The Chicago MaroonVolume 81, Number 55 The University of Chicago Friday, May 11, 1973Assembly elects Brickell presidentas walkout, litigation cloud resultsBy STEVE DURBINMark Brickell has been elected to replaceTom Campbell as president of StudentGovernment SG also chose a new electionand rules committee, a new Committee onRecognized Student Organizations (COR-SO), new officers, and filed two vacancies onthe Student-Faculty-Administration (SFA)Court, including a new chief justice. All ofWednesday night’s actions, however, arethreatened with a challenge in the SFA Courtover the legitimacy of some of the freshmanrepresentatives.Brickell defeated opponent DaveSobelsohn by a two vote margin. After thevote, Ron Davis, at the time still chairman ofthe election and rules committee, raised anobjection on the grounds that some of thefreshmen voting were members of the pastBy MARKGRUENBERG“If you compare public opinion to themedia,” noted syndicated columnist JosephKraft Tuesday, ‘‘it is like comparing MountEverest to a molehill.”Kraft, speaking as part of the Center forPolicy Study’s Mass Media 73 lecture series,chose a comparison between what he called‘‘the unknown and unknowable God of publicopinion” and the communications media.“What are the media?” he asked. ‘‘We areseveral thousand easily identifiable peopleworking for the broadcast media and thenewspapers, giving ourselves ulcers, talkingto each other and working under deadlines.There is nothing very mysterious about us.We are a very familiar service-we haveabout the majesty of a piece of plumbing.The difference between that old andpublic opinion is very striking.”In addition to calling it “unknown andunknowable”, he said “Public opinion has adeep inner automonous heat. It is laid downby a whole range of experiences. Itrepresents the unconscious wisdom of therace. It tends to be decisive only when wehave to pay or bleed for something. That iswhy to me it is unknown and unknowable.”Kraft warned against a phenomenon hesaw occurring in the middle and late 1960’s.It seemed to him that journalists, riding atide of prosperity “acquired a snese of hubrisand began to think they represented publicopinion.” This he decried as a “delusion.”He gave an example of this sense of self-importance which iijfected journalists of allmedia. “Walter Cronkite’s signoff line‘That’s the way it is today, folks’ was a sign.That’s not the way it is today, folks-that’swhat can get crammed into 30 minutes!”Kraft commented.“That’s a vain overblown claim and wePulitzer prizesTwo former University students received1973 Pulitzer prizes, according to theColumbia School of Journalism, whichawards the prizes.David Broder, columnist for theWashington Post, the Chicago Sun-Timesand other newspapers who received an MA inpolitical science from the University in 1951,won a Pulitzer for his political commentary.Dr Robert Coles, who was a medical internat the Pritzker school of medicine from 1954-55 won a prize for his book “Children ofCrisis” The book deals with children un¬dergoing great social change. assembly, and not properly electedrepresentatives in the new assembly.Earlier in the meeting, Campbell haddecided to seat all of the people certified bythe election and rules committee report onlast week’s general election, since therewere no challenge suits on the SFA courtdocket. Apparently, Davis and the OBS slatewanted to challenge the election of some ofthe Reform Party members, but had beenthreatned with a counter-suit.The vote on the president was the onlyelection of the evening that was challengedon any grounds. Immediately after the vote,a large number of people, including most ofthe OBS representatives, boycotted themeeting, in an effort to reduce the assemblybelow the required quorum. The quorum wasmaintained, however, and no opposition wasvoiced.With the advice of Tom Campbell, nowKRAFT: columnist Joseph Kraft decriesthe delusions' of the press. Photo by Lin¬da Lorincz.shouldn’t let him get away with it,” Kraftcontinued. “This implies a special wisdomwithout bias, which is very extreme ”Kraft also warned of the bad side effects ofthe delusion. “This delusion was particularlystrong among unfairly treated minoritygroups. The media are the echo, we are notpublic opinion. We confused ourselves andfelt we were public opinion.”“We had our comeuppance from the Vice-President. It was child’s play. I do not wantto justify those attacks, for they wereunenlightened, know-nothing attacks usedfor low political purposes. But, we werewrapped up in ourselves and out of touchwith the blue-collar American.Amplifying on what public opinion was, hecarefully distinguished it from journalisticopinion. “Public opinion is the God of theAmerican political system. The Constitutionassures us that final decisions are going to bemade by public opinion. Elections aredevices for ascertaining it. All officials dothings in the name of it, even we in the mediaclaim we are doing things in the interest of it.All of us look to it as the validator of oursystem.”Although the Vice-President had ef¬fectively blasted the notion that the pressand public opinion were one and the same, hedid so because, said Kraft, “Agnew and theNixon administration had shared ourdelusion.“Our hubris was their paranoia. Theyreally believed that the men in the offices ofthe media-and to them ‘the media’ meantthe men in the three networks and other menin two newapctpei s--»lu»pcu public opinion inthe United States.” acting as parliamentarian for Brickell, theassembly altered the agenda in order to electa new election and rules committee im¬mediately. It was hoped that by replacingDavis’ election and rules committee that theelection of the president could be certified bythe new committee, for the benefit of the SFACourt. A vote was held, and the followingpeople were elected: Robert Esty, JuliaRoberts, Barbara Stout, Tex Horning, andDoug Carden. Esty was chosen to be thechairman.The assembly turned its attention next tothe vacancies on the SFA Court. By a two-thirds majority, Dennis Navarra was chosento fill a two year term, and Curtis Spillerreceived a one-year term. Upon beingelected, both of them resigned their seats inthe assembly.Since one of the vacancies was caused bythe resignation of Paul Collier, chief justiceNow. however, the situation has changed.Kraft opined, and he traced the change to onecause-Watergate.“Watergate sets things right. We do havean opening for a new beginning. The ad¬ministration is now on the defensive. Thepresident has apologized to the press ingeneral and Ron Ziegler has apologized tothe Washington Post in particular. ThePresidency is on the defensive in a way ithasn’t been in my memory. Cabinet mem¬bers speak up, FBI men guard files. There isa new independence.“I hope we draw the right lesson,” hecontinued. “What strikes me is not that wegot the President, not that we illuminated theissue, but that the Administration, despitethe Post’s efforts, nearly got away with it.Watergate matured as an issue when publicopinion got to it.“Watergate shows that the media are thenecessary handmaidens of the unknowngod.”“To recognize that the arbiter of ourdestiny is unknown is very healthy,” hesummed up. “This instills a caution which isthe basic perequisite of civilized govern¬ment.”During questioning he amplified on hisview of the relationship between press andpublic opinion, noting “We can’t push it(public opinion) around.When questioned if this implied a lesseningof coverage of other viewpoints, he replied.“It does not imply that there be less attentionpaid to minority opinions. It does imply thatyou should be aware that it a minorityopinion when you pay attention to it.”Kraft also did not support any proposedshield laws. “I haven’t yet seen a good shieldlaw. The relationship between the govern¬ment and the media won’t be easily set downinto a law that will stand up in court, so I’magainst shield laws until I see one that willstand up.”On other issues, he felt that in terms of thepresent relationship between the ad¬ministration and the media “there has beena systematic effort during the past four orfive years to suppress the media and blackencritics. I have no great sympathy for themand I doubt they have truly changed theirviews.” He also felt that the President wouldnot be impeached, and he decried the ‘newjournalism’.“The politics goes clean against thepossibility of impeachment. The Democratsare afraid of the possible backlash, and theywould prefer to have Richard Nixon to kickaround anyway. Certainly the Republicanswon’t try to impeach him.” for the past year, a new chief justice had tobe chosen from the seven students on thecourt. Dennis Navarra was selectedThe agenda was amended once again inorder to get to the election of the Committeeon Recognized Student Organizations(CORSO). The new committeemen, chosenby a two-thirds majority, are: Cliff Tabin.Anita Jarmin, David Miller, Patrick Spain,and Chris Petruzzi. Ms Jarmin was electedto the position of chairmanTom Cook was elected vice-president of theassembly; Aimee Grieb was selectedtreasurer, Charles Ritter was chosengraduate secretary, and Scott Williams is theundergraduate secretary.The last official act of the evening was thepassage of an enabling act, which gives theexecutive committee of the StudentGovernment the authority to conductbusiness during the summer quarter.In spite of the important nature of thebusiness being conducted at Wednesdaynight’s meeting, the proceedings were oftenmarked by frivolity in the voting andnominations. George McGovern wasnominated to become president, and OttoKerner received one vote in the final elec¬tion. The most remarkable event of thisnature occured when representative RobertEsty was recognized, just beforenominations for president, and took out hiscornet and played “Dueling Banjos” with anunidentified accomplice on the tuba. Estyhad objected that Student Government wastaking itself much too seriously.Several times during the meeting theassembly had to be reminded that, becauseof the selection of new officers and com¬mittees, this was the most importantmeeting of the year.When questioned about the evening’sevents President Brickell expressed dismayat the OBS walkout.“I had hoped that the assembly could worktogether this year in an attempt to raise thequality of student life, and I said as much inmy campaign speech. The OBS walkoutseems to indicate that my sentiments maynot be shared Sadly enough, the walkoutmay have precluded the installation of OBSon the Executive Committee or on thestanding committees of the assembly. Iwould have preferred a more equitabledistribution of titles.”The new President’s desire for unity wasmade clearer when he said. “I am willing toaccept resignations from those elected inorder that OBS might have a second chanceat Executive Council and CORSO positions. ”KroghAccording to the Associated Press, aUniversity professor has reported thatWatergate scandal figure Egil (Bud)Krogh once threatened to destroy anyoneopposing Nixon administration policies.Dr Daniel X Freedman, chairman of thedepartment of psychiatry and an authorityon the effect of drugs on the mind, said thatthe incident occurred in 1970, when he toldKrogh of his refusal to support legislationto create a White House office on drugabuse. Krogh reportedly responded:“Well, don’t worry, Doc. Anyone whoopposes us we’ll destroy. As a matter offact, anyone who doesn’t support us we’lldestroy.”Krogh, who was Undersecretary ofTransportation, resigned Wednesday inthe lace of reports linking him to the in¬tensifying Watergate scandal. At the timeof the incident in question, he was an aideto special assistant to the President JohnEhrlichman, who resigned last week.Freedman was unavailable for commentyesterday, reportedly on a business trip toHawaii.Kraft denounces ’hubris1 in media,advocates listening to majority viewJournalists clash with federalweapons chosen are subpoenas government:and VietnamBy FRED EGLER“I think anybody in Washington who’s notparanoid is crazy.”LA Times reporter Jack Nelson had set themood for the second A J Lienbling Counter-Convention last weekend in Washington:They’re After Us.Displaying a federal subpoena as his scararrest warrants injunctions, andespecially jail terms were also acceptable),in the ‘‘Who Are the Brain Police” battlebetween the press and the government.Nelson and his colleagues took on a collectionof outspoken if sometimes ill-behaved criticswho made one thing (if nothing else) clear:The establishment press in this country hasnever before been subject to such an intenseand sustained level of criticism.(MORE), the New York journalism reviewwhich ran the three-day ‘‘happening,”provided forums for a wide range of com¬mentary on the press. The most pointedconfrontations, however, came when theestablishment press (the big dailies, wireservices, and TV networks did battle withtwo diverse elements: the government, andthe ‘‘alternative,” or underground press,which was the best-represented group at theconvention.The straight press took the offensiveagainst the government, and immediatelyattacked its most vulnerable target: Viet¬nam. A panel entitled ‘‘Journalistic Lessonsof the Vietnam War” became a collection ofharangues by both the establishment andunderground media against the singlegovernment representative on the panel.Constructive press criticism (the avowedpurpose of the panel and, indeed, the con¬vention) got lost somewhere in the endlessarguments on issues such as ‘‘How one canbe corrupted, beaten down, and discouragedby the government’s handling of the news.”(Gloria Emerson, The New York Times)This is not to say that the government’sposition was defensible. At least, no one onthe panel seemed to think so, with the almostpitiable exception of Barry Zorthian, once(1964-68) the US press chief in Vietnam, andthe man who called the war, “The most openin American history.” Now a State Depart¬ment official, Zorthian appeared to want toforget Vietnam rather than to defend it. Asthe panel’s most obvious target for com¬plaints about government handling of warnews, however, he soon found he could doneither.The panel quickly discovered that it wasmuch easier to criticize official policy thanjournalistic failures, especially at a jour¬nalist's convention. Gloria Emerson wasprobably most guilty of this. After repeatingZorthian’s quote about the “openness” of theVietnam war, she added in a half-sob, “Thatsimply is not true, and that’s all I have tosay.” This got some questionable applausefrom the audience, but it was characteristicof the commentary of most of the panelmembers.As the discussion turned to the audience,however, some constructive press criticismfinally began to appear. “We can’t rely onCongress to be ahead of us,” said RobertManning, the editor of the Atlantic. “Manynewsmen in Vietnam criticized only theconditions of the involvement, not the in¬volvement itself. No one appeared to realizethat the same fifties cold war ethic wasbehind it all. Journalists just don’t knowenough about the torrent of facts which theyreceive on a daily basis; they just don’t knowenough about government.”Much of the criticism of the government’spolicy was enlightening, even if it did detractfrom the panel’s criticism of the press. “Weused to listen to Radio Hanoi for reports ofplanes shot down,” said Paul Fisher of WBAIradio in New York “If you listen longenough, you realized that what the (US)government was doing was halving Hanoi’s totals and releasing them half an hour later.”Emerson also recalled her bouts with theArmy, who “were willing to fly you to a VCdelta raid, but would refuse to take you to thescene of American operations where youknew the same thing was going on.” AtlanticEditor Manning gave the best summation ofthe attitude expressed by most of the panelmembers towards the government: “Trustyour mother, but even with her, cut thecards.”Most useful information for the press-government warriors was available at aworkshop called, “Getting Subpoenaed: Howto Fight Back.” The panel was organized bythe Reprter’s Committee for Freedom, anorganization established solely to prevent“Governmental Repression” of the press.The panel included some veterans ofrecent confrontations: Besides Jack Nelson,who was subpoenaed after an interview withAlfred Baldwin, the star government witnessin the Watergate trials (the first ones), therewas Les Whitten, arrested by the FBI forpossession of papers from the Bureau ofIndian Affairs which he was relaying to JackAnderson. Jack Landau, the moderator ofthe panel and head of the Reproter’s Com¬mittee for Freedom; and Ian Belner, anattorney defending a Baton Rouge, Lareporter in the least-known but perhaps most consciously does so and makes politicaldecisions on who to subpeona and who toprosecute and does so not on the basis ofjustice, but on the basis of power, politics,and self-interest.” And the only way to fightthat, the panelists agreed, is to head for thecourts.The most honest self-criticism of theconvention came at its final session, asiminar on “Who Decides What is News.”Britt Hume, an editor of (MORE), kept thepanel thinking about things like, “Why didthe Clifford Irving-Howard Hughes storyreceive so much publicity?” Robert MacNeilof UPI had the most resourceful answer:“Britt, one of our subscribing editors fromHenrietta, Oklahoma once sent us a letter inwhich he demanded, as a subscriber, twostories every day: One that would make hisreaders cry, and one that would make hisreaders horny. And when we’re lucky, wefind one that can cover both.”More serious soul-searching was done overthe much-talked-about “winter book” onpotential presidential candidates. Theendless speculation over Presidential frontrunners, Victor Gold, former presssecretary to Vice-President Agnew, wasparticularly bitter in his criticism of thispractice: “In 2 1/ 2 years of dealing with thepress, I constantly put up with idioticRUBERS ^.Qs£r^LIABU°\&important case discussed during the session.The case, as Belner explained it, involves a“gag" order placed upon a trial in BatonRouge in which a civil rights worker was“attempting to enjoin the state of Louisianafrom harrassing him in his work.” The judgeordered a Baton Rouge reporter held incontempt of court.According to Belner, a lot more is at stakehere than the $300 fine. “This story is uselessunless it appears the next day in the BatonRouge papers. The reporter cannot waitaround to go through the appeals process,and has to print the story before an appealcan be taken.” Landau, a lawyer, drew thisconclusion: “The Baton Rouge case meansthat any time a court issues an order againsta reporter of newspaper, you simply have toobey the order for as long as it takes to ap¬peal it. And we simply cannot believe thatthe Supreme Court is going to uphold whatamounts to an automatic power in any judgein the country to censor the press fromcovering public proceedings.”Washington Post correspondent JackMackenzie, who covers the Supreme Court,had a different view: “I’d be very muchsurprised if the Supreme Court touched thisproblem for a very long while.” Thus, theSupreme Court won’t act. The local courtsare harassing reporters. So what do you dowhen the subpeona comes?Call your lawyer, according to the“veterans.” “We re not just dealing with thegovernment or the Justice Departmentabusing its power,” announced Jack Nelson,“But we’re dealing with a government that questions like, “Does the Vice Presidentwant to be renominated?” As soon as he wasrenominated, the question became, “Doesthe Vice-President intend to run in 76? Yourcoverage is like a football game; I really feelit detracts from substantive criticism.”Eileen Shanahan of the New York Timesimmediately took up the cudgel for the presson this issue: “You (Gold) are in the positionof saying that the press is idiotic to askanything officials aren’t willing to tell them.Some stuff can be a waste of time to thepresident and the press, but this attitude of,‘We’ll tell you when we’re ready and notbefore’ is extremely dangerous.”The “horse-race” coverage of politics alsoreceived much criticism, particularly inregard to the large amount of coverage, atthe height of the Watergate affair, given toJohn Connally’s switch in parties. JannWenner of Rolling Stone speculated that“There must be a dozen ITTs andWatergates on Connally’s background. In¬stead of covering this as a straight politicalstory, somebody should be sending in¬vestigators to Texas now and dig them upbefore he becomes a formidable candidate.”The straight press was also chided forfailing to cover “in-depth” stories such asanti trust suits and consumerism morecompletely. The TV networks came underthe most criticism on this score. “Wouldn’teven a brief mention of stories like anti trust thought otherwise. “If someone nears a briefunexplained item on the news, he doesn’t runout and buy a paper. This just tends toconfuse people. We (the Nightly News) are aself-contained program giving a daily, ifincomplete, version of the news.”NBC, it turns out, also killed an exclusiveby its Congressional correspondent, PaulDuke, who had discovered that L PatrickGray had burned Watergate evidence a fullday before the story broke in any of thenational media. Miss Basham also had todefend this: “Duke had the story althoughthere were many unanswered questionsabout it. It wasn’t ‘killed,’ (although thestory wasn’t run until after the WashingtonPost broke it) we just didn’t understand it. Itwas a bad error in judgment, but we’vetried to err on the side of caution, especiallyin the Watergate case.”Throughout the convention, the mostconsistently interesting and incisivecriticism came from the floor in the personsof underground press representatives.Although they sometimes created somerowdiness in the seminars (open mikes onthe floor were turned off after the first daybecause of some attempted take-overs;questions were passed up to the panels onpaper after than, amidst cries of cen¬sorship.), they seemed constantly ready todeal with issues that the panels were contentto shy away from.At the Vietnam seminar, one reportercalled the straight press a “cheering section.The Establishment press is where thealternative press was 5 years ago.” While thepanel members were content to beat theirbreasts about not realizing what was goingon in 1965, several penetrating questionsfrom the floor, all from alternative mediaspokesmen, on the coverage of the currentairwar in Cambodia (or the lack of it) wentunanswered.At the subpoena workshop, the lack ofunderground media representatives on thepanel was pointed out by an audiencequestioner: “I’d like to know what happenswhen the subpeona stop and your officestarts getting firebombed or your papersgets busted on a phony charge of obscenity orquantities of grass are planted in yourpockets—what do you do then?” The panel’sadvice, “Call your lawyer,” somehow rangrather hollowly in the face of tactics whichthe straight press didn’t have to deal with atall.Although Rolling Stone hardly classifies as“alternative media,’’ Jann Wenner’scomment on coverage of the 1972 politicalcampaign struck near the center of thecriticism of the establishment press: “We(Rolling Stone) put one person on thecampaign trail last year—Hunter Thompson.He may have seemed crazy, since he wasn’ta Washington heavy, a political pro, or anexpert long-time observer. But he called theshots better than any single correspondent,and did it consistently. Why? I think this isworth looking into.” Unfortunately, the paneldisagreed; coverage of the 72 campaign wasbarely mentioned by the panel.Last year’s Liebling convention, begun asa protest to the annual editors and publishersconvention, was free. This one cost $8. Lastyear there was no security; Freaks crashedthe meetings, took over seminars, tried to“run the show.” This year, everyone worebadges which were checked at the door. Theconvention reaised some importantquestions on the “direction” of journalism,and the press’ role in its battle against thegovernment—often taken to mean thePresident. But the spontaneity and en¬thusiasm of 1971 was gone. One unidentifiedaudience member said it all: “Let’s not playroles. Last night at the party I paid $1 for a 35suits,” asked a member of the audience, “on,say, the NBC Nightly News create more cent bottle of beer. That’s enough to make usdemand for more news about it?” all start asking some questions about whatNBC correspondent Christie Basham we’re doing here.”sales & service312-mi 3-3113* ^foreign car nospitai & ciinic, incsouth kimbark avenue • Chicago 60615,2 * The Chicago Maroon * Friday, May 11,1973 TRIP TO JAPANJULY 10-AUG. 20.1973LIVE-IN. WORK-IN BASE INJAPANESE VILLAGE*785 INCLUDES:Round trip oirfarefrom Now York, room A board. Excursions,Lactures. Sponsored by: KSI (Int’l. Youth Enrichment Ass.) Incooperation with: JAPAN AIR LINES. Write and or call: IM¬PERIAL TRAVEL SERVICEMO Fifth Avenue. New Yoer. N.Y. 10019 (212) SRI-6350 ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900 . HOUSE FOR SALE... SOUTH SHORE10 rm„ 5 bdrm. home. Newlysided, alum, triple track stor¬ms, garage, walk dist. toschools, pks., and Lk. 20 min.Loop, 10 min. U of C. Call forappt. 493-2823 By owner.Rare opportunity at $19,500.JESSELSON’S& SEAFOODFRESH FISH752-2870,752-8190.363-9186 -13401.53rdStudy shows great changes in wardBy MARK GRUENBERGA recently released study, sponsored byalderman Leon M. Despres, reveals that thefifth ward, home ward of the University, hasundergone much change in recent years.The study, which covers the politics,demographics and history of the ward showsthat in many respects Hyde Park is atypicalof the true character of the ward, which alsoincludes sections of South Shore andWoodlawn.The ward includes all of Hyde Park exceptfor three blocks in the far northwest cornerplus that part of Woodlawn from 60th to 67thstreet east of Woodlawn avenue (whichexplains why Burton-Judson is in the 20thward) and South Shore east of Stony Islandavenue and north of 71st street.One important fact which may affect theward in the future is redistricting. If the CityCouncil redistricts itself on one-man one-votelines, the boundaries of the fifth ward may besignificantly affected, for the populationdeclined from 87,122 to 66,902 in ten years.The population of Hyde Park declined byalmost 12,000 and that of Woodlawn byalmost 11,000.Urban renewal undertaken since 1952 hashad a great effect on Hyde Park, as shown bythe number of housing units available landthe unemployment rate.Hyde Park lost almost 4000 housing units inten years. All of the losses were apartments,and it is reasonably safe to say that theywere lost to urban renewal. One out of everyfive apartments available or existant inHyde Park in 1960 was either not available ornonexistent in 1970.The unemployment rate in Hyde Parkdropped from 5.1 percent in 1960 to 3 percentin the midst of the 1970 recession. By con¬trast, unemployment in the other two areasof the ward was much higher. South Shoresaw its low unemployment rate of 2.8 percentin 1960 jump to 4.4 percent ten years later.The unemployment rate in Woodlawndeclined greatly percentagewise, over 5percent. But it declined from 14.8 percent ofthe Woodlawn work force to a still-great 9.3percent, double the national average.Politically, the ward is very liberal andindependent on the surface. The report statesthat after a period of rock-hardRepublicanism ending in the middle 1930’s“Hyde Park has been strongly committed tonon-partisan non patronage politics forseveral years.”However, what has been true of Hyde Parkhas not been true of the rest of the ward.Looking at the statistical breakdown for thethree most recent elections, it is apparentthat only the power of the Hyde Park area tooutvote the rest of the ward combined haskept the fifth ward on an independent path.The most striking example was in the April1971 mayoral election.In that election, Mayor Daley won a land¬slide victory over Richard Friedman, aregistered independent Democrat running onthe Republican party line when the regularRepublicans showed an unwillingness to putup a sacrificial lamb. The regularRepublicans were right, as Friedmancarried two wards in the whole city, the fifthward and one other. To be more accurate though, one wouldhave to say the Friedman actually carriedthat whole other ward and part of the fifthward—Hyde Park. Election records showthat he carried Hyde Park over the mayor bya margin of almost 3500 votes, but the mayorcarried South Shore and Woodlawn by over1500, chopping Friedman’s final margin to1878.A similar pattern seemed to hold up in the1972 primary and final elections where HydePark consistently picked the insurgentcandidate while the other two - sectionstended more to support the Democraticcandidate. There was one outstanding exception to theabove rule, however. Edward Hanrahan.Hanrahan was clobbered in Hyde Park andin the rest of the ward in both the primaryand the general elections.The vote totals for the April primary,according to the study were as follows:Donald Page Moore Raymond BergHyde Park 7393 1412Woodlawn 570 738South Shore ™88 1167TOTAL WARD 10'05' 3317 Hanrahan9992595361794In the final election, Hanrahan was alsosmashed by present State’s AttorneyBernard Carey. Carey carried Hyde Park 13,680 to 2745, South Shore 5&30 to 1945 andeven squeaked through in Woodlawn 1382 to1179 over Hanrahan Overall, Carey’smajority was over 15,000- a margin ex¬ceeded only by the 18,764-vote margin rackedup by George McGovern over RichardNixon. McGovern, too. carried all threeareas of the ward, by enormous margins.In short, the fifth ward, fueled by HydePark votes, has followed the consistentlyliberal, independent voting pattern which thereport traced historically. The fifth wardsent University economics professor Paul HDouglas to the city council in 1939, beginninga political career which eventually saw himserve three distinguished terms in the UnitedStates Senate (1948-66).Douglas’ supporters formed an in¬dependent committee when he first tried forthe senatorial post This committee becamethe nucleus for the Independent Voters ofIllinois (IVI). Since then, the ward haselected other independents such as formeralderman Robert Merriam, staterepresentatives Robert Mann and BernardEpton, former state representative andCongressman Abner Mikva and state senatorRichard Newhouse.However, there has been one significantvariation from the independent votingpattern that Hyde Park has exhibited, andthat is in voting for the respective wardcommitteemen of the two parties. MarshallKorshak. the Democratic committeemanand city collector, is a key component of theDaley organization. He is, like many othermembers of the organization, under thescrutiny of the grand jury which is lookinginto his tax records. Korshak was unopposedin the 1971 election.John L (Bunny) East, who has held hisoffice as Republican ward committeemansince 1928, according to the report, was alsounopposed in the election. East has beensubpoenaed by the grand jury in connectionwith its investigation into vote fraud.Parking lot dooms recycling centerBy ANDREW SEGALThe continuation of the recycling center at54th and Lake Park is threatened by plannedexpansion of the parking facilities at the NewHyde Park Shopping Center. The MerchantsAssociation of the shopping center has askedthat the recylcing center, operated by theHyde Park-Kenwood Community Con¬ference, be moved to the extreme north endof the parking lot to make way for additionalparking spaces. The Merchants Associationwould still have the option to evict therecycling center at six month intervals.HPKCC says that they cannot make a go ofthe recycling center without some guaranteeof permanence for their location. At a meetingThursday with representatives of theMerchants Association, HPKCC made twoproposals, aimed at maintaining therecycling center. One alternative to the six-monin ‘Jease” would be to guarantee theHPKCC 18-24 months at the northernmost part of the parking lot. Within this amount oftime, said Mrs. Jan Blankenhorn of HPKCC,new locations elsewhere in the communitymight become available if the shoppingcenter still wanted to expand parking.Presently, there are no other sites for therecycling center.‘‘They are willing to let us exist there on ashort term basis, with the option to get rid ofus every so often,” Blankenhorn told theMaroon. ‘‘But we can’t expand our volumewithout a permanent location.”The second proposal HPKCC is suggestingto the Merchants Association would allow therecycling center to stay in its presentlocation, while the merchants tried in goodfaith To solve the parking problems in otherways. For instance, slanting the parkingspaces would increase parking capacity by20 to 30 percent, according to Blankenhorn. Ifthe Merchants Association were not able tosolve the parking shortage, the recyclingcenter would then vacate and help pay for paving the cinders where it now sits.The recycling center opened 14 monthsago, when EcoSex, a recycling center at theBlue Gargoyle, became overburdened TheCity aided in construction, and SanitationCommissioner James McDonough supportsthe project.‘‘As for as I know, this is the only recyclingcenter of its type within the city limits. Weare the only one that takes all types of refuse,not just newspaper,” said Blankenhorn Sheestimates that the center has handled 336,000pounds of glass and 73,000 pounds of tin sinceit opened.HPKCC has about 750 signatures on apetition to the Merchants Association askingfor a reprieve, and there is talk of a boycottof stores in the shopping center.‘‘We have attempted to remain aboveboard and not say anything negative,” saidBlankenhorn. ‘‘But we may move into othertactics. I personally favor a boycott I'mpretty angry.”Brent House Institute Workshop:RENEWING THE PUBLIC SPIRIT:Explorations into the Personaland Political Life of ChicagoTwo Saturdays, May 12 and May 199:30-5Total cost with lunch $7.50Leaders: GEORGE ANASTAPLOProfessor of Political ScienceRosary College and Lecturer inLiberal Arts at U of CDON BROWNINGAssociate Professor of Religion andPsychology at U of CWorkshop will bo hold atBRENT DOUSE5540 Woodlawn Ave.753-3392 HAVILL’SRADIO, TELEVISION& HIGH FIDELITYSALES. SERVICE & ACCESSORIESZenity — PanasonicMastQricork — KLH1368 E. 53rd, Chicago 60615 • PL 2-780C45 Years Serving Hyde Park 9 AM-9 PM 7 Days A WeekHYDE PARK PIPE AND TOBACCO SKO&1552 E. 53rd - under 1C tracksAll students get 10% off>ask for "Big Jim''PipesPipe Tobaccos Imported CigarettesCigarsFriday, Moy 1), 1973 - The Chicago Maroon - 3Joe Louis MilkI Y'fi opojirC tillCampus group hits academic racismBy CLARA HEMPHILLMembers of the Committee AgainstRacism, a newly formed political andeducational group on campus, are cir¬culating a resolution among faculty mem¬bers and securing signatures and donations.The resolution denounces the doctrines ofracial supremacy held by academiciansArthur Jensen, Hans Eysenck, RichardHernstcir., and William Shockley.The Committee Against Racism hassecured about two dozen signatures on theirBerrigan petition in the past week, and has receiveddonations from about half of those signing.The donations will be used to pay for thepublication of the resolution and thesignatures in “appropriate journals andother publications.” The resolution is aresponse to a statement defending in¬vestigation of ‘the role of inheritance inhuman abilities’ which appeared inAmerican Psychologist last June and whichwas signed by many scientists andacademicians. The resolution states that the doctrine ofracial supremacy has been “rapidlyspreading in professional literature, texts,and respectable popular magazines,” and“taught as fact in classrooms across thecountry.” The resolution calls on facultymembers to “urge their university senates toadopt measures designed to eliminateclassroom racism, to urge...academicdepartments to condemn and refuse todisseminate racist research, to expose theunscientific character of racist ideas. ..” andUSsees 'nazification' inBy MARK SPIEGLANAnti war activist priest Phillip Berrigan,speaking at the Lutheran School of TheologyTuesday night, called for continuedresistance to the increasing “nazification” ofthe United States.The Josephite priest, on parole afterserving more than three years in prison forthe destruction of draft files in CatonsvilleBERRIGAN: Reverend Philip Berriganspoke on prison reform. Photo byLeonard Lamberg. and Harrisburg, was expected to speak aboutthe penal system, but began by announcing achange in topics. There was no point indiscussing the penal system, he maintained,while we are “engulfed by a larger violencewe call war.” He called war an “institution”and said that the hopes he once had for thiscountry were a casualty of the Indochinawar.One point Berrigan was particularlydetermined to drive home was thewillingness of the majority to acquiesce toevils. “One of the tasks of life is not to bechanged by the majority,” he said. Hecomplained that Americans are “un¬conscious of the damage they do them¬selves” by running with the majority. Citingas an example the “dereliction” of theGerman church in the 30’s and 40’s, heclaimed that Hitler would never have risen ifthe church had stood by the Gospel. Why, heasked, are we incapable of applying thisanalysis to ourselves?Berrigan spoke of a “backwash ofviolence” in this country. “We produceviolence in our domestic bosom” and at¬tempt to export it, he claimed, but “thechickens came home to roost.” He warnedthat as the war continues under the cease¬fire, we are killing ourselves. He drewanalogies between the Indochina bombingand the pollution of our own environment,between a “racist” war abroad and the“deepening racial syndromes” at home,between jailed South Vietnamese and“absurd political indictments” here, andcharged that as we produce more warplanes. our commercial aircraft become more andmore unsafe.He called Saigon our “foreign Watergate”and said that the only difference is that theSaigon situation was more apparent over agreater number of years. What was onceperhaps the most beautiful city in the Orient,he lamented, is now filled with refugees,disease, inflation, and para-military police.He called the Saigon government a dic¬tatorship “unrivalled around the world,” andsaid that from two to three hundred thousandpolitical prisoners have been “liquidated,”because if freed they would be threats to“Thieu and his hoodlems.” According toBerrigan, these prison systems were set upwith the help of the Federal Bureau ofPrisons.All of this, he said, would be “impossiblewithout us.” With our help, however, Saigonhas the third largest air force in the worldand the largest standing army, of 1.1 millionmen, he reported.Berrigan referred to Watergate, notsurprisingly, as our “domestic Saigon” andsaid that such scandals also had a longhistory. During World War II, he charged,ITT had German subsidiaries which wereoverlooked at home. “If you play bothsides,” he said, “it doesn’t matter who wins.He concluded by bemoaning the generallethargy of the resistance movement today.We seem to “shy away from participation indifficult solutions” he said, and warned thatwe are controlled externally by amaterialistic culture and internally by ourlovelessness. to “organize and support activities toeliminate racist practices and ideaswherever they occur.”The UC Committee Against Racism is one ofabout 25 campus groups across the countryformed to denounce academic racism. TheUC committee, like the others, plans topresent anit-racist speakers, to offer courseson race and IQ, and to criticize racist text¬books, in addition to circulating theresolution.Richard Lewontin, the UC professor whohas been circulating the petition, em-pahsized that the committee proposedpositive programs, not destructive ones.“We won’t sniff out racist professors,” hesaid, “but encourage good classes. We wantto have students ask embarrassing questionsof teachers who don’t examine the viewpointof racist textbooks.”In raising the issue of racism on campus,Lewontin hopes to show that the publicationsof Jensen and others are not only un¬scientific, but also politically significant. It isimportant, he says, not only to show thatthese theories of racial superiority arescientifically invalid, but also to show thatthese theories have implications for socialaction. “Racism has been around for a longtime,” says Lewontin, “but Shockley andJensen have raised racism to new heights.They’ve put forward their theories intestifying for school budget cuts. Theirtheories have been given publicity on TV, onthe radio, and in popular magazines. They’veused their prestige to give respectability toracism.”Critics of Lewontin’s position support theresearch of Jensen and Shockley on thegrounds of “academic freedom” -- that anyresearch should be permitted, even if it dealswith IQ of different racial groups. Lewontinreplied, “Academic freedom here is a redherring: a false issue. Why is the study of IQin different racial groups intrinsically moreinteresting than the study of ear-lobe shape?Funds for research are limited. If Jensenand Shockley have no plans for im-plimentation of their theories, why is therethis priority? They must think that theirtheories will have some effect on politicalconditions. We’re trying to show that it’s apolitical issue, not an academic one. They’reusing genetics as a weapon in the socialstruggle.”Wfe’re only half a world away.Come join us for less than half the usual price.New low round-trip air farefrom New York—only $450 direct toBombay or Delhi.50% reduction for students on alldomestic air and rail fares and re-duced group fares for bus travel.Your dollar is still worth a dollarin India. And India has always beena bargain.Our Youth Hostels and HolidayCamps also save you money!Naturally, you’re not thinking about visiting India simply to save money. It is another world half aworld aw ay, and that intrigues you. Here’s a world of contrasts. A fascinating variety of races and cultures.\\ here the old and the new abide in surprising harmony. The rising cities throbbing w ith life. Old tow nsreflecting the pomp and majesty of Empires long past. The whispering peacefulness of the flatlands. The!u h, green jungles. The remote, snow-capped peaks. All this is India. More than 4000 years of it.What else?Our “Meet the People” program lets you visit with an Indian family. And we’ve another programt’n it introduces gr< >ups of \ isjrjng students to Indian students on their campuses. For complete details andinformation, see \<»ur Travel Agent. Or contact the Government of India Tourist Office. Mean-^nd in the coupon tor your free copy of our 52-page brochure. It brings India somewhat closer.( rnmentof India Tourist Office,New fork: O Ea^t 4(hh Street. Chicago: 201 North Michigan Avenue,a. Francisco: 685 Market Street.' ■•!.’! Semen: Plea c send me \vur free 52-page brochure about India.( itv State ZipSee India. Its another world.219 B4 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, May 11, 1973i &»'! GO , f \ yet/ ^ooiv* (l\v The\ PonyI Shop/ BICYCLE CENTER7v*\ l Offering the Lowest Prices on theWorld's Most Desired BicyclesI T? ] Englitfi Dawet. Falcon. Raitigh, Royal ScotFranch Anquatil. Gitana, Jaunat, LaPiarra,Merciar, Mototoacana. Roold, UnictportGar man KalkhotfItalian: Bianchi, Bottecchia. Corto. Frtjui.Mirtlla, OlmoJapanaaa: Azuki, Crystal. Fuji. Nilhiki, SaklnaAmarican Rost, VistaTWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU743 Chicago Ave.Evanston864-5775 760 WaukeganDeerfield945-9630"Moflciug quencheda B.WlO.C.'s * hwk-siyed llmt (ikeAkadma Red!"Take it from one with a man-sized yen,men. When a * Big Man on Campus getsa big thirst. It takes a big drink to satiateit. And nothing. I repeat nothing,l.riilates the tonsils and taunts a thirstlike Akadama Red, Fred.Altndama RedThe toast of the campusImported by Suntory International, Los Angeles, Calif.ABOUT THE MIDWAYFlea marketLeaving Hyde Park never again to return?Get rid of your unique collection ofmiscellany by getting a table at the FleaMarket in Ida Noyes on May 19. All students,staff & faculty are cordially invited toparticipate. Phone >3591 to reserve a salestable. The doors will be open at 8:45 for thosewho have signed up for tables. Tables notclaimed by 9:30 will be released to anyonedesiring one. There is no charge for par¬ticipating or for tables (which will beprovided by Student Activities, the sponsorof this event).In addition, there will be an auction at 2:00pm in the lobby of Ida Noyes. Some of themost sought-after items on the auction blockwill surely be the graphics donated byJoseph R Shapiro from his extensive privatecollection. These include: a signed, num¬bered 3-color lithograph by Ubac; a signedand numbered original print, “Tree atNight” by Werner Dreives (1964);lithographic reproductions “Atelier Mourlotposters”, one by Miro, the other by Calder.Other auction items received to date in¬clude: “A Free Lunch with Milton Fried¬man”, a bookcase from Alden’s; fromFrederick Cooper, a table lamp; a case ofMacon Blanc (Chateau Jadot) from KobrandCorp; from Polk Bros, two cube lites; fromRadio Shack, a transistor radio; from Ap¬pliance Repair & Supply, a Bissell carpetsweeper; from Lightolier, a high-intensitylamp; a bag of Rich Scotch’s newly shornhair. Other donors are: Custom Corner,Sourian Rug Cleaners, Magikist RugCleaners, Dick Boyajian, Importer. Alsoexpected for the auction are additionallamps, shelving, rugs, and furniture.Immediately following the auction therewill be a drawing for four rides in a Cessna201, cabin class, departing from Meigs Field.These rides are courtesy of the UniversityNational Bank and a University ID will berequired of the winners, who must be presentat the drawing.Women's health careThe Chicago Women’s Liberation RockBand will perform in a benefit for WATCH(Women Act To Control Healthcare) Sunday,Friday, May 11FOTA: Halim el Dabh, Egyptian percussionist, pianist andexpert in sound and movement, workshop, 5 6:30 pm, IdaNoyes; performance, 8 p m freeFILM FESTIVAL: "When This You See, Remember Me,""Anything You Want to Be", "David Off and On", and aBetty Boop cartoon, Norris Center, Northwestern, Evanston, sponsored by Chicago Women's Liberation Union,admission $2 in advance, $2.50 at the door, 7:30 p.m.FLUTE RECITAL: Lia McCoo and Robert Needleman willperform at the First Unitarian ChuVch, 5650 SouthWoodlawn, 8 p.mLECTURE: "The Iranian attitudes toward history, life andpeople as revealed in Persian miniatures," Richard Ettinghausen, New York University, Social Science 122, 4 p.m.LECTURE: "The Exotic Sephardic communities," RabbiMichael Azose, Hillel, 8:30 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: "The nature of molecular abosorption ofinfrared radiation by the atmosphere: some implicationsand applications," Ohio State professor John Shaw, Hinds101, 3:30 p.m.SHERRY: History sherry hour, Soc Sci tea room, 4 p.m. May 13. The benefit, which doubles as aMother’s Day celebration, will be held at theColumbia College Theater Center at 1032West Barry at 7:00 pm. In addition to theband, a videotape on the Chicago MaternityCenter will be shown. The CMC is the onlyurban American clinic that delivers babiesat home. Admission to the benefit is $1.50 forwomen and men; children are free.AIM leaderClyde Bellecourt, a co-founder of theAmerican Indian Movement (AIM) andleader of the recent AIM takeover ofWounded Knee, South Dakota, will speakSubtle racismIn last Friday’s issue of the Maroon youreported on the shooting of two University ofChicago employees. Among the sentencesincluded in that report was this: “Both at¬tackers and both victims were black.” Thisis a classic example of the more subtleracism which is so often manifested but soseldom detected. You could have added “Ofcourse,” to the sentence and it would nothave made it much more racist in its im¬plications.Your statement seems to imply one or bothof two things. (1) In saying the attackerswere both black you seem to imply that suchbehavior is to be expected of black people. Aseveryone knows, you further imply, blackpeople are like mad dogs—unpredictableand likely to attack without warning. Beingblack, and more importantly, being one whobelieves in and respects the individuality ofmen, I bitterly resent the implication and theconcomitant categorization. (2) In saying thevictims were both black, you imply that it isof less consequence when two blacks arevictimized than it is when two whites meetwith the same fate. The primitive mentalitywhich holds that the relative worth of humanSaturday, May 12FORUM: "Classwide organizing against Phase IIIausterity and slave labor," Craig Edwards, NationalUnemployed and Welfare Rights Organization, Ida Noyes,sponsored by UC Labor Committee (753 0039)CANCELLED: SHIR concert.PARTY: Israeli Independence Day celebration, Hillel, 9p.m.FILM FESTIVAL: "Cleo From 5 to 7", "Joyce at 34," "ThatFabulous Face," "This Is the Home of Mrs. LevantGraham" and another Betty Boop cartoon, McCormickSeminary, 800 W Belden, admission $2 in advance, $2.50 atdoor, sponsored by Chicago Women's Liberation Union, 7p.m.OLD MUSIC: Allegro con spirito and the OPRF Recordersociety present a concert of Renaissance music, Ida Noyeslibrary, 8 30 p.m., free.Sunday, May 13UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICES: RockfellerMemorial Chapel, 11 a m., preacher . Reverend Bernard OBrown, assistant dean of the chapel, "What Will Life GetOut of Me?"FOT A: Clifford Smith, composer pianist performing his today (Friday) at the Law SchoolAuditorium at 12:30 pm. There is no ad¬mission charge for the speech, which is beingheld in conjunction with a Wounded KneeBenefit at 8pm tonight at Alumni Hall, 1011West Belden. Admission to the benefit is $2.Bellecourt will speaking on the purposed ofAIM, and the motives behind the AIMdirected takeover of Wounded Knee, whichended yesterday amid charges of bad faithand truce violations from both the Govern¬ment and AIM.Kogan awardHerman Kogan will receive the 1973Communicator of the Year Award of Thebeings is dependent on the colour of theirskin comes through quite vividly in thisreport as the one by which you are possessed.I don’t doubt for one second that you willdeny the validity of my inferences; it is to beexpected. However, it will take more than asimple denial to convince me that my ac¬cusation, if you will, is unfounded. Liberalwhite America must come to the realizationthat hers is a racist tradition, one whichcontinues to thrive in spite of all the boldassertions to the contrary, in spite of all theverbal protestations supporting non-racistattitudes and belief systems. The racism ofwhich I speak cannot be seenmacroscopically. Only in such situations asthis very shoddy reporting does the latent,unpurged racist consciousness becomemanifest.You, like America, have a long way to gobefore your sub-conscious liberalismequals that of your rhetoric (consciousliberalism). Underneath the radiant exteriorof your and her existence lives the reality.That reality, one with which most people findit difficult to cope, is that the basic assump¬tions which were made about blacks as apeople in the seventeenth and eighteenthcenturies continue to be transferred andp.m., freeJAZZ Joseph Jarman duets with Don Moye, MalachiFavors, others (possibly Richard Abrams), Ida Noyeslibrary, general admission $1.50, sutdents and/ or membersof Front for Jazz $1, 8 p.m.ROCK BAND: The Chicago Women's Liberation Rock Bandwill display at the Columbia College theater center, 1032 WBarry Also a videotape on home delivery of babies and theChicago Maternity Center, donations $1.50, all welcome,sponsored by WATCH (Women Act To Control Healthcare),7 p m.Monday/ May 14FOT A: Clifford Smith, piano recital, Mandel Hall, 8 p m.,freeLECTURE: "Filmmaking in the People's Republic ofChina, Perspectives on Life, Art, and Politics," GeraldTannebaum, room 302, Soc Sci, 4 p m.LECTURE: "Max Weber's Critique of Marxism" byWolfgang Mommsen, University of Dusseldorf, jointlysponsored by the Committee of Social Thought, thedepartment of history and the department of sociology, SocSci 122, 4:30 p m. University of Chicago Alumni Association onFriday, May 18. Kogan is editor of Showcase,which appears in the Chicago Sun-Tinu*s.The award will be made at the University’s16th Annual Communications Dinner at 7pm in The Arts Club of Chicago, 109 EastOntario street, Chicago. Tickets may beobtained by calling the Alumni Associationat 753-2175. Kogan will be guest speaker atthe dinner. He will be introduced by theevening’s Master of Ceremonies, Louis“Studs” Terkel, author and award-winningbroadcaster, now with radio station WFMT.Terkel was the 1968 Communicator of theYearbelieved. Those assumptions feed the can¬cerous growth of racism which may even¬tually cause the death of this nationFrightening, isn’t it?!Thomas Mitchell. Jr.SG electionWednesday, May 9, the new StudentGovernment held its first meeting.At the outset, the chair recogrrr:ed theseating ot representatives, some of whomhad been elected under questioimble cir¬cumstances. For instance, as least fourmembers, who were elected frorc OtherCollege, actually had resided fierceTower for the past year This violab the SGConstitution. All of these are menu.. s theReform Party. One of them was “e!-"-ted”CORSO Chairman, and another was“elected’’ SG Treasurer.In addition, at least ten elected Reformcandidates did not file their own candicacypetitions. This includes the newly “elected”President. As soon as the new President hadbeen “elected”, OBS delegates and variousmembers of the Department of CitySanitation walked out in opposition !o theillegal seating which determined the vote.A bare quorum remained for the election ofthe new Elections and Rules Committee, twonew student members of the SFA Court.CORSO. Vice-president, Treasurer, etc.Once the opposition was gone, the HeiormParty took control and many establishedprocedures were disregarded in ordnr to“grease the wheels” of SG, as one Reformdelegate put it. One of the omissions was fairrecognition of Assembly members bv theChairAs the meeting proceeded, morerepresentatives walked out. However, asinterpreted by the presidential^ appointedparliamentarian, Thomas Campbell, aquorum is not necessary to conduct SGbusiness at the first meeting.We ask the party which purported to“reform” Student Government. Is thisfighting fire with fire?SG representatives, Julia RobertsDiantha McJiltonRachel RosenDavid SobelsohnGene KuehnemanCALENDARown works after a successful European tour, Quantrell, 3 continued on page sixLETTERS TO THE EDITORKIMBARKLIQUORS-WINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINESTIMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to youlTHE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC.1214 E. 53rd St.53-Kimbark Plaza NY 3-3355 (RAT?nI)T HILARIOUS"ROGER EBERT. CHICAGO SUN TIMES“CAESAR IS TRULY “CAESARA GREAT COMIC AT H,sARTIST!”—Kathleen Carroll,N.Y. 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TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Order* to taka out1318 East 63rd MU 4-1062Friday, May 11,1973 - The Chicago Maroon - 5ABOUT THE MIDWAYcontinued from page fiveBaseballWednesday afternoon at Downer’s Grovethe Maroons defeated George Williams 8-7behind the bat of freshman Paul Kowalek.Kowalek, who had five hits in the St. Francisdoubleheader, had two triples and a double inthe game to raise his batting average to .370.Bob Griffin also had a good day at the platewith four rbi's. three coming on a basesloaded tripleDave Weinberg was the winning pitcherand Tim George got credit for a save with astrong three inning relief stint in which hestruck out six men. The victory endedChicago's four game losing streak andavenged a previous doubleheader loss toGeorge Williams.In the double loss the previous Saturday,the baseball squad turned in one creditableperformance against St. Francis College ofJoliet. The Maroons were crushed 13-0 in thefirst game, but by the second game everyonehad gotten a chance to take a few swings andhandle a few grounders. Although the resultwas not a victory, it was a well-played 2-1ball game.Starting pitcher Jack LeVan lasted fiveinnings in the first game although heavy StFrancis hitting and some poor backup workby the Maroon defense made his stay lessthan pleasant St. Francis built a big leadearly and had no trouble holding onto it.The Maroons entered the second gamewith a -1-8 record and a three game losingstreak. The Chicago club jumped to an earlylead in the second inning on a single to rightby 1 om Cullen, a perfect sacrifice bunt bypitch r Tim George, a single by left fielderPaul . owalek and a throw ing error by Jolietcatcher Monty McLaren.It locked as though the one run lead mighthold up the whole game behind the strongpitching of Maroon ace Tim George. George,who faced the minimum nine batters in thefirst three innings, got out of a jam in thefourth after he gave up a one-out double toJoliet 's second baseman Capista. balked himto third, and then walked Ken Randich.George had no trouble in the fifth, retiring the side in order, but it was in the sixth thatthe Maroons’ ^ad dissipated.Coach Angelus expressed disappointmentat the Maroon performance in the first game,and attributed most of their trouble to notbeing properly prepared to begin the game.Joliet arrived at Stagg Field at about 10:30and got in a lot of batting and infield prac¬tice. The Maroons drifted in at various timesand did not have proper pre-gamepreparation.Friday afternoon the Maroons host NorthPark in a single game and Saturday af¬ternoon Niles moves into Stagg field for a12:30 doubleheader.Brass choirThe University of Chicago Brass Choir willgive a concert this Saturday night, May 12, at8 pm in Bond chapel. The Brass Choir,previously featured at the Wassail party, andat a concert last quarter, will be performingworks ranging from 15th century songs ofWilliam Brade, to a contempory dancewritten by Bernard Heiden, as well as worksby Bruckner, Byrd, Dahl, and Sanders.Admission is, of course, free.Women s athleticsTwo high school seniors—one fromCalifornia and the other from Ohio—havebeen awarded the University’s newacademic-athletic scholarships for women.The two were selected after nearly 1,000high school women from across the countrywrote to the University inquiring about theWomen’s Athletic Association-GertrudeDudley scholarships which offer full tuitionfor four years.Response to the announcement of thescholarships last November was so over¬whelming that two scholarships, instead ofone as originally planned, were awarded for1973-74. This scholarship opportunity willcontinue to be available to incoming fresh¬man women each year.The two 1973 winners of the University’swomen’s academic-athletic scholarshipsare. Noel Bairey, of Modesto, California, andLaura Ann Silvieus, of Kingsville, Ohio. Bothwill enter the University as freshmen next fall.Miss Bairey is a swimmer, nationally-ranked in Amateur Athletic Union com¬petition, while Miss Silvieus is a softball,volleyball, and basketball player.The Dudley Scholarships were establishedat the University last November (1972). Theyare believed to be among the first of theirtype in the nation.The scholarships are awarded to an in¬coming freshman woman, or women, whohas participated in high school sports or whohas shown an interest in sports through suchactivities as camp counseling, life guarding,YWCA or Jewish Community Center work,or any other similar activity.There is no stipulation in the scholarshipthat recipients must compete in women’sintercollegiate varsity sports at theUniversity, which fields women’s varsityteams in six sports: badminton, basketball,baseball, swimming, tennis, and volleyball.Noel Bairey will graduate from Grace MDavis High School, Modesto, California, inJune. She participated in interscholasticswimming, water polo, and gymnastics.Miss Bairey also participated in powder puff football at Davis High School, playing free-safety and end. She has competed inAmateur Athletic Union (AAU) swimmingfor eight years and quajified for the 1972 AAUnational championships in the 100-yard free¬style event Miss Bairey plays the viola andviolin and if 7 member of the ModestoSymphony Orchestra and the Grace M DavisHigh School Orchestra. At school she was asophomore class senator and vice-presidentof the junior class. She is a member of aModesto Boy Scout Explorer’s Post. She hastwo younger brothers.Laura Ann Silvieus will graduate fromEdgewood High School, Ashtabula, Ohio, inJune. At school she was captain of thewomen’s varsity softball team and thewomen’s varsity basketball team. She wasnamed most valuable player in theAshtabula recreation volleyball league. MissSilvieus also served as president of thestudent council, president of the senior class,and vice-president of the science club. She isa member of the National Honor Society,Who’s Who in American High SchoolStudents, and the Buckeye Girls State. Shehas two brothers and three sisters.CORSO CORNERFOTA 73 CONTINUESFRIDAYMAY 11- HALIM EL-DABH, Egyptian per¬cussionist, pianist and expert insount and movement.Workshop 5:00-6:30 PM IdaNoyes Hall Performance 8:00PM FREESUNDAYMAY 13- CLIFFORD SMITH, composer-pianist performing his ownworks after a successfulEuropean tour Quantrel!Auditorium 3:00 PM FREEMONDAYMAY 14- Piano Recital-CLIFFORD SMITH,.Mandel Hall 8:00 PM FREETUESDAYMAY 15- Modern Dance - THELENINGRAD KIROV BALLET inthe film, SWAN LAKE'Mandel Hall 7:30 & 9:15 PMAdm.-$1.00WEDNESDAYMAY 16- NOONTIME SERIES-HOGCALLING COMPETITION andDUELING PIE FIGHT, featuringLisa ’BANANA CREAM' Capellvs. Joe MASTER DEBATER'Morris. Come see crushedcherries and banana cream-Main Quadrangle 1 2:00 NOONTHURSDAYMAY 17- NOONTIME SERIES-MARTIN,BOGAN and the ARMSTRONGSBlues, ragtime and Pop 20's and30 s- Hutch Court 12:00 NOONFRIDAYMAY 18- NOONTIME SERIES-Demonstrat-ion by the JUDO, KARATE, andAIKIDO CLUBS. MainQuadrangle 1 2:00 NOON6 - The Chicpgp Maroon - Friday, A^py 1), 1973 ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELSunday May 13f 1973 11:OOA.M.BERNARD O. BROWNAssistant Dean of the Chapel“WHAT WILL LIFE GET OUT OF ME?”U.C. FOLKLORE SOCIETYpresentsFREE M0THER’$-DAY GOSPEL SHOWfeaturingfabulous EVELYN GAY & THE GAY SISTERSwith REVEREND DONALD GAYTHE COOK COUNTY VOCAL SINGING CONVENTION- Stars of the 1970 Folk Festival -and The HOLY TRAVELLERSSAT. EVENING 8:15 P.M. Ida Noyes - Cloister ClubfREEl!On Saturday, May 19th theINTERNATIONAL STUDENT SOCIETYwill take a TRIP TO LAKE GENEVA, WISC. Cost:$2.00 (bus fare only). Open to non-members.Tickets: Student Activities: Ida Noyes, Mo-Thurs.;ISS Open Table: Intern l House: Sat-Thu 6-7: 30P.Departure: 7:45 AM from Ida Noyes 59th Street.Return: 5:00 PM to Ida Noyes. (Trip includes visit toYerkes Observatory and Williams Bay College; pic¬nic or lunch - hiking - boating - relaxing!) FIRST WATERGATE, NOW “HAIL”Hail' Bless its malicious little heart— KfvIN Kflnr. BOSTON GtOBT^\MARINA CINEMA ■abc CORONETiwcmctcim ■ENTERTAINMENT AND THE ARTS(1. to r.): Professor Leonard B. Meyer, Mrs. Meyer, Professor Izaak Wirszup. Professor Meyer spoke at the last Woodward Court lecture onTuesday night. Photo by Hugh Taylor.The State of the ArtsTomorrow, and Tomorrow, and TomorrowBy ELIZABETH RUSSO“Joseph Kraft is speaking at the LawSchool, Father Berrigan is at theLutheran School, and so it looks as if artwill come last”, sighed Professor IzaakWirszup, commenting on the paucity ofpeople gathered in the Wooward CourtDining Room. Nevertheless, by 8:10 onTuesday night, a substantial number ofthe faithful had arrived to hear LeonardB. Meyer discuss “The Arts Today—And Tomorrow?" in the last WoodwardCourt lecture for this academic year.In discussing his topic, ProfessorMeyer delineated the plurality thatcurrently exists in the arts, andspeculated on where these trends willcarry the arts in the future. Explainingthe nature of the problem. ProfessorMeyer stated, “The history of the arts inour times has been characterized bychange.” However, this change—arapid succession of styles—has notmeant supremacy of any particularaesthetic mode. New movements existside by side with the old, creating aplurality of equals rather than ahierarchy.Such a profusion of valid artisticmovements makes predictions of thefuture very difficult. The naturalreaction is to ask whether theburgeoning of new styles will continue,if one certain style will becomedominant, or if several styles willcontinue to coexist. Whileacknowledging the hazards ofspeculating on the future of the arts,Professor Meyer thinks it is necessary,in order to better understand what ishappening in the present.“Whal an event ib...whal it means to us, is not merely a function of itsexistent present. Its meaning dependsin a very real way both upon the eventswhich have preceeded it and upon theevents which it is thought, rightly orwrongly, to imply.”Considering the possible alternatives,Professor Meyer theorized. “I'm goingto suggest that the coming epoch will beone of stylistic stasis, a period withoutradically new developments or novelmodes of expression.”The professor then went on to tracebriefly the continual change which hascharacterized Western culture for thelast five hundred years. Originally, itseemed that the forces of history ( asobscure to Professor Meyer as they areto the rest of us) dictated that culturesand styles had to change and develop toavoid becoming decadent and dead. Butnow, these categorical formulationshave little impact, thanks to historians’research showing that change is theexception rather than the rule in mostcultures. William McNeill suggests that“we face the eventual establishment ofworld wide cosmopolitism which,compared with the confusion and hasteof our time, would enjoy vastly greaterstability.”Many of those events which havefostered change in the past no longer<exist, Professor Meyer contended.One of these is the possibility of majordiscoveries. New lands and exoticcultures are things of yesteryear, andall arts which have existed are essen¬tially known to us now. One must alsoconsider science and technology, whichhave been greatly responsible forchange in our civilization. These areas will continue to develop, of course, butthe pace of change will probably leveloff. Of course, too, knowledge anddiscovery must occur in “a favorableideological envoronment” in order forchange to take place.Professor Meyer believes that theideological climate for change, longfavorable in the West, began to disin¬tegrate early in the twentieth century.New discoveries in the physicalsciences called traditional con¬ceptualizations of time and space intoquestion; Freudian psychology causedan upheaval in the social sciences, andCubism in painting and atonal music,which emphasized the artificality of art,“severely threatened the notion that thearts were based on universal, naturallaws.” Doubt was cast upon theexistence of a Master Plan. In such atentative atmosphere, aesthetic ex¬perimentation and a heavier reliance onchange were encouraged.But by the 1940’s, two world wars andthe experience of dictatorship hadshaken most people’s faith in theinevitability of progress. Thus,Professor Meyer said, “Change has lostits magic charm.” In such an at¬mosphere, statis, in an activitely-fluctuating state, is now possible.Professor Meyer placed three schoolsof thought in his theoretical statictriumverate. Traditionalism is self-explanatory; its partners are for¬malism and transcendentalism.For the formalist critic, hostory isirrelevant; a work of art superceedtime and p4ace. Formalism ispluralistic; Pierre Boulez and Ben¬jamin Britten, Andy Warhol and Andy Wyeth. Samuel Beckett and Saul Bellowcan exist side by side.Transcendentalism, on the otherhand, is a reaction to both the “ab¬stract. fragmented view of the “worldof formalism and last century's beliefsin individuality, progress and teleology.This philosophy of contemporary artemphasizes the interrelatedness of theworld and the concreteness of man'sexpereince of it. We know particular,concrete sense expereinces; all else isinference.Despite the differences in these twotheoretical systems, the lack of em¬phasis in both on causality—formalismbecause it discounts history andtranscendentalism because it focusessolely on individual enents—thosefacets of the arts which follow theconstructs of either system are stillheading toward stasis.In explaining the harmoniousamalgamation of the three schools ofartistic though. Professor Meyerpostulated a sort of Brownian Motiontheory for the arts. Thus, invididual artsand artists may be creating andreacting extremely, but the all-encompassing state of art will remaineither at rest or “sail slowly through theair”. Such an image is very helpful forconveying the state of the artstoday —atemporal, nonlinear,pluralistic, eclectic, inclusive. Havingacknowledged this steady state of ac¬tive fluctuation, the question to askourselves will not be which style isdominant at any given moment butwhether the art that we come in contactwith is elegant, entertaining, and in¬triguing.Friday, May >1,1973 - The Chicago Maroon - 7Catharsis at the Old Ball ParkBy C.D. JACOI was five years old. Harry Carey wasin the announcing booth screamingabout Stan Musial and Enos Slaughter.The New York Giants were in town, andI was approaching Busch Stadium forthe first time. Inside, the Cardinalswere dressed in red and white and theGiants, as befits the villians, weresomberly attired in black and white.There was a magic in the enclosed air ofthe stadium that was reflected off thefield like the glow from the centerlights; it was my first major leaguegame, and I felt like I had just beengiven the key to the city of Oz.I'm a lot older now. Things changebut, like Yeats keeps telling us, allforward motion is in a circle. HarryCarey is the announcing boothscreaming about Dick Allen and BillMelton. Another New' Yark team is intow, and I am approaching Sox Park forthe first time. Inside, the White Sox aredressed in red and white and theYankees are in black and gray. Themagic is still in the air; there are stillsome parts of America it feels good tocome back to.A trip to Sox Park at 35th and Shieldsis the best value in either entertainmentor the arts in Chicago. For one dollar,you are given a seat in the bleachers, atrip back to childhood, and a healthyslice of the American dream. Age doesnothing to diminish the fact that thosepeople on the field are honest-to-Godmajor league baseball players and, assuch, are to be ranked—even by pseudo¬intellectual anarchists—somewherebetween Michael and Gabriel.Baseball fans are attracted byseveral things , one of these is a partisanfeeling for the home team. This isn'teasy for a lot of us from out of town,especially since this megopolis of 5million has two major league teams.The solution to this is simple enough:The (sniff) Cubs belong to the North Side. They have fair and proper claim toeverything north of Randolph Street.The Sox belong to the South Side, theethnic and cultural guts of the city.The South Side has loved, hated, andtolerated the White Sox for years. Theywon the pennant in 1919, but threw theseries to the Cincinatti Reds in thefamous Black Sox scandal that, amongother things, ended the career ofShoeless Joe Jackson, the best hitterever to play ball in Chitown until DickAllen came along. The Sox took theAmerican League flag again in 1959, butlost the series to the newly-transplantedDodgers. Until two years ago, the Soxwere one of the worst teams in majorleague ball; now they are one of thebest. The last time the Sox won thepennant, Fire Commissioner Quinn setoff every warning siren in the city incelebration and caused a wholesalepanic; ths time, the South Siders maysettle for burning down McCormickPlace again.Another attraction of baseball is theunexpected; no one, in the stands or onthe field, knows what is going to happennext. For example, in Saturday night’sgame, Dick Allen, first baseman andMost Valuable Player in the AmericanLeague for 1972, was removed from thegame in order to rest; you don’t over¬play a superstar. Tony Muser replacedAllen at first. Ho hum, I thought. I hadjust finished the “hum” when a Yankeeleft hander pulled the ball down the firstbase line, straight as an arrow, behindand above Muser. Muser turned andlept, looking like a short-hairedNureyev and, for one crystalline, frozenmoment, was held suspended andcontorted in the air while the ballsmacked into his glove. The wholecrowd went nuts.The crowd, hoarse, beery, andmanaical, is another reason to spend anafternoon or evening at the ball park.Kids, long hairs, blacks, Alabama-bornsteelworkers, hot dog men who hawkfranks like they sing of lost love onBeale Street, and fanatics who jump upon the seats and spill beer whilePOP MUSICSpring has begun to quicken the bloodof the concert going crowds, and alsothe pace of presentation of those con¬certs. In Jazz this week, the highlightsare OSCAR PETERSON at the LondonHouse (see review' elsewhere in today’sMaroon ), and drummer ELVIN JONES. in a return engagement at the JazzI Showcase. For Blues, there is OTISRUSH at the Wise Fools Pub, and one ofthe last living giants of blues,i LIGHTNIN1 HOPKINS, will be at theQuiet Knight.Rock covers the rest of the city. Abrief, selective guide to concerts lists:country-rock POCO and folk-rock discussing the umpire’s parentage areall together at Sox Park in the biggestmelting pot since Ellis Island.Also waiting for you is the only realexploding scoreboard in the majorleagues. Oh sure, other ball parks havescoreboards that light up and playrecordings of fireworks. Sox Park,however, has a scoreboard that lookssomething like a huge pipe organ; eachof the pipes is a rocket launching tube,and when Allen or Melton or Kelly or aSox rookie just up from Des Moines hitsa homer, it’s the Fourth of July andBastille Day rolled into one. Skyrocketsexplode over the Dan Ryan Ex¬pressway, whistles and sirens go off,and a tape of what sounds like the battleof Dunkirk, complete with diving planesand exploding bombs, is played over thepublic address system. The next timeyou’re listening to a Sox game and aSouth Sider hits a home run, open yourwindows; you can hear the commotionin Hyde Park.Partisanship, cultural experience,and the thrill of the unexpected are allconsiderations, but they all take secondplace to the quality of baseball that isbeing played on the field. People don’tlike to watch a loser, especially a loserthat plays a sloppy brand of baseball.This, in turn, affects the players, whodepend, as we all do, on other people,both teammates and fans. If the team isbad, the crowds stay away, so the teamgets worse, so the crowds become eventhinner, and so forth. The White Soxwere so bad between last year and 1960that, in 1969, the Sox management wasthinking about moving the teamelsewhere. The Memphis White Sox? Itsounds obscene.Then, things began to happen. ChuckTanner became manager of the Sox,and brought with him a good humor andinfectious enthusiasm that soon startedto galvanize the team. A manager is asimportant to a team as two or threesuperstars. Witness the situation withthe Cubs when the lamented Mr.Durocher was manager, they had thetalent to win, but Leo was such aCALENDARSTRAWBS at the Kinetic PlaygroundSaturday; the INCREDIBLE STRINGBAND plays their last American tour ;concert at Cahn Hall in Evanston Itonight (note: the concert is sponsoredby the Amazingrace, who have finally !put tickets on sale at the Reynolds clubdesk) PAUL SIMON will thrillthousands of people in tomorrow’sconcert at the Opera House.FRANK ZAPPA is scheduled for the |Auditorium on Wednesday; IF,FREDDIE KING and AZTECA will beat the Aragon the same evening. Andtickets for the CAROLE KING concertnext Friday are on sale at the Arie divisive influence that the team nolonger felt any communality or sense ofpurpose.Tanner is another story. He wasresponsible for turning the Peck’s BadBoy of baseball, Dick Allen, into acontented, happy player who enjoyedhis teammates, the city he played in,and the game. Thanks to Tanner’s in¬fluence, Allen has brought hard-hittingbaseball back to the South Side, and hasgiven all of us hope that the sirens willgo off again this year.Also included in the Sox lineup areBill Melton, the home run king of theAmerican League for two years in arow, and Carlos May, whose majorleague career was almost ended twoyears ago when one of his thumbs wasblown off by a hand grenade in an ArmyReserve exercise. Another excitingreason to watch the White Sox is WilburWood, the portly knuckleballer fromCambridge who just might win 30games this year.The White Sox are a strange team; ina lot of cases, they win games that theyhave no business winning. Regularsports writers attribute this to anephemeral quality known as “hustle” or“desire” or something else equallytrite. The fact is that the Sox play as ateam, and not as a bunch of individualswho want to set records and draw thenext pay check. They’re communardsin a sense; they depend a great deal oneach other. This is what separates themfrom a lot of other major league teams,including the Cubs, and is the mainreason that they will win the AmericanLeague pennant this year.' Chicago, unfortunately, is not filledwith White Sox fans. Many people stillconsider the Cubs the Chicago team. Atthe last Sox game I went to, forexample, a man was sitting two rowsbehind me, wearing a Cubs wind-breaker. He was rooting for theYankees. Figures.MURMUI CEF presents9 of the HEARTIf 1 Wlmffvlw ■Cobb HallSunday, May 13 1% ■ II 1C? 1 I mm 17 and 9:15$18 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, May 11,1973Ballet West A Look at Both Sides NowBy MELINDA KANNERAND KAREN ROOTHAANDuring the first intermission, thelobby smoking group exhaled politely,“They are really a lot better than I jexpected.” Ballet West, from Salt LakeCity, had just completed its opener— abeautifully fluid interpretation ofGeorge Balanchine’s Serenade.“We try very hard. We do our bestand just hope the audience will likewhat we do.” Cindy Gerber, 18-year oldmember of the company, was warmingup backstage minutes before curtain.“The whole company is excited to behere,” she was saying. “We’ve neverperformed in Chicago before.” Shestretched, extended, releved up anddown on pointe. As she moved, herdelicate features laden with stagemake-up, she said, “We know how wefeel about it. When we hear or read whatother people say about our work, it isreally interesting. What they see outthere and what we see in the wings is sodifferent.” If Ballet West saw anythingof what we saw, they should bedelighted with last Sunday’s per¬formance at the Opera House.Balanchine has said, “Many peoplethink there is a concealed story inSerenade. There is not. There are,simply, dancers in motion to a beautifulpiece of music.” Staged by Bene Ar¬nold, Ballet Mistress, Serenade flowsand trickles in sumptuous strands likehoney. The four movements ofTchaikovsky’s “Serenade in C Majorfor String Orchestra,” although notintended for dance, correspond to theluxuriant choreography.The curtain opens to reveal severaldiagonal lines of girls in the shadows ofthe darkened stage. Gradually, soft bluelight bathes the corps de ballet 4n itscool beams. With open, outstretchedports de bras, the dancers begin to weave in and out. Responding to thefirst movement, “Andante non troppo,Allegro,” the corps moves out ofstillness into whirling momentum. Thepace quickens; movement becomesmore vigorous and elusive.Breaking into groups of three, thecorps dances in circles with alternatingports de bras and effaces, each echoingthe movement of the group before.Constantly moving, fluttering,Serenade waxes lyric the expertise ofits featured dancers—MerribethHabegger, Vicky Morgan and PhillipFuller. It captivated the audience andvirtually demanded their affection.Tom Ruud’s Mobile was an ingenioushighlight. “I went to the University ofUtah and studied to be an architect,” heexplained backstage. Mobile is based onthe architectural sculptured effect. Iconceived the whole thing in my mind when I was 22.”Mobile is a somatic sculpture withPhillip Fuller its rigid and monolithicaxis. Kristine Miller and Cindy Gerber,as inclined projections, orbit around thestationary pivot. As though drifting onlight breeze, the girls construct angulararabesque penchees; they balance onhis back, suspend from his waist. AramKhachaturian’s 2001 string music waschosen, said Mr. Ruud, for its serenefloating quality after the dance waschoreographed. “Mr. Christensen,” hesaid, “calls it my little gem.” Mobile isa brief but beautiful piece of abstractconception and precise execution.The longest, most lavish produc¬tions—Pas de Dix (from Raymonda)and Con Amore—never gave theaudience a moment to be bored. Aconstant motion of tour jettes and swiftslices en pointe in Pas de Dix displayed each soloists’ virtuosity. The SecondVariation, featuring Charles and PhillipFuller—(twin brothers), Frank Hayand Jay Jolley, was exquisitely free-flowing with its grand jettes, elevationsand entrechats. Sarah Price'scostuming in rich browns and golds, andGary Horton’s orangy lighting workedto subdue the dance’s explosive ef¬fervescence.Con Amore is in itself an amusingstory—it was presented with just theright touch of theatrics. A bandit,Christopher Fair, invades a camp ofAmazons. He pursues their captain.Vivian Cockburn. but is forced intokneeling submission at musketpoint.The scene shifts to a lady’s boudoir.There Mary Bird entertains threeamours—hiding each as the next en¬ters—until her husband, MichaelRozow, returns to find her in the fondembrace of all three.Fade back to the Amazon camp.Confusion and partner-chasings ensueuntil Amore, danced by Tenley Taylor,pierces the hearts of all with her bowand arrow. Transfixed, a frigid book¬worm rushes forth to claim her.Paquita Pas de Deux, danced byJanice James and Tomm Ruud, madeus wish that Mr. Ruud had been employed as something more than a barrefor Ms. James to demonstrate her graceand control.Polished but unassuming. Ballet Westnever faltered during the three-hourconcert. Currently on a Midwesterntour, the 35-member troupe will returnto Chicago in October. WilliamChristensen, the company’s ArtisticDirector, has said, “A ballet shouldcontain all the elements of goodtheatre: Spectacle—Drama —Vir¬tuosity—Innovation.” Mr. Christ¬ensen's expectations have beenfulfilled in Ballet West.“Mobile”—Pythagoras in motion. Photo by Gary Horton.Open UpackAuk,"/yMake the most of H! With TWAit pays to be young.TWA’s got a lot of things to help youin a lot of ways around the U.S. and Europe.But nothing comes close to the adventure¬some brave blockbuster Worldtrek expe¬ditions (arranged exclusively through TWA).Worldtrek.This isn't a vacation, it’s an experience.From two weeks trekking the fjords ofScandinavia to 12 weeks on a pilgrimageto Kashmir. You'll find yourselfcamping with nomadic reindeerherdsmen, or boating across theBlack Sea to Yalta.For the exciting details, go toyour TWA Travel Agent, TicketOffice, or Campus Rep. — or sendthe coupon below.TWA- IT PAYS TO BE YOUNG*Box 25, Grand Central Station, N.Y., N.Y. 10017Please send me infonnation on the following:Worldtrek Bonus Coupon BooksStutelpass * Ovemite Pass *Destination Europe Pack Bed and Breakfast *NameAddressCity .State Zip _ TT62•Service marks owned exclusively by TWA.or call campus rep. James Boggan 955-4705Friday, May 11,1973 - The Chicago Maroon - 9The Flavor of Budapest in ChicagoBy LESLIE KOHNThe history of Chicago indicates thatit is without doubt a city of neigh¬borhoods, tightly knit and sometimesquite suspicious of outsiders.Paradoxically, while these neigh¬borhoods sometimes breedparochialism, they also are a valuableresource within the city, especially tothose who enjoy sampling the food andculture of myriads of different peoples.Last week, we travelled up to the NorthSide, far up Lincoln Ave, beyond NewTown and the images it brings to mind,to the “Hungarian Restaurant", 4146 NoLincoln, for some authentic “home-country cooking". I will vouch for itsauthenticity on the grounds that 1 havea Hungarian grandmother who is a verygood Hungarian cook.This is a very unpretentiousstorefront restaurant, small and simplydecorated. The physical surroundingsare by no means awe-inspiring, but decor here is secondary to the food. Allof the cooking is done by the owner, MrsMelik, in a kitchen area right in thedining room. Her only assistance inrunning the restaurant comes from onewaitress and one general helper. Theatmosphere was pretty lively, and theconversations were split betweenHungarian and English.The menu is somewhat limited; thereare about 7 or 8 main courses fromwhich to choose at dinner, ranging inprice from about $2. to $3.50. Soup anddessert are extra. Everything is home¬made, and the limited menu is the onlyway to insure real freshness and toprevent Mrs Melik from collapsing ofoverwork. As it stands now, she workswithout respite.We began our meal with a liverdumpling soup, which contained a lightand fluffy liver dumpling (try it even ifyou normally don't like liver) and crispcarrots in a nicely seasoned broth. It was followed by a lettuce and tomatosalad that was good, but nothing out ofthe ordinary. As a main course, I had acombination plate which included beefgoulash, chicken paprika, stuffedcabbage and a type of meat loaf ac¬companied by’spaetzle (I’ve forgottenthe appropriate Hungarian word).The goulash was delicious, the meattender and spicy with a tasty gravy. Thestuffed cabbage was also first rate; butthe chicken, while good, could have hadmore paprika than it did. The spaetzle,soaked with the mixture of gravies, wasa delight. My companion had a“burgandy goulash1’, beef withmushrooms, onion, and wine. It wasserved in a deep metal dish and thenwas transferred into the plate. It was,without a doubt, superb, all the differentflavors of the ingredients came through.Other entree choices included each ofthe items on the combination plate, plusSzekely goulash, and loin of pork,among others. Dessert was a mixed success. Theapple strudel was disappointing; servedcold, it was too thick of crust and rathersoft, the apple flavor didn’t comethrough. However, the palacintas, thin,crepe-like pancakes filled with apricots,arrived piping hot and were fantastic.The chief virtues of the “HungarianRestaurant" are its small size, MrsMelik's brand of home cooking, and itsvery reasonable prices. I wouldestimate that a complete meal wouldcost between $3.-$5. Service is friendlyand helpful, but sometimes erratic. Wewaited quite a long time for our maincourse (though it was worth the wait).Bring your own wine; (there is also aliquor store a block away that stockssome Hungarian wines). Take a trip upLincoln Ave into the real Chicago andenjoy a good, filling meal at“Hungarian Restaurant”. Use the #11bus which stops along Wabash Ave. andthen goes northwest on Lincoln.The Caretaker Stalks Mandel This WeekendBy ERIC BOGOS1ANTonight, Saturday night and Sundaynight at 8;30 pm in Mandel Hall.University Theatre will present HaroldPinter’s The Caretaker. This will beUniversity Theatre's major productionfor the quarter and will star KennethNorthcott as Davies; PatrickBillingsley as Aston; and Nick Rudallas Mick. Those who have attendedrecent UT productions will recognizethe names immediately: KennethNorthcott's latest appearance was inThe Good Woman of Setzuan; PatBillingsley showed up last in Oh ! What aLovely War; and of course, Nick Rudallis the director of University Theatre.The direction has been handled by agroup of people from the campus andcommunity. The group is an ex¬perimental approach being tried out byl'T for the first time, in an attempt tofamiliarize the members with all thevarious duties of a director. The grouphas shared carrying the load of propmanagement, lighting, costuming andpublicity, at the same time par¬ticipating in the more enjoyablebusiness of directing the actors.In the interview with Nick Rudall thatappeared in last Friday’s Maroon acomplete synopsis and description ofthe play was given, so 1 won t go into toomuch detail here. The play is set in ahouse on the west side of London. Abum. Davies, is saved from a “punchpop-’ and brought home by Aston, a soft-spoken and deliberate man who lives ina room filled with junk. Aston offersDavies a place to stay for awhile. After Davies is settled, Mick, Aston's brotherand landlord of the house, enters andunsettles him all over again. Whatfollows from this point on is the in¬teraction of the two brothers throughDavies by offering him the job ofcaretaker. As is usual with Pinter, analmost surreal situation builds intopeak intensity through the clash ofpersonalities.The set is almost as interesting as theindividual characters. Designed byCharles Jenkins, this “room” (afamiliar setting for Pinter) is filled withevery kind of clutter imaginable. Allsorts of “clobber" can be found, from alawn mover to a kitchen sink. The set isunusual in that Mr Jenkins has actuallybuilt an entire room out of wood,complete with roof and floor and func¬tional door and window. The only thingmissing is the downstage side of theroom, so the audience can see in. Theentire dwelling has been placed oncasters so that it can roll out onto theapron of the stage as the curtain isopened. The effect is, for lack of a betterword, dramatic.Describing plot, set and charactersprobably doesn't help those who havenever read or seen a Pinter play un¬derstand what he’s all about. Pinter’sunique blend of comedy and tragedyisn’t easy to pin down to a catchphrases, though quite a few critics havetried. His theatre is somewhat of anacquired taste, being based on theslightly foreign British scene and theideology of the “Theatre of the Ab¬ surd". However, few of us can feeldetached from the problems of com¬munication and personality definitionthat he presents. The world Pintercreates is paradoxical and frightening;a super-real impression of 20th centuryreality. It is a world full of ambiguoussymbolism and psychology that servesto puzzle and disturb the typicalanalytical audience. And throughout hisplays Pinter’s special insight intohuman relations produces a comedythat is enough to bring tears to youreyes.Equally weighted with his relevant“message” is Pinter’s outstandingmastery of theatrical dynamics.Although the rhythm, tension andcharacter portrayals help make a playlike the Caretaker great, it is Pinter'sdialogues that make it unforgettable.He handles modern British idiom with anease and skill unparalleled by any othercontemporary playwright. Writingrealistic dialogue is perhaps theplaywrights most formidable task, yetfor Pinter this seems to be secondnature. (He wrote his first short gem,The Room, in one week.) Pinter'sdialogues are neither tedious noridealized. The dozens of pauses andredundancies which have become his -trademark make his characters cometo life, while providing a suspensefulrhythm. The plays, which are almostplot less, are moved along almost en¬tirely by the energy of the verbal in¬teractions. The worst blows in his playsare not physical, but verbal.Used 6 ft. wide bulletin boards-$ 12.50Used 3 drawer files-$l 5.00Used wood desks-$l 5.00Used metal desks-$25.00“cash and carry"with Jhis ad only-lUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.c BRAND XQIUl8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:00RE 4-2111Thurs. till WH) P.M. JAMESWAYPETERSONMOVING & STORAGEr „ 646-4411Call °R *or646-1234 free estimatesCompletePre-Planned Moving ServiceLocal • Long Distance • Packing e CratingImport-Export.fi. Containerized StorageFormerly al General Office55th & Ellis 12655 So. DotyUtMsu . Chicago. !H 60633 StudentDiscountModelCamera1342 E. 55th493-6700Most complete photoshop on South Side.I said earlier that Harold Pinter’swork is based on the “Theatre of theAbsurd”. I should qualify thatstatement. Pinter’s work is not onlybased in that “school” but is one of themain foundation sources for a definitionof it. He shares the honor of being one ofthe forerunners of this type of theatrealong with Albee, Beckett, Genet andIonesco. The one consistent facet of the“Theatre of the Absurd” (if there isone) is its avoidance of rigidity. Thework of the absurdist playwrights isusually to some degree ambiguous inchronology, personality, symbolism,place or meaning. This style serves thepurpose of disturbing the traditionalaudience, at the same time establishingthe ideology that nothing is definite.Pinter refuses to give interpretations tohis plays, and that fits in perfectly.Each individual will see the play in hisown way- each person defines everyword in his own way, each person seesanother's personality in his own way.All definitions are valid. A characterfrom an Ionesco play, Jack, w;ants toreplace all words with one word: cat.Pinter extends this way of looking atthings to people. People can be no morerigidly defined than words can be.Another person's actions are notpredictable; in other words, one personcan never really “know” anotherperson. Thus we are left with themodern dilemma of communication,which Pinter communicates to us sowell.^9|e9|caicafea|cdic9|ca|e9|e9|ca|c^r@onneU 0?C&ii4t *J 1645 E.59TH STREET „* CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 ?J Phone: FA 4-1651 J*************IEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde-Park 3-837210- The Chicago Maroon - Friday; May 11, 1973Clifford Smith Recites on PianoThe Festival of the Arts will presenttwo solo piano recitals by composer-pianist Clifford Smith this week. Thefirst recital will be held on Sunday, May13, at 3:00 pm in Quantrell Auditorium.The second will be presented on Mon¬day. May 14, at 8:00 pm in Mandel Hall.There will be no admission charge ateither performance.Mr. Smith began his work at the pianoin 1957 at the age of twelve, revealing aremarkable keyboard facility. A yearlater he composed his first severalpiano compositions and two choral odes,confirming an affinity for both pianoand composition which induced hisrapid growth and extensive musicaloutput. He first appeared in publicduring the month of his fourteenthbirthday, arousing the keen interest of avery enthusiastic Chicago audience which commanded his encore. In thesubsequent years, Mr Smith appearedsporadically in public, playing works ofhis own as well as many works of othercomposers to equally enthusiasticaudiences in cities in the Midwest, buthe eventually chose the retreat ofprivate life.A graduate of Interlochen ArtsAcademy and the University ofMichigan, in piano and composition, MrSmith has worked with Balint Vazsoni,Benning Dexter (a student of AlexanderSiloti), and Leslie Bassett (a student ofErnst von Dohnanyi). Mr Smith foundhis direction intrinsically in the musiche composed and in the works of othercomposers which he analyzed andplayed. His avid musical productivityspans a large volume of symphonic,chamber, and solo concert music. Mr Smith recently returned to publicperforming in December of 1971 with awell-received recital at the DetroitInstitute of the Arts, and at that time,embarked on a very extensive, eighteenmonth cycle of recitals completelydevoted to his own works for solo piano.These many recent performances havebeen very enthusiastically received incities throughout the United States andCanada, and this far-ranging cycle hascontinued with an extremely successfulconcert tour of the principal capitals ofEurope. Many return engagements andfurther concert tours have resultedfrom Mr Smith’s recent public andcritical reception, including a forth¬coming second tour of the Europeancapitals as well as tours throughoutRussia and South America. Mr Smithcontinues now through the final portionsof his present recital schedule with further concert touring in the UnitedStates and Canada.Mr. Smith's acclaim in Europe isevidenced by remarks made about hisperformances in the European press.Said the Review of London Recitals,London. England “a very fine keyboardartist...his luminous tone and range ofcolour was a delight...highly poeticcontent...: This composer's music...hassomething personal and valuable tosay.” In Paris, France, Le Guide duConcerts reported that “This Americanof 27 years has already behind him arich past as a composer and as apianist, since he debuted at 13 year¬s’. ...He has a ravishing touch, pearlyand vaporous in turn, and a wrist ofsteel in the dizzying series of octaves...”Further information is available at753-3591.Ratatouille: The Boycotter’s ChoiceBy HOWARD M. ISAACSOne modern word which has had agreat deal of success both linguisticallyand politically is the term “boycott.”Originally the name of a Captain whohad some troubles in Ireland in 1880, thename and the procedure have passedinto the English, French, German, Dutch, and Russian languages. Whatwith the current boycott on meat, we ofthe Maroon feel it our duty to provideour readers with an all-vegetable dish,and one which in no way smacks of“rabbit food.”Ratatouille (pronounced, ra-ta-TOO-ee) is a heavenly creation of southernRip offEuropeSTUDENT-RAILPASSThe way to see Europe without feeling like a tourist.Student Railpass is valid in Austria, Belgium, Denmark,France. Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway,Portugal, Spain, Sweden, SwitzerlandEurailpass. Box 90, Bohemia, New York 11716Please send me your free Student Railpass folder orderform □Or your free Eurailpass folder with railroad map LiNameStreet.CityState. Zip192bSo you plan to spend theSummer in Europe thisyear. Great.Two things are mandatory. A ticketto Europe. And a Student-Railpass.The first gets you over there, thesecond gives you unlimited SecondClass rail travel for two months for amodest $150 in Austria, Belgium,Denmark, France, Germany,Holland, Italy, Luxembourg,Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden,and Switzerland! All you need toqualify is to be a full-time student upto 25 years of age, registered at aNorth American school, college oruniversity.And the trains of Europe area sensational way to travel. Over100,000 miles of track links cities,towns and ports all over Europe. Thetrains are fast (some overJOO mph),frequent, modern, clean, convenient. and very comfortable. They have tobe. So you’ll meet us on ourtrains. Itreally is the way to get to knowEuropeans in Europe.But there’s one catch. Youmust buy your Student-Railpass inNorth America before you go.They're not on sale in Europebecause they are meant strictly forvisitors to Europe—hence theincredibly low price. Of course ifyou’re loaded you can buy a regularEurailpass meant for visitors of allages. It gives you First Class travel ifthat’s what you want.Either way if you’re goingto zip off to Europe, see a TravelAgent before you go, and in themeantime, rip off the coupon. Itcan’t hurt and it’ll get you a bettertime in Europe than you ever thoughtpossible. France, delicious hot or cold, suitableas a main course or a side-dish. Mme.Marie-Helene Adler has kindly providedus with her version of this old favorite,adapted to fit American markets.You will need:1 medium eggplant3-4 medium zucchini2 big onions3 1/2 chicken bouillon cubes1 medium-sized can Italianpeeled tomatoes6-7 big cloves of garlic1 round tsp. thyme1 tsp. oregano1/ 2 tsp. pepperSlice the eggplant lengthwise into 4pieces, cut in turn into 2/ 3 inch chunks.Slice the zucchini lengthwise once, and then into 2/ 3 inch chunks. Cut theonions into thick slices. Drain thetomatoes and slice in half. Chop thegarlic.FOODOver a medium flame, fry the onionsin 1/ 2 cup of oil until golden. Then addthe eggplant, zucchini, bouillon cubes,and garlic. Fry for 15 minutes, stirringoccasionally. Now add the thyme,oregano, pepper, and tomatoes, andcook covered for 30 minutes. Serves 3- 4.With TWAit pays to be young.Armed with just your TWA Bed andBreakfast:i: Plan, and a pack on your back,you can get a lot more of Europe for alot less with TWA. ^Here are some ways we helpBed and BreakfastTWA’s "Bed and Breakfast’’gets you guest houseaccommodations (at theleast) in 47 European cities,breakfast and extras likesightseeing or theatre ticketsall at really low prices.Europe Bonus Coupon Books.Take your boarding pass'to any TWATicket Office in London, Paris, Rome,Frankfurt, Madrid, Athens or Amsterdam,and you’ll get a book of bonus coupons goodHfor absolutely free things, as well asdiscounted extras like bicycles, theatretickets, sightseeing, meals and lots, lotsmore. Like we said, with TWA it pays to beyoung. For all the details write: TWA —IT PAYS TO BE YOUNG* Box 25, GrandCentral Station, New York, N.Y. 10017.OR CALL CAMPUS REP. JAMES BOGGAN 935-4703! BONUSCOUPONIBOOKS COUPONScoupon §Coupon f’‘■'■'—•if‘Service marks owned exclusively by TWA.f Any transatlantic boarding pass is acceptable Benefits are being offered by participating merchants.Friday, May 11,1973 - The Chicago Maroon -11Rock Editor Eats Humble Piel. \ an mtoThe internal protection more women trustCMColumban FathersSt. Columbans, Neb. 68056Please send me a copy of youbooklet. No strings.NameAddressCityState ZipCollegeBy GAGE ANDREWSEarly in this academic quarter, theMaroon printed an article of mine thatwas intended as a shopper's guide torecord buying in the Grey City. It wasmy hope, when I was beginning theresearch for my article, to find a storethat 1) had all the records I wanted 2) atprices I could easily afford, with 3)sales people who were sufficiently in¬formed that they could be helpful if Ihad a question. Approximately twoweeks after the appearance of the ar¬ticle 1 was contacted by one of the storesmentioned in the article, R & S Recordsof 3148 W Armitage. The substance ofthat initial conversation was that R & Sfelt that their store had beenmisrepresented in the article, and theyrequested an opportunity to meet withme in order to correct and explain some of the information about their store thatwas contained in the original story.I met with a Mr Howard Kobernik, Jr,who along with his father runs thisfamily-owned store. Mr Kobernik wasquick to explain some of the moremysterious items originally mentioned:that the use of anti-freeze boxes inwhich to transport records was a cost¬saving idea, since creating new cartonswas far more expensive than usingthose that have already been printed forfactories that have since gone out ofbusiness. A second item was thepresentation of both cancelled checks(for large amounts of cash) made outto, and “accounts owed’’ statementsfrom, some of the followingdistributors: Galgano Distributors on WArmitage, Sounds Unlimited in Skokie,and M & A Wholesale on W. Jackson. Itwas very clear that the distributors, which were so elusive for me when Iwas preparing the first article, do ac¬tually exist.My allegation that I didn’t believethat a record store could sell records forthe prices offered by R & S was an¬swered by Mr Kobernik with this in¬formation: first, the fact that Ii & Sowns the building that the store islocated in means that they do not payrent on it, and these savings are passedon to the consumer (R & S does not ownthe plot of land the building is locatedupon, but the implication was that rentfor the land was low). Second, that R &S does not purchase large amounts ofadvertising, which Mr Kobernik feltwas definitely a contributive factor tothe high costs of records in other stores.The last reason was the volume ofsales by R & S Records. Though Mr.Kobernik declined to give me their average weekly sales figure (he feltthat such information was con¬fidential), he did suggest the possibilitythat a major portion of the savingspassed on to the consumer originatedfrom the wholesaler; in other words,that retailers who buy large quantitiesfrom wholesalers are encouraged toreturn with their business by beinggiven discounts over the wholesaleprices offered to smaller purchasers.I have been offered persuasiveevidence that my research for theoriginal article was incomplete or in¬sufficient. I apologize to Mr Kobernikand to the employees of R & S recordsfor any mis information and misleadingconclusions that were originallywritten, and for the un-thinkinglyflippant reference to the Mafia.I am tryingto bribe youwithuncertainty,withdanger,withdefeat.JorgeluisborgesThat’s mostly what you’llfind if you commit yourlife to the millions in theThird World who cry outin the hunger of theirhearts. That...and fulfill¬ment too...with theCOLUMBANFATHERSOver 1,000 Catholic mission¬ary nriests at work mainly inthe developing nations.We've been called by manynames - "foreign dogs" . . ."hope-makers" . . . "capital¬ist criminals" ."hard-nosedrealists" ..Read the whole story in ournewJPTDTPTP 16-PAGEr xtHiHi bookletTells itlikeit is Hi.WeVe theiinoyarillDirivetsUni: We leap offramps throughflaming hoops.We dohairpin turns, nearcollisions, 2-wheeldriving. That’s howwe demonstrate thestrength and tractionof Uniroyal SteelBelted Radials.Watch for us on TV. Roy: Daring we maybe, but dumb we’renot. If we couldn’tcount on Uniroyalsin hairy situations,we wouldn’t taketheir money. We’renot looking for grief. Al: So if you wantto feel the sameconfidence on theroad as we do onthe track, even inrain or freewaytraffic, get yourselfsome Uniroyals.We use ’em. Andwe don’t like topush our luck. — Don’t changeyour summerplansIf you’re going to spend alot of this coming summeraround the water—sailingand swimming—you’ll wantthe protection of Tampaxtampons.Girls have frequentlywondered about swimmingduring those difficult days.Old-fashioned napkinsmake swimmingimpossible, but withTampax tampons themessage has always been:"Go ahead and swim."You're dependablyprotected internally. Andyou never have toworry about anythingshowing underswimsuits because internalprotection is invisibleprotection.So don’t change yoursummer plans justbecause your period mightinterfere. Tampax tamponslet you sail, swim, water-ski, sunbathe—just likeany other day of the month.12 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, May 11,1973By LARRY FRISKEIt’s great to have a reincarnation ofthe Oscar Peterson piano-bass-guitartrio back in town at the London House.Also on the plus side, the managementis making an effort to solve the mostpersistent problem of house noise, andjudging by the congregation gatheringfor this engagement, it is doublynecessary.Joe Pass is the first guitarist to workwith Oscar since Herb Ellis in 1958, whoalso combines with Pass for duo guitarsessions when Joe’s not with the trio.Pass' latest album is entitled Sim¬plicity, on World Pacific, and a jointproduction with Ellis in addition toBarney Kessel and Howard Roberts toform the first jazz guitar quartet isrumored. An excellent young bassist,Niels-Henning-Orsted Pedersen, whohas played with Oscar briefly before,completes this spirited trio.Born in Montreal, Peterson beganclassical piano training at age six, andby 14 had his own segment on a weeklyradio program. Beginning in 1944, hewas featured with Canada’s JohnnyHolmes Orchestra. He first appeared inthe United States in 1949 at New York’sCarnegie Hall for an appearance withJazz at the Philharmonic. By 1954,Oscar had developed an internationalreputation with his playing with JATP.For the past twenty years, Peterson hasbeen at the top of his field, winningnumerous jazz polls and Metronomeawards. Incredibly, he has recordedover more than 100 albums.Oscar Peterson is one of the most superb and active pianists on the scenetoday. His speed is reminiscent of ArtTatum and his constant streamlinedflowing dominates the character of thesound. This can develop into a kind offlamboyance in this ever-present questfor subtleties, but in Oscar’s case youare more often than not caught up in thesearch of never-ending possibilities.With Peterson’s technique, there is noproblem with his speed. After kickingoff w ith a brisk and moving “On A ClearDay You Can See Forever,” Oscar keptthe burning tempo with rolling chordalmovements on “Just Friends,” ablysupported by Pass’ inventive highpicking and a stomping, chordal con¬clusion.Peterson’s stretching out at such asustained pace is something to behold.Adding arpeggios in “Our Love Is HereTo Stay,” and full-ahead tempo for“Sweet Georgia Brown,” he closed thelatter with a walking beat as if to catchhis breath before the next onslaught.Oscar is even more effective when hehas all that much more space to fill-inon ballad selections. The most sensitivesolo this evening, along with subtlecolor contrasts, was on “Rainy DaysAnd Mondays,” Pedersen was quiteeffective here supplying a rich timbreaided by his arco technique. JohnnyMandel’s “A Time For Us” providedanother full and rich sound exercise forPedersen and “Who Can I Turn To” re¬emphasized Oscar’s full keyboardrange. Just as Heraclitus proposed over2500 years ago that everything is in aconstant state of flux, today’s mosteffective proof is in the fingers of themagnificent Oscar Peterson.Sponsored by the University of Chicago, Center for Policy Study,Arms Control and Foreign Policy Seminar.EUROPEAN SECURITYFOREIGN POLICYHis ExcellencyCOMELIU BOGDANAmbassador, Socialist Republic of Romaniato the United StatesThursday, May 17 3:30 pmBreasted Hall, Oriental Institute1155 East 58th StreetNO ADMISSION CHARGE NO TICKETS REQUIREDFriday, May 11,1973 - The Chicago Maroon - 13Peterson Personifies Perpetual Motion\ \ • r •RECORDSBcm|o PlayerCarl Jackson(Capitol ST 1 1 166)Some records are very catchy at first especially instrumentalalbums featuring high velocity playing The few albums thatremain consistently entertaining usually contain a wealth ofmusical ideas and mastery of the instrumental idiom. Althoughmost catchy records tend to fade quickly after the 5th or 6thplaying, this record gets better with more playing. This is the kindof album I would wake up to in the morning and bounce around theapartment while getting ready for classes. Bounce bounce boun¬ceAccording to Glen Campbell Carl Jackson is the best young BanIO player around I d second that and add that he is one of the bestaround regardless of age The album begins with Dueling Ban|Os (which by this time has been played to death and satire on theradio who knows, in addition to the belligerent tubas we mightget the 101 Strings version next week) Anyway. I try not to letminor annoyances detract from the enjoyment of this tune I thinkthis is infinitely better than the sound-track version of DuelingBanjos and that s hard to do because I really like the sound-trackversion What s outstanding is the air tight synchrony of Glen Campbell s guitar and Jackson s Banjo By the way. Glen Campbelldeserves a lot of credit for the success of this album. His guitarplaying has never been better and adds immeasurably to thealbum He also did a good job producing the album At certainpassages of Dueling Banjos . it really did get hard to breathe andI had to let it out with a long wheeew.The rest of the album featured the same king of precise andsuper fast picking Especially interesting are the original com¬positions by Jackson C.J. Breakdown Song for Susan OldMiss and Ain t Got no Name Then there are some old countrystandards like Foggy Mountain Breakdown Orange BlossomSpecial and Say Old Man C.J s Breakdown . Old Miss andAin t Get no Name are the usual bluegrass idiom and very wellplayed Song for Susan is a very pretty and lyrical song andthat s no mean feat because it s hard to get a banjo to sound softlyand sweetly Carl s playing on the old country standards is just unbelievable His mastery of banjo technique especially the upperregister is remarkable It was really breathtaking to hear a supposedly overplayed song (Foggy Mountain Break¬down ^transformed by a fresh interpretation and accelerated outof sight by some fast playing. There have been times when I won¬dered if my turntable had been set on 45 rpm instead of 33 rpm.After hauling out all the adjectives in Webster s to describe CarlJackson s playing I still feel I haven t done justice to this recordthe only way to fully convince people is to have them hear therecord and then this whole campus will be filled with wheew, andwhooo. and other forms of gasping breath. Maybe if I set up somegigantic speaker system on top of Reynolds Club hmmmmm...-Ben D. HuongRIEVALU ATIONCharlie Mingus(ABC Impulse A59234 D)Reevaluation is a collection of tapes from the years thatCharlie Mingus recorded with Impulse Most of these cuts are from1963 but age certainly hasn t lessened their value Besides beingthe most inventive jazz bassist (in my opinion) he is also a pianistand a band leader Being a good leader is important even whenworking with a small group Mingus can write arrange, and lead asmall group almost as well as he can play.The main interest in this album is in hearing Mingus do bass.Better Get Hit In Your Soul gives Mingus a chance to show off hisfabulous style His melody playing in that number may be con¬trasted with the strictly rhythmic bass playing he does in II B SHere he demonstrates the bass as tempo and meter determinantin an introductional interplay with the drums One of Mingusmajor inspirations came from Duke Ellington, and it is in a tributeto Ellington, Mood Indigo that the full expression of Mingus sensitivity is achieved in a superb bass solo.The piano style of Charlie Mingus bordered on *‘.e classicalBody and Soul is turned into a marvelous array of chordal textures and colors Here the emphasis is on harmonies rather thanrhythms In She s Jus! Miss Popular Hybrid Mingus paints arealistic picture of one of his lady friendsTwo full sides of this double album are taken up with the jazzballet suite The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady a remarkableexample of Mingus s ability to write and to keep a group playingbeautifully balanced music Black Saint is a magnificent piece ofiazz Mingus and his group pull it off with a large degree of suc¬cess. It has one spot of joy after another, unravelling considerabletalent. It has Mingus on bass and piano Dick Hafer on tenor saxand flute Jay Berliner on guitar plus the rest of the Mingus gangIf anyone ever needed further proof of Mingus s capability to keepbalance in a group it could be supplied by a piece called HoraDecubitus There are several instruments all laying down a sololine, yet the number succeeds in being uncluttered and fresh-Michael FranzenDanny's SongAnne Murray(Capitol ST 11 172)In her third album Danny's Song. Anne Murray offers the samecommodity that has been hers all along — a bell-like voice andmaterial chosen with care and sung with precision. Perhaps sheisn t making it as big as she deserves because she offers little inthe way of surplus entertainment — no dead chickens fly throughthe air and there is a marked absence of smoke bombs bubblemochmes and offstage scandals — all the lady con offer is consistent qualityWithout consciously trying to one-up anybody, she wins everytime Danny s Song of course needs no more than a mentionbecause it has (mercifully or not) been picked up by the Top-40stations Killing Me Softly With His Song out-Roberta s Ms Flack,and I II Be Home makes Barb Streisand s version sound like atest run Hoyt Axton can sit sifting grains of sand on the beach ofhis choice forever knowing that his Ease Your Pam is in MsMurray s repertoire Ditto for Scott MacKenzie whose WhatAbout Me opens the second side of the olbum recorded live atthe National Arts Centre Ottawa with a clarity that marks anengineering first.There isn t a bad song on this album I know. I ve listened to itnon-stop since the day I got it. Around The World With Three Dog NightThree Dog Night(ABC Dunhill DSY 50138)Here it is. A two record album set of your favorite hits done byyour favorite top forty group, Three Dog Night. If you go in for thissort of thing, you II be in seventh heaven. It was recorded live andincludes their latest hits an organ solo aptly titled Organ Solo , adrum solo with the same cogent nomenclature, and even a real,live jam. One gues as to what the jam is titled.Included on the olbum are Never Been to Spain, Joy to theWorld Black and White, and Pieces of April. If you will excusethe atrocious pun, this album is a real dog-Michael FranzenHot August NightNeil Diamond(MCA2 8000)From somewhere in the dark recesses of someone s recordingstudio a long-awaited event has arrived — that mythical productthat we all thought must somehow exist — a concert album thatsounds as good as a standard recorded package Hot AugustNight, Neil Diamond recorded in Concert at the Greek Theater inLos Angeles is a triumph for artist and engineerNeil Diamond is at his best — the liner notes describe his performance perfectly as a spontaneous exhausting display ofenergy and sensuality . Most of his standards are included in thistwo record package except regrettably African Triology but Isuppose you have to draw the line somewhere when you redealing with a singer who consistently strikes gold.The Diamond dilettante may find cause for distress in a few cutsHolly Holy for example despite the prodigious number ofstrings hired for the occasion doesn t quite have the strength ofvoice found in the original, nor the rigorously balanced scoring.Brother Love s Traveling Salvation Show doesn t have the oomphthat it did a few years ago but bear in mind that it came at theend of the concert and who besides Robert Merrill is in top formafter the equivalent of four album sides?Crunchy Granola Cherry Cherry Solitary Man , andSoolaimon", on the other hand, are rendered as well and in somecases better, than they have been in more controlled recordingsessions.Perhaps Neil Diamond * greatest gift is his ability to put a songacross. It s not the purity of the voice so much as a unique stylefraught with emotion. One may not always hear true notes but theenthusiasm never stops. It s the same quality that made FrankSinatra (an older singer who now hangs out with politicians)populai and accounts for a great deal of Bill Medley s success.If you have all of Neil Diamond s albums, buy this one to get adouble dose of his electricity; if you have none, this is the one youought to shell out for-Elizabeth RussoSmokey Robinson and the Miracles/1957-1972Smokey Robinson and the Miracles/1957 1972Tomla T320DThis two record set is packaged in one of the Motown Cor¬poration s pseudo-cloth jackets and the title reads like the in¬scription on a headstone. Fortunately, the music is far less somberthan the cover 1957 1972 does not stand as any sort of tributeto Smokey Robinson, who, as the seminal artistic master-mindbehind the Motown Sound holds a position of importance in thedevelopment of rock and roll second only to that of Chuck BerryRather this live set is mostly a fine, unpretentious conclusion toSmokey s career as lead singer with the Miracles. It was recordedduring the group s final concert tour before Smokey s departure toconcentrate on songwriting and producing for Motown.The album s best cuts are renditions of the Miracles past hitsthe arrangements used on the studio versions are loosened up andplayed with here The Tears of a Clown comes off as flashy rockand roll, with Jimmy Allen s excellent up-front drumming. TheMiracles vocal harmonies are featured more prominently on theseversions of Ooh Baby Baby The Tracks of My Tears, and HereI Go Again than on the originals, and Smokey s lead on MoveLove is o beautiful variation on the studio version. MichaelJackson s Got to be There serves as a vehicle foi some fine, in¬tricate group singing.There are some low spots though including an unmercifullylong Las Vegas arrangement of Abraham Martin and John.Bad Girl and Shop Around, two of Smokey s best songs, hereamount to little more than the humorless babble one expects fromthe Smothers Brothers. Fortunately all this dreg occurs in one con¬tinuous segment so it s easy to skip over it and concentrate on thegood stuff And good Smokey Robinson is some of the best there is.-Mark BushmanThe History of Jimmy SmithJimmy Smith(MGM Records 2 V6S-881 4)At his best Jimmy Smith is in a class by himself. He is a masterof time and touch and can make the liabilities of the electric organinto assets. He is a dynamo of energy and swings like no one else.This album is the music that Jimmy has done but it is a mixedbag from a viewpoint of where Smith is today Cuts like The Cat,Who s Afraid of Virginia Wolf, and the orchestral arrangementson eight of the thirteen cuts on these two records seem quitedated. Still, there is a little of the Jimmy Smith sty». The Sermonis a cool and easy blues number and the orchestral arrangementson Walk On The Wild Side by Oliver Nelson and Slaughter onTenth Avenue by Lalo Schifrin are acceptable at times. This isdefinitely not a best album of Jimmy Smith.Unfortunately, Verve has done it again with another vacantrecord sleeve, lacking the names of Smith s sidemen and dates ofthe cuts It does include a note by Harvey Siders and a list of theprevious albums from where these cuts were selected.Ever since he organized his first trio in 1955, Smith has capturedacclaim and success He has won every organ poll in Downbeat sin¬ce 1964 the first year the organ was recognized in a separatecategory He won a grammy for The Cat in 1964 and many otherawards too numerous to mention. If you are unfamiliar with thepast accomplishments of Jimmy Smith, this record might be an ac¬ceptable beginning, but why not start with the Best of Jimmy- Elizabeth RussoWESTERN TMub*STARTING JUNE 28th 'TIL END OF AUGUST•VEGAS•OISNEYIAND•HOLLYWOOD• PALM SPRINGS• 8 DAYS, ALL TRANSFERSJET HOTEL TAXES* TIPS $ 229 PER PERSONDOUBLEOCCUPANCYGREAT TRIP FOR THE FAMILY OR A GROUP493-1813Hyde ParkBaak Lofty1525 E. 53rd Si. Jr* $<***& *J0*f*e HEADQUARTERSFORPASSPORTPHOTOGRAPHSAPPLICATIONS* PHOTOGRAPHSinblaqk & whiteand colorColl MU 4-7424 nowfor an appointmentCorona Studios13 14 fc.53KD ■14tThR.ChicogoMqroon:Fridoy. ^Aay l l, 1973 Be What You Want To BoLink Wray(Polydor PD 5047)Link Wray plays and sings country-rock. At one time country-rock was the bastard of the musical scene. Rock disowned itbecause of country-rock's twangy voice and inevitable electricguitar playing the Nashville version of the blues mode. Countrymusic disowned it because of its loud and crude imitation of realcountry. Now country-rock has come into its own and is vulnerableto every ersatz lonesome cowboy who wants to make a hit album.Link Wray does some nice stuff. He is helped by a few friends,namely Jerry Garcia and Commander Cody. As a result there aresome good things happening; this is particularly true on River-bend where Jerry Garcia is allowed to play around. The songMorning is also well done, soft and simple.Unfortunately the album is disorganized Wray appears to beexperimenting; On You ve Really Got a Hold on Me the volume islowered slowly and then brought bock to its former level. I* is asophomoric play with no good effect. Some good material is ruinedby tinkering.-Michael FranzenBad News Is ComingLuther Allison(Gordy G964L)LeadIt is somewhat unfair for me to speak of this record concerningits inherent qualities clone. Luther Allison, one of the finest oftoday s young bluesmen, is one of the few musicians I ve seen in oclub setting enough times to feel completely ot home with. He is anall-around talented singer and guitarist, and if this were notenough, is a stellar showman, almost always turning on evening ofgreat blues into a helluva good time. This is not to lessen the im¬pact of this record which contains some of *he best of LutherAllison, live or recorded. His previous albums have been onDelmark, but this is on Gordy, party of the Motown system, andshould assure Luther of the wider recognition which is long over¬dueLuther s blues roots are in Chicogo. He first worked with JimmyFast Fingers Dawkins at the young age of 17 in 1957. He startedon bass but was influenced enough by B.B King to take up theguitar His band has been o standout ot the Ann Arbor BluesFestival for the last three years and have also put in on ap¬pearance at the now-defunct Fillmore Eost.The Allison compositions shows Luther in fine form, especiallywhen vocalizing on the title cut as he reflects the notes from hisguitar in his voice Paul White s organ and Garfield Angove s har¬monica, one of Luther s favorite sounds, are especially effective onRaggedy and Dirty. Ray Goodman on rhythm guitar and AndrewSmith on drums and bass round out this tight bandTwo Willie Dixon cuts lead off this record. I ve heard Luther singLittle Red Rooster'' countless times, but even without the spon¬taneity of a live performance, this is as fine a rendition as I canremember. Evil Is Going On is most characteristic for its honestblues lyrics and Angove's harmonica. Luther s guitar shinesbrightly on B.B King s Rock Me Baby " and his solos on Dust MyBroom remind me of Luther at his cutting-loose best.There s some news o-comin alright, and it's Luther Allison.Check it out.-Larry FrUkeHouses of the HolyLed Zeppelin(Atlantic SD 7255)Houses of the Holy is a disappointment. The raw emotion ofLed Zeppelin isn t in any of these songs. Zeppelin usually puts ospatial aspect in their songs, as well os a temporal; Houses of theHoly has only a hint of this.The one spatial song is "The Song Remains the Same , but itpales beside Whole Lotto Love and Immigration Song (onprevious albums). The Song Remains the Some does retain theunusual accent pattern common to most good Led Zeppelinmaterial.The Rain Song is gentle, mellow. So mellow, in fact, that itseems out of character. It is also one of the few songs on thisolbum which has lyrics."This It the springtime of my loving-The second season I am to know.You are the sunlight In my growlng-So little warmth I felt before.The other good song is Over the Hills ond Far Away, with thatacoustic guitar work that isn t outstanding, but that sounds goodwith Zeppelin s music.The Crunge is one of Zeppelin s highly rhythmic songs, ruinedby extremely poor lyrics. An attempt at stream of consciousnessmonologue, it turns out muddled and repetitious. Do yer Mak eris on imitotion of 50 s type rhythm and blues and it is bod to thepoint of being ridiculous. Where is the Led Zeppelin of their firstalbum!*- Michael FranzenThe Black Motion Picture ExperienceThe Cecil Holmes Soulful Sounds(Buddah BDS 5129)Today, there is what has been termed by some as the BlackMotion Picture Experience I don t know what this means exactlyand I om sure that many others don t either. Is it the fact that thereore Blacks starring in movies, composing the music, writing thelyrics, ond buying the tickets’ It certainly couldn t be because theyare producing, earning and receiving well-deserved Oscars, andreaping the financial benefits of bulging box officesWhat Cecil Holmes has done is to merely gather some of the hitsongs of popular block movies and arrange them into jazz in¬strumentals. The songs chosen are Super Fly", Shaft", TroubleMan Slaughter", "Freddies Dead", "Across 110th St.", "loveTheme from Lady Sings the Blues ", Ben", ond 2001. Thearrangements are nice and the Cecil Holmes Soulful Soundsproduce some nice, peppy, soulful sounds despite the compositionof the band. However, in my opinion they just don t rote with theoriginals done by Isaac Hayes, Curtis Mayfield, Marvin Gaye. Bobby Womack, ond Billy Preston.If some of you are thinking that there is o bit of oversensifivity in this review, you are most correct. Several things came intoquestion when I first picked up this album. Firstly, how is "2001” apart of the black experience? Secondly, how is the "Love Themefrom Lady Sings the Blues ", composed by Michele LeGronde,exemplary of the "Black ' experience? Thirdly, is this just anotherrip off based upon the sympathetic souls of black folk who want tosupport their own? Now don t get me wrong, the music is nice, butif o particular message is to be conveyed (i.e. the block motion pic¬ture experience), then that is just as important and it is therewhere the discrepancy lies. For more on this issue turn onto WHPK(88.3 FM), Tuesday, from 7:30 to 10:00 A M.-Juana J. SinclairHush 'N‘ ThunderYusef Lateef(Atlantic SD 1635)When it comes to jazz, Yuseff Lateef knows what he is doing. Hisstyle has a maturity that, olthough not original, is certainly com¬fortable. Huge 'n' Thunder is a potpourri album of flute and tenorsax, with sharply contrasting numbersOne of the sharpest contrasts is between Prayer" ond Sunset",Prayer" is o large group number, with a rhythm that is currentlylabelled funky", "Sunset is an experimental piece; the har¬monies ore unusual and in some cases nonexistent, as the specialeffects department takes over.In "This Old Building Lateef s throaty sox bit has rough edgesechoing the roughly sensuous jazz of Harlem in the fifty’s. OpusParts I & II" is very relaxed, even when Lateef changes tempo, withthe flute s melody skimming over the accompaniment. But in theend, it's oil comfortable.-Michael FranzenSpinners(Atlantic SD 7256)Along with the Stylistics, the Manhattens and The Chi-Lites, Spin¬ners stand among the best of the currently popular vocal groupscarrying forward the do wop tradition. The group s recent movefrom Motown to Atlantic Records has been immediately followedby three huge AM radio hits "I'll Be Around, "How Could I let YouGet Away, and Could It Be I'm Foiling in Love, all of which areincluded in this fine album Spinners is unabashedly commercial,soft soul, built upon simple, catchy tunes and lyrics, but at thesame time it offers carefully woven textures which make therecord better with each listening.Much of the credit for the album s success must go to producerarranger Thom Bell, whose string ond horn arrangements augmentthe Spinners backing band tastefully and economicallythroughout. Bell has programmed the album intelligently, creatinga sense of mounting dramatic intensity from the lighter openingcuts through the concluding magnum opui. Could It Be I'mFalling in Love.Just You and Me Baby is the closest thing to traditional dowop here, with supple but disciplined group singing. Don * Let theGreen Grass Fool You is o pleasant surprise with its Swing Eraarrangement and a great, bouyont lead vocal, ond "How Could ILet You Get Away is notable both for its wispy, Joe South-styleguitar fills and for the beautifully anomalous line. "Like MotherGoose/I done set you looseThe concluding "Could It Be I'm Falling in love is the quin¬tessence of the Spinners art, with Earl Young deserving honorablemention for his heart beat drumming. I doubt that anyone who haslistened to Top 40 or soul radio at all recently could have avoidedhearing this cut; if you like what you heard, you'll like Spinners.-Mark BushmanSida by SidaArchie & Edith(RCA APL1 -0102)It was inevitable, say the liner notes for this album. This isone of those albums that simply had to happen." Unfortunately, tothe everlasting detriment of RCA, Carroll O'Connor, EdithStapleton, and most of all, the American public, this statement istrue. Avoid at oil costs; if you re that heavily into masochism,spend an evening with Richard Nixon instead.-Elizabeth RussoIt is not sufficient for everyone to obey and to listen to ’heDivine message of the City of Righteousness, the Faithful City Inorder to propagate that message among the heathen, nay, in erdurto understand it as clearly and as fully as is humanly possible, onemust also consider to what extent man could discern the outlinesof that City if left to himself, to the proper exercise of his ownpowers But in our age it is much less urgent to show that politicalphilosophy is the indispensable handmaid of theology than toshow that political philosophy is the rightful queen of the socialsciences, the sciences of man ond ot human affairs even thehighest lawcourt in the land is more likely to defer to the con¬tentions of sociol science than to the Ten Commandments as thewords of the living God-Leo StraussJAMESSCHULTZCLEANERSCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933MAO TSE-TUNGStrongly suggests thatAmerican people MUSTdrink TEA from thePeople s Republic OfChina.quantity"SUNFLOWER” 50TEA BAGS $2.00"PALACE” Vi Lb.Loose TEA $1.75(postage paid. Money Back guarantee.)NAMEADDRESSRononna Importers8601 Boverly Blvd. #4Lot Angeles,Calif. 90048 YMCA CAMP MARTIN JOHNSONOffers high quality camping to youngsters ofall races, religions and nationalities.CO ED CAMPINGfor 9-16 year oldsFAMILY CAMP. Aug. 25 - Sept. 3July 1-July 28July 28-Aug. 24• Sailing • Swimming • Canoe Trips• Photography • Trip ProgramTennis • Waterskiing • Horseback RidinglocotoH on 300 ocrcs in the ManisteeNotionol Forest near luddmgton. Mich.Chicago Office:1400 E. 53rd St..Chicago, 111.60615Phone 493-5202 or 324-5300'MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSSCENESFlea Market/Auction/Prizes! May 19Ida Noyes 10:00a m to 4:00. For information call x 3591.The Parvarim Israel's top FolkSingers sing June 2 at Hillel. Call 2850161 or 493 8880Welcome (encourage?) Spring withAllegro con Spirito 8. OPRFRS Consort. Music of Weelkes, Morley,DiLasso & other Renaissance typesIda Noyes Lib. Sat May 12at 8:30 p mFREE!Rabbi Michael Azose (SephardicCenter of Chicago ) will talk about"The Exotic Sephardic Communities"tonight at 8 30 at Hillel, 5715Woodlawn.Friday night is Bestiality Night!Unlease (sic) your desires!TSFF equals 3 Stooges Film FestivalFUTURE CPA's. Learn how toprepare for the CPA exam. BeckerCPA Review Course. Call collect 312346 7742Chinese film: From the Highway. 19thc Banditry & chivalry. Color. Englishsubtitles May 14, 7.30, 9:00 International House. $1.00Peer Counseling Group for Women:Women staff of the Chicago Counseling 8. Psychotherapy Center willteach client centered listening skills.Between sessions members willcounsel with each other Peer Counseling is conceived as an alternative tothe institution of psychotherapy forwomen who want more individual timeand support than a rap group canprovide. Cost $40 for 8 weeks. Call 6841800 for infoWomen's Film Festival: Fri 5/11 atNorris Center at Northwestern 7:30pm Gertrude Stein's "When This YouSee Remember Me" 8. other films. Sat5/12 at 800 W. Belden 7:30 pm AgnesVarda's "Cleo from 5 to 7" "Joyce at34" 8. other films. $2.50SPACEStudent housing available in largeKenwood house in exchange forbabysitting or household jobs Male Uof C student preferred. Call 538 7810Sublet with option for fall: 4 rmsSI35/mo 54th 8. Lake Park. 4th flspacious, light, very safe. Furnished(plus TV) If you want it 1/2 blk fromcoop, 1C, banks. Good for couple ortwo bedrms. Call Debbie 241 7230dinnertime for info2 fern rmmates wanted to share furnapt at 56 8. Univ Own room. $76.67 8.phone 8. utils Marjorie 288 2315 or 9476540.Female wanted to sublet Jun 9. 52 8,Blackston Fall option $65. 363 4652Summer Sublet Can Apply Singly Apt 6rms 2 bdrm 55th Univ. 2 porch $175/moCall Robin 3304 753 2249F em grad rm mate wanted now 8. nextyr Own rm & bath in furn apt 1/2 blkcampus S90/mo 947 93346/1 10/1 sub 8, opt on lease 2 rm apt.$l43/mo incl util 8. w/w cptg. safeclean 5254 Dorchester Call 947 9637Looking for two roomies in large 3bedroom apt Lincoln Park area $75ea787 8197 or 787 1844 eves or C07 3457Wanted 4 bdrm apt near UC for 73 4Call 753 2240 Rm 1705 or leave messApartment for sublet w/option for fall.3 rooms, good location, close tocampus $136 Phone 947 9347Apt sublet June 15 to Sept 15 two roomsview of garden 5845 Blackstone$l38/mo Call 241 6856 or PL 2 3656ZenoSublet 3 4 bdrm furn apt $150 54 8,Greenwood Call 753 2240Want to rent/sublet 2b furn apt/houseof sabbatical prof No children or pels363 4300 x713 starting anytimeSpacious 2 br apt w/dishwasher 2 blkAway fr/Lk Call 955 3184 Day or NightSUMMER JOBSGirl's Camp in Wis.Counselors for:CeramicsDramaticsArts & CraftsRidingContact Mr. Jacobson528-005540% OFFatTHE BOOK NOOK%%Across from the Co-Opf'THISWEEKINew Michael JacksonBeatles 1967 ■ 1970Donald Byrd - Black Byrd| Sublet 7 rm apt 54 8, Harper fireplacewash/ dryer huge kitch. 947 8320 eveLive with my roommate! Own room inIg close friendly apt $60/mo AvailNOW Fern grad stu pref 667 1230ROOMMATE wanted beg Junestraight clean fern grad own TWOrooms, furn. at corner 56th Univ.$92 50/mo Call 324 9338Roommate wanted for own room inlarge sunny apt with two others It'snewly redone and on campus bus $68per mo From 6/1 643 7528 eveTO SUBLET: 2 br furn. apt. Jun SeptUniv owned bldg just south of MidwaySafe $130/mo 8, util 684 1930Room: large apt w/4 others (male) $665462 Cornell 493 2822, 753 27803 BDRM to Sublet in Air Cond Apt.Bike Rm Laundry, Janitor in Bldg1400 E. 57th St. 288 6697Sublet 6/15 9/15 airy 2 3 bdrm furn aptBkyd w/real grass 5340 S Harper $213flex Call947 0612 evesSublet w/option master bedroom inBI6L66V—COURSEEVALUATIONSPICK UP A FREE COPYIN GATESBLAKE 107TO HELP YOU REGISTERYour own Ig rm in Ig apt 3 blks tocampus. Avail summer with option foreternity. $50/mo 955 3583Roommates wanted (one for summer,one for summer or longer) in 4 bdrmapt. 5401 Wdlwn avail 6/8 $51/mo 32437793 rooms summer and/ or nextacademic year Little Pierce air condand all util included Call Al, Chris, orSteve at 493 8845, Apt. 302.Sublet June Sept 3 bdrms avail in 6rm apt Clean newly painted close tocampus shops $60/mo negot 241 7521Block to beach 8. University busstudent or retiree special 1 bedroomapt. furn or unfurn. Laundry facilitiesgood trans. $115. Call 221 6607 or 7687376Rm & prvt bath near campus $10/weekbegin June 1 Male stud pref. DO 3 2521Faculty invited to rent villa or cottage Italian Alps during Sept or Oct WriteProf. Previtali Box 323 Cotati,California 94928Reliable fern grad wants privaterooms in Hyde Park home for low rentplus babysitting or household help 3636700 x 246 days.I Bdrm, E Hyde Pk, Dshwshr, AirCond Dispose all, 1 Blk frm Lk.S!90/mo Takeover lease Jne 1st. Call324 7965 After 6.to live atTHE FLAMINGOON THE LAKE5500South Shoro DriveStudios from $154One bedroom from $170Furnished or unfurnishedShort term leasesSwimming pool-no fee752-3800Mrs. Adelman Like Julian Bream's music? ForCLASSIC GUITAR STUDY 262 4689Portraits 4 for $4 00 and up MaynardStudio, 1459 E. 53, 2nd floor 643 4083.PEOPLE WANTEDTSFF Tonight Cobb 7:30 and 9 $1Unusual position Must have aboveaverage skills in typing statisticalcharts, manuscripts and questionnaires for survey researchorganization Interesting andchallenging assignments. Call 684 5600Ext 322 for appointment. An EqualOpportunity EmployerGraduate student 8. wife Sept 1 to liveon third floor of Kenwood home andCare for two girls 5 and 6 years oldafter school. References required. Callfor details 624 6915 Call 955 0447 evenings.large newly decorated apt. Male orFemale Available now or June. Walkto campus, coop $83/mo 288 1385Large 4 room apt avail June, Falloption, good location/E Hyde Park$175 Call 363 7205 or 643 7597 eveNice rm in 4 bdrm apt $68 Summer wfall opt. pref. 57 Kenwood 288 83241362 Madison Park 6 rooms. Immediate occupancy. Call 648 2005 after5pm'M grad physics st seeking room in 2 3bdrm apt ($75 or less/mo 8. util) willtake occupancy June 8. continue fallCall Costas 3 8324 or 3 0443 For rent room for summer w/bath$50 month. Call Chuck 324 81523bdr hse near campus fully furn. aircon June 1 Sept 1 ideal for family or 3stud $200/mo plus utils 947 0706Sublet 7/1 9/1 flex spacious 2 bdrmturn apt in beautiful coop bldg w/yard56 8, Univ $185/mo 241 7599 Experience Doctors' Recep Steno inattractive Loop office, serving 3 internists. Light bookeeping 8, insuranceforms. 5 day week Salary open ContactMiss Sigale 372 6383Wanted a number of males age 21 orolder to serve as paid research subjects on human fertility. Apply Drs.Tom Jones 8. Richard Landau, M 168Billings Hosp 947 5534Partial room and board in return forbabysitting 3 sml children, Ige HydePark apt own room, bath 643 3792Ref RequiredHyde Park Babies 2 3 mos. old: Haveyour sociability tested by grad in infant child development. Have MomAN INVITATIONTo Join1HE FLAMINGO CABANA CLUB5500 South Shoro DriveFun at the pool in country club surroundings.For Information Call 752-3800 Mrs. AdelmanS Shore 2 br house for 3 4 mon. Subletnear campus bus furn'ed Call 731 9636SUMMER SUBLET: Huge (6 rm 8. 2bths) and beautiful Hyde Parkapartment Nice neighbors. Call 3631238ROOMATE WANTED: own room,53rd and Kenwood, female preferred;S85 mo, Call 752 3378 between 5 and 7p mApt. to share, huge aircond rm,S66/mo, 55th 8. Cornell 493 2822 CHICAGO BEACH HOTELBEAUTIFUL FURNISHED APARTMENTS Near beach, parks, I.Ctrains, 11 mins, to loop U of C anddowntown loop buses at door Modestdaily weekly monthly rates. 24hr. deskComplete hotel services 5100 S.Cornell DO 3 2400Live in Federika's famous bldgNearby, furn or unfurn. 2 & 3 rm. aptsfor 1,2,3 people Refrig , stove , pvt.bath, stm heat Quiet Sunny, viewParking, trans $120.00 up Free Utils.Robinson, 6043 Woodlawn 955 9209 or427 583 Short term lease or longerSummer sublet on Campus, one FOwn room bath S75/mo 955 4182 eve call Janet 24 16532/753 4178 leavemesgHomemaker live in with time off forclasses Excellent opportunity forimpecunious grad student 947 9054after 6pm or weekends.FOR SALESublet June Sept 1400 E 57th 1 bdrmAvail a/ c Call 955 5782Had your fill of FOTA's shlockculture? Renew your ties with theforgotten cultural heros of yourprepubescence TSFF Tonight 7 30 & 9Sublet available immediately 4 rmapt 7425 S. Shore Dr. Right on thelake! Beach is private fantastic view.Close to CTA campus bus 1C $145/mo.768 1484 or 684 1800 To sublet now 3 1/2 rms I bdrm verysafe good cond all applianced inclFurniture opt 5305 Kimbark $155 Call753 3362 9 5 or 324 2550 evesSUMMER SUBLET w FALL OPTIONSpace for two or three 6/10 Air Cond 2bdrm/2bth/l vngrm/ktchn. 55th &Dorchester Rich or Howie 955 9096eveSublet June 1 mid Sept large 4 rm apt54th & Woodlawn Furnished airy 2416845 around dinner time.Must Sublet 1/2 Ige clene 2 bedroomapt near Coop Pref fern 241 6532Sublet avail June Beautiful spaciousAIR COND S Shore 2 bdrm furn apt. Areally nice place Larry 667 2775 eves8i weekends.Sublet 2 places in clean apt 56th &University 947 8277.FURNISHED 4rm APT to sublet Jun 9Sept 23. 54 81 Grnwood $135/mo.Shopng 2 blocks call 753 2240 rm 1801or 18055405 S. Woodlawn, 2 8. 3 rm furn.'hedapts 643 2760 or 667 5746 Mrs. GreenPEOPLE FORSALe"Yes, McGovern, Eagleton and Shriverhave wone the Three Stooges lookalike contest. TSFF Tonight 7 30 & 9Could your young child be swayed byJews for Jesus ten years frbm now?Not if he's had a Jewish Day Schoolexperience. Call Sherry Glick at 9479141Exp typist all kinds of papers 947 0033Free classes offered for beginning andadvanced speakers of English as asecond language International HouseMon 8i Wed eves 6 30 8 :15Moving? Need help? Hire my van andI Best rates. Jerry at 684 1175.Experienced manuscript typing onIBM Selectric. 378 5774 Intriguing & practical items on auction block, Sat May 19, 2:00 INHMAGIC CARPET 8 pads creamy beigefor 3 18X12 rooms Ex Cond 493 17685000 BTU air cond works $100 947 933464VWreliable sunrf rfrack$400 batttiresbrakeslyrold faftoryrebuilt 32485 days BR49427eve ask for Gail70 Renault sedan wagon Auto Exc.Cond lo mi. 25 30 mpg 667 5960Leaving town Must Dispose of allFurn 2 tables reading ch 288 7985Queen size bed mattress (firm foam)box spring frame excellent condAvailable now $150 or best offer 3631447 aft eve, weekendTSFF Tonight Cobb 7.30 8, 9 00 $110 speed ladies Raleigh blue bikewicker basket, infant seat, padlockincluded 1 yr old seldom ridden $100Call after 5 30 or wknd 684 5813SCM office electric typewriter. Vertical 8, horizontal 1/2 spacing. 44characters Model 415 dual ribbonellectric carriage return repeat keys$100 Call 5:30 wknds 684 5813Very sturdy redwood desk made forheavy electric typewriter also suitableas a desk 3 roller mounted drawers tohold reams of paper etc $30 Call after5 30 wknds 684 S813FURNITURE SALE: Beds, sofa,chests, desk, dinning table w/6 chairs,chair w/ottoman Sat. 5/12 noon to 56915 S. Paxton »2 955 6861'68 VW only 34000 mi Asking $850 Call947 0706'64 T Bird, power everything, air condexcellent condition. Call 241 5529 or955 3608. $400'63 VW Less than 6000 mi since engrebuilt in '71, good trans 81 gener Thiscar works $400 call 288 7985Used furniture, air conditioner, muchmore. Priced right Call 324 8790eveningsAdorable intelligent pedigreed German short hair pups They arejudicious watchdogs. 947 9054BOOKS!!! '40«o OFF at Chicago'smost interesting old bookstore Goingout of business Oct 31. 20,000 boundbooks 40°0 off. Also thousands ofpaperbacks and long play records. BillNewman's A 1 Bookstore, 1112 NState, Daily 2:30 9:00 p.m. Sat. andSun/ 1:30 6 005 yr old house across from park nrUniv. 2 Bdrms 1 1/2 Bathe Finishedbsemt. Small yard Dishwasher,washer and dryer Private parking Adorable male and female puppiesmostly German Shepherd 324 51)6ABORTIONSWere Larry, Curly, and Moe aborted?Find out 'tonight TSFF 7 30 & 9 Cobb Come in or call JEWS FORJUDAISM, 7135 N Carpenter, Skokie674 0448BLUE GARGOYLEDance come support our last benefit ofthe school year live music by WOOFFri May 18 at 9 00 adm $1 tickets onsale at GargoyleSat May 19 Ida Noyes Hall10:00 a m Flea Market2 00 p m AuctionImmediately following auction, grandprize drawing rides for 4 on a Cessna401 from Meigs Field Courtesy ofUniversity Natl. BankMusic! Dancing! Food!JIM, SKIP, AND ED NO LOX & BAGELSF ind out where our own Three Stooges,Vice, Landt, and Turkington, learnedthe tricks of the trade TSFF Tonight7 30 and 9 00 Cobb $1TSFF IS THE THREESTOOGES FILM FESTFreak out Bring your Yo Yo's, HulaHoops, Slinkies, Silly Putty andPeashooters to TSFF and Moe will biteyour nose. Cobb 7:30 & 9 $1WANTEDWanted 4 tickets to Spring '73 Convocation. (Each convocee is intitled to3.) If you have a spare to sell or giveaway, call Debbie 241 7230 morningsor dinnertime.Three Stooges, Tonight, Cchb $1TRAIN FREAKSAmerican Flyer 8. Louis Marx modeltrains for sale all in working conditionMake an offer for any or all Call after5 30 or wknd 684 5815BIKE WANTEDGirl's bike Call Lissa 947 0953APT. NEEDEDWANTED: 5 6 room apartment for 3 4people in Hyde Park Call Fred at 2416894 after 5INSOMNIASUBJECTS WANTED BY SLEEPLAB FOR STUDIES OD INSOMNIA,FEMALES ONLY, AGE 18 28 $10 perNIGHT APPLY IN PERSON TO 5741DREXEL, ROOM 302 MF, 9 5.YOUTH CARDSGet your Youth Card from yourAmerican Airlines campus rep beforethe summer travel season, Call LarryMarden at 947 8867 after 6:00 p.mReservations alsoPLAY TENNIS6 indoor courts, 3 outdoor courts,Private 8> group lessons availableSouth Side Raquet Club, 1401 E SibleyV19 1235.RUMMAGE SALESaturday May 12, 1973 9:00a.m. till5 00 p m First Baptist Church ofChicago 935 E 50th St. Chicago, III.Come early for bargains galoreFOLK DANCING8 p m at Ida Noyes Hall Sunday(general), Monday (beginners).Friday (requests) 50c donation, forinfo Call Janet 955 8184WANTEDTransportation to N Y C or L I. forstereo Call 288 6407PUPPIES FOR SALEDo you want an adorable warm bundleof love for your very own? Thesepuppies need a home. Mostly Germanshepherd, male and female 324 5116GAY LIBERATIONGAY LIB OFFICE is open again. SunThurs 7 30 11p.m. Ida Noyes 301 7533274. Tues is Women's nightCOFF EE HOUSE every Fri 8 12pmat Blue Gargoyle 5655 S. UniversityAveBRIIDGE MAGAZINEThe new Bridge Magazine is out Nowon sale in UC bookstore and allChinatown bookstores. A relevantmagazine for the non passive AsianAmericanARE YOU JEWISH?Looking for answers to life's greatquestions, for Truth with a capital T?Maybe you've given up on your Jewishheritage, the TORAH, withoutdiscovering what it's REALLY allabout! We want to help you learn. No L&B Sun Come To the YomHa azmaut party Sat night insteadJEWS FOR JESUSAre Larry, Curly and Moe Jews torJesus’ Break bread with them tonightTSFF 7 30 and 9 00 $)ISRAELINDEPENDENCEDAYGuess who's 25, Jewish, still single anddoesn't care? Come celebrate herbirthday anyway with some fefafef,Israeli songs and dances at Hillel on5/12 at 9 00 Cost $1NUMISMATISTSInterested in forming a club’ Contactme c o the MAROON, Box 105RIDESRIDE NEEDED to San Franciso weekof 6/4. Will share expenses Call 7527124 eves or amCAT LOVERSOur 2 cats need a foster home for 18months while we be abroad They arelovable, clean and never scratch wecould never give them away Expenses paid 667 1723 eveFUN FORTODDLERS15 24 month olds needed for study ofplay 8. imitation Just one 40 mm playsession with another child Call Jeanor 752 8624PERSONALSNew Priv Owned Skyhawk S18 WetInstr Available Midway 281 3373Get your gear together for the FleaMarket, May 19 Sign up at x3591Keep on trucking those tulips into IdaNoyes 209 M F 9 00 to 3.00The SHIR concert scheduled fortomorrow night has been cancelledEver wanted to ride in a Cessna 401?Here's your chance Grand Prizedrawing. May 19 after 2:00 p mCourtesy of University National BankA long Sunday of studying needs ashort food break at the Snack Bar 1stfloor Pierce, every Sunday 5 9 p mWRITER'S WORKSHOP (PL 2 8377).We need people to play in the CoffeeHouse Call Debbie 753 3444 (DU)All Vitamins20* OFFHEALTH FOODSPlus these everyday pricesVitamin E d'alpha1001 U 250 caps 51252001 U 150 caps 53 75400 1 U 100 caps 54 95250 caps $11.15Vitamin C 1000 mgs100 tabs 51 95250 tabs 54 40Vitamin C crystals5000 mgs per tsp.1 kilo $7 501 pound 54 005210 S Harper in Harper Court363 1600VOLKSWAGEN SOUTH SHOREAuftioniad VW Daalor/ Opart Daily—Cloiad Sunday Phonf-7234 S. Stany Island BU 8-4900 Clyde Bellecourt, Wounded Knee Veteran & Co-founderof The American Indian movement will speak at the U.C.LAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUMTODAY at 12:30Friday, May 11, 1973-The Chicago Maroon -15DOLLAR DEVALUATIONCOMINGDon't be misled, the dollar devaluation is history.You'd never know it in the wine department of theParty Mart, though, Unlike liquor retailers, we, aswine merchants, promised you pre-devaluationprices on all imported wines until we had to replaceour stocks. That time is now approaching. Ship¬ments will arrive VERY SOON, forcing us to raiseour prices to account for the effects of both inflationand devaluation. SHOP NOW to take advantage ofthese old prices.RED WINESFrench Pinot NoirBordeaux Cabernet SauvignonCotes Du RhoneBourgueil1970 Aloxe-Corton1970 Mercurey red burgandy *3M fifthred *298 fifthred *2** fifthanjou red *29* fifthred burgundy *49* fifthred burgundy *379 fifthWHITE WINESCorton Charlemagne 1964 fuii white burgundy *798 fifthGraves Superieur demi sec white bordeaux * 179 fifthCoteaux de Layon semi dry Loire valley wine *2" fifthIF QUALITY IS CONSIDERATIONSELECTING YOUR WINE MERCHANTS IS THEMOST IMPORTANT DECISION.Daily: 10am-ll pm Sunday: Noon-9pm Daily; 9am-10pm Sunday: Noon-9pm16 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, May 11,1973