Alliance opposes government repressionBy NANCY CHISMANThe office is small and ordinary with afile-cluttered anteroom and constantly ring¬ing telephones. The people are varied:some civil rights workers in the 1960’s whohave moved on to a new job, others youngand members of a counter-culture.Their attitudes convey a dedication whichsustains itself before the immensity of thething they are fighting: repression.Last year, after the Conspiracy trial, thedeaths of Black Panthers Hampton andClark by police bullets and the attempts byNixon to conservatize the Supreme Court,over 60 urban and suburban Chicago orga¬nizations came together to form the Al¬liance to End Repression.Each had felt repression in a differentway and together had the potential of form¬ing a powerful resistance to repressiveenergies loose on a broad front, accordingto the chairman of the Alliance, Jack Men¬delsohn, minister of Hyde Park’s First Uni-'tarian Church.Dick Criley, once a student activist atBerkeley during the 1930’s, and now chair¬man of the Committee to Defend the Bill ofRights, became the catalyst for the pioneercoalition.Criley began making the rounds of vari¬ous liberal groups in January, 1970 meetingwith key leaders and “putting them on thespot” to act. “The affirmative feeling tocreate a new kind of coalition was strong,” ANALYSISCriley said. “By April 1970 we had openedan office and were functioning.”A little more than a year later, the Al¬liance has attained unprecedented victoriesagainst repressive legislation and tactics.One of its first successful acts was to chal¬lenge the validity of Judge Robson’s “gagrule” for the Chicago-15, a group which de¬stroyed draft records.It seems natural that this pioneer projectbegan in Chicago — repression has becomepart of the city image. It seems extraor¬dinary that it is still alive and growing inChicago.Part of the credit goes to Rev John Hill,the founder of the Association of ChicagoPriests, with a city-wide reputation as afirst class organizer, who is the head coor¬dinator of the Alliance. He has already hadthe distinction of being subpoenaed by the‘ ‘ u n-American” Horsley committee oncampus unrest.Secondly and almost by accident, the Al¬liance began to use a task force method asa tool to solve problems. Contingents, com¬ posed of “anchor men and grub workers,”moved in on bail reform, legislation, juryreform, justice in law enforcement, politi¬cal trials and judicial accountability, with apersistence which has initiated immediateand long-range results.Betty Plank, formerly director of Friend¬ship House, and now a 12 hour a day work¬er in the tiny office at 431 S Dearborn, saidno conflicts have emerged with so manygroups working together.The style of the Alliance has been able toremain flexible and open without com¬promising any of the numerous organiza¬tions offering support.The cooperation within the* Alliancecomes from the realization that the repres¬sive situations confronting society areserious, according to Criley.During the McCarthy era, Criley facedthe House Committee on Un-American Ac¬tivities. Today he is still waging war onHUAC’s successor, the House Committeeon Internal Security (HCIS).Secretary of the task force on legislation,Criley believes it can be reduced to the ba¬sic area in the struggle against repression.Through the Alliance support has beenmobilized to fight the Defense Facilitiesand Industrial Security Act, a bill whichthreatens the freedom of speech of employ¬ees in companies with defense contracts,and to repeal the Detention Act which wasContinued on page 2 Bruce RabeJACK MENDELSOHN: Hyde Park ministerand chairman of Alliance.The Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 57 The University of Chicago Friday, May 14, 197117 new members chosen for CouncilSeventeen new members of the council ofthe University senate, the ruling body ofthe faculty, were announced Thursday byKnox Hill, secretary of the faculty.Those selected in the recent elections willserve for a three year term beginning July1.The council, the University’s main legis¬lative body, will elect a seven membercommittee of the council, the executivebody of the University, at its first meetingduring the summer.The council has 51 members, 17 of whomare elected annually. Any member of thecouncil is eligible for election to the com¬mittee, and there are no nominees beforethe election meeting. The present spokes¬man of the council is economics professorD. Gale Johnson.Some 670 faculty voted in the elections,choosing from 42 candidates. Balloting wasby mail.Members of the University senate, whoare eligible to vote for the council, musthave been at the University at least oneyear and hold the rank of at least assistantprofessor.Those faculty selected are Dr JamesBowman, associate professor of medicineand pathology; Joseph Ceithaml, professorof biochemistry; Robert Dreeben, associateprofessor of education.Also, Dr. Jarl Dyrud, associate professor ofpsychiatry; Donald Fiske, professor of psy¬chology; Julian Goldsmith, Merriam dis¬tinguished service professor and chairmanof geophysical sciences; Robert Grant, pro¬fessor of divinity.Also Hanna Gray, associate professorhistory; Dr Alfred Heller, associate profes¬sor of pharmacology; Richard Lashof, pro¬fessor of mathematics; James Lorie, pro¬fessor of business; Saunders MacLane, Ma¬son distinguished service professor ofmathematics; Norval Morris, Kreeger pro¬fessor of law.Also Peter Novick, associate professor ofhistory; Stuart Tave, Harper professor ofEnglish; Dr John Ultmann, professor ofmedicine, anu Kari Weiniraub, Donneiieyprofessor of history.Student activities still flourishBy JUDY ALSOFROM“You will write a story about the death ofstudent activities,” the editor said.“But I can’t” said I.“Wh” not?” the editor queried.“Because, they have not died, they havebeen transmogrified,” said CharlesO’Connell, dean of students.“I like that word,” said I, “but what ex¬actly does it mean?”“Well it means” said O’Connell, “thatsome activities which deserve to die do be¬cause they no longer function in the timeswe live in. When there comes a time in thehistory of youth that a need arises for aformal dance or a yearbook, Wash Prom orCap and Gown will once again be created.”Right now such traditional activities suchas the formal dance, the concert organizers (Revitalization), a yearbook, are dying oralready def net. But this is not to say thatall organized student activities are in asimilar state of decay. New ones are con¬tinually cropping up, and old ones recharg¬ing with the emphasis on gimmicks andspontaneity.Gimmicks? Well they all started withSVNA which is now a recognized, orga¬nized student activity, and their vitality- spread over to such staid “un U of C-ish”activities as dances.According to Skip Landt, director of stu¬dent activities, in the early sixties “thenorm was that attendance at dances led tothe inevitable route towards the return offootball games” which Hutchins had suc¬cessfully purged a decade before. Nuw thecampus has opened up and there is not the same social pressure” which once existedto mark dances and pursuit of life of themind mutually exclusive.So now we have an Up Against the Icywall dance with attendance at 1200, theLascivious Costume Ball with attendanceat 3500, and most recently a sock hop forpost-pubescence teeny-boppers, with an at¬tendance in excess of 1000. Transmogrifiedstudent body, to say the least.And what about spontaneity? The tradi¬tional student activities in this category ac¬cording to one enthusiastic junior are sex,dope and booze. But an ardent Mandalacoffee shop fan and crazed bridge fanaticadvocated that bridge had replaced allthat.Wily? Because it brings out tile kiilerContinued on page 3HURRY UP AND WAIT: Many students queue up for one of UC’s more popular activities: the ubiquitous flick. Jon YuenCook County bail system 'negates rights'Continued from page 1used to set up concentration camps.The legislation task force is working tocreate a microcosm of the alliance struc¬ture in each congressional district to forma grass roots effort against repressive leg¬islation.The bail project undertaken by a specialtask force of the alliance almost a year agohas proved to be one of the most successfulprojects, despite reluctance to cooperate onthe part of the first judge approached.It was found that the bail system of CookCounty “negates the principles of presump¬tion of innnocence, the right to a fair trial,and due process for the poor,” according tothe Alliance’s “open letter.”Hundreds of volunteers observed bailhearings in the Holiday Court and foundlittle attention was paid to the financialability of the accused and the effect con¬finement would have on his job and familystability if he could not afford to post bond.The task force urged that the Illinois stat¬ute providing for release on recognizancebe employed by judges. To facilitate use ofthe statute, law students interviewed ac¬cused persons regarding their backgroundand task force members verified all pos¬sible information to be presented to thejudge.This action radically changed the natureof the Holiday Court. Since the task forcebegan its program, over 680 people havebeen released on their own recognizance,many of whom would have been in jail formonths awaiting trial. The task force ispushing to extend the program to felonycourt and women’s court.The action of the alliance was also re¬sponsible for the appointment of BarnabasSears as special prosecuter on the BlackPanther (Hanrahan) case. Sixty-seven af¬filiate organizations filed petitions for theappointment “in the belief that justice de¬mands a complete investigation of the alle¬gations” arising out of the grand jury re¬port.The jury reform task force has been look¬ ing into the process of jury selection to de¬termine why juries are mainly white,middle class and middle aged. The taskforce for justice in law enforcement is cur¬rently focusing on an investigation of policeraids and the abolition of the coroner’s of¬fice and its replacement with a medical ex¬aminer.Questionnaires were sent to all judges onthe last election ballot by the task force onjudicial accountability to determine theirstanding on important issues for the inhu¬mation of the voters.The task force project involves creationof a sense of accountability to the public onthe part of the judges, by observation ofthose sitting in the criminal division of thecircuit court.Task force progress reports and reportson special projects are made at the month¬ly council meetings held by the alliance.Each affiliate organization sends delegatesand has one vote in decisions on policy.Mendelsohn said there has been littletime for PR work since the alliance is di¬rected toward action. Yet it has become aSome 275 residents of International househave signed a petition protesting a decisionby the house board of governors to reducethe house deficit by firing five cleaningwomen and a painter.The petition, endorsed Wednesday nightby the house council, also demands that I-house residents be allowed “to examine thebudget and to participate in the determina¬tion of the manner in which the necessaryfunds for paying these deficits will be fi¬nanced.”Responding to this demand, I-house staffassociate Bernard Brown said, “We areplanning to make available to the entiremembership of the house, including allresidents, the information which reveals force to be reckoned with and is recognizedin every press room in the city.One indication of the alliance’a increas¬ing influence came as a surprise to mem¬bers, Mendelsohn reported. Several daysago a telegram was sent to Mayor Daley’soffice advocating the formation of a policecommission appointment board similar instructure to that existing for the board ofeducation.Currently five police commissioners whodetermine policy for the police departmentare appointed by the mayor for five yearterms. According to Betty Plank, themonthly meetings of this board have beenopen-shut affairs lasting scarcely 20 min¬utes.A few days later, the alliance, which hadgeared itself for a refusal, was told repre¬sentatives could meet with the mayor’s ad¬ministrative assistant to discuss the issue.Members of the alliance view it as a coa¬lition with the capacity for infinite ex¬pansion and one that can reach the publicin a mass way which radical and studentcoalitions have not been able to do.Hill emphasized that new blood was nec-the source of the deficits and the operatingbudget of the house.“The question of what degree of partici¬pating the students will have in decidinghow the house deficits shall be met is stillunder consideration,” Brown said.“The positions of five maids will beeliminated,” Brown said, “reducing maidservice in the dormitory from a daily to atwice-weekly service.“Four of the maids employed who wereregular employees have been offered posi¬tions in the housekeeping service at Bil¬lings hospital at slightly higher rates ofpay, and can begin as soon ac they leavehere in June without losing a day’s pay. essary for the alliance, which has a largenumber of student volunteers, but it wasimportant for it to be a non-student endeav¬or, an adult endeavor.Criley, whose experience qualifies him toelaborate on the focus of student orientedorganizations and their failure to sustainthemselves, said they did not usually relateto the problems of the community and tend¬ed to move too far too fast, losing momen¬tum or getting chopped down.Mendelsohn put it more concisely. “Analliance of students couldn’t accomplishthis sort of action easily. The alliance isone of diversity which has not includedthose whose analysis of society includes de¬struction of its institutions. It’s hard to ef¬fect a student coalition whose elements donot contain this viewpoint.”Mendelsohn feels that the future of thealliance is holding promise of its continuingeffectiveness. “Repressive tendencies aregaining and expanding and this elicits thetype of response embodied in the alliance.The members have responded with an ex¬traordinary amount of cooperative and in¬telligent behavior.”at l-house“The fifth person is a temporary employ¬ee who has worked here only a few months.We’re attempting to find her employment,although nothing has been offered heryet,” he said.“I don’t know that the employment situ¬ation is for the painter,” Brown added. “Heis a skilled craftsman, but without tenure,which is why he had to be dropped.”Responding to the claim by some tenantsthat “if cuts have to be made, they shouldcome out of the house’s large program bud¬get,” Brown explained that the programfund could not be used to reduce the deficit,since the fund “is the result of an endow¬ment, and is restricted to non-operating ex¬penses.”Five maids, painter firedAn Unusual Opportunity for Record CollectorsDEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHONandARCHIVE PRODUCTIONS6.98 List Albums for 4.29Thru Saturday May 29THE BOOK NOOKMUSIC OFBachBeethovenBrahmsChopinDvorakHenzeMahlerMozartSchubertSchumannSibeliusTchaikovskyAnd Many Others 1538 E. 55th St.Across from the Co-op in the Hyde Park Shopping CenterPERFORMED BYSPECIAL OFFERComplete Beethoven Edition12 volumes, 75 recordsList $503.66,now $275.00 *****+*Jf****'X ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★*■ Amadeus QuartetGeza AndaKarl BohmDietrich Fischer-DieskauHerbert Von KarajanWilhelm KempffBirgit NilssonDavid OistrakhKarl RichterSviatoslav RichterMstislav RostropovichHelmut WalchaAnd other Top ArtistsSELECT YOUR FAVORITES FROM AMONGTHE FINEST CLASSICAL RECORDINGS AVAILABLE2/The Chicago Maroon/May 14, 19711)Ji)A**' Burgess lectures on'Limits of ObscenityEight students elected to FSACCSL “The purpose of a pornograph is to aidauto-eroticism” he added, and later ex¬panded it to include “procuring satisfac¬tory emissions.”ANTHONY BURGESS: Reknowned author spoke before a crowd of 400 about the cri¬teria for judging obscene material. By JOE FREEDMANThe air seethed with sensuality Wednes¬day night among the crowd of 400 at thenormally staid University law school audi¬torium. The occasion was an address byauthor Anthony Burgess, now professor ofcreative writing at Princeton University,sponsored by the Festival of the Arts(FOTA).Although Burgess’ unprepared talk wasentitled “Limits of Obscenity”, he con¬cerned himself not as much with how farone should go in obscenity, as with criteriafor judging obscene material.Burgess termed obscenity “a major fearof most authors next to libel.” He admittedto feeling “paranoia” himself on the sub¬ject, largely as a result of his having hadtwo books delayed two years while his’agent and publisher studied their obsceneimplications.Burgess termed today’s literary climate“exceedingly permissive,” and cited maVifestation from one of his classes. “If Ifind a manuscript with shit in the first lineand fuck in the second it’s usually writtenby a young lady.”In keeping with his confession of para¬noia, however, he added that “we can onlyfear that the cycle is rumbling on its way to an era of repressive censorship.”Burgess then got into the flesh of his talk,an analysis of what is meant by “obscene.”He said “the term is rattier subjective, per-taining usually to the anal and urinarytracts.”Admitting that obscenity applies usuallyto “offensive” material, Burgess wonderedif “plastic, which cannot be recycled maybe far more obscene” than feces.Another qualification for obscenity mustbe intent. “A sculpture made of feces is notobscene as long as we don’t know what itis,” Burgess noted. “A very ill drawnphallus is obscene because the function isin doubt.” The intent, in this case, is deri¬sive.Concluding his scatalogical remarks,Burgess noted that “we are born betweenfeces and urine a joke played by the Deitywhich the Church was not slow to grasp.”Turning to a related topic, pornography,Burgess concisely defined its major sellingpoint, the “pornograph . .. One of the per¬ennial features of Western (and Eastern)society, a pornograph is an anonymous fe¬male creature used to promote sale,” hestated.Referring to works of authors such as theMarquis de Sade, he said “We’re not talk¬ing about art, we’re talking about craft.”Only ten percent of the University stu¬dent body voted in the elections for mem¬bers of the faculty student advisory com¬mittee on campus student life (FSACCSL)last week.Eight students were chosen in the elec¬tion to serve on the committee beginningnext September through next June.The eight students elected are: CharlesAnderson 72, Thomas Brandt 73 and PaulYovovich 74 in the College; John Laing,chemistry, in the biological and physicalsciences divisions; Doug Adams, linguis¬tics, in the humanities division; JohnEvans, economics, in the social sciencesdivision; and Patrick Remy, business andFrank Wrobel, law, in the professionalschools. Of the 750 votes cast, Anderson receivedthe greatest single total with 77 votes,Remy received 68, Laing 63, Brandt re¬ceived, 62, and Yovovich 53. Wrobel andAdams 24, and Evans was a write-in candi¬date.Voting was done by mail to all the stu¬dents in the University. Ballots were count¬ed earlier this week by Skip Landt, directorof student activities, James Vice, assistantdean of students, Tom Bierstedker 72, acurrent member of FSACCSL Mark Sha¬piro 72, and Gary Nakarado, 71, also aFSACCSL member.Adams from the humanities division isalso a current member of FSACCSL and isthe first student in the four-year history of the committee to serve for more than oneyear.The social sciences division had no candi¬dates. The greatest number of candidateswas in the college where 11 students ran forpositions.FSACCSL serves an advisory committeeto Charles O’Connell, dean of students.During the past year, the committee hasadvised him on a variety of matters in¬cluding campus security, student part-timeand summer employment, campus coffeeshops, and the career counseling program.Other current members of the committeeare Eugene Goldberg 71, Howard Smith-son, business, William Sullivan, law, Manu¬el Cavazos-Lerma, social sciences and Ir¬vin Kaufman, biophy sci divisions. Burgess defended Sade’s works, sayingthat “the Marquis knew what was going tohappen in the public world.”“If one can keep cruelty bottled up inbooks, one is doing the state a favor.” headded.While on the subject of public benefits ofpornography, Burgess brought up the caseof “the abominable snowwoman,” an Eng¬lish Lady who blamed a sex murder on theliterature read by the assailants. Burgessreferred to the human vampire who admit¬ted he was “much affected by the sacra¬ment of the church” and suggested banningthe Bible as well as de Sade.Burgess ended his talk with quotationsfrom two of his works. A question and an¬swer period followed.Sit-in biggest social event’ in past 5 yearsContinued from page 1instinct,” and its popularity (both the in¬stinct and the game) are thoroughly at¬tested to by the fact that three floatingbridge games were going on simultaneous¬ly accompanied by a lot of noise and cardthrowing.There are also the outdoor dances withSVNA punch that have been occuring week¬ly, most often in Hitchcock court. Andthere has been the outbreak of Da DailyGranite which one student called “our ownhigh-school underground newspaper.”Martine Buxtehude, as a self proclaimedbig wheel, said about the overall picture onstudent activities, “Students want their ac¬tivities done for them. They want to be tak¬en by the hand and led, they want to beentertained. Why I think that the last bigsocial event on campus in the past fiveyears was the sit-in, and the closest next tothat was the burning of the bookstore. Isaw people there I hadn’t seen since myfirst year.”It would seem that fresnmen, least un¬touched by University atmosphere andmores, might give a more cogent picture ofhow effective and active student organiza¬tions are.One said, “Nobody is going to say theyshould be eliminated and nobody is going tosay they are the greatest thing ever seen.They are taken for granted. But they arean opportunity to meet other people,” andhe added rather cynically, “to get involvedin several University cliques.”This quasi-positive cynical tone was ech¬oed by another first year student who saidhe thought “Student activities are six feetunderground. We reinforce each other’s cy¬nicism. The problem is the admissions of-fipp if we jet in a few dumb jocks like Yale Bruce RabeWHAT TO DO TO BE IN ON UC CAMPUS: Be a member of the marching Kazoo band (left) or read a magazine in the “social center”of Regenstein library.we’d all have a better time.”“And 200 more girls” several chauvinstschimed in.These freshmen are right, of course. Theface of student activities is determined bythe nature of the student body.What is popular on this campus, besidesthe ubiquitous coffee shop, bridge game,and SVNA punch? Certainly anything freeand nearly free, such as activities put onby the Ida Noyes Program Board (GamesNight, Fat City, and 25 cents old timeflicks, dances), UT, football games and theKazoo band; CEF and DOC films, campuscoffee house on Friday nights, and the Sat¬urday Night night club, Hitchcock Films and other movies, and of course, as manypeople have oft pointed out, folkdancing(which was even popular, way back in the60’s according to Landt.)The common factors in all these activi¬ties appears to be the general laxity theyoffer as far as necessities for date, dress,time, and sustained interest or requiredparticipation.Landt points out that the student bodyhas no social pattern, therefore no real so¬cial pressure, such as at big state schoolswhere it is an anathema to spend Saturdaynight in the library. (Typically, one studentcommented that Regenstein is the socialcenter of the University.) 'Hie flourishing of small student activitiessuch as karate and judo club, musicalsociety, outing club, intramural sports andeverything else would seem to suggest thatthe death knolls to activities are not tightmoney or academic pressure.Marty Marcus, former head of Revitali¬zation claimed that the Woodstock spirit ofgate-crashing and rip offs killed Revitaliza¬tion, along with competition from the down¬town concerts.If student activities are alive and well,then, what makes some students say theyare “six feet underground?”Because nobody knows what trans¬mogrified means.May 14, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/8LETTERS TO THE EDITORSFreshmen figuresWhen your reporter talked to me aboutnext year’s freshman class I informed himthat I thought a report in the Maroon at thistime would be misleading as the com¬petition had not closed. I was correct; thearticle was both misleading and irrespon¬sible.The competition this year has been mostunusual in that it has run beyond all ournormal deadlines. I did not have the com¬plete figures on the class when I talked toyour reporter and consequently the articlein the May 11 issue of the Maroon is filledwith inaccurate figures.I am at a loss to know where he learnedthat 50 transfer students had been admit¬ted. The transfer competition does not be¬gin until May 19 and will not be over untilearly July. It will be the middle of Julybefore we know how many transfer stu¬dents will be enrolling in the fall.The figures reported in the article on stu¬dents who have accepted admission com¬petition and who have been members of theclass of 1975 since last December. Further¬more, the 447 does not include returns sincelast Friday nor does it include the numberof students who have been given extendeddeadlines for a variety of reasons.I further told your reporter that 23 stu¬dents had already been admitted from thewaiting list and that more students fromthat list would be admitted as soon as theCommittee hod an opportunity to reviewtheir credentials.There are currently 540 students whohave accepted a place in the class of 1975;in addition 23 students have been offeredadmission from the waiting list, most ofCANOE TRIPSPlan an exciting canoe trip intothe Quetico-Superior Wildernessfor the highpoint of your summervacation! Rates you can afford.For information write BILL ROM'SOUTFITTERS, Ely, Minn. these students will accept admission, andfinally, there are approximately 30 studentswho have been given extended deadlines. Itis probable then that the class of 1975, evenwith attrition between now and registrationday, will settle around 575 students.It is too early to predict the number oftransfer students who will enroll next Sep¬tember. However, transfer applications areup approximately 15% and at this time itseems very reasonable to expect to enroll100 transfer students.May I suggest that in future when a re¬porter is writing an article about admis¬sions which will include a lot of figures andpercentages that he clear that part of hisarticle with me before going to press.Anthony T G PallettHanoi grantIf Professors Lewontin and Levins aresincere about wanting to help North Viet¬nam, they should not ask Hanoi for money.Friday, May 14LECTURE: Professor Hamid Algar, department of NearEastern languages, University of California at Berke¬ley, "Some Observations on the Maqshbandi Tariqatin Boania," Cobb 107, 3:30 pm.GEOPHYSICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR: Paul Julian,National Center for Atmospheric Research and affil¬iate professor, "The applicability of radiometric tem¬perature soundings i’i deriving initial data for generalcirculation models," Hinds 101, 4 pm.WHPK: Wagner's Lowengrin, with Melchior, Rethberg,Huetvn, Thorborg, List, Warren, Leinsdorf, 5:30 pm.FLICK: Strike, first of Eisenstein’s revolutionary films,SOS, Quantrell, 7:30 and 9:15, 75c.EVOLUTION DISCUSSION GROUP: Round tables dis¬cussion, Leigh Van Valen, "What is an adaptive It is like asking blacks or American In¬dians to pay for research on their rehabili¬tation.Seven hundred dollars in hard currencyis a lot of money for North Vietnam. It willbuy 100 scientific books, 30 journal sub¬scriptions, thousands of doses of antibio¬tics, or 50 to 300 dinners for Xuan Thuy inParis. If these examples are not persuasiveenough, it will also buy 6.023x10-23 roundsof ammunition, 2713 hand grenades, or 314mortar shells.There are enough private foundations ofphilanthropists in this country who willsympathetically consider a grant appli¬cation of this sort. Failing that, the moneycould be raised by contributions frompeople who voted “yes” on the recent refer¬endum. Surely they will be prepared toback up their words with deeds.And if worst comes to worst, ProfessorsLewontin and Levins might fund this re¬search out of their own pockets, perhaps byzone?". Hinds 176, 8 pm.LECTURE: Rev Andrew Greeley, "The New Ethnicityand the Jewish Community in America," Hillel, 8:30pm.COLLEGE GRADUATING CLASS MEETING: Plans forconvocation, speaker, dress, ceremony, Reynolds club,12:30 pm.UNIVERSITY THEATRE: Premiere of Krieglstein'sOrigin 0400 at Reynolds club theatre, 8:30 pm.FOTA: Poetry workshop with Vagn Steen, Ida Noyes li¬brary, 3 pm.FOTA: Poetry reading by Irish poet Richard Murphy,Ida Noyes library, 8 pm.FOTA: "The Death of Andy Warhol," Woodward courtcafeteria, 8 pm.FOTA: "The Masque of Winter," Medsyn for Melancho¬ly, Hutch court 8 pm.SCREW THIEU DANCE: SVNA punch, 50c donation re¬quested, 58th and Woodlawn, 8 pm.Saturday, May 15UNIVERSITY THEATRE: Origin 0400, Reynolds clubtheatre, 8:30 pm.GAY LIB DANCE: 750 S Halsted, 9 pm.FOTA: "The Death of Andy Warhol," Woodward courtcafeteria, 8 pm.FOTA: "The Art of Concrete Poetry," lecture by VagnSteen, Breasted hall, 8 pm. foregoing the next trip to Hanoi. The n^Tey involved is probably less than two per¬cent of their annual salaries. Most of ushave donated comparable sums to otherworthy causes.With all these options available, I wonderwhy Professors Lewontin and Levins choseto apply to Hanoi. Apart from putting thefinancial burden on the beneficiary, it ex¬poses the University community to seriousrisks.Congress and the Administration barelytolerate dealings with Hanoi by individualstudents or faculty members. They are notlikely to tolerate such dealings by the Uni¬versity as an institution, and may retaliatein ways that will hurt us all: students, fac¬ulty, and administration.Besides, I suspect the North Vietnemeseknow how to fill in bomb craters withoutadvice from U of C faculty.Sunday, May 16UNIVERSITY THEATRE: Origin 0400, Reynolds clubtheatre, 8:30 pm.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Rev W BarnettBlakemore, dean of Disciples Divinity house, "TheReapparances of Our Rising Christ," Rockefellerchapel, 11 am.REHEARSAL: University Orchestra, full orchestra,Mandel hall, 1 pm.GAY YOUTH MEETING: Ida Noyes 218, 3 pmGAY LIB OPEN MEETING: Ida Noyes Library, 7:30pm.FOTA: Midwest premiere of Handel's oratorio "Theodora," professional orchestra and soloist, studentchoir. Rockefeller chapel, 3:30 pm, tickets $3, studentsSI.Monday, May 17MILTON FRIEDMAN: sponsored by Students for Capi¬talism and Freedom, Social Science 122, 7:30 pm.FOTA: Easley Blackwood, "Recita| of 20th Century Mu¬sic,*' works by Allan Berg, Arnold Schoenberg and An-ton Webern, Mandel hall, 8:30 pm.ACCOUNTING MAJORS Koga Gift Shop1/5 OF CPA'S IN USA Distinctive Gift llems FromARE FORMER STUDENTS OF The OrientBecker CPA Review Course and Around The WorldChicago 1462 E. 53rd St.(312) 236-5300 684-6856 Edward AndersProfessor, chemistry, Fermi instituteABOUT THE MIDWAYFOTA: Norma Hirsh, soprano solo recital, with MiriamBtasi on piano. Bond chapel, 8:30 pm.FOTA presentsThe Collective in SACCO & VANZETTI May 14-15-16First Unitarian Church$.50 at the doorsex IS YOUR BUSINESSSUN INCOMESun Life’s new incomeprotection planCould you afford to stop working for a year?If not, talk with your man from Sun Life ofCanada about their new disability income plan... to keep the money coming in when you'renot able to.SUN LIFE OF CANADARALPH J. WOOD, Jr.CUIOne N. LaSalle St.Chic. 60602FR 2-2390798-04704/The Chicago Maroon/May 14, 1971 birth eontrol OURSWe believe your private life should be your own. And when itcomes to buying contraceptives, the hassle in a crowded drug¬store isn’t exactly private. So we’ve made it possible for you toget nonprescription contraceptives through the mail.We specialise in men's contraccpli'es and we offer two of the mostexciting ones available an> w here -Fetherlite and NuForm condomsThey're bettei than anything you can get in a drugstore. Importedfrom Britain, they re lighter, thinner, more exciting to use; andprecision manutacturmg and testing techniques make them as re¬liable as any condom anywhere. Made by LRI. world's largest manu-tacturer of mens contraceptives. Fetherlite (the best) and NuFormnot only contorm to exacting USFDA specifications, but are madeto British Government Standard 3704 as well We think you’U likethemOur illustrated brochure tells you all about Fetherlite andNuForm And about seven other American brands which we haveca-elully selected irom the more than one hundred kinds availabletoday And we explain the differences.We also have nonprescription loam for women and a wide 1 »variety of books and pamphlets on birth control, sex, population. 1 Iand ecology , jWant more information? It s free. Just send us your name andaddress Better still, for one dollar we 11 send vou all the informa¬tion plus two Fetheilite samples and one NuForm For four dollarsyou'll get the brochuie plus three each of five different condombrands (including both Imports). All correspondence and merchan¬dise is shipped in a plain cover to protect your privacy, and weguarantee your money hack n you le not satisiied with our products.Why wait?POPULATION PLANNING ASSOC.Box 253S-S. Chapel Hill, N C 27314Gentlemen: Please send me: Your free brochure and pricelist at no obligation, Three samples for $1 Deluxesampler package for $4.NameAddressCity State Zipokpea uovu-utvr teuwvWSDS presents"STRIKE"!First of the Eisenstein Revolutionary FilmsTells the daring story of aPre-Revolutionary strike and its suppression. Contemporary European FilmsSunday May 16 Medium CoolLaw School $ 1Thursday May 20 Winter LightIda Noyes 25cFriday May 21 Beaux Arts BallBartlett Gym $1Saturday May 22 AdaIen-31Cobb $ 1Sunday May 23 Mississippi MermaidCobb $ 1Tuesday May 25 Kris KristoffersonMandel $1Thursday May 27 Shoot thePiano PlayerIda Noyes 25cNEW HARPER TORCHBOOKSThe Morality ofCivil Disobedienceby ROBERT T. HALLTB/1573 *2'25 v EditionsCloth Torchbook LibraryTB/41 $9-50The Mass StrikeThe Political Party and♦he Trade UnionsAt your booksellerFri. May 14, 7:30 & 9:15 P.M.QuantrellIO, . Harper es) RowPaperudCK uept. b*, 4a t. 33d St., New York 1001b,v>Vai.-f- iifis/•?,'\J ’ V-jjjfi ;»,'dKlMMEl ."This is heartbeat of the nation"Founded in 1*92. Published by University of Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the regularschool year, except during examination periods, and bi-weekly on Wednesdays during the summer. Offices inrooms 301, 303, 304 In Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637. Telephone (312 ) 753-3263.Distributed on campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail $8 per yearin the United States. Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, Illinois. ABOUT THE MIDWAYConspiracy movie“69 Cr 180”, a movie about the Con¬spiracy 7 trial will be premiered at the cen¬ter for continuing education May 25.There will be three showings of the movieon that day, at 5, 7 and 8:30 pm. The lasttwo showings will cost $5 per ticket, withproceeds going to the Roger Baldwin Fundof the American Civil Liberties Union.However, the first showing is beingscreened especially for students at $2.50per person.The movie is a collection of drawings byFranklin McMahon, an artist-reporter whowatched the proceedings of the trial. Thedrawings were made into a movie by Mar¬vin Gold.Library grantThe University library has been awardeda grant of $400,000 from the Council on Li¬brary Resources, Inc, with a matchinggrant from the National Endowment for theHumanities, in partial support of a five-year program for the continuing in¬vestigation and development of comput¬erized library data systems.These grants, totalling $800,000, providefunds for the five-year program’s major ob¬jective — the development of an efficientcomputerized system to handle large bib¬liographic data files.The five-year program calls for develop¬ing such a system and applying it to vari¬ous library services. One application — thecontr 1 of book circulation — is directlysupported by the grants.The grants for “Development and Oper¬ational Testing of a Library Data Manage¬ment System” were announced Wednesdayby Herman Fussier, director of the Univer¬sity Library; Dr Fred Cole, president of thecouncil on library resources; and WilliamEdgerton, acting chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities.Among the remaining and unfunded tasksof the basic five-year program are the de¬velopment of a system for the control ofserial publications, establishment of a sys¬tem for collecting and analyzing data tomonitor various library operations; and theextension of system capabilities to use ex¬ternally-generated data bases such as theNational Library of Medicine MEDLARS,the Chemical Abstract Service, and otherdiscipline-based information stores.The s»j„tem to be developed will be ca¬pable of maintainin' computer files of upto one million recoius. Each record willgive a bibliographic description of a book,with an average of 1,000 characters of datain a number of variable length fields.A major function of the system will be toorganize, index, and store incoming dataabout books. Another function will be toidentify, retrieve, and selectively displayinformation to guide library users in theirsearches for books and other library re¬sources.This system will make possible practicalapplications in a number of library pro¬cessing operations involving bibliographicdata.Western Civ petitionsStudents wishing to take western civ¬ilization (History 131-2-3) over the summermust petition to do so in the college historyoffice, Gates-Blake 206 before Friday,June 4.This is necessary because of an antici¬pated high demand. Registration will beprovisional until those who must take thecourse this summer to graduate are ac¬counted for.Eric Cochrane, professor of history andEmile Karafiol, assistant professor of his¬tory will teach the course this summer.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 snacks . . .Sill BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933The Harper Concert SeriespresentsSonata for two flutes in C MajorAdagioAllegroSonata for two flutes in G MajorAllegro con brioMinuetto Robert ValentineBeethovenFantasie in D minorSyrinxSonata for two flutesLamentabileModerato Anonymous* 1646DebussyWilhelm BachPerformed by:Normand LazarowJean RosenthalFriday, Today, May 14th, 4 p.m. Harper Reading RoomSponsored by the College and theOffice of Student ActivitiesThis wi!! Soke the place of the concert tlial woo io be pe;formed b;Jeon Rosenthal, John Chestnut, Judith McKay.* FOTA RECITALSSat. May 15thLexington Studio8:30 PM Norma Hirsh mezzo-soprano,Miriam Blasi piano, Vocalrecital featuring music ofShumann, Brahms, Mozart, andRavel.Wed. May 19thIda Noyes Library8PM Student recital of vocal andinstrumental musicThursday May 20thQuantrel8 PM Elizabeth Daniels, soprano,Craig Worthington, piano,Vocal recital featuringShubert's Song Cycle "TheShepherd on the Rock".ALL RECITALS ARE FREEDESKS-BOOKCASESSWIVEL CHAIR - LAMPS - TABLESNEW & USEDC BRAND > equipment&SUPPLY CO.8440 So. South Chicago Ave.(Parallel to Chicago Skyway)Open Mon. -Sat. 8:30 -5:00RE 4-2111Immediate DeliverySpecial Discount for Studentsand faculty with I.D. card The road.Play it, feel it,know it, sense it,command itTake of it whatit has to offer.The Renault 16. Front-wheel drive.4-wheel independent suspension.Torsion bars. Rack and pinion steer¬ing. Front-wheel disc brakes.Up to 30mpg. Top speed, 90 mph.Net effect: Total adhesion tothe road and a whole new way tocommunicate with it. $2,495.jC..isimports, <3nc.2347 S. MICHIGAN AVE.CHICAGO, ILL.,TEL. 326-25501IIIMay PfUAPLATTERPino. Fried Chicken *j Italian Foods ■I Compare the Price! jj 1460 E. 53rd 643-2800 jL...vr&unsB...J14, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/5THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSCLASSIFIEDSClassified ad deadlines are 10:00AM Monday for Tuesday's Paper,and 4:00 PM Wed. for the Fridaypaper.The cost is 50/line the first run¬ning and 40‘ for repeated in¬sertions for University people;75'/line and 60'/repeat line fornon University people.Strictly Per¬sonals are run for everyone at3C / line.Ads must be paid in advance sobring them to our office, Rm 304Ida Noyes, or mail them in with acheck.FOR SALESONY 350 Tape Deck 3 Head. AlsoLarge B&W port TV, chair & TblSONY-SIOO; TV-etc $20 ea. 684-8120Small Mahagony MARTIN about 40yrs. old — slightly cracked — willbargain. Inquire at LIFERHYTHMS MUSIC. 1701 E. 55thStreet.61 MERCEDES BENZ Exc. condi¬tion $700 or BEST OFFER 955-6620.Books, Paperbacks, Bought andSold. 1503 East 57th Street. Powell'sBookshop. 12-10.STEREO Headphones: Beyer, Pro¬fessional. $40. 477-8846. DUAL TURNTABLES New CheapBASE Blank Tape Bob BJ836 753-2261.FOTA Recital by Norma Hirsh,mezzo soprano, Miriam Bias, piano.Saturday 8:30 pm Lexington Studio.FREE.A Smith-Corona Super Sterling costs$114 at the Bookstore. Buy mine —Save $.Anne 752-3896.Easley Blackwood Mandel MondayHUGE TENT 9 by 18 $60. 955-5250BRIAR PIPES. Best quality. Cheap477-8846A Little Love for Sale-OriginFurniture, household items, new 8.like-new clothing. Sun. May 1611:00, 9744 S Merrill, SA1-3836Portable typewriter, Olivetti 32.Fine shape. $40-Flourescent desklamp, like new. $20. — Camera Ac¬cess case. $25. 477-8846.TONIGHT! The Masque of Winter-Medysyn for Melancholy CloisterClub 8 pm FREE from FOTA.BASS VIOL w-case $150. 955-7245FURNITURE: 3 Dbl. Beds, desks,tables, chairs, lamps; pots, pans.752-1469 evenings.The Death of Andy Warhol starsRichard Nixon, Mick Jagger, ArtLinkletter, G. B. Shaw, Mark Rudd,and many more. Thurs-Fri-Sat at8:30 Woodward. FREE from FOTA. Group of 10 desperately need colorTV, 8-10 pm, Sunday night Can Pay.Call 667-2507 or 753-2898 anytime.Keep Trying.Affect, cat needs summer home.Food, sm. board fee. 684-7123.Will you rent us station wagon orcamper for month of August? HY3-7973I need an apt (couple) from June1st to August 30fh. Hyde Park, Lin¬coln Park, or far north side. If youhave one to sublet, contact: D. Dan¬iel, 1508 Hinkson Avenue, Columbia,Missouri, 65201.Handel's Theodora Sunday May 16thRockefeller Chapel. Professional or¬chestra & soloists (Featuring Bar¬bara Pearson).PEOPLE WANTEDRUSSIA Camping Jul 31-Aug 13Need one person for a group of 4.Cheap. Call 684-7994.McDonald s self-destructs when the10 billionth hamburger is sold —The Death of Andy Warhol.WNTD: Rock, bolk, blues, jazz,Country Western Band to appear ina movie. Write Byron Productions4037 N. Major Ave, Chicago, 60634.STAFF, STUDENTS. SUBJECTSNEEDED FOR SPEECH EX¬PERIMENT. ONE HOUR'S WORK,$1.75 Cash. On Campus. Call x3-4710for an appointment. TEACHERS: Chicago Suburban andMidwest placement service for allfields and levels. Also Principals.Please write today. LynneMcLaughlin. McLaughlin Employ¬ment Service, PO Box 435, St.Charles, Illinois.SUMMER JOBSInteresting, challenging jobs for col¬lege girls and teachers are avail¬able at ELAINE REVEL, INC. Youcan make good money While work¬ing for ERI on temporary jobs asa typist, clerk, steno, dictaphoneoperator, etc. Apply at ELAINEREVELL, INC. CHICAGONorth — 4832 N. Lincoln LOl-2696Loop — 230 N. Michigan ST2-2325Hyde Park — 1525 E. 53rd St., 684-7000 OAK PARK — 944 Lake St.A U 7-6888 DES PLAINES — 2510Dempster 774-9625.SKOKIE 5200 Main St. 679-1550.CATLOVER who can provide temp,home for very friendly well-behavedfemale cat. June-mid-Sept. Litter,food provided plus salary. Call Sue288-0659BABY SITTER wanted for Auguston Martha's Vinyard. 684-0048Female to share 2-person bsmt.Own room 8. corridor; UNUSUAL57th 8. Blkstne $58.75 . 288-1315Babysitter needed: Occasional after¬noons or eves 7600 South Shorearea. 9 month old child. Call 221-5767.Fern Roommate Wanted. Own FurnBedrm avail, immed $65. 667-3321. A bicycle puts youclose to nature - Thusspake ZarathustraTurin in, Turin on,drop joggingV for velocipedeCheapest prices for Car¬lton, Raleigh, Robin Hood,Falcon, Peugeot, Gitane,Mercier. Radius and DawsFactory trained mechanics.Used bicycles spasmod¬ically. Flv-by-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00-8:30; S&S IO-8TV rarprihtgjrrr. from Old Town3 rm apt avail. June 15, 57th 8< Dor¬chester, perfect for 2, $110 Call 363-3382.June 1 RMMTE for summer ANDFall. 43.50-mo 8< util. Big room 684-3744. 53rd 8. Kenwood. AIR COND So. Shr. apt needs female roommate. $60 & util-mo. prj.vate bdrm, end shower. 221-5565Spacious 3 rm nr pk. Graciouslyfurnished. Quiet. Lots of workspace. Jun-Oct. $150-mo. 955-7245Wonderful apt rent whole or by rmlargest rms in HPark 684-3915Mid-June — Mid Sept. 4 large cleanfurnished rooms facing Midway (noparking problems) Washer, dryer inbasement. Rent $100-month. HY3-7051 eveningsThe Death of Andy Warhol takesplace at McDonald's so we choseWoodward Court CafeteriaPoetry reading by Irish poet Rich,ard Murphy Friday 8 pm INH4 Ig rms. 1 bdrm. Redecorated 6-1-8-31 Cal! Dave eve 363-8272Sublet — Jun-Sept 10. 31 rms,breezy, near pt. furnished 8. doublebed $135. 752-6851.Summer plus option next year: 2rms. in 6 rm apt: $63 mo. CallMcAdow at 363-2750.Summer Sublet, one pers. $50 moCall 667-7144 after 7:00 p.m.Lge 2 bath apt trnshd nr campus200-mo negotiable. Call 288-5511Summer Sublet: 2 bedrooms, 58th 8.Kenwood. Call 684-6689 between 5:00and 7:30.Sunday, May 16thRockefeller Chapel3 PM MIDWEST PREMIEREHANDEL'S THEODORA Tickets atReynolds Club,Woodworth's & at the doorSTRINGS GALORE! Darco,D'Angelico, Ernie Ball; Gibson, etc.Electrics by gauge, and sets. LIFERHYTHMS. 1701 E. 55th Street.To deliver June 8: double bed, $30;dining table, $5; Apartment-sizedhumidified, $30. 643-0155Hard single bed with lovely head-board for sale. Call Wendy 667-5012.Used Fender Twin Reverb AmpAsking $300; Farfisa Electric Organ.Roberts Stereo Tape machine; Mar¬tin Tenor Sax-$165 or best offer.LIFE RHYTHMS MUSIC COOP,1701 East 55th Street.Camping Gear-Air mats, bags,packs, Auction Items. All Now 30-50% Off HICKORY 324-1499.1963 Dodge 6 cyl Good ConditionCall 643-9455.Workshop with poet Vagn Steen Fri¬day 3 pm Ida Noyes Library.Shure Microphones 25% to 40% offLIFE RHYTHMS 1701 E. 55 955-0459The Italians get it again — The Col¬lective presents Sacco and Vanzetti:May 14-15-16 Unitarian Church.FOTA.Tape Deck Sony 350 3 heads, Nearlynew. Best Offer. Also recordingtape: Sony 150, Scotch Dynarudge203, Low noise, 1800 feet. Factorysealed. Call Carl, 667-5012.I" "Cut out and save 'ris ad: “'Don’tCallYourTravelAgent!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 CitiesWeekly departuresFlights under the auspicesof World StudentGovernment Organization.Send coupon ... call, writeor visit. Boot and Shoe Shipment just ar¬rived. Sale Priced. John's Men'sWear, 1459 East 53rd Street.Easley Blackwood performs worksby Alban Berg, Arnold Schoenbergand Anton Webern. Monday 8:30Mandel FREE from FOTA.1969 Air Conditioner $125 Double bed$50; string chair w-ottoman $25;plus rugs, bookcase. Call 493-1786 af¬ter 6.Best Waterbeds In Town $29.95 ForKing Size, 5 yr. guar. $29.95 8, Cus¬tom frames, htrs, at Dr. Feelgood's,State 8i Chestnut.Life Rhythms is Hyde Parks firstmusic store for musicians. We areopen 7 days a week. 1701 E. 55th.The corner of 55th 8> Hyde ParkBlvd.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.Sony 355 deck (mike 8< phones). 7rls. new tape, 2KLH 17 speakers.955-6626.W.S.G.O. please send□ Travel bulletins□ Application for InternationalStudent I DName.Address _City C/aStateSchool— -Zip.Charter & GroupTravel Specialists60 East 42nd StreetNew York 10017Call (212) 697-3054 DYNACO Stereo 80 basic amp 8.PAT-4 preamp $200 or best offer($320 new). Must sell by May 27.363-4179 after 5 p.m.Sofa, Dinette set. Mattress, Re¬finished desk, dressers, lamps, swi¬vel tables. Call J. Newman 538-2907after 5.Return ticket on Aug 9-Sept 11 Chgo-London charter. 667-7462.CONSOLE PIANO: Chickering 1947in superb condition both outside andin. Will haggle fr $900 (moving in¬cluded). 955-6330.Back issues of Infinity Magazine 30cents.Model Camera 55th 8, KenwoodWANTEDTHANKS FAMILY NEEDS Home orAPT 6 Br Sept. 1; 643-5613, 667-3307LOVING CARE for plants 8< Art. AMBITIOUS MEN of all trades,north to ALASKA and YUKON, ar-round $2800 a month. For completeinformation write to JOB RE¬SEARCH, P.O. Box 161, Stn-A, To¬ronto, Ont. Enclose $3 to cover cost.MANAGER WANTEDCoffee and snack shop and campusInstitution needs manager for 1971-72school year; flexible hours, but shopIs open primarily In the evening.Salary $50-$80 depending upon ar¬rangements. Call 753-3593 for inter¬view.WEDDING BANDSOne of a KindIndividually Designed• 'frSilver from $20Gold from $40Visit me at my workshop andsee other custom crafted sculp-.ture to wear.BASHACALL 337-0715Days or EveningsMasochist who will eat U of C pres¬tige dinner. Apply library personneloffice. LIBRARY UNIONFern share house sum close campcheap BU8-1100 est 301.Recital by Norma Hirsh, mezzosoprano. Sat. 8:30 pm LexingtonFILM MAKER WANTED Educa¬tional Film 16mm Fun 768-2457.All you ever wanted to know aboutconcrete poetry but were afraid toask. Vagn Steen at the Oriental In¬stitute Sat 8 pmMotel Room Clerk, part-time, 79th 8<South Shore Drive, Breakers Motel.Call 374-4500, between 10 am and 4pm.FOTA: The Masque of Wintertonight 8 pm Ida Noyes.MALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWAPPLY NOW-START WORK IMMEDIATELYOR AT THE END OF THE SEMESTERJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN UP TO $50 OR MORE DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWDAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSfrom grange n*nr homo nr crlinol6/The Chicago Maroon/May 14, 1971 PEOPLE FOR SALETYPING: Fast, accur. FA 4-4703.CHEAP XEROXING!! Xerox 7000(fastest, also reduces, can halvecosts) open to all. 10 cents to 4cents dep. on vol. 753-2078.4th year biology major, to graduatein June, needs summer employ¬ment Has experie. e in sales andbiology lab research Call Don 667-5012.Experienced babysitting in myhome. Full or part time. Live closeto University. Reasonable Call 955-1158.Need a band. Call Joe 447-5091.MASSAGE FOR MALE 8. FEMALEHawaiian, Scandinavian, and Mid-Eastern massages — all three com¬bined into one very satisfying mas¬sage. Call BOB, 326-4739 anytime.SPACE57th & Dorch 2) rm apt from Jul 1$129-mo. Call 667-0509FOTA presents The Midwest Pre¬miere of Handel's favorite oratorio— Theodora. Sunday 3 PM.FOTA — The Death of Andy WarholMay 13-14-15 Woodward 8:30 FREESacco 8. Vanzetti — best play of thequarter 8< still only $.50.4 rm, 1 bdrm apt on Lake, E. EndAve, 24-hr drmn, $225 mo, availJuly 1. Call 3-2886 or 288-5314"The Art of Concrete Poetry" — alecture by Vagn Steen. Sat. 8 pmBreasted Hall. FREE from FOTA57 8, Blackstone 2J rms $114-moavail June 12. Furn for sale. Call955-9516 except Sat 8> SunSUMMER ROOMS AVAILABLE5615 UNIVERSITY$11 per week minimum PL2-9874.Own bedroom 50-mo 57 8. DrexelStart June. 643-6632 NATHANLive in Fredericka's famous build¬ing. Nearby, furn or unfurn, 2, 3rms, bath, kitch, porch, quiet, sun¬ny, SI20 up, free utils. 6043 Wood-lawn, 5-7 pm, 427-2583, 955-9209.Richard Murphy poetry readingtonight 8 pm Ida Noyes FOTA freeShare AIR CONDITIONED apt. nr.campus. Furnished. 731-1417. 5508 Cornell Huge 8 rooms 3 baths,4 bedrs, pre-med, med 8. grads,noncoeds. July & Sept.Lge 2 bath apt frnshd nr campus2G0-mo negotiable. Call 288-551121 Rm apt. apt. $100 mo avail June15 1350 E 53 air cond for sale 955-9769.Townhouse So Shore 5 rm 11 bathbsmt, 1 blk to Campus Bus, 1C, 11blk to lake. Child, pets OK. Avail.July 1 About *200. 221-5035.CHICAGO BEACH HOTEL5100 S. Cornell DO 3-2400Beautiful Furnished ApartmentsNear beach-park-I.C. trains U of Cbuses at door Modest daily, weekly,monthly rates.Call Miss SmithGarage 5508 Cornell $15 mo or $50yr.SUMMER SUBLETFern Rmt needed June-Sept 2-bdrapt 54th 8, Harper. Option to renewlease Frn or unfr 493-6711SUBLEASE — Option in fall 52nd &Univ. Large 2 bedroom 324-8524SUBLET — Clean 3 room furn. apt.June 1-Sept 1. Air cond., TV, Mod¬ern Kitche, 53 & Kenwood. Stud.cpI. pref. $142 mo. 324-7108June 15 to Sept 15, 58 & Harper fourbedrooms with big windows Sunporch completely furnished utilitiesincl. Call 752-8459.Furn 4 rm apt, grand piano hifipartly air conditioned. For one yearfrom June 15 to responsible couple$225-mo. Call 643-3429.WANTED FOR FAL: Rm in apt-hsewith others interested in women'smvt Linda Greene 955-662652nd D'chester — Furn Studio aptnear trans. shop. $129 mo. util, inclJune Avail. Ph 752-0086. Hyde Pk June-Sept 5 room furn.Apt. Spacious 924-2362.AIR CONDITIONED, furnished, 1bedrm apt June 11-Aug 29. $130Phone No. 324-3974.LIVE HIGH THIS SUMMER! Fe¬male subltrs wntd for CASTLE INTHE AIR in Little Pierce. Kitchen,air cond, close to EVERYTHINGCHEAP! 493-3284, 363-6324.1400 E 57th SUBLET. Need! femaleroommate. Air-cond. Freshly paint,ed. Modern. Furnished. $65 mo. Call288-0659.Apt for summer sublet 2 rooms 55th8. Harper. 955-0633.Spacious furn 4 rm near campuspossible fall option $130 mo. 947-5148day, 924-2254 eve.1-3 girls to sublet 6-71 Option forfall. 1400 E 57th 324-8930.Sacco & Vanzetti — THE play ofthe quarter. 1st Unitarian Church.Fri-Sat- Sun. FOTA 50 cents.1 bdrm apt. Furnished $185. Facultywishes to sublet to responsible partymid June-Dee. 4 large, bright rms.Newly decorated. 5300 Block Dor¬chester. 955-0159.Furn. 1 bdrm apt, summer $65-MaleRmmate or $130-Couple 493-4843.PHOTOGRAPHY CONTESTCASH PRIZESLeave Entries With Pat Remy (643-7275)At Gorman (Model Camera, 493-6700)OrProf. Darrel Bock (Judd 430, 753-3876)Sponsored by FOTA and UofC CameraClubEnter work by May 26 works by Schumann, Brahams, Mo¬zart 8. Ravel. Sat. 8:30 LexingtonFemale Subletters, June-Sept. 56thand Univ. big furn apt. Call 952-8459.D0NTSSELYOUANYTH INGBut, if you buy the ideaof a vocation—a life of service& prayer for others— wemay be able to help you.We are the Passionists.Following the inspiration ofPaul of the Cross we pledgeourselves to become in aparticular manner disciplesof Jesus Crucified.By this discipleship we tryto serve others.Contact:Bro Kevin O'Malley, C PPassionist Community, Dept. A5700 N. Harlem AveChicago, III. 60631Straight Talk: !Your diamond is at... FOUNDSbllha^kFINE JEWELERS FOR 60 YEARS 4119 N. Wabash at Washington *| ENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZA^JJune-Sept 2-3 Air-CondSum Sublet 2 flat apt bldg subletwhole bldg or either apt $135 and$150. Call 684-5720 — 643-0749 or spe¬cial arrangements for individuals.Male roommate wanted for FURNapt at 1400 E 57 SUMMER ONLYAIR COND. 363-7310.57th & Maryland, 6 rooms, 4 realbedrooms, 2 baths, washer-dryer,mid-June-mid-Sept. 752-7196.SUMMER SUBLET June 12-Oct. 1.41 rm apt, male grad to share withsame. $65-mo. Cal! Ralph at 643-6247.FOTA'S International Poetry Week¬end: Vagn Steen 8< Richard Mur¬phy. It's all FREE.GESTALTGROUPSWeekend & evening groups nowforming for personal growth &learning. Experienced leaders.Scholarships available.INTERCHANGEHOUSE752-2707 SUBLETbedrms, $53 mo. Ea. 955-9126SUBLET June-Sept. 58th & Mary¬land Big & Inexpensive. 684-7994.See the greening of Chicago fromthis light, airy, 6-room apt over-looking trees, park, playground.Sunny balcony. Fireplace. Close tostores, coffeeshops, bookstores,UofC, 1C, beach. June 15-Sept 15$225-mo. 288-4004.APARTMENT WANTEDGrad couple needs apartment forsummer. Price-range $100-$130Please Call Don. 667-5012.I REALLY NEED TO FIND ALARGE APARTMENT FOR NEXTYEAR. IF YOU KNOW OF ONE,PLEASE CALL AND TELL MEABOUT IT. CALL FRED, 236 BJ,753-2261 or 752-9538. Our self-respect, after being frit¬tered away by library bureaucracy,rises again with the LIBRARYUNION.BEAUX ARTS BALLCEF, IHC, FOTA will present thisyear's Beaux Arts Ball on FridayMay 21 at Bartlett Gym between8:30 and 1:30. Admission of $1 willbe charged for students, faculty, 8<staff. $1.50 for all others. Thisyear’s gala will feature the music ofHound-Dog Taylor, Mighty JoeYoung, Howling Wolf. A $50 prizewill be awarded to the best cos¬tumed couple. A $25 prize and two$15 runner-up prizes will be givenfor the best individual costumes. Asubjective committee of bigotedmembers of CEF, SVNA, and thefaculty will compose the panel ofjudges, whose decision will be final,except in cases of appeal. Ticketson sale next week in the MandelCorridor.TENNIS RACKETRESTRINGINGBill Dee Tennis Racket Restringing.New Davis Tennis Rackets 20 to25% Off.24 hour servicePhone 586-7971 Monday thru Friday.6:30 to 10:00 P.M. Informal Bible Study, Sunday eve¬nings at 8pm. Call 667-7632.Easley Blackwood Mandel Monday8:30PM. Free from FOTA.RADIO ODYSSEY — Midnight Sun¬day on WHPK-FM. Requests takentil 3.The NIGHTCLUB will have the fol¬ic entertainers, the next 3ween*: Vaughn Clemens Quartet,John Wolfe's Bluesband, and ShelleyFlowers. On Saturday nites in IDANOYES.Do you have bats in the belfry?Bring them along to the FearlessVampire Killers, Sat., COBB, DOCFILMS, 7:15 8. 9:30.Blow your brains out! HohnerHarps always on sale at LIFERHYTHMS MUSIC 1701 E. 55th.FOTA: The Masque of Winter Songand Dance Friday May 14 8 pmCloister Club. FREE.LOOKING FORSOMETHING REAL?Than taka onothar look at JawsSunday, 10:00 a.m.CORNELL AVENUEBAPTIST CHURCH8200 South Comall Ava.Call 667-7632 for a ride. NO COST FOR MOVINGSpecial Deal for University PeopleBring Goods in yourselfStore for Summer MonthsWe will hold warehouse open afterhours or Saturday by Appointment.PETERSON MOVING AND STORAGE12655 S. Doty, ChicagoPhone 646-4411ABORTIONS FOTA CONTESTSWHY PAY for abortion counselingyou can get FREE in Hyde Park?NY abortions from $150 Call ClergyService, 667-6015SHAZZAM!$25 REWARD FOR APT$25 Reward for 1, 11 or 2 rm un-furn apt avail immed. Pref olderapt, sunny, porch, etc, near lake orcampus w-option for fall Call Henry493-7118; Su, T, Th: 11 am-l:30 pm;Fri or Sat Internal, external, special projects,housing, and academic affairs com¬mittees of SG will meet Ida NoyesTues 5-18, 7:30. New ideas & peoplewanted.SCENES24 HRS ./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 $150.00ETHICAL ABORTION REFERRAL215-879-3100Roommates or sublet starting June1 option to lease spacious SouthShore apt. 3 bdrms, 2 baths, closeto 1C. George 752-1429.3rd Person to shr 6 rm turn aptJune-Sept. S. Shore 752-7011Furn 5 rm June 9-Sept 1. E. HydePk Blvd, $150-mo. 538-2539STUDY SOUNDSIMPROVE GRADESTh« Sam# Amount Of Tim# To sfudyUSE STUDY SOUNDS MONEYEcology Freaks only need apply!Help yourself & others breathe eas¬ier. Call 685-0005 eves.REWARD for 25-word essy on "theLiveral Tradition of the U of C" LI¬BRARY UNION.RIDES A great blues dance-concert fromFOTA & CEF: James Cotton Band,Houndog Taylor. Friday, May 21st.Only One Dollar.FILMS AND TALK: (Claude), and(The Critic). Bonhoeffer House, 5554S. Woodlawn, 6:30pm, Sunday, May16.HYPPO Jam 25 cents, Fri. 8-12,Blue Gargoyle.Screw Thieu Ball-Kent State Park,rock, SVNA punch, tonight.Kris Kristofferson is coming!CRAFT 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 3-0155FUTURE CPA'S — Learn how toPrepare for the CPA Exam. BeckerCPA Review Course. Call Collect(312 ) 236-5300'AM students who did not pick uppublic affairs applications last Fri¬day may do so in G-B 120 or fromIheir advisors. This year's FOTA Contest Day willbe held in conjunction with theFOTA Fair on May 23rd. Prizesawarded in the fields of Hog-calling,frisbee throwing, yo-yo's, paper air¬planes, jacks ( watch out for FastSue) and pi recital. Start practicingnow!KRIS KRISTOFFERSON!The hottest young country-folk sing¬er in the country today will appearon campus for a concert on May 25.Admission $1 for students, faculty,8. staff. Major sponsors: CEF andIHC. Kristofferson's songs have wonGrammy's and his latest hit "Me 8.Bobby McGee" is the title song onJanis Joplin's last album. Ticketsgo on sale next week in the Mandelcorridor.BEAUX ARTS BALLCEF 8, FOTA present this year'sBeaux Arts Ball: ■- oala concert andmasquerade ball ro the music ofHound-Dog Taylor, Mighty JoeYoung, Howling Wolf and CarrieBell, with John Little-john. $50 prizeto the best couple in costume. $25 tothe best individual costume, two $15runner-up prizes. Music 8< Dancingfrom 8:30 — Friday, May 21, Bar¬tlett Gym. Tickets on sale, MandelCorridor, on Tuesday. All students,faculty 8. staff, $1. Others $1.50. Unltm<t Van UnmmKRIS KRISTOFFERSON!FOTA IS bringing Kris Kristoffersonto campus. Tuesday, May 25th.Only One Dollar.CPA REVIEWBECKER CPA REVIEW COURSE— new term begins Wed., 6-2. Halfof ail successful III. candidates areformer students. 346-7742.PERSONALSHave they fried Sacco & Vanzettiyet? FOTA presents The Collectivehi THE play. Fri-Sat-Sun.Irish Poet Richard Murphy readshis poetry. Friday 8 pm Ida Noyes.FREE Gerbils. Call FA4-1525Great Cat, Blk, male neutered 8mo, well trnd, moving, can't takewith, FREE to good home FA 44931.An Oasis in the Desert .. . Middle-Eastern Cuisine at Ahmad's, 1450East 57th Street. Free moving, free use of my KnollAntique, junk furniture, by respon¬sible party s-qtr. 684-7123.No necking without garlic at TheFearless Vampire Killers Sat nite7:15 8. 9:30 Cobb DOC.You don't have to be Jewish to bePregnant .. . but if you are, Callthe Ark. 463-4545, 4-10pm.HYPPO JAM 25 cents, Friday, Gar-goyie.ASTROLOGY — Personal con¬sultations are now offered to stu¬dents at a special student fee. Con¬cerned about career selection, |obopportunities, love, and your realself . . . Call 723-1363 Jo Mitchell,D.F. Astrol. S.Bells of Sarna . . . and finger cym¬bals — from $1. LIFE RHYTHMS.• wii. k.umprthenvon ifuOy At A FaHer Rat*electronically produced soundsCAUSE THIS TO HAPPENPl«**e Specify8 Track Tap* Cassette Or IP RecordSend Chech 0r Money Order - f» 94 Eachinclude 75c Hen-" -- - -Sound ConceptsCheriottesviiStu— 1 BoV'X72902 Rider Wtd. Share driving exps. toPORTLAND, ORE. 752-1469 IRALOSTFemale Siamese Cat (Seal Pt) fromapt at 53rd 8< Greenwood PleaseCall 667-2922 (Lost on Monday, May10th). LIFE RHYTHMS is an authorizedSlingerland drum dealer. StartingMay 12 (For one month) new Sling¬erland Drums on Sale for 30% offlist price. 1701 E. 55The Reverend Andrew M. Greenleywill speak on "The New Ethnicityand the Jewish Community inAmerica," at Hillel, 8:30 tonight.< ABORTIONcan be less costly than you maythink, and pregnancies of up to12 weeks can be terminated for$175.00including doctors fees, labora¬tory tests, ait medication &referral fee. Hospital and Hos¬pital affiliated clinics only. Safe,Confidential, Immediate,call(212) 838-071024 hours — 7 daysWoman's Aid & Guidance Group40 E. 54th St., N.Y., N Y. 10022 UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY684-3661FRANK P4RISIproprietor USED CAMERASMINOLTA 135mm 12 8 w/coso$84.00KAUGAR 135 (2.8 Pontox Mt.ComARKEY DRYERS A WASHERS 1 $30.00ot ooch modal atARGUS COSINA w/CopolSquare Shutter Block Body f 1.8 25% offIans 4 Casa $125.00NIKKORMAT FTN t 20AUTOVIVITR 135 28 (or Nl $175.00KONIN STOCKHAW CONTROL $35.00NEW UNtCOtOt CHEMISTRY ADAEKIOOM AIDSPATTERSON DARKROOM EQUIPMENTCANON FI AAGFA COLOR PAPERIN 10 shoot packagesMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th St.New Hours 8:30-6:00 p.m.SCREW THIEU BALLRock by The ImagePeoples' Punch by SVNAGuerrilla Theater by Rapid TransitFriday, May 14, 8:00 pmKent State Memorial Park58th & WoodlawnSponsored by The Science for Vietnam Project to raisefunds for medical supplies for Vietnam. Donationsrequested.Fri-Sat Woodward CourtMav 14-15 TUB HEATH 1 OK AIIDV IMADHOI 8 PMmay 14-1 J IIK ■IIAlVl 1 Vr lilllr 1 VIMIKIIwh FREESUBLET — Avail June 15, eft apt12th fir view Lk Mich. Air cond.$145.50 mo. S. Shore 734-0171SUBLET 2 — option 1 bedroom aptCheap $95. U blocks from KimbarkShop. Plaza. Call 288-7119Need 2 people to share sublet w-stereo, bike & girl. Mid June-mid-Sept. 61 big rooms-$185. 53rd &Woodlawn. 363-8835.Uniquely designed 3 bdrm apt toSublet 7-1 - lo-i w-option Near Lakeand 1C. 324-7471. LOST: "Thomas" — Cat. Tabby(yellow) with white paws & belly.Reward-$25-Call 324-3991.ORATORIOFOTA presents the Midwest Pre¬miere of Handel's Oratorio Theo¬dora. Sunday May 16th, 3PM Rock¬efeller Chapel. Professional Orches¬tra and Soloists featuring Met. Op¬era Audition winner Barbara Pear¬son. General admission tickets $3 atWoodworths Bookstore, ReynoldsClub & TICKETRON. Students $1 atReynolds Club Desk.KIMBARKLIQUORSi>WINE 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 St.53-Kimbark Pinza HY3-3355 Handel's Theodora on Sunday is at3PM (not at the time on the FOTAcalendar).Sunday at 3 pm history will bemade. The 3rd Am. Performance ofHandel's Oratorio Theodora atRockefeller Chapel. Tickets atTICKETRON, Reynolds Club, Wood¬worth's. $3 generals $1 students.There will ba tickets available atthe door for Handel's Theodora.Sunday at 3, Rockefeller.FOTA: Poetry Workshop with VagnSteen today 3PM Ida Noyes FREE.The Harper Concert Series presents:Sonata for two flutes in C Major,Adagio — Allegro, Robert Valen¬tine; Sonata (or two flutes in G Ma¬jor, Allegro con brio-Minuetto —Beethoven; Fantasie in D minor —Anonymous — 1646; Syrinx — De¬bussy; Sonat for two flutes, Lamen-t a b i I e — Moderato — WilheimBach; Performed by NormandLazarow, Jean Rosenthal. Today,Friday, May 14th, 4pm. HarperReading Room. Sponsored by theCollege and the Office of StudentActivities. This will take the placeof the concert that was to be per¬formed by Jean Rosenthal, JohnChestnut, Judith McKay.The Masque of Winter Tonight! FEARLESS VAMPIREKILLERSFangs for the Memory! Docpresents Roman Polanski's FearlessVampire Killers. The man whomade Rosemary, Repulsion, andKnife in the Water lays it on wi.feSharon Tate. Sat, Cobb, 7:15 8. 9:30.LOVEABLE NEWSSTANDHyde Park's most loveable news-stand-Bob's Newsstand 51st 8> LakePk now carries over 1000 differentMag titles plus 40 different under¬ground comix! Hours: Mon-Fri:6am-6pm; Sat: 6am-lam Sun 7am-4:30pm. Sun N.Y. Times on saleSunday 8:30am. Shaloml Filmmakers Newsletter, 60 cents.Model Camera, Hours, 8:30 to 6:00p.m.Easley Blackwood: Concert of 20thCentury Music. Monday, May 17th,Mandel, 8:30PM. Free. FOTA.How do you stop a Jewish Vampire?Let Roman Polanski put the bite onyou in The Fearless Vampire Kill-ers, Sat, Cobb, 7:15 8. 9:30.SALE on New Slingerland Drums.30% Off All Sets — Used sets withZILDJZN CYMBALS. LIFERHYTHMS MUSIC. 1701 E. 55th St.Fixing guitars is a Life RhytmsSpecialty 1701 E. 55thABORTIONpregnancies up to 12weeks terminated from$175.00Medication, Lab TestsDoctors fees includedHospital & Hospitalaffiliated clinics.(212) TR 7-880324 hours-7 daysPHYSICIANS REFERRALWe know we can help you. even i»in t»IV *n someone 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. jL. ;oo;; Mick Jagger is a girl! (In TheDeath of Andy Warhol) FREE fotaTIGER STRIPED male kitten, cute& affectionate, 5 mos old Free togood home. 465-0370.Handel's Theodora-Rockefeller Chap¬el Sunday 3 pm. General admission$3; students $1. Get your ticketsnow at Reynolds Club or Wood-worth's Bookstore.Blow your mind with good music.Lowest prices on all stereos at MU-SICRAFT. On campus, Bob Tabor,363-4555.The Collective does better musicalsthan Blackfrlars'. If you don't be¬lieve it, come see Sacco and Van-zetfl.SUPER PERSONALSOriginbeast eats Heidegger 0400.HYPPO Jam 25 cents, Friday, Gar-goyle.Tire of waiting days, weeks, monthsfor your guitar to be repaired?Gives Speedy Service A Store Runby Musicians for Musicians. LIFERHYTHMS.FOTA: The Death of Andy WarholMay 13-14-15 Woodward 8:30 FREEUsher in Spring wtlh The Masque ofWinter Fridays pm Ida NoyesTAhSAM-Y&NCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing mCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Orders to take out’218 East 63rd MU4 1062May 14, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/7"ITif"''1'401"ITif^V^T^IkMVirC^?'TT’if^V^r^\•(YlebrationMtlcnd.inccwillbelimitedti><><>.000personsduetorequirements|CTlift]1lAVJ%3Ijl/JHftIlf!(VIfT^to1ftJl/•«•(Ioralauthorities.AMississippiKiverislandsitewasselectedbecauseofthe';»'-«//historicroleoftheregionindevelopingbluesandjazzmusicand*inordertoassureattendancewouldbepositivelycontrolled.CommercialtransportationtoCelebrationIslandisnotavailable.AccessisbyourprivateRiverferryboatsonly.AdmissionequiredtoboardferryboatsandswappedforaspecialbadgewithaPolaroidphotowhichwillbemadeforyouasyouarriveontheisland.Thephotobadgemustbewith•ontheisland,hourhundredyardsofwater,aswiftandpowerfulcurrent,aworldfamousundertow,andpatrollingspeedboats,will'combinetoinsurethatnoswimmersreachtheislandsitetoovercrowdthesiteandtaxsanitationfacilities.Rightdayticketsincludingferryboatsandbadge'cost$28.00.Threedav-bine2<>th-28th)ticketsdonotrecommendthembecausemuchoftheprogramwillbemissed.Allticketbuyerswillreceiveaninformationkitwhichwillprovidedrivinginstructionstotheboatormationonfacilitiesavailableontheisland.MoneywillbelefundedforallticketordersarrivingafterCelebrationissoldout.Positivelynoticketssoldafter.June18th.bvmanyofthesamepeoplewhohelpedbringyoutheAtlantaInternationalPopFestivallast.July,theNewOrleansPopFestival,andtheTorontoRockandRollRevivalfeelthatoutdoorvacationscanbesomethingexcitinglydifferentthantheyhaveeverbeenbefore!InAtlantalast.July1thwesurprisedyouwithC.rand.FunkRailroad, I',.ulliAtNewOrleanstheyearbeforewesurprisedv<*uwiththe.JeffersonAirplane.InTorontoitwas.JohnPennonandthePlasticHimRand.Alloftheseactswereun¬isourcustomtogivepeoplemoretlinnwepromise.Wehaveaf'ev/’dynamiticsurprisesupoursleevesfor(Ylebrationtoo.Keepthefaitlianddigadifferentkindofvacationliecountryatthetimc'oftheSolstice..Campinginthewoodsandplayinginfieldsofcloverwithyourbrothers...Fightmagicaldays...ACelebrationofLife! AFRICANDANCEBANDALEXTAYLORBALLINJACKAMBOYDUKESBEACHBOYSB.B.KINGBOZSCAGGSCANNEDHEATCHUCKBERRYCHAMBERSBROTHERSCOUNTRYJOEMcDONALDRAVISHANKARDIXIELANDJAZZBANDROLANDKIRKFLYINGBURRITOBROTHERSMELANIE^,IT'SABEAUTIFULDAYMILESDAVISJOHNLEEHOOKERPINKFLOYDSYMPHONYORCHESfRAJOHNHARTFORDTAJMAHALJOHNB.SEBASTIANVOICESOFEASTHARLEMKATETAYLOR&BUDDYMILESERICBURDONDELANIE,BONNIE,&FRIENDSWAR30MOREGROUPSNOWBEINGCONTRACTEDAMERICANROCKOPERACOMPANYPERFORMINGMUSICFROM“JESUSCHRISTSUPERSTAR"SOMETHINGDllFLRENTINOUTDOORLNTERTAINMENTAN'EIGHTDAYVACAIION.INACOUNTRY.SETTINGATTHEBEGINNINGOfSUMMERTIMEANEXPOSITION:AWORlDIAIRWITHHUNDREDSOFROOTHSANDFXHIBITSTOENTERTAINANDINFORMPIJPP[TSHOWS.DANCETROUPES.MAGICIANS.ASIROIOGIRS.ANDCRAfTSMENFROMALLOVERTHEWORlI)ACIRCUSANDAMUSEMENTPARK:COMITIIIWITHANIMAlSHOWS.TIGHTROPEWAIKERS.’FLYINGTRAPE/IARTISTS.MlNSHOTIROMACANNONAERIAlIIREWORKSI>ISTTAYSAt1.AtONEENDOfTFHEISLANDSOASNOTTOEMSTLJETBYOURQUIETINJOYMFNIOfTHECOUNTRYWORKSHOPSANDSEMINARS:PETERMAXTODISCUSSGRAPHICS.DRWILlIAMABRUZZITOGUIDEASYMPOSIUMONDRUGS.YOGIBHAJANWllLINSTRUCTINMLDUAIIONANDYOGAAMAJORSPIRITLJAlClNTfRllAltJRINGIIACHlRSOTMANYSCHOOLSOfIHINKING'.■BUTMOSTALLALL,THECOUNTRY:IIATURINGACASTO!MILLIONS'...TRLES.BIRDS.WllDflOWERS.ATTELEtitGINN+NGOf-SUMMlRWUENTVIRYERINGISGREINANDLUSHSUNNYSKIISANDS1ARRYNIGHLSONAPRIVATFISLAND;TOPUTYOURHEADIN1HERIGHTPIACEFORCEUFRELATIONPII.AS!.READTHQREALJSWALDENAIEWDAYSREIOREYOU1)1PARTIfYOUCANTGETINTOTHOPEAIJ.YOUWONIIIKICf.IEBRATION.anth<>»■itiesIhatticketswillberyouatjillIinies•irIn>atersveilIiarkSdll.un.WelanmngsandmlBroughtt"y<»u..People'.vhoTomandK.iread\ertisedasItAWeekIIItMAILORDERSTO:CELEBRATIONP.0.BOX60118.NEWORLEANS.LA..70113ENCLOSESELFADDRESSED.STAMPED.ENVELOPEEIGHTDAYTICKETS(a$28.00EACHTHREEDAYTICKETS(a20.00EACHNAMEADDRESSCITYSTATE30Volume 3. Number 27 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of the Arts ' Friday, May 14,1971Robert Mulligan’s Summer of '42, currently atthe United Artists downtown, is not for all tastes. Itbelongs to that most deplorable of genres, theadolescent defloweration saga, and much of Summerof ’42 wavers dangerously on the thin line betweenthe sensitive and the maudlin, the poignant and theembarrassing, the nostalgic and the condescending.But because of director Mulligan’s skill with actors,his loosely intimate camera technique, and thestrength of concern in his style, I think that it is theone film I have seen that most nearly renders aparticularized expression of something common toour experience.Summer of '42 tells the naturalistically detailedstory of three young teenagers on the beach, trying tocome to grips with the anticipation of sex and theimmediacy of horniness. One of the boys, Hermie,develops a crush on a distant older lady of twenty-onesummers, and the core of the film relates theprogress of their friendship. For Hermie, the sum¬mer of ’42 shuts him off irrevocably from a kind ofchildhood, and he can never again be as he was. Thesummer is seen filtered through his memory, lesshaunting or pervasive than a sharp, simple line ofdemarcation.Mulligan, director of Love with the Proper Strang¬er, Inside Daisy Clover, and Up the Down Staircase,as well as the as yet unreleased The Pursuit ofHappiness, has dealt with problems of adjustmentever since his first film, Fear Strikes Out. Althoughhis work has been somewhat uneven, no one elseworking today, in any country, has quite the lyricalintensity that Mulligan achieves to some degree in allof his films His characters confront hostile environ¬ments and attempt to make a meaningful existencefor themselves in the face of both opposing life-stylesand an indiflerent foreground.Mulligan allows his characters their thoughtsand feelings to generate the richest, most lyrical,passages in any movie of the last few years. Hiscamera is always close enough for us to be involved,but it also is free, vigorous and assured in its fluidity,permitting the actors and their characters maximumexpressiveness. Summer of '42 is one of Mulligan’smajor achievements, and certainly will end up one ofthe year’s stronger films.—Myron MeiselChicago filmmaker and critic Charles Flynninterviewed Robert Mulligan when the director wasin town for the opening of Summer of ’42.I’d like to ask a general question about all your films;Garv Grimes nlavs the kev role of a youthapproaching manhood in “Summer of ’42.” in several of them, the narration is from the point ofview of a child —To Kill a Mockingbird, Inside DaisyClover, and the last two, Pursuit of Happiness andSummer of ’42. In others, like Baby the Rain MustFall and The Stalking Moon, a child is one of thecentral characters. To what degree is this a con¬scious thing with you? Do you think it’s a continuousmotif in your career ?Not really. It’s more accident than design. Theaccident of finding a good script, and the scripthappens to involve young people. Obviously, Irespond to certain material, but that’s an uncon¬scious thing. There is a strong similarity between ToKill a Mockingbird and Summer of '42, which is againan act of memory, an adult going back to hischildhood, and spinning out a story. Pursuit ofHappiness is about a young adult, so I wouldn’tconsider that. In Baby the Rain Must Fall, the child’sfunction is secondary.A kind of mystique builds around anyone who workswith young people. People begin reading a good dealmore into it than is really there.When I saw Pursuit of Happiness I was struck bywhat seemed to me the total pessimism of the ending.It was a total rejection of what America has become Jennifer O’Neill (right) with Gary Grimesin “Summer of ’42.”the lab: one, because I don’t believe in it, and it’s arisky business. Two, Bob Surtees (director of photo¬graphy) is a genius, and a beautiful man to workwith. He’s one of the so-called old pros in thebusiness, but he’s got the head and the heart of atwenty-two-year-old (and the body of Ed Wynn). Hecomes to make pictures, and he comes with enormousenthusiasm, imagination, and daring. He knows hisfield, he knows what film can do and what it can’t do,and he’ll push it to the limit.Robert Mulligantoday; did you feel that way about it?Yes. I felt, after developing the screenplay andtalking with many young people, a growing dis¬enchantment with the Establishment, with their roleand their peers, the activists and the revolution. Adeep disconnection was taking place, a kind ofunplugging. They found by this reaction to theEstablishment that they were actually feeding it andwere effecting no change. I think it had to do with agreat many things — the assassination of RobertKennedy, the failure of Eugene McCarthy; and Ibegan feeling, “How sad,” because so many of themwere, in essence, leaving the country, whether or notthey left it physically (as many were doing), eitherbecause of the war or the threat of the draft or thisemotional vacuum. And so many of them were thebest of the young people — the thinkers. And that’spart of what I wanted to get into Pursuit ofHappiness. What Bob and I discussed early on was the look that Ifelt was important to Summer of ’42.1 wanted a soft,gentle and very muted color. And several thingscontributed to it: first, the country that we worked inlooks that way. It has very much the feeling ofAndrew Wyeth — both in the geography and the colortones. There are no hot colors, no wild fields offlowers in bloom. It looks very much as it appears onfilm, because the area we shot (in Northern Califor¬nia) sits in very soft, diffused light, for ninetypercent of the time. The light itself was soft, whichhelped. The colors remained cool. We then usedfilters — very slightly — slight, light filters, all theway through the picture, including the interiors. Wedidn’t want to jump inside and suddenly have a hardfilm look. Here, I wanted a consistent feel. Bobagreed.I’d like to take a specific scene in Summer, and askyou about how you planned and rehearsed it. It is theseventeen-minute silent sequence, in which Hermiegoes to Dorothy’s house after she has received thenews of her husband’s death, which ends with themgoing to bed. To what extent was the shooting stylethought out in advance?Could you talk about your color work with RobertSurtees on Summer of ’42? Was the pastel effectachieved through filters, or in the lab?It was done with filters; no work was done at all in It was all planned, because that’s pure film. You'renot relying on dialogue or language —it’s simplyimage upon image. So it had to be very carefullyplanned. It was designed by the director — you can’tsay, “well, let’s improvise,” because it’s so depend¬ent on mood. It was the very last scene we shot in thepicture: that was dictated by the nature of the scene,it’s so sensitive, the two people are very young —Jennifer (Dorothy) is 22, Gary (Hermie) is 15, that Iliterally did it step by step, so that they had no ideawhat the next step was going to be. From the time sheappears, until they finish dancing, was done in asingle take. Continued on Fuge Till eeGuardian: Well-balanced And WittyDavid Garrick’s The Guardian wasperformed with grace and finesse Fri¬day night by a quintet os superlativeplayers: D N Rudall, who also directedthe piece; his wife, Diane; KennethNorthcott; Edna Epstein; and AnandaWood. The play lends itself well tointimate presentation, and the Com¬mon Room of Swift Hall, where it willbe performed Friday and Saturdaynights at 8:30 (admission $1.50) seemsan appropriate setting for this appeal¬ing genteel comedy.The humor of this short play (onlyabout forty minutes acting time) restson a rather complicated failure incommunication. The heiress Harriet,pursued by an egocentric, foppishyoung man, really loves her middle-aged guardian, Heartly, but is pre¬vented by femine delicacy from declar¬ing her affection. The plot is set inmotion when young Jack Clackit de¬clares to his uncle his intention ofmarrying Harriet, the ward of Heartly,a family friend. By perverse andmisdirected inferences, Jack is con¬vinced she returns his love.In the ensuing complications, eventhe gouty, splenetic old uncle, mis¬informed by Harriet’s well-intentionedmaid, comes to believe himself theobject of the young woman’s affec¬ tions. The entire action is a series ofmisunderstandings leading to the ulti¬mate discovery, with comic exposureof follies in the process.The Guardian was adapted fromFagan’s “La Pupille” (1734), whichwas first performed in 1759. It drawsheavily on conventional eighteenth-century stage wit and relies on stockcharacter types: the beautiful, demureyoung woman of fortune and marria¬geable age; her benevolent, virtuous,middle-aged guardian; her earthy,spirited maid; an egocentric, affectedfop; his brusque, down-to-earth uncle.There is little in the play that is uniqueCEFand f.o.t.a. present Tickets $1THE BEAUX ARTS BALLFRIDAY MAY 21A Concert and Costume Dancewith Hound-Dog Taylor,Mighty Joe YoungJohn Littlejohn,Howlin Wolf &Carrie BellTickets at the Mandel Box Office, TuesdayMODEL CAMERAThe Minolta Team willshow (Demonstrate) the en¬tire camera line in ourstore.SRT101-SystemMovie CamerasInstamaticsFriday, May 21stSaturday, May 22nd10-624/48 hr.developingMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th St.■ JET TOEUROPE& ISRAELInexpensive flightsthroughout the yearLowest Fares, choice of1 way or round tripSTUDENT HOLIDAYS40 EAST 54th STREETNEW YORK, N.Y. 10022212/832-6844DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometrist•ye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363 Virgil Burnettor unpredictable — from action tocharacter to occasional witticism.Nonetheless, because of the sound¬ness of Rudall’s conception of the play,the conventions in this production seemfresh, and the stock characters havereal life. Ananda Wood’s portrayal ofthe fop may seem stilted to some. ButFriday night’s audience of eighteenthcentury scholars (from an area meet¬ing of the Johnsonian Society) undoubt¬edly recognized the historical authen¬ticity of such an interpretation.The remainder of the quintet weredelightfully well balanced. One caneasily approve the revival of the pro¬ duction after its earlier performancesby almost the same group at Ida NoyesLibrary in December of 1969. KennethNorthcott’s consistently fine portrayalof Sir Charles Clackit had severalbeacon moments — particularly thosebrief gleams of lechery before hisrecognition of having made himselfridiculous. Diane Rudall was a con¬vincingly perplexed Harriet — deli¬cate, but with an appropriate season¬ing of spirit, complemented by therobust good nature of Edna Epstein’sLucy.The character of Heartly could easilyhave been acted as that of a prig. ButRudall accomplished the nearly impos¬sible (for a modern audience) feat ofmaking a highly moral, virtuous manattractive. Indeed, one of the finestmoments of the performance was Ru-dall’s portrayal of Heartly’s first glim¬mer of hope that he may be the one whohas Harriet’s heart.The Guardian surely is not a “great”play; but this production was well doneand highly entertaining — a fine in¬troduction to the comedy of a periodthat too often is considered the dramat¬ic wasteland between Congreve andSheridan, with Goldsmith only a smalloasis.—Marilyn KlawiterTHEATERTTTyV V hither Humanity ?Scene from Werner Krieglstein’s “Origin 0400.”Origin 0400 will be performed at theReynolds Club Theater May 14-16 and21-22, directed by Werner Krieglstein,the author of the play. During the lastyears Krieglstein has produced his ownadaptation of Schiller’s Don Carlos andMrozek’s Out at sea. Curtain is 8:30pm; tickets $1.50; students $1.Origin 0400 was originally a take-offon a commercial of a big Germanchemical firm. In the advertisementthe firm had personalized their chem¬ical products in order to improve theirimage. While, on one hand, we find mantaking on the character of statisticalmaterial, number and object, on theother hand we find chemical productsobtaining human faces and fighting forprogress and humanity. The charac¬ters of ORIGIN 0400 are somewhere inbetween — they are both human beings and chemical products.Origin 0400 was first produced byNeue Buhnein Frankfurt, Germany,and was performed also in Italy. It wasawarded second prize by the DramaFestival Jury in Parma, Italy and waspartially taped and broadcast by theItalian Television RAI. It was also aselection of the German ExperimentalTheater Festival in Frankfurt.A Italian critic wrote in II Resto diCarlino: “The conflict between theindividual and the collective has beenworked out anew. The Neue Buehnehas found a new exciting deminsion forthat. The ten actors seem to be the lastanalysis a machinery, which destroysand sacrifices, finally negating its ownspirit. In all that, one can notice theintellectual dissatisfaction of the ac¬tors with their own art.”CINEMA CHICAGO AT MICHIGAN787-8722PARK NEARBY INTERNATIONAL CRAFTS SALESunday, May 16th, 11 A.M. to 10 P.M.Carvings, ceramics, stitchery,graphics, hangings, jewelry.Something for Every PurseAT K.A.M. TEMPLE930 E. 50th St., ChicagoFood & Drink served Admission $1Community PREGNANT?Need Help?For assistance in obtaining a legalabortion immediately in New YorkGty at minimal costCHICAGO (JH)«W>777am- PHILA. (215) 878-5800MIAMI (MS) 754-5471ATLANTA (404)5244711NEW YORK (212) 5124740I A.M.-10 P.M.—7 DAYS A WEEKABORTION REFERRALSERVICE (ARS), INC.2/Grey City Joumal/May 14, 1971Allusions ToAncient Culture“Chinese Painting at Mid-Century” is a mis¬nomer, but the current show at the RenaissanceSociety Gallery is the first group show of contempo¬rary Chinese painting in Chicago. Twenty-fourChinese painters who are active on the mainland, inTaiwan and Hong Kong, and in the West, arerepresented, and all of them work in the classicalbrush and ink tradition. The paintings in the showwere selected for their use of traditional materials(brush, ink and watercolor) and for a brush strokehaving an individual structure and life of its own.The Chinese cultural, political and economicstructure was disrupted by the intervention of theWest in the nineteenth century. Nevertheless, paint¬ing techniques have remained the same throughoutthe centuries. The confrontation between the newChinese culture and the old artistic forms might havebeen suicidal, but the surprises in the art are actuallyfew. China has experienced cataclysms before, andnow, as then, the general level of excellence in art isaccompanied by subtle and gradual change. Rich¬ness of texture, harmony, and resonance of surfaceremain the constants — a refreshing acknowledg¬ement today of the limits of artistic expression. TheChinese artist’s work has always been grounded inthe constant observation of nature and the copying ofthe orthodox masters.The layers of stylistic allusion are less bur¬densome here than in the painting of the Ming andChing periods and the most personal of visions aredirectly accessible. The mental landscape of Li K’oJan, “The Terrace Where Yen Lze-ling Fished,” hasa mesmerizing expressionist effect. The psy¬chological withdrawal and detachment so typical ofthe Chinese artist, especially during difficult periodsof history, meets the classical standard of purityhere. The figure paintings of Fu Pao-Shih, incontrast, may find less sympathy with viewers,because his pastels (especially pinks) are unusuallyabove surface. Much more contemporary are theworks of Huang Chou, (interestingly enough, the firstman to be executed during the Red Guard-ledCultural Revolution) whose work may appear to be aconcession to Socialist realism. In this same vein, but more disarming, are the paintings of Ch’ang ShihF’a, which have all the charm of the best children’sbook illustrations.The influence of the West upon these artists isimplicit. They use shading and chiaroscuro effects,and in general there is a great influence on color andink wash. Western influence is most powerful in anew boldness of design; bold in the sense of anestablishment of an immediate presence.Experimentation is seen in the abstractions ofTung Hsien (who lives in Evanston) and PongChung-Ray, for Chinese painting has always held torepresentation and has gained additional meaning bybeing identifiable. These experimentalists might bebetter represented, but this show will serve as a goodintroduction to the contemporary expression of anancient culture. The exhibition will remain at theRenaissance Society until June 12.—Gerald Howard Know Actors,Directing ActorsI thought Jennifer O’Neal was much better inSummer than she was in Hawks’ Rio Lobo, and Ithought Pursuit of Happiness was Barbara Her-shey’s best performance by far. How do you workwith actors?There is a whole combination of influences that eithermake or don’t make a performance. Not having seenthe Hawks film and not knowing what Jennifer wascalled upon to do, I can’t comment. She may have feltawkward — any one of a thousand things. The mostimportant thing in working with actors — outside ofbuilding some level of trust between actor anddirector — is for the director to create a climate ofwork in which actors feel free, don’t feel they’rebeing judged, don’t feel threatened. Working with-professionals is easier, to a degree. They knowwhat’s coming, what’s happening, what’s the matter.There’s a kind of shorthand between a professionaldirector and a professional actor. Nine times out often, professional actors come in with their pocketsfull of things to do.Basically it’s finding those words that a particularactor responds to. Certain people are slow gettinginto a role, some get in very quickly. In some, energylevels are very high; in some, low. Some actors aresuper-sensitive to certain kinds of influences —sounds on the set, for example. Some don’t want it.Working with an actor means knowing him.Your next project?It’s a book called The Other, by Tom Try on. I havethe first-draft screenplay with me. It’s a real horror,terror story. I got my start doing out-and-outmelodrama, on live TV. And now I’m going back to it.SHARON TATE RAVISHED BY VAMPIRES!ROMAN POLANSKI'SFEARLESS VAMPIRE KILLERS(Spend Saturday Night with your Best Ghoul.)OR, PARDON ME, BUT YOUR TEETH ARE IN MY NECK.A macabre horror-fantasy from the director of ROSEMARY S BABY, REPULSION,KNIFE IN THE WATER.Cobb Hall, Saturday night at 7:15 and 9:30, a $1 treat from Doc Films, and, ofcourse, free to all season ticket holders. See the blood drip in both color andCinemaScope!************** ***********$I GOLD CITY INN I| **** Maroon ** New Hours:^ Open Daily* From 11:30a.m.^ to 9:30 p.m.* "A Gold Mine of Good Food"*^ —& Student Discount:^ 10% for table service* 5% for take home| Hyde Park's Best Cantonese Food15228 Harper 493-2559 f LIBRARYASSISTANTHalf-time, hours to be arranged. Typing40 w.p.m., light bookkeeping. At least 2years college. Center for Research Librar¬ies.955-4545* (near Harper Court)*** Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.) ***y i i rv our convcmem iuwuui wi uci»****************** ******** Be sure to reserve your ticketFirst in Germany and Italy, now in ChicagoThe American Premiere ofWerner Krieglstein'sORIGIN 0400by the director of 'Don Carlos' and 'Out at Sea'Fri. Sat. Sun. May 14-15-16 Fri. Sat. May 21-22curtain 8:30 pmReynolds Club Theatre57th & UniversityTickets: $1.50 - Students SI .00 For Reservations call 753-3581 STARTS TODAYANTHONYADVERSEwith Frederic MarchplusSTORY OFLOUIS PASTEURwith Paul MuniTHE BIOGRAPH THEATRE2433 N. Lincoln Dl 8-4123Plan to visit us soon. Admissionat all times is only $1.25. Bringyour Friends. PREGNANCYPROBLEM?THERE IS NO CHARGEFOR OURABORTIONREFERRAL. WHY SPENDMONEY NEEDLESSLY?OUR PROFESSIONALSERI/ICES ARE FREE.CALL (215) 722-53607 DAYS 2k HRS.ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E 53rd St288 2900 EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-837?May 14, 1971/Grey City Journal/3Super Sock Hop“It was da night of da big dance. I greased backmy hair, put on my eye-talian ass-kickers, grabbedmy fourteen-inch stiletto in da hip pocket of my skin¬tight chinos. But da school had other ideas. Dey madeyou check your shoes when you went in. It’s kindahard to stomp someone in your socks. The cops anddicks were as thick as flies, too. My buddies were alldere, lined up against da walls like a bunch ofturkeys. Rocco’s gang was dere, too. Dose wopsdidn’t even have enough class to put on a shirt. Deylounged around in dere t-shirts with dere sleevesrolled up to hold a pack of Camels, mocking daprincipal and anyone else who came within range. Iknew we were going to have to mix it up. But later,after da dance.“Ginny and I really showed ’em how to dance. DaMadison, Twist, Shake, Stroll, Jitterbug — no onecould touch us! (Phil and da Fastbacks ain’t noDanny and da Juniors, but dey were real sharp.) Dabest was on da slow numbers when I held Ginny tightin my arms. “I took Ginny into da auditorium where dey wereshowing movies. We sat in da back row and made-out, missing all da action in da Lone Ranger. (All Icaught was:‘Who was that masked man, anyway?’‘I don’t rightly know his real name. But I’veheard him called . . . “The Lone Ranger.” ’ Man, Icould use some silver bullets when we rumbleRocco.)“After we danced to “Sweet Little Sixteen,”“Teen Angel” and “Poison Ivy,” I took Ginny homeand hurried back to back up my buddies. We caughtRocco behind da gym. We started to slug it out butdey pulled chains and tire irons. So we pulled out ourpic-stickers. Then da cops came and we all ran.Screw da cops! Screw Rocco! ”—Frank Hurley, as told to GCJ(Frank Hurley is a twenty-nine-year old high schooldropout now working as a second-string lawn moweroperator. He’s also a member of the ACES.)Sunday, May 16thRockefeller Chapel3 PM MIDWEST PREMIEREHANDEL'S THEODORAOr Acapulco for $10.In living color.Your Eastern Campus Rep can showyou how you can enjoy a week-longvacation in Ft. Lauderdale or MiamiBeach that figures out to $7.85 a day.The same in Mexico City at $7.00daily or Acapulco at $12.70 daily.Or San Juan for $12.07.All you do is join ETC (Eastern'sTravel Club) at the special studentrate of $3.00. That not only qualifiesyou for these special Club rates, butalso gets you members-only extraslike your own car pool, free sight¬seeing trips, special discounts, yourown Club room, parties, and more!L4/Grey City Journal/May 14, 1971 Then use your Eastern Youth FareCard to cut your cost of flying. It willreserve you a seat at 75% fare to thefarthest domestic point on Eastern'ssystem. You just pay regular fare therest of the way.Get all the details, application blanks,from Peggy Johnson. Call 493-5543.Like today.EASTERNThe Wings of Man. Tickets atReynolds Club,Woodworth's &at the doorZipPered pants with Snaptwo full length Zippers androws °t Shiny snaps... Pbntsby Mole in maroon,purple or Peach-%Hang-out is a part of Cohn £ sternHyde Park Shopping center/55th$LaktPark10,000 PAPERBACKSAll ’A PriceA Lot of Classical Music Score?Buying Books, Paperbacks,TextsPOWELLS' BOOKSHOP1503 East 57th10-10 DailyLouis Falco: Naturalistic and NewLouis Falco, who Clive Barnes has called “one ofthe most exciting male dancers in the world,” willpresent a lecture-demonstration at Mandel Hall,Thursday, May 20, at 8 pm. It’s free and open to thepublic.Since the Chicago Dance Festival ended inJanuary, Chicago has been visited by some well-trained modern dancers, but the choreography forthe Netherlands Dance Theater, Les Grands BalletsCanadiens, and the Dance Theater of Harlemgenerally has been lacking in choreographic direc¬tion, intelligence, and originality.Falco has these in abundance. At Mandel Hall heand the two associate directors of his company,Jennifer Muller and Juan Antonio, will perform“Huescape,” an excerpt from his newest work,“Sleepers,” and one other excerpt. They will alsodiscuss their work and answer questions.Falco and Miss Muller, both in their twenties,graduated from the High School of the PerformingArts in New York and joined the Jose Limon troupefor a tour of Latin America. They remained withLimon for nine years, until Falco formed his owncompany of featured dancers in 1967 with nineformer students of Limon, Martha Graham, andPearl Lang.Juan Antonio was educated in Mexico City andhas had extensive ballet training at the schools of theJoffrey Ballet and American Ballet Theater. Since1967, he has danced as a guest artist with GlenTetley’s company, and been a member of Falco’sgroup.Falco’s company is a closely-knit group with ahigh level of technical virtuosity — they are super¬lative dancers who have been molded into a strongperforming ensemble. They have been growing asperformers along with Falco’s choreographic vocab¬ulary and his visions of theater.Falco’s earliest works (Argot, 1967; Huescape,1969; and Timewright, 1969) introduced bodies inususual shapes, lifts, surprise falls, and bendingtwisting torsos with striking body extensions. Thepieces, tense dynamic and dramatic, gave notice ofthe theater pieces that were to come.“Caviar” arrived in 1970 with a world premiereat New York’s City Center and was called by onecritic “the ultimate experience of the City Center Juan Antonio, Jennifer Mueller and LouisFalco in “Huescape.”Season.” On stage was Napanaw’s Pottery Shopproviding both an original rock music score andconversations; in the pit was Eugene Lester and afull orchestra. The stage also housed styro-foamsturgeons designed by Marisol, the Chilean artist, aswell as nine dancers. Everything blended into aunified whole that kept saying “We feel joy — share itwith us — we are all one family.”More original shapes, groupings, holds, andmovements came on the heels of “Caviar.”“Ibid” is a “solo for the company,” and.is repeatedtwice in one evening by different members of thecompany. The decor consiste of two horizontal barsof neon lights, one yellow, one white. But the focalpoint is Maatthews Kheaann Khristiaann who plays abass flute and moves beautifully, enticing, charming, and intertwining with one dancer.“Sleepers” is a dramatic theater work and furtherdevelops one direction Falco’s work has taken. Itdrips with psychological “meanings”, stupendousdancing, and intelligent dialogue which forms the“score.”Falco is a charismatic, articulate, intelligent, andoriginal artist. He is honest, moody, charming, andalways striving for perfection for himself and hiscompany. He is attentive and responsive to hisdancers and this comes across in his works. JenniferMuller emphasized this during a rehearsal lastsummer, when she said, “The great thing aboutLouis is that he works with the individual; that’swhat strikes me about being in his company. It isn’tlike everybody’s doing a chorus-like thing. You reallyfeel like an individual and that’s what his pieces areabout — people. ‘Huescape’ is my individual reactionas a down-to-earth-unheroic person; it shows manysides of a person’s character.”When Falco became tired of interpreting otherchoreographer’s roles, he began doing his ownchoreography. “It fed me enough to last 20 years interms of my interest in the dance. It opened up somany areas and made me look at everything in acompletely different way,” he says, adding, “Mostdance training is conditioned to the point that wetreat everything at a high level. For example, if wemake a gesture toward someone, we try to encom¬pass the whole world, in a sense, as the Europeanballets do. I’m trying to get dance on another levelnow.”His process of creating dance can begin with anyimpulse he’s reacted to, or his dramatic situationmay develop from some movement-ideas. The pastfew years have shown Falco to be consistently in theavant-garde of dance theater and technology. (Hehas been incorporating laser beams in his work since1968).But the beauty of his artistic collaborations is thatthey’re not gimmicky, but rather are unified withmovements in a sensible, tasteful manner. Falcois a member of the avant-garde in dance who keepsdance movement primary. He “wants to take awaythe decorations, to keep the dance naturalistic whilemaintaining a high level of expertise.”— Paula Meinetz Shapiro —THEATERThe Warholian TruthMick Jagger dreams; Art Linkletter converts;Joe Namath sells; Oscar Wilde directs; ZeldaFitzgerald dances; Mark Rudd speechifies; GeorgeBernard Shaw sleeps; Jane Forth borrows; RichardNixon tries to get charisma, and Andy Warhol reignsover this Hades of Superpeople in The Death of AndyWarhol No. 1 by Malachy Walsh, to be presented inWoodward Cafeteria by Majors Productions on May13,14, and 15 as a part of the Festival of the Arts.The one-act play, written in verse, takes place ata McDonald’s stand which will self-destruct when theten billionth McDonald’s hamburger is sold. Itrevolves around the attempts of various Superpeopleto chide, coerce and prod Warhol into making asignificant action, which he steadfastly refuses to do,all the time warning them of the imminent destruc¬tion of the stand they are at. Warhol maintains aSatanic disinterest in everything that takes placearound him, never taking himself or anyone oranything else seriously.Loosely based on Don Juan in Hell, part ofGeorge Bernard Shaw’s gargantuan philosophicalplay Man and Superman, the play maintains a lightand humorous tone, with Warhol as a joking,sarcastic Satan. Weaving in and out of the texture ofthe play are the themes of death, reality, and dreamor illusion as they relate to Warhol, the latter beingthe most important. The play is quite faithful to AndyWarhol and his vision of himself and his universe, asis exemplified by the following statements by Warholhimself.Q. Do you think pop art is —?A. No.Q. What?A. No. Q. Do you think pop art is?A. No. No, I don’t.I’d prefer to remain a mystery. I never give mybackground, and, anyway, I make it all updifferent every time I’m asked.All my films are artificial, but then everythingis sort of artificial. I don’t know where theartificial stops and the real begins.I feel I’m very much a part of my times, of myculture, as much a part of it as rockets andtelevision.The artificial fascinates me, the bright andshiny.I never wanted to be a painter. I wanted to be atap dancer.In the play, Warhol sees the banality materialismof modern America and shows it to Americansthrough his art. Americans, perhaps seeing them¬selves too clearly in the picture he shows them, reactagainst him and refuse to accept his vision. As MarkRudd says in the play, he is a porphet, a seer, butinstead of showing Americans what they are andpointing the way to salvation, he revels in theirdegeneracy, their artificiality, their banality, there¬by encouraging and celebrating degeneracy ratherthan reacting against it. It is here that Warhol earnsthe role of the devil in the play. As Don Juan says inDon Juan in Hell, “It is the absence of this instinct inyou (to improve man’s condition) that makes youthat strange monster called a Devil.”Warhol demonstrates in the play that all ideas — From left: Russ Gager, director; MalachyWalsh, writer; and Dan Decker, producer,of “The Death of Andy Warhol No. 1.”New Left politics, advertising, philosophy — arenothing but rhetoric, word-games that fools bickerover. If one has the best rhetoric, one has the bestideas. Warhol denies the notion of what is true andwhat isn’t; truth doesn’t even enter into the matter.It’s just words.While he destroys other people’s philosophies, heremains impregnable by not revealing his own, andpretending as though he doesn’t have one. And yet hedoes, and sometimes he is prodded by circumstancesinto inadvertently revealing it; in situations like thishe contradicts himself and makes himself no betterthan the people he was criticizing. Warhol, then, isperhaps a rather pitiful creature, as Moliere’sHarpagon was if the audience ever took himseriously, but nevertheless he is triumphant in theend.— Russ GagerContemporary European Films May 16Haskell Wexler’sMEDIUM COOL7&9:15 Law School' May 14. 1971/Grey City Journal/5Culture VultureARTTwentieth Century Prints at the Art Institute. Galleries1C8 and 109Gary V Heider's Ceramics and Sculpture at MidwayStudios May 16 21.Ryder Gallery (500 N Dearborn) shows the fifty best printadvertisements and television commercials of 1970 andAIGA Communication Graphics show through June 4th.FOTA: Calligraphy demonstration and lecture by MrsMargaret Chang. Sponsored by the Renaissance Society, 4pm in Bergman Gallery workshop.DANCELouis Falco, artistic director of the Louis Falco DanceCompany, and his two associate directors, Jennifer Muellerand Juan Antonio, will perform "Huescape" and excerptsfrom two other works as part of a lecture demonstration onThursday, May 20, at 8 pm in Mandel Hall. From FOTA andfree.Master Class with Louis Falco, Jennifer Mueller and JuanAntonio, 1 pm on May 20 in Ida Noyes Gym. $1.50 forstudents, $3 others; call 753 3574 for more information.The Dance Troupe, a company affiliated with ColumbiaCollege, will present "Journey" and "Three Folk Pieces"every Wednesday through May 26; Columbia College Centerfor Performing Arts, 1725 N Wells; contribution $1.50.A Dance Workshop by Ronny Kaye will begin May 3 andrun 8 weeks at the Kingston Mines Theater, 2356 N LincolnAve. Classes are Monday nights; body movement 7 8:15,modern jazz dance 8.15 9:30. $2 per class. 525 9893.A complimentary copy of the Feb Dance Paper isavailable by writing to the Chicago Dance Foundation, 4949S Woodlawn, Chicago, 60615. The subscription rate is $2 peryear for this monthly on Chicago dance. The Joseph Jarman Art Ensemblewill perform Wednesday in Ida Noyes.Admission $2; $1.50 for students.FILMDOC FILMS has a special last minute attraction forSaturday night: Roman Polanski's The Fearless VampireKillers starring Sharon Tate as a victim, a scary, hilarious,gruesomely prophetic film, Cobb, 7:15 and 9:30. Free to DocAssociates, $1 for others.SDS presents Sergei Eisenstein'sfirst major work, Strike,tonight at 7:30 and 9, 75 cents.CEF showing Haskell Wexler's Medium Cool, shot righthere in Chicago, right here at the Law School, Sunday nightat 7:15 and 9:30, $1.The rest of the week on campus: Tuesday has JudyHolliday and Jack Lemmon in George Cukor's It ShouldHappen to You and Wednesday Raoul Walsh's epic with Clark Gable and Jane Russell (she takes a bath). The TallMen Both Doc, Cobb and 7:30. Thursday in Ida Noyes at8:30, Ingmar Bergman's Winter Light, one uf his bestAround about the town are Summer of '42 at the UnitedArtists, The Murder of Fred Hampton at the Threepenny,and the Cinema is presenting three weeks of Greta Garbodoubles — check the dailies for details. At Alice's, 950 WWrightwood, Tuesday's film (8 and 10 pm) is The GospelAccording to Saint Matthew.MUSICThe Old Town Renaissance Consort presents "Thule, theperiod of Cosmography" Sunday at 4 at the Church of OurSavior, 530 W. Fullerton Parkway. The Masque of Winter (Medsyn for Melancholy) tonight8 in the Cloister Club yn atSong recital by Norma Hirsch, soprano, and Marie Rodenmezzo soprano, with pianist William Browning; sonqs ,nfive different languages by Schubert, Debussy, GrieaBellman and Mozart Pierce Tower, 8 pm, Wednesday, MayMidwest premiere of Handel's oratorio Theodora Sundavin Rockefeller Chapel at 3. Tickets $1 for students, S3 others*at Woodworth's ticketron or Reynolds ClubNorma Hirsch gives a soprano solo recital with MiriamGlasi on piano tomorrow at 8 :30 in Bond ChapelEasley Blackwood presents a recital of twentieth centurvmusic Monday at 8:30 pm in Mandel, Berg, Schoenberg andWebern.Elizabeth Daniel, soprano, solo recital with Craig Worthington on piano, Thursday at 8 in QuantrellTHEATERThe Collective presents Sacco and Vanzetti this weekendat 8:30 Friday Sunday, at the First Unitarian Church, 57thand WoodlawnThe Milwaukee Players presents Fiddler on the Roof May14 16 at West Division Theater, 2300 W Highland BlvdPhone reservations 933 1144 Curtain Friday and Saturdayat 8 30, 2 pm on Sunday. Tickets $3 and $2, students halfpriceFOTA presents The Death of Andy Warhol in WoodwardCourt Cafeteria Friday and Saturday at 8 pmFOTA POETRYVagn Steen conducts a poetry workshop today at 3 Dm nIda Noyes LibraryIrish poet Richard Murphy reads his poems at 8 tonight inIda Noyes Library.Vagn Steen lectures on "The Art of Concrete Poetry" at 8pm tomorrow in Breasted HallHYDE PARK THEATRE #1 HYDE PARK THEATRE #253rd & Lake Park NO 7-9071 5238 So. Harper 493-3493STARTS FRIDAYMAY 14TH Kohlberg Theatres STARTS FRIDAYMAY 14THI ACADEMY AWARDNOMINATION FOR| BEST ACTRESSi CARRIEj SNODGRESSf diary of a madf housewifeI a trank perry film * 1 Does her angerat a domineeringhusband justifya wife's takinga lover?Tkit wift was drironfa find out!ALSO I'm the champand I’ve got agold belt and awhite womanto prove it.That sticks inyour craw,don't it?"One of the finest in recentyears. Solid direction,sensitive acting, and asuperb script combine tomake PUZZLE' a tour deforce for everyone involved"FAYE DUNAWAY“PUZZLE OF ADOWNFALL CHILD’A UMIVfRSAI fiat AM R“’tv IECMNICOOH- -IS- 20th Century Fox Presents A Lawrence Turman Martin Ritt ProductionThe Great White HopeStarring James Earl Jones, Jane AlexanderProduced by Lawrence Turman Directed by Martin Ritt [GP]Screenplay by Howard Sackler based on his play ::Produced on New York Slage by Herman Lev»n PAN A VISION* Color by 06 lUlf*AT SIX SPECIALLYSELECTED THEATRES- JACK R01 UNS'CHARLES H JOFFF Pioouctxrwoody alien’s“bananas”i xecutive Prixluow LOUISE LASSER • charlesh joffe • jackgrossbergd-i- •••!:, WOODY ALL IN • te Producer *<1 tdv RALPH ROSENBLUM, actWOODYALLLN ,:MICKfY ROSF • m*<d,MARVIN HAMLISCHQjp vrrz.... | COLOR by Deluxe * United ArtistsFirstChicagoShu wing EDENS I« BREMENTOWNEgg LAKE * YORKTOWN CINEMA IIU/A MARINA CINEMA I • WILLOW CREEK FRUITS & VEGETABLES“Extends from the kitchen tothe bedroom, and reveals aworld between. Out of thecommingled pleasures of thetable and of the bed she makesa high, but not frivolous, com¬edy. This is a reckless andshameless first book, and it isa joy to read.”—Stanley Kunitz“Talent, intelligence, andhonest (therefore erotic) sen¬sibility ...” —John Logan “Compelling rhythms andvivid, often startling, images.This is a first book of imagin¬ative power in which thereader will hear an excitingand individual voice ....”—Robert Pack“Erica Jong’s poetry has ex¬traordinary graces: an adven¬turousness, a riskiness, plus aself-possession ....”—Michael BenediktCloth $5.95, Paper $2-95at all bookatorea Holt, Rinehart & WinstonROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELSunday May 16, 1971 11:00 A.M.W. BARNETT BLAKEMOREDean Disciples Divinity HouseThe University of Chicago"THE REAPPEARANCES OFOUR RISING CHRIST"Tuesday, May 18, 12:15 p.m. Lecture-Demonstration atthe Console, Edward Mondello, University OrganistWednesday, May 19 12-15 pm Carillon recital,Robert Iodine, University Carillonneur. LOW PRICE TICKETSFOR ALL STUDENTSNEWLEMUMAY 18 -MAY 30Mon thru Thurs 8 30 P MFri and Sat 7 30 P Mand 10 30 PM,BELAFONTE NOW APPEARINGONLY $4.50 PER TICKET. LOW PRICE TICKETS FORSTUDENTS APPLY EVERY NITE BUT SATURDAY.TICKETS SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITY. TICKETSAVAILABLE AT BOX OFFICE ONLY. FOR TICKETINFORMATION: 298 2170. YOU MUST HAVE YOURSTUDENT I D. WHEN PURCHASING TICKETS.MILL RUN THEATERGolt and Milwaukee Roads in Niles MSouth Shore Drive at 79th St. RE 1-3700if you need anABORTIONyou’ll need compassion.All you need do is call us. We’ll tell you everything youshould and may want to know about a sate, legal abor¬tion in N.Y. and it you wish, arrange lor the finest medi¬cal care at the lowest possible cost tor 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. 113726/Grey City Journal/May 14, 1-971Right: Sacco; left: VanzettiA Tableaux Vivante on CampusSacco and Vanzetti, a new play written andproduced by The Collective, comes on like thetableaux vivantes school of historical drama familiarin Brecht, Hochhuth, Weiss, and radical theaters. Webegin with a mechanical ballet, a short wordlesspiece about S and V’s supporters awaiting themoment of execution. Then two fine scenes, usingplenty of new theater techniques, of our heroes in jailand courtroom. Next we expect the illustrated classanalysis, the background on S and V, the big appealsand laments.Oops! Those kids sure did fool you that time,Perfesser. Because this is a speakeasy scene, withsongs — about the bartender, the Dempsey-Willardfight, women’s emancipation (“We can smoke andwe can drink, Men will realize we think’’), flivvers,flappers and gangsters. Then a wax museum, withsilent statues of Babe Ruth, Theda Bara, Garbo,Isadora Duncan and Lindbergh. And laced throughthese scenes are freezes where we see the last daysand executions of S and V. But then it’s over, lessthan an hour, and we, uh, waal, un-ah, I know that oldorganizing principle is around here somewhere, but IYou see, the songs and statues are pretty good,but they don’t exactly have anything to do with Saccoand Vanzetti. They surround the men, like the ’20’sencompassed the trials, but they don’t really containthem. So the play is like a Brecht piece, where yousuddenly began picking up another signal, say fromthe Ed Sullivan show. Or, it’s a Sacco and Vanzettiplay which suddenly grew a strange tail and a weirdhead and came out sort of like a griffin. Nothingparticularly wrong with griffins, mind. It’s just that Ihad been expecting to see a lion in that cage.Another problem — partially a problem of theform — is the Revolutionary Pity Fallacy, which goessomething like this: “Free Angela, Bobby, and JohnSinclair! (Right on!) Solidarity with the NLF, BlackPanthers, and white mother country radicals! (Righton!) Remember the Scottsboro boys, Goodwin-Chaney-Schwerner, Chickenhead McGoon, and FredHampton! (Right on!)” The question is when youstop listening.So, in parts of The Collective’s play, I miss aTHENIGHTCLUBpresentsThe VaughnClemens QuartetThe John WolfeBluesbandShelly FlowersMay 15May 22 Ida NoyesMay 29 liveness ui the human or political facts of the case.We’ve been denied access to much informationbecause S and V have been presumed innocent, theircorpses exhumed for display rather than autopsy. Itreminds me of Joe Hill’s materialization at peacerallies. The tension of lives and struggles, ofknowledge coming in like electricity over the nerves— all that is too faint in some spots. Tableauxvivantes ask us for a momentary, generally emotion¬al, response to a picture, rather than a continuousliving-through with the characters.These are strong criticisms of the play’s con¬ception because I think that The Collective got abouthalf way toward something very, very good. Much ofthe writing here is classy and effective, and I wasrooting very hard for them to keep dodging thosetacklers all the way to the goal line.Also, the production is up to a tougher script.They manage very smooth staging, acting which isalways competent and disciplined, and occasionalvery deft cameos. In the jail and courtroom scenes,where the style becomes wilder and more ex-pressionistic, the balance of motion (noise withspeech) meaning is exactly right. Lighting, masksand music are all controlled and effective.The greatest joy of the night is the acting of thetitle parts. Chris Lyon plays the inarticulate butexplosive Sacco in fine counterpoint to David Cole’sbigger, more reflective Vanzetti. The old problemsremain — Cole and Lyon can count on our sympathyfrom the beginning, since we know that this ismartyrology. And the shape of the script is such thatwe have to surrender our affection to them ratherthan earn a perception of them. But whole chunks oftheir acting stay in the mind as fine emotional work.Sacco and Vanzetti remain with me as aware of andbitter about their situation, simple and passionate,above all dignified.So, go see Sacco and Vanzetti (which will runagain this weekend), but not because it’s aboutrevolutionaries or even because it’s short, cheap (50cents), and nearby (57th and Woodlawn). Go becauseit’s serious and considerable, an original work bystudents and community people which is fine enoughto stand a little friendly bitching. _ £>a vjd jones Coming EventsOratorioThe Festival of the Arts will present the midwestpremier of the dramatic oratorio Theodora byGeorge F Handel on Sunday at 3 pm in RockefellerChapel, with Larry Mendes conducting. BarbaraPearson, 1971 Metropolitan Opera National Auditionfirst place winner, will sing the role of Theodora.Miss Pearson, resident soprano soloist of the Rock¬efeller Chapel Choir, made her debut with theChicago Symphony Orchestra last weekend as sopr¬ano soloist in the performance of Mahler’s EighthSymphony.This will be only the third performance of thework in the United States. Musically, Theodora mustrank as one of the most important compositions in thehistory of music.It was Handel’s favorite oratorio, and he consid¬ered its Resurrection Chorus his greatest achieve¬ment.The story of Theodora concerns a fifth centuryChristian martyr, a leader of a Christian group whois condemned to a public prostitution for refusing torenounce her faith. Her lover, a Roman soldierconverted to Christianity, rescues her. She laterattempts to save him, and both are executed. Thecharacterizations are well developed by the music ifnot by the libretto.Tickets may be purchased at the Reynolds Club,Woodworths Bookstore, or at any Ticketron outlet.Ticket prices are $3 general admission, and $1 for allstudents. The performance will begin at 3 pm, not asscheduled in the FOTA calendar.Omar SharifLawrence of Arabia is back after eight years, butthe academicism of David Lean’s style remainstimelessly irrelevant. The desert is shot mag¬nificently by Freddie Young, who also did DoctorZhivago and Ryan’s Daughter for Lean, and there isa certain level of craftsmanship and intelligenceinvolved, but mostly it’s a listless picture show withthe fuzziest motivations imaginable. Pictorialismand “understatement” subvert any statement at all.Peter O’Toole is intriguing in his blue-eyed Nordicbearing, and Omar Sharif actually seems promising.It’s a good show, all told, but it’s a long long wayfrom the masterpiece it was proclaimed when itcame out. I much prefer the insanities of Ryan’sDaughter — Laurence is the lit crit tradition ofmoview falling just short of madness and interest.(Suggestion: try not to see the film downtown at theMarina, but rather at one of the south side locations.Reason: the Marinas show only in 16mm — like Docand CEF — and in a film as dependent on thecinematography as this one, you’re being cheated in16mm.)The Beguiled, Donald Siegel’s Gothic horror filmwith a wounded Clint Eastwood progressively ra¬vished and mutilizted by Southern belles in GeraldinePage’s boarding school, is now gone, but it was thebestcrafted and skillfully modulated American mov¬ie yet this year. Watch for it — it’s good and scary,and an interesting addition to Siegel’s career ofparanoia and violence, including such lower bracketmasterpieces as The Killers, Invasion of the BodySnatchers, Coogan’s Bluff, and David Affelder’s ownRiot in Cell Block 11.—Myron Meisel; puytcr’s ALL-NIGHT SHOWPERFORMANCES FRIDAY l SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREMay 14IF12:15,2:00 A.M. May 15LET 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.June 4KAMA SUTRA12:15, 2:00 A.M. June 5THREE IN THE ATTICTHREE IN THE CELLAR12:15. 2:00 A.M.June 11The Revolutionary12:15, 2:00 A.M. June 12Count Yorga, Vampire12.15 A.M.The Dunwich Horror2:00 A.M.I TKim SI SO 1 KRISKRISTOFFERSONin ConcertMANDEL HALLTuesday, May 25, $1Tickets on Sale Mandel Corridor Wed.JESSELSON’S> CDCCU acu o. Far East KitchenChines^A AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen Daily I 2 10Fn & Sat 12 12Closed Monday53rd & Hyde Park Blvd955-2229May 14, 1971/Grey City Journal/7ftl* *!*:< >:«:<>» »>:< »:< »:< >;»;< >;»;< >V4>;«;< >;»;< >;♦;« t;«;i »:< »:« »>:<?« *1^' »5!» »!*?« »!•!« f75!« i!*!i »!*ti »5!» i!!!(»!«!« »>%»!•!« >5Ii >5Ii »!®T« >!•!« »!5VoAMnMMMHMnm ;« »:< »:< »:< »;•:« »:< »:<»:«»:« »:< »:< >;«;«!«»!7<r!S!« r!5!« »!5t« >!*!« »J5!« »!S!<»Tw!?w9!« »SFINAL DAYS!TODAY 8:00-5:00 TOMORROW 9:00-1:0020% DISCOUNT SALEALL BOOKS IN STOCK!All Sales Final(Books formerly on sale discounted an additional 20%)UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTOREs1M$8M$ tHA*U♦H*itmIJrVMhuKM888N8MMM Fi; ^ *:♦:« >>:< >;«;< i;«;i >;•;< >•«;< >;♦;< »;*;4 >;♦;< »;•;« »;•;< i;»;i >;«;< >;«;< >;»;< >;»;< tyi >;«;< i’«;i >•♦;< >;•;« rt«;« >••-< ^»;< >;•;< >;•;< ivi >;•;< >;»;< i^i >;•;< »;•;< i;»;i >;«;< >;•;< i-^;i i^-i i^;i iv> i^'i j >;#•« t^i; '4Jf*i5!i »5!i i5!i »!*7« iTi i!*!i »5Ti »5!t »!5T« i!«!i iJJIi »5!i i!»!t »?•!« »7S?« »!??« »5!i »!5!i »5I< »5Ii »?•?« >!•?« »I!!i »5?i i!JIi i!*Ii i”« »S!< »T5N i!«!i »!•?« »!*?« i5!i »7!i i5!i iT« »?•!. »7*?» *!•% »5» »!•% ”i »?•?« »!C!« >T5T« »Ti »T«T» iTi i*»!i i5!i»!»% i! • ;gmmKi8$WfMnn♦it?u$mnNmKH#HHUMU:¥:maVMyu.♦It*.A V8mS>IKH:¥:4 4¥HftHMHHHKmHftHHM>u<|gHHH¥t iL*iMuvvH4 4*:¥:itmMH>U<8ftHn>1K>l£ftftftmMH8 20% DISCOUNT SALEToday 8:00 - 5:00 Tomorrow 9:00 - 1:00GIFT DEPT. - 2nd FloorGifts, Glassware, JewelryCosmetics, KitchenwareTies, T-Shirts, Sweatshirts,Hundreds of ItemsPHOTOGRAPHY DEPT. - 2nd FloorAll Film, Chemicals,Flash Bulbs, Paper,Cassettes, Recording TapeMany Other ItmesALL SALES FINALALSO SPECIAL SALE ON SOME TYPEWRITERSSAVINGS UP TO $80UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTOREStreet8 Grey City Jouri 4 »V| »^| l^l 1^1 >2il 1^*1 l^l 1^ 1^11^1»STi »R|($!w!S!i i3!i i!!!i i5?i »!•!« »T5!i r5?i i5!i »5Ii »!*!« ►! ;«2i41.^4 »^i *Xi»g<!«i!S!4i!«!i »3?« iSwSIi►. mft>«<nmHM:¥:HnmMHnHmmnWiRmKNHnMHftnH8mKmKnKnnmKnHnKMHU’♦U?M