The Summer MaroonVolume 80, Number 4 The University of Chicago Wednesday, August 4, 1871Lloyd Eldon SaundorsNICHOLAS RUDALL: An assistant processor of classics and director of the currentCourt Theatre production “Lysistrata,” he will become University Theatre directorstarting in the fall.Nicholas Rudall namedBy MITCH BOBKINNicholas Rudall, assistant professor ofclassics, has been appointed director ofUniversity Theatre (UT) beginning in theautumn quarter.Rudall, who will be the first academic tohold the UT post, will continue his teachingassignments in classics and in the com¬mittee on general studies in the huma¬nities.In the coming academic year, Rudall willbe teaching a three-quarter theater course,the University’s first serious study of thetechniques and philosophy of drama.Since Rudall will not be able to spend allhis time in the theater, Robert Nelson, as¬sistant director of student activities, has been appointed as UT administrative as¬sistant.Nelson will be in charge of the day-to-dayrunning of the UT office while Rudall willbe in charge of the theater’s artistic andpolicy-making decisions.UT is currently looking for a new techni¬cal director. Hopefully, one will be appoint¬ed in time for the start of autumn quarter.Rudall will be replacing Annette Fernwho served as UT director. Miss Fern’scontract was not renewed after her one-year term. Miss Fern’s dismissal was thesubject of a slight controversey in thespring quarter. Some students felt that herdismissal came before she had had achance to prove her abilities. The Maroon HEW investigates UCdiscrimination chargeBy PAUL BERNSTEINThe US department of health, educationand welfare (HEW) is sending five staffmembers to the University this week to in¬vestigate charges of job discriminationagainst women.According to Hilda Smith, history, of theUniversity Women’s Association, the in¬vestigation is the result of a report sub¬mitted to HEW in January 1970 by Jo Free¬man, political science, which charged sexdiscrimination in University hiring and pro¬motion practices.Federal contractors art prohibited by ex¬ecutive order from discriminating againsttheir employees on the basis of race or sex.Federal contract negotiations with a uni¬versity can be suspended if HEW finds evi¬dence of such discrimination.The Freeman report charged that in sixsocial science departments no women hiredfor untenured positions had ever workedtheir way up to full professorships. It waslater used as data by the Women’s EquityUT directorsupported this argument in an editorialduring the quarter.Rudall has been at the University since1966. He has directed a number of theaterevents during that time including the cur¬rent Court Theatre production of “Lysist-rata,” reviewed below.Because Rudall will still be holding anacademic appointment, the majority of hissalary will come from the humanities divi¬sion. The UT budget will supply him with astipend, however. This amount will be farless than the UT directory has been givenin the past. Rudall has many ideas for us¬ing the extra money which he explained inan interview Monday.Continued on page 2 Action League, a national group, whichcharged sex discrimination against the Uni¬versity to HEW last December.Miss Smith said she did not know if thelatter charge had helped bring about theinvestigation. HEW ofifcials could not bereached for comment.Members of the UWA circulated some 200questionnaires to women staff and facultyafter HEW indicated it would conduct aninvestigation, Miss Smith said, and sentthem to the regional HEW office. Most ofthe respondents charged some kind of dis¬crimination, she added.She said that one of the group’s majorfindings was that “when women apply forjobs, there is little relationship betweentheir training and the job they receive. Awoman’s education has almost nothing todo with her salary.”Other complaints included salary differ¬ences for men and women doing the samework and low pay raises, she said.The team of HEW investigators will talkwith University officials, hold interviewsand study records.William Cannon, vice president for pro¬grams and projects, said he had been toldthat HEW was coming “very soon” butthat he did not know what charges or gen¬eral areas were being investigated.Cannon said that the University was pre¬pared to cooperate fully with the in¬vestigation “although I don’t mean by thatthat we’ve done anything wrong.”Cannon said his office had been in“frequent communication” with HEW overthe last years concerning University hiringpractices, although it was usually with re¬spect to minority groups rather than wom¬en.“We’ve given them statistical informa¬tion on several occasions,” he said. “Eachtime we’ve answered their questions satis¬factorily; it’s an ongoing administrativeprocess.”THEATERCourt's 'Lysistrata a totally enjoyable showBy CON HITCHCOCKAristophanes’ Lysistrata (the current Court Theatreproduction) is a play that is supposed to be “relevant toout times.” First produced in 411 BC, it tells of a war thatis bitterly opposed by the women of Greece, who vow toabstain from sex with their soldier-husbands until theyvote for peace.Many productions of these “relevant” plays seek todrive home their point with a sledgehammer, and the re¬sult is often a heavy-handed production that sacrifices dra¬ma to make some point.Fortunately, director Nicholas Rudall does not fall intothis trap, and Court Theatre’s current production of “Ly¬sistrata'’ provides the playgoer with a totally enjoyableevening of theater in what is the finest production in recentCourt seasons.Skillfully acted and staged, this production allows themany facets of this play to emerge, and the slapstick, thebawdy dialogue, and the characterization are all welltreated and presented with the attention which they de¬serve, with nothing sacrificed to the “point” of the play.C Heard brings to the title role the coolness and thestrength that are needed to keep the troops in line lest theyrun home to their husbands and lest the anti-war ardorbums out in their hearts.My only complaint is at tii she seemed to un¬derplay the role — perhaps she shouiu nave been more of acastrating female, especially when she is explaining to thecommissioner how to form a good government. But overallshe gives an excellent performance, particularly when shehas the women swear to abstain from sex.Several other actors are worthy of note, especiallyJohn Tsafoyannis and Gail Wilson in the scene where heattempts to lure her away from the women and back intohis bed. She agrees to see him only after he has promised1o vote for peace and then tantalizes him (as per Lysistrata’s instructions) by forgetting to get the bed, the mat-ress, perfume, etc, etc, etc, only to find that her super- aroused husband is merely going to “think about” votingfor peace. This scene is one of the funniest of the play, andit is performed to perfection by these two.As the commissioner unable to run the war because thewomen occupy the treasury, J David Cope provides theright amount of bluster and pompousness, though he mighthave done better to throw down in anger the veil and potsthe women lay upon him instead of just carrying themaround.The other women occupying the Acropolis — BarbaraHill, Sylvia Helm, Gloria Skurski, Liis Kuningas, and Su¬san Seliger — are competent, while Edna Caldwell is adelightful (if a bit too hammy) Calonike, and DvoraSchwartz brings the right amount of Spartan vigor andausterity to the role of Lampito.Saving the best for last, the two choruses were nothingshort of magnificent. The chorus of six old men who plan tostorm the Acropolis and free it from the women, are con¬fronted by six women who plan to douse the torches and toblock any attack on their sisters.Here is some of the best staging in the production asthe choruses respond to the barbs of each other and engagein some of the most entertaining battles of the evening, asthe old men, scarcely able to walk, are continually tauntedand beaten back by the women. Although the men occa¬sionally were unable to rise above a monotone, the wom¬en’s voices were perfect. Every word could be heard clear¬ly, something that doesn’t often happen in plays requiringa chorus.One of the highlights of the chorus scenes — in fact, ofthe whole play — was the use of Daniel Pugh’s masks andcostumes, which greatly enhanced the show. The sets werequietly effective, as was the flute and drum accom¬paniment during the chorus songs.T urge you to see “Lysistrata,” which is playing thelast four shows this weekend. Its story, its acting, its stag¬ing, itc dialogue (Rudall’s own excellent and veryliteral translation) all combine to make for an excellent,lively production of this “relevant” play. St*v* AofclLYSISTRATA: C Heard (above) play the title role in anexcellent production of the Aristophanes comedy whichwill be performed by Court Theatre for the last time thisweekend.ABOUT THE MIDWAYBosen on CHANicholas Bosen, assistant dean anddean of students in the law school, has beenappointed to the Chicago Housing Author¬ity, which is responsible for determinghousing policy for the city.The appointment was made by MayorRichard Daley. The Sun-Times reportedthat Bosen had been active in Daley’s elec¬tion to a fifth term last April.Bosen has been at the law school since1969. Before that he worked for the FederalTrade Commission in Washington and for alaw firm in Chicago. He received a JDfrom the University law sch* 1 in 1966.Bosen replaces another tm **sity pro¬fessor, Richard Wade, on the authority.Wade, a professor of American urban his¬tory, went to the City University of NewYork last year. He is currently in charge ofthe New York presidential campaign of SenGeorge McGovern (D-SD)GrantsThe University has received from a fed¬eral agency a $100,000 contract to studyCanada’s experience with universal healthinsurance, and a $45,000 contract to studyhospital staffing in the United States, Swe¬den, and Great Britain.The contracts, for three years, effectiveJuly 1, were made by the National Centerfor Health Services Research and Develop¬ment, an agency of the US Public HealthService, to the center for health adminis¬tration studies of the Business school.Odin Anderson, professor of business andsociology and associate director of the cen¬ter, will administer the two contracts.Robin Badgley, professor and director ofBehavioral Sciences at the University ofToronto School of Medicine, will serve incollaboration with Anderson as staff direc¬tor of the $100,000 Canadian study, under asubcontract from the University of Chicagoto the University of Toronto.“Health legislation in Canada should beof particular interest to policymakers inthe United States,” said Anderson. “The or¬ganization of hospital and physicians’ ser¬vices in the two countries is virtually thesame. Autonomous hospitals are owned bynon-profit corporations or government bod¬ies, and both countries have an autonomousmedical profession that has offices indepen¬dent of the hospitals.The three-nation study of hospital staff¬ing is a cooperative program with HarvardUniversity. Duncan Neuhauser, assistantprofessor in Harvard’s school of publichealth, will work with Anderson on thestudy.Neuhauser, who received his PhD in hos¬pital and health administration in 1971 fromthe University, will take a paid leave fromHarvard to visit Sweden with Anderson thissummer.Hospital personnel per patient day inSweden in 1967 totaled 1.47, versus 2.65 forthe U.S. and 2.38 for Great Britain, accord¬ing to Anderson.The purpose of this comparative study,said Anderson, is to learn where savingsmight be made in use of personnel. Otherfactors that Anderson and Neuhauser plan to study include the effect on staffing pat¬terns of hospital size, scope of services, av¬erage length of stay, and occupancy rate,and whether some members of the hospitalmedical team might substitute for others.Daly to HarvardCharles U Daly, former University vice-president for development and public af¬fairs, was recently appointed vice-presidentfor government and community affairs atHarvard University.Daly was vice-president here from 1964-1969 when he resigned to head the Chil¬drens’ Foundation in Washington, DC. Mi¬chael Claffey is now vice-president for de¬velopment, and Eddie Williams is now vice-president for public affairs.Appointments• Eugen Pusic, Yugoslavian social wel¬fare expert, has been named visiting pro¬fessor in the school of social service admin¬istration at the University.The appointment, effective January, 1,1972, was announced by University Pres¬ident Edward Levi.Harold Richman, professor and dean ofSSA said, “Eugen Pusic will bring to ourfaculty a rare breadth of learning and ex¬ perience drawn from European countriesas well as many developing nations on oth¬er continents. He adds great distinction toour faculty.”Pusic is currently professor of public ad¬ministration, faculty of law, at the Univer-stiy of Zagreb. He will be in residence atthe University for six months each yearover the next three academic years.He served as President of the Inter¬national Conference on Social Welfare from1964 to 1669, and has been at various timeshead of the organization and planning de¬partment of the Ministry of Social WelfarePolicy in Croatia, Yugoslavia, and assist¬ant secretary of state in the Council ofHealth and Social Planning in Croatia . . .• Joseph Drake, 31, has been appointedgeneral manager of the University printingdepartment.The appointment, effective immediately,was announced by Robert Heidrich, direc¬tor of purchasing and auxiliary services atthe University.Drake has been with the University sinceFebruary, 1970. He succeeds Greer Allen,who is leaving the city.Drake has been accounting manager inthe printing department and is enrolled inthe University business school’s 190-MBA program ...• Larry Greenfield, a graduate of the di¬vinity school, has been named to the newly-created post of assistant dean of students inthe school.Greenfield’s appointment, effective July1, was announced by Joseph Kitagawa, pro¬fessor and dean of the divinity school andprofessor of far eastern languages and civ¬ilizations . . .• Dr James Bowman, Jr has been ap¬pointed director of laboratories at the Uni¬versity hospitals and clinics.His appointment to the new position wasannounced by the dean of the division ofthe biological sciences and the Pritzkerschool of medicine.Dr Bowman, 48, is associate professor ofpathology and medicine, and in the com¬mittee on genetics and the College. Hecame to the University in 1963 as medicaldirector of the blood bank and assistantprofessor of medicine.One of three doctors on the nine-memberHealth and Hospitals Governing Commis¬sion of Cook County, he is also a consultanton health facilities planning to the US de¬partment of health, education and welfareand a board member of the MetropolitanChicago Blood Council.“Dr Bowman will direct and review theservice, teaching and research programs ofthe general services, clinical chemistry,microbiology, serology, and related labora¬tories, and the blood bank,” said Dr JosephKirsner, deputy dean for medical affairsand chief of staff of the hospitals and clin¬ics .. .• Dr Emily Jo-Ming Pang has been ap¬pointed assistant professor in the depart¬ment of pediatrics of the division of thebiological sciences and the Pritzker schoolof medicine.Dr Pang received the MD degree in 1961from the National University of TaiwanMedical School, Taipei, Taiwan. She intern¬ed at Maimonides Hospital, Brooklyn,New York, from 1962 to 1963. She was resi¬dent in pediatrics in the Coney Island Divi¬sion of Maimonides Hospital from 1963 to1965.In 1965, Dr Pang joined the staff ofKing’s County Hospital, Downstate MedicalCenter, Brooklyn, as a fellow in hematolo¬gy-Dr Pang came to the University of Chi¬cago in 1966 as a fellow in pediatric hema¬tology . . .• A world authority on diseases of theliver has been named the second WalterPalmer visiting professor at the Univer¬sity.Dr Sheila Sherlock will serve as visitingprofessor in the department of medicine atthe University November 1-3, 1971. She ischairman and professor of Medicine in theUniversity of London Royal Free Hospitalschool of medicine. At the University ofChicago she will consult with the gas¬troenterology staff and conduct gastroente¬rology rounds, conferences, and lectures.The visiting professorship was estab¬lished in 1966 to honor Dr Walter L Palmer,the Richard T Crane professor emeritus ofmedicine at the University. Until his retire-Continued on page 3r, « SCIENCE FICTION FILMSfHhniP _ „ „. _ _■IDR SIDE DFTHE Slin “ exactly opposite the earth #n the other side of the sun. Their ship. J crashes and the astronauts find themselves trapped on a mirror-image Earth - whereeverything is reversed, excellent technical achievements with interesting concepts\4jjBmake this film a must. Roy Thinnes, Ian Hendry, PatricK. .,'ymark.FRIDAY 8:00 IN COBB Aug. 6MOTORS AUTO SERVICEComplete Auto RebuildingPainting & FrameAlso VW RepairsQuality service work done for less than thedealer.1536 East 71 st Place288-3434 i REDEEM THIS COUPON FOR: 1! 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Rudall plans festivallong-term projectsContinued from page 1Beginning in the autumn quarter, UTwill hold workshops three-times per weekin dance, acting and hopefully in technicaldesign, Rudall said. “Certain plays arevery difficult for students to do, but in con¬junction with our workshops some of theseobstacles will be falling down.” Hopefullythe workshops will elucidate some of theproblems of upcoming UT productions sothat performance quality can be improved,he added. “We will co-ordinate our work¬shop work with the productions and we willco-ordinate the productions with a student’slife.”With some of the money, Rudall hopes tohire an outside director to come to campusand direct a full-scale production.During one quarter next year, UT willsponsor a festival of the American theater.The festival will be a mixed-media series ofevents explaining the development ofAmerican drama. Rudall hopes to use lec¬tures, UT productions, films, music and alibrary display of American drama booksto capture and develop the growth US the¬ater.Rudall is currently seeking outsidespeakers for the festival and TennesseeWilliams has been invited and has showninterest in the project. During the festivalquarter, UT would hopefully have product¬ions by major American dramatists in¬cluding Williams and O’Neill.Rudall will direct at least two plays nextyear. He hopes to start in the fall with“Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead”,the recent play concerning Hamlet’s twoassociates.UT will sponsor staged readings of playsthat are being studied in humanities classesthis coming year. Rudall feels that this will bring UT closer to campus life. “There isvery little connection now between Rey¬nolds Club and Cobb Hall. I’ve talked aboutthis problem and how I’d like to see itchange. The Reynolds Club was becomingan isolated part of the campus. Many pro¬fessors and students were not visiting thetheater,” Rudall said.UT could also plan its production far inadvance, according to Rudall. In this way,a student during his four years at the Uni¬versity could see many different periods oftheater rather than just leaving the choiceof productions up to the whim of individualstudents and faculty members. “However,I wouldn’t want the theater to become oneperson’s property,” Rudall added.Rudall’s appointment, like Miss Fern’s,is for one year with review and possiblereappointment after that time.Rudall, a native of Wales, began his the¬atrical career playing Shakespearian wom¬en in boarding school. At Cambridge,where he received his BA, he worked on avariety of drama events and appeared inrevues with David Frost.At Cornell, where he received his PhD,Rudall did a great deal of acting and di¬recting. Here at the University, he has di¬rected “Under Milkwood”, “The Guard¬ian”, “Tis a Pity She’s a Whore”, “TheMarriage of Heaven and Hell”, and otherproductions. He has also appeared in anumber of shows including “Richard III”and “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern,”which was performed during Victoria’sWorld two years ago.Rudall’s wife, Diane, has also done agood deal of acting including work at Chi¬cago’s Hull House. Together they havepresented “Entertaining Mr Sloane” atChicago’s Columbia College.ABOUT THE MIDWAYContinued from page 2ment, Dr Palmer was also head of the gas¬troenterology section of the department ofmedicine. The Walter L Palmer Fund,which supports the professorship, is main¬tained by more than 400 colleagues,patients, and friends of Dr Palmer . . .• Dr Ronald Singer has been reappointedchairman of the department of anatomy inthe division of the biological sciences andthe Pritzker school of medicine.His new three-year term, effective July 1,was announced by University PresidentEdward Levi.He has written extensively on the physicalanthropology of Africa south of the Sahara.He was a faculty member of the Universityof Cape Town department of anatomy from1949 to 1960.Singer has published over 100 scholarlypapers, including studies on the sickle celltrait in Africa and in Madagascar.A frequent visitor during the 1950’s to theUnited States, where he performed re¬search and lectured on anatomy, Africanpaleontology, and anthropology, he joinedthe faculty of the University of Chicago asThe Summer MaroonPAUL BERNSTEINMITCH BOBKINCON HITCHCOCKEditorsMIKE COHENBusiness ManagerSTEVE AOKI, DAVE FOSSEPhotography EditorsMARK BLECHNER, CHARLES FLYNN,SUSAN LEFFStaffDIANA LEIFERAssistant Business ManagerFounded in 1892. Fublished by University ofChicago students every other Wednesday duringthe summer. Offices in rooms 303 and 304in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 East 59th Street,Chicago, Illinois 60637. Phone 753-3263. Summerhours: during weeks when an issue appears,Monday afternoon, all day Tuesday, Wednesdaymorning. During alternate weeks, open only onTuesday. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mail $9 per year in the UnitedStatus Mnn-prnfit nnrtano paid at ChicagoIllinois. professor of anatomy in 1962. He wasnamed acting chairman of anatomy in 1963and chairman in 1965.KudosUniversity of Chicago economist RobertFogel has been awarded the Joseph ASchumpeter Prize for 1971 by the presidentand fellows of Harvard College.Fogel, a professor of economics and his¬tory, is a co-winner of the prize with AlbertFishlow of the University of California atBerkeley. Each will receive a cash awardof $2000.'Fogel and Fishlow are hailed as pioneersof the “new economic history. . .Their workhas extended the range of econometricanalysis to long-run problems of economicgrowth. Their efforts have yielded rigorousand fresh interpretations of the Americanpast.”The prize, honoring the late professor Jo¬seph Schumpeter, is awarded to one whohas made an original contribution to eco¬nomics, regardless of academic standing,affiliation with educational institutions, na¬ tionality, or any other possible restrictions.The primary test in awarding the prize isdepth and originality of perception. It hasbeen awarded only four other times since itwas established in 1955.Before coming to the University in 1963as a Ford Foundation Visiting ResearchProfessor, Fogel was an instructor atJohns Hopkins University and an assistantprofessor at the University of Rochester.Through January 1972, he is on leave ofabsence to lecture and write. His most re¬cent book is “The Reinterpretation ofAmerican Economic History” with StanleyL Engerman et al.Art exhibitionSculptures and ceramics by Francis I Os-ague, a Nigerian graduate student in thedepartment of fine arts, will be on displayat Midway Studios August 6 through the 28.Osague’s sculptures reflect both contem¬porary modern sculptures and traditionalAfrican art. All members of the Universitycommunity are invited to view these worksof art. EXHIBITION: “Afro-American Portrait,”one of the sculptures of Francis I Osague,is one of the works on display at MidwayStudios.BULLETIN OF EVENTSWednesday, August 4CONCERT: Contemporary Arts Quartet Cobb, 8 pm.FILM: Douglas Sirk's "All that Heaven Allows'' Centerfor Continuing Education, 8 pm, $1.Thursday, August 5CONCERT? Kevin Henry with his Uilleann pipe andIrish songs, Hutch Commons, noon.FILM: "Phantom of the Opera," Cobb, 8 pm, $1.GAY LIB: Consciousness group on bisexuality, IdaNoyes, 7:30 pm.THEATER: "Lysistrata," by Aristophanes, CourtTheatre production, 8:30 pm.Friday, August 6FIL\U "Journey t othe Far 5ide of the Moon," Cobb,8 pm, $1.FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes parking lot, 8 pm tomidnight.THEATER: "Lysistrata" by Aristophanes, Court Thea¬ter production, 8:30 pm.Saturday, August 7TRIP: Starved Rock State Park. Sign up at studentartiyitipc nffire 1NH 909 XT591THEATER: "Lysistrata" by Aristophanes, Court Thea¬ter production, 8:30 pm. Sunday, August 8SERVICE: Charles Mayer, Minister of UniversityChurch of Disciples of Christ, Rockefeller chapel,11 am.CARILLON RECITAL: Jack Ulrich, director of music,Lutheran Church of the Holy Communion, Rocke¬feller chapel, 4 pm.THEATER: "Lysistrata" by Aristophanes, Court Thea¬ter production, 8:30 pm.Tuesday, August 10FILM: "True Grit," Hutch Commons, 7:15 & 9:30pm, SI.Wednesday, August 11CONCERT: New Deal String Band, Hutch Court, noon.GALA: New Deal String Band, Hitchcock Quads, 8 pm.FILM: Alfred Hitchcock "North by Northwest," Cen¬ter for Continuing Education, 8 pm, $1.Thursday, August 12CONCERT: University Symphony Orchestra, HutchCourt, noon.GAY LIB: Consciousness group on bisexuality, IdaNoves. 7:30 om.FILM: W C Fields in "You're Telling Me," Cobb,8 pm, $1. Friday, August 13FILM: "The Day the Earth Stood Still," Cobb,8 pm, $1.FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes parking lot, 8 pm to mid¬night.THEATER: Shakespeare's "The Taming of the Shrew,"Court Theatre production, 8:30 pm.Saturday, August 14TRIP: Rain date for trip to Starved Rock State Park.THEATER: Shakespeare's "The Taming of the Shrew,"Court Theatre production, 8:30 pm.Sunday, August 15SERVICE: Robert Middleton, Minister of Hyde ParkUnion Church, Rockefeller chapel, 11 am.CARILLON RECITAL: Raymond Keldermans, carillon,neur, Thomas Rees Memorial Carillon, Rockefellerchapel, 4 pm.THEATER: Shakespeare's "The Taming of the Shrew,"Court Theatre production, 8:30 pm.Tuesday. August 17FILM: "The Tenth Victim," Cobb, 8 pm.August 4, 1971/The Summer Maroon/3GAIA!Summer on the QuadranglesFestival Night *WednesdayAugust 11 ffhHitchcock Quad8 p.m.NEW DEAL STRING BAND!(bluegrass!)Calliope concert!(a 1910 Pangley Circus Calliope, made in Muscatine, Iowa).Ice cream!Balloons!Cotton Candy (maybe)FreeFreeFreeFreeFreeFreeFreeFreeFreeFreeFreeFreeeeeeeeeeRain? Moved to 7 p.m. August 12th STUDENT CO-OPBOOKSTORESUMMER CLOSEOUTRECORD SALE10% OFF ON ALLOF OUR DISPLAY COPIESONLY ONE COPY OF EACHRECORD SALE BEGINSTHURSDAY MORNING!3.99 3.59 3.29 -► 2.96SO TRUCK ON IN!WE ARE BUYING ANDSELLING USED BOOKSALSO GOT LOTS OFTHAT WHOLESALE LOVE!REYNOLDS CLUB BSM'T11:00-5:00 M-FBONUS - New Deal String Band Concert-Wednesday, August 11 th NOONSummer on the QuadsGIVE A DAMN.USE A CONDOM.Take the worry out of sei, and you’ll enjoy it even more!Making love is great. And if you really give a damn about both yourlives...you’ll want to protect her against accidental pregnancy. 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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 J44 3 cTHyd^Parkcarry ant Service4*7-979!Ham.- Yip m wveeJt&ijsUntil 1 amfri.(sif.Ctojco MowoAYTelephone <312) 233-5700A J StkUTO RADIO • AIR CONDITIONINGSPEEDOMETER • BURGLAR ALARMSSTEREO SYSTEMS • STEREO TAPES8540 SOUTH ASHLAND AVE.CHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60620... ms - /II7. J J A -- arnl . c III- J 1'McCabe andMrs Miller:'best of '70sBy MITCH BOBKINNo beating around the bush. Robert Altman’s McCabe& Mrs Miller (now at the Oriental) is a wonderful movie,easily the best American film of this new decade. It soeasily surpasses “Five Easy Pieces,” “Love Story,” “Car¬nal Knowledge” and every other big movie of the recentpast that it may be unique — the only truly good movie tomake it big in the 70s.The success of “McCabe and Mrs Miller” belongs sole-i ly to Robert Altman. He has progressed much since hisfirst big movie, “M*A*S*H.” He no longer delights in tele¬photo shots, giving the audience a feeling of distance. Rath¬er, while watching “McCabe & Mrs Miller,” you are ac¬tually led to believe that you are right there as the actionis occurring. You feel like a resident of PresbyterianChurch, a small-town in the Northwest, instead of like asnoop.Altman has made this intimacy even more intense bymaking the dialogue overlap. Sometimes you simply can¬not hear what the characters are saying, almost as if youwere standing too far away to make out all the words. Atother times, it all seems too loud, as if you are too close.The camera here moves like a human being, not like anomniscient third-party. In this heightened intimacy, Alt¬man tells a story full of day-to-day details of life, the littlethings that make people so very real. Once you get so closeto the locale, the intimacy would have been destroyed if wecould only see the important, momentous events. Instead,we see snatches of unimportant people and events, McCabebelching, Mrs Miller making it with a miner.McCabe (Warren Beatty) is a small-time gambler andmaybe a gunman who irkes over a small Washington town.He imports some whores, puts them in tents and preparesto clean-up. He even builds a new saloon. Into his quietlittle scheme come two obstacles — Mrs Miller (JulieChristie) and the corporation. Mrs Miller wants McCabe tofund her in opening a real whore house, linen, lace and all.Together they make money hand over fist. But the town isworth more than either McCabe or Mrs Miller realize. Thecorporation tries to buy McCabe out but he holds out for ahigher price. The corporation leaves but sends back threegunmen to get McCabe. Instead, he gets them but is shot inthe process. At the end of the film, McCabe sits thoughtful¬ly dying in the snow, Mrs Miller gets high in a Chineseopium den and the townspeople save the town churchwhich has had very little use since McCabe arrived intown.McCabe is the protagonist, but as we see more andmore of him, his stupidity and fright become obvious.| McCabe talks big, but when action comes, he tries to findan easy way out. Mrs Miller is by far his mental superior.She can figure out his books quicker than he can, and heF only mumbles into his bristly beard when she asks him forf quick answers to matnematical questions. They develop anunusual love affair, neither really loving the other.More important than the relationship between McCabeand Mrs Miller is their relationship with the town. BeforeMcCabe and Mrs Miller arrived, Presbyterian Church was| dull, lifeless. The townspeople built a church but whenexcitement came, they let it go unused, preferring gam¬bling and whoring to anything else. But when adversity^arrives in the presence of the corporation, no one standsbehind McCabe. After all, the church is burning and theyI built the church. McCabe dies as the townspeople congratu¬late themselves on saving their monument, though theirfirst citizen and shining light is dead. “McCABE AND MRS MILLER”: Julie Christie on the set!>f Robert Altman’s latest film.To add to the feeling of the Northwest in 1902, Altmanhas used filters to give the film a hazy, misty look. Thissubdued tone adds a quiet, relaxed feel, perfect for thismodern, different Western story. The environment of Pres¬byterian Church — snow, rain, sleet, unvarnished woodbuildings and gas lamps — show up incredibly well in thisfiltered effect.The acting in this film js superior, but one feels that allthe actors are merely following Altman’s masterplan. Allthe actors, whether they had bit parts or a leading rolewere required to live in the set of the town as the entiremovie was filmed. This camaraderie led to a friendly,knowing relationship between all of the characters, makingPresbyterian Church seems like a real town, not a figmentof some movie makers imagination.Warren Beatty and Julie Christie both deliver the per¬formances of their careers. Beatty, dark and glowery, muf¬fles his words in his beard, but he develops the characterof the horny, money-grubbing, but slow McCabe through avariety of techniques. He moves incredibly well on thescreen and dominates each of his scenes. His clothes, per¬fectly chosen, help to supply the feeling of fopishness that a1902 gambler-type might well have had. Further, he knowshow to interact with the other characters. As he pulls afriend aside or whispers in Mrs Miller’s ear, his motionsare natural and real. Julie Christie, not looking particular¬ly pretty in her curly hair-do, is perfect as the quick-wittedbut depressed Mrs Miller. Her use of opium could havebeen explored a bit more, but Miss Christie supplied deptheven when her part was shallow. Here indeed is a case of afine actor overcoming a skimpy script.As good as “McCabe & Mrs Miller” is, this movie hasa more important role to play. In recent times, too manypeople seem to have forgotten what good movies shouldhave in them. Action, characterization, good shooting anda goal are all but missing in every one of the “big hits” ofthe last few years. “McCabe & Mrs Miller” is a refreshingchange. It shows that there is someone left who can makefine films that can sell in this country. Robert Altman’snext production should be eagerly awaited. In the mean¬time. see “McCabe & Mrs Miller.” 'Panic' drugaddict, girlin New YorkBy CHARLES FLYNNSoon after they get together, Bobby (A1 Pacino) tellsHelen (Kitty Winn) that “no one ever stays with me verylong.” The reason is pretty clear: Bobby’s a junkie, andbefore Jerry Schatzberg’s harrowing Panic in Needle Park(at the Michael Todd) is over, Helen has become a hard¬core user, too. “Panic” is less a cautionary tract about thedangers of smack than a close, careful, compelling studyof two people trapped both by addiction and by an on-offrelationship neither seems to understand.Helen is a country mouse from Ft. Wayne, Indiana, noless, who comes to New York and runs into a cityBobby. The epitome of Brooklyn (so a former residentassures me), Bobby is a fast-talking but highly vulnerablecharacter. He and Helen shack up, and one of the film’sbest scenes is a brief, silent moment in one of New York’sinnumerable greasy-spoon lunch counters (this one just off72nd Street’s “Needle Park”) after Helen has discoveredBobby’s habit and must decide whether to stay with him orrun out. Her commitment to Bobby is still unformed anduncertain — it’s an effective moment. She stays and goesthrough a whole series of changes that culminate with herbetraying Bobby to the narcs. The ending of the movie isbrief and beautiful — an open-ended possibility that, aftersix months in jail, Bobby may return to Helen. The senseof possibility in this last scene is complemented by a slightforward tracking shot as they walk together.In “Panic” Schatzberg has moved from the highly sty¬lized, fashion-photographer prettiness of his first film,“Puzzle of a Downfall Child,” to a much cleaner, sharper,simpler shooting and cutting style. In particular, some ofthe telephoto shooting on the outside shots is breathtaking.And a brief scene in a prison shower stands out as a photo¬graphic highlight, with cameraman Adam Holender per¬fectly capturing the stark whiteness of the steamy room.The New York locations are properly grimy. The JoanDidon-John Gregory Dunne script sags in places, butSchatzberg’s feeling more than makes up for it. Muchworth seeing.Previews: Death in Venice and The Music LoversLuchino Visconti’s “Death in Venice” and Ken Rus¬sell’s “The Music Lovers” are two films very much boundup in music. In “Death,” Visconti (“The Damned,” “TheLeopard”) has taken the writer in Mann’s story, Aschen-bach, and converted him into a thinly-veiled version ofGustav Mahler. Mann’s story is a masterpiece about obses¬sion, about a futile search for the unpossessable beauty.Visconti’s equally obsessive, oppressive style (his first, a1942 version of James Cain’s “The Postman Always RingsTwice,” was appropriately titled “Obsession”) would seemto be perfectly suited to Mann’s novella, more so than toVisconti’s previous literary sources Dostoievsky (“WhiteNights”) and Camus (“The Stranger”). I’ve seen excerptsfrom the film, and the physical recreation of Venice in thesummer of 1911 — especially of the Hotel des Bains —looks magnificent. Opening this Friday at the Cinema.With Gustav Mahler’s music.Ken Russell’s “The Music Lovers” (opening at the Ma¬rina Cinema, Friday, August 13) is one of the great madfilms. Russell is musical-decadent-choreographic-historic-hvsterical. He follows his television films on Strauss, El¬gar. and Delius with a biography of Tchaikovsky. “TheMusic Lovers” is a brilliant examination of the connectionbetween an artist’s fantasy life and his creative output. Amust-see.' 'Phantom off the Opera," with Lon ChaneyThursday night, Cobb, 8 pm $1.00 Summeron theQuadranglesCARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998|aM®» whaf you need from a $10,9*12 Rug, to o customTCorpef Specializing in Remnants'; f* MiH returns at a fraction of the <fon9'nol cost..•-Korotion Colors and Qualities."Mdinonol 10% Discount with thisFREE DELIVERY* Cornett Dtoriil *J 1645 I. 55th STKffV #- CHICAGO, IU. 60615 *Phone: FA 4-1651 ?'**$ 5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113^ ^foreign car hospital A bicycle puts youclose to nature - Thusspake ZarathustraTurin in, Turin on,drop joggingV for velocipedeCheapest prices for Car¬lton, Raleigh. Rohin Hood,Falcon, Peugeot, Citane,Vlercier, Radius and Daws.Factory trained mechanics.I sed hicvcles spasmod¬ically. Flv-bv-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 "J Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00-8:30; S&S 10-8Th* carprth.*jrrr. from Old Town EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World! 162 L 53rd St.684-6856 UNIVERSITYSUMMER ORCHESTRACONCERTMOZART: "Heffner" Serenade, K. 250BRAHMS: Serenade in D, Op. 11FRIDAY, August 13HUTCH COURT6:00 PM FREEAugust 4, 1971/The Summer Muroon/5lonqlost feature !FieldsFields *> <1e critics:L van Beeltiovenhowever, and after m fir#t 1*1,11)1 i ifl ill Vivace e Sempre Scherzartd©r Adagio AAolto e AAesfo -*f Theme R®s*se - AllegroWednesday, #bqp|N|tf|, - " ii Quan trel I A uditoriumCHAMPAGNEBUsaniThe road.Bayit, feelit,know it. sense it,command H.Take of it whatit has to offer.■<«§ #*** SUNDAYS11:30-2:30MATINEE SPECIALi Sun. Shit to 5 p.m Adults 13.1#Children $2.00l pl us tax)The Renault 16. Front wheel drive.4 wheel in,depen.<k>.nt suspension,Torsion Iwra.feujk and pinion siperirtfe Frpnt whMl cjisc brake::.I p to ltQ mpig Top speed, WmphJSM e(Re?4: Tptal.adhesion tothe road and a whole new wav tpcommunicate with it, S.!.1'.lr> KN'It FloorPa rkSank Building1525 E. 53rd955-5151j«SSW<MU&HHraif^OTlFRETUJN WH*J YOU#W'T0|E2M7S. MICHIGAN AV€CHICAGO.AU..TEL. 326 -2550s-t.49$jfr%@P’S' BOOK STORESR, , . •• It'dlio'n: tood» ,jB$fsi-‘iiX:*:•• S'| Compare the f rice/ jS}^T' 0^0 J/{to;*L-^1.floY-.^• '•* o * -v a mimm493-3493ELIZABETH GORDON1 620 E 5'3rd St288 2900THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSPOR sale DELIVERY MAN WANTED JOBS AVAILABLE SPACE WANTEDOboe & accessories. 955-8874.Maternity clothes, size 9-14. Ex¬cellent condition. 324-6637."complete WATERBED SYS-TEMSincl. frame, pad, liner, 5 yr. war¬ranty. Pick up in Hyde Park $100and down. Student discounts 955-5114after 4 pm.Bookcases, desk, bed. Pat 667-3321.Dbl-bed, desks tables, bkcases, TV,etc. Call Norm 752-6286.Zenith Portable TV - $30Old Magnavox TV-light mahoganycase - $10.Steel Kitchen cabinet-5 drawers, 2shelves-scratch resist top—$40. Call734-5297 evenings.AIP. COND, 1 yr old, 6000 BTU,$120, 288-9752 Rm607, 7:30pm.1965 Chevy II Nova, V8, 283 eng, 17-18 miles per gallon, runs beau¬tifully, no body rot, great city car.Ask $375. 288-9096. Windy.Olympia Portbl Tyoewriter-$40.Remington Quietwriter PortableTypewriter - $20.F o r m i c a-top tables-brwn walnutgrain-40"x20"x30" high - $12 3ftx5ft-$20. Call 734-5297 eves.All Sportcoats Must Go - $10 8< Up.John's Mens Wear, 1459 East 53rdStreet.Table model IBM electric for sale.Good condition. $50 or best offer.Call Semon, 667-0082.TYPEWRITER FOR SALE SCMSterling Manual portable-four yearso I d-excellent condition-with carrycase-call 548-5768 morn.Dr. Feelgood's Waterbeds — Best intown — $29.95 for king size. Alsocustom frames and exotic imports.858 N. State 664-0964Presents at Presence ... Indianprint dresses and bikinis, old furs,health foods, and other discoveries.PRESENCE, 2926 N. Broadway, 248-1761.CAMPING EQUIPMENTRENTAL: Tents — sleeping bags.Stoves — lanterns HICKORY 324-1499PEOPLE FOR SALEFamily of 3 will House- or Apart¬ment- Sit Sept. 288-4661.MONEY ain't plentiful these days.So when you need to have a profes¬sional copying job done use the topof Xerox's line - the 7000. From 5 toJO cents a copy, depending on thevolume. 753-2067.TYPING. Fast, accur. FA4-4703.RUSSIAN INSTRUCTION by nativeteacher. Trial lesson, no charge.CE6-1423 office, 472-1420 home. Maroon needs someone to deliversummer and fail issues. Must havevan or bus. Good pay for a fewhours of work per week. Call Mike,753-3263 or 955-3079.WANTEDWant to rent car or bus in Septwhich sleeps 2. Call 493-3744 eve¬nings; 353-4523 days.Very cheap sleeping space in HydePark or near north side. Also needsleeping bags and two-man tent.Call Cheria at 753-4207.I want a used electric piano at areasonable price. Call Ben, days at753-3180.Need ride for one from Paris East¬ward about Sept. 2. Will share driv¬ing costs. Call 355-4564.Ride needed fall quarter 5 days aweek from 3000 North to Universityand back, 9am-5pm. Will share ex¬penses. Call 929-1016 or 753-3263.PEOPLE WANTEDWANTED: Female roommate for71-72. Approx $65. CALL 947-9459. Ifno ans. keep trying.Female rmmte wanted to share 2bedrm furn apt. 5559 S. University.Grad stud prefd, avail end Aug.Call 324-5704.STAFF, STUDENTS. Participate inan experiment on the perception ofspeech. $1.75 cash for an hour'swork. On campus. Call X3-4714 foran appointment.Dissertation writers who want grouphealth ins call 338-7529 after 6pm(not a salesman).Woe is me! SSA student, F, needsroommate-s with apt. Fall 1971. Willbe in Chicago Aug. 8-13. Pleasewrite: Sally Jasper, 275 Pufton Vil¬lage, Amherst, Mass, 01002.Responsible fern grad student toshare apt. Own room. MI3-4894.Driving instructionpay. 324-6637. wanted. GoodAUGUST UNION SERVICESRockefeller Memorial ChapelSunday Morning Worship 11 o'clockAugust 8THE REVEREND CHARLES H. BAYERMinister of University Churchof Disciples of Christ, ChicagoAugust 15THE REVEREND ROBERT G. MIDDLETONMinister of Hyde Park Union Church, ChicagoCARILLON RECITALSSunday at 4:00 P.M.August 8 -Jack Ulrich, Director of Music,Lutheran Churchof the Holy Communion, ChicagoAugust 1 5 -Raymond Keldermans, Carillonneur,Thomas Rees MemorialCarillon, Springfield, Illinois AVAILABLE! Fulfilling job as childcare worker with behaviorally dis¬turbed children at Pritzker Chil¬dren's Hospital, 800 E. 55th St. Full¬time starting pay $490 per month.Permanent position. College degreenot required. Call Lee Coleman 643-7300 ext. 28.PETSBEAUTIFUL BLACK FEMALESpayed 1-yr-old cat needs home,Love. Free. Call 493-7921 or 667-1680.Handsome, friendly, male, smooth¬haired, 6-mos. old terrier needsgood home. Free. Paper-trained.Shots. Good with children. 955-2887or x34494.FREE 2 healthy kittens rust tigerstripe, weaned 8< trained. 8 weeksold. 493-4881 after 6.Please give home to abandoned cat.8mo, female, loving. 667-6053.FREE 3 KITTENS, 2 black, 1 grey6 weeks old, weaned & trained plusextra BONUS 955-7223.SCENESGESTALT ENCOUNTER GROUPthis weekend. Fri. 8pm-12; Sat.Noon 10pm; Sun. Noon-6pm. $25.Lorrie Peterson, Experienced Lead¬er. Phone 288-3541.For U C foreign Students andspouses. 1-House Residents, UC For¬eign visitors only: STRATFORDFESTIVAL THEATRE TOUR, Sept3-4. See MACBETH MUCH ADO,and VOLPONE. Total subsidizedcost to qualified persons - $24.50. In¬cludes round trip bus trans., threebalcony tickets and one night's lodg¬ing. Bus leaves 8:00 am, September3, returns by 8:00am Sept. 5. Spon¬sored by International House. Call753-2272, 2275.Sublease pottery painting studio andliving area. Skylights, yard, garage.Old Town. 642-9119.Room, bath and partial board nearcampus available beginning now orin fall in exchange for babysittihg.Call 288-5174.Need a babysitter from 9am-3:30pmon weekdays. 752-3961 aft. 4pm.Resp. babysitter needed for charm¬ing 2-yr. old girl. Wkdys. 8AM-4pm.955-2887 or x34494.Need 3rd roommate to 9-72 or 73.Call John, 924-6017. Prefr busns.soc. serv or law stdnt. 1210 E. HydePark.STAFF, STUDENTS. Participate inan experiment on the perception ofspeech. $7.00 cash for a 4-hour ses¬sion. On campus. Call X3-4714 foran appointment CHICAGO BEACH HOTEL5100 S. Cornell DO 3-2400Beautiful Furnished ApartmentsNear beach-park-I.C. trains U of Cbuses at door Modest daily, weekly,monthly rates.Call Miss SmithSPACEREWARD: Need 1-2 bdrm apt inarea bounded by 57, 59, Harper,Univ. To $175 mo. 955-2187.BOURGEOIS COMFORT, PROLE-T A R IAN PRICE! Share myspacious, safe, quiet, 5-rm. SouthShore apartment fall and year.Avail, late August, Call Christopherat 265-4862, 9am-4:30pm or 643-4417till 12pm.Room in apt w-3 others (male) 53 8,Dorch., $46.25-mo. & utils. 643-4821(Avail. Aug. 15).Live in Frederika's famous building-now, Sept, or Oct. Nearby. Furn. orUnfurn. 2,3 rm apts. $120 up. Freeutils. Pvt. bath, Quiet, Sunny. 6043Woodlawn. 955-9209 or 427-2583.South Shore Sublet. Large furnroom. Avail at least til Sept 1. $55-mo. On campus bus rte. 324-2671, af¬ter 6.Beaut, spac. 3 or 4 bdrm in SoShore. Garage, El. Dishwr, Cl.wash-dryer. AvI. July 1, Call RA3-4400 weekdays. Stu may share.For Rent: 2 rms. share rest oflarge apt: $90 - Don 684-2256.2-bdrm, 5 rm. So. Shore apt, newbldg, a.c., d.w., disp, secureCampus bus, Sept. 1, 375-2370.5rm apt available Sept. 1 at 53 &Greenwood. Call 955-0595 eves.Attractive S'h rm South Shore aptavailable Sept 1, $155-mo Call 734-5297 evenings.I want a 2 to 3 bedroom apartmenton the nea" north side starting Octo¬ber 1. Willing to pay up to $200,must have large rooms. Please callCherie at extension 3-4207.FALL SUBLET5rms., furnished $150-mo. Mid-Septor Oct '71 to Sept. '72. 54th & Univ493-4071, evngs.FALL SUBLET. 5-room furn ap7 Furnished apt. desparately .neededby 2 sweet grad girls. Call 643-0176.Member Foreign Consulate Staffwants to rent furn apt or house Sept10 to Dec 31.* B. Martinsson SwedishTrade Commission, 333 N. MichAve, Chicago. 726-2582.Fern grad student wants room Inapt 71-72. Has car 538-6790. far East KitchenCh inese & AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILS ~Open Daily 1 2 10Fri. & Sat 12 12Closed Monday53rd & Hyde Park Blva955-2229SABBATICAL?Responsible post-grad couple return¬ing fall qtr will sublet 8, care forfurnished apt, townhs, etc. -L. Nel¬son, 725 Princeton Blvd., Lowell,Mass., 01851.PERSONALSP & P Tie the Knot. Congratula-tions.University Student Special Turkishhamburger dinner complete - $2.75with ID only. Tuesoay & WednesdaySpecial. 15% reduction for studentswith ID at EFENDI, 1525 E. 53rdSt.UC STUDENTS, FACULTY &STAFF:20% discount on all non-sale mer-chandise at Cooley's Corner, 5211 S.Harper Court. Tues, Thurs & Fri:10-7. Mon 8< Thurs 10-9. Saturday: 9-7. Sunday 8< Wed: Noon-7. Uponpresentation of proper identification.RIDE BOARD - Call 334-7668 -Maybe we can hook you up withsomeone going where you are • $1charge. KIMBARKLIQUORS»WINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINEST^^e^IMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to you!THE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC.1214 E. 53rd St.53-Kimbark Plaza HY3-3355Fresh, good naturedexhilarating f un.—Gary Arnold, Washington PostBRUCE BROWN'SOH ANY SBby the man who ma®by the man who made ‘Endless Summer’ from Cinema 5 RatedRUSH at OAK Park Carnegie GarageReduced Ratesr TELEPHONE 944-2966Tomorrow NOON:Kevin Henry and his pipes in Hutch CourtSummer on the QuadranglesCALLIOPE CONCERT - WEDS. AUG. 1HITCHCOCK COURT 8 pm 11th Summeron theQuadranglesOne Week from Thursday, W.C. Fields in oYOU'RE TELLING MlSummer on the Quadrangles Rare Feature FiE8 pm in ( lm:'obbAugust 4, 1971/The Summer Maroon/7WINE AND CHEESEA FINE PARTY IDEAyriii VADII UEDIf IMCD sharp,tangy, andNlvV TUKW ntlfmlflLlf CREAMY TEXTURE $1 29lb.1970 BEAUJOLAIS MOULIN-A-VENT 98 fifthNEC PLUS ULTRA SOFT AND CREAMY, SLIGHTLY SWEET, 19WITH A TOUCH OF KIRSCH ‘31959 CHATEAU L' ARIESTE SAUTERNE-THE GREATEST VINTAGE^ 2 ^ fifthHOLLAND GOUDA FIR"T™'MllD-SNDDELICATELY FLAVORED $2 29lb.. * . A .A1,«A.,p . I. LIGHTLY FLAVORED1966 CHATEAU DU C0UR0NEAU stsmsim $ 1 98OF EXCEPTIONAL QUALITY I fifth$C 003 to, $5FLAVORED WITH PORT WINE,PARTY MART SPECIAL CHEDDAR BRANDIED, AND SHARP ^2 45 lb.HALF PRICE ATPORT 1960 VINTAGE CURRENT MARKET PRICES $4 98 fifthTHE PARTYMART2427 East 72nd StreetBA 1-9210