George Beadle researching corn geneticsBy NANCY CfflSMANA rumor still exists at Cal Tech thatwhen George Beadle was a faculty memberthere, he scaled the walls of buildings totake pictures from striking angles. The sto¬ry isn’t exactly true, but Beadle’s ability toget a look at things from unusual anglesseems characteristic.President of the University from 1961 to1968, and a Nobel prize winner in 1958 forhis work in medicine and physiology, 68-year old Beadle still spends all availabletime in research. He is now working on thegenetic problem of the origin of the newworld’s most highly developed agriculturalcrop: corn.Toward the end of his term as President,an old interest in the ancestor of corn wasrekindled by Garrison Wilkes’ PhD thesis,which stimulated Beadle to reexamine thewhole problem.Beadle had always believed that the an¬cestor of com was a Mexican plant calledteosinte, derived from the Aztec word “teo-centli,” meaning “god’s ear of corn.” In1939 he had found teosinte could be driedand popped like com. Later he made grittybut edible tortillas out of the ground wholeteosinte meal. Wilkes, at that time however, believed-that modern com was derived from aprimitive wildcom, not teosinte.After his retirement in 1968 Beadle re¬sumed work on the problem, proceedingfrom the hypothesis that the primitiveforms of corn were mutants of teosinte.Beadle explained that teosinte “seeds”have an extremely hard covering and thatthey scatter from the husk when ripe. Twomutations, resulting in a soft covering andnon-scattering kernels, would lead towardthe development of com.According to his theory, more than 5000years ago pre-Columbian agriculturistsprized the qualities of these mutants, culti¬vated them, and with no knowledge of gen¬etics, developed some 300 distinct varietiesof com.“This was a very remarkable feat ofplant breeding,” Beadle said. “I suspectwomen accomplished this while the menwere hunting and protecting their terri¬tories. You can put that in for women’s lib¬eration.”After a trip to Mexico to harvest teosinteseeds, Beadle began to study hybrids ofContinued on page 3 , 5 -1Steve AokIGEORGE BEADLE: The Nobel prize winner gazes fondly at his corn plants.The Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 61 The University of Chicago Friday, May 28, 1971Anne Moses selectedstudent ombudsmanqualification.” She added, however, thatshe hoped women in the University who feltthey had been the victims of discriminationwould not hesitate to see her.“I’m familiar with their gripes and Ifully empathize,” she said.All eight applicants were interviewed bythe selection committee May 12 and 13. Allwere undergraduates, and two of themwere women.Student members of the selection com¬mittee were Larry Straus ’71, appointed byincumbent ombudsman Tony Grafton; Ge¬rard Leval ’72, appointed by Student Gov¬ernment; and Tom Biersteker ’72, ap>pointed by the faculty-student advisorycommittee on campus life.The three faculty members, appointed byprovost John Wilson, were physics profes¬sor Peter Meyer; Harold Metcalf, profes¬sor of business and dean of students in thebusiness school; and Nancy Helmbold, as¬sociate professor of classical languages andliterature and dean of students in thehumanities division.The ombudsman, according to a releasesent out by the University, “receives griev¬ances and, at his discretion, brings them toappropriate people or institutes in¬vestigations into those cases where a re¬view by his office seems warranted.“Since the work of this office is intendedto result in improvement in the regular re¬medial processes, the student ombudsman,as an independent officer, calls attention toabuses of discretion wherever he findsthem and suggests changes in rules, pro¬cedures, or policies wherever he sees fit.The student ombudsman also issues quar¬terly public reports describing in generalwhat his activities have been.”The ombudsman is a salaried officer ofthe University, and is supplied with an of¬fice in Reynolds Club and a secretary.Last ragThe Maroon will publish its last issue ofthe year next week on Friday. There willbe no Tuesday issue, and Friday’s issuewill contain a Grey City Journal. Advertis¬ing deadlines will remain the same:Wednesday at 4 pm for classifieds, Thurs¬day at noon for display advertising.'W' added, T requirements tighterBeginning in the fail, students will be eli¬gible for a new grade withdrawal (W) andthe requirements for getting an incomplete(I) will be tightened.At a meeting of the College council thisweek, a motion was approved which wouldrequire the registrar to give a student an Fif the teacher does not turn the grades in ontime. The grade can be changed as soon asthe professor turns in the grades.W is a grade for which students mustpetition if they desire to withdraw from acourse after the fifth week of the quarter.As approved by the coundil, it will havethree variants: W, if no work has beendone at the time of withdrawal; WP, if the work done at the time the student withdrewwas passing; and WF, if it was failing.College dean Roger Hildebrand explainedThursday that the reason for this move wasto remove any stigma from the grade of R(registered), which many students now getafter withdrawing from a course.Hildebrand added that the R is intendedto indicate merely that a student was regis¬tered for the course and should not be usedas an “escape hatch” for students who arefailing a course and want to drop it.Under the new incomplete ruling, stu¬dents must have their teachers fill out aform that will detail the work that mustbe completed to get a grade. Hildebrand explained that there is an“unreasonable number” of incompletesnow being given out and that the new sys¬tem is designed to put on paper the workrequired of a student, should the professorbe unable to grade the work.Hildebrand went on, “The net effect isimprovement. It defines the grades morecarefully, and should reduce the unhappi¬ness and the pressure that goes with theindiscriminate use of I’s.”The current policy requires only that stu¬dents make up their incompletes before thepenultimate quarter before their gradu¬ation.Frank GruberANNE MOSES: New ombudsman will be first woman to hold job. Anne Moses ’72 has been appointed stu¬dent ombudsman for the 1971-72 year. Herappointment was made by Unviersity Pres¬ident Edward Levi Tuesday.Miss Moses, who will be the first womanto hold the position of ombudsman since itwas created in 1968, was one of eight appli¬cants for the job.An ombudsman selection committee ofthree faculty members and three studentssubmitted recommendations to Levi beforehe made the final appointment.A history and philosophy of religion ma¬jor from Minneapolis, Miss Moses is cur¬rently manager of the Burning Shame cof¬fee shop. She also works as a receptionistin the College advisers office.Miss Moses said after her appointmentthat she wanted to “make the position ofombudsman more real to students. I’d liketo contact freshmen during orientationweek.”Miss Moses said she had no immediateplans to work for substantive reforms, butexpected that she would develop some inthe course of her work.She noted that she was well acquaintedwith student complaints about the Collegeadviser system, because of her work in theCollege advisers office, and would there¬fore be in a good position to deal withthem.Commenting on the fact that she will bethe first woman ombudsman, she said “Iwant to play that down. It’s not my mainSG considersfund campaignStudent government (SG) president Da¬vid Affelder has abandoned plans for a vol¬untary student activities fee and will in¬stead seek support for a fund-raising cam¬paign to be supervised by SG.Affelder announced at last Tuesday’s in¬formal SG meeting that he is working for astudent referendum next October whichwiii consider both the mandatory and vol¬unteer fees, as well as the new plans forthe fund-raising campaign.Affelder plans to rely on volunteer fundraisers, who will try to persuade thetrustees and “other rich people” to con¬tribute to student activities.Instead of a “blanket” campaign, Affel¬der wants to divide the “fund drive” intospecific categories, “which contributorscould relate to”.“We would ask individuals to contributeto specific activities which interest them”,he said.Affelder said he dropped his plans for avoluntary fee after receiving responsesfrom a number of students and talking withrepresentatives of several organizations.Doc Films and the Folklore society weretwo of the organizations which he said dis¬approved of the mandatory fee and the me¬chanics of a proposed discount card.Affelder said that the main drawback tothe voluntary fee is that it “would take toomuch time to administer”. He feels thatthe same amount of time could be betterspent by fund-raising.The SG president hopes to “raise up to$120,000”, which would include the $39,000which has been appropriated to CORSO fornext year. But he admitted, “I will takeanything I can get, even if it’s only $1,000or $2,000.”Affelder reiterated that the mandatoryfee is “definitely dead”, He said he willencourage individual organizations to raisefunds, even though he realizes “that no onelikes to take time out from activities to goaround scrounging up money”. Bruce RabeDAVE AFFELDER: Our beloved leader was besieged this week by a new subversivemovement: BLAPP.Six faculty members electedto academy of arts, sciencesSix members of the faculty at the Univer¬sity are among 148 new members of theAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences.They are:• Bruno Bettelheim, the Rowley dis¬tinguished service professor in the depart¬ment of education and professor of psy¬chology, psychiatry, and in the SoniaShankman Orthogenic School;• Marc Nerlove, professor of economics;• David E. Pingree, professor in the de¬partments of history, near eastern lan¬guages and civilizations, and south Asianlanguages and civilizations, and in the Ori¬ental Institute and the Fishbein center forthe study of history of science and medi¬cine;• Paul Ricoeur, the Nuveen professor inthe divinity school and in the department ofphilosophy, who was named a Foreign Hon¬orary member; .EUPHORIA BLIMP WORKSIMAGEFILMSPARACHUTE10 FOOT BALLWILL BE ATNORTH FIELDTHIS SUNDAYMay 30 7:00-11:00Only 50c - UC I.D. RequiredSponsored byIDA NOYES PROGRAM BOARD, PIERCETOWER, SVNA • John A. Simpson, the Ryerson dis¬tinguished service professor in the depart¬ment of physics, the Enrico Fermi In¬stitute, and in the College; and• Bernard Weinberg, the Hutchins dis¬tinguished service professor in the depart¬ment of romance languages and literaturesand in the College.Their election brings to 76 the number ofUniversity of Chicago faculty memberswho are members of the Academy of Artsand Sciences.The names were announced at theSociety’s 191st annual meeting in Boston.The Academy is one of America’s oldestlearned societies. It was founded in Bostonin 1780 by John Adams and other leaders ofthe Massachusetts Bay Colony. They usedas models such learned societies as theFrench Academy and the Royal Society inLondon. BLAPP blastsSGandWHPKIn two surprise attacks this week, theBlackstone Peoples Party (BLAPP), se.ceeded from Student Government (SG).Tuesday night, members of BLAPP burstinto the Business East chambers of SG,blasting away with squirt guns and waterWalloons, declared their independence, exe¬cuted their SG representative, and exitedamid firecrackers, smoke bombs and con¬fusion.Wednesday night, BLAPP took overWHPK and broadcast for over an hour be¬fore the station was recaptured by someUniversity security police.At the Monday melee, Pee Wee, aspokeswoman for BLAPP, pried the gavelfrom SG president Dave Affelder, who wastold at water gun point to surrender thefloor. Before doing so, Affelder entertaineda motion of “What the fuck?!”, which wasso moved, seconded and unanimouslypassed.The BLAPF spokeswoman jumped on thespeakers desk and read the BlackstonePeoples Party Emancipation Proclama¬tion, demanding the immediate executionof Toodie Connor, SG treasurer and TomJanhke, the Blackstone delegates to SG,who allegedly were elected on a secession¬ist platform.Janhke confessed his guilt. Miss Connorwas led up against the wall and shot withthe pistol.The BLAPP army left igniting a purplesmoke bomb to cover their escape. As thepurple haze filled the chamber, SG appoint¬ed a sargeant-at-arms to insure the sancti¬moniousness of future SG proceedings.Wednesday the BLAPP ruling committeeasked for volunteers to take over WHPKand broadcast the message of Purple Hazeto the campus. BLAPP set fire to WHPK’slocked door. When the radio station tech¬nician opened the door he was forced atwater-gun point to hand over the micro¬phone.If ||mV« foejvHtn Hat wkath yo«r euHure as *ell •atnca/TAtNtine you 4ri*Jsomethin*new*lo;n joctliyXriRvrlccarry eut sarviae4*7-97?! NORTHWESTERNUNIVERSITYpresentsSLY mtFAIRLYSTONEIN CONCERTSATURDAY, MAY 29McGAW HALL, EVANSTONnansfctt U00DOORS OPEN scon HAUAT 7:90 OR DOORKIMBARKLIQUORS-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 Plaza HY3-3355 STUDENTS^ FOR STUDENTS AGE II to 30Fire Includes:1 Round trip 747 SABENA Belgium WorldAir Lines from New York So Bros***.Belgium Leeoes Fridays, SWurd.Vi ®'Sundays from June t. 1971lower 1»et from October 1. 197t toApril 30. 1972 I2. One nifit in e superior category howlocated in the beers of Brussels3 On. wey tranefer lo your Bruwelt hoWfrom tbe airportAnd imagine you can slay in Europe “Pto on. year, meaimum, from lh« <*»'• ®travel No minimum stay requirements uoanywbara you l*a Do what you want That*ara no rastnctiom connactad with this p«"This It not a char tar No minimum pawangrraquiramams Rasas ara boaad on double occuponcy Tha only raquiramani it that youbs a tludam. 12 to 30 yaws of age.in an sducationet aatablishmant Noiaim*national addon fare from your home cityto New York ts applicable to this programA STS OO deposit par parson is requiredCompare' Than write or callMICHAEL 4. FLYNN & ASSOCIATES120 S LaSalle St a Chicago. Ill 60603PHONE: 131?) Ml 60822/The Chicago Maroon/May 28, 1971Steve AokiTYPICAL HYDE PARK ALLEYWAY: Despite such ominous roadways, crime hasbeen decreasing in the community. Hyde Park crimedeclines this yearBy GORDON KATZBelieve it or not, crime has been decreas¬ing in Hyde Park during the first fourmonths of this year.According to figures released by the Chi¬cago police department, and compiled bythe South East Chicago Commission(SEOC), the total index crime rate in Chi¬cago’s 21st district — of which Hyde Parkforms a large part — is down 12.4 per centfrom this time last year.Bounded by the lake and Cottage GroveAve, 18th and 61st Streets, about half of the21st’s population lives south of 47th Street.Crimes against person are down 33.4 percent from 1970, while crimes against prop¬erty have decreased 9.1 per cent. Violentcrimes (rape, serious assault, robbery, andmurder) have dropped 16.5 per cent fromthis period last year.Of the 13 homicides in the district so farthis year, only one has been south of 47thstreet. Six forcible rapes have been report¬ed since January in the Hyde Park area,while serious assault in the 21st district isdown 42.7 per cent.“This is what’s most pleasing to me —that we’re down in crimes of violence,”said Don Blackiston, SECC’s resident cri¬minologist. “We’re 13th (highest) out of 21 police districts — at one time we used to benumber one,” he observed.Not surprisingly, Michael Delaney, direc¬tor of University security, reports that “thenumber of emergencies are not as great asthose we have formerly had.” Crimesagainst person “have lessened consid¬erably,” he said.“We find that the thefts against automo¬biles are our primary problem,” Delaneystated. He cited cars parked on the mid¬way as being particularly vulnerable totheft.With the exception of occasional thefts ofproperty in dormitories, students are sel¬dom involved in campus crime. Althoughmany of those responsible for crimes suchas bicycle theft are youths from the adja¬cent neighborhoods, Delaney observes that“they’re not all youngsters — some arequite professional.”Delaney attributes part of the decreasedlevel of crime to the installation of whiteemergency telephones, which began in Sep-teember 1969. When one lifts the telephonereceiver, a patrolman is immediately dis¬patched to the phone’s location.“It serves a real preventive purpose,”Delaney said. In addition, “they havehelped in apprehending some suspects.”Work is tedious on project: BeadleContinued from page 1“the most teosinte-like corn and the mostcorn-like teosinte,” both of which have thesame number of chromosomes.“If the hypothesis that many genes dif¬ferentiate the two forms is correct, recov¬ery of the parental types should occur inreasonable large second generation popu¬lations,” he said.As a result of Beadle’s studies and thefindings of several other scientists, “moreand more people now take seriously thehypothesis that modem com was deriveddirectly from teosinte,” he said.In order that the teosinte seeds heworked with could germinate faster,Beadle clipped the hard coverings from thestone-like kernels, before planting them.In the course of his research he has al¬ready clipped some 30,000 seeds. His roomin Bams laboratory is filled with seeds andspecimens of the plants he has grown inMexico, in a plot at 55th and Ellis and in“all the available space” in the Universitygreenhouses. He now has a crop growing atthe University of Illinois — Urbana andin Mexico.Except for care of the Mexican and U ofI fields, Beadle does all his work himself,including the harvesting of teosinte. Dem¬onstrating for the reporter on a plant in thegreenhouse, Beadle said, “With this kind ofproject you need a big emotional in¬vestment. You have to keep your steam upbecause the work is tedious.”He collected the teosinte seeds with apracticed dexterity. “How would you like toeat this stuff” he quipped. “I’ve been toldit is a cure for dysentery, but I have nevertried it for that.”“I do most of this work myself,” headded, putting the seeds into a bag. “Thatway I know what I’m doing, and if I makemistakes, they are mine.”Besides his work on the teosinte project,which Beadle enjoys “because it’s simple— something I can do myself,” he is pres -dent of the Chicago Horticultural Societyand delivers occasional lectures on hiswork.He finances his research in part with in¬come from speaking, as well as with helpfrom the University and the HorticulturalSociety. Land and care of the experimentalfields have been provided in Mexico by theInternational Maize and Wheat Improve¬ment Center and by the University of Il¬linois in Urbana.Beadle’s Wahoo, Nebraska origin mayaccount for his interest in the interactionsbetween plants and people. During his term as president, signs near his house invitedstudents to stroll through the back gardens.Campus “historians” also remember theBeadle’s concern for grass adversely af¬fected by student traffic patterns, whichstimulated a sign campaign urging stu¬dents: “Think. Every step you take kills 40blades of grass.” Some students alledgedlyresponded to his ecology campaign by plan¬ting corn seeds on campus. Later, Beadlegave in and had a new sidewalk construct¬ed.By LISA CAPELLEight tenured professors have resignedfrom the University to accept positionselsewhere. In addition two professors areretiring, and the University is extendingthe tenure of three who have reached re¬tirement age.Law professor Dallin Oaks will becomethe president of Brigham Young Univer¬sity. Robert McKersie, professor of indus¬trial relations at the business school willassume the post of dean of the businessschool at Cornell.Hans Morganthau, Michelson dis¬tinguished service professor of political sci¬ence and history having reached the man¬datory retirement of 68, will teach at theCity College of New York next year.Dr Merel Harmel, chairmen of the de¬partment of anesthesiology will be at Duke,and Robert Daniels, professor of psy¬chiatry, is going to the University of Cin¬cinnati.Charles Stinnette professor of pastoral di¬vinity is going to Phillips University in Ok¬lahoma.Edward Schwartz, professor of social ser¬vice administration, and Joseph Fitzmyer,professor of near eastern languages andcivilizations, have resigned.Marshall Ketchum, professor of financein the business school and Stefan Schultz,professor in the department of German lan¬guages and literature and the College areretiring.Gerhard Meyer, professor of economicsin the College and chairman of the com¬mittee of general studies in social science,has received a post retirement appointmentwhich will allow him to keep teaching ashas Maynard Kruegar, professor of eco¬nomics in the College. It seems curious to some that Beadlechose to remain in Chicago, since he cameas an administrator from the California In¬stitute of Technology. “I like Chicago,” heexplained, simply.“Mrs Beadle and I have a large emotion¬al investment in Hyde Park-Kenwood. It’san exciting community in which a wide va¬riety of people live and work. I’m some¬times discouraged that students do not ap¬preciate it for what has been accomplishedin the past several decades.”Richard McKeon, Grey distinguished ser¬vice professor of classical languages andphilosophy has also received a deferred re¬tirement appointment. According to Blackiston, the fall in thelocal crime rate is due partly to the de¬creased level of public political and socialactivity. “I think a lot of the crime depend¬ed on that kind of activity, which hasdropped off,” he said.Organized crime has ostensibly left HydePark, Blackiston reports. “We don’t runinto any of it anymore,” he said.Use of herein in Hyde Park also appearsto be very limited. Most narcotic traffic,Blackiston said, deals with pills and mari¬juana. The amount of heroin in the commu¬nity has decreased ever since the urban re¬newal of the ’50’s, he added.While crime has been going down in HydePark, crime in South Shore “has pickedup” although in many categories it is stillbelow last year’s volume. Blackiston notesthat policy operators, gamblers, and prosti¬tutes appear to have moved south fromWoodlawn in recent years.So, how safe is Hyde Park? “In spite ofwhat everybody says, there are a lot ofpeople who walk on the streets at night —I’ve been doing it for 18 years,” Blackistonanswered.. Steve AokiCALL BOX: Thesp telephone pm?rg?ncy cau boxes os numerous cornero alu security.May 28, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/32 professors to retire, eightresign to accept new positionsrmnonesuchinEKS-74082 EDDIE HARRIS & LES McCANNSECOND MOVEMENTAtlantic SO 1583L. A. WOMANL. A. WOMANEKS-75011tnu&i CHARGEWITH Bank Am( »1CAS0 HYDE PARK1444 E. 57thMU 4-1505OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 5MFG. LIST VS. LOWE'S2.98...2.253.98...2.984.98...3.395.98...4.196.98...4.899.98...6.78MaryThe Song It Lowe • Colorado ■ Children Oneand All • Paths ol Glory • Wish I Knew How ItFelt To Be Free • (Erika) Rhymes andReasons • Follow Me • First Time • Circus *Song For The Asking • Indian Sunset IATLAIMTICITHE ROLLING STONESSTICKY FINGERSRolling Stones Records COC 59100H-71238 H-71240H-71236 THE CONTEMPORARY CONTRABASSNew American Music byJohn Cage, Pauline Oliveros, Ben lohnstonBERTRAM TUWTZICY com r aha* w - . .H-71237H-712354/Thc Chicago Maiuuii/May 28, 1971ABOUT THE MIDWAYLaw grantThe University has established a profes¬sorship in urban law in honor of ArnoldShore, a prominent Chicago lawyer andgraduate of the University's law school.The chair will be held by law professorAllison Dunham, an expert cm laws affect¬ing the growth and develi pment of cities.The $600,000 endowed professorship wascreated through a $300,000 matching grantfrom the Ford Foundation and a likeamount contributed by a large group offriends of the law school.The purpose of the professorship is tostrengthen the law school’s resources forteaching and research in aspects of the lawaffecting the government of urban areasand the control of the urban human andphysical environment.EvaluationCollege students are requested to turn intheir course and teacher evaluation formsto the College dean’s office, Gates-Blake132, by the end of exam week.Any students interested in compiling andwriting the evaluation booklet over thesummer are invited to a meeting Wednes¬day night at 7:30 pm in Cobb 103.The evaluation book, which will coverspring 1971 courses, will hopefully be readyin time for autumn registration period.Any student who did not receive an eval¬ CLASS ON THE QUADS: Some lucky students enjoyed sun and studies when theweather was still good.uation form in his class may pick them upin Gates-Blake 132.Owl and serpentOwl and Serpent, the men’s senior honorsociety, elected its 1971-72 members at its only meeting of the year Tuesday night.The Owl and Serpent performed its soleremaining function, self-perpetuation, atthe traditional site of the Eagle Pub, choos¬ing as officers for the coming year JoyRobinson, president; Eric Rubin, vice pres¬ ident; Tom Biersteker, secretary; and BillWallace, chaplain.Also elected were David Affelder, CraigCook, Ethan Haimo, Con Hitchcock, SueLoth, Chris Lyon, Karl Menninger, AmyRyan, Jill Strassman, and Larry WoodeU.During the hour and a half of con¬viviality, the society also elected an adviso¬ry board to aid and consult with the Owland with the Serpent. Dr Thomas Auerbachwas elected chairman of this board. FredHubbard was elected treasurer in absentia.Others elected to this board are MurielBeadle, Elvin Bishop, Daniel Boorstin,Leon Botstein, Judy Clark, Joel Cope, BillDee, Richard Flacks, Marc Haller, SteveLandsman, Ensign Tim Lovain, Step May,Tom McKinley, the alleged 34 Nobel lau¬reates, Melba Phillips, Fanny Regal, andSpeedy.Rejected for membership were CharlesPercy, Leopold & Loeb, and the Shah «rfIran.The honorary women’s society, Nu PiSigma, also named new members thisweek. Appointed were Lucy Arimond, Mar¬jory Baruch, Donna Bean, Dalia Belinkoff,Geraldine Brady, Judith Brophy, KatherineChiang, Anne Clark, Ruth Emyanitoff, Ei¬leen Fritz, Carolyn Haynes.Also, Joan Huebl, Dorthea Juul, ChristineLehto, Amy Levine, Margaret McCarty,Patricia McQuilkin, Anne Moses, SigridContinued on page 9Contemporary European FilmsSATYRICON6:30 8:30 10:30Saturday May 2951 ' "Cobb Cobb 7 & 9:15LAST SUMMERSundayMay 30NOTICE: |The U. of C. || Bookstores will be yclosed on Saturday,May 29th andMonday, May 31 st mnmUniversity ofChicago Bookstores yBom»vi m >v>g<ivi ivi igj* *3S**3S ■iSlSstrawberry fieldsHOW ABOUT CAMPING INJAMAICA THIS SUMMER?An out of sight experience awaits you at the most beautiful andtropical campsite you can imagine. Set in 18 acres with toweringpalms, 2 white sand beaches, a reef for snorkling as well as localfishing villages nearby and much, much more.COST? - RIDICULOUS - $25 A WIIKper person for 2 in a tent, if more share a tent - it's cheaper!INCLUDES: Fully equipped tents, all cooking utensils, picnic tables,stoves, etc. We even have thatch roof cottages! - they're a little extra,but not much.‘SPECIAL NOTE TO GROUPS - Special low group air fares areavailable for 15 or more persons traveling together.CAUL NOW FOR RESERVATIONS (212) 247-4505er write for hoe brochureCaribbean CompyoutKlt, 54 Wort S6th St., NYC, 10019Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe OrientAround The WoflJ1462 E. 53rd St.684-6856 . CAMPINGEQUIPMENTSales - RentalsHICKORY 324-1499 The Efendi poudly announces a champagnebrunch for only $3.50 per person, children$2. The brunch will include Turkishsepcialties like basted eggs with fetacheese, lulu kabob, choban salad andmany other delectable dishes plusCOMPLIMENTARY CHAMPAGNE.From 12:30 to 3:30 on Sundayswith all you can eatTenth floor of the HydePark Bank Building,1525 E. 53rd Street. HendKMOVING?ro" PETERSONMoving & Storage646-4411 free estimatesComplete Pre-Planned Moving ServiceLocal • Long Distance : Packing • CratingImport - Export^ Containerized Storages/®V Formerly at General Officex!' 55th & Ellis 12655 So. DotyUnitmw Vmn unmm Chicago, III. 60633 LLAYLCy’S ALL-NIGHT SUCHPERFORMANCES FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREMay 28MAGIC CHRISTIAN12:15, 2:00 A.M. May 29MONTEREY POPDON'T LOOK BACK12:15,2:00 A.M.June 4KAMA SUTRA12:15, 2:00 A.M. June 5THREE IN THE ATTICTHREE IN THE CELLAR12:15, 2:00 A.M.June 11The Revolutionary12:15, 2:00 A.M. June 12Count Yorga, Vampire12:15 A.M.The Dunwich Horror2:00 A.M.June 18The Wild Bunch12:15,2:30 A.M. June 19”Z"12:15,2:30 A.M.I ncun use ISUMNER JOBSDRIVEaCHECKER TAXIIMMEDIATE OPENINGSViSIT OR CALLMR HARRIS345 W. WASHINGTONHA 1-1315 PREGNANT?NEED HELP?For Assistance in Obtaining ALegal Abortion Immediately inNew York City.FINANCIAL CONSIDERATIONGIVEN TO ALL STUDENTSCALL(312) 922-0777.8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.7 Days a WeekABORTION REFERRALSERVICE• (ARS, Inc.) HYDE PARK SUPERMARKET1346 E. 53rd St.A place to shop for those who like to save and don'tlike the hassle of crowded checkout lanes and imper-sonal service. Remember all our meats are cut to orderby a friendly old butcher. Some specials this week are:Ground Beef 59y.bSpareribs 69'/*Chicken 29‘/*Bar-B-Q Sauce (180Z.)3/$ 1Tomatoes, vine ripe.. 29 V-Half & Half Yogurt... 29'/piPepsi cola (i6oz.) 8/89cCentrella potatoe chips 49cSweet corn 5 ~,./49'Cucumbers 2/29'Green OnionsBathroom tissuesMay 28, 1971/The Chicago Mareoa/5The Chicago MaroonPAUL BERNSTEIN, MITCH BOBKIN, CON HITCHCOCKCo-editors•DON RATNER SUSAN LOTHBusiness Manager Senior Editor•JUDY ALSOFROM, Managing Editor AUDREY SHALINSKY, Executive EditorFRED WINSTON, News Editor GORDON KATZ, Contributing EditorNANCY CHISMAN, Executive Editor STEVE AOKI, Photography Editor•LISA CAPELL, JOE FREEDMAN, KEITH PYLEAssociate Editors•RICK BALSAMO, DAVE FOSSE, FRANK GRUBER, LESLIE LINTON, BRUCE RABE,STEVE STRAHLER,JONATHAN YUENStaffSTEVE COOK DIANA LEIFEREditor Emeritus Assistant Business ManagerFounded 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 50637. 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.An investigation/Student activities are taken lightly by a great number of people oncampus. In Leo Moldaver’s gadfly in today’s Maroon, which has igniteda flury of activity concerning the state of student activities on thiscampus, it is made abundently clear how small a part of the University’sbudget goes to student activities. We find it particularly amusing tonote that Northwestern’s yearbook gets more money than all of theactivities on this campus combined. Northwestern might appear tosome to be a more enlightened campus in this regard than our own be¬loved University of Chicago.The state of student activities here depends on many more variablesthan just money. While no one can deny that more money would go along way towards improving student activities here, a lot more can bedone with even the limited resources available. What then is impedingthe running of student activities on this campus? One explanation thatmany people are willing to accept is the inefficiency and ingrainedlethargy in the student activities office.Twenty leaders of student activities feel that an investigation ofthe student activities office is necessary. Many Maroon editors havesigned that letter and so we obviously endorse that idea. However, wefear that many people will merely shake off the letter as sour-grapesor as unimportant. We think that both of these charges are unwarrantedand untrue.The students who signed the letter are all responsible, hard-work¬ing members of the student community. Some of them even won HowellMurray awards for their activity in extracurricular affairs this week.They all considered this letter a wise move and one that is long overdue.In fact, some said that it was not strong enough — they wanted theletter to call for the immediate firing of Skip Landt, director of studentactivities. While we can understand these students’ feelings, we thinkthat this one move is premature and that the investigation by the stu¬dent ombudsman should decide whether this is the single best move tomake in improving the operations of the student activities office. How¬ever, we will not dismiss this suggestion as impossible or ludicrous. Wehave heard a number of rumors around campus that Landt’s superiorsfeel he will never lose his job. Such job security is excessive and fore¬closes constructive discussion.Our fear that many on campus will dismiss this letter as unim¬portant troubles us even more. The running of student activities onthis campus is intrinsic to the state of student life here. When studentactivities flourish sncl are interesting to many students, people aroundhere tend to do things, go out, enjoy themselves. Any psychiatrist willtell you that happy people tend to be productive ones. When studentsare down in the dumps, their work suffers.The mere fact that 20 activity leaders felt that this letter was im¬portant enough to sign and that they were all contacted within twohours, should give some indication of how strong feeling is for thisinvestigation to be undertaken. We urge the student ombudsman tostart this investigation before many students leave campus at graduation,and we also urge any student who has strong feelings on the runningof the student activities office to go in to see the ombudsman and totell him what they are thinking. Only in this way can a fair investigationbe accomplished.We are more fearful that administrators will be unwilling to takepart in this investigation for they are obviously the ones being investi¬gated. However, if they are concerned at all with what students arethinking and interested in, they will not take this investigation lightly.We can assure them that the students who signed that letter all meanbusiness. 'Slipshod control' kills studentactivities, Moldaver chargesBy LEO MOLDAVERThe major debacle which last week re¬sulted in the bankruptcy of FOTA and thesubsequent cancellation of the Beaux ArtsBall should not be viewed as an isolatedevent. It is just another unmistakable signof the stagnation and the decline of studentactivities on campus. That stagnation anddecay are increasing among many studentgroups is a fact. Some have already suc¬cumbed. The fiasco over the Ball is only asymptom. It would be easy to dismiss theBall’s cancellation on the premature bank¬ruptcy of FOTA last Wednesday. Or toheap blame upon the FOTA steering com¬mittee, whose youth and inexperience withlarge-scale events complicated an alreadybad situation. But such dismissals would betoo easy. They would ignore the basic,overriding sickness by concentrating on themost obvious manifestations of the disease.The meeting of CORSO which last monthapproved FOTA’s budget was a very inter¬esting one. Not so much for its lack of dy¬namism, since few students expect it atsuch meetings. But on more substantivegrounds. Although six people were therewho were “CORSO people,” only Don Hel¬ler and Paul Barron actually hold officialCORSO status. Ex-officio members whoparticipated in the meeting, the deliber¬ation of issues, the questioning of wit¬nesses, and the actual allocation of fundsincluded Dan B (Skip) Landt, Enid Reiser,Jeff Schnitzer and Paul Collier. At thepresent moment none of whom seems tohave been elected to CORSO, or to havebeen required for the meeting owing to theSG constitution. The SG constitution doescall for three faculty representatives to bepresent at all meetings which are to carry“official” weight.Meetings have gone on this year withouteven one such representative, unless, ofcourse, the Faculty Senate recognizes DanB Landt as one of its own. At present it isunknown why Landt, director of student ac¬tivities, is present at these meetings, orwhy he has not facilitated the presence offaculty members, or why, as an adminis¬trator duty-bound to enforce the regulationsof the school and the edicts of DeanO’Connell, he has not blocked meetings atwhich a legal quorum was not present.But this facet of Dan B Landt’s role asactivities director is only a small glowingember in the pall of stagnating and declin¬ing student activities on this campus. IfMr O’Connell feels that his enlightenedleadership has resulted in presence of hap¬py, healthy, solvent activities on campus,he should look again. And he should lookhard at the manner in which his con¬federate subordinates are operating theirdepartments. Take the matter of the BeauxArts Ball.At the previously mentioned illegal COR¬SO meeting, Landt heard a discussion of aprojected Eeaux Arts Ball slated to takeplace at Bartlett Gym on May 21. He heard GADFLYabout where the money was tentativelycoming from, who the performers mightbe, which groups were working on the proj¬ect, and what the financial expectationswere. This is not revealed in the officialmeeting transcript, which Dan B Landthimself takes. Nor is the direct request for$500 of CORSO backing for the event.Nonetheless, Landt seems to have re¬called the project well enough to call meinto his office the following week to urgeme to work in co-sponsorship with Revitali¬zation. The sad performance this year byRevitalization seems to be the cause ofsome embarassment on Skip’s part. Thefact that he has okayed their ventures, andthat he has stood neutrally by as they lap¬sed into insolvency are not facts whichshould be held against him — necessarily.All the same, the Ball was again discussedwith him for one half hour. Further infor¬mal discussions took place in the followingweek.Imagine the surprise of many who werepresent in his office on Monday May 17 tohear him say that Maroon announcementsof the Beaux Arts Ball on the previous Fri¬day had “taken him by surprise.” Was theBall a secret event? Has it not gone on inone form or another for over a decade?How could he have been surprised when thematter had been the cause of public andprivate discussion and planning for fiveweeks? How can he have missed the boatwhen the Ball was the subject of newspaperaccounts and street-corner discussion? Canhe really be so out of touch with affairswithin his own office that he did not knowor remember that FOTA time is BeauxArts Ball time? Can he have forgotten themeetings he himself had attended? (thoughhe has been known to do so in the past). Itis not comforting to know that five weeks ofsteady planning among members of CEFand FOTA were called by Landt “pre¬mature.”When there are less than 100 hours to gobefore a major campus event, is it anytime to take the matter “under advisementfor further consideration?” Is it time tohold bureaucratic meetings with depart¬ment heads who had already been con¬sulted weeks in advance? Is it a time toimpede and obstruct the signing of con¬tracts with salaried performers becausespace for the event in Bartlett had not yetbeen applied for through the channel ofLandt’s office by Landt? What was going onhere, members of FOTA, SG, and CEFwere wondering out loud?Slipshod control over the events withinhis domain is not new to Landt. Is he everreally aware of just how much moneyFOTA or SG or Doc or CEF or Revitaliza-Continued on page 9The follotving letter was sent to the stu¬dent ombudsman, Anthony Grafton, yes¬terday:We, the undersigned, as leaders or for¬mer leaders of student activities on theUniversity of Chicago campus, have hadreason to observe the operation of the stu¬dent activities office under the direction ofDan B (Skip) Landt.We have wondered about the effective¬ness of this office, and while we do not nec¬essarily agree with all of the charges thathave been raised in Leo Moldaver’s gadflyin today’s Maroon or with other chargesthat have been made verbally over theyears, we do think that all of these chargesare serious and worthy of investigation.The very fact that this office is underattack and that it is the subject of con¬troversy is alarming. The relationship be¬tween the student activities office and thestudents working on these activities shouldbe one of harmony and trust. We do notdetect either feeling at this time.Because of this, we hereby request thestudent ombudsman, Anthony Grafton, tomake a formal investigation of the effec¬tiveness and operations of the student ac¬tivities office and its personnel.We would hope that all students, adminis¬trators, and officials of student activities oncampus would be willing to discuss theirfeelings with the ombudsman and that the investigation will resolve all questions andcontroversies surrounding the office satis¬factorily and with finality.Steve Cope, Student Ombudsman 1969-70Michael Fowler, SG President 1970-71David Affelder, SG President 1971-72Peter Ratner, FOTA Chairman 1968-69Douglas Kissel, FOTA Chairman, 1969-70Isaac Finkle, FOTA Chairman, 1970-71Charles Flynn, DOC President, 1969-70Jim Jubak, Doc President 1970-72Myron Meisel, Doc Treasurer, 1970-71Foster Chanock, Beardsley Ruml ProgramDirector 1970-71Jerry Dahlke, Wash Prom Chairman andBeardsley Ruml Chairman, 1970-71Amy Ryan, SG member and a big cheesein SVNAMarty Marcus, Revitalization President1969-70Jerry Webman, IHC President 1968-69 andMNC memberRoger Black, Maroon Editor 1968-69Caroline Heck, Maroon Editor 1969-70Steve Cook, Maroon Editor 1970-71Mitch Bobkin, Maroon Editor 1971-72Con Hitchcock, Maroon Editor 1971-72Paul Bernstein, Maroon Editor 1971-72Steve Aoki, Maroon Photo Editor 1969-71David Travis, Maroon Photo Editor, 1967-69and year Box editor, 1969-706/The Chicago Maroon/May 28, 1971"Who's the new guy?" LETTERS TO THE EDITORSFOTA woesOnce again this year FOTA has a prob¬lem. It cannot find a chairman for nextyear’s festival. Absolutely no one who isnow in FOTA wants to assume the position,although the experience of these peoplewould make them most qualified.Why does no one want to run this excitingprogram? For the same reasons severalqualified people were discouraged fromrunning this year’s festival — that is, theytalked to Skip Landt. All of the potentialpeople who considered running FOTA nextyear said the same thing. There is justtoo much red tape, no cooperation fromthe university, the most inefficient andslow system of paying people for work, andother forms of subtle discouragement likeCORSO (really the toy of Skip Landt) cut¬ting FOTA’s budget by $1500 this year forno justifiable reason.That’s why FOTA didn’t have enoughmoney to bring a rock band of some statureto campus. FOTA never received that $6500which was supposedly set aside for it.Why should the Director of Student Activ¬ities want to discourage such a wonderfulactivity like FOTA? The answer is easy.The people who run FOTA care more aboutthe arts, people and the welfare of the ex¬tracurricular life of the University thanthey do about holding to a rigid budget. In1969, the final debit of FOTA was $1700. Itwas ignored by the University and FOTAwas greatly praised.The following year, with a much largerbudget, the debt came to $2100. This debthelped put CORSO’s entire budget in thered. As a result Isaac Finkle had to sufferthrough many sessions with CORSO tellinghim how FOTA was inefficient, undemo¬cratic, needed a faculty advisory com¬mittee with voting powers over the pro¬grams, needed a treasurer and that theywouldn’t give him money until he made allthese changes. Two things had changed since 1969 tocause this negative attitude. First, I dele¬gated more responsibility for programs toindividuals presenting those programs.This caused all sorts of extra work for thealready overworked and inefficient StudentActivities office — now 20 people in¬stead of one were seeing Skip Landt in aday about FOTA.Second, as I mentioned, OORSG’s debtwent into the red. At all costs the Univer¬sity decided to stop the FOTA debt, in¬cluding the cost of giving the faculty halfthe responsibility for something they clear¬ly did not want to become involved in atall.All of the changes suggested by CORSOat the direction of Skip Landt were de¬signed to shift work from his office toFOTA, or slow FOTA down through the useof committee decisions. Neither the com¬mittee, the treasurer, the faculty com¬mittee worked this year. FOTA still ran upa $1500 debt.The director of student activities also de¬cides who should receive the $100 HowellMurray Awards for extracurricular activi¬ties. Given the spectacular success ofFOTA 1969, 1970, everyone assumed thatthe chairmen and originators of these twoevents would undoubtedly receive suchawards. Everyone but Skip Landt whochose to let his petty grievances stand inthe way of his better judgement. Is it anywonder no one who is with FOTA wants todirect it next year?Dong KisselAdviser to FOTA 1971Cochrane reactionMy first reaction to Eric Cochrane’s let¬ter was that he must be kidding and that hecertainly could not know much about thenon-teaching staff at UC from a vantage ofa full professorship in the department ofContinued on page 8HYDE PARK THEATRE #1 HYDE PARK THEATRE #253rd & Lcke Park NO 7-9071 5238 So. Harper 493-3493STARTS FRIDAYMAY 28TH Kohlberg Theatres STARTS FRIDAYMAY 28thBARGAIN MATINEESat. & Sun. 1:00 to 3:00 P.M.$1.50TkeTweim Chairs’is uproanoufun! Any true fan ofcomedy has to see if-ABC TVI M-i a a— rj_AflNttMHh+gfm kMDmfcSrM«-• RON MOODY c* gALSO“WILD CHILD” Telephone (312) 233-57008540 SOUTH ASHLAND AVE.CHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60620DESKS -BOOKCASESSWIVEL CHAIR - LAMPS - TABLESNEW & USEDequipment&SUPPLY CO.8440 So. South Chicago Ave.(Parallel to Chicago Skyway)Open Mon. -Sat. 8:30 -5:00RE 4-2111Immediate DeliverySpecial Discount for Studentsand faculty with i.D. card MOTORS AUTO SERVICEComplete Auto RebuildingPainting & FrameAlso VW RepairsQuality service work done for less than thedealer.1536 East 71st Place288-3434STUDY SOUNDSIMPROVE GRADESWhiio DovotinfTho Soma Amount Of Ttmo To StudyUSE STUDY SOUNDSYour CCom* V°yf Concentration And ImprovO*U.CT«6n«imjlY pnoouced’sounds’CAUSE THIS TO HAPTENeiosM Spocify• Top*. Cassette. Or LP ftecon ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERSi 620 E 53rd Si288 2900 TAKCArM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOUDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Orders to take out1318 East 63rd MU4-1062 PREGNANCYPROBLEM?THERE IS NO CHARGEFOR OURABORTIONREFERRAL. WHY SPEND■ MONEY NEEDLESSLY?OUR PROFESSIONALSBtVTCtS ARE FREE.CALL (215) 722-53607 DAYS* 2b HRS. Tht* University of Chicago Chorus Fr.mk Tino Director.Mines Math Director ciccrThe University Clumber Orchestra- Roger Solie CoruiuttorandanAll Star Jazz Combo present aHAM PE L (Wr for swu i Vnluis Air P> Ac* H Siutv for i»nhotm m Dt T1RRO -fwirna// [\uw \HARPEbJTlER Mcssc.h MittuHMANDEL HALL 57th and UniversityAvenWAY ISth Friday evening-at 6 30ADMISSION FRE£ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELPENTECOST SUNDAYSPECIAL CELEBRATION11:00 A.M.E. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the Chapel"STRUCTURING THE SPIRIT"Weekday Chapel MusicTuesday, June 1, 12:15 p.m. Backstage with the Or-ganist. Edward Mondello will demonstrate the organand play a brief recitalWednesday, June 2, 1215: p.m. Backstage with the( ortllnnn»,>r Robert Iodine will demonstrate the Curii-lon and play a brief recital. Interested persons shouldbe in the Chapel Office no later than 12 Noon for thetour to the Clavier Room.May 28, 1971/Tbe Ckicaga Maraaa/7LETTERS TO THE EDITORSContinued from page 7history and a residence at 5220 Greenwood(has he ever spent much time across theMidway?)Having been a student in the College forfour years and a full-time employee for al¬most one more, I have come to see thatmuch of the University intellectual commu¬nity does not deal with the University’s in¬ternal problems the way it pretends to dealwith (supposedly unrelated) larger socialissues.UC is a school where, in the past twoyears, 120 students were suspended or ex¬pelled for protesting sex discriminationagainst UC teaching staff, where severalmore (myself included) were suspended forsix months or longer for a two-hour demon¬stration in support of a demand for freemeals for UC cafeteria workers (at thetime they were making $2.07 an hour andwere predominantly black women from theSouth Side), and where, finally, prospectivestudents were advised not to come if theyplanned to act on their convictions that theUniversity ought to act out its spoken mor¬ality.It is also an institution that is laying offits most necessary and, often, oldest em¬ployees (unionized as well as ununionized)and is replacing others who leave with tem¬porary workers (who receive no fringe ben¬efits and even less protection than theirfull-time comrades) when they are re¬placed at all.It is finally a corporation that votesagainst even the minimal reforms thatGeneral Motors is willing to impose on it¬self, and it hasn’t even the decency tocringe when the federal Department ofHealth, Education, and Welfare comes toinvestigate charges of sex discriminationin hiring and firing of staff.I don’t know what the learned professorfeels that we on the staff can do for ourbrothers and sisters in Woodlawn. I am oneof a majority of UC staff women who makeless than $2.50 an hour with little hope of advancement in our grade levels.The library workers started to get togeth¬er last spring when they exited en masse inprotest over the invasion of Cambidia. End¬ing the war will keep many of our black,brown, yellow, red and white brothers andsisters alive, so maybe a work stoppage todemand an end to all US involvement inIndochina is the answer to Mr Cochrane’sdoubts.In the meantime, though, the economy isdragging us down. Our wages are not keep¬ing up with housing, food and utility prices.And how many of us can afford to takeclasses at UC (even if we could get thetime off), or send our children to lab schoolor even get decent childcare in other pri¬vate facilities?Many older employees have seen a seriesof unsuccessful attempts to unionize at UC,as well as unsuccessful attempts of the al¬ready unionized UC staff to get ahead, des¬pite pro-University leadership of their lo¬cals.All members of the University commu¬nity should support the library workers intheir attempt to better working conditions,wages, grievance procedures and retire¬ment benefits.anyone who believes that the libraryworkers work and retire in luxury shouldknow that over 50 percent of these workerssigned union cards within the first twomonths of the campaign and that even su¬pervisors, who are not protected by theNLRB, were discontented enough to play asignificant role in the organizing.If the University cannot pay decently forthe efforts of those workers who actuallykeep the place going, it does not deserve tohave another building built, to have anoth¬er tulip planted, to have another house inWoodlawn destroyed, or to tell another stu¬dent or worker that her or his mind is freeand that she or he should always feel mor¬ally justified in acting out personal con¬victions for the betterment of society.Anne Hack *70Doc Films presentsBOB & CAROL &TED & ALICETonight Cobb 7:15 and 9:30 $1Georges Franju'sJUDEXMon 3 pm Cobb FREE TO AILOH! WHAT A LOV ELYWARFri. June 4 Cobb 7:15 & 9:30 $1•/The Chicago Marooa/May 28, 1171 Deve Foss*UNDER THE SPREADING CHESTNUT TREE: A grad student quietly studies.DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometrist•ye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363 UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY684-3661FRAISK PARISIproprietor EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbarfc Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372M.loff ScLJ ofm.* an anceSummer - June 28 to August 6mornings and afternoonsFor Children4 & 5 yr olds - Music Fundamentals and Dance6 & 7 yr olds - Music Fundamentals with OrffInstruments - note reading ensemble, eartraining - rhythm8-10 yr olds11-13 yr olds A New course forInstrumental Students who havenever had MusicFundamentals1 Ensembles with OrffInstruments2 TheoryHarmony3 SightreadingandsingingFar East KitchenChinese & AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen Daily 12 10Fri. & Sat 12 12Closed Monday53rd & Hyde Park Blvd955-2229FUTURE CPA'SLEARN NOW ABOUT THENEXT CPA EXAMNOVEMBER 3-5, 1971THE BECKERCPA REVIEW COURSEChicago(312) 236-5300Ow Succ—*ul Students Roprmsnti / c r>r t ic ai / u wr ujMI Next Count Begin* June S,197l| STUDENT-GRADSTRAVELwith the American Union ofStudents .. SPECIAL stu¬dent fares to and through¬out Europe .. DISCOUNTSon lodging, meals, enter¬tainment .. AUS servicecenters in major cities.AMERICAN UNIONOFSTUMNTSCa> HUoiy: 314-146* The roadPlayit, feel it,know it, sense it,command itTake of it whatit has to offer.The Renault 16. Front-wheel dri/e.4-wheel independent suspension.Torsion bars. Rack and pinion steer¬ing. Front-wheel disc brakes.Up to 30mpg. Top speed, 9u mphNet effect: Total adhesion tothe road and a whole new way tocommunicate with it. 12,495.JZcsL,*3mports,*3^nc-2347 S. MICHIGAN AVE.CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-25501pT2zaPLATTERPino, Fnod ChickenItolion FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E 53rd 643-2300 jABOUT THE MIDWAYPHI KAPPA PSI: Now that the old fraternity is boarded up, all the grass is on theoutside.Continued from page 5Pakula, Kathleen Picken, Annie Pierce,1 Margaret Ryan, Marilyn Schakel, and FranSolmor. All are third year students in theCollege.FulfbrightsApplications are now being acceptedthrough October 15 for Fulbright scholar¬ly ships for 1972-73. The scholarships grantawards for graduate study or researchabroad, and for professional training in thecreative and performing arts.Application forms and information for’ University students may be obtained fromFulbright advisor Cassandra Pyle in Ad¬ministration 226.Levi on TVUniversity President Edward Levi willmake a rare television appearance Sunday, night when he will be interviewed onWMAQ television, Channel 5, at 10:30 pm.Levi will be interviewed by Irving Kupci-net, who writes Kup’s Column daily in theSun-Times and who hosts a Saturday night1 talk show.Levi was last interviewed in Decemberon WBBM’s “Lee Philip Show.”Senior awardsThirty-one College seniors and seven jun¬iors were inducted into Phi Beta Kappa,the honorary academic society, at the an¬nual honors assembly Wednesday.The seniors inducted are Constance Bal-int, Gary Born, Deborah Cahn, EugeneChiu, Fred Devore, Daniel D’Ippolito, Jef-> frey Doering, Lawrence Dworet, Nora Dud-wick, Harvey Cytch, James Fitzgerald, Da¬vid Fried, Chris Froula, Deborah Funkhou-ser, Anne Galin, Robert Green.* Also Judy Housman, Janine Jason, Kath¬leen Komar, Philip Lutgendorf, CatherineLynch, Martin Marcus, Alvin Martin, Dan¬iel Mass, Corinne Nyi, John Smetanka, Al¬lan Spradling, Lawrence Guy Straus, Carl Sunshine, Jerry Webman, and Joshua Wei¬ner.Fifteen seniors were elected to Phi BetaKappa last year.Juniors elected were Francis Boyle, Rob¬ert Israel, Sigrid Pakula, William Pollack,Robert Tax, John Tragenstein, and DavidZimny.To be eligible for election in the junioryear, a student must have at least a 3.75average, and to be considered in senioryear, the average must be at least 3.5 on ascale of four.Also awarded at the assembly were theHowell Murra y-Alumni AssociationAwards, presented to seniors who have made outstanding contributions to the ex¬tra-curricular life on campus.The ten seniors are Constance Balint,Marcia Edison, Charles Flynn, EugeneGoldbert, our own Miss Caroline Heck,Mitch Kahn, Angela Lee, Martin Marcus,Albert Shpuntoff, and Jerry Webman.The Amos Alonzo Stagg Medal for “bestall-around record for athletics, scholarship,and character” was presented to MarkSackett.David Knaak received the William BondMedal for the varsity track athlete whoscored the greatest number of points dur¬ing the season. Library unionUniversity library employees, in an elec¬tion Tuesday, voted by an overwhelmingmajority of 266-14 in favor of being repre¬sented by a union.The election was termed by acting unionchairman Pat Coatsworth as a “people’selection to provide each library employee achance to say whether he wants a union.”Mrs Coatsworth was pleased with thevote, “given the time it took place.” Shenoted that there are 320 union members,not all of whom voted. She attributed thelow vote to the short announcement of theelection.Mrs Coatsworth indicated that the votewas “heavily full-time since many studentsdidn’t know about it.”The election was supervised by an “im¬partial people’s labor relations board.”Two ballots were ruled invalid, one becausethe student involved no longer works at thelibrary.Spring convocationSubrahmanyan Chandrasekar, Hull dis¬tinguished service professor of astronomyand ,i.rophysics, physics, and in the Fermiinstitute, who was recently inducted intothe National Academy of Sciences, will bethe speaker at the spring three convocationsessions, June 11 and 12.University President Edward Levi willpreside over the three convocations.The first ceremony, Friday at 10 am isfor students in the business school, the li¬brary school, and the school of social ser¬vice administration.The second ceremony, Friday at 3 pm isfor students in the graduate divisions ofbiology, humanities, physical sciences, andsocial sciences, and also for students in theschool of medicine, education, divinity, andlaw.The final ceremony, Saturday at 10 am,is for graduating College students.Caps and gowns will be the official stu¬dent dress.Caution discourages projects: MoldaverContinued from page 6tion really have? Does it effect him to know* that student groups are folding in a finan¬cial drought while he officially restrainsCEF from lending them further monetarysupport? The sloppy, extra-formal way inwhich CORSO meetings take place is anexample of the rule, not the exception.It should be understood at once that,while the obvious duty which certain Uni-t versity officers are charged with may be topromote as varied and exciting a calendarof campus events as financially possible,the reality of function is quite different.For duty and interest do not always con-1 verge in the operation of many adminis¬trative agencies on campus. And more of-'ten than not, when the latter is in conflictwith the former, the former will lose out.► Certain administrators are more concernedwith avoiding blame for flops than in gar¬nering credits for successes. And in the at¬tempt to avoid blame from the mighty, higher-ups of this corporate institution,many bureaucrats lapse into overt hesi¬tancy in approving events, or in giving en¬thusiastic support to the formation of newt groups.Each project brought forward, be it a Re¬vitalization concert or a FOTA fair or aCEF film series, or a black cultural pro¬gram, is examined in the light of whatf could go wrong, and who could get blamed.The possible benefits such programs couldprovide are often a secondary consid¬eration. And while such meticulous concern* with the Big Picture can be labeled circum¬spection, if you are an 80-year old fieldmarshal, it may also be called Negativismor Obstructionism if you are trying to, coordinate and maintain the dozens of stu¬dent groups here on campus. Few campusadministrative functionaries bear strikingresemblance to 80 year-old marshals. Butcaution is not always born from personalityanyway.There is a serious question about whetherthe Over-Bosses of this school really careabout having a vigorous and entertaining social and cultural program here oncampus. When there is an annual financialturn-over of 150 million dollars, and only 40thousand is earmarked to budgeting exist¬ing student activities, something is serious¬ly wrong. When this school can afford luxu¬rious edifices for her Grand Masters thatcost upwards of 75 thousand dollars, whilemany student functions are going bankruptsomething is wrong.The total amount of funding given toCORSO for all recognized student groupsfor the whole year is less than the generalbudget of the Northwestern yearbook. Only0.025% of the capital of this school is in¬vested on providing genuine student activi¬ties for students. And even this minisculesum is manipulated in such a manner thatit cannot serve its best ends. For prejudice,apathy, and bad judgement on the part ofits bureaucratic overseers limit the amountFriday, May 28EXHIBIT: Contemporary Turkish Paintings, Center forContinuing Education. Sponsored by FOTA, throughJune 30.MUSICAL: "Stranger in the Vineyard," Rockefellerchapel, 8 pm.PLAY: "A Midsummer Night's Dream" at Lab School'sSpring Festival, Friday and Saturday, 5:30-8:30,play starts at 8:30, $1.SEMINAR: Alan Newell, Cornell University, "Semi-Dispersive Wave Systems,' Geophysical SciencesSeminar, Hinds Auditorium, 4 pm.GAY LIB: Ida Noyes 218, 7-12 pm.CONCERT: University Chorus, Chamber Orchestra, andJazz Ensemble, Mandel, 8:30 pm.CONCERT: String Quartet, Harper reading room, 4 pm.PLAY: University theatre peXrformance; Cafe MoulinRouge, Reynolds club, 8:30 pm through Sunday.FLICK: Doc Films, "Judex," Quantrell, 7:15 and9:30 pm.Saturday, May 29MUSICAL: "Stranger in the Vinegard," Rockefellerchapel, 8 and 10 pm.CONCERT: Collegium Mumicum, Bond chapel, 8:30 pmthrough Sunday.FLICK: CEF, "Satyricon," Quantrell, 7 and 9:15 pm.GAY LIB: Coffee house, Ida Noyes library, 7:30-12 pm.Sunday, May 30PI irir- TFP- "I as* Summer • 'aw srhnnl 7 and 0-70 that can be done with the money.Mr Landt feels that CORSO should havemoney to sponsor pet projects like GamesNight at the Ida Noyes Program Board, butnot enough money to finance the Ball. Hefeels that there is sufficient need for him tohave a 3 and a half room office suite, andyet try to deny even tiny offices to Year-Box, Black Colony, Gay Lib.This is not to say that Mr Landt is usinghis intellect to actively impede the work ofstudent groups on campus. Far from it, hehas been exercising little positive control,one way or another. His first reaction tothe Ball: surprise and then advised consid¬eration for 72 hours, are typical. When CEFand Revitalization formed up as groups, MrLandt spent the better part of one-half hourdiscouraging them. He was not sure thatthere was “sufficient need for another filmgroup on campus” as he told Malcom Kot-Monday, May 31GAY WOMEN: Meeting, 171 W Elm, 8 pm.Tuesday, June 1RECITAL: Edward Mondello University organist willdemonstrate the organ and play a brief recital,Rockefeller chapel, 12:15 pm.TALK: Math professor Paul Sally, "Funny Functionsfrom R to R," sponsored by undergraduate mathclub, Echkart 206, 8 pm.Wednesday, June 2RECITAL: Robert Lodine will demonstrate the Carillonand play a brief recital. Rockefeller, 12:15 pm.CARTOONS: Sponsored by International Socialists,Cloister club, 75c, 7:30 pm.Thursday, June 3FLICK: CEF and the Heyes program Board, "Julesand Jim, Ida Noyes, 9:15, 25c.GAY LIB: "Conciousness-Raising Groups on Bisexual¬ity," Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.DINNER: Order of the "C", for all lettermen, QuadClub.MUSICAL*.chapel s grr. tier and Ken Simonson. He was not surethat Mitch Pines should have been en¬trusted with so large an amount as $3500for the Cream concert.He was not sure that it was a good ideato “get involved” in the efforts to reopenthe Pierce Snack Bar as the UnderGroundin Winter of 1969-70. He was “uneasy”about the utility or the need in bringing theLiving Theatre here for their spectacularweek-long engagement. He was not movedor concerned at the disintegration of PierceCinema or Cap & Gown. What he mostseems involved with is avoiding the weightof blame.And in so doing, he easily manages to putmany ideas permanently to sleep withpocket-vetoes like “further planning isneeded,” “consideration must be taken,”etc. If speed and ingenuity are pre-requis¬ites of solid administrators, then our schoolmay be in very serious trouble. If adminis¬trative functions were done openly andabove board for all students and faculty tosee it would be good. If the financial irre¬gularities surrounding University grants toCORSO and CORSO grants to groups couldbe compensated by vigorous leadership andtight control, then they could perhaps betolerated.But confusion is in the ascendant here.And in its wake are the hulks of many stu¬dent groups already dead, or quickly starv¬ing for the lack of funding, leadership,and admininstrative coordination which isnot there. The leaders of the administrationseem to have vanished into the woodworkand the memories of the Beadle years.While it mgiht be silly to expect Camelot inHyde Park, the sparse austerity of a Tinta-gel was not too much to hope for. As thebody of the Beaux Arts Ball and a bankruptFOTA stare us in the face, we must ask,“Will even this be denied us?” I am notoptimistic.Leo Moldaver, ’71 is president of CEF,co-founder of Revitalization, and a three-BULLETIN OF EVENTSCELEBRATION: Pentecost Sunday, Rev E SpencerParsons, "Structuring the Spirit," 11 am.anger in the Vinegard," Rockefeller fjmp prpsj/ipnf of Piprrp tmlx>rMqv 98 1Q71 /TKo PhioQan Mamnn/Q(CLASSIFIED ADS)HAPPY BIRTHDAY, MOM!CLASSIFIEDSClassified 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;75c/line and 60c/repeat line fornon University people.Strictly Per¬sonals are run for everyone at30 /line.Ads must be paid in advance sobring them to our office, Rm 304Ida Noyes, or mail them in with acheck. 64 Chevl, 4 dr, 6 cyl, std, low ongas. 4500 M. Going overseas. 752-7273.Cabart Oboe. 667-6496.Bed, 3 lamps, desk, dresser, sofa,easy chairs, cheap. 363-5092.Water beds from $70, health food,old furs, and other discoveries atPRESENCE, 2926 Broadway. 248-1761.Best Waterbeds in Town $29.95 ForKing Size, 5 yr. guar. $29.95 & Cus¬tom frames, htrs, at Dr. Feelgood's,State 8< Chestnut.OLD MASON & HAMLIN GRANDPIANO AA Model Excellent PlayingCondition $1500 - BR 4-7455.GARAGE FOR RENTRent our beautiful, spacious garage,starting June 15. Big enough for anymobile, even if it's a hearse or afire truck. Call 667-0082 evenings.Bargain rate. OPEL 1966 Runs Well. Radio, newtires. Keep Trying 667-2257.Recording Tape: Sony 150, $2.50.Scotch Dynarange 203, low noise,factory sealed, $4.10. 1800 feet poly¬ester. Special prices for big orders.Carl 667-5012.FOR SALEDesk $20, Armchairs $5, Dresser$10, Wardrobe $10 Rug-Curtains 955-9126Land Rover Good Condition Yearand Vj old. $2,500 Call 924-5828.Jean Bells $4.99. John's Mens Wear,1459 East 53rd Street66 Honda 150, $150 or best offer Hel-m e t, Dartboard, Schlock ReedsBooks Too, Call Nathan 752-9511 Bed. Bought brand-new, only twoyears ago. In excellent condition.$50. Call Don 667-5012Air-Condit. 5000 BTU Excellent con-dit. Used only 2 mos. $105 or bestoffer 753-2261 Rm 841FOR SALE: 9x12 nylon gold arearug $40; wooden rocking chair $39;sewing macine $25; VM Stereo $30.Call 842-1462 after 5 p.m.Selmar Baritone Sax. Good cond.Dali 643-7107 after 7PMBooks, Paperbacks, Bought andSold. 1503 East 57th Street. Powell'sBookshop. 12-10.Save $$ on Dual KLH, Scott, AR,Dyna, at MUSICRAFT. On CampusBob Tabor. 363-4555.WHY RENT? $12,500 buys 2 bdrm.brick cottage, fireplace, oak firs,new kitchen, South Shore singlehome area, near campus bus, idealfor fac/stud couple 374-5241 — 752-4976 after 6 pm.VW Camping Bus, Westfalia, 1969,available end of July, very lowmileage $2400. Call 667-4143, 7-10pm.FURNITURE: Large Desk, Tables,chairs, couch, dishes, shower, rug,fans, many other things. 493-5132Old Geometric Oriental Rugs.$300.00 - $500.00. FA 4-6538SALE: 2 small desks, metal framecot with mattress, lamps, and lotsof other goodies. 288-7245NAVY OFFICER'S UNIFORMSThis War. Size 40-42. 667-1134 Sleep on Water in your SummerSublet. King, Queen, Double andsingle waterbeds all $30. CallCampus Rep Gretchen Donart forthe best prices in town x33>76Beds, desks, tables, chairs and ageneral apartment full of stuff. Rea¬sonable. Call 288-2777.Double mattress 8, box spring, largebeautiful sideboard also suitable asdresser, smaller dresser with triplemirror plus some things free. 684-3915.Our Furniture. Cheap. 643-5224Typewriter Olivetti Studio 44 goodcond. $50 or offer 493-6643Dresser $10 Crib-mattress $7 Toys-clothes-shoes. 375-4187.Stand-up aluminum barbeque pit onwheels, hardly used, $20 or best of¬fer. Call 324-9358.Bamboo flutes for sale. ContactDouglas Ewart 324-4633 or 324-9358.4 Harness Jack-Type Floor Loom45" Weaving Span. 928-9208.■j 3rd HILARIOUS WEEK!}'‘Absolutelydevastatingfy * Woody Alton's latestbag of nuttiness iswelcome indeed/*moti KNOBLAUCH, Chicago Today GENE SlSKIL Chtcapo TribunaGUj * JACK ROLLINS CHARLES HJ0PFE Product**woody alien’s“bananas”EDENS I • ttHCNTOWHt ♦ TOMTOWH CMEM» III)/* MMML CMEtU I*:™" LAKEIS.'Tht Chicago Maroon/May 2», isni RECORDINGS from the Art En¬semble of Chicago "GREAT BLACKMUSIC." 1. Reese and the SmoothOnes $5.00; 2. Message to Our Folks$5.00. Both recorded in Europe. Call324-9358.Furniture, clothes, art supplies, artwork, assorted strange items. Freewine, punch or iced tea. Sat. May29, 12 to 8 pm. Chet & Pris Witele.2727 S. Indiana Ave. Apt. 205.Furniture: Desks, chest, bed, fan,bookshelf. Ultracheap 493-2237BOOK SALESaturday, May 29. Book Sale Noonto Five. Paperbacks, all subjects,especially social sciences. Mostbooks under 20 cents 9th floor,Pierce Tower, 5514 S. University.Great Buys.STARTS TONIGHTTHE PUBLICENEMYstarringJames ^ JeanCagney HarlowplusErrol FlynninTHE ADVENTURESOFROBIN HOODTHE BIOGRAPH THEATRE2433 N. Lincoln EM 8-4123Plan to visit us soon. Admissionat all timos is only $1.25. Bringyour Friends.SUPER BOOKSALENEW BOOKS — 2-3 Off List Price.Theology-Philosophy-History of Reli-gions-Ethics-Economics-Sociology-Philology-History. SWIFT COM¬MONSMay 27-28. 9:30-5:00.SALE VERY CHEAPExcellent condition: Trunk, typewriter, vaporizer, electric clocksteelmaster card cabinets, shoe bag.Call Diane 643-5307.DOGGerman Shepard 5 yrs old needsnew home. 324-5247.FREE: Collie Puppy to home withyard. 4 mos old. Vaccinated Love¬able & smart. 373-7153.WANTEDWANTED: Garage for compact carMid June-July 21; will extend datesif necessary. 324-3978ROOM WANTED nxt yr in friendlyapt nr campus. Karen HY3-8041WANTED Man 8» Woman's Bike-Gdcond. Cheap. Call Don at 3-3357.WANTED: Queen Size Bed 643-5437If you're leaving town and have acar you want to sell, come toHank's Auto Sales, 8024 S. Stony Is¬land. CASH for your CAR. 374-2700.RIDESNeed 2 riders to San Fran. LeaveJune 6 Call Rick 684-8120FAC Needs Driver(s) Drive car toSeattle Approx. July 1. References.752-7045. PEOPLE WANTEDCOURT THEATER TRYOUTS: TheCrucib'e, dir Annette Fern; Lysist-rata, dir. Nick Rudall. Taming ofthe Shrew, dir. Annette Fern. May2, 9, & 30. June 5 8, 6, 2-5 in MandelCourt Yard. Call 753-3581, 1-5STAFF, STUDENTS. SUBJECTSNEEDED FOR SPEECH EX¬PERIMENT. ONE HOUR'S WORK,$1.75 Cash. On Campus. Call X3-4710for an appointment.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.3 fern rmmts wanted for Sept, 57 8<Dorchester. Call 288-6357.Frm Roommate for summer — andforever 55th & University, 684-7275.Rider Wanted to share expenses toOregon leaving Chicago 6-14 Call337-2928 eves or mornings.Student to share 7 rm apt $50 moJune to Sept. 324-4677 After 7 pm.Russia Camping Jul 31-Aug 13 Need1 person. Cheap 684-7994Wanted: Responsible person to drive1970 car to Cambridge, Mass be¬tween June 11-15. Call 493-7357 after8 p.m.Need babysitter next fall in myhome for most of one day a weekand other occasional days Call 624-7920.Experienced sailors wanted to crewon 23ft racing sloop. No pay — justfor kicks. Weekends. Phone 955-5090evenings.Childcare my home or yours, part-time or full-time. Excellent job 1300N. State for student, spouse or otherinterested person. Salary & transp.943-7126.Fern. Roommate for No. Side 2-bdrm. apt. You have to see to be¬lieve! Summer Only. 348-1856I'm ,oot'"o 'o- '•m-''i« to s°e theWest with this summer. Anyone in¬terested — 753-2233 No. 43TAKE AN ALUMNUS TO THEFIREWORKS! Sat. June 5, 9:45 pm.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.AU7-6888 DES PLAINES — 2510Dempster 774-9625.SKOKIE 5200 Main St. 679-1550.Two grad students looking for 3rd.Your own room and bath. 2 blocksfrom Lake. Phone 363-3546, 9-11 pm.Desperately need YOU to care torour two small female loving catsthis summer. We'll pay expenses &$30. 374-1389 after 4. (If no ans. 493-1040).VIVACIOUS YOUNG TALENTto create unique entertainment ex¬perience at Pierre's, Internationalnightclub opening in the Holiday Inn— Lake Shore Drive. Singing, danc¬ing, show tunes, spontaneous dia¬logue — Pierre's girls perform inquality surroundings at top income.Talent and freshness required, ex¬perience optional. Will train andcostume. Call Lou Magen, 943-9200.Fluent SWAHILI speaker to help mepractice twice-wk. 363-1788.HELP THE JOURNALThe Grey City Journal needs peopleto help lay out the weekly issues.Writers and reviewers of all thearts are also needed. Experiencehelpful but not necessary, if you'rewilling to learn. Interested? Call493-3031 after 5 pm.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 $50 OR MORE DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWDAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school Denim K<wps 9o*°9a jactLctfporit duo In «tenim byRobert L«wis. In chodoMj, navyor red. Jacket Pont"MO.Hang-out i$ a part of Cohn £ sternHY<ie Park Shopping center/ 55**$ Lake ParkPEOPLE FOR SALE 5- & 6-YEAR-OLDSFluent Spanish Tutor Available Call288-1030 after 6:00. Ask for apart¬ment G9.TYPING 40cents-pg 721-9835 after 6MASSAGE FOR MALE & FEMALEHawaiian, Scandinavian, and Mid-Eastern massages — all three com¬bined into one very satisfying mas¬sage. Call BOB, 326-4739 anytime.Need a band. Call Joe 447-5091.Bells of Sarna . . . and finger cym¬bals — from $1. LIFE RHYTHMS.Arabic and French tutoring by na¬tive speaker Tel: 465-3779Experienced full-time babysitting inmy home. Close to University. Rea¬sonable. Call 955-1158.Need a band? Call Joe 447-5091TYPING: Fast, accur. FA 4-4703.Graduating senior, majoring inbiology, needs summer employment.Has experience in bio lab researchand sales. Call Don 667-5012. Responsive and responsible gradstudent is organizing summer schoolfor 5- & 6-year olds. Lots of fun, plearning, crafts, field trips. Reason¬able rates, lunches included. 3246817.SPACE___Female Roommate Wanted fo share *with grad student July 1-summerwith option for Oct. lease, wood-burning fireplace, bay kitchen, Ige.,airy, E. Hyde Pk.. at least 24 yrs.old, mature grad student or workinggirl. 643-6612. M, W, noon to 100;,evenings, 9:30-11:00 pm.i S. Woodlawn, 28,3 rms apts,MI3-2760 or 667-5746 Mrs. GreenAvail July 1 Big Garden apt 3 rm(1 bdrm) 54 8. Lake $120, 1 blk frm,>1C Si campus bus. Call 667-60522Vi rms avail now on So Shore Dr.ACR Rainbow Beach nr campus bus& 1C w-w carp, elevator. Sublet $105inc utilities. Call Pat, 3-2486 or 643-RESTAURANTMondo Mia Opening Soon 1463 EastHyde Park Blvd. 667-9791 CARRY¬OUTSGAY LIBGAY LIB Coffee House Sat 5-29 IdaNoyes Library 1212 E 59 7:30 3 RM-E. South Shore. 1 blk 1C.Newly dec. Adults $140. SA 1-8420-Student to live in modern rm nr Ufor 15 hrs help summ 8.-or nxt yr.1-10 yr girl. 667-0725acious 7 rm S. Shore apt 4rms, 2 gar Dshwshr & dryeriu/lu nor Avail lulV 1. RA344UU.rm, 2 bdrm apt for summer andnext year 1364 E 52nd St Call 643-3438 or 758-3561 mornings.3-4 Bedroom apt-Summer w-opt forfall Furn Avail 324-7148pmSouth Shore Sublet. Room for 2Avail June 15. $65-mo. Call Ralph at324-2671 or 753-3974.Two Need Third Roommate for Lg 6rm Hyde Pk apt. for Summer 8< Re¬new In Fall. CALL 955-7352-eves.Steve-Bob Rent Negotiable.Wanted June 1. Man to share fur¬nished apt near campus. Own room.Maid service. Call 947-9221 after6.CHICAGO BEACH HOTEL5100 S. Cornell DO 3-2400Beautiful Furnished ApartmentsNear beach-park-I.C. trains U of Cbuses at door Modest dally, weekly,monthly rates. Call Miss SmithTire of waiting days, weeks, monthsfor your guitar to be repaired?Gives Speedy Service A Store Runby Musicians for Musicians. LIFERHYTHMS.CHEAP apt in S. Shore: sixenormous rms, 3 bdrms, sunprchnew appliances. $160. 752-9601Room available starting June 14.Any sex, but no cats. (Allergy, notprejudice) 5744 S. Kenwood, 2ndfloor. 493-0143.Large 3rd floor suite to rant frommld-Sept. Fin# for 2 students ormarried couple choice location 58th& Blackstone Ave Phono 752-1102.Large 2 bdr. apt avail end of June.Near Coop on campus bus. $170. 2rmmates or family. Call 288-4639.Sunny, 3V4 room apt. 57 and Dor¬chester. Immed. occupancy. $140-mo. Call 288-3685.5 rm fum apt 5712 Drexel 6-15 to »•31. $140-mo plus elec fc gas Fac,grad prof. 288-1378.BOURGEOIS COMFORT, PROLE-TARIAN PRICEI Share myspacious, safe, 5 room apartment,summer and year. Call Chris at 265-4826 9 am-4:30 pm, 643-4417 till 12pmSUMMEROOMS: $10-12 wk. greatlocation and other bonuses. 5747University. 752-9718. Need 2 roommates for 4 bdrm apt$50-mo. Cali Ken, Herb 684-8120FOR RENT: Rustic Cabin in woodson Maln'es Casco Bay. Full plumb¬ing, beds for 9. Available June,July. $175 per week, $600 per month.CALL 538-7810.Man wanted to share 6-rm. apt.Next year with 3 grad students OwnRoom; 3 blks from campus. $55-mo.Call 324-9090.SPACE TO TAKEWITH YOURENT A MOTORHOME for a groupor family vacation. Be free fromSave money and have a lot morer otels, restaurants and John stops,fun.We have two units for rent byweekend, week or month.68 Internat'l sleeps 6(7 If you'rereally together). Complete kitchen,bath. Stick shift. $150 wk, 8 centsml.1971 Travco mlni-motorhome sips 4.Sink, stove, little bathroom. Auto¬matic transmission. $125 wk., 8cents ml.On-The Bus, Inc.373-7512SPACE YOUR MINDSEnrich your lives this summer sur¬rounded by an excellent art collec¬tion and library, 2000 books & Twobedrooms King size & double beds$142-mo SUBLET, Preferably gradcpt or 2 fern st. Call 493-4472.SUMMER SUBLETSGreat Studio apartment to subletJune 15 to Sept. 15. Very reasonablerent. Three blocks from campus.Large living-dining room. Modernkitchen and bathrrom. Ideal for. oneperson. Even some trees In yourfront yard. Phone 752-6441.Summer Sublet-South Shore fur¬nished, 6 rms, $150-mo. Mid-Junethru Aug. 684-4383.SUBLET 7-1 Option for Fall. Large6 r m apt 57 & Kenwood nearcampus, 1C. Call 955-6457. $225Female Subletter wanted: June thruSept 56 & Unlv, Own bedrm 2 bathsmod kitchen very clean cool quiet.Call 955-0194.2 girls to sublet Alr-cond Own rm1400 E 57 $65 each. 324-8930Furn. Apt. 3' rooms (One bedrm)excellent location 57th & BlackstoneRent $140 Call 432-5431Sub-let Jun-Aug 4 bdrm 2 bath town-house fully furnished incl linens,utensils, baby items. Close to UC.288-0154.One (1) Bedroom-Spaclous-To RentIn a 3 bed apt good location on eve¬ning bus route-bedroom has Its ownbath. Plus common rooms: kltch,din, bath. Call 288-8075. Ask for Bill.SUMMER SUBLET 1 rm. 5511 Unlv.Avail June 1-15. 363-3292.Rent my room for the summer Innice, large 3 bedroom apt near 53and Greenwood. Bob 955-89271 bdrm apt. Furnished $185. Facultywishes to sublet to responsible parlymid June-Dee 4 large, bright rms.Newly decorated. 5900 Block Dor-chaster. 9554)159.2 rms furnished. 55th and Harper.955-0633.“4^er aijd^Ffe aijd 4-JW’THE LOVES OF A SENSUOUS WOMANPlus: ABCs OF LOVEChicago-? Fmpst. Most Unique CineShangri-La DOORS OPENTHEATRE222 No STATE at Wacker Drive 9:00 A M. (AT BOTH THEATRES J332-4010 l darkClark atmadisonk 2 2843 SUMMER CRAFTSATBLUE GARGOYLEWeavingMacro meCrochetTEXTILE ARTSUNLIMITEDCRAFTS SCHOOL928-9208SHAPIROS ARE DUE JUNE 1st.Fern rmt needed tor summer. Aircond, furn, mod. apt. $60. 643-6370Roommate to share lg. turn aptJune-Sept. S Shore $67 752-7017Roommate for large bright apt nr53 & Woodlawn. Must like cats Call667-7193 (Opt. for Fall).3 room furnished apt Stereo-TV$130-mo 56-Kimbark. 667-3038.3 Bdrm Apt in South Shore Optionfor Fall. 493-6435.Air-conditioned, furnished, six roomapartment at 1400 E 57th St Desper¬ate. Will talk about price. 955-1469apt 604.June 15 to Sept 15, 58 8. HarperFour bedrooms with big windowssunporch completely furnished Call752-8459.NO. SIDE 2-bdrm apt w-real char¬acter. Beg. 6-10 Very Ige. 5 roomsmod. kit-ba, fully 8< beaut, turn.,incl king size bed. Perfect for cple.,prefer grad, faculty. A Steal at $250,incl util. 348-18563 rm apt furnished. Lease availableTV 5443 Woodlawn. 493-3390SUBLET July 1st South Shorespacious 3 bedroom 2 baths, $175-mo. 1 yr. lease required. 734-1063.SUMMER SUBLET from June 15-Sept 15, large apartment, furnished,yard, cheap, 2 blks. from campus.Call KAZ, 752-5582.Furnished studio apt. 1380 E. HydePk Blvd; utilities paid, carpeted,linen service, phone, $135. After 5:30KE6-4300 apt 203.APT., 56th 8i Unlv, need 1 tamale toshare with 2 roommates, June toOct. Rent negotiable, Call 753-2249,x 1408, 1410 or 1414.Summer Sublet: IV? rm apt, 55th ABlackstone. Call 324-4269.2V? rm 55 A Harper June-Sept Verysafe, lit* $115 No. 324-3092Spacious 3 bdrm, 2 bath summer w-opt for fall. 955-7889.SUMMER SUBLET: Two BedroomsIn 7 room apartment at 58 A Kan-wood. Rant Negotiable; call 684-6689Roommates for sublet: Prlv. room54th A Dor. Furnished. Ask $45-mo;but will cut to beat competition.Call Jeff 324-3028.AUG 13-OCT 3(dates flexible), roomIn house w-kitchen, near campus$45-mo, 753-3754, Barbara S.Mala June 15-Sept 15 SUBLET Poss.Op. 71-72 Own room aircond. LittlePierce 324-0238.Sublet 5 rm-apt. Furnished, Air-c S.Shore, Lovely Building! June 15-Setp1 (arr) Rent: $160-mo Leave massEx 3591 or HY 30061 for Mika Buck,ner.SoShore on lake prv. beach w 2Mad students. Own rm A bath. FurnA piano. Fall opt. 374-6472 $60 moSublet June-opt to lease Oct. 2 bdrmA garage — Hyde Pk. 288-6304Some Sum Sub-Need Roomate(s) toshare BIG apt - $50 — 5305 So.Woodlawn. 363-8835.2 bdrm apt 60 A Woodlawn $110-mofum June 15-Sept 30 752-9508Summer Sublt 4 bdr lg apt — 2 blksfrom UC $175 July 1. 324-14693 rm furnished apt air condlt. TVreserved parking guard at door$134-mo. Call 324-3441 pm's.Summer Sublet, 2 big bedrooms,choice location, reasonable, 684-9743ask for John or Hank.Sub. Sublet 4 bdrm. dean On theMidway. 324-6871.24 rm furn apt; on Cps Bus Lina ACTA to Loop; Shaded bkyd — plantJune 13-Sept 15 110-mo 752-57123rm. apt. June 15-Sept IS In Mrd.Std. Housing Furn. 643-4498.Large furnished apt 2 bedroom 2bathroom 150-month. For summer.Call 643-6243 • 753-3913.3 room unfurnished sublet. Cheap.Coma Saturday to 6045 Woodlawn.Ring for Smith.SUMMER SUBLET June 13-Aug 25.3V? rms. fully furnished, king-sizebad. Near 1C A shopping. $116-mo.Call 341-6377 day-ask for BarbaraBouton. 363-8008 evenings.Furnished Hyde Pk to share Junell-S#pt 30. I am male g. stud. Call363-1022.Sum Sub JftlS Aug. I speetsvs turn* rms w-plano, reasonable. Grad stu¬dents prat 538-2539. 1 .or 2 people wanted to share huge8 rooiri apt. in South Shore for sum¬mer and possibly next year. Lo¬cated near campus bus and beach.Call 288-5799.4 rm Furn Apt 56 & Univ. June--Sept. $56-mo. CA Pete 44 Hitchcock.FEMALE $55. 288-6657. SUMMER.SUBLET June-Sept 2-3 AIR-CONDBDRMS. $50-mo each. 955-9126.6 large, sunny, air-conditionedrooms in Madison Pk. Good for chil¬dren June-Sept. 538-0538.GREAT APARTMENT - can bemade Into 1 or 2 bedroom. June 15to Sept. 30 with option for fall. 145-mo. Call 288-2777.CHEAPER THAN RENT6rm, 3bdrm, 2 bath, condo for sale.Washer, dryer, carpeting, drapesIncl. 51st A Kenwood. 536-7024, eve-nlngs and weekends.APARTMENT WANTED3 Bedroom Apt wanted for 9-15-71 to7-1-72 In Hyde Park (furnished) byUIC faculty member. Write 27 Van¬couver St., Yarmouth, Nova Scotia,Canada.LOVEABLE NEWSSTANDHyde Park's most loveable news-stand-Bob's Newsstand 51st A LakePk now carries over 1000 different/Mag titles plus 40 different under¬ground comix I Hours: Mon-Frl:6am-6pm; Sat: 6am-lam Sun 7am-. 4:30pm. Sun N.Y. Timas on saleSunday 8:30am. Shalom ITHIS WEEK IN CEFOn Tuesday hear Kris Kristoffersonlive at Mandel at 3:30 for $1. OnThursday see Truffaut's Shoot thePlano Player at Ida Noyes at 7 A9:15 for 25 cents. On Saturday seeSatyrlcon at Cobb at 6:30, 8:30,10:30. On Sunday see Last Summerat Law School at 7 A 9:15. OnThursday of next week Jules A Jim25 cents.PROTECTIONHouse-sitting situation wanted SumrQurtr and-or next year 363-2391.ABORTIONSWHY PAY for abortion counselingyou can get FREE In Hyde Park?NY abortions from $150 Call ClergyService, 667-6015LOSTLOST: 1 pair contact lenses inwhite plastic case Modest Reward.Call Gretchen 324-6037.INVESTMENTSPartnership In Retail A Rentalcamp’nn eauipment business MinCapital $1000 HICKORY 324-1499.SCENESSave June 19-20 For CHESSFIREWORKS-FIREWORKS-FIRE-WORKSSat. June 5, 9:45 p.m.EXHIBIT OF Contemporary TUR¬KISH PAINTINGS Now at Centerfor Continuing Ed. Open 24hrs aday.Mondo Mia. Say It five times with amouthful of Pasta.Informal Bible Study Sun eves, 8:30pm. Call 667-7632.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,Merrier, Radius and Daws.Factory trained mechanics.Used bicycles spasmod¬ically. Fly-by-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00-8:30; S&S 10-8The carpetbagger* from Old TownThe AACM Big Band performs ev¬ery Monday night from 9pm at thePumpkin Room, 2015 E. 71st Street.$1.50 Donation.You don't have to be Jewish to bepregnant, but if you are ... Callthe "Ark” 463-4545 4-10pm.REUNION IS FOR STUDENTSTOO IFireworks Sat. June 5, 9:45 pmSAVE June 19-20 for CHESSFly home in the same plana as yourbooks. Only air freight gives youthis kind of security. Cad AmericanAirlines campus rep. Jim Sack forthis added comfort at 604 6667.Omar Kayam never had It so good.Middle-Eastern cuisine at Ahmads,1450 East 57th Street.SHAPIROS ARE DUE JUNE 1st.Student Co-op will buy books. StartMonday May 25. 25% paper backstextbooks, too. AM only.SALE: on New SI ingarland Drums.30% Off All Sets — Used sets withZILDJZNCYMBALS. LIFE RHY¬THMS MUSIC. 1701 E. 55th St.Fixing guitars Is a Life RhythmsSpecialty 1701 E. 55th.EGGS BASTED IN BUTTER toppedwith fata cheese ... lust one of thedelicious dishes In EFENDI'S Sun-day Brunch. 12:30-3:30, Sunday,May 30, 1525 E. 53rd St.La Revua CAFE MOULIN ROUGEFrl Sat, Sun May 20-30 ReynoldsClub Theater 0:30 Tickets $1. Rey¬nolds Club Desk.LIFE RHYTHMS is an authorizedSlingerland drum dealer. StartingMay 12 (For one month) new Sling¬erland Drums on Salt for 30% offlist price. 1701 E. 55. U L_HJSUN INCOMESun Life’s new incomeprotection planCould you afford to stop working for a year?If not, talk with your man from Sun Life ofCanada about their new disability income plan... to keep the money coming in when you'renot able to.SUN LIFE OF CANADARALPH J. WOOD, Jr.GUIOne N. LaSalle St,Chic. 60602FR 2-2390798-0470CRAFT COOP features prints, tiedye, leather, macreme, and otherhandcrafts, ell done by local artiste.Visit us Mon-Frl 11:30-2:30 ThuraNit# 7-9 In the Blue Gargoyle 57th AUniversity.SHAPIROS ARE DUEWorks on loan from tho Art to Livewith Collection are DUE JUNE 1stIn IDA NOYES, Room 209. Thosoreturning works late will be fined 25cents per day.KRIS KRISTOFFERSONIHear the freshest new sound incountry-folk live at Mandel today at3:30 pm for only $1. On sale at thedoor: colorful tickets. KK Is winnerof Grammy Awards, has writtensuch as "Me and Bobble Mg Gee,"was voted the top Country Artist oflast year, and has bean lauded tothe skies by such as Newsweek,Daily News, Sun-Times, CBS nation¬al tv, Rolling Stone, and artists IlkaJanls Joplin.JAPANESE CULTURALPROGRAMFEATURING tho Shlzuko Inbe Clas¬sical Dance Troupe. TONITE Clois¬ter Club 0:30PM FREE! ABORTIONpregnancies up to 12weeks, terminated from$175.00Medication, Lab TestsDoctors fees includedHospital & Hospitalaffiliated clinics.(212) TR 7-88032 k hours-7 daysPHYSICIANS REFERRALWe know we can help you, even ifit's just to talk to someone.CPA REVIEWBECKER CPA REVIEW COURSE— new term begins Wed., 6-2. Halfof all successful ill. candidates areformer students. 346-7742.PERSONALSYegt Fasts Cencer.tr.Beg-Adv. Single-Group Cleseee SRINERODE OF INDIA DO 3-0155 To Mr. Biorling, Director PersonnelOffice: It the pictures you were tak¬ing at the rally didn't turn out, wewill be happy to supply substitutesfor $1.00 print. Library Staff Organ.Comm.WHO SAYS REUNION IS STUFFY?Fireworks Sat. June 5, 9:45 pmSAVE June 19-20 for CHESSFaculty and Students • Taka Us ToYour Bosom • Mondo Mia's.Free copies of the Birth ControlHandbook are available in the SGoffice, INH 210. Larger numbers ofcopies are available to students,faculty, or staff. Leave request withSG secretary.Let me sell your house, call 734-1743for an appointment attar 5pm.Coma and listen to tho soulfulstrains of UC's own folk and iazzmusicians. The Coffee House-Tonight 8-12 Ida Noyes Library.Ralph Nadar wouldn't want you toaccept a car as a graduation gift.Take a vacation to Mexico or Cali¬fornia on American Airlines Instead.Call campus rap. Jim Sack 684-6447for details.Responsible MD will drive your carto SF CAL Juno 12 No VW'S 955-6587.SHAPIROS ARE DUE JUNE 1stASTROLOGY — Personal con¬sultations are now offered to stu¬dents at a special student fat. Con¬cerned about career selection, |obopportunities, love, end yuuir reel■elf ... Call 723-1363 Jo Mitchell,O.F. Astro). S. Blow your mind with good music.Lowest prices on all stareoa at MU-SICRAFT. On campus. Bob Tabor,Life Rhythms to Hydo Parks firstmusic store for musicians. Wa areopen 7 days a week. 1701 E. 55th.The corner of 55th 8. Hyde ParkBlvd.Efendl opens for Brunch ....12:30 to 3:30 p.m., Sunday, May 30,Complimentary Champaign, all youcan eat of our sumptiousTbrkishbuffet. 1525 E. 53rd St.FLY EUROPE BY JET London endFrankfurt. Prize for only $144choice of departure a. return. ForInfo call 866-9800.Sail your library to tho Coop Bsmt.of Reynolds Club.HARPERCONCERT SERIESThe Harper Concert Series presents:String Quartet in B Flat Ma|or K.540, "The Hunt", by Mozart. Per-formed by Jim Bundle, violin; SallyBauman, violin; GerryKamow,viola; Bob Koenig, Cello. Friday,May 28th, 4 p.m.. Harper ReedingRoom. Sponsored by tho Collage endthe Office of Student Activities.SUPER PERSONALSThank you Joseph, Roscoe, Don.Letter and Malechl for the beau¬tiful I Incredible! concertlA Bad Am Ombudsman lCongratulations Annie from thoGuys at the Gulch.StudentDiscountModelCamera1342 E 55th493-6700Most complete phot0 shopMay », 1971/The CUcage Mareea/11SAVE'I| '**on all Spirits and Winesfor your vacation needs| * -I 'T 'iLOWEST PRICES IN THEMIDWESTCHOOSE FROM THE TREMENDOUS WINESELECTION - 1400 DIFFERENT WINESVINTAGES FROM 1856 TO 1969All nearby states have much higherprices. Stock up before leaving Chicagoand save as much as $200 per fifthon all spiritsjAll types of imported cheeses are pricedat extremely competitive pricesNew York Herkimer $ 129 per lb.■The Party Mart2427 East 72nd StreetBA 1-9210t-^jjtWE FEATURE ONLY NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS12/The Chicago Maroon/May 28, 1971Volume 3. Number 29 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of the Arts Friday, May 28,1971The CassowaryA short story by Penelope KashReed pen and brush drawing by David Travis.The jungle was as much the productof slow accretion as is the coral reef;there were small hills whose flowersbloomed with strange color, growingfrom the mounted corpses of a centuryof bright red birds, who chose or werewilled to return to a particular, impala-pably unique grove before death. Inslow competition the plants rose to thesunlight, and acceded with the gracefulmotion of a turning stem to the ultima¬tum of the royal palms, who saved thefullest sunlight for themselves and leftwhat scraps remained around theirfanning edges for the smaller growth offoliage. Orchids were parasites withouthumility and the trunks of trees thesolid points in a world of soft vegeta¬tion, like tent poles supporting thetough canopy of growth. Sinuous bynecessity, like pickpockets in a full-pressed crowd, animals veeredthrough thickets or lay still til theirnocturnal hours freed them from theteeth of sunlit predators.Baroque, symphonic, the jungle re¬peated each motif endlessly, until theanimals grew stupid in the heat andrested. The morning had been spent infuror, the animals strutted or leapedwith pride in their ingeniousness, satis¬fying nature with their corkscrewhorns or wide luxurious tails or branch¬ing stripes. The butterflies appliedthe cosmetician’s arts and painted eyeson their skirts. The ants formed abridge and hurried to the river’s otheredge, without looking at their armoredcomrades swept downstream, nevermeant to swim. Each variation, theproduct of natural selection, was famil¬iar, the sophisticated denizens werebored and had been, since the riveredvalley became tropical, and they werecompelled to flourish.The pattern was not tireless. The lionwaited couched in lushest repetition forthe changes in weather or season or hisown physiology.“Why struggle to resemble a thicketof cane with your stripes or dappledlight with your spots?” the carnivorequestioned. “The trick is so old that weare all now recognized by our decep¬tions. The life of an animal is frenzy,the life of a plant resignation. Only thebirds are enviable.”The birds crossed the sky with theirbrains like jewels, which navigatedwhile they felt no more than the wind.The birds were euphoric, careless,always on the verge of falling, yetconfident of minds so instinctual thatthey worked without the flying creat¬ure’s slightest notice. They flew, per¬fect in their vanity, and their joy was tobe visable. Only their vision was acute,so precisely printed in their sight thatthe characters never joined in words,and all, jealously distinct, were mean¬ingless.The lion in wisdom would glance ?tthe birds, envious, but saying, “Flyhappy idiots,” while light-bodied, na-iver cats climbed after them .and fellfrom trees, their claws scraping thebark. But even the clawed bark waspredictable.Only haphazard intruders from theveldt broke the weary harmony withunfamiliar growls and the sandy furappropriate to their patternless plaindesert. But as they paused, unused towalking on the spongy jungle floor, anddeafened by the chatter of cockatoos and apes, the spotless coats werespotted and their blundering ownerseaten. Their novelty faded with thetaste of their arid meat and the dis¬appearance of their foreign blood intoindifferent soil. The dry cockleburgrowing from the beast’s dead side atfirst would thrive, then die, ungratefulfor abundant rain so infrequent in thedesert.The harsh luxury was inhospitable tovagrants from another climate; thecondor and the jaguar, the monitor andboa were all the children of humid airand heat, and of the vast deception ofmimicry and adaptation. If MotherNature had elsewhere abdicated infavor of her weak but rational heir, shemaintained a duchy in that jungle,ruled by the dictum, “Procreate, diver¬sify, devour!” and the flowereingplants were no less shy than the lizardsand the carnivores, to live beneath thatbanner,There was, of course, no choice. Yetthe jungle’s rarest creature managedto elude the law by living in the dark. Itwas the Cassowary, known and enviedby no one, resembling nothing becausehe was never seen. Unobtrusive, dull,and rapid, the clumsy flightless bird was like the perfect courier, travelingceaselessly in search of darker nightsand denser thickets and the few blackseeds he swallowed on the run. Deniedthe sweet euphoria of the birds and thestolid sensuality of the mammals, theCassowary was consoled by the knowl¬edge that he could not be pursuedthrough groves of bamboo, which in therainy season grew shut like a swollengate behing him, or be devoured as hedrank from pools collected by darknatural law, from trees taxed heavilyby rainfall. When he sensed the deli¬cate tremor of another animal’sbreathing, he allowed himself to bedeflected to a side path by that breath,but detours relentlessly brought himcloser to the point where the jungle’sheart and his own timid one wouldcoincide.The night was without a moon, blackas a mind without a single thought. Interror the Cassowary wound throughthe depths of the jungle, between thick,intestinal vines, white from constantdarkness. Something stole his sense ofdirection, something sent him forwardin a staggering run. He had reachedthe chaotic <?nd essential con¬summation. The mocking darknesshad led him to his mate. It was, like all first loves, a humili¬ating and involuntary passion. Hisdelicate wife seen vanished, when leop¬ards woke and stalked their fragileshelter. Bitterly he acknowledged in¬stinct and ran in steady, unwillingpursuit of the female, reasoning thateven the proud theatrical swan isfaithful to one mate.That afternoon the Cassowary re¬sembled a'missionary tourist familiarwith a temple, which is suddenlyrecognized as a pyramid of lust, deco¬rated with indecorous embraces andkisses unknown to the temperate zone.The animals lay scattered in sensualdiversity, the suave leopards with thefinal grace that comes from knowingthat desire isn’t theirs but Nature’s,yet profiting from the pleasure. Seriousbaboons embraced their beloved, sala¬manders wriggled in a courtshipdance, and every camel had his hump.Even on the white veranda overlookingthe jungel basin, incestuous colonialsfondly sat, restrained before servants,unabashed before nightfall, un¬wittingly linked with all the hiddenbeasts below.At dusk, in desperation, the Cassowa¬ry questioned herbivores and insects,the smaller reptiles, and the carni¬vores who seemed well-fed or friendly.He damanded of a gaudy snake whatthe female Cassowary might look like,for he had met and loved her entirely inthe dark.“Ah, twinkletoes, she looks like you.Brown feathers, grey legs, not tooflashy. Not like this-” and he flicked hisown brocade back with his tongue.The Cassowary inquired of a stoutred monkey and his mate, had theyseen her?“That I can’t recall,” the monkeyanswered.“Do you know where the femaleCassowaries gather?”“I used to, but now it slips my mind.”“Is there really a plant which luresthe female and secures her love? ”“Yes. Of course. Definitely. It’sname, it’s name-I can’t put my fingeron it.”“You couldn’t if you had a hundredhands,” said the old monkey’s wife,and she led him home by the arm.So the Cassowary was left alone,unprotected by darkness, in an unfa¬miliar land. In a day he had becomeacquainted with the blind pervasiveforce of instinct, and seen it every¬where apparent, the mother of diversedeception and after that, of a boredgrace which made its slavery toler¬able. It was remarkably still. Hetrotted down a yellow clay path towardthe water, and a sigh passed back andforth between the trees.He saw his mate and was terriblyexcited; he broke into a gracefulflashing run. He recognized her not bysight but by her subtle and endearingscent, and was jubilant at her ugliness,which seemed so comfortable to him.She mildly lowered her head anddrank, tilting up her beak and swallow¬ing in gulp. She was wonderful. Thewind shifted and the female turnedsharply, glanced his way with roundstupid eyes, and ran off, terrified notby hfer mate but by the lion who heldhim by the throat, anu intently shookhim limp. The Cassowary is the rarestof creatures; the jungle a product ofslow accretion.MXJSICArt Ensemble: Expressive, DynamicIt’s true: they’re back. Individually,they are Joseph Jarman, Roscoe Mit¬chell, Lester Bowie, Malachi Favors,and an unidentified friend. Collectivelythey are the Art Ensemble of Chicago.The audience which packed CloisterClub last Wednesday night — a mixedbag of blacks, freaks, beats, and others— found the Ensemble’s music basic¬ally unchanged after a two-year exilein Europe. The Ensemble’s secondAmerican concert since their returnshowed that they are still playingmusic which demands a lot from thelistener, but gives back even more inreturn. It’s not conventional music —you’ll never hear it on AM radio — butit’s not really “difficult” either; not ifyou’re willing to surrender yourself fora few hours to the artistic world ofthese musicians. If you can approach itas honestly as it presents itself to you,it becomes music of a surpassingnaturalness and beauty.It’s hard to write about this music.Even recordings fail to capture itcompletely, because the Ensemble un¬derstands and exploits the power oftheir music as theater. With the in¬cense, the costumes and masks, thespontaneous choreography, the fivemusicians engulfed in a sea of literallydozens of percussion, wind and brassinstruments of every description, theEnsemble is a spectacle both bizarreand strangely seductive. The En¬semble’s music is diminished when it’sseparated from the all-encompassingmood created by the group, a moodcommunicated through sight and smellas well as sound.These theatrics have the effect ofundermining the Western notion thatthe audience and the musicians are(and ought to be) sharply and irre¬concilably separated. (This dis¬sociation has all kinds of unfortunateeffects. If the audience is “in here” andthe musicians “out there.” (or viceversa), no real communication cantake place. Art is reduced to perform¬ance. Musicians take on the character¬istics of trained bears — creatures inwhom is cultivated a skill calculated toentertain. At best, this separationleads to an emphasis on empty tech¬nique either on the individual (vir¬tuoso) or collective (ensemble) level.In either case, the artist is relegated tothe role of mere “performer” whoseperformance seeks to create the illu¬sion of some kind of musical decathlonchampion, or else a slightly animated,white-tie-and-tails mechanical musicbox. What more often happens isworse; since the artist is just a per¬former he can be turned on and off atwill, leaving the audience free to dis¬tort or ignore his message. He’s not taken seriously. Only in Westernsociety has music become Muzak.)The music of the Art Ensemble, onthe other hand, is not mere “perform¬ance”, but communication, expression,threat, entreaty, or, as last week’sprogram was entitled, “Passions ofSorrow.” It’s simply the most concisepossible communion between these mu¬sicians and their world. Their aim isnot to create illusion, but to express insound what they are. That’s why theirastounding technical mastery of all those instruments is important only asa basis, as a means and not an end.Forty instruments are just forty toolswith which to seize reality and remakeit in the artists’ own images. Or image,I should say; for the truly amazingthing about the Art Ensemble is theiralmost flawless unity. — the organicand dynamic unity of five artists whothink, create, who seem almost tobreathe together.The result of this marvelous feat ofpractice, intercommunication, and self-control is music at its most funda¬mental level — organized sound. Theprinciple of organization is emotional;and the Ensemble, with remarkablesensitivity, ran the emotional gamut,from the superficial calm and sup¬pressed violence of the delicate, ma¬rimba-filled opening section, to therage and passion of the horns in themiddle of the two-hour set, to thegradual relaxation of the ending, like abitter-sweet acceptance of the con¬tradictions that had come before.Through all the changes in tension anddensity, the direction of the musicaland emotional thrust was always clear.These musicians demand above all tobe taken seriously, as they take them¬selves. That means that no words —reviews, blow-by-blow descriptions, ortheoretical constructs — should me¬diate between their world and yours! Ihope America takes the second chanceit’s been offered to afford these artiststhe recognition they deserve. If youmissed the Art Ensemble last week,don’t make the same mistake twice. Ihope they’ll be back. (And all power toBlack Colony for sponsoring lastweek’s concert. Hopefully they’ll bebringing more black music in thefuture. Clearly the audience for it ishere.)—Steve MetalitzConviviality at Cafe Moulin RougeCafe Moulin Rouge will be UniversityTheater’s final production of the sea¬son on May 28, 29, and 30 in ReynoldsClub Theater.Directed by John Tsafoyannis, themusical revue carries the ParisianCafe from the Can-Can period of Tou¬louse-Lautrec to that of Jacques Brel,with stops in-between.With choreography by AdrienneBecker and musical direction by JoelCope, the stage is filled with Can-Cangirls, strippers, song-and-dance menand the people of Paris’ cafes andstreets.The cafe setting seems the naturalplace to find Gertrude Stein (AnnetteFern) and a few of her friends, theever-popular Yves M. (Patrick Bil¬lingsley) and his stripper friend (DianeKramek), and Apache Dancers (Adr¬ienne Becker and David Datz).The Cafe is located in Reynolds ClubTheater. Curtain time is 8:30 p.m.;admission $1.00 for all. Tickets are onsale at Reynolds Club Desk, and will beavailable at the door. Photo by Rosemary TerryCulture VultureMUSICThe University Chorus, Chamber Orchestra, and a JazzEnsemble are giving a Spring Concert in Mandel tonight, at8:30. Free. Works by Handel, Tirro, Charpentier, and Bach.Sunday the The Chicago Chamber Orchestra presentsMozarts Divertimento in F Major, K 138 and Handel's WaterMusic (complete). On the shore of ihe lagoon of the Museumof Science and Industry; 3:30. Free!Renaissance Music will be presented by the RadicalRenaissance Revivalists, at the Chicago Theological Semi¬nary (the Graham Taylor Chapel), Thursday June3 at 8:30.THEATERDream Theater opens at the Body Politic, presented bythe Community Arts Foundation and performed by TheChicago Extension. Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30. $2 andS3 2259 M Lincoln. 477 1977 Cafe Moulin Rouge isUniversity Theater's final production, featuring can-cangirls, strippers, and Frenchmen, Reynolds Club Theater,tonight through Sunday. 8:30; admission SI.The Goodman Theater continues to present Lady Audley'sSecret. Written by Douglas Seale, the play is taken from an1862 best selling novel by Mary Elizabeth Breden — allabout love, villains, good, evil, etc.The Ivanhoe presents Another Part of the Forest throughJune 6, written by Lillian Heilman, 3000 N Clark. Tuesdaythrough Friday, 8 30 pm; Saturday, 6 pm and 9:30 pm;Sunday 7 pm.Buck White is moving to Saint James United MethodistChurch, 4611 S Ellis Avenue. The all male black musicalplays every Thursday and Friday. Tickets are $2.50 4.50with $1 student discount except on Saturday.You're A Good Man Charlie Brown has opened at theHappy Medium, 901 N Rush for an extended run. Studentsmay purchase tickets for $3 a half hour before curtain time,Tues Fri performances at 7:30 pm.Chekhov's The Seagull is being performed for free everyFriday and Saturday at 7:30 at the Columbia CollegePerforming Arts Center, 1725 N Wells. 944 3756Free Theater will prsent through May, William Russo'sAesop's Fables Sunday at 7 and 9 Monday at 7 30 and 9. Atleast through the end of the month, they will also presentRusso's Civil War on Saturday evenings Call 929 6920 formore information. The meaier is at J257 N SheffieldObviously, admission free. Barbara Cranephotographs May 23-June 27Second Unitarian QxichSahjday.Sunday. 1 to5656 BarryA/e(328-3274) The Me Nobody Knows continues at the Civic Theater,Washington and Wacker. This is the Chicago production ofthe current New Yaork Obie award-winning rock musicalbased on the creative writings of school children from theghetto Tickets $4 7.50. Call 726 7890.Grease, a 1950's rock musical, continues at the KingstonMines Theater, 2356 N Lincoln.ARTThe Center for Continuing Education presents "Contem¬porary Turkish Painting" throughout June.Deson-Zaks Gallery, 226 E Ontario, offers "Shape ofRealism, May 21 June30.The Art Institute presents "Matisse as a Draughtsman"— over 80 charcoal drawings, watercolors, and cut paperdesigns, May 29 through July 11. Admission chargeAt the Museum of Contemporary Art, May 22 through July4 "Radical Realism" and "Cosmo Campoli Restrospective". (Casmo Campoli is a sculptor from Hyde Park.)The Renaissance Society Gallery will show "ChinesePainting at Mid Century" through June 12, 108 GoodspeedHall.The Bergman Gallery presents "Erotic and FantasticDrawings by Nine Artists" (arranged by GCJ art editorSusan Left) through June5. Cobb418The 31st Society for Contemporary Art Exhibition at theArt Institute continues through May 30, Montgomery WardGallery.Harriet M Harris Cneter offers very inexpensive coursesin drawing, painting, leathercraft, macrame, etc. begunApril 12. Call 955 3100 for info.Twentieth Century Prints at the Art Institute. Galleries108 and 109Ryder Gallery (500 N Dearborn) shows the fifty best printadvertisements and television commercials of 1970 andAIGA Communication Graphics show through June 4th.DANCE■ ue uariene Blackburn Dance Troupe is presenting newmaterial from Nigeria in a concert entitled Ouleku withmusic by the Pharoahs. Dunbar Auditorium, 2900 S King Drive, June 5, 8:00, tickets at the door $5.50, students halfprice. For information call CA 6 3077 or 536 2046.A Dance Workshop by Ronny Kaye continues throughJune at the Kingston Mines Theater, 2356 N Lincoln Ave.Classes are Monday nights, body movement, 7-8; modernjazz, 8:15 9:30. $2 per class. 525 9893The Stuttgart Ballet will be at the Civic monthly on dance,is available at $.20 a copy or $2 per year by writing theChicago Dance Foundation, 4949 S Woodlawn Ave., Chicago,60615. (if you're curious and money-cautious, a complimentary copy of the February issue is available from thesame address.)FILMWeekend fare about variations on coupling: Friday Docshows Elliott Gould, Dyan Cannon, Robert Culp and NatalieWood as Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice, though notrespectively, at7:15 and 9:30 In Cobb. Saturday at CEFFellini's Fellini Satyricon at 6:30, 8:30 and 10:30, also inCobb. Sunday is CEF's Last Summer at the Law School at 7and 9:15.Monday afternoon Doc will be showing George Franju'sJudex, at 3pm in Cobb, free to any and all comers. The filmis about a French super detective who punishes evilcapitalists in pre-WWI Europe. Friday next Doc is showingwhat happened after pre WWI Europe with RichardAttenborough's Ohi What a Lovely War, starring everyBritish actor alive.About town: Bertolucci's the Conformist at the Playboy,Forman's Taking Off at the Esquire; and Summer of '42continuing at the United Artists.SPECIAL EVENTThe Afam Gallery and Studio Coffee House, 1037 East 75thStreet, will present the GaJery Ensemble, Calvin Jones, juju man; Wesley McClendon, alto saxophone and flute; BillyMitchell, electric bass, Bobby Miller, drums; Gene Scott,acoustic bass; and Jose Williams, soprano saxophone andrlarinot nn May 29th Of 9 p.!T. Theintroduce a new compositionby Bobby Miller, entitled,"Died for What?" In addition to the sounds, coffee, fruitjuices, and covivality will be available.2/Grey City Joumal/May 28, 1971YearNail Poetry: Private and Purereview of the year nail, published inTHE NEW COLLEGIATE DIVISION, BY STU¬DENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO.The Year Nail is a collection of fifteen poems andfive drawings by University of Chicago under¬graduates. The cover has a photograph of the poets ina sunny room, the price is 35 cents, and you can buy itin the NCD office (Cobb 330). I am impressed by thegeneral high quality of these poems; and thedrawings by Laura Holland, who did those finewoodcuts in the Pierce Tower show, are an appro¬priate counterpoint to the poetry. The whole collec¬tion is free from the banality and faddishness thatsometimes haunt student anthologies. The selectionand format of The Year Nail give an impression oftaste and economy in editing.These poems are clearly the work of peoplewhose lives are primarily mental and whose ex¬perience is vicarious and aesthetic. Of all the poemsonly two or three are rooted in the poet’s experienceof the real world. The others spring from aesthetic orintellectual experience. The life of the mind ispresent in them almost to the point of solipsism; andthe life of the body and the plainer emotions havebeen thoroughly expunged. I am afraid that theyshow the negative effects of the University ofChicago, too much enforced remoteness from reality.These are the poets of the generation of the NewFeminism, psychedelics, hard sex, Whole Earth, andRevolution. But not a whisper of any of these things isadmitted into The Year Nail. This writing isconsciously timeless, and I wonder if such extremerefinement away from public reality is really good. Itsaves the poems from triteness but it also robs themof potential strength. The poets’ personal experienceas whole human beings is sublimated into a kind ofpoetic diction which is beautifully crafted but alsorather distant and cold.For all that, these poets have very distinctvoices. Elaine Cohen’s is the most personal. Thepoetry of nature and friendship is done in imageswhich, though not breathtaking, are lucid and direct:you asked me if I was coldand you wrapped my shawl tighteraround me no wind nowyour arms took oarsspread circles in the waterTom Donahue’s “Shoshannah” is a spare, lovelypoem. He asks of a dreaming girl beside him:in what green graceful fieldsare you runninghair flyingwithout me“A Thinking Man’s Game” by Richard Duffee is asuperb fantasy piece in which he plays chess with amadman using bizarre pieces, including a “Jean A sketch by Laura Holland.Paul Sartre piece,” a vulture’s egg that can captureanything anywhere. Duffee’s* “Ugetsu” is a beau¬tifully-wrought response to that haunting movie:It is seen and agreedabout the tonwn and country:your blue glazeis the luster of motherof pearl. It is a glazethat was unknownbefore you came.But in “Heraclitus at Delphi” he forces the languagebeyond the breaking point and the poem falls apart inthe first stanza.Paul Belserene’s “November 22, St. Cecilia’sDay” has a psychological intensity that the otherslack. The images are not merely precise; they aresuggestive, obscure, involuted, existential. This isthe one poem in the book whose individual lines makea catch in the breath, despite its difficulty anduneveness:The Senseless fills the sky.I will have long gone simple before March.Afraid. Again. Some old birds flap and cry* * *Let us wind you when the leaves are downFILMForman’s Comic CharmTaking Off, the new film by Milos Formancurrently at the Esquire Theater, is that rarest ofpleasures — a great comedy. There are plenty offunny pictures — Woody Allen’s Bahanas is a goodrecent example — but in a real comedy the laughsmean something, our pleasure carries beyond theostensible source of amusement. A film can doserious things without even being serious at all; infact, I personally respect the comic artists in film,such as Chaplin, Keaton, Ernst Lubitsch, or PrestonSturges, perhaps a bit more than the heavyweights.What they do is much more elusive, and much moredifficult. Try to count the great directors of comedy— there aren’t all that many.Milos Forman, the Czech director of Loves of aBlonde and the lesser-known but no less good TheFireman’s Ball, is one of those privileged few, and hisnew film about the problems of parents of runawaychildren is the best comedy to come to Chicago sinceTruffaut’s Stolen Kisses and Donen’s Bedazzled; it isfunnier than the former and more humanly com¬passionate than the latter.There is barely any plot. The fifteen-year-olddaughter of two limited but essentially decentsuburban parents runs off to audition, along withthousands of other kids, at a Fillmore marathon.When she returns home after an anguished night onthe parents’ part, their reaction moves her to runaway. As the weeks pass, and the parents unsuccess¬fully search for her, they meet many other parents offugitive children, most of them sincerely desiring tounderstand their children and at the same time muchhappier and closer together since they left.This sounds a bit unfairly sociological, becausethe film’s greatest charm and wisdom lies in itsstubborn refusal to comment on its characters’actions: rather it simply presents them in the mostaccurate and sympathetic way possible. Taking Off is a comedy of recognition, of seeing people we knowacting like the people we know — and in Forman’shands that itself is funny. He seems to discoverpeople in their moments of greatest naturalness, andhis humor aims for the fundamental actions ofpeople’s lives: getting along, making do, taking off.Taking Off is a leisurely comedy, and if you likeyour farce to zip along, you might squirm a bit,especially in the opening reel. But if you enjoy theamazing variety of all the faces you see every day,looking at a stranger’s eyes and sharing a momentwith him, and care about the fact that people careabout themselves, nearly every moment of TakingOff is precious. The Pentagon might call it a “lowprofile” picture — kids and parents may loose theircool, or get totally hysterical, or at least irremediab¬ly confused, but Forman’s pictures resolutely keepthe blood pressure down. The movie is so sane aboutour individual insanities that I left the movie feelingnot only better than when I came in, but richer.The performances are unextraordinary, butwonderful. Forman simply picks his players (mostlyamateurs) perfectly, and lets his great skill atunobtrusive cutting mold the “acting,” a techniquethat violates our theatrical prejudices but is con¬firmed by that grand old American criterion —success. Buck Henry and Lynn Carlin (playing a slyvariation on her role in Faces) are notably relaxedand have some good bits, and Linnea Hancock, astheir daughter, is the duck-angel of my dreams.I don’t want to spoil any of the amazing scenes inthe movie, all of which I like, but the lesson insmoking pot offered the curious masses of parentsqualifies as an instant classic. So do the successionsof untalented guitarists gamely making their try forinstant fame at the audition, and the strip pokergame played by two newly-stonecf couples, and thedrunken Henry trying to eat a hard-boiled egg. And rustle sounds around the trench and trees.* * HcThen let us when the last flag touches ground,and quick hands scratch up frenzy for the dance,Wind you up and store you in the earth,to spring out flowers when the sun comes round.Emily Grosholz writes with less emotional re¬straint than the others, and this gives a rich andsensuous texture to her poems, but her syntacticaland logical structure at times gets out of control.Both virture and excess can be seen in “Venus is theMorning Star”:Every highborn, every lowborn selfShares hands with me this morning, and wedanceAround the purple-veined horizon walls,Beneath the dome painted with wings.We company the warmeyed morning starWho leaves us full of snow, which were her hair,All strewed over our marble floor.Richard Mohr’s long untitled poem exhibits themost thoroughly evolved thought in the volume. It iswritten in a style that reminds me of the FourQuartets in its dizzying abstraction, but it is notrooted in Eliot’s familiar Christianity. Instead, theexperience it springs from is the mind’s experience ofits own condition, the mind contemplating the inwardimages of its own depth:You could see the church,but not the bell. Not a clang,but a continuous groan, din,murmur, susurration,a drone that neitherbeckons nor warns.It is brilliant, pure poetry; but these images are soinward and refined and private — the dream of adream — that we come out of the poem and the wholebook with a strong vague thirst for some sort ofordinary public daily experience.I know the reality of this country of distant purementality. But I also know that not many people thinkthese thoughts or feel the sublimated emotions thataccompany them. These are sophisticated poets inthe high academic tradition, but they are certainlynot the revolutionary vanguard that poetry needs togive it a large miscellaneous audience again. Theyhave rejected the way of Allen Ginsberg, say, withhis public images and accessible emotions, andinstead written house poetry for the educated few,who are at home in a thoroughly intellectualatmosphere. The Year Nail is a fine poetic expressionof the University of Chicago experience, in which wecan see all the strengths and limitations of poetswhose life is the life of the mind.—William CarpenterA scene from Forman’s Taking Off.Together with Bertolucci’s The Conformist (playingnext door at the Playboy), Taking Off makes thecurrent movie scene in Chicago the best it’s been in along, long while.—Myron MeiselMay 28, 1971/Grey City Journal/3Radical Realism in Art :An Intense ExperienceThe title of the new show at theMuseum of Contemporary Art, “Radi¬cal Realism,” sounds like just a newjuxtaposition of some old words — or itcould indicate the gropings of an arthistorical language trying to keep anapologetic pace with a Painting that itonce called dead. Even in this age ofsuper-transient art movements whereabstract expressionism is of the past,we can still look to it and the actionpainters for an unsurprising ancestryfor the artists in this show. The evi¬dence lies philosophically in the kind ofemphasis on process (though, alas, theaction painters too wound up with aproduct), and the artistic questions itraises go beyond the semantics of onlyone art form.In fact, the piece that commandsattention first (I saw almost no onebefore, during, and after the Members’Preview who was not immediatelydrawn to it, usually lettingout a slow“Wow”) is a sculpture by Robert DeAndrea. It is a virtuoso performance,as are all the works in the show, intechnical execution and “realistic” il¬lusion: a male nude whose out¬stretched arm is the only support forthe female suspended off the ground ina running position.The “how” of its execution fits wellinto the show’s theme of where theartist goes for his reality. Da Vinci would be pleased; this one goes toNature herself. Casts were made fromlive people, and then used as a mold forthe sculpture. Unlike George Segal,who uses the mold itself as a positiveelement, De Andrea uses the negativeof his mold to recast and works inelaborate detail, recreating the meti¬culous physical reality of living humanbeings. (The woman was actually sus-'pended while he made the cast.) It isinteresting that the work is placeddirectly to the left of two large paint¬ings which were done by anothersculptor, Stephen Posen. He createdhis own subject by setting up still lifesof boxes wrapped in cloth and renderedthemexa. is seen.Most of me other artists paintdirectly from photographs, but thedivergency of their styles once moreplaces the focus on the tremendoussubjectivity of their approaches. Theconcept of an assumed “photographicreality” that we are conditioned intobelieving is objective, is once and forall obliterated. In other words, RalphGoings can translate with graphicprecision every light and shadow ontrucks in suburban drive-in settings;Robert Bechtle can evoke every stain¬less steel sparkle on a towel dispenser;Richard McLean can create every veinand shiny ripple on a horse of which hehas only seen a photo; Malcolm Morley Howard Konovitz’can go so far as to turn his canvasupside down and paint his subject bytwo-inch squares to divorce himselffrom it. Their very own Art creeps in inspite of these efforts, and the formal,abstract elements take over — in thecolor (Paul Sarkesian has a giantcanvas of a backyard scene perhapsinspired by the camera and certainlyreminiscent of a day seen through ayellow lens filter), the strange surfacequality, the eerie lighting. Compositionitself and its relationship to subjectmatter seem resolved in psychologicalterms.John Clem Clarke is yet anotherexample of an artistic inspiration real¬ ‘Death in Treme.”ly derived from procedures though heostensibly went to art history for hissubjects. A Manet, for example, wasprojected in the form of a slide fromwhich a stencil was cut through whichpaint was sprayed. The technique andeffect are totally unique, and thequality is something I could hardlyrelate even vaguely to any past artmovement. You simply have to bethere to sense the lurking, non-verbalemotionality of the art in this show. 1came away with the feeling that nomatter how I identify it, it’s “real” ifit’s something I can identify with.—Patricia SfeoraMUSICRelaxed and Rugged KristoffersonIt’s been four long months since the last popconcert on this campus and while the Kris Kristoffer¬son concert in Mandell hall Tuesday afternoon wasnot exactly worth four months waiting for, it was apleasant way to spend an overcast May afternoon.Kris Kristofferson is about thirty, bearded, talland rugged. One demure young lady in the audiencesaid “this Univeristy could use some more men likehim — real men.” This is the aura that Kristoffersonemits — and his voice reflects his ruggedness. He isrough, gravelly and not particularly melodic. At onepoint after having sung a song, Kris said “that’swhat the melody should sound like” as his guitaristpicked-out the tune. Kris wasn’t kidding. His voicedoes disguise the melody.Further, many of the songs that Kris writessound a lot like all the others. In the first setparticularly, I was sure that he had already playedsome of the songs he was performing, but as theyprogressed, it became apparent that they were justhighly reminiscent of previous ones. Kris’ unmelodic voice aggravates this problem.Besides, Kris Kristofferson can’t play his guitarfor beans. His lead guitarist, Terry, played circlesaround Kris’ monotonous strumming. Terry pickedsome very fine stuff and played a great 12-string,finding medodies and chords that one could notsuspect would come up in a Kris Kristofferson song.The other instrumentalists were ordinary, particu¬larly the bassist who seemed to know only the mostmediocre bass lines. Terry’s contribution to thesound of this group can not be over-emphasteed. Hewas the only one who really played music.With all these things working against the successof this concert, why was it such a success? Probablybecause it was fun.Kris Kristofferson may not be a great singer orinstrumentalist, but he has an astonishingly relaxed,easy-going stage manner. His patter between thesongs was not forced — it seemed natural and wasoften quite amusing. Even during the songs, heimprovised the lyrics, adding jokes about his dry throat and the time of day to the delight of theaudience.Perhaps Kris Kristofferson’s songs do sound a bitrepetitious, but some of them are beautiful andcreative. Kris is one of the new breed country artists.He does not rely on the “June-moon-spoon” lyrictradition of country musicians, but writes lyrics thatreflect his Rhodes scholar training. “Me and BobbyMcGee”, Kris’ most well known song, contains theironic philosophy of freedom: “Freedom’s justanother word for nothing left to lose.” Many of hissongs also contain references to dope and liquor, anew outlook for the country sound.Concerts are fun. They allow the audience tobask in the limelight of a fine performer and to watcha talented musician at work. This year has beenduller for the absence of these affairs. I hope it is notanother four months before the next pop concert onthis campus. We need them a bit more frequently.—Mitchell BobbinTl IS LOOKING FORNUMBER ONE COMBINATIONTexas Instruments is looking for a young person with a variety oftalents. He must have a high degree of business savvy as well as aworking knowledge in electronics. With an educational back¬ground combining a BS and masters in EE and/or a BBA and MBA.And he must speak Japanese and English fluently.Prefer a recent college graduate with 0 to 3 years experience insemiconductors. You will be working in Tokyo. Japan. Your jobassignment will be varied from marketing to manufacturing tofinance to sales - all leading to a management position.If you have this language and job flexibility writeBOB HENSLEECorporate StaffingTEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED ! 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