center for Performing Arts, 1725 N Wells;contribution $1 50.A Dance Workshop by Ronny Kaye will begin May 3 and run 8 weeks at theKingston Mines Theater, 2356 N Lincoln Ave. Classes are Monday nights; bodymovement 7-8:15, modern jazz dance8:15-9:30. $2 per class. 525-9893.Sybil Shearer gives a lecture-demonstration "An Introduction to Choreography," Cloister Club, May 4 at 8. Fota presentatirn free tickets, first come basis.A complimentary copy of the Feb Chicago Dance Paper is available by writingto the Chicago Dance Foundation, 4949 S Woodlawn, Chicago, 60615. Thesubscription rate is $2 per year for this monthly on Chicago dance.Les Grands Ballets Canadiens presents "Tommy," a rock opera dancespectacular, April 28-May 2, Wed thru Sun at 8, Sunday matinee at 2. TicketsS3.50-9 at box office and Ticketron. Opera House (Wacker at Madison)MULTI MEDIA AND SPECIAL EVENTSThe Ensemble. "Living Newspaper" and two plays, "The Interrogation" and"Weapons" are presented at Leon Lerner Theater in Uptown Center-Hull House,4520 Beacon. Fridays at8, Saturday at7:30and9:30 Sunday at 8. Tickets2.Monday at noon on the quads, FOTA Maypole Celebration and speech by RogerHildebrand.FOTA's Mixed Media Art Exhibit from I IT in SSA building.DRAMARobert Hopkins directs University Theater's production of Jules Feiffer's LittleMurders, tonight through Sunday, and May 6-9, in Reynolds Club Theater at 8:30Tickets S2, $1.50 with student1 ID, available in room 304 of Reynolds Club.Reservations 753 3581.Tonight and tomorrow at 8:30 at the Lutheran School of Theology The UnlawfulAssemblage, an improvisational group similar to Second City, performs (FOTA).Tomorrow at 2pm in the Cloister Club in Ida Noyes, they'll have a workshop.The U of C Blackfriars Comedy Society presents its 1971 production, TheDemocratic Way, tonight and tomorrow and May 7 and 8 in Mandel. Fridayperformances are 8:30; Saturdays, 7 and 9:15. Tickets available at Reynolds ClubdeskChinese Wisecracks will be performed at the Columbia College PerformingArts Center, 1725 N Wells St every Saturday through May 1; 7:30 and 9:30.Lily Tomlin of "Lauqh-ln" will apoear at Mister Kelly's through May 2.The Goodman Theater presents Anouilh's Poor Bitos, continuing through May16. A comedy probing the roots of man's power compulsion.Buck White is moving to Saint James United Methodist Church, 4611 S EllisAvenue. The all male black musical plays every Thursday and Friday. Ticketsare $2.50-4.50 with $1 student discount except on Saturday.You're A Good Man Charlie Brown has opened at the Happy Medium, 901 NRush for an extended run. Students may purchase tickets for $3 a half hour beforecurtain time, Tues-Fri performances at 7;30 pm.Chekhov's The Seagull is being performed for free every Friday and Saturdayat 7:30 at the Columbia College Performing Arts Center, 1725 N Wells. 944 3756.Free Theater will present through May, William Russo's Aesop's FablesSunday at 7 and 9, Monday at 7:30 and 9. At least through the end of the month,they will also present Russo's Civil War on Saturday evenings. Call 929 6920 formore information. The theater is at 3257 N Sheffield. Obviously, admission free.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 of the current New York Obie award-winning rockmusical based on the creative writings of school children from the ghetto. Tickets$4 7.50. Call 726 7890.Grease, a 1950 s rock musical, continues at the Kingston Mines Theater, 2356 NLincoln.University Theater and FOTA presents a lecture-demonstration of thetechniques of Jerzi Grotowski by Joseph Slowik, of Goodman Theater, ThursdayMay 6, 2:30 pm, Reynolds Club Theatre. Free.FILMDOC for the week: Tonight Orson Welles' version of Franz Kafka's The Trial,starring Anthony Perkins and Jeanne Moreau, 7:15 and 9:30. Tuesday, GeorgeCukor's A Double Life (Shelley Winters' film debut and Ronald Colman's Oscar)at 7:30. Wednesday at the same time, Joseph L Mankiewicz's House of Strangers.CEF presents Jane Fonda in Sydney Pollack's They Shoot Horses, Don't They?7 and9:15 (Gig Young got his Oscar).Sunday night Gay Lib presents Richard Brooks' Sweet Bird of Youth, from theplay by Tennesee Williams, starring Paul Newman and Geraldine Page (EdBegley got his Oscar). Plus a half hour of Betty Boop which is really the best filmof the week, and besides Gay Lib needs support, right?Super director Roger Corman is coming, courtesy of FOTA. There'll be freeshowings of his films in connection: War of the Satellites Sunday at 2 in Cobb,followed by Masque of the Red Death (In Cinemascope!), considered by many tobe his best. Monday afternoon at 3 you can see The Trip, starring Easy Rider duo,Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper, and written by Jack Nicholson Corman will beon hand after the show to rap, and w'M ; in Tom Wolfe and Norman Pfeiffer in acolloquimon "Pop" (?) Monday night at 8 in Mandel.The Humanities Division is showing two films with screenplays by WilliamFaulkner Monday night, free, in Cobb: Jean Renior's The Southerner and aHoward Hawks film. DANCERock BalletLes Grands Ballets Canadiens, a young Mon¬treal-based company, is performing Tommy, a newrock opera ballet, through Sunday at the OperaHouse. The multi-media production is arriving hereafter sold-out performances in New York at CityCenter and the Metropolitan Opera House.The work, which received favorable, thoughrestrained reviews, was choreographed by FernandNault, a former ballet master with the AmericanBallet Theater, for the 50-member company to musicby the British rock group, The Who. The balletincludes a recently omnipresent phenomenon inmodern dance — a male chorus-line.Tommy is the story of a young deaf-mute whobecomes the idol of a religious cult and is sub¬sequently rejected. A shorter work. Hip and Straight,will precede each performance of Tommy. Ticketsare $3.50-9.— Paula Meinetz ShapiroHAPPY MOTHER’S DAYStation JBD invites you to have Mother’sDay Dinner with us. Dinner is served from 1PM to 11 PM. -Our Roast Prime Rib of Beef has pleasedthe Hyde Park community since 1944. Our RedSnapper in capers or wine sauce is only one ofour fish specialties. Hot Crabmeat au Gratinwill really challenge your appetite AND yourtaste buds.(If you know a GOOD cocktail when youtaste it, you only need to tell us how you wantit.)Reservations will be accepted.i/ ^STATION Call BU 8-9241F T H E B E ST? FOOD AND DRINKS ■fc, IN TOWN ~4 Buss BartoStation JBD5500 S. Shore Drive(Flamingo Hotel)4/Grey City Journal/April 30, 1971 Your mother loves you, no matter what.Send her a BigHugbouquet, and send itearly. Make Mother’sDay last a little longer.Call or visit on FTDflorist today. He’ll takeit from there. Deliveredalmost anywhere in thecountry. A specialgift. At a specialprice. Fo( a specialmother. Yours.Usually available al leu than%,\250*FTD BigHug Bouquet early♦ As an independent businessman, each FTD Member Florist sets his own pricts. STUOY POLITICS INEUROPE THISSUMMERand earn 6 credits inComparative Govern¬ment while visiting 10nations in Western Eu¬rope plus East Berlin andCzechoslovakia. Semi¬nars and lectures will begiven by an Oxford-edu¬cated American profes¬sor and 70 leading Eu¬ropean statesmen andscholars. Meet with Eu¬ropean students of sim¬ilar interests at balls andother social events.Write or call Prof. R.LSchuettinger, Political Sci¬ence Dept., Lynchburg College,Lynchburg, Virginia, 24504(703) 845-9071, Ext. 348‘The loveliest, bubbliest bauble of the season!"—JUDITH CRIST, NBC-TV (Today Show)COLUMBIA PICTURES PresentsA FRANCOISTRUFFAUTFILMMonday thru Thunday 6:00, 7:45, 0:30 P.M.Friday end Saturdny 4:45, 6:30, 0:15, 10:00 P.MSundny 4:15, 6:00, 7:45, 0:30 P.M. riiiipi1vIZ04 N . PMONI <M4 |« 14 NEW PERENNIAL PAPERBACKSThe Poemof HashishWith “The Hashish Club”by Theophile Gautierby CHARLES BAUDELAIRETurning on in nineteenthcentury Paris.P 215 950Meditations:Food for the SoulFor Every Day of the Yearby SRI CHINMOY GHOSEThe teachings of a greatspiritual leader of India.P 214 950Drugs and theOther SelfAn Anthology ofSpiritual TransformationsCHAMAN NAHAL, EditorProgressions in humanconsciousness from drugsto the spirit.P'196 $1.25At your booksellerj-^| Horner Rowigi} Paperback Dept. 6249 E. 33d St., New York 10016Diverse Talents:UC Dance GroupCorman: Taste for the GrotesqueBruce K3DeFrom the UC Modern Dance Group performance. Roger Corman, the master of the cheap and foryears chief genius of American-International Pic¬tures, will be here on campus in connection withFestival of the Arts. Corman, who has made dozensof pictures over the last fifteen years, will beparticipating in a colloquium on Pop with author TomWolfe, architect Norman Pfeiffer and Sun-Times artcritic Franz Schulze in Mandel Hall Monday night at8.Despite his short shooting schedules and min¬iscule budgets, Corman has displayed remarkablevisual flair and all of his work reflects his ownparticular taste for the grotesque. Motifs of necr¬ophilia, fear of mutilations, and Jewish humor cropup in likeliest of unlikely places: Machine GunKelly’s terror of coffins, the man-eating plant inLittle Shop of Horrors (the masterpiece of the quickiehorror flick), or in any one of the Edgar Allan Poe“adaptations.”Lately Corman ha: made a string of slightly self-conscious, definitely “arty” films such as BloodyMama and the upcoming Gasss. The former iscertainly one of the most perverted movies ever shot; the latter, which deals with a world in whicheveryone over 25 has died, is a loose, episodic filmthat seems simultaneously sincere and calculating.Frankly, I much prefer his earlier work, with itsamazing verve, nerve, and economy of movementand means. Corman really made every shot count inthose days, and the simplest set-up or cameramovement carried loads of meaning and emotion thathis generally strained scripts never approached. Itmay seem funny, but I respect films like ApacheWoman, Teenage Caveman, and Little Shop ofHorrors as legitimate, if minor, works of art. Thetitles may be raunchy, but the intelligence behindthem is evident to anyone who looks at what is on thescreen. With Corman, like the Man says, “What yousee is what you get.”There will be three free Corman films shown byFOTA, in conjunction with Doc, Films. War of theSatellites will be shown at 2pm on Sunday in Cobb/and Masque of the Red Death will immediatelyfollow. Monday afternoon the flick is The Trip, at 3,and Corman will answer questions afterward. Checkhim out.— Myron MeiselApril 30, 1971/Grey City Joumal/53A modest, tasteful “Hour of Dance” was present¬ed by the UC Modern Dance Group at Mandel Halllast Saturday and Sunday under the direction of ElviMoore.Two of the ten works presented were by MrsMoore, six by her students, one by Sally Lee and oneby Doris Humphrey. “An Hour of Dance” was a veryenjoyable, varied, and well-conceived program withtastefully fashioned costumes, and adequately re¬hearsed and trained dancers, whose abilities morethan matched the demands of the choreography.The weakness of the student choreography wasfor the most part' a musical one. Sometimes thechoice of music was a poor one; other times themovements on stage seemed to have little to do withmusic. While Merce Cunningham intentionallychoreographs movements independent of JohnCage’s unrelated dialogue and sounds, some of thestudent choreographies looked like they were sup¬posed to be done “to” the music.A case in point is Lisa Seligman’s “MirroredRoom,” which began with an excellent choreogra¬phic sense of music, but as the Miles Davis musicprogressed into nightclub background music, itbecame remote from her dancing — which had somenice bending, almost snake-like movements.Another somewhat minor complaint is the use ofa group of basic ethnic circle-dance steps to form ashort solo, such as Adrienne Becker’s “Ve Davdid.”Miss Becker is a fine dancer with a light step andpleasing stage presence. Her choreographic original¬ity may have been in the selection of ieps and theirordering, but nonetheless, it looked too familiar.“Water Study,” a 1928 work by Doris Humphrey,was reconstructed from the Labanotated score. Thiswork, and Elvi Moore’s “Nine Times Eight” to musicby Bach presented the group to its best advantage;their discipline and training was obvious in theirperfect timing, especially in the well-executed unisonmovements. Miss Moore's piece, which was choreo¬graphed for a special Advent service at RockefellerChapel, had a good sense of space. It was graciousand noble and sustained the audience’s interest.Perhaps this very good piece would have been superbwith some more pronounced tempo changes.The “Solo for Elvi: I” by Joanna Hall had aneffective accompaniment by Morton Feldman whichsounded like a Moog synthesizer. This piece wasperformed nicely by Mrs Moore, but the choreogra¬phy could have been more dynamic.“Eclipse,” choreographed and danced by CeliaShneider and Steve Korns, was a good piece ofchoreography, and like some others on the program,it should be developed into a longer piece. Itreminded me of Louis Falco’s new work, “Ibid,” inwhich a dancer and flutist charm and entice eachother.— Paula Meinetz Shapiro Vo ices: Illusion and RealityOne has to expect an experimental evening if atheater program combines two such contrary play¬wrights as Gertrude Stein and Tenessee Williams.Williams on the one side is known for his deeplypsychological character studies and tries to establisha second reality on stage, tries to pretend stage isreality, while Stein never lets the audience forgetthat what she does is theater, a play, not real. Sheplays with situations, presents very simple picturesof everyday life in a new context revealing their realidentity. Language itself becomes a problem for her;nothing is established, nothing certain, in everythingwaits the contradiction ready to be exposed. Art itselfis problematic for her.There is no curtain; the restaurant room of theBlue Gargoyle is colorfully decorated. The actors,mostly in dancing dresses, come onto the improvisedstage, the play begins. The “ladies’ voices” startwith the visual mutation of language pieces: sweet —sweet tea — teapot. All the action is lost for a while inthe incarnation of a super teapot on stage. Theseexercises repeated effectively the manipulation oflanguage which happens daily around us. Words losetheir original meanings, become products, emptycontainers, or teapots, if you will. Language, orwhat’s left of it, is in the last analysis a bubbling ickyliquid, which one had better avoid in order not to getpoisoned. So far, an enjoyable performance whichinvites all kinds of reflections.The light changes and something different be¬gins: Talk to Me Like the Rain by TennesseeWilliams, a play about two lovers in a rooming housesomewhere in Manhattan. The dialogue reveals theloneliness of the couple, the alienation of modernman, the difficulty of communication. So far Ger¬trude Stein, we could agree, deals with the sameproblems. But a look at aesthetic questions shows theunbridgeable gap between the two. I mentioned itabove: Stein is aware, and makes us aware, that sheis presenting theater: Williams doesn’t.Now I admit my dislike for Williams (hedemands a professionalism in acting which is very rare, and only then is he bearable), yet it is not onlymy dislike which made me feel the Williams was outof place in this performance. Directors Ann Becker-man and Elaine Cohen (ladies’ voices!) must havefelt the aesthetic gap somewhere along the line. Theyfound a quotation of Stein about repetition’s changingthe original meaning of words and situations whichthey perhaps intended to justify the repetition of theWilliams play.Now Stein obviously did not mean that repeatinga play by Tennessee Williams would change itsmeaning. Not even the effect of switching the rolescould have been meant by Stein. The switchcertainly says something about the different charac¬ter of male and female roles in our society, or at leastin Williams’ plays, but it says nothing about thecharacter of repetition itself or how things arechanged in this “Age of Technical Reproducability,”which is a theme extensively explored by Stein.The repetition of Williams was not effective. Theaudience was lost in the repetition of a pseudo-realistic piece of art and the only impression Ireceived was that I had attended two performancesof the same play, perhaps a matinee and an eveningperformance, since the cast had changed. The onlyintellectual task left was the undesired one ofdeciding which group was more successful. I decidedmyself for the second couple. They tried harder.The evening was of immense value if onlybecause it opened up a variety of exciting aestheticquestions. I have to stress that the performance ofthe group as a whole was far above the usual level ofUniversity Theater performances. To mention indi¬vidual names in what was so obviously a collectiveeffort seems silly. I conclude by saying that I saw aninteresting performance which reflected on a largescale the gap which goes through our society: the gapbetween the ones who live in a make-believe reality(Williams: art as a world in itself, which has nothingto do with reality) and the others, who show things asthey are: (Stein: theater as an illustion and reality assuppression). —Werner KrieglsteinA scene from “What Are Ladies’ Voices?” Bruce Rabewin inn w m mu c^pw^yiwiBP ■DANCEFOTA PresentsEnigmatic ArtistSybil Shearer, a mystery of the dance world, willpresent a lecture-demonstration entitled “An In¬troduction to Choreography” at the Cloister ClubMay 4 at 8 pm. This FOTA presentation is free andopen to the public.Miss Shearer is an enigma because after she“made it” in New York, was offered positions withtop companies and received the Dance Award, sheproceeded to leave New York to settle in Evanston,where she is an artist-in-residence at the NationalCollege of Education and gives one or two concerts ayear.In a recent interview she said she came to theMidwest “because the rhythm of the Midwest has asweep to it, rather than the broken rhythm I felt inNew York. I also loved the muted vistas of theflatlands of the Midwest offers ... New York is tooingrown and crowded.”She is expected to do a very brief solo at thedemonstration. Miss Shearer doesn’t fit into any patclassification since she combines original movementwith the modern and classical idioms. As JohnMartin, former dance critic of the New York Timeshas said, “You wonder sometimes if Sybil is abaptismal name or a sacerdotal title, for she has anuncanny penetration into things that lie below thesurface of experience. She has danced into existencea world of her own; far from an exclusive and stand¬offish one, however, for everybody is not onlywelcome but invited in.”—Paula Meinetz Shapiro Neil Nathan and Pat Prinz in UT’s Scott Carlson“Little Murders.”DON'T HYDE PARK THEATRE //I53rd & Lake Park NO 7-9071 THEATER66Little Murders’*University Theater is presenting this weekend(tonight through Sunday) the opening performancesof its major production of Spring Quarter. LittleMurders, the 1968 play by Jules Feiffer.Directed by Robert Hopkins, Little Mur¬ders is a post-assassination play, set in the age ofurban paranoia where motiveless mass-murder is asmuch a part of the atmosphere as air and noisepollution. The era is that of gratuitous violence whichgrows out of the frustrations of a previouslyisolationalist nation having to go internationalist inan immense way, feeling unappreciated, unloved,and finally unwanted for all its good works and inreaction, turning narcissisticaily violent toward theoutside world (Santo Domingo, Vietnam) and para-noically violent toward its own internal world (raceviolence, random violence, motiveless mass-mur¬ders),’’says Feiffer.The play is a satire set in the Newquist householdof Upper West Side New York, a family struggling tosurvive in a mad world beseiged by noise, airpollution, insane doorbell ringers, obscene phonecalls and random sniper fire. The play centersaround Patsy Newquist, the All-American girl,blonde, and vibrant, who brings her final fianceeAlfred Chamberlain, home to dinner to meet herparents, Carol and Marjorie Newquist. Alfred spendshis time getting beat-up in Central Park and takingpictures of fecal matteThe production opens tonight, Friday, and playstomorrow and Sunday and next Thursday throughSunday. Tickets are $2.00 and $1.50 for students withI.D., and are available in Room 304 on the third floorof Reynolds Club. Performances are in ReynoldsClub Theater at 5706 South University Avenue. 60637Curtain time if 8:30 p.m. each night.HYDE PARK THEATRE #25238 So. Harper 493-3493SGEDby CAR REPAIRS /Surj/cA Jo- • -BRIGHTONFOREIGN AUTO BERNICE4401 8. ARCHER A/e.» for in Swvfoe. "call254-3840 254-5071 254-5079ATTENTIONVOLKSWAGENOWNERS!!!Shocks installed 1200-1300-1500 V.W.,up to 1969 Front & RearShocks installed for transporters(except rear '68 Models & up) $8.25each$8.25each$10.95eachSteering damper installed for 1200-1300-1 500V.W. & Transporter $10.50Balancing per wheel $2.00Wheel alignment $12.50NEW PRECISION EQUIPMENT BY HUNTER%8eiawroft__RoeeickHAwVa£rr«ibiSPECIALFirestone Champion Tires560x15 black wall SALE$15.76 plusexcise tax $1.58Continental Tires560x15 Blackwalls560x15 Whitewalls600x15 Blpckwalls600a15 Whitewalls $21.00 plus excise tax $ 1.74$23.00 plus excise tax $ 1.74$24 50 plus excise tax $1.82$26.50 plus excise tax $1.82APRIL SPECIAL 3RD!DEbig0week \K°Mberg Theatre HELD OVER2ND BIG WEEK2a ROTTONPOPULAR PRICES!C«'!ir ATRARI McCARTNYf RARRIRII SCRAfYHtt PROOUCTWR Qp . -ALSO“ ‘M !A S H’ is whatthe new freedomof the screen is all about.”—Richard Schickel, Lile2a SATURDAY & SUNDAYSPECIAL BARGAIN MATINEEOpening Until 3:00 PMSI.50 For AdultsNew 35 MM Stereo Sound SystemMAS*An Ingo Preminger ProductionColor by DELUXE* Panavision* “YOU MUST SEE THIS FILM!”— Richtrd Schickel, liltCOLUMBIA Piciuns Pietenn • BBS Product-onJACK NICHOLSONFIVEERSS_ PIECES „• COLOR 1K1' m )ALSOLOVING—iPi— —itr— —if<- —ifr— ^ifi^ *GOLDCIT Y INNMaroon********&* New Hours:^ Open Daily* From 11:30 a.m.to 9:30 p.m.* "A Gold Mine of Good Food'** Student Discount:****** 10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food#5228 Harper ********************493-2559 %*ib* Eat more tor less. *# (Try our convenient take-out orders.) #—A— —A— —A— ——A—# (neor Harper Court)AEat more for less. KIMBARKLIQUORSWINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINESTIMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to you!THE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC.1214 E. 53rd Si.53-Kimbark Plaza HY3-3355Coming... May 16MEDIUM COOLbyCEF ■ auto ©leurope■ STUOENT/FACULTY GRANT Program■ Special rates in European overseas travel^R for purchase, lease, & rental of cars. Form details brochure write: University^R Grant Dept., Auto Europe, 1270 Second § S^^Avenue, New York, New York 10021 z <*II6/Grey City Journal/April 30, 1971Cezanne’s Vision*ap photo: Russ PotterBlackfriars cast members rehearsing their 1971production “The Democratic Way.”Comedy WeekendThe Blackfriars Comedy Society will present its1971 production, “The Democratic Way” this week¬end and the weekend of May 7.Directed by Mike Einisman, and written by MarcPrimack and Mike Dorf, the show gives a slightlyjaded view of reality in politics. The plot, essentially,deals with a prosperous cliche writer who aspires tothe Presidency of the United States. The head of a PRfirm, an eager accomplice, provides the new imagehe needs to win. The show is a lighthearted, not-in-depth study of the candidates, issues and tacticswhich have become part of the American way —tactics to which we have all become too accustomed.The show’s producer is Marcia Edison, Abbess ofBlackfriars.Performances will be given at Mandel Hall, 57thand University on campus. Show times are Friday,April 30th and Friday, May 7th at 8:30 pm. OnSaturday, May 1st and May 8th performances are at7 pm and 9:15 pm each night. General admissiontickets are available at The Reynolds Club desk, 57thand University from 10 am to 4 pm daily. Reservedseats will be sold at the Box Office, the week of theperformance, from 10 am to 2 pm. Phone orders forreserved seats will be taken at 753-4483. Paul Cezanne is purely an aesthete’s painter.Delighting in the forms and moods of nature forsensation’s sake, he painted sans undertones ofartistic school, moral code, ideology, or religiousfaith. Cezanne’s paintings are the realizations of hisvision of nature, a vision which seems in its freshnessto find a wholly new joy in the perception of nature,while forgetting nothing essential.In the Cezanne exhibition now at the ArtInstitute, ninety-odd paintings, watercolors anddrawings representing all periods of the artist’scareer make up an exhilarating visual experience,and one not often to be had: the Art Institute’s lastCezanne show was in 1952, and no folio book can dojustice to the brilliance of Cezanne’s palette.Cezanne was an Impressionist of a different color.Though, like Monet and Pissarro, he treated color asthe medium of light and saw the complexity of colorin nature, he created not a “window on the world” asthey did, not a single ephemeral captured moment,but an embodiment of his vision of nature as aconcrete permanence, from which all ephemeralthings have been purged, leaving the eternal stillnessof a purely visual world. His waveless sea is hard andcrystalline, a sapphire stillness; his mountains aredisrupted with relief. Nowhere in his houses does adoor open, a curtain flutter; each object’s primaryquality is its immutable presence, its vivid being.Very much a painterly painter, Cezanne built hisforms of small touches of color. Closeup, the canvasrather resembles a much-used palette, but from adistance a form emerges, with strong conflictingplanes and compelling perspective depth. The tech¬nique Cezanne employs in building his forms of smallbrushstrokes of color is more easily visible in hiswatercolors, such as “The Three Skulls.”Cezanne’s still lifes and portraits share a quality ofcomplete immobility. It is the plasticity of forms, thecolor of light, that intrigued Cezanne, rather than theproblem of capturing, in a painting, a humancharacter. In viewing apples and people alike he sawthe passivity of inanimate objects; his was a visionfrom which all activity save that of the act ofperceiving was banished. “You must be like anapple,” he told his models (it is known that he madeVollard sit some two hundred times). “Does an applemove?”A painting like “Ginger Pot with Pomegranate andPears”, with its richly patterned drapery back¬ground, exemplifies Cezanne’s love of composingsubtle harmonies of forms and colors. That theharmony and rhythm of the overall composition washis overriding interest is not difficult to discern, forhe frequently organized the elements of his paintingsin physically unlikely if not impossible ways. Theplate would fall off the table, the orange would befloating in space two inches above the bowl, the rightshoulder of the “Boy in a Red Waistcoat” would be X g* “’tkCezanne’s Self-Portrait done in 1882-83. Courtesy ofthe Art Institute of Chicago.dislocated. This openness and interdependence offorms is a baroque characteristic found throughouthis work. For example, in “View of the Sea fromL’Estaque” one sees that the planes and volumes ofthe village buildings, each indistinct and incompletein itself, are jumbled together in overlapping se¬quences. The act of seeing them is an ordered visualprocess — the artist guides one’s eyes in the processof seeing his vision.It is the freshness and power of this vision whichmakes Cezanne a great master. Conceiving andexecuting his own view of nature, his solid forms builtof rich and subtly-observed colors, he found andcommunicated a new way of seeing the world, madea gift of a unique mirror of nature, born of his ownunique way of seeing. In the painter’s own words, “Isnot a bunch of carrots, naively painted in thepersonal tone in which it is seen, worth all theeverlasting daubs of the Schools, their chewed-overart, shamefully cooked up according to recipes? Theday will come when a single original carrot will begreat with revolution.”— Chris FroulaDoc Films Announces Changes of Schedule...Saturday, May 8, Costa-Gavras'Only Campus ShowingCobb 5:30 8:00 10:30 $1Friday, May 28 BOB & CAROL & TED A ALICE(George Franju's JUDEX moved to May 31, 3 p.m. FREEEUROPE& ISRAELInexpensive flightsthroughout the yearLowest Fares, choice of1 way or round tripSTUDENT HOLIDAYS40 EAST 54th STREETNEW YORK, N.Y. 10022212/832-6844 EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 Far East KitchenChinese & AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen Daily 12 10Fri. & Sat. 12 12Closed Monday53rd & Hyde Park Blvd955-2229 24HRS./DAY Immediate schedulinglicensed physicians, accre¬dited hospitals and their out¬patient clinics. Call today for imme¬diate confidential information and as¬sistance. Lowest prices for finest care. As lowas J 150.00ETHICAL ABORTION REFERRAL215-879-3100April 30, 1971/Grey City Journal/?m fPM / »'The Supreme SLR System Provides a New Dimensionin Professional PhotographyASK FOR A DEMONSTRATIONPHOTOGRAPHY DEPARTMENT 2nd floorUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOK STORE5750 S. ELLIS Straight Talk: lYour diamond is at... IIc: aSUN INCOMESun Life’s new incomeprotection planCould you afford to stop working for a year?If not, talk with your man from Sun Life ofCanada about their new disability income plan... to keep the money coming in when you’renot able to.SUN LIFE OF CANADARALPH J. WOOD, Jr.GUIOne N. LaSalle St.Chic. 60602FR 2-2390798-0470 FINE JEWELERS FOR 60 YEARS119 N. Wabash at Washington IENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZARICHARDBRAUTIOANTHEABORTIONAn Historical Romance of 1966This novel is about the romantic possibilitiesof a public library in CaliforniaJUST PUBLISHED$5.95; TOUCHSTONE PAPERBACK, $1.95SIMON AND SCHUSTERContemporary European FilmspresentsTHEY SHOOTHORSES, DON'TTHEY?Saturday, May 1 7 & 9:15COBB HOWTO’EARN ALLIBS®WANT.^Allth Cknro R.l.i. -» TOtj <" |... t >/i lit U I / Till Jl Kt l-J/UU 5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113 If5 easy JoshdiS+ribiAC ZIPDICECIDCIES.La&f ^yrvwvNer'Saverage income,was *1.000 -to*3000 Give *oW coHaqe -trywhile ydu're of 1School, you carrevest an exclusivefern-lory kr yourhometown +his „50ftimer 5end iio I1•to-zipcax. Po0hsuin6<£>MA/nRist office40D6U56e>srP-0 BOH 31ssctfi'vJe'll 6end you IO'irectones plot, ourfull qgflaDIF YOOQB. NOTAB50unEi_V^ATlSPlED'^ ^foreign car hospital abortion HIfI *can be less costly than you mavthink, and pregnancies of up to12 weeks can be terminated tor$175.00including doctors fees, labora¬tory tests, all medication *referral fee. Hospital and Hos¬pital affiliated clinics only, iare,Confidential, Immediate,call(212) 838-071024 hour* - 7 daysWoman'* Aid & Guidance Group40 E. 54th St., N.Y., N Y. 100228/Grey City Journal/ April 30, 1971