The Chicago MaroonVolume 80, Number 10 The University of Chicago Friday, October 15,1971Enrollmentstays abovepredictionWHO SAYS PSI U HAS ALL 1 HE AIHLfcl tSr: Certainly not these rugged members of Phi Gam.UC frats adopt communal life stylesBy Judy AlsofromWay back in the thirties when Alonzo Staggwas king and Chicago was a member of theBig Ten (and before Ida Noyes destroyedsororities by committing suicide), there wereapproximately thirty fraternities on thiscampus.Today you will find along with theresumption of football (with the calliope manas king) that there are still fraternities onthis campus -six of them hidden amongvarious college buildings and trees between56th and 58th street on Woodlawn andUniversity Avenues.What, you may ask is a fraternity doing onour self-styled sophisticated intellectualresearch oriented campus, or, who is afraternity man?One shy but intimidating admissions of¬ficer, a recent UC grad, is one because,“Once a fraternity man, always a fraternityman.” This does not really answer thequestion, but one third year member of PhiGamma Delta said, “Well, Judy come on upto my room and I’ll really show you whatfraternity means.”Fraternities have been stereotyped, nodoubt due to the publicity of the late nightfifties movies and the excitement of thehometeam winning its homecoming gameamidst beer and panty raids. Vestiges of thiskind of organization may still exist on bigstate university campuses with national“Greek” charters, but most likely inmodified forms (with the advent of co-eddorms and co-ed bathrooms, panty raidshave logically become obsolete.)If this rah rah. he-man type of fraternityever existed on this campus, it certainly doesnot today. The consensus of the six fraternitypresidents and their members is that theyhave chosen to live in a fraternity forbasically four reasons: it is cheaper than thedormitory system, less remote than apart¬ment living, provides an opportunity to be anindividual while still maintaining an intenserelationship with people you have chosen tolive with.It seems, though, that while each fraternity proclaims the ideals of this communityliving, and all still subscribe to thetraditional rush and pledge period, each hasits own character, either due to reputation,or oddly enough, to their financial situation.At Phi Gamma Delta, I was greeted by BillPetryk, the president, and led into a libraryreplete with plush leather chairs, and a fewmugs on the fireplace mantle. He wore a tieand jacket and said, “Yes, we do still haveour traditional Friday night dinners. 'I attended one of these long ago and ac¬ cording to Bill they’re still the same, whichmeans that before dinner the formallydressed brothers sing their song and finishdinner with the alma mater (of UC no less).During dinner, if there are guests, they areformally introduced followed by a loudprolonged (so it seemed to me) adulation byabout a hundred and twenty snappingfingers.This would seem to be the classic frater¬nity on campus but they are not eclecticwhen it comes to members, “We’ll take justabout anyone who can get through pledgeperiod (ten weeks of work sessions, cleaning,and free dinners) who will give us a com¬mitment.”Presently Phi Gam (as it is fondly known)has 21 members, 15 of whom live in thehouse. Costs are about $340 a quarter, roomand board combined.A few houses down from Phi Gam, rightnext to Blue Gargoyle, is what once wascharacterized as the jock house on campus,Psi Upsilon (Psi U). However, their vitalstatistics reveal that out of the 27 members(16 of whom live in the house) only half areFRAT MFN: There doesn't seem to he a members of athletic teams-which is averagefor all the fraternities.It costs; bout $355 per quarter to live in PsiU with an $85 intiatiation fee which is appliedtowards the social budget. They hope to haveabout three parties a quarter, which arefamous in their own right. Because UCfemales do not seem to find their way tothese fetes, Psi U busses in girls fromMichael Reese, Patricia Stevens (potentialsecretaries), Rosary College (potentialnuns), and a newly discovered “hot” nursingschool, Wesley.Though Psi U has what may be deemed astraditional frat parties (beer and free en¬trance to girls), there is a serious side tothem. President Roger Krause, a fourth-yearstudent in the College, said that “Living witha group of guys you’re forced to get alongwith tends to give one a certain respon¬sibility. We try to maintain a balance of ideasand opinions. And as far as this being a jockhouse, we have some guys who aren’t evencoordinated enough to play intramurals.”Continued on page 6stereotype on this By Jeff RothUniversity enrollment has suffered a slightdecrease this year, but nevertheless remainsabove the predicted enrollment on which thefiscal 1971 budget was based.The number of registered students on thequadrangles as of Tuesday was 7480. Anexpected enrollment of 7400 was built into thebudget. Last year’s enrollment was 7626.The most noticeable decrease is in theCollege, but this was not unexpected, due tothe smaller freshmen classes which haveentered during the past several yearsThis years freshman class enrollment is565, compared to 608 last year. However, 110transfers make this years entering class of675 actually somewhat larger than its 1970counterpart.Surprisingly, enrollment increases haveoccurred in the humanities and socialsciences graduate divisions, this despite thediminishing supply of government and otherfellowships.In the professional schools, only the schoolsof divinity and education have experiencedsubstantial drops in enrollment from lastyear.The overall decrease of two percent is amuch more moderate one than the drop of 10percent which took place last year, in whichthe graduate divisions were particularlyhard hit.Here are the enrollment figures as ofTuesday for the College, graduate divisions,and professional schools:School Autumn 1*70 Autumn 1971College 2212 2060Bio Sci 245 249Hum 655 700Phy Sci 565 486Soc Sci 1278 1369Total graduate divisions 2744 2804Business 626 621Divinity 306 226Education 180 123Law 490 508Library 120 135Medicine 352 380SSA 356 396Total professional schools 2430 2389Students at large 240 227Total 7626 7480does dishes.campus; everyone reads newspapers orUC biology professorsdenied $700 grant forVietnamese land studyRICHARD LEVINS: Associate professor of biology and member of New Univer¬sity Conference did not receive his Hanoi science grant. Photo by DickBarrish. A group of University biology professorshas been denied a $700 grant which wouldhave financed a study of restoration of war-ravaged Vietnamese land.The group, known as Science for Vietnam,applied to William Cannon, vice-presidentfor program and projects, for permission tosubmit the grant request to North Vietnam.Among those that applied were biologyprofessors Richard Levins and RichardLowentin who is on a one-year sabbatical atOxford.According to Naomi Kistin, a member ofScience for Vietnam, “The University heldon to the grant for a long time” beforereferring it to the Treasury DepartmentIn late sumer, the foreign assets controldivision of the federal Reserve bank in NewYork rejected the grant request.Boucher program to continueBy John CarrollThe recreation program at Boucher Hallfor community youths will be recontinuedthis year at least through March.The program of swimming, gym, trips andtours, and arts and crafts, last year ran fromOctober through June. Last year’s budget fornine months was $15,000 while the budget forsix months this year has been set at $12,000.Program director Herb Smith says thatafter the six months there will be “arestructuring of the entire program,” sincemost of the staff are graduate students andwill be graduating in March.Smith added that the program probablywould continue through June after therestructuring.The program, which is funded entirely bythe Universitv. ODens today. Boucher will be open to the community Tuesdavs, 5 to 9 pm;Fridays, 5 to 10 pm; and Saturdays, 10 am to4 pm.Smith said that this year the program willexpand to include “more extensive trips andtours” such as to high school football gamesand Chicago Bulls basketball games. Newcultural activities have also been added.The staff at Boucher will be a combinationof paid graduate students, work-studystudents and volunteers. Volunteers from thestudent body are always welcome, Smithsaid.The youth program was originally formedafter a group of community high schoolstudents held a sit-in in Ida Noyes Hall inMay, 1971 and renamed the building “FredHampton Memorial Center” in honor of theslain Black Panther leader.Negotiations following the sit-in resulted in the creation of a summer program for thecommunity at Ida Noyes which was followedby last year’s nine month program atBoucher Hall. A summer program was againheld at Ida Noyes last summer.When asked about community response tothe activites, Smith said it was “sotremendous” that they would go with the 980people who were registered. There was “noneed to recruit more,” he said. In a letter sent to Cannon, the Bank said,“Transactions of this type are not consistentwith the present policy of this governmentwith respect to North Vietnam.”Miss Kistin said she felt that theUniversity was “very uptight” about tnegrant, while in the group and the Universitycommunity in general “many were excitedat the possiblity, but hopes weren’t too high.”Cannon was unavailable for comment.Despite the rejection, Science for Vietnamintends to continue looking into the biologicaleffects of the war, said Miss Kistin.“One of the group, who is now in Min¬nesota, has just returned from North Viet¬nam with four pages of typewrittenrequests.” she elaborated.She added that the requests came from ahospital in Hanoi, a War Crimes Com¬mission, the University of Hanoi biologydepartment, and the President of the NorthVietnamese Supreme Court, among others.Some of the requests that the NorthVietnamese wanted the scientists to trywere “preliminary experimentation on theeffects of herbicides on plants and animals,gathering books and materials circulating inthe United States about Indo-china andcultural exchange programs of all types.”“It’s sort of a gamut of activity,” she said.She also noted that the requests would “givethe group a spurt of new energy” whichwould keep them together, even without anymoney for research.Labor boardon lab school upholds rulingfaculty appealThe National Labor Relations Board(NLRB) has upheld the April decision of thelab school faculty not to unionize, denying anappeal by the lab school faculty associa¬tion.The move to unionize was defeated bythree votes in April. Contested ballots in¬cluded those of department chairmen andthe head librarian, who were consideredsupervisory personnel by the NLRB. Had thevotes been accepted, they would have beenenough to swing the vote in favor ofunionization.Richard Muelder, president of the facultyassociation, said that the group, after con¬sulting with their lawyers, had decided not tofight the NLRB decision. He said that theassociation did not have the financialresources to “fight the University of Chicago in a court battle,” and also that the facultygroup had little chance of winning, becauseof what he termed President Nixon’s“conservative appointments” to the NLRB.Muelder stated that his association plansto try again at a future date to achieve unionrepresentation for lab school faculty. By lawno new election may be held until at least oneyear has passed since the previous one.Therefore the earliest possible date for a newelection would be April 15, 1972. Mueldercommented, “We’re convinced that we canwin next time.”The faculty association is seekingcollective bargaining rights to negotiate anew master contract with the University.The NLRB scheduled the election onwhether to unionize after the facultyassociation showed that at least 30 percent ofthe lab school faculty supported the demand. MAN AND BEST FRIEND: Ken fondles Alpha Deits' mascot.GOLD CITY INN**** MaroonNew Hours:Open DailyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9:30 p.m."A Gold Mine of Good Food' ********* t JESSEISON’SFRESH FISH & SEAFOOD7S3-337Q, 732-4190,341-9144 - 13401. SMA$ Student Discount:^ 10% for table service# 5% for take home| Hyde Perk's Best Cantonese Feed§5228 Harper 493-2559(ftMwMarfwrCmwt)Eat more for less. ****************i (Try our convenient take-out orders.) # WHPK- FM88.3THE STUDENT RADIO VOICE OF THE UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGOTHIS WEEK, CHECK OUT:FREE SOUL - JAZZ AT MIDNIGHT WEDNESDAYAFRICAN HI-LIFE AND CALYPSO - THEONLY SHOW OF ITS KIND, 7:30 SUNDAYTHE LONE TEEN RANGER - GOLDEN OLDIES,AM ON FM, 9:00 SUNDAYS ROCKEFELLER MEMORIALCHAPELUniversity Religious ServiceSunday October 17, 1971 11 o'clockBERNARD O. BRQWNAssistant Dean of the Chapel"STERILE TECHNICIANS -HEARTLESS VOLUPTUARIES'SUNDAY SEMINARRockefeller Memorial Chapel Undercroft 9:45 to10:45 a.m. Discussion led by 7he Reverend Ber¬nard O. Brown, Assistant Dean of the Chapel.i - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 15,1971New draft law ends 2-S deferrmentANALYSISBy Fred Egler and Joe LeeCollege students will soon find themselvesliable to the draft for the first time in severalyears as a result of the 1971 Selective ServiceAct.The revised draft law, passed this sum¬mer, eliminated the 2-S blanket studentdeferment for all students who did not have a2-S during the 1970-71 acdemic year. All thosewho formerly would have received defer¬ments will be placed in the lottery pool withnon-college students of their age.The first class affected by the changes willbe the Class of 1975. Current freshmen will beliable for the draft during the year, followingthe assignment of their lottery numbers.The lottery affecting ail draftees born in1953 will be held sometime in July of 1972,according to notices received by studentsrequesting information from the SelectiveService.The new policy represents a drasticchange from Selective Service's formerposition on student deferments. In the past,anyone who was engaged in education of anykind could be deferred until completing it,through either the 1-S deferment, whichapplied to draft-liable individuals still in highschool, or the 2-S deferment, given to collegeundergraduates automatically when theyfurnished their local draft board with proofof registration at a college or other higher'educational institution.Student reaction to the new draft law hasbeen mixed. A sampling of opinion amongfreshmen, who will be most widely affectedby the changes, ranged from uncertainty (“Idon’t know what I’d do if I was drafted; Iguess I’d go if I was called.”) to indignation(“I’d never join the war machine; I’d rathergo to Canada or even to jail”).Many students, because their lotterystatus will not be determined until next year,remain undecided.The recent changes in the draft, includingthe new student deferment policy, will alterthe draft in two important ways.First, more men will be drafted at ayounger age. In the past, holders of 2-Sdeferments were placed in the manpowerpool for the year immediately following theirgraduation; thus, their ages usually rangedupward from 21.Under the new policy, however, virtuallyall draftees will be 19 or 20, since their yearof eligibility will follow the time when theirdraft number is drawn. That year willcoincide with the 19th brithday of theprospective draftee.The other significant change in thecharacter of the draft will be an expandedpercentage of “safe” lottery numbers.With the decreased draft calls, a “wound- QUAKER HOUSE: Students study booklets obtained at the Draft Counseling center. Photo by Dave Fossedown” Vietnam war, and all 19-year-olds inthe pool at the same time, the number abovewhich a person is considered “safe” fromdrafting (about 140 this year) will probablydecrease.This will mean that progressively fewerpeople will be drafted each year, possiblytapering off to zero by 1973 or 1974, when avolunteer army may be instituted.The “safe” number could also be loweredby the implementation of the recent women’srights Constitutional amendment, whichpassed the House this week. If put into effectin time, the provision allowing the drafting ofwomen on equal basis to men couldtheoretically cut the draft call for men inhalf.It is not clear whether women would bedrafted for combat duty if the women’srights amendment is adopted.The new draft law will affect many fresh¬men, especially those with high-prioritydraft numbers, who, for the first time in aSELECTIVEserviceLAWREPORTER selectiveSERVICELAWREPORTERVOIS..1 & 2MEWUlTTIft ».QfCfStONS'iClt.Z. & COMMINTS VOLUME 9Ntwtti m«atctNi oicjno***Airictts *PLRt PLEICOUNSELORS AND THE LAW: Nowdeferrment' more need legal advice or that students no longer have theiri their rights. Photos by Dave Fosse. 2-S number of years, run the risk of having theirundergraduate education interrupted.To the non-deferred student with suchnumbers, the new policy will pose two im¬portant questions:What can I do to avoid being drafted?f Will the University allow me to continuemy education here if I am drafted and decideto return?Several alternatives to conscriptedmilitary service exist. The first, and mostobvious one, is to enlist. Contradictory as thismay sound, it is an alternative chosen bymany; in fact, Selective Service estimatesthat the draft and its threat accounts for fully60 percent of US armed services volunteers.The chief advantage to enlistment, ofcourse, is a higher ranking, and a lessdangerous position, probably not in Vietnam,and perhaps in a potentially hospitablelocation such as West Germany or Japan.The chief advantage to enlistment, ofcourse, is a higher ranking, and a lessdangerous position, probably not in Vietnam,and perhaps in a potentially hospitablelocation such as West Germany or Japan.If one finds any military service in¬tolerable, however, it is very easy to seek thehelp of a draft counseling service. TheUniversity provides such service, but theregistrar’s office has stated that counselingwill not begin on a formal basis untilNovember.Several private groups in Hyde Parkcounsel prospective draftees, however. Theirviews on the status of students withoutdeferments varied widely.The Friends Society, located at 5615Woodlawn, operates the Hyde Park DraftInformation Center, which provides coun¬seling and information to anyone who seeksit.A counselor at the center, who asked toremain anonymous, said that the counselingwas done on a “situational” basis, and thatmost of the center’s visitors are Chicagostudents.The counselor said that the recent draftlaw changes would, in her opinion, “notaffect the number of students drafted thatmuch, because there are so many other waysfor students to avoid the draft.”She cited medical deferments, con-scienctious objection, flight to Canada andimprisonment as possbile alternatives toinduction, and said that the abundance ofcampus draft counseling centers nationwidehelped many students’ chances for avoidinginduction completely.The Midwest Center for Draft Counseling• MCDC) also maintains office in the Hyde Park area. However the MCDCoperates mainly as a clearing housedirectly with draftees.Marian Neudel, an MCDC representative,was somewhat less optimistic about studentstatus than the Friends Committee. She saidthat “few, if any” ways existed by which theaverage student could avoid the draft en¬tirely. She added, however, that almost anystudent could take advantage of “usefulprocedural rights” to delay his induction.Freshmen who had applied for a 2-Sdeferment before the new legislation waspassed in September could appeal a draftboard decision classifying them as 1-A, andcould eventually go to court, if they desired.Miss Neudel said that avoiding the draffentirely, short of leaving the country or g(to jail, was unlikely, since hardshipmedical deferments were rare, and con¬scientious objection “probably won’t in¬crease that much,” despite the newlegislation.The Mandel Legal Aid Clinic, at 6080University, also provides draft counseling,but extends its services chiefly to individualswith incomes “at the welfare level,” ac¬cording to an official at the center. As aresult, the center rarely takes cases ofUniversity students.The official did say that students without a2-S deferment with a high-priority numberwould be “very vulnerable” to the draft,since the alternative deferments are “rare”or difficult to obtain.For vulnerable students who choose toaccept the draft, or to volunteer to avoid it,the question of re-enrollment at theUniversity is an important one.The University’s policy toward re-enteringstudents from the military is lenient,however. In its “Special Announcements toStudents Entering the College,” dated April15, 1971, the University states the followingPolicy: “Students in good standing at theUniversity who are unable to continue theirstudies because they are drafted, enlist, orchoose conscientious objector status, will bereadmitted to the University as soon as theyare able to return.”Selective Service has stated that studentsdrafted in mid-year will be permitted tocomplete the academic year.For the student, the new draft lawrepresents a radical change from formergovernment policy, one that could directlyaffect almost any male student enteringafter 1971, and could interrupt his educationand normal pattern of life through milita *yservice. .Friclav, October 15,1971 - I he Chicago Maroon - JoThe Chicago MaroonPaul Bernstein, Mitch Bobkin, Con HitchcockEditorsMike CohenBusiness ManagerJudy Alsofrom, Managing EditorFred Winston, News Editor Susan LothSenior EditorAudrey Shalinsky, Executive EditorGordon Katz, Contributing EditorLisa Capell, Joe Freedman, Keith PyleAssociate EditorsSteve Aoki (senior editor) , Terry Brykczynski, David Fosse, Ira Friedlander, FrankGruber, Curtis Johnson, Leonard Lomberg, Pat Patterson, Ugis Sprudzs, Leslie Travis,(Editor), Jon Yuen (Associate Editor) PhotographersJane Batt, John Carroll. Fred Egler. Larry Faulks, Terri Feinstein. Caroi Freed, MarkGruenberg, Jim Hill. Bill Lazarus. Joe Lee. Sidney Leiiky. Jeei Lockridge. Jeee Roth. TimRudy. Ellen Sazzman. Ugis Sprudzs, Steve Strahi er. Paul Wendelgass. Josh ZionStaffFounded in 1892. Published by University of Chicago Students on Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the regular schoolyear, except during exam periods and, intermittently during the summer. Officers in rooms 303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall,1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637. Telephone (312) 753 3263. Distributed on campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail $9 per year in the United States. Non profit postage paid at Chicago, Illinois.FraternitiesThe stereotype of the frat man, beer mug in hand, is slowly but surelyfading into the past. The frat man of today is not the animalistic jock thatwe all picture when Greek letter organizations come to mind. Particularlyon the University of Chicago campus, he is not necessarily indistinguishablefrom any other student. He is not by definition short-haired, athleticallybuilt and a bit dim-witted. For many this stereotype is hard to give up,but nonetheless it is disappearing.In the meantime, however, many of the frats on this campus are havingtrouble convincing people that they are no longer rah-rah. Because of this,many Greek houses have had to take in boarders and females to fill up theirhouses. Not enough students are joining to make the fraternities fiscallysound organizations. While we are pleased to see that there are people willingto live in frat houses, even if they aren’t members, we are distressed to noticethat many people are dismissing frat life as an unlikely alternative for themin their search for housing during their four years here. Perhaps, we all shouldreconsider frat life.The advantages of living in one of the fraternity houses on campus are many.First, and for many most importantly, is their close proximity to campus. Ifyou live in Alpha Delt, for example, you can wake up 10 minutes before yourclass starts and still get there in time. University and 58th St is an enticingaddress.For those who don’t like to cook or seem to have no natural ability in thatdirection, frat life is a way to get your meals made for you, without living inthe dorm. Dorm life, it seems to us, is getting better but is still the worstof all possible living situations in Hyde Park. Frats supply more space, betterfood, and cheaper prices. Undoubtedly a good deal for people who preferinstitutional living.The comaraderie that exists in frat life is repugnant to some (just callinga frat member “brother” may seem a bit silly) but for all of the unhappypeople in Hyde Park, frat life, living with friendly, enthusiastic people, maybe a good cure for loneliness. As long as living in a frat house does notmean gross initiation tasks and animalistic behavior, perhaps joining a fratisn’t such a bad idea.This is not to say that frat living is for everyone. Obviously, most females willnot elect to live in the co-ed frat house. However, there are many male stu¬dents here who should seriously reconsider frat life. Many would benefit fromit.VotingThe fact that 18, 19 and 20 year-olds can vote for the first time next yearwon’t amount to very much if enough of them neglect to register. Politicalexperts are already estimating that as many as half of the new voters will notgo to th6 polls next year for one reason or another.We urge all 18 to 21 year-olds from Illinois, whether students or communityresidents, to register to vote (if they have not done so) this Tuesday at twoconvenient locations: in M and el hall from 9 am to 4:30 pm, or in Ida Noyesfrom 9 am to 5 pm. Those who have considered it too much trouble to registerdowntown have no such excuse now. Nor does it 'make sense to stay awaybecause of uncertainty over Illinois residency requirements. Although it is stillunclear whether dormitory residents are eligible to vote in Illinois, anyone inthat position should register now and then wait for the court decision to gettheir voter registration card.We hope that even University of Chicago students will find enough energyto walk over to Mandel or Ida Noyes Tuesday and give themselves a chanceto effect political change.4 The Chicago Maroon - Friday, Octobei 15,1S71 letters to the editorsPsychotherapyI would like to clarify a few points made inTuesday’s Maroon article about the ChicagoCounseling and Psychotherapy ResearchCenter.While faculty members were on the staffof the University’s old Counseling Center,there are no current U of C faculty memberson the new Counseling Center staff.The fees collected do cover our monthlyoverhead, but are probably insufficient tocover costs of newer furnishings, communityservices on a special, lower, etc.We are not in business to offer therapyonly, or particularly, to students. However,as part of the general community, studentsare as welcome as others to avail themselvesof our services, should they so choose.Norton B KnopfExecutive SecretarySexist sportsDuring the spring quarter of 1971 a fewmembers of the men’s physical educationdepartment met without requesting anystudents (such as the dorm athletic chair¬men) to be present in order to discuss whowould be eligible for intramural competitionunder their auspices; on that day they ex¬cluded women from any of their IM com¬petition for 1971-72. The result of this is yetanother case of women being denied equaltreatment at this university.Almost every co-ed house has a number ofwomen who would like to play in many of thesports, and this is so despite the fact thatthere is official discouragement of theirparticipation. For almost all of the sportsthere is no possibility of women being hurtbecause they are “weaker than men’’. Of the24 IM sporting events/ leagues planned forthis year by the men’s PE department, 19 arecompletely non-contact (eg “table tennissingles’’); another three are technically not“contact sports”--“pre-Xmas basketball,” “post-Xmas basketball”, and soccer; two of24 or about eight percent are contact sports-football and wrestling.Certainly there is absolutely no excuse forwomen’s exclusion from the first 19, andbasketball and soccer are often played byorganized women’s teams. If a vwoman wantsto play basketball (for instance) against menin serious competition, then she has decidedthat she is willing to risk whatever injurymay be involved. Whenever women haveas ve<( lo play for their house in any IM gamev/e’Ye been involved in, the players and theofficials have had no objection-they haveaccepted her as another player. Only the PEfaculty objects.The problem that women face is not iustone of being unable to play against stiffcompetition, but one of being unable to findany competitive programs. Anyone whogives the matter the slightest bit of thoughtwill recognize that the men’s PE departmenthas a far larger budget, and concomitantly afar larger IM budget than the women’sdepartment. This fall the men’s PEdepartment is offering 8 leagues and/ ortournaments; the women’s PE dept, willprobably offer one league (n volleyball), andwill offer only two other regular organizedactivities, AND ALL THESE THREE ARECO-ED!So under the present system, women whowant to play competitive sports find them¬selves blocked at every turn, even thoughthey pay the same tuition as men.This university certainly would not acceptit if there were two physics departments-awell-equipped one for whites and a poorly-equipped one for blacks--and the formerdenied blacks who asked the right to usetheir facilities simply because there werefew blacks who did so. And yet, somehow,separate but unequal is OK for IM sports.The men’s PE department has but one moraloption before it—to open up their IM programto all students.Paul Bin bergSue ClauterRich Pokorny (athletic chairman)David ScarburoghResidents of Greenwood HallPhoto by Leslie TravisThere are almost as many bookstoresas taverns in Hyde Park, which, IS suppose, tells you a lot about the neigh¬borhood. Besides the UniversityBookstore and the Student Co-Op inReynolds Cluo basement, there are ninebookstores worth covering. Here theyare in a highly subjective order ofpreference:Reid Michener, 5309 Kimbark. Hours:Monday-Saturday, 6 p.m.-midnight.“Fifteen years ago,” Reid Michenerbegan, “I swore I’d never have apaperback in the store.” Well, he hasthem now. It’s one of the few con¬cessions Michener, a highly originaland dedicated book-lover has made tothe market. Paperbacks, he explains,are to be read and thrown away. Oldbooks have a romance, they’re something to possess. Reid Michenerbelieves in the romance and he hasanywhere from 50,000 to 70.000 books inhis store and storeroom.Michener has been in business 33years, and is in many ways amicrocosm of the ups and downs ofHyde Park over the years. He’s beenmoved three times (once from 57thStreet and from two locations on 55thStreet) -- all three times by theUniversity. He remembers the dayswhen Hyde Park was a center of la vieboheme -- low rents, artists, cafes. Allgone, but Reid Michener remains.Michener’s store sells used booksexclusively, and is particularly strongin literary criticism and criticalbiography. Reid also has a greatselection of old Modern Library books, and if you’re in a pinch for a classic at 11p.m., this is the place to get it. Lots ofolder (1950s) hardback fiction, andsome paperback fiction, includingmany mysteries. Older but goodselection in social sciences, especiallyeconomics and sociology. Largelyoutdated books on film, okay theatre,poetry and art collection.Drop in and see Reid. He’s a greatguy, and it’s really a pleasure just tobrowse in the store. Always a good talkshow on the night radio.Staver, Booksellers, 1301 East 57th St.Hours: Monday-Friday, 10 a.m.-lOp.m., Saturday, 10:30 a.m.-S p.m.,Sunday, noon-6 p.m.Stavers is probably the neatest andbest-arranged bookstore in the neigh¬borhood -- which makes it a pleasure to browse in. The one unusual feature ofStavers is their large selection ofBritish and French paperbacks - aselection unduplicated in the city(though one might try the EuropaBookstore in the 2900 block of NorthClark for French, German and Spanishpaperbacks.Stavers has both scholarly worksfrom Britain (including things likeBritish Museum monographs) and alarge selection of mysteries. There is agreat section of literary criticism, andStavers is also very strong on art booksand drama. Small but choice selectionof fiction and an equally small butexclusive shelf of books on the occult.Good on history, philosophy, socialsciences.Continued on Page 5iPain inRussianWintersTom Courtenay in the title role of ‘One Day in the Life...’Of the current releases playing abouttown this week, the film adaptation ofAlexander Solzhenitsyn’s One Day inthe Life of Ivan Denisovich, at theCinema Theater, commands thegreatest interest. An Anglo-Norwegianco-production, directed by the Finnish-born Caspar Wrede, Denisovich neatlycompresses the particular kind of dryobservation that marked Solzhenitsyn’snovel. Some might object to a sort ofheightened British sensibility in thebuilding of details, notably in RonaldHarwood’s script and Tom Courtenay’sperformance as Ivan, but I feel thatsuch slight affectation makes the pic¬ture more immediate and recognizablethan inevitably clumsy imitationRussky. Also, Sven Nykvist, Bergman’scinematographer, does a lovely job ofcapturing the colder side of snow, whichon color film is not so easy as one mightthink.However, in the adaptation from theliterary work, Denisovich suffers fromthe addition of certain “literary” at¬titudes that the book wisely avoided.Film has a natural tendency towardpolemicizing, presenting cases. To theircredit, the filmmakers have tried toavoid this pitfall, but withoutSolzhenitsyn’s careful control ofnarrative details,, much of the filmseems to contend that Ivan’s storyrepresents in some ways the “triumphof Man’s indomitable spirit over themost extreme of pain and suffering.”It’s very difficult to control details onfilm—a picture shows everything where words are, by their nature, selective.For all its fine understatement andrestraint, Denisovich on film becomeswhat is essentially one of the morehackneyed humanistic myths.After all, even sitting in the cold of theCinema Theater, it takes a particularlysmug complacency to moan over thepyrrhic triumphs of men reduced to thesurvival level of insects. How muchsympathy would Ivan retain as a Negroin the antebellum South? I suspect thatthe admiration accorded IvanDenisovich’s endurance is more afunction of a decades-long Stalinisthangover than anything else. Still, evenif the attitude implies a rather limitedrespect for human potential, it’s a hellof a lot better than finding elaborateexcuses in advance for tyranny andoppression and injustic, whether forStalinist Russia in the thirties, or moreup to date, for the Arab nations of today. God knows the liberals have earnedtheir guilt; one would hope our Left oftoday wasn’t working so assiduously toearn theirs.Meanwhile, Denisovich is an in¬telligent piece of entertainment fromthat most unlikely of entertainmentgenres: the work-epic.* * *On the other hand, if you prefer aRussia with a romantic soul, DavidLean’s Doctor Zhivago is being revived,beginning Wednesday at the MichaelTodd (that is, if Gone with the Wind’srun isn’t extended for a fourth time).Whatever you may think of the film(and I have strong reservations aboutnearly all of it) if you intend to see itagain, this is most emphatically thetime and place to do so. First of all, theMichael Todd is the only place inChicago where you can see 70mm these days, and Freddie Young photography,with the superior quality and tone that70mm allows—quite literally twice asgood as the normal 35mm you see intheaters—is worth sitting throughanything.Incidentally, if you doubted what Isaid about photographing snow for cold,Young makes the Russian wastelandsstunningly lovely, but hardly chilling. Ifnothing else, Doctor Zhivago looksamazing. And what’s more, the pricesare fantastic: $1 mornings, $1.50 af¬ternoons, and $1.95 evenings. In asimiliar mode, West Side Story is now atthe United Artists, though without70mm and the enlightened ticket policy(though it is only $1 before noon). Worthcatching, if only as a yardstick tomeasure how far you’ve grown sincelast you saw it.—Myron MeiselViifiMt'(Im 8m tiUuU't Slittt It Qtillitlt'CtI-JIM t MHtSfl *CAVUSI Hi« in COLORPIUS: SWEEDEN'S “I FEEL IT"Shangri-LaSAINT MARGARET’SCHURCHThe Episcopal Church ofSouth Shore2555 East 73rd St., at Coles Ave(1 block west of So. Shore Dr.)The Rev. Albert F. Peters, RectorSERVICE SCHEDULESUNDAY9:00 a.m. Family Mass& Church School11.00 a.m. Low Massand SermonWEDNESDAY 6 p.m. MassFRIDAY 9:30 a.m. Mass,Healing Service SPRING SEMESTER—ISRAEL! Brandeis University/The Jacob Hiatt Institute| Study centered in Jerusalem/February-June, 1972j Limited to 30 students| Juniors, Seniors and Grad students eligible,j Four courses/History, Literature, Archaeology, Bible' Earn 16 Creditsi Knowledge of Hebrew or Arabic preferred■ Cost: $2000/Tuiiion, room, board round-trip travel! 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Photo by Leslie Travis.If you’re looking for free entertainment stay oncampus and stroll through the Bergman Gallery andthe Renaissance Society Gallery. Contemporary artposters and posters of World War I are the focus of theBergman show. These groups of posters are, ofcourse, quite different from each other in style andeffect and so provided an interesting contrast.The war posters are fascinating from a socio-historical standpoint. They demonstrate quite clearlythat at one time “patriotism” was not a dirty word.The slogans proclaim, “Fight or Buy Bonds,” and“Bonds Buy Bullets.” Not all of the posters areespecially interesting or notable artistically, butseveral, such as those by Howard Chandler Christyand James Montgomery Flagg, are successfulaesthetically. These are fine examples of an effectiveposter; “an instantly perceived, convincing andmemorable image.”Some of the works seem absolutely repugnant intheme. One such poster shows a wounded, but joyousAmerican soldier holding three bullet-pierecedGerman helmets. The slogan next to him reads, “Andthey thought we couldn’t fight.From our historical vantage point we may even findmild humor in some of the posters. Several ofChristy’s works attract the viewer’s attention by thedepiction of a beautiful and scantily clad womancalling for victory.The contemporary art posters were produced insmaller quantities than the war posters, but in largeenough quantities to make them accessible to much ofthe public in terms of price. They have recentlygathered widespread interest among collectors, and itis easy to see why. They may differ from a more ex¬pensive edition of a certain graphic only in the lack ofthe artist’s signature, the production of a largeredition, or the use of less expensive paper. They areoriginal art posters, done by the artist, or under hissupervision.Many of the works here are by well-known artistssuch as Magritte, Chagall, Steinberg, and Albers.They are all rather large, colorful, and perfect forhanging on a big, empty apartment wall. The Miro isenchanting and especially appealing, as its price isonly $31 framed. All the Bergman posters are for saleRoberto Rossellini’s The Rise of Louis XIV has itsfirst Chicago showing this Sunday night as part ofContemporary European Films’ autumn series. Thefilm was my own choice for the best movie of 1970, butI hesitate to write about it simply because it is toogreat a film to be done justice to with only oneviewing. I will therefore confine myself to a fewremarks.The film opens quietly as Cardinal Mazarin is dyingamidst the civilized tortures of 17th century medicine.As he is bled and powdered by the court physicians,Mazarin becomes concerned over the future of youngKing Louis and requests that Louis visit his bedside.The apparently irresponsible young man arrives, andthe Cardinal offers his fortune to him so that Louis canstrengthen himself against his enemies within thecourt. He quietly declines the offer-and so begins therise of Louis XIV.This chronicle, covering the next twenty years ofLouis’ rule, selectively recreates the reality of courtlife. The color is subdued, the acting is underplayed,and drama as such is totally absent. Unlike traditionalhistorical films where history is a series of decisivemoments, Rossellini’s history is a continuum ofsituations and characters. The different situations andcharacters appear and disappear but history con¬tinues on. As Louis’ scheming renders his rivals im¬potent, the emphasis is on the results of the schemesrather than on the delight or dismay of the par¬ticipants. The characters act, rather than emote, asparts of the play of history.Our initial reaction is that RosseLmi has trans¬ported himself and his came l a back in time.Somehow in the process, he has become invisible andis able to photograph t’ * Fren 'h Court unnoticed. Ourresponse to the film is refore one of admiration for and the art posters are available through Poster Plus,Inc., a beartiful and friendly gallery at 2906 NorthBroadway. When you’re in that part of town be sure tostop in and take a look around.The exhibition at the Renaissance Society Gallery isentitled “The New Curiosity Shop” and was organizedby Joseph R. Shapiro, president of the Museum ofContemporary Art and donator of the ShapiroCollection. To quote Shapiro, “The curiosity shop isstocked with all manner of marvelous things ofastonishing invention. No formal paintings orsculpture as such, madness forbid! But bizarre ob¬jects of wonder, surprise, wit, and audacity.”the ingenious man who could accomplish such a feat.There have been no great moments to move us orspectacles to excite us, and so we emerge from thetheater perhaps a little bored, thinking, “Yes,Rossellini is very talented.”Only afterward do we discover that the film is farmore than an authentic recreation. In rememberingthe film, we come to realize that its genius (as op¬posed to its talent) lies in the selection and juxtaposi¬tion of the actions presented. Every movement and ev¬ery word places us in a milieu, not for its own sake,but rather so we can understand the way that historyemerges from this setting. Every action or decisionthat nudges history forward becomes part ofRossellini’s interpretation of history.We are shown that Louis is both shrewd and vain,but only vain enough to shrewdly exploit the vanity ofothers. The outstanding politician, then as now, issimply an ordinary man with an extraordinary un¬derstanding of his own ordinariness. As in all goodhistories, the emphasis in The Rise of Louis XIV is onboth what is the same and what is different. Thequestion of the film’s relevance to us today is an awk¬ward one. It’s relevant to us, but perhaps it isn’trelevant to today. Circumstances change, but menstay the same. History is the past, and as such it canonly be studied in a detached manner.Rossellini has created the first truly historicalcinema, and anyone with the slightest interest inhistory or in film should see it. The screenplay waswritten in collaboration with the French scholarPhilippe Erlanger which might impress some as to itsserious intent. To my fellow non-historians, I can onlysay that The Rise of Louis XIV gave me greater in¬sight and understanding into history than a year ofWestern Civ. “Aesthetic objects there are; but mostly anti-art-random pieces of life-kooky, irrational, funky, garish,and absurd. Art of sense and nonsense, as fun, inplayful games of antic spirit and comic delight. ...”he concludes. Many private donors and galleries havelent the pieces which are exhibited, including works bymore than 50 artists. Calder, Cornell, Linder and someChicago artists are represented. Despite these im¬pressive credentials, the collection borders on kitsch.Individual works are amusing and are certainly goodconversation pieces, but by juxtaposing more than 80“curiosities” Shapiro has created a mood of confusionand even insolence. As one onlooker commented,“You have the feeling that someone is puttingsomething over on you when you’re in the gallery.”If you accept the concept of anti-art, and manypeople do, you may agree with Shapiro and appreciatethe show. If you feel, as I do, that “anti-art” is ameaningless term, then you probably will find littlesatisfaction or attraction in this menage of addities.Rather than finding delight or astonishment in thedisplays, I found disappointment at the lack of sen¬sitivity and beauty. This is the art of nonsense, but bycloistering it in a gallery the freedom of comic delightis lost.For me, the main success of the “New CuriosityShop” is that it virtually forces you to make valuejudgments. All the works displayed evoke a strongviewer reaction.The Renaissance Society Gallery is at the first floorof Goods peed Hall and their show runs throughNovember 13. The Bergman Gallery is in Cobb Hall418; the poster show continues throught October 30.SusanLeffthe m lOUTHUlMITCH BOBKINEditorJOHN DEL PESCHIO, THEATERMYRON MEISEL, FILMSUSAN LEFF, ARTDEENA ROSENBERG, MUSICAssociate EditorsCHARLES FLYNNPAULA SHAPIROContributing EditorsMARGARET ROBERTSFRAN SOLMORInspirationsJUDY ALSOFROM, BOB PURRICELLI,JACK MARKOWSKI, MARK SWEDLUND,MARINA BARALDINI, DON DRUKERStaffTht Grty CityJamal n the UxcatvMantmicOttralmafazmi PrmWwttUy •i it* Mjrm* Offkt, IJa NtytsWi 753-M6J.FILM 1 ■==========— -The Rising Power of a King:Rossellinni’s ‘Louis XIV’ FilmMichael MahernFriday, October 15,1971 - The Grey City Journal - 36610by CAR repairs/SutjJcA Jo. • •BRIGHTONFOREIGN AUTO <8£fWUCE4401 S. 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California 92666MALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER’S LICENSEAPPLY NOWDRIVE A YELLOWJUST TELEPHONE CA 5-6692 ORAPPLY IN PERSON AT 120 E. 18th ST.WE HAVE WEEK-END WORK FORYOU.LAST SUMMER STUDENTS EARNEDUP TO $50 OR MORE DAILY.WORK DAY OR NIGHT OR DURINGSEMESTER BREAKS.Work from a garage near home or school$Kipwy fib*Joff arrived - «n Kindt ofiKWmy Feb}. do*cn$ of nowcolor*, from *5 to *14Hiis c p«rt of Coton 4 sttmHyde ferk Sh#ffin$ Center/ 5$** £ Like weRLB Jkuilmu,410 S MICHIGAN • CONTINUOUS 11 4$ A M City Parkingat door-on dar groundHA 7-3300RATING-Wanda Hair New York Daily New, “A winner!”—PLAYBOY MAGAZINEA Mel Brooks Film"TheTwelve (hair/ GENE WILDER“QUACKSERFORTUNEHAS A COUSININ THE BRONX’POTPOURRIg==^====^—=-bb«--i——Examining Hyde Park’s BookstoresContinued from Page OneStavers sell paperbacks almost ex¬clusively -- very few hardbacks. Theservice is friendly and if a book youwish to examine is wrapped in plasticfoil, don’t hesitate to unwrap it -- no onewill mind (as long as you wrap it againwhen you’re finished). You can orderbooks from England through Stavers --but delivery is often very slow.Harper Court Book Center, Harper at52nd. Hours: Monday-Friday noon-9p.m. (closed Wednesday), Saturday,10:30 a.m.-9 p.m., Sunday, 8:30 a.m.-9p.m.Jack the friendly proprietor of theBook Center, gives Stavers a close runfor the title of best new bookstore inHyde Park. There are about 7200 titles,all new and mostly paperbacks. One ofthe largest selections of fiction in thecity. You can get the Sunday New YorkTimes here, but either come early orhave Jack hold a copy for you. Also avery ungual magazine selection, andmany underground papers unob¬tainable elsewhere in Hyde Park (likethe L.A. Free Press and its offshoot TheStaff, and if you don’t know about thesepapeis and their famous want ads,you’ve got some catching-up to do).Jack is making plans to enlarge theBook Center which will be complete bythe end of the year. He’s knocking out acouple of walls, making room for morebooks. He’s already got a great selec¬tion in the areas of poetry, currentpolitics (Womens Lib, Black Studies,Ecology, and other fancies of themoment), cookbooks, film, theatre,history (especially American),philosophy, religion. Okay on paper¬back mysteries, rather weak in sci-fi(try Stavers for British sci-fi).Also watch for the Book Center’s saleson Penguin and Harper paperbacks, atwhich great bargains can sometimes beobtained for 50*. A good store that’sgetting better. Say hello tc Jack’s cat.The only place in Hyde Park you can getVariety.Powell’s, 1503 East 57th Street. Hours:Monday-Saturday, noon-9 p.m.A new arrival that bought out themoribund Green Door bookstore andcombined its stock with a large selec¬tion of good used paperbakcs. Malechauvinists take note: as you enter, alarge selection of used Playboysbeckon.If you can get past this, Powell's has avery good supply of paperback fictionand all social sciences (in hard andpaper back), especially history. Manyforeign language books, and a large butmostly outdated cinema section. Goodselection of art books, too. The store’sinterior is new, fresh and bright, whichis quite pleasant. Probably the bestplace to sell books in the area, too,although you may have to wait a day ortwo to get an offer. A good store.Joseph O’Gara, 1501 East 57th. Hours:Monday-Saturday, noon-9 p.m.O’Gara has a specialty: History. Ifthis is your bag, you’ll go wild inO’Gara. It is a beautiful store, im¬peccably organized and amazinglystocked in American and WesternEuropean History. Almost all hardbackbooks, reasonably priced.Mr. O’Gara specializes in British andScottish History; many of his sales areto libraries across the country. A verypleasant store to browse in -- the air isalways scented with Mr. O’Gara’s pipetobacco. Fairly good selection inreligion and literature, too.O’Gara buys books, but only good andinteresting hardbacks. Occasionally,you’ll find a small stall of 25* or evenfree books out in front. You may find agood book or two in this stall -- or a fewlaughs. But I once saw Wayne Boothpick out two free books from O’Gara’sstall, which proves discoveries are to be made therein, even by the great.Rudolph A. van Tellingen, Harper at52nd St. Hours: highly irregular,usually open 5-8 p.m. weekdays.It is truly impossible, even forveterans, to predict when this bookstorewill be open. You just have to take yourchances. Mr. van Tellingen is a kindlyman, and he seems to know his books.Used paperbacks at half price ~ and alarge selection of good ones.Don’t sell books here -- you’ll getrobbed. Many old American Heritagesand National Geographies, some oldforeign paperbacks and many artbooks. Used hardbacks on philosophy,social sciences, fiction -- a fair selectionwith rather high prices. Worth droppingin once or twice.Clark and Clark, 1603 East 53rd Street.Hours: Monday-Friday, noon-6,Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sundayclosed.A rather odd bookstore - the bestthing they have to offer is a huge, disorganized table of old paperbacks, inno order whatsoever, at 13* each or twofor 25*. If you feel like digging, you mayfind an old Mickey Spillane or RaymondChandler. A very bad selection of printsand overpriced picture framing (hint: ifyou have something you want framed,go to Somogyi, 3045 North Clark, for thebest work in the city).A few textbooks, seemingly selectedat random, and much musty usedhardback fiction, moderately priced.Old National Geographies. The peoplewho run the store are decidedly un¬friendly, so the only reason to go is tocheck out the paperback table. Don’tget anything framed here. You havebeen warned, (Do it yourself, even.)Woodworth's, 1311 East 57th. Hours:Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Satur¬day, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., closed Sunday.Step into Woodworth’s, and you mayfeel transported back to 1940. The decor,atmosphere, and staff all add up to thatimpression. Woodworth’s has a good selection of drama paperbacks, buteverything else is rather old and dusty.Hard to tell whether the ancient historyand literary hardbacks that line wallsare new books that never sold or usedvolumes. A rather good but mustycollection of stationery, too.Woodworth’s also has a post officethat’s never open. Definitely an oddity.Book Nook, Hyde Park ShoppingCenter, 55th at Lake Park. Hours:Monday-Saturday, 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m.,Thursday, 9:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Sunday,closed.No dogs allowed. Many Grove Pressand New Directions books, but a veryspotty selection of everything else. Lotsof pop-type stuff. Fairly good recordselection, but usually high prices (buyrecords at Ears, 2200 North Sedgwick,The Gramophone, 2600 block NorthClark, or One Octave Higher, 2900 blockNorth on Broadway). Watch for sale adsin Maroon. Just not a very interestingbookstore.- The Grey City Journal - 5Friday, October 15,1971iThe Plans and Ideas of M<Nick Rudall, assistant professor of classics, was chosen as th< director ofUniversity Theater (UT) over the summer. Rudall, a veteran of many UniversityTheater productions, both as an actor and as a director, replaces Annette Fernwhose one-year appointment was not renewed. Rudall has been at the Universityfive years and during that time has distinguished himself both for his theaterwork and his love of teaching. During the coming year he will continue to teachfull-time and he is currently offering the first University sequence-course in thephilosophy and traditions of theater.RudcAl will present Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead later in thequarter. Rehearsals have just begun for this modern play retelling the Hamletstory through the eyes of two of the ploys minor characters. Last week Rudall wasinterviewed by GCJ theater editor John Del Peschio and expressed a variety ofinteresting ideas.I’d like to start by congratulating you, and I suppose that the first question, whichis basic, is what do you do, what’s your job?Well, I’m still teaching full-time. As director of the theater, I’m in charge of, itsounds high fallutin’ but it really isn’t, artistic decision; that is that I will helpguide the theater artistically, whereas for example the other two members of thisnew triumvirate I am sure will do different things. Bob Nelson will do the prac¬tical administration, and Charles Jenkins will assume the technical direction ofthe theater, so we are sharing things.What happens this year, and I am sure it will happen in most years is that I shalldirect at least two plays, major productions. If and when I don’t do a third play, oreven a second play, I shall arrange to bring in an outside director or a directorfrom the University community, if possible. For this year it’s not quite clearwhat, or whom yet. But that’s the general set-up.What kinds of theater do you want to present ?I have a notion that I want to explore soon with the UT student board, and that isthat we plan a sort of 4-year sequence of plays, as soon as we get going—thatdoesn’t include this year, because it comes in at a rush. This would be a sort of 4-year sequence where it would be possible for a freshman coming in by the time hehas left to have seen plays representative of the major eras of theater; that he willhave seen a Greek or Roman comedy, Comedia, a Renaissance, Shakespeare,Restoration, Realism, Modern, Experimental, Absurdist—that the 12 majorproductions would sequentially represent various areas of theater over a givenperiod, at which time I think there would be less possibility that the board and thedirector would disagree, if that notion itself were approved, because then it wouldbe a matter of choosing the plays within this framework and I think there wouldbe even less reason for conflict, rather than relying on the director’s whim as itwere: “Oh, I’d like to do this one.” This would place it within a framework thatwould be useful to an academic community. One of the problems, precisely, hasbeen that the theater is over there, and Cobb Hall and Gates Blake are over here,that the classrooms function quite independently of it—of the theater I mean.Yes, l think that that last point about the sometime opposition between CobbHall—the academic part of the College at least, and the...I wouldn’t call it opposition.I have sometimes felt, this is my fourth year here now, that the University hasthis conception of itself as an intellectual institution, which I think is a validconception. But I think it also has an annoying tendency to think of the performingarts as being dangerously able to pollute the purity of the intellectual atmosphere.I don’t think that that’s necessarily true. Do you sometimes see theater, ballet,music, opera, to a certain extent perhaps, as bastard children of the Universitystruggling to survive in a cold—or warm, intellectual environment. ? Do you thinkthe University pays lip service to the arts? Do you think that the Pick Theater wasallowed to die?I’ll try and answer as many of those as I can. Let’s deal with the question of theuniversity’s attitude to the performing arts first. I think first of all you have tounderstand it historically as far as I can tell not having been here more than fiveyears. You’re right. This school was and to a very large extent still is concernedwith the theoretical aspects of art not in the practice of it or in the teaching of the6 - The Grey City Journal - Friday, October 15,1971 Nick Rudall at UT auditions last*practice of it as it certainly doesn’t have a home economics school nor a foresschool and I think to a certain extent, while those are humorous comparisons, ticertain extent they are true. Because Fencing 101 would be parallel to aninhusbandry 101 in the minds of some people. They both would be practical coursAnd there has been a resistance and probably to a certain extent a very healresistance up to a certain point. Simply because the school is small, it hadifunction; that was a liberal arts education.Biit I don’t think that it is just that this University has been slow to changethink all institutions have been slow to change in recognizing that there iseducational value in the performance of the arts. One understands a play mibetter by doing it, not much better but one can further one’s understanding ciplay by doing it in one form or another, as well as in reading it and analyzingsymbols. So I don’t think the resistance was unfounded, I think it’s been a gradilearning process in this institution and elsewhere that the performance of theaithemselves has an educational value. It took some time to have a BergiuGallery and the Midway Studios are still across the midway. We will not haFencing 101 here for awhile. So I think that, even if that does not fully answer!question, I think it at least states the position of the University.Given that, given that the University is not going to teach acting, is not goin?teach lighting for credit, or animal husbandry, then your question is still vihowever. What is the University’s attitude towards the arts given that it is!going to teach them? There you called the arts bastard children. To a certiextent they are, but no more so than football, if you want; this school does*lavish funds on student activities and the theater, music, dance and studentstivities. The University has no budget for UT productions. It has a budget!salaries of three people; no more. There is no budget so if you want to say tlthat indicates that they are bastard children, you are probably right again. Bitis a very difficult question for me to answer.— .Should this school have a drama department?The answer to that question is what kind of drama department do you waiYes, I think this University should have a drama department. I’m not quite stfwhat kind it should be yet, but people should realize what kinds of rirafldepartments there are. There are drama schools like those at Goodman, whayou don’t deal with literary or historical questions necessarily, you deal alnnentirely with practical questions of voice, posture, movement, interpretatiolighting, carpentry, stagecraft. And then there are the other schools like CoriKor Yale where the stress is very definitely laid on historical awareness of vdevelopment of theater. There are seminars in acting, classes in stagecraft, e!The danger of a set-up where you have a full drama department with drammajors, the danger for a school like this, is, perhaps it isn’t even a danger, thatmaybe the wrong word, but what tends to happen is that those who become drammajors then assume total control of that theater. It becomes their plaything. Hino longer a student activity, at least it rarely is. Students can of course try o<occasionally, but the drama department attracts the kind of students who «want to use that theater at every possible opportunity and they will tend to!better than the average inexperienced undergraduate. You then say that 5longer is the theater an open student activity, but it is almost all the prerogati*of that drama department which of course puts on much better plays than we!now, probably, because you have the experienced student who is totally dedicatewho has experience, even by the time he comes here, and the theater, the p«formance of plays would be infinitely better than they have been or than they cibe now. Some people would call that a danger.ilk Rudall, New UT DirectorAll Nick Rudall photos by Leslie Travis.Given where we are now, minus a drama department, but with UniversityTheater, what are resources that you would most like to exploit in your new joband what areas frighten you because of their weakness?B ISr mttig fflsingradiheairgmit havera,oing l1 vaiis 5:erta>ess*?etiIV t)Bll twai:e si!1riraflwildalma jtatio'orniof tSft, e«riraflthatIrang. in jryflio vto alats;gati*wetcatee ptt>y ci I partially indicated my feeling about that particular question already. Thething I most want to have happen is to make University Theater a communitytheater in the sense that it will provide those plays and those services that willhelp that community as it is now; that is will provide plays that should be put on inan academic community, plays which perhaps couldn’t even be put on elsewhere,or wouldn’t want to be put on elsewhere necessarily. I think we should aimtowards that. That after all is the function of an academic community; that itprovides plays which that community couldn’t see elsewhere all the timewhenever they want. . . Goldoni, comedia. . . since we’ve mentioned those twobefore.I think that is the major area which I wish to exploit, that is that I would likethere to be a very close relationship built up gradually, admitedly, between thehumanities here and the theater itself. It’s perhaps an impossible problem. I don’tknow. We have to provide them with theater that people would want to see. Wecan’t just say come and see our plays because you haven’t been coming to seethem. We’ve got to give them theater that they want to see of as high a standardas we can possibly aim at. The difficulty is precisely that the standard hasn’talways been high enough for those professors who are used to the London stage tocome along and see productions.Now how can we improve the standard of acting and directing, etc? That’s theweakness obviously in the scheme. How do you do that? Well I think that theschemes we have in mind now will help a long way towards this. I’ll start with thesimple basic one, and that is we hope to develop, are in fact developing already aprogram whereby those who are beginning to act, beginning to direct will be able*to select a play or a scene from a list of plays submitted by professors in thehumanities and then those scenes, once rehearsed as play readings can be per¬formed in the classrooms. W’hich I think would be fun for the classroom but itwould also be a very good way to get experience at directing, because the onemajor difficulty in directing is not placing lights but getting your actor to read aline within your own interpretation. One can do that in a play reading too. So it is avery good way to start. That’s one program that we have in mind and it is alreadystarted.The second program to improve the standards is to provide those very thingsthat other drama departments do provide but at the moment, and perhapsalways, for no credit, academic credit. We are instituting workshops this quarterimmediately. There will be. for example, dance and body movement workshopsgiven by the theater every week. That is already decided. There will be an actingworkshop every week. That is already decided. All the details of time and placeand things are not yet worked out. Charles Jenkins will be giving workshopsstarting in a week or two on lighting, lighting design, scene construction, scenedesign and will be doing this whenever and as often as he can, and people want itto be done. We have in mind to bring in people who some of the people associatedwith theater here have met up at the Guthrie and around town to give sort ofesoteric workshops in the use of stage materials. Plastic foam, I think there isgoing to be a workshop on.In other words the only way we can improve the standard of theater is to helpthose students who are interested get experience through workshops that theycouldn’t get by hanging around, because obviously there just aren’t going to beenough major productions in a person’s life where he’s going to have a chance tolearn everything that be could possibly know about acting, for example. So, the acting workshops will be strong and will continue all the time.What I want to do with those workshops is to gear the workshops towards thoseproductions which we have in mind for the future. So if we decide to do a Goldoni,our workshops would be directed towards expressing onesself in a classicalcomedic way, which sounds like a heavy phrase, but what it would mean is thatwe would work on comedia techniques for a long time in workshops in theprevious quarter or two quarters. Those people who were in those workshopswould form a very nice core for any subsequent production. If we do say amodern, realistic Tennessee Williams soon, which we might do though that’s notdefinite yet, then the workshops would be directed towards realistic charac¬terization, accent, questions of scene analysis where you know exactly what’sgoing on, why, where—the basics of the method acting for example.To sum up what ihn saying is that to improve the standard of performance wehave to decide in advance what the productions are going to be, have workshopsused in the previous quarter to prepare those who are interested in doing thoseworks in terms of movement, voice, theater design; in other words coordinate allactivities to produce more experienced student actors.Why are you an actor? What part of you is involved in acting? Why do people likeit?I don’t know why people like it. I’m in it. . . I’m not in it any more, I haven’tacted for a long time. I started doing it in high school in Wales, which is probablythe fairest answer, because we just had to do it then, virtually. We did extensivepreparation for Shakespearian productions in a school where the age range wasfrom eleven to about 19 and we would prepare for about six months and do theonly Shakespeare in that part of South Wales. I started, because it was an all boysschool, by doing female roles in Shakespeare. We had a sort of stock company. Ithink my first part was the Queen in Hamlet. That’s why I started.Did you have one of the higher voices?No, we all did. When my voice broke I was then allowed to do Goneril. After thatit was Richard III and Romeo, I think. But to answer your question as to whypeople act I think that once you have done it, whatever the immediate cause,which in my case was compulsion by the school, it’s very hard not to try to im¬prove on what you already know you can do. Gradually one gets to know one’slimitations and then you want to improve upon them all the time and one does finda progression in ones’ capabilities as an actor. The other answers and the onesthat are always churned out—the smell of the greasepaint and the applause. I’mnot sure that there’s so much smell of greasepaint and applause around here todrive a person on to be an actor. I think it’s much more the fun of exploring acharacter, trying to erystalize him/ her and pinning him down and graduallydeveloping the skill to do that. At least it is for me.What excites you about your current project, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern?What started to excite me about the play is that it has a core meaning which Iwant to be immediately assimilable by an audience and that is namely that theseare two men, intelligent, who are lost. That’s what they play is about, how they tryto find out where they are, what they’re doing and why they’re doing it. Andnothing else should obscure that fact in that play. That’s got to be the thump in theaudience’s face all the time; that’s exciting because that demands answers interms of setting, lighting, mood, pace, frantic responses from Rosencrantz andGuildenstern. It requires all kinds of things and that’s the basic challenge.But there is another exciting challenge and that is to get two young actors to beable to carry a long, verbal play. The challenge there is to make them put flesh onwords. There is a danger that these words will hang in the air and not come fromtwo very real people. There are many scenes where all that is on the page is anumber of quick, short lines which could be said by anyone, but they musn’t besaid by just anyone; they must be said by two people who don’t know where theyare and they want to know where they are. They are almost paranoid about it sothat every single question comes from that terrible desire to know where they areand that’s a very difficult and exciting problem to do because it is a very difficultpiece of acting. It’s terrifying to me at this stage.Friday, October 15,1971 - The Grey City Journal - 7\!CULTURE VULTUREi = 5=Walk in the Loop or North side This WeekendThe Grateful Dead will play in the Auditorium this week.THEATERThe School for Wives, Brian Bedford's New Yorksuccess (see review elsewhere in this issue) continuesthrough Oct. 23 at the Studebaker Theater. Student discounttickets available for every performance excepi Saturdaynight.The first Goodman Theater production of this season.Assassination, 18*5, a world premiere play written byStuart Vaughn, starts this coming Thursday, Oct 21 at theGoodman. Vaughn will also direct this play about the deathof Abraham Lincoln. Through Nov. 28.Status Quo Vadis will play at the Ivanhoe Theater, 3000 NClark, through November 28, an extension of seven weekspast the original seven week run. Tickets are $3.50 to $5.00.Cali 248 6800.The Kingston Mines Theater is now showing two plays,Terminal which is presented Fridays, Saturdays at 8:30pm and The Whores of Babylon which is shewn Thursdays at8:30 and Fridays and Saturdays at midnight. 2256 N. Lin¬coln. Call 525893.Poe is still at the Body Politic, right across the street fromIhe Kingston Mines Theater. This play about the death ofEdgar Allen Poe is closing Sunday, so the only times left tosee it are tonight at 8:30, tomorrow at 8:30 and 10:30 andSunday at 8.30. Run to see this one now!Multiple Work, by the Free Theater of Columbia College,is being shown at 3257 N. Sheffield on Sun at 7 and 9 and Monatsthrough Dec. 6. This mult-media presentation is FREE!The Old Town Players at 1718 N Park are presenting ToClothe the Naked through Dec 19. This is a Chicagopremiere of a Pirandello play. Fri and Sat at 8:30, Sun at7:30. $2.50.I'm Really Here and The Zoo Story, by van Italie andAlbee, respectively, are being presented by the NewChicago City Players at 615 W Wellington through Oct 23.Fri at 8:30, Sat at 8.Heilo from Bertha and The Zoo Story by Williams andAlbee are being shown at Cafe Topa, 3806 N Ashland on Friat 8:30 and Sat at 7:30 and 10 through Oct 24. $3.University Theater presents the Goodman Children'stouring company in The Thwarting of Baron Belligrew thisSunday at 2 pm in Mandel Hall for $1; become a kid again.ARTThe Art Institute's special showings at the present timeare: Views of Florence and Tuscany throuqh Nov IS; TheArt of the Sepik River through Nov 28; Photographs byOavid Lockhart closing Monday; and American Textilesthrough the end of the month.Enrico Baj Retrospective is at the Museum of Contemporary Art through Oct 24. 237 E Ontario.Selected works from two one man shows by Americanartist Benjamin Clark are now on display at CCE, 60th andKimbark, through O-t 31. Daily from 9am til 8 pm.Astrology is the Clock of Destiny, now at the Hyde Pak ArtCenter, Blackstoneand 53rd St, will continue through Nov 6.Two Generations Apart, a dual exhibition of posters ofWWI and today are now on display in Bergman Gallery, 4thfloor Cobb. Stop in before class. In the RennaissanceGallery, first floor Goodspeed in The New Curiousity Shopthrough Nov 13. See reviews of these two exhibits in thisissue.Shapiros are today. Go to Ida Noyes and see what numberthey're up to by the time you read this.FILMTwo films by two great Italian masters on campus thisweekend. Tonight Doc films presents Michelangelo Antonioni's L'Avventura which shocked Cannes back in 1960and a year later was selected the second greatest film of alltime, after Citizen Kane. One of the key films of the lastdecade. Sunday night CEF presents Roberto Rossellini'sThe Rise of Louis XIV, which suffered a more quiet neglect it was originally shown on French TV. See commentelsewhere in this issue.Tuesday night Doc is showing Vincente Minnelli's Bellsare Ringing, starring Judy Holliday in her last role, in color,Cinemascope, and Susar.saphone. Wednesday, Doc's shockof the quarter---the original uncut version of Tod Brown¬ing's Freaks. It takes one to know one. See posters fordetails.Elsewhere and recommended: Witchcraft Through theAges, one week only, at the Biograph.The Little Stabs of Happiness Cinematheque, 656 Barry,will show Potemkin, Eistenstein's silent masterpiece thisMonday, Oct 18 at 8 pm. $1.50 A Betty Boop cartoon, too.Boo boo bee doop, boop!Alice's Revisited, 950 W Wrightwood, is showing ThePassion of Joan of Arc Tuesday at 8 and 10 pm. This film ispart of the Best of Carl Dreyer series.NUC is presenting a Latin-American Film Festival at theBlue Gargoyle on Fridays at 7 and 9. Tonight they will beshowing Blood of the Condor, the surprise hit of the SanFrancisco Film Festival.King, a documentary on the life of Martin Luther King will be shown at the United Church of Hyde Park, 53rd andBlackstone Sunday, Oct 7 at 7 pm. Produced by El / Landau,the film uses "on the spot" news reports and films from thenation's leading agencies.MUSICEdward Mondello will present an organ concert inRockefeller Chapel this Tuesday night at 8:30 pm. Admission $1. Guests artists will also appear.Alice's music this weekend will include Howlin' Wolftonight and tomorrow night at 9 pm. Donation $2.50, 950 WWrightwood. Sunday features McLuhan at 9 for $1 andWednesday is jazz night with Ken Chaney and theAwakening also at 9 for $1.The Ides of March, Chicago's own Blood, Sweat and Tearswill be at I IT tomorrow at 8 :30 $2.50. 3241 Federal, Hermann Hall.David Cassidy, our favorite little hermaphroditic pop-star(ain't he cute) is appearing in Arie Crown Theater, Mc¬Cormick Place tomorrow at 3 and 7:30. If you're 14 and goingthrough puberty, go, if not, beware!For you heavier individuals, the Grateful Dead will be at the Auditorium Theater Thursday and Friday, Oct 21 and 22at 7.30. Tickets are $3.50, $4.50 and $5.50. At ail TicketronOutlets.The Chicago Symphony Orchestra will present"Washington's Birthday" from Charles Ives' "Holidays,"Stravinsky's "Symphony in Three Movements" andBeethoven's "Symphony No 5" Thursday, Oct 21 at 8:15.Today at 2 they will present "Variations for Orchestra" byCarter and Mahler's "Symphony No 5". Afl conducted byGeorg Solti.The Lyric Opera will show "Rigoletto" tonight, and"Tosca" tomorrow and Monday. All performances at theOpera House at 8.ETCThe Circus, the big curcus, is still at the Ampitheatre. Runto see the lions, and tigers and bears. Oh my ISG will hold a dance tonight for only $1 at 8:30 Woof!This is a dog dance.Finally, this would be a good weekend to examine eitherthe Loop or the North-Side. The weather should be cool,walking will not be too taxing and you really should see thiscity before the winter weather sets in.Michelangelo Antonioni'sL'AWFNTMP AL MY YClilUlvTonight 7:15 & 9:30 MDoc Filmst CHICAGO'S FAVORITE HIT! ***♦****¥**¥¥*5**¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥I "Preserves an aes¬thetic balance be¬tween the comic gro-tesque and thecomic indecent.Quite a Feast"- Chicago Sun-Times"Best evening I'vespent at a theatrein Chicago for along time. Well writ¬ten, well staged,ana well acted,with attention to de¬tails of costumingand set pieces aFmost unheard ofhere."-Daily PlanetStaged by Eleven "Best experimentalplan this year. Thelarge cast does anexcellent job withthis tremendouslydifficult work. Stag¬ed brilliantly andwell acted."-Near North News"Fantastic, extrava¬gant, and beautiful.A transparant mem¬brane between twoworld."-R. CameronThe ReporterFRIDAY AND SATURDAY AT MIDNIGHT ******I♦******* ChampagneBrunchSunday $3.50 adults$2.00 childrenIN THE HYDE PARK BANK BUILDING1525 E. 53rd • 10th Floor • 955-515110% STUDENT DISCOUNTTUESDAY, WEDNESDAY,THURSDAY FINETURKISHFOODWeek Nights5 to 12dosed Mon.JAMESSCHULTZCLEANERSCUSTOM QU AUTYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933 EXOTIC TROPICAL &DESERT PLANTS75e & upatSouthtown Flower & Garden Shop7151 South State Street"In the Old Market Area”t THURSDAY AT 8:30 J^KINGSTON MINES THEATERSj * 2356 North Lincoln Avenue *¥ Re*: RO1-4400 $tWaa a a » A*★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★**★*■ ★★★★*8 - The Grey City Journal - Friday - October 15,1971 KATSAD0S P i A D M A ( y,INC• Complete Prescription Needs• Prompt Delivery Service1521 E. 53rd ST. Phone 288-8700 PIZZAj PLATTERj Rizzo, friedI Holion foodiS Compare the Price!| 1460 1 5 3rd 643-2800i WEPfUVKRMUSIC!MotidelloRockefellerPlaysRockefeller Chapel offers the University com¬munity numerous musical events of consistently highquality. The first of this year’s major concerts will bepresented Tuesday, October 19, at 8:30 p.m. by Ed¬ward Mondello University organist, assisted byDonald Doig, tenor, James McKay, bassoon, andElliot Golub, violin.The concert will highlight the 126-stop Skinner organof the chapel. To place the large organ in historicalperspective, Mondello will play a work from the mid¬fifteenth century, “Mit ganczem Willen,” fromFundamentum Organisandi by Conrad Paumann on aregal, and four minuets, a march and musette fromthe Notebook of Anna Magdalena by Bach on a three-stop positif. Both the regal and positif are small,portable organs used primarily before the 18th cen¬tury. They will be on display in the chapel the day ofthe concert. A special demonstration will be presentedat 12:15 pm on that day by Peter Crisafulle, the builderof the instruments, and his wife, Lynda, flutist andrecorder player.Three widely differing aspects of Baroque solo artwill be performed by the tenor, bassoonist andviolinist, all within the context of chamber music,Donald Doig will sing the intimate song, “Bist du beimir,” and a recitative, aria and chorale from the AnnaMagdalena book. These, like the short dances to beplayed by Mondello, are didactic works which Bachused in teaching his first wife.Two sonatas, one for bassoon and basso continue byJ E Galliard and the Op 12, no 1 solo sonata for violinand basso continuo by Handel, are the remainingworks. Galliard’s sonata is one of the few examples inthe Baroque era of a sonata for a bass instrument. Itrequires a virtuoso performer, yet its style remainslight and attractive. The sonata by Handel, in whoseLondon opera orchestra Galliard played, displays theingenuity and imagination of a great composer. Histextures are transparent, his rhythms fresh and hismelodies tuneful. Still, the greatest strength of thework is the freedom with which Handel organizes hismaterial.Two works by Bach, the G Major Fantasy and thePrelude and Fugue in A Major, the Introduction andPassacalia in d minor by Max Reger and the Preludeon a theme by Vittoria by Benjamin Britten are thepieces to be played on the large organ. Mondello ex¬ The organ pipes and thlstops in Rockefeller Chapelplained that although the organ is one of the largest inthe Midwest, he must be careful to choose only pieceswhich suit the lush, romantic sound of the instrument.Only with difficulty can he duplicate the crisp, brightsound of a true baroque organ.The strength of the Rockefeller organ is its noble,cathedral sound and the unusually great number ofhighly individual stops. Mondello describes the organas an English cathedral organ with strong Germanand French influences. These assets suit the organperfectly to the Reger Introduction and Passacaliawhich demands a wide variety of colors and, in itsconclusion, a magnificent, dramatic full-organ sound.Mondello says that Rockefeller is the only hall inChicago where this piece could be performed in thestyle the composer intended.Mondello points out, however, that the organ consoleis in need of extensive repairs. In order to perform theReger piece, he will use two assistants to pull stopswhile he plays, since the combination machine of theorgan console, which usually serves to move the stopsby using preset buttons, cannot be relied on. Mondelloregrets that the console has decayed to its present condition since such pieces as Easley Blackwood’sSymphonic Piece for Organ, Op 18, written for theRockefeller organ cannot be played. Mondello ex¬plained that most of the moving parts in the organ arecovered by leather and that after many years of ex¬posure to the high sulfur content of Chicago’s air, theleather has begun to decompose. The solution, Mon¬dello asserts, is to replace the old mechanism with asolid-state combination mechanism having no movingparts. Despite its problems, though, the sound of theorgan remains beautiful and majestic.Because of the mechanical problems of the organconsole and the limited repertory which can behandled without a combination action (works such asthe Hindemith organ sonatas and the Franck organchorales are now impossible to play on the console)the format of solo organ recitals followed In pastyears has had to be abandoned. Instead, concerts suchas this, featuring a number of musicians and utilizingthe strong aspects of the organ, will be given. Shortnoon day concerts also will be offered every Tuesdaythroughout the school year at 12:15.-Robert HolstPRE-LAW MEETINGWednesday, October 20, at 4:00 p.mReynolds Club, South LoungeMr.Nicholas Bosen, Dean of StudentsUniversity of Chicago Law Schoolwill discuss national law schoolswith interested students.Information about application toLaw Schools will be distributedat the meeting. NEKA&MEHYDE PARKS NEWEST BOUTIQUEClothing, Jewelry & Giftstram!■£«, Sa. America, Spain, Israal 4 ParsiaPersian Rugs of various sitesReasonably PricedHOURS: Tuns, thru Fri. 11-9Mon. 6 Sot. 11-6, Sun. 12-51613 E. 53rd St. Ml 3-1111dLome borne fo dinnergpec'alitmjH63&.5 pmC103C0 r+oMOArf Italianhgfe parh bhr&ru-Ouis UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 L 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY664-3661FRA!\K PARISIproprietorA bicycle puts youclose to nature - Thusspake ZarathustraTurin in. Turin on,drop joggingV for velocipedeCheapest prices for Car¬lton, Raleigh, Robin IKh*1.Falcon. Peugeot, Gitane,Mercier, Radius and Daws.Factory trained mechanics.Used bicycles spasmod¬ically. Fly-by-night rentals.hrii Bicycle C*p2112 N dark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00-8:30; SAS 10-8TW ctrplWirn Iim OM TownFriday. October 15,1971 - The Grey City Journal - 9ANNOUNCEMENTExaminations for Regular CertificationCHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLSDate of National Teacher Examination: November 13, 1971Deadline for filing with EducationalTesting Service: October 21, 1971Deadline for filing Application (Form Ex. 5) October 29, 1971 4-30 piApply - Board of Examiners, Room 1026Chicago Board of Education228 North LaSalle StreetChicago, Illinois 60601ChicagoCertificate TitleKindergarten-PrimaryIntermediate-Upper GradesHigh School BiologyHigh School ChemistryHigh School EnglishHigh School Mathematics‘High School PhysicalEducationMenWomenHigh School PhysicsArt, Grades 7-12General Science, Grades 7-12General Science, Grades 7-12‘Homemaking Arts, Grades 7-12‘Industrial Arts, Grades 7-12‘Auto Shop, High SchoolLibrary Science, Grades 7-12‘Electric Shop, Electronics, H.S.‘Musk, Instrumental, 7-12‘Musk, Vocal, Grades 7-12‘Print Shop, High SchoolSpecial Education, EMH Grades 1-12Special Education, TMH Grades 1-12Special Education, SpeechCorrection 1-12‘Wood Shop, High School‘Practkals will be given in April. National TeacherExamination TitleEarly Childhood EducationEducation in the Elementary SchoolBiology and General ScienceChemistry, Physics, General ScienceEnglish Language and LiteratureMathematicsMen's Physical EducationWomen's Physical EducationArt EducationBiology and General ScienceChemistry, Physics, General ScienceHome Economics EducationIndustrial Arts EducationIndustrial Arts EducationMedia Specialist - LibraryIndustrial Arts EducationIndustrial Arts EducationMusk EducationMusk EducationIndustrial Arts EducationEducation of the Mentally RetardedEducation of the Mentdlly RetardedSpeech PathologyIndustrial Arts EducationSpecial NotkeCandidates for teaching certifkates may make application for theexamination if they moot aN requirements by February 29, 1972. TheCandidate should file applkation with Educational Testing Servke,Box 911, Princeton, New Jersey 08540, to take the National TeacherExamination in the area for whkh he is qualified.The following credentials must be presentedto the Board of Examiners not later thanFriday, October 29, 1971:Application (Form Ex 5)Official transcriptOfficial birth certificateAmasttomnAe Bootee aLuuiljlwppwfcinn tot comiicanofi orwwaExamination scores be sent to the request that National TeacherBeard of Examiners. Minimum500Teaching Area Examinations 550Total Composite Score 1100For application form (Ex 5) please sbe your placement director orcaR 312-941-3920. ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★A"' cKIMBARKLIQUORSINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINESTIMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to you!1X1 ONLY TRUf WINE SHOT IM HYM PARKSMD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC1214E.SMSI.NY3-33S5 FLY AWAY TOTHE ROCKIES(For just $90*)We’ve made skiing the Rockies abargain. $90.00 will fly you to Denveror Colorado Springs and back ...to the best powder in the U S.A.At no extra cost, choose our 747 AirCruise ... the only 747 serving Denver... the only 747 with two lounges anda pub, to make the hours pass likeminutes.Fly away to Aspen, where a week ofskiing costs as little as $81 (7 nights,6 days, lifts included — low season,double occupancy). So far, the cost ofyour ski holiday comes to $171.00. Ifyour time is worth money, doesn’t thatmake skiing the nearby Rockies thebest bargain?For more information or reservationsfor individual and special group pack¬age rates, call your travel agent orContinental’s Ski Desk at 686-6500.Or mail -the coupon below ior ourlatest ski brochure.‘Round Trip tour basing fare fromChicago, including 8% FederalTransDortation Tax.Mail to:CONTINENTAL HOLIDAYSP.O. Box 4187North Hollywood, California 91607Please send me a free Continental“SKI THE ROCKIES” brochure.NameAddress.CityState .Zip.ORD-UCCONTINENTALAIRLINES j★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★LET THE FOLKS BACK HOME KNOW WHAT YOU'RE INTO.In touch with o Maroon subscription foronly $9. This sends all issues forthe academic year.CHICAGO MAROON 1212 L 59th St., Chicago, III. *0*37NameAddressZ»P‘ THE STEWARDESSES"WILL BEAT A THEATRE NEAR YOU . .THE UNPUBLISHABLE NOVEL IS NOWAMERICA’S MOST CONTROVERSIAL FILM!STEREOVISIONCHRISTINA HART • MICHAEL GARRETTANGELIQUE 0E MOLINEDONNA STANLEY MMM IHNCtl ■Hina MW OWICKO ttLOUIS K. SHF.R • ALF SILLIMAN JRDistributed by TEITEL FILM CORF.* Mam Milanin Chicago BRIGHTON • 400 • HI-WAY • HYDE PARK I• LUNA • in the suburbs LAMAR o«k po** LYRIC Blu* Island • MEADOWS Rolling Meadows• NORTOWN Chlearo HaigMs • PARTHENON Hammond • STATE South Bond• TIVOLI Oownors Grow* ML AARON ZIMBLEROptometristaye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363A professionalABORTIONthat is safe,legal &inexpensivecan be set up on anoutpatient basis by callingThe Problem PregnancyEducational Service, Inc.215-722-536024 hours—7 daysfor professional, confidentialand caring help.Name onething thathasn't gone upsince 1950.Try. Try hard.The only thing we can think ofis what we make. The Swingline“Tot 50” Stapler. 98c in 1950.984 in 1971.And it still comes with 1000 freestaples and a handy carryingpouch. It staples, tacks andmends. It's unconditionallyguaranteed. It's one of theworld s smallest staplers.And it's the world's biggestseller. Could be that's why ithasn't gone up in price in21 years.If you’re interested in somethinga little bigger, our Cub DeskStapler and Cub Hand Staplerare only $1.98. Both Tot andCub Staplers are available atStationery, Variety and CollegeBookstores.The Swingline "Tot 50”98* in 1950. 98* in 1971.If you can name something elsethat hasn't gone up in pricesince 1950, let us know. We'llsend you a free Tot Stapler with1000 staples and a vinyl pouch.Enclose 254 to cover postageand handling.10 - The Grey City Journal - Friday, October 15,1971THEATERDu Goodman CM**'; TOo«n Tourtu CM*mBrian Bedford and Cast Amazein Moliere’s ‘School for Wives’theater> I T PresentsGoodman Play! The Goodman Theatre’s touring■ children’s company will present The1 Thwarting of Baron Bolligrew this■ Sunday, Oct. 17, in Mandel Hall at 21p.m. for just $1.The play, written by Robert Bolt (hewrites screenplays for David Lean andwrote the play, A Man for All Seasons)land directed by Joseph Slowik appealsparticularly to children from ages 5 or 6to about 12.In the play, the Baron and a dragonhave made a pact not to interfere witheach other’s victimizing of the poor.Pudgy Sir Oblong Fitz Oblong comesalong and along with Odidiah Bob-blenob, and a twittering magpie cleansup the little island.1 While children are fascinated by thisproduction, even parents will enjoy thegood-natured fun. More information onthis show can be obtained by calling 753-3581. New York's Phoenix Theatre hasbrought Moliere’s School forWives to Chicago. Chicago shouldwelcome it, for the production is ex¬cellent. Moliere’s play has beencarefully and imaginatively developedin every facet of production and ispresented in a sparkling new versetranslation by Richard Wilbur.The plot concerns Arnolphe, a mandetermined not to be cuckolded, whohas had a beautiful peasant girl-Agnes-- raised in complete ignorance ofworldly affairs. The girl is to be hiswife and her continued ignorance,assured by Arnolphe, is to protect himfrom cuckholdry. During- Arnolphe’sabsence, of course, the inevitable youngbeau-Horace--happens by and begins alove affair with Agnes. Meanwhile, bycoincidence, Arnolphe has become theconfidant of this same young man in hisstruggle to win Agnes from the grip ofthe “old man,’’ Arnolphe himself. Thecomedy ensues.The unformily excellent cast is leadby Brian Bedford as Arnolphe. Thecharacter of Arnolphe is based on thecontradiction between a reasonableintention (avoiding cuckoldry) andunreasonable dedication and fanaticismin attempting to realize that intention.Bedford has managed to capture thespirit of the role (and the play) per¬fectly. As the self-righteous moralist, asthe evil schemer against the younglovers, and as the repeatly frustratedgoat of all of Horace’s triumphs (con-THE BOOK CENTER5211 South Harper Court3y all modern marketing standards, we are afailure! Imagine-no air conditioning! No carpet¬ing! No sweatshirts or bras! No fancy fixtures!Then why after only 6 years are we the storewe are?Basically because we try to find the books thatpeople want-and the people that want the booksfind us.Very basic also to our growth is our staff.It's small but good. (Pretty too!) Finding booksat THE BOOK CENTER is a pleasure because ourpeople know what we've got and we will gladlyhelp you find it.Browsing is a pleasure because we have ourvery large stock of titles broken down by cate¬gory, and within each category alphabetically byauthor.Our hours are also set up with the book buy¬er in mind. We're open:Saturday—10:30 A.M.-9:00 P.M.Sunday—(New York Times Day) 8:45 A.M.-9.00 P.M.Weekdays from Noon to 9 P.M.COME BROWSE W ITH US SOON! fided in strictest confidence to theirfrantic by silent victim), he is delightful.He succeeds in mixing the serious withthe ridiculous, weaving apparentlygenuine motives with caracaturedemotions mitigating evil plans withfore-ordained failure, and establishinga conscious and graceful relationshipwith the audience. He suspects that wehave come to laugh at him, but henevertheless lets us in on his schemes.He acts as if his farcical machinationswere of utmost consequence. But oc-cassionally he reveals that he knowswe’re in a theater and thinks that that isthe most amusing thing of all!Joan Van Ark’s stylized portrayal ofthe naive but rapidly learning Agnes isvery well executed, as is David Dukes’properly flashing and amourousHorace.The technical aspects of theproduction deserve praise also. NancyPott’s costumes are always descriptiveof the character they grace, and are attimes fascinating in all the gawdiness ofthe Sun King’s court. The lighting isunobtrusive but sensitive (the sunlightlooks like it has filtered through leavesbefore it strikes the roof of Arnolphe’shouse), and obtrusive enough when there is a purpose. The scenery issimple but effective, c allowing scenechanges to take place in no more thanthree seconds, thereby maintaining aconsistantly lively pace.School for Wives is running untilOctober 23rd at the Studebaker Theatre.There are student prices on week nightsand matinees. Take advantage of them.--Richard KilbergHelp the GCJThis is the second issue of the GreyCity Journal, and we hope to make thisyear our best. However, we need yourhelp. If you would like to -vrite oncultural events, please contact the GCJeditor, Mitch Bobkin, at the Maroonoffice, 753-3263.Also, we are planning a guide toChicago’s bars. If you have a favoritewatering hole that you want to makesure we cover, just drop us a note, incare of the GCJ Drunken editor, Maroonoffice, Ida Noyes 303.This WeekendTHE BANDERSNATCH NITE CLUBopens the fall quarter withthe university of ChicagoCONTEMPORARY JAZZ ENSEMBLEfeaturing:w. thomas McKinleySTEW CATZ bass pianoDICK 0LDERMAN, percussionSaturday night, October 16 9 pm-12:30 amCloister Club, Ida Noyes Hall / only 25calso featuring: various b-snatch num-nums, includingour mouth-watering pizza, lovingly made bytopless italian peasant girls upstairs in thebandersnatch pizza kitchen.LIVE JAZZ!!DON’T MISS IT!!(Live Music Every Saturday!!)Use Maroon ClassifiedsThey work wonders!Friday, October IS, \ Hie t.rey C ity Juurnal - 11EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometmtKimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Pork 3-8372 Students WantedMale or FemalePart-timeFlexible Hoursl^orn $40 or More Per WeekCall Frank Mooney525-47779 a.m. to 4:30Leather GarmentsEXPERTLY CLEANED& REFIMSHEDBeat the Fall & Winter Rush. Have your* leather garments cleaned now.Alterations & repair also available.The Town Cobbler1458 §. 53rd752-0402Pick-up & Delivery ServiceBecause of increased inquiries, we are making available this famous17" x 19" full color poster. To order, fill in the coupon and mailremittance in cash, check, or money order.PRICES ARE:$.50 each or 3 for $1.00Make checks payable to J. D.' Patton nameADDRESSCITY .STATE _ZIPAMOUNTNO. OF POSTERSMAIL TO: J.D. PATTONP.0. BOX 2066BENTON PARK STATIONST. LOUIS. MISSOURI 63158FINE JEWELERS FOR 61 YEARS119 N. WABASH Two people really together, laughing,loving, looking for tomorrow.See for yourself our selection ofquality rings.To assure your satisfaction we willexchange or refund full value.You won’t be hassled at Hollands.• WOODFIELD• EVERGREEN• LAKEHURST DESKS-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. cardBRANDTelephone (312) 233-5700CONDITIONINGRGLAR ALARMSPAUTO RADIO ■SPEEDOMETERSYSTEMS STEREO TAPES8*540 SOUTH ASHLAND AVE.CHICAGO ILLINOIS 60620 SLINKY'SFENDER’SD'ANGELICO'SPROFUNDASBRONZE - CLASSICSILK & STEEL12 - STRING STRINGS - 50% OFFONE SET PER COUPONSAVEAS NEVER BEFORE ONUNCLAIMED LAY AWAYSMARTIN e GUILDGIBSON e FENDERand others . . . OCT. — NOV. Welli Sell YouName BrandJeans forBecause We Want Your Body.A Special Selection of six, seven, eight, andten dollar jeans for four dollars.One week only at Just Jeans.Saturday, October 16, 1971 throughFriday, October 22, 1971And get into our great jeans.You'll get a lot out of it.jusij EANS1607 East 53rd Street288-9796Your Body Belongs In Just Jeans12 - The Grey City Journal1 1 riday, October 15,1^71, ABOUT THE MIDWAYMurphiesThe deadline for submitting applicationsfor Henry Murphy scholarships, awardedquarterly for students who engage in time-consuming extracurricular activities, isMonday, October 25.Applications are picked up and submittedin the College aid office, 5737 University Ave.The purpose of the awards is to permitstudents to work on student activites insteadof having part-time jobs. Final awards arebased on financial need, academic standing,and the nature and extent of the student’sactivities. There are a limited number ofhonorary awards for those who do not havefinancial need.UNICEFDiane Broadhent ’74 and Joyce Adachi ’74are cooperating with UNICEF to collectwrappers from various products whosecompanies have reached a rebate agreementwith the United Nations Children’sEmergency Fund.If the wrappers of Birds Eye Vegetables(front panel), Clark Gun (pack wrapper),Hunt’s Snack Pack (back panel), Kool Aid(package), Peter Paul Candies (UNICEFseal), Pals Vitamins (box), and Welch’sJams and Jellies (label) are sent to UNICEFby November 10, UNICEF will receivemonetary redemptions.Collection boxes will be placed in thedormitories and Regenstein near the vendingmachines. Items may also be sent ot the girlsat 5825 Woodlawn, room 1423, or they willpick up items if called at 753-2249.Rummage saleThere will be a rummage sale in thegymnasium of the school of Saint Thomas theApostle church, 5467 S Woodlawn from Oc¬tober 27-29. The sale will be from 9 to 4 on thefirst two days, and from 9 to noon on Friday,the 29th.Donations of saleable articles are welcome)n Sunday, Oct 24, after morning mass, andvill also be taken on Monday and Tuesday,Jet 25-26, bdtween 10 and 4._AppointmentsPramod Chandra, an art historian, hasoeen appointed professor of art at theUniversity.Chandra has been a University facultymember since 1962.Chandra, a native of Benares, Indiaalso is a member of the committee on SouthAsian languages and civilizations at theUniversity and is active in the AmericanAcademy of Benares, which he helped foundand of which he has been Director.■ William Horgan has been appointed in¬structor of physical education and assistantfootball and baseball coach at the Univer- is a member of the Women’s Board of theField Museum of Natural History, Chicago.Register!MOOSE: And yet another fraternity member.sity. The appointment was effective Sep¬tember 1, 1971.He has spent six summers as m instructorat the Boston Patriots and Pro All-StarFootball Camps at Milton, Massachesetts.Paul Wheatley, a specialist in the com¬parative and historical study of cities, hasbeen appointed a professor in the depart¬ment of geography at the University.Wheatly comes to the University from theUniversity of London. Previously he wasorofessor of geography and history andchairman o f the Center for Southeast AsiaStudies at the University of Califormia,Berkeley.The University announced Monday thecreation of an endowed professorship inurban and labor economics in honor ofIsidore Brown and his wife, Gladys Brown.The professorship is one of several inurban studies at the University. It is madepossible in part by funds from the FordFoundation.University President, Edward Levi saidthe chair will be held by Arnold Weber, aprofessor in the graduate school of businesswho is currently on leave as executivedirector of President Nixon’s cost-of-livingcouncil. Weber is expected to return to thecampus in November.The named professorship honors IsidoreBrown, r mrently a senior member of the law firm of Brown, Dashow, Langeluttig, Arons,and Doran, Chicago, and his wife, Gladys,who has long been active in civic affairs. She University students who are Illinoisresidents and who meet the Illinois age andresidency requirements will be able toregister to vote Tuesday in either MandelHall or Ida Noyes Hall.To be eligible to register the person mustbe over 18 years old, a resident of Illinois forat least six months and a resident of thesame voting district for 30 days as of March31, the date of the first primary.Students can register in Mandel from 9a.m. to 4:30 pm and hi Ida Noyes from 9 amto 5 pm.Walgreens' bustA plainclothes policeman arrested twoUniversity students Wednesday afternoon atthe Hyde Park Walgreen’s, 55th and LakePark, for purchasing liquor while underage.The boy and girl were taken to the 21stPrecinct Station, where the boy was bookedand released on bond Thursday. The girl,believed to be 18 years old, was released,without being charged, Wednesday evening.When asked by officers for his ID, theyouth reportedly said he had none, but ad¬mitted he was only 19 years old.Also arrested, according to Officer Vail ofthe 21st Precinct review desk, were the clerkresponsible, charged with selling liquor to aminor, and the store manager, charged with“keeping a disorderly house.” Both havebeen released on bond. Trial date has beenset for November 4th.BULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, October 15 Sunday, October 17Discussion: Rabbis Max Ticktin and 0»niel Leifer on"Gensis," Hillel House, following liberal services at 7 p.m.Discussion begins at 8:30 p.m.QUADRANGLE BOOK LECTURES: British rule in Indiaand its English judges, Kipling and Forster, Pick hall, room16, at 4:30 p.m.DOC FILMS: L'Avventura by Michelangelo Antonioni, atCobb 209, at 7:15 and 9:30 p.m.GAY LIB: Coffee house at Blue Gargoyle, 7:30 to Mid¬night.LECTURE: The worlds most valuable mineral or howArchimedes saves the petroleum industry a billion dollars ayear, by Joseph Smith, at the auditorium (room 101) inHinds laboratory, 4 p.m.FILM: Blood of The Condor, at The Blue Gargoyle, 7 and 9p.m.CHINA LECTURE: Ann and Uldis Kruze report on theirrecent month long tour of China (mainland) at QuantrellAuditorium at 11:30 a.m. and at 1 p.m. Also at theCrossroads Student Center, 5621 Blackstone, at 8 p.m. Allprograms open to public. UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICES: fcockfellermemorial chapel, 11 p.m.SUNDAY SEMINAR: Discussion led by Rev. BernardBrown, assistant dean of the chapeL Chapel Undercroft,Rockefeller chapel, 9:45 to 10:45 a.m.SEDITION: Robert Clark, professer of political science.Loop College, will speak on "The Charge of Sedition" atBonhoeffer house. He has been a friend of Eqbal Ahmad(Harrisburg 8) from graduate student days at Princeton, at6:30 p.m. 5554 Woodlawn.CEF FILMS: The rise of Louis XIV, in Cobb at 7 and 9:15p.m.Monday, October 18Saturday, October 16FOOTBALL: The Maroons playTech at Stagg Field, 1 p.m. Northeastern Illinois APG: Dr. Philip Hauser, director of Population ResearchCenter at the University, on "Attaining a Stable Population:Facts and Myths," at Ida Noyes hall, 7:30 p.m.MEETING: To discuss kosher eating co-op and AdatShalom, Hillel house at 8 p.m.Information can be obtained from students activities officeby calling 7532150 at any time, day or night.If you have decided to terminateyour pregnancy we can help you.(Abortions are legal in New York Stateand residency is not required).STRICTLY CONFIDENTIALABSOLUTELY NO REFERRAL FEEFREE LIMOUSINE SERVICE AVAILABLETOTAL COST:$150 UP T014 WEEKS$300 14 T016 WEEKS$35016 TO 20 WEEKSFor information call:(212)873-3492or write to:WOMEN’SORIENTATION CENTER257 Central Park WestNew York, N.Y.A WON-PROFIT OMANUITWN INDO AMERICAN CULTURAL EXCHANGE ASSN.presents“FETE INTERS ATEOX ALE”AN EVENING OF EXOTIC FOOD & DANCEDelicacies from India, France, Lebanon...Featuring Jimmy Payne’s Afro-Cuban Dancer’sMexican Folklore Troupe, Indian Classical & Many More.WHEN: Saturday, Oct. 23, 19716:30 P.M. Banquet8:00 P.M. PerformanceWHERE :The Lutheran Theological SchooUOOE. 55th St.$4.00 Members $4.50 Non-MembersRESERVE YOURTICKETS TODAY”!!!!Please make checks toI.A.C.E.A. 5423 S. Hyde Park Blvd.Chicago, III., 60615PHONE: 363-0027 New University Conference &Chicago Area Group on Latin America:LATIN AMERICANFILM FESTIVALOctober 15Blood of the Condor (Bolivia)October 22The Hour of the Furnaces-Part I (Argentina)October 29The Hour of the Furnaces-Part II & IIINovember 5III World, III World War (Cuba)November 12The Jackal of Nahueltoro (Chile)Fridays: 7 & 9 pmBlue Gargoyle $1 00Friday, October 15,1971 The Chicago Maroon - 5Nixon's economicstouch daily life: LyndLINDA JENNESS: Presidential candidate for the Socialist Workers Party spokeyesterday in Ida Noyes. Photo by jon Yuen.Linda jenness speaks in Ida NoyesBy Ellen Sazzman‘•Nothing is wrong with being a minority aslong as you're right,” said Linda Jenness.Socialist Workers party 1972 presidentialcandidate at a meeting Thursday in the IdaNoyes library.Although she does not expect the SocialistWorkers slate to win the election, she ex¬plained that her aim to be “the exposure ofthe undemocratic nature of this country.”Miss Jenness spoke on the topic“Feminism and Revolutionary Politics”,emphasizing the “only solution to thiscountry’s undemocratic, capitalist society isthe building of mass movements by women,blacks, chicanos, and workers.“When these movements organize andfight for control of their own lives, therevolution will happen.”Miss Jenes warned that these groups muststop selling out to the Democratic andRepublican Parties.“Both parties are instruments of capitalism. They must oppress women andblacks for cheap labor. The system cannottolerate challenges from those oppressedany more than it tolerated *he challengefrom the prisoners at Attica.”People in general have little control overlegal matters, employment, and pollution.Jeness asserted. Women who constitute 53percent of the US population "can’t decide tohave an abortion. “Once she has a child, awoman can’t decide whether or not to spendher life raising children because money thatshould be channeled into building of day carecenters is being spent in Viet Nam. Womenearn 59 percent of a man’s wage for per¬forming the same job. Nixon’s economicpolicy freezes our inequality into thesystem.”Miss Jenness believes a new wave offeminism is sweeping the country. “We aregoing to define ourselves. We will not bedefined by men or society.”Listed among the latest accomplishmentsof the movement were a twelve-year-oldgirl’s application to the Little League and an By Sidney Lehky“Nixon’s economic policy touches oureveryday life,” said Staughton Lynd, formerassociate professor of history at Yale and anactive member of the anti-war movement,leading a teach-in on Nixonomics in IdaNoyes Wednesday.The basic aim of the meeting sponsored bythe New University Conference, as part ofthe moratorium day activities, was to collectideas for a “mock-examination” which willbe distributed during nationwide anti-waractivities planned for November.The examination would take the form of aseries of multiple-choice questions designedto bring out facts which would illustrate keypoints of Nixonomics to the common man,according to Lynd.eleven-year-old girl's entrance and victory inthe traditionally male soap box derby.Twenty women have also organized the firstfemale firefighting unit.“Men in the street can make any kind ofremark or disgusting noise to a woman onthe street but if she approaches him. she isarrested for soliciting.George Jackson spent ten years in jail forstealing $70 while an Illinois stockbrokerreceived a one year sentence for embezzling$4 million and Lester Maddox's son con¬victed of car theft does time on the week¬ends so as not to interrupt his education.The oppressed majority in this countryaccording to Miss Jenness is a potentiallypr^verful movement because “centuries ofpent-up rage are finally being released in amassive fight for self-definition and a votefor the Socialist Workers Party in 1972 is avote for that fight.”Miss Jenness will speak on “The Crisis inAmerican Politics” tonight, at 8 pm at theLoop YMCA, 37 S Wabash. She will alsoappear on Kup’s Show, October 16. He said the idea for the exam originatedwith the Students for a Democratic Society(SDS), who prepared such an examinationon Vietnam in 1966.“I want a synthesis of the teach-intechniques of 1965 and the mock-exam of1966”, he said, as he asked those at themeeting to help him write the examination.The examination, he said, “is something Ithink is very important. Teach-ins in the pasthave lacked such instructional material.”The wage-price freeze, the relation of theeconomy to war, inflation, and thedistribution of wealth were discussed.Lynd constantly emphasized the need tobring the ideas to the common man. “Canyou think of a way of making that idea ac¬cessible to the man in the street, in thesupermarket9” he asked when he thought astudent was becoming too esoteric. “Howcan we deal with our position in a questionand answer form*1”There are several similarities betweenAmerica’s involvement in Vietnam andNixonomics, Lynd said. Johnson's statementthat ne would not send combat troops toVietnam was comparable to Nixon’sassertion that he would not freeze wages andprices, as well as the Gulf of Tonkinresolution oeing comparable with thelegislation empowering the freezeLynd also said that Nixon’s institution ofthe freeze made him more responsible forthe action of the economy. It would be lesseasy for him to put the blame on others, hesaid.Lynd said there was a very importantdifference between the effects of Vietnamand Nixonomics. “Very few people were ableto speak about Vietnam from experience. Atthe beginning the teach-ins were veryremote, academic.” He went on to say that incontrast Nixonomics is something all of usknow about, something which affects usdirectly.He said he was not satisfied with the freeze“because it would freeze an inequitabledistribution of wealth.” All wages below$10,000 should be unfrozen, in his opinion.Frats change to avoid obsolescenceContinued from page 1He added, however, that he thought.“Frats are dying. They have been dyingsince football was eliminated, and they’redefinitely having a struggle this year. Dormlife has been made better. But the biggestobstacle is upperclassmen who misleadfreshmen by giving them a stereotype imageof fraternities. If anything, those who join afraternity are less conforming by not livingin a dorm or apartment.”Certainly it is true that Chicago frater¬nities cannot be stereotyped. I also found onUniversity Avenue tucked away withouteven an identifying plaque, Phi Delta Theta.Phi Delt has six members, but they arefinancially solvent, because there are nineborders. Half their members are on teams,too (three). However their president, AndyYingling, fourth year, doesn’t feel frats are introuble. “They are just going through aperiod of change. Greater student activismand awareness has created a conservative image which certainly does not exist on thiscampus. We have a close community here-certainiy we don’t have the lemmingpopulation in a dormitory.”Another interesting population existsfarther down the street where there is a 60 to40 white to black ratio, at Alpha Delta Ep¬silon. This high a ratio does not exist in anyother University housing on campus. Thereare thirteen members and eight boarderspaying about $380 a quarter. One membersaid they have rush and pledge after afashion, but because of the nature of theCertainly the most liberal (non fraternity-fraternity) is Zeta Beta Tau-Phi SigmaDelta, which has between its two houses (oneextension is located on Ellis) twenty fivemembers, ten of whom are female.Instead of the furnished library of Phi Gamor the trophy-lined walls of Psi U, or theseven foot statue of Athena decorating theentrance way at Phi Delta, Don Putterman, 4th year ZBT president lounged back in hisliving room suite of salvation army decor totalk.When asked if the fraternity functioned, inany traditional way as in doing some com¬munity service, he replied, “Yeah, we getour ass in gear once in a while. This Saturdaywe’re having the regional convention.” Thismay be the reconciliation they have beenlooking for, because although the frat con¬siders their girls full members, the nationalchapter has not recognised them as such.According to Putterman, co-education hassolved their financial problems and for thefirst time in a few years, the house was full atthe beginning of autumn quarter.Putterman (also the only president I sawwith relatively long hair and wearing a workshirt, surrounded by a harem, and obviouslyrelaxed) explained why he joined a frater¬nity. “My standard riff when I justify it tomyself, is that it’s made up of very distinc¬tive individuals and everybody maintains that individuality. National fraternities aredying because they don’t change, they are ananachronism designed for the collegecampus 40 years ago. Co-education hascreated a humane atmosphere that permitsone to survive in Hyde Park.”One woman member said she joinedbecause, “I don’t know of any other small co¬operative living unit on campus.” “Andbesides,” added Putterman “we have suchdistinguished alumni as Julian Goldsmith,Joe Schwab, Leopold or Loeb, I forget whichone, and Julian Levi and Sydney Khorscack.Ed Levi even pledged.”A lot of freshman boys from Pierce Towerand around campus, when asked said theywere quite satisfied with their dorm life, anddidn’t see any need to join a fraternity. Andthere is also the sophomore who didn’t opt forfraternities because “They’re full of Trot-skyites.”“Besides they’re probably all a myth.”(What do you think,Mr. Vice?)CEF PresentsTHE RISE OF LOUS XIV Oct. 17Cobb Hall 7:00 & 9:15 $1.00Far East KitchenChinese & AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILS *Open Daily l? 'l0Er i & Sat I 2 1 2Closed Monday53rd & Hyde Park Blva955-2229 FA 4-0633 34 CATERING SERVICEUnique Restaurantd 1= ine Del icatessen1501 EAST FI IRD STREETCHICAGO, lt_l_. 60615SPECIALIZING IN LAZY SUSAN TRAYS HELP!!!THE MAROON needs a DELIV¬ERY MAN to deliver some of its issues.Good pay for a few hours work. Musthave van or bus.Call Mike or Diana at 753-32636 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 15, 1971THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSHYDE PARK FIREWOODOAK$50 Ton DumpedALSOCHERRY, BIRCHMAPLE & HICKORY Baby carriage, carbed. clean gdcondition-S20-cradle like new, S25. 2211988Sony stereo taperecorder #280 solidstate 4 channel 2 speed selfcontainedunit-JlOO. Call 752-7935 eves.Double bed with wooden frame(modern) springs 8i mattress included$30. 955 0743.LUDWIG DRUMSET 684 7560Smaller AmountsAlso deliveredCall Art Michener955-2480Student ConsiderationsFOR SALEIndian Tapestries Si Prayer Rugs $6.00at RADICAL RAGS 1375 East 53rd St.1 bdrm coop apt. Low monthlyassesment. Convenient to UC. Rec rm,free laundry, off-street parking,balcony. 324-2742 or 324-6637Old Fur Coats fro.n $15 at RADICALRAGS, 1375 E. 53rd St.Maple Desk, 4 drawers, $35. 752-2290.Three used drum sets, all under $200 atLIFE RHYTHMS 955-2270.Household goods must sell by October31. 2 oriental rugs 8< a desk call 947-9677 after 3 pmHandcrafted brass and silver jewelry -See Barbara at LIFE RHYTHMS 955-2270; 1701 E 55.Double chest of drawers w/ bigmirror; hot plate 753 3559.Guitars and amplifiers at LIFERHYTHMS MUSIC STORE 1701 E 55.Big Savings on Sportcoats & Shoes.John's Men's Wear, 1459 East 53rdStreet.Used flutes and clarinets at LIFERHYTHMS 1701 E 55th St, 955-2270.'66 VW Squareback, reblt engine, newbrakes, luggage rack, lo mi $900. 274-4400 days, 327 8266 evenings.40% off on new Slingierland drums.LIFE RHYTHMS 955-2270 1701 E 55th. Photographs by Ken Love atTALISMAN GALLERY, 1552 E. 53rdSt. Oct 1 thru 15.Book bought & Sold. Powells Bookshop1530 E. 57th 955-7780New Pipes and Tabacco by Celliniused Dunhill-SavinelliTalisman Under the 1C1552 E 53rd 324 0837WANTEDUsed bike for male. Call Paul, BUS-3884.Man & Woman's bicycle, cheap,should be in good condition. Call Mrs.Ratner 467-6000 or 375-5379.DESK WANTEDI need a desk and chair to go with it. Ifyou have either at a reasonable price,call 955-3341 and ask for Fred.PEOPLE WANTEDSalesman wtd. Make extra moneyselling latest automobile burglaralarm. Write for full info. Cordover 8.Co., Box 627, Mirieola, NY, 11501.Babysitter for 1st grade girl, 3:15-5:30.Call eves. 288-6257 Ref. req'd.Need accurate typist for single job ofwork. Speed not essential. Will pay $50for roughly ten or twelve hours workover the next two weeks. Work at ownconvenience. Call 667-2507 or x32898.Roommate for nice S. Shore apt. Ownroom w/w.w.cpt.; adj.bath, somefurn. Rent $65. JoAnn 221 5842Anyone who has had experiences incommunal living and wants to rapwith us come to 5717 S. Woodlawn Wed9 00. This means you too Paul 8. Alan!WANTED. Subjects for psychologyexperiment. Call Chris 9476555.GOYA G40 Classical guitar $680 new$350. Clarinet $310, worth $240,MARANTZ 7T Preamp $195, SONYTC230 Stereo Recorder $310 LEEFlour Mill $310, Down Sleeping bag,nylon tent, camp stuff, 5 beds, tables,lamps, chairs, '64 CHEV $120 CYCLELeathrs 8348558LOWESTYOl!THFARESEUROPE$165round-trip jet from New YorkFor only $165* round trip,Icelandic Airlines jets you fromNew York to Luxembourg in theheart of Europe for best connec¬tions to everywhere. Effective foryouths aged 12 thru 29. Bookwithin 30 days of departure.Also, check our Youth Fares toNorway, Sweden, Denmark, Eng¬land and Scotland. Major creditcards accepted. See your travelagent! Mail coupon!‘Add $10 one way for departureswithin ten days before and afterChristmas and Easter and dur¬ing summer season. Fares andconditions subject to change. MALE Wtd to share E. Hyde Pk. Apt.Sunny, airy 8. quiet. 493 4841.Hy. Pk couple w/ 18 mo old boy wantsitter one wkend/ mo. Live in option.Call Mr isenberg, 341-2294 any hour.Leave message w/ name, phonew/ ans. ser.Young woman to assist teacher inliterary work (PLaza 2-8377)PEOPLE FOR SALEConversational Spanish Individual-Group Instruction LEON 6C4-2064.Pregnant?Need Help?We w.tll help any.woman regardlessol race, religion, age or financialvstalus We do not moralize butmerely help women obtain qualifiedDoctors for abortions, if this, iswhat they desire Please do notdelay, an early abortion is moresimple and less costly, and can beperformed on an out patient basis.Call:L 312 922-0777Problem Pregnancy HAssistance of Chicago8 AM-10 PM—7 DAYS ‘A NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION'•I5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113To: Icelandic Airlines630 Fifth Ave., N.Y., N.Y. 10020(212) PL 7-8585Send folder CN on Lowest YouthFares to Europe □NameStreet.CityState ZiDMy travel agent isICELANDICLOFMIDIRx&p ^ ^foreign cm hospital Mother of nursery school boy wouldlike to keep another child age 3-5 af¬ternoons. Call 752 2290, 1 block fromcampus.Play the RECORDER. Call HB. AskAbooi Group Rates 9479719.LEARN MANDARIN CHINESE-Professional tutoring. 324-0350.TYPING Past, accurate FA4-4730.Learn African and Afro-Cubandrumming. Call Adam, MU4-2297.VIOLONCELLICello lessons; former EastmanStudent; bgnrs wlcme 536-3521.SPACESpacious room w/ private bath availimmed in large East Hyde Park apt oncampus bus route. Male, female, orcouple 955-2270.Sublet with option to lease Very rice 4room apt $150/ mo Hyde Park. Call268-2191.Furnished single rooms $55-865 permo. Meals available. 5625 S.University 947 9424, 324-9723.WANTED:Fern Student to share 3rdflr. townhouse apt, priv. rm living rm,kitchen, bath. $80mo. Iblk campus.Call Dobbi 2883706.SUBLET APT Studio Kitchen-Bath$120/ mo. 5419 S. Harper. See managerin building. 643-3171.Lovely 9 rm Viet. 4 bdrm, fin aft 1-1/ 2mod ba, mod kit bltins disp dishwr, flbsmt wshr dryr, Ig yd gar, frpic, glsenc frterr porch gas fa ht, 220 LN, Vic2400 E 74 PI. $24,000 243-6064 dys, nt721-1555.SOUTH SHORE DRIVEBeautiful building overlooking Lakeand golf course-Spacious!2bdrms,2bath-S1853 bdrms, 3 bath- $250SILVERWOOD, INC. 955 4600Comfortable room available inspacious, clean apartment. $56. permonth. MorF 51st & University. Call288 8075 eves.WANTED: Apt to sublease in HydePark. Call 324-1896.Roommate Wanted, male, to sharequiet, Oesireable, 3-1 / 2rm furn apt.6043 Woodlawn, 955 9209 or 427 2583.DIANE APARTMENTS5424 CORNELLElevator Bldg. Newly decorated 8,furnished. 1-1/ 2 8. 2-1/ 2 rooms. Excelshpg. 8. trans. MI3-1432.HIGHLAND APARTMENTS7147 SO. JEFFERYElevator building. Near 1C 8. Bus.Newly decor. 8i furn. Studio 8. 1bedroom. Mrs. Roff FA4-7501.CHICAGO BEACH HOTEL5100 S. Cornell DO 3 2400Beautiful Furnished Apartments Nearbeach park-1 .C. trains U of C buses atdoor Modest daily, weekly, monthlyrates.Call Miss SmithLive in Frederika's famous Building.Nearby furn or unfurn 2,3-1/ 2 rm aptsfor 1,2, or 3 people. Refrig, stve, pvt.ba, pvt. porch, stm. ht. Quiet, sunnyview. Parking, trans. $120 up. Freeutils. 6043 Woodlawn 955-9202 or 427-2583 Short term lease.THE JEFFERY TOWERS7020 So JefferyExcellent transp. 8, conv. shpgFurnished Mgr. R. Jones on Premise.REASONABLE RENTALSCall MCALL MI3-2383. LOUIS LOUISDid Louis XIV really say "Where hasthe pin bin been Ben"? Find outSundav Oct. 17 Cobb 7:00 8i 9:15 pm.$1.00.IT'S A TOOLDON'T BE A FOOLPICK IT UP & USE ITRegister to vote, Tues. Oct. 19 all dayin Mandel corridor. If you will be 18; aresident of III. for 6 mos and of theprecinct for 30 days on March 21, 1972,you can do it! S.G.-Vote!EPICUREANDELIGHTMODESTLY PRICEDWANT TO EAT THE BEST FOOD INHYDE PARK? We have it. Lunches$20 per mo. Dinner $40 per mo. Rightacross from Regenstein. 5625 S. Univ.324 9723, 947-9424.A DAT SHALOMMEETINGAll students interested in a Koshereating coop please attend meeting atHillel House. Monday, 8:00 p.m.CONCERTSHIR, a recently formed group for theperformance of Jewish music,presents A CONCERT OF ARTSONGS at Hillel House, October 23,8:30pm. Gerald Rizzer, MusicDirector. Admission free.SCENESAll the world's a stage...learn to be aplayer! University Theater offers freeacting workshops with Lucille Strauss,former chairman of Columbia CollegeDepartment of Drama Saturdays, 12to 4PM, beginning October 23. Forsign-up or information call X.3-3581.Is the world still inquisitorial?Remember when? 1567 is the year,Spain is the place, "The Inquisition" isthe name. The play replays. For realin the world. In drama, in church, on aSunday morning in November, othertimes, other places. For folks whowant to make Sunday morningsdramatic. Interested? Interviews atBonhoeffer House, 5554 Woodlawn,Saturday (10/ 16) at 2:00 8i Monday at3:30 P.M.Prisons 8. prison reform. Hear 01Chicago Connections 10/ 17 QuakeiHouse 5616 Woodlawn 6:00 potluck,7:00 meeting.So the commune failed?! Come join u«in exolortng what makes a communework (or not) by sharing your experiences 9:00 Wed Oct 20, 5717Woodlawn Will also discusspossibilities for future communalexperiments in Israel, both rural 8turbanInterested in Theatre? UniversityTheatre wants you! For informationon free workshops in stagecraft, ac¬ting, and dance, check U.T BulletinBoard in Reynolds Club, or call X.3-3581.A London based Israeli internationaljournalist 8< playwright was thetheatrical hit at this summer'sEdinburgh Festival with severalplays. A Theater Guild Travel directorwith 15 years experience in directing &staging saw them, liked them, 8,brought one back with permission toproduce it at the University ofChicago. Oriented to a theater andchurch of people, not justprofessionals, he will direct "The Inquisition", premiering in a churchon a Sunday morning. Interviews ofwould' be participants at BonhoefferHouse, 5554 Woodlawn, Saturday at2:00 8t Monday at 3:30. Age not aconsideration. Professional ex¬perience not necessary. Get in on theact: faculty, students, townsfolk.Technical help also needed withlighting, costuming, makeup, posters,etc. as a vital part of process 8t in¬teraction.Liberal Friday night service at Hilleltonight, 7:00, planned and run bystudents, including a reading of onescene from Aharon Megged's playGenesis.DANCEwithWOOFFri. Oct. 158:30 pmIda NoyesAdmission: $1.00S.G. - 1NPB -Mr. PlywoodINDIAN COOKING CLASSESEight weeks. Contact 955-9812 beforeor after 9am - 9pm.Dietrich Bonhoeffer was executed bythe Nazis for "crimes against thestate" in 1945. The Berrigans are injail and the trial of the Harrisburg 8 isupcoming. Any connections? Come toBonhoeffer House Sunday evening at6:30 p.m. to find out. 5554 Woodlawn.Oneg Shabbat at Hillel tonight at 8:30.Discussion of the Cain and Abel story,including Rabbinic commentary andBuber readings, with Rabbis MaxTicktin and Daniel Leifer.Students for Voter RegistrationMeeting 3.00 Tues. Oct. 19 EastLounge Ida Noyes.Are you feeling comfortable? Want toshake a little lethargy? Come toBonhoeffer House Sunday evening at6:30 . 5554 Woodlawn.Join the Craft Co-op in it's first craftfair of the season, Oct. 22-23 at theHyde Park Shopping Center, 55th 8<Lake Park, llam til dusk. Sellanything handcrafted by you. Membership $1.00, fair fee $1.00. For infocall Flora, days 548-3302.Missed the Quaker Open House? Come8, hear of prison conditions. 5615Woodlawn, Sunday 10-17, 6pm, potluck7-meeting.Weekly Hebrew conversation (ChugIvrit) starts Wed Oct 20, 8:00, 5715 S.Woodlawn. All levels welcome.GESTALT ENCOUNTER GROUPOct. 15 to 17 Fri. pm to Sun. pm $25.Lorrie Peterson 288 3541.WEAR OUTYOUR SHOESTHIS WEEKENDPoncho Pilot - Dance 8i Rite ofDissipation Sat. 1:30pm by HitchcockHall. Absolutely Free, From S.G.!GAY LIBTHE GAY LIB COFFEE HOUSEinvites all Gay Sisters and Brothers toWork for the JournalThe Grey City Journal needs new blood to work for it. Ifyou would like to write articles on cultural events or would liketo edit them, or do almost anything with them, contact MitchBobkin at the Maroon office, 3rd floor Ida Noyes, 753-3263.MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637pates to runNAME, ADORESS. PHONE...CHABGi: SO* pm Kna, 40* pm aadi In* H Nw mi la mptwAti in nInn, 40* pm nacot Inn. Hmm an 30 lattara, apnaaa, amipvnctvntfMi matin in • Inn. All AM PA® M ADVANCEIKADMO: Thfaianwicttn chetyf $1.00 tar ywww haadhif. Manual•nna (for Saba, •*.) a*a frna.1 i1. . • its opening on Fri 10/ 15 at the BlueGargoyle 5655 S. Univ. Ave. 7:30pm tomidnight. Bring your homemadegoodies!PERSONALSHyde Park's complete music storeLIFE RHYTHMS 55th-Hyde Pk Blvd.955-2270"The Charge of Sedition" atBonhoeffer House, Sunday evening at6:30pm. 5554 South WoodlawnThe Coffee House will happen againFri. 8-12 Ida Noyes Library. If you areinterested in performing (folk, jazz,etc) or in helping us run it contactDebbie 493-7592 or Dan Boucher 402.A wide range of sounds - LIFERHYTHMS 955-2270, 1701 E 55Eqbal Ahmad is one of the"Harrisburg 8." Learn more about itat Bonhoeffer House Sunday eveningat 6:30pm. 5554 Woodlawn.Make friends! Learn Hebrew! MeetKiki! Share adventures! All this &much more (incl. refreshments) everyWed at Chug Ivrit.Bamboo flutes, bells and wind chimesat LIFE RHYTHMS 1701 E 55th.Robert Clarke, Prof, of Poly. Sci. inthe Loop, will discuss "The Charge ofSedition" at Bonhoeffer House Sundayat 6:30pm 5554 S. Woodlawn.Four black and white kittens needhomes. 8 weeks old. 753-4474 (days),667-0378 after 6.Jesus was charged with sedition. Whydo you suppose he was crucified? Doesit still happen? Come to BonhoefferHouse at 6:30pm Sunday evening toget this kind of thing in unaccustomedperspective. 5554 S. Woodlawn.Free! Lovely, affectionate 9mo oldfern. Siamese kitten 9552545.Free! Puppies, cute white andloveable. 667-8146 after 5.Key found near corner of Kimbark and55th. Call 955-2287.Interested in Hebrew, Israel, Aliyah?Join others interested in the same atthe Chug Ivrit Wed Oct. 20, 8:00 , 5715S. Woodlawn.Announcing the New Location ofWinsome Art Studio is at 10544 Ewing.10%discount with this ad framing. 221-2421.Talisman Craft Gallery imports fromMexico, Spain, Haiti, Israel, India, theNorth Side. 1552 E. 53rd 324-0837.HYDE PARK DRAFT INFO CENTER5615 S. Woodlawn 363-1249 Visit or callM-Tu W; 7 9PM.Pipes & Tobacco by Cellini - New 8,Used Dunhill Savinelli etc.TALISMAN, hrs. 11-9, 1552 E 53. 324-0837.WRITERS WORKSHIP (Plaza 8377)BECOME ORDAINED:Join our religious society as an Or¬dained Minister with a Doctor ofDivinity. Completely legal. Get allcertificates and ID. WriteMISSIONARIES OF THE NEWTRUTH; PO Box 1393; Dept. M2,Evanston. Illinois 60204.CAMPING EQUIPRENTAL:' Tents - sleeping bags,Stoves - lanterns. HICKORY 324-1499don't miss ourMinoltaDemonstrationOct. 16,9:30-5ON• CAMERAS• LENSES• MOVIECAMERAS• ACCESSORIES• LIGHT METERS6ET 0VR PRE-SURTAX AllTIME LOW PRICESmodel camera493-6700 13421.130)Friday, October 15,1971 - The Chicago Maroon -IT’S FONDUE TIMESWISS EMMENTHALERand (save 68c)SWISS GRUYERE 1 p-"d«f 2 Lbs. For$£00You’ll Need This For Good FondueSPANISH LONDON CREAM SHERRY $998Compare This To Brands Selling For $5.98 FifthCUTTY SARK Quart $d*691944 VINTAGE PORT $CT99Light, Delicate Flavor With A Clean After Taste FifthFRENCH SPARKLING PARTY WINE $999Available In Semi Dry Or Very Dry Fifth1959 VINTAGE CHATEAUL’ ARIESTE SAUTERNE Fifth $998Rich, Full Flavored Sweet Table Wine To Serve With Fruit or CheeseEARLY TIMES Quart $£49SEBASTIANI’S CALIFORNIA GOLD MEDAL WINNERSMOUNTAIN BURGANDY RecF Light, Dry, Pleasantly FragrantMOUNTAIN CHABLIS Crisp, White, Soft & SuppleMOUNTAIN ROSE Clean, Dry Flavor Your Choicen $119QuartA VAST AND UNUSUAL ASSORTMENT OF CRACKERSTO ADD TO YOUR PLEASURE