Hyde Parkers crowd hearing on 1C jamMANN AND DESPRES: Alderman Leon Despres, sponsor of the 1C service cutresolution, talks with state representative Robert Mann of Hyde Park, who spoke infavor of it at the hearing last Monday.By MARK GRUENBERGThe City Council passed fifth wardalderman Leon Despres’ resolutionprotesting service reductions on the IllinoisCentral railroad (IC) last Wednesday.Passage of the resolution came one dayafter a crowded hearing before the council’sUtilities Committee, which featureanumerous Hyde Parkers and residents ofSouth Shore favoring the measure.At the hearing, Bernard Rane, assistantcorporation counsel for public utilities, toldthe capacity crowd and the committee,chaired by Alderman Wilson Frost (34th),that he had spoken to the chairman of theIllinois Commerce Commission, (ICC) whichhad approved the reductions.“He said that they are reviewing thematter at this time,” Rane said. “Theytreated it as a schedule change.” Under ICCrules, schedule changes do not requireadvance notice or public hearings butservice changes require 30 days postednotice and public hearings.“In my opinion,” Rane said, “The ICengaged in change of service, not change ofschedule.” “Good!” interjected aldermanDespres.Rane added that corporation counselRichard Curry had instructed him to gobefore the ICC and ask for “a schedulerollback” to the pre-July 1 schedule. Inresponse to a question from aldermanRichard Simpson (44th) he noted, “I will askfor a suspension of the new schedule untilthere are public hearings.”After the meeting, Despres wasenthusiastic. Predicting the later easypassage that the resolution would have in theCity Council, he added, “I thought that theway Rane was talking, the ICC wascontemplating restoration (of the oldschedule) immediately.”After Rane finished with his testimony,city collector Marshall Korshak, alsoDemocratic committeeman for the fifthward, followed him to the witness chair.Korshak called the cuts in the number oftrains a “social problem” and concluded “Apublic utility has to make some kind ofsacrifice to maintain service.”State representative Robert Mann (D-Hyde Park) then charged the IC with“gouging thousands of captive commutersfor profiteering”. When challenged toproduce figures on gouging and profiteeringby Alderman George Nataris (42nd), hepromised to supply the committee with data.However, some of the data backing Mann’scase was later provided by Thomas Quinlan,of 5200 S Kenwood, who noted that thepresident of the IC had told the Wall StreetJournal in an article published July 23 thatMs Frederika Blankner, owner of abuilding slated for demolition under theSouth Campus urban renewal plan, filed amotion in the Court of Appeals Monday tostop the Department of Urban Renewal(DUR) from taking over her building.In the latest moves in a five-yearlegal war over the building, DURinformed Ms Blankner and her tenants byletter on July 14 that they were taking overthe building as of yesterday. Ms Blankner’smotion Monday was for an injunction toprevent the takeover until the United StatesSupreme Court decides the case.In her brief filed in the Court of Appeals,Ms Blankner stated that she “Hasmaintained direct management...of theproperty., by understanding of theDepartment of Urban Renewal and withoutany formal court order.“On July 14, 1973, without prior notice,”the brief continues, “the City of Chicagoabruptly terminated that understanding.” the IC had made record profits last year,despite a loss on the rommuter trains.Mann was followed by a number ofordinary citizens, who jammed the roomawaiting their turn to speak. One, MargaretAsperies, of 5514 S Blackstone, described theproblems of students taking night courses inthe Loop. “I have found myself in a difficultsituation for night classes at RooseveltUniversity. I have to take an 11:02 eveningtrain to get home. One student has to takelour trains to get home.”General Horace Wolfe of 6916 S Ogilvie,and a former president of the Chamber ofCommerce, described the situation in SouthShore. Saying that “we do want comparableservice” he described the situation in the old1920’s-vintage cars which still make theSouth Chicago run part of the time. “Youwould think it was a contingent of warrefugees being hustled to a concentrationcamp,” he said.George Miller, of 1700 E 56th, submitted astudy he had done which showed that thenumber of north bound trains stopping' at57th street dropping from 67 to 40 and thenumber of southbound trains dropping from67 to 39 each day. Other witnesses presentedThe ‘understanding’ was halted by a letterfrom the city to the tenants of Ms Blankner’sbuilding at 6043-45 S Woodlawn. In the letter,relocation supervisor Emma Manar told thetenants that as of yesterday, DUR wouldmanage the building and that they were topay rent to the Department. The tenantswere also told that they were to vacate thebuilding by October 31 of tl s year, li whichtime DUR would tear it ti vn.Ms Blankner’s brief pointed out that “as aresult, the tenants are making immediateplans to vacate the building. This will subjectthe building to vandalism...bejfond the pointof rehabilitation .” She charged that shewould lose the building “not by the processesand operations of law but by the arbitraryoperations of the Department of UrbanRenewal.”The brief charged that “there was noreason whatsoever” for the Department’sactions. She also charged that the buildingwas an asset to the area because ne newbuilding is planned “and it is not interfering similar studies for the other two Hyde Parkstations.Independent alderman William Cousins(8th), a cosponsor of Despres’ resolutionalong with South Shore alderman RobertWilinski (7th), commented. “This witnesshas given us the facts and figures we needabout the service cut.” Miller replied thatthe IC had told its riders that it had enlistedthe aid of a computer in drawing up the newschedule. “If so,” he noted wryly, “It wasprobably a worn-out Chinese abacus.”Also appearing were two representativesfrom the Hyde Park-Kenwood CommunityConference (HPKCC), who told of themeasures taken by the conference againstthe IC. The executive committee of HPKCCpassed a resolution condemning the servicechanges and pledging support to anyone whoopposes them, while HPKCC treasurerLeonard Bloom wrote a letter to the directorof the Cost of Living Council charging that areduction in the number of trains without acorresponding cut in fares was a violation ofthe price freeze.Arabelle Gowan, who lives at 51st andBlackstone, pointed out that in the lateevening, southbound trains now run only at9:30 pm, 11 pm and 12:30 am. “That is quitetakeoverwith the activities of the University ofChicago, which is the ultimate owner of theproperty” if Ms Blankner should lose herfight.Meanwhile, Earl Neal, special assistant tocorporation counsel Richard Curry, receiveda letter from fifth ward alderman LeonDespres. Despres’ letter said. “In theinterest of fairness and order...the cityshould refrain from taking possession...ordisturbing tenants until the present litigationis decided."Despres cited the undecided SupremeCourt case, the constitutional issues, the lackof a replacem°nt building and the point thatMs Blankner has already won in court: “Onappeal, a property is to be protected fromirremediable destruction. The city shouldobserve that principle for its citizens,” asreasons for the city to not expropriate thebuilding.Neal agreed, and stopped DUR action untilthe injunction is decided inconvenient,” she said. She also replied to acharge from a man from Harvey, whocontended that the IC had notified its readersof service changes. “I doubt that manyreaders of ‘Hello’ (the IC newsletter) wouldtake its phrase ‘zone fares’ to mean thewords ‘service cut.'”Still other commuters were unable tocome, and sent statements to AldermanDespres who had them inserted into therecord Joyce Lanphar. of 1765 E 55th,pointed out the problem someone would havein getting from Hyde Park to the southernsuburbs. “I don’t know how you would feel asa child” she wrote “But I don’t think I’d likestanding in a strange station (63rd street) bymyself, and I don’t think parents would like iteither.“The IC’s latest innovations encourage anoh-hell-let’s-drive attitude," she concluded.Two commuters cited the danger of the63rd street transfer point, with Sally Martiniof 5533 S Blackstone pointing out that it is notvisible by roving patrol cars from the streetwhile a Ms Wildman. a former Universityemployee, quoted Winston Moore (executivedirector of Cook County jail) on the area: “aneighborhood where personal security hasbroken down so completely that few familieswith any choice want to live there." MsWildman added. “This is realism, notracism ”Citing 12 trains passing through 53rd streetwithout stopping while he and a crowd ofcommuters waited for a train, HarveyLorberbaum of 5000 South Cornell observed.“Continued building of residences in ourarea along with large new apartmentcomplexes and increased enrollment in theUniversity of Chicago all require increasedmass transit at a lower cost. It appears thatthe Illinois Central has its increases anddecreases confused.”Statements were also received from HydePark residents Lester Roth, CharlesMcDaniel. Jane Drilling and anonymousdoctor.The following chart was submitted at the heonng hy CharlesBlaine of 5'20 South HarperWEEKDAY IC COMMUTER SERVICE BETWEEN 53RD STREIT ANDDOWNTOWN BEFORE AND AFTER JULY I 1973Number oftrams Wait mg timepre post Percentage Pre postDirection Time period July 1 July 1 of service cut July 1 JulyNorth 7 o.m 8 o m 13 4 69 percent 4 m i n. 16mm9am 5 p m 38 1 5 61 percent 1 2 mm 30 min6 p m -1 0 p m 10 5 50 percent 23 min 44 mmNorth ENTIRE DAY 84 40 52 percent - —South 9 a m 4 30 p m 36 1 5 58 percent 1 3 mm i 30 mm5 30 p .rn 7 30 p rr 1 1 1 4 6^ percent 11 mir i 40 min6pm 10 pm 13 5 62 percent 17 mir i 53 mmSouth ENTIRE DAY 84 40 52 percent — —CONDEMNED: Ms. Frederika Blankner sbuilding at 6043-45 S. Woodlawn, objectof yet another lawsuit.Court suit stops buildingBabbling Bickersons ln Political DramaTANGO: Durwald McDonald manipulates a rather curious machine as RobertHoover looks on in Court Theather's current production, Tango.By MICHAEL EDGERTONTango is true political theatre. Thepolitical conflict is cleverly metamorphosedinto an eccentric and bickering family; tomake his highly theoretical points aboutpolitical life in eastern Europe Mrozek hashis people speak with the accents of anintellectual salon without making the wholething an unentertaining debate.In the topsy-turvy drawing room of Tangoit is Eddie, the tough guy. who rules the roostat the end, having successfully dispatchedhis rival, the romantic and philosophicalyoung Arthur. And whom does he have totyrannize over when Arthur is gone? Onerather charming, harmless, and thoroughlydecadent couple, an ingenue, and an old manseasick with senility. Arthur's is not the firstdeath in the family: he joins Eugenia, hismaternal grandmother, who dies on cue, toeveryone's dismay but no one’s regret. Howdid Eddie get control of this little empire?The answer is that Eddie isn’t just Eddie,and his empire is not merely one of sofas andpillows. Only to know that Mrozek is Polishwould make Eddie look like the caricature ofStalinists he is in his power-hungry self-assurance and undiluted animality. By thesame token, the nitwit he compels to dancewith him (Eugene) is the epitome of thebourgeois democrat, right down to hisassertion that the individual will alwayscome first.All of these parallels will no doubt beevident much earlier. Arthur’s father andmother are busy breaking conventions (theysay) after a long and rebellious youthcomprised of a like disregard of tradition.Eddie is even having an affair with the wifethat her husband refuses to stop on thegrounds that sexual freedom is the basis ofhuman freedom. Arthur sees it differently.He wants his father to show some self-esteemand some concern for his cuckoldry. This isbecause Arthur is an unsuccessful rebel,lacking conventions to rebel against that heis unable to supply for himself. He wants itboth ways, and it means his downfall.This is a part of Arthur’s program to makehis family “sit up straight.” The schemefails, even though Arthur realizes, too late,that if he is able to get some power over lifeand death, like that of Eugenia, he mightmake something out of the moral andintellectual mess he's in. Unfortunately itisn't the loquacious and cerebral Arthur whois able to do it. At the peroration of thespeech in which he announces this discovery to his preoccupied family, his fiance Ala tellshim that she has been unfaithful to him withEddie on this, their wedding day. Arthurtakes himself too little into account, and thestupidity of his moral idealism hits him hard.Not, as it turns out, as hard as Eddie does,since he kills Arthur with a couple of blowsfrom the rear.As Stomil, the father, puts it: “I’ve alwaysthought we were slaves of abstractions, but that someday humanity would take itsrevenge. Now I see that it’s only Eddie.”Head as a political allegory, the cold warheavy brutalizes the ineffectual intellectualwhile the loving family fixes its eyes on thefuture and rationalizes its froideur withimpeccable finesse. So much for Arthur,concern with the direction of events, and“involvement.”The program note mentions that Mrozekwas a cartoonist as well as a newspaperman. And his play is full of little cartoons. Onesuch is the bit of vaudeville where the oldman. Eugene, tries to encase the incorrigiblebohemian Stomil in a red corset. The samegoes for the little piece of action, just beforeArthur is killed, where seems to reach adetente with Eddie. Even the dialog has acurious, captional quality, though callingsomeone a formalist is unlikely to provokefistfights in this country. But Mrozek alsotucks in little naturalistic scenes when itsuits his purpose to show how foolish theendless, abstract discussions really are.These are the exchanges between Arthur andAla.Lucille Strauss has done a remarkable jobwith this remarkable play. Unlike anotherproduction of Tango, which received areportedly farcical treatment, she chose tolet the laughter come where it may in favorof a more determined and ideologicalemphasis. The argumentative style of theplay makes that possible too. One thing abouther direction deserves special mentionalthough it is usually assumed to be presentin a good production. The composition of themovement on the stage showed every climaxto be painstakingly prepared for, without asingle movement to distract the eye, with acomplete economy of arrangement in themainfestly theatrical material at herdisposal.The cast is a strong one. DurwardMcDonald, Ralph Klein, and Judy Herbst arevery much at home on this stage, and theirat-ease keeps things moving forward crisply.It is especially gratifying to see Mr. Klein insomething more demanding than his lastpart in Medea. Robert Hoover adds anothergood performance to his lengthening list, andthis is a role that should benefit him as anactor: if good feeling ever overshadowedrough spots in acting, this is one play wherethat should hold true. John Tsafoyannis isexcently chosen as Eddie. Kathleen Hart isquite good as the moribund madcap, and herdeviation from the script at the end of Act 2 isa crusty surprise she should leave in.Patricia Goraque as Ala has the good (orbad) luck to be one of those well-realized butunsympathetic characters: she portraysshallowness with great depth. Finally, theelegance of the set is matched by that of thecostumes.This is an important play, excellentlydirected and performed. Court Theatreshows in presenting it that they are not justanother college theatre, and that theydeserve the attention of a broader Chicagoaudience.STANLEY H. KAPLANEDUCATIONAL CENTERSUMMER SCHEDULEMCAT classstarts 8/19/73MCAT Compactstarts 8/5/73for two weeksLSAT classstarts 9/9/732 yr. Nat l BdsATGSB - GRE also2030W. Devon(312) 764-5151 “INFINITELY MORE INTELLIGENTTHAUciASTTAhlGOINPARISrKEVIN SANDERS, ABC TV NET"THIS IS MY FAVORITE MOVIEOF THE YEAR." - Phil Ochs,Los Angeles Free Press"A BITING AND HARSHLYHAUNTING FILM THAT GOESOFF LIKE DRY GUNPOWDER- Rex Reed, Ngw YorkDg 1 l_y News"THE HARDER THEY COME ISTHE BEST MOVIE I'VE SEENCOMBINING CONCEPTS OF POPCULTURE AND SOCIAL REAL¬ISM SINCE BLACKBOARD JUN¬GLE " - Wayne Rooins,CreemROGER CORMAN pretents A NEW WORLD RELEASEHARDERTHEycemEPLAYBOYTHEATER1204 N. Dearborn • Phone 944-3434 4) PIZZAPLATTER1460 E. 53rdMl 3-2800FAST DELIVERYAND PICKUP YES!THERE ISISRAELI' DANCINGTHIS WEEK!Sunday, 7:30 P.M. HillelIMEYE EXAMINATIONS \ CARPET CITY jFASHION EYEWEAR | 6740 STONY ISLAND <CONTACT LENSES i 324-7998 !Has what you need from a ]DR. KURT ROSENBAUM $10 used 9x12 Rug to a { jcustom carpet. Specializing 4 1Optometrist in Remnants & Mill returns 4 [at a fraction of the original ) tcost. j |(53 Kimbark Plaza) 5 Decoration Colors and 4Qualities. Additional 10% 41200 East 53rd Street 4 Discount with this Ad. |HYde Park 3-8372 i FREE DELIVERY 1 ■wueTi 1ISMTIM SERVICE |Clinic in Chicago area. 1 to a• 24 week pregnancies ter-|minated, by licensed ob-.. stetrician gynecologist.|lOuick services will be[arranged. iI CALL COLLECTT 24 HOUR SERVICE I| (216)281-6060^Factory AuthorizedDealerSAABVolkswagenSouth-Shore Inc.7234 S. Stony IslandBU 8-4900SOQ FILMS PRESENTS FRIDAY, AUGUST 10FEDERICO FELLINI'SNIGHTS OF CABIRIACOBB HALL $1.00 7:15 & 9:152-The Chicago Maroon-Thursday, August 2, 1972Fern Lib ancient and modernBy MEREDITH ANTHONYTwo new rock operas, Stefani Hirsch’sWhat In The Name Of Anything? andWilliam Schneider’s No One Was Saved, areplaying in a double bill at the Free Theateron Thursdays and Fridays at 8 p.m. throughSeptember 14th. The first is about thefreedom of the modern woman to thumb hernose at a man who doesn’t like her style,while the second is an atavistic warningabout what will happen if she does.These operas are the latest offerings in theFree Theater’s series of first works by youngAmerican composers. Both Ms. Hirsch andMr. Schneider are studying with thenationally-known William Russo. Hisinfluence is strongly felt in both of theseworks and they are a credit to his abilities asmentor.Guitar-playing Stephani Hirsch composedand sings the lead in her saga of a girl whose boyfriend is leaving her because she comeson too strong. She must make the decision ofwhether to learn to play the mouse or to saygoodby to him, and presumably to men ingeneral. Ms. Hirsch, whose stage makeupmakes her look like a Jewish career girl onthe make in a better singles’ bar, firmlychooses to split. Her decision in a dancenumber which parodies the sexy low-slungguitar-humping that has become the stock-in-trade of many a male rock star. CliffordRubin, the excellent guitarist of previousFree Theater operas, sings the boyfriend anduses to good effect his pale, dolichocephalic,comically mobile face. The production iselegantly simple, a series of songs with noextras, sets, action, or special effects.William Schneider’s No One Was Saved ismusically more complex and interesting butthe production is cluttered. He has chosen, asWiliiam Russo often does, a classicalsubject, an obscure myth from Ovid. Iphis, aconservative romantic played by Mr. Schneider, is in love with the hard-heartedAnarexete (sic), an independent modern girlwho doesn’t want to be tied down. Iphis killshimself in a fit of unrequited passion andAnarexete (Kat Buddeke) is goaded andfinally turned to stone by an angry avengingVenus. The proliferation of theatricaldevices marred the effectiveness of thesimple mythic structure: the frequent use ofmime and the symbolic prop — a rope thatillustrates the binding force of love, clashwith the verbal imagery of the honeybeemotif. The personifications of Death (in ablack hood) and Love (in red satin) jar withthe attempt to give the protagonistspsychological antecedents and the realism ofthe portrayal of the lovers’ mothers, repletewith house-dresses and scuffs. Althoughsome of these extraneous elements whichweigh down the story should be dispensedwith, we vote to keep the mothers. BothDebbie Gilbert and Deborah Howard areremarkable for their excellent strong voices. their stage presence, and their highly-developed comic sense. The scene in whichDebbie Gilbert surreptitiously leafs throughIphis’ contraband copy of Score is one of themoments that works best, and DeborahHoward periodically calls her daughter in ahigh-pitched whine that vibrates with perfectauthenticity.Musically No One Was Saved is moreinnovative than the first work and if it couldbe pared down a little, shorn of some of thedistracting theatrical trappings, it would beexceptionalRunning concurrently on Sundays at 7 and9 p.m and Mondays at 8 at the Free Theaterand also highly recommended is BillWilliams’ Dangerous Teachings based onBertolt Brecht's poetry. It is no lessenjoyable for raising some of G.E Lessing'squestions about what material is appropriateto what art form in its juxtaposition of rockrhythms to a stern political message.Humivideo group to expand activities, objectivesBy MARKGRUENBERGPractically assured that its funding will tiecontinued, the Hum Video team, led byDavid Affelder, plans a new expansion ofoperations, starting with showings of theirtapes in the Cobb Hall coffee shop on August17.“We have built up a fair amount ofexpertise,” Affelder stated. He felt that theexpertise would be used to help HumanitiesProfessor John Cawclti teach two classes inmedia which he has planned for this fallAffelder added that he felt HumVideo hasCawclti’s support in being funded this fall.HumVideo is asking for $21,000 for next year,a $2000 increase from this year.Basically, Affelder said, the fundingcommittee of the Wiliiam Benton ResearchFund, which has provided funding :orHumVideo, “has to decide if videotape is anecessity or a luxury.” Affelder’s contentionis that given the potential of the medium overthe next five years, the aid in teachingCawelti’s classes (which could beexpanded), and the past history of theUniversity's heavy involvement ineducational media, the funding is a necessitynow."Our major activity will be Cawelti sclasses,” Affelder said, adding that “theBy ROBERT CHARKOVSKYA $51,000 land sale from the City of Chicagoto the Hyde Park Bank and Trust Companyhas been okayed by the Chicago Departmentof Urban Renewal and submitted to the CityCouncil for final approval.The proposed purchase concerns thenarrow strip of land between old Lake Parkand new Lake Park Avenues, 53rd and 54thstreets. The bank plans to develop the landinto a 71-car customer parking lot uplifted bya small brick mall on the lot’s northern end.We’re spending over $50,000 to buy theland, plus an estimated $120,000 for repavingand landscaping,” commented Hyde ParkBank President Denis Daly. “It’s a lot, butwe feel that the corner at present detractsfrom what is a very attractive bank building,and we’re chalking the project up to publicrelations. What it will do for the whole cornerwill be tremendous.”The purchase price of $51,436.41 for34,290.94 square feet works out to $1.50 persquare foot, a value determined by “twoindependent appraisers” according to MattHartigan of the Department of UrbanRenewal.Closing of the sale should come if theapproving ordinance reaches the Councilfloor at the next Council meeting inSeptember. “I don’t anticipate anyproblems, and I don’t think (5th Ward. tape shows that you exactly can or cannot dowith television. Our facilities by cooperationwith a similar videotape project which isbeing set up at the Chicago TheologicalSeminary.”In the meantime, to make everyone moreaware of the potential of videotape and alsoto provide a little entertainment, Affeldersaid that HumVideo would be showing sevenof its tapes to anyone who cared to come inthe Cobb Hal! coffee shop at 7:30 and 10 pmFriday, August 10 and Friday. August 17.Leading the showing would be anotherviewing of “Sit-In: A docufantasy” about the1969 sit-in here. The program will alsoinclude the premieres of “Steamboat’s AllTime Travelin' ' and “The Little Defeats: avideo poem”."Sit-In ", of course, is the film that hascaused much controversy here in two years.Purporting to be a visual treatment of the1969 sit in at the University, it is factual up toa point in covering the sit-in itself, butthereafter starts drawing some curiousanalogies The key to this “docufantasy”part is the burning of the old bookstore at57th and Ellis, according to Affelder.“Steamboat's All Time Travelin’ is adocumentary feature, following a steamboatfrom Chattanoga, Tennessee to Peoria.including Hyde Park1 Alderman (Leon)Despres does either,” predicted SherryMeinert, the alderman's administrativeassistant.The land has been vacant for the pastseveral years, though prior to the moving ofLake Park Avenue, it was the site of anumber of businesses. Among the morefamous was the old “Calico Cat” lounge.The Chicago MaroonSummer editionMark Gruenbergeditor-irxhiefElizabeth Russoarts and entertainment editorRichard Bakerbusiness managerstaffGage Andrews, Meredith AnthonyRobert Charkovsky Michael EdgertonToby Hofslund, CD Jaco Aar°n LipstadtHenry Post. Andrew SegalMarlie Wassermon Mark Wasserman Illinois, while “The Little Defeat,” isdescribed as “a personal statement tape ofwierd dimensions.”“The Little Defeats: a video poem" alsoillustrates the future uses of videotape at theUniversity, according to Affelder.“My contention is that cable and cassettetelevision will build up. That, combined withcheaper and easier to use production tools invideotape, will eventually lead to what I seeus video publishing. People will be able tofilm their papers, if possible, rather thanhaving everything in print.” For example,HumVideo filmed UT’s “Endgame” lastyear so that the actors could study how theywere doing.CALENDARThursday, August 2PERSPECTIVES The ’rial of public officials" on Per^pectives, WLS TV, 6 30 pmMOVIES: Movies on China "Tachai a model commune"and "The 23rd Anniversary of 'he People's Republic ofChina", Ida Noyes library, 50c. 7 30 pmREVIEW Ravima's Beethoven program is commented onby English professor Richard Wanq on UC Review of theArts, WHPK PM, 8 am and 8 pm.TANGO It does not take two to go to Court Theater'sproduction of Tango 'hough for tickets you must call 7533581 It begins a' 8 30 pm in Hutchinson Court everyThursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday night until August12 WARNING: Tonight is the benefit performance for theHyde Park Neighborhood Club Do not call the CourtTheater for tickets The prices are steep, but if you want a'icket, for 'oniqhi only, call Ms Fay Isenberg at 643 4062DANC ING Israeli danc ing every Thursday at Hillel, 5715 SWood I awn, 8 pmFriday, August 3REVIEW Enqlish grad student tells whether she will hireThe Hireling on UC Review of 'he Arts, WHPK FM, 8 amand 8 pmQUACK, QUACK No it is not a flight of honking geese,ducks or whatever It is a rock group playing at an opendance in 'he Ida Noyes parking lot tonight. They are knownas 'he Dynamite Ducks and their music for the dance orshould we say their quacks? starts a' 7 pmSTUDIO: Court Theater Studio presents Birdbath andFingernails Blue as Flowers, Reynolds Club theater, $1 50,7 30 pm Friday through Sunday till August 12MARTIAL ARTS I Aikido in Bartlett Gym, 6:30 pm. AlsoTuesdayPERSPECTIVE: "The prosecution of political figures" onPerspectives, WLS TV, 6:30 amLECTURE The microbiology club strikes again, sponsoring a lecture by Dr feinz Saedler of the Institut furGenetik der Universitat zu Koln on "Substrates involved inillegitimate recombination, insertions in the gal operon",Ricketts North 1, 4 pm Coffee in RN 7, 3:30 pm.FILM "Paths of Glory", SOQ, Quantrell, $1, 7:15 and 9:15pmRALLY In support of UFW, 608 S Ashland, 7 30 pmSaturday, August 4BUS: If you think the trip to Starved Rock was long, or theone to Indiana Dunes, wait till you see where Rich is haulingus this time! Yerkes Observatory To board the bus, be at'he Ida Noyes Parking lot at 8 am or before.DISCUSSION The College of Complexes, 105 W Grand, is sostarving for instructor;, liai imy have drafted their janitor,Slim Brundaqe, who is proposing that we have a war withMexico Just what we need after Vietnam the descendantsof Pancho Villa. Find out what it is all about for $1 at 9 pm.Sunday, August 5PROGRAM "Poetry, fantasy and imagination" withNorman Leer at the Near North Unitarian Fellowship, 1755N North Park, 11 amDOUBLEHEADER The White Sox, otherwise known as theKamikaze Squad because all of them are injured, take onthe hottest team in the AL in a doubleheader at ComiskeyPark Oakland? No Kansas City? No The Yankees? No. “The University ought to get in on it now,”Affelder continued, “so that they can use thedistribution system and new informationThis would continue the University'stradition of active participation in public-affairs radio.“The economics are such in videotape thatthe University can now produce cabletelevision for itself and the surroundingcommunity, using videotape and we couldexpand into a University video community.”he stated. “The equipment is now cheapenough in videotape so that you don’t have tobroadcast to millions of people anymore.You can now have personal statements andvideo publishing.”Milwaukee'’ No, no' even Milwaukee. They meet Texas,wh ich has, so help us God, won 8 out of 'heir last 9, includinqa no hitter, over people like 'he A s and Kansas City Socome and see 'he Sox (and get your chance to throwoma'oes at 'he Maroon editor, who will also be there but hewon" i el I you where), 1 15 pmMonday, August 6TOUR Robie House, 2 30 pmREVIEW The Academy production of plays by TennesseeWilliams and Jean Anouilh is reviewed by French professorRichard Dunn on UC Rev uw of 'he Arts, WHPK FM, 8 amand 8 pm and WBBM AM. Sa'urday, 7 20 amMARTIAL ARTS II Karate Club, Ida Noyes, 7 pm AlsoWednesdayGAY LIB Meeting, Ida Noyes, 7.30pm. Also ThursdayTuesday, August 7FILM "Bulli't", SOQ Quantrell, 7 15 pmFOUR DAY REVIEW A four day review of theShakespeare festival in S'artford, Ontario, begins todaywith a review of Ivan Turgenev" A Month in the Country byprofessor Marvin Mirsky on UC Review of 'he Arts. WHPKF M, 8 am and 8 pm At 'he same timeson the following days,Mirsky will review Wednesday, She Stoops to Conquer,Thursday, The Taming of the Shrew and Friday, OthelloWednesday, August 8GAME Table tennis, Ida Noyes, 6 pmMEETING Society for the Advancement of EasternCulture, Ida Noyes, 6 30 pmBRIDGE Ida Noyes, 7 pmDANCING: Country dancers, Ida Noyes, 8 pmBAND National Recovery Act, Hitchcock Court, 7 pmFriday, August 10VIDEO The Humvideo show of 7 tapes including "Sit In",star's in 'he Cobb Hall coffee shop, 7 30 pm (See articleelsewhwer in 'his issue ) Schedule, Sit In 7 30, LittleDefeats 8, S'eamboat 8 30, discussion 9 Admission 50c Info753 3380 Also 'o be shown on August 17FILM "Nights of Cabiria", SOQ, Quantrell, Si, 7:15 and9 15 pmSunday, August 12RICJ'S BUS Another bus 'rip, except that Rich Scotchdoesn't know where the hell it's going! See him for detailswhen he qets themDISCUSSION Landlord tenant relations, with Alan KewittNear North Unitarian Fellowship, 1755 N North Park, 11 am.Tuesday, August 14FILM "Murder at the Vanities", SOQ. Quantrell, SI, 7:15pmWednesday, August ISCONCERT Chicago Woodwind Consort, Hitchcock Court, 7pm If rain, go 'o QuantrellThursday, August 16TURTLES: SOQ Turtle walk Art Laffler's turtle collectionMeet at Ida Noyes, 2 15 pmR AVINIA SOQ bus to Ravima leaves Ida Noyes at 5:30 pmSee Rich Sctoch for details.Thursday, August 2, 1973-The Chicago Maroon-3Hyde Park Bank to constructraised parking on vacant lotFour films to missBy HENRY POSTAnything is real in the movies.And in the case of The Devil in Miss Jonesit's male fantasy. So male that it’s surprisingthe place isn’t picketed. And even moredepressing that the film seems to getswallowed.Which is what Miss Jones does a lot of.After slashing her wrists in a senselesslyexplicit opening scene, Miss Jones findsherself in the Devil’s office “unexpectedly.”What to do? She suggests she lead a life oflust, at least for a while. She returns to earthmore than ready to swallow anything: analintercourse, vaginal intercourse, three ways,blow jobs. You name it and Miss Jones willtry it.And all this lust, this ultra-sexual attitudein the female is a beautifully transparentmale projection of male sexual fantasies intothe body of the female. Miss Jones hands outlines like, “No, No, Wait I’m going to come.Wait Wait." And when she does, she fallsdown into utter exhaustion from her one-timevaginal orgasm. The male partners arestill ready and waiting, and she’s off intodream land.How’s that for a switch, ladies?And even more than that. Miss Jones is sodependent on the male for her rocks-off sexthat when she finally has to return to hell, herultimate punishment is to be partnerless.“ But I can’t get off by myself," she screams.Since there’s this level of “lesson,” thefilm is taken seriously as having some formof redeeming social value. That itperpetuates the male sexual tradition makesit a destructive social input. (Good reason fortaking it off the market, some might say.)But it is a scream to watch this patheticcreation of male ego structure wake up in herbed, reach for her fruit bowl and — that’sright, you guessed it — cram the grapes upherself, along with a banana. A good meal.I’m sure. Miss Jones is as unredeeming as it isindigestible. At $4 for sixty minutes you canafford to miss this one.Another film that’s making the rounds andought to be picketed is Live and Let Die, thenew James Bond film with Roger Moore. Inthis one, Bond takes on the entire blacknation, from Harlem to Haiti, and killseveryone off.Every Black is a racist’s dream—filledwith voodoo beliefs and pleasingly thick-beaded and stupid.And the women? They are the sexist’sdream—filled with an uncontrollable desirefor “it" and pleasingly thick-headed andstupid.Against this backdrop. Bond carries on themost elaborately tricky series of adventuresyet. So technical and scientific are hisvarious gimmicks that the blood andplastered bodies seem mere extensions of thefilm’s glossy superficiality.Each cinematic sentence needs a period.And in Bond’s world, death is the only formof punctuation.If you enjoy sitting and squirming whileyou imagine yourself throwing away another$4, try the double feature at the Bijou.The best part of it all is calling to seewhat’s playing. 943-5397.Once you’re there, the hard corehomosexual skin flicks begin. Sunday, HotSunday is described as “a very tough act tobeat; you’ll be on the edge of your seat.”Which in fact was true for most of thehouse. They were on the edges of their seats.Getting up and going to the powder room andreturning every 10 minutes. Needless to say,I can’t imagine what was going on in there.Out in front, I kept waiting for the film tobegin. Not that it wasn’t going in full five¬way force. But nothing was happeningexcept “it."A Vaseline bore.The second feature, “Give it a try. YouDINNER AT " tje^kIS ONLY A MINI BUS RIDE AWAYAtop the Hyde Park Bank Bldg. 955-5151Student discount* weeknightsThe Humivideo ShowFeature Video Tapes from the U of C7:30 “Sitin: A Docufantasy”8:00 “Little Defeats: A Video Poem”8:30 “Steamboat’s All-time Travelin’”9:00 Discussion and selected short tapesFriday, August 10 & Friday,August 17in theCobb Basement CoffeeshopAdmission 50°For info: call 753-3380 have nothing to lose but your innocence,”had a better plot and less pimples, a factwhich in this genre makes it a three star.Whatever Mama Wants involves a agingqueen who’ll pay anything for what shewants. And in her case there’s nothing quiteas satisfying as a little S&M on a Saturdaynight.You take it from there. I couldn’t andwalked out. Only to suffer theembarrassment of meeting someone I knewto be a tacky social climber on the street."Oh, I see,” she said with a smile thatshowed off her fangs,” Catching the Bijoufeatures on a Saturday afternoon.”I lowered my sunglasses and dashed up tosee the next worthless film, The Last OfSheila.With Richard Benjamin, Raquel Welch,Dyan Cannon and James Coburn as elementsin this Who-Done-It, the film concerns aproducer who tries to trick a confession outof the suspects he imagines as the possiblekillers of his gossip columnist wife, Sheila. To do this he invites the crowd on a week longboat ride along the southern French coastwith evening “games” planned forentertainment.While the unfolding of the mystery ishardly surprising and the identity of the realkiller was clear from the start, the moreentertaining touches in this film deal with theHollwoodesque world of status.Raquel Welch, for example, is slighted bybeing given the cheapest line of Gucci bags.Dyan Cannon has the most expensive Diorlipsticks. And one of the killers has LouisVuitton. It’s been said that the story is basedon fact and that Raquel Welch is really AnnMargret. A perfect casting job.One of the great moments in this otherwisedull and styleless work is the death scene ofthe producer, James Coburn, who gets acandle stick bashed into his head while indrag as Raquel Welch wearing a monk’soutfit.Can you beat that?Anything is real in the movies.Symphony falls flatBy JOE MANCININot even the soloists were able to saveRavinia’s "Concerto Celebration II” with theChicago Symphony Orchestra. It would havebeen more appropriately named “ConcertoDesecration II”.The fault lies basically in the inability ofconductor Sergiu Comissiona to make senseof the music. Comissiona is the mostoverrated personage to come out ofBaltimore since Boog Poweil, and has nobusiness attempting to conduct the CSO, anensemble completely beyond his talents.Comissiona had some help in ruining theMozart D-minor Piano Concerto (Number Twenty) from Rudolf Buchbinder, a 26-year-old German-Czech pianist. This is not to saythat the performance was filled with clinkersor wrong notes; in fact, Buchbinder gotevery note right. It was the dynamics thatwere wrong: Buchbinder and Comissionaattacked the Mozart as if it was the BrahmsD-minor Concerto with tempi that were toofast and overblown fortissimi erupting fromorchestra and keyboard. I prefer my Mozartsubtle and poetic, and the sturm-und-dranginterpretation was completely uncalled for.Buchbinder can perhaps be forgiven hisexcesses; he is young and I would like to hearhim tackle the Brahms D-minor, but heString Band Music byDavid Prine and Tyler WilsonNATIONAL RECOVERYACTSOQ Wednesday, August 87:00 p.m. Hitchcock CourtFREE(Rain date: August 9)4-The Chicago Mnroon-ThursHny August? 1973\\ Hireling" Compelling, Well-DoneBy AARON LIPSTADTIn the summer of 1970, 1 was traveling inEurope, and happened to find myself alonefor a few days. Feeling a bit bored andmaybe homesick, I decided to see TheStrawberry Statement. It was doublypromising: it was based on the book aboutthe student activities at Columbia, whichwould certainly satisfy my homesickness,and it had won a top prize at the Cannes FilmFestival. Well, how impressive, I said tomyself, eagerly eying the publicity postersas I entered the theater. Needless to say, thisfilm was a disappointment, an unmitigatedflop. Without going into the details, let mejust say that The Strawberry Statement hasgiven me a very jaundiced view of whateverthe Cannes Film Festival approves, at leastfor the last three years, and probablyforever. I naively assumed that the CannesFilm Festival, an international event held inwhat is a capitol of sophisticated society,would have some kind of standard with which I might not agree, but could respect.This wasn’t the Academy Awards, this wasEurope. At the present, however, if Cannesawards a prize to a good film, I say to myself,either it was luck or the film was too good toignore. If they choose another flop, I just nodcynically. Even worse, I expect them tochoose a bad film. Whatever they like, Iautomatically expect the worst of.The Hireling had the misfortune, from myobviously perverted point of view, to win theGrand Prize at the Cannes Film Festival(along with Scarecrow). Aside from SarahMiles, whom I never liked very much (lessfor herself than for the high-strung roles I’veseen her in) I was unfamiliar with the actorsand director. And although it has beenpraised by some reviewers for whom I havesome respect, it’s generally been receivedwith reservations. Still, I was somehowexcited—perhaps the Anglophile in me—as Iwaited for the film to come across thescreen.The premise of the film is simple: a lonelyunder Commissionashould lay off Mozart.I expected better from F'ranco Gulli andJanos Starker in the Brahms DoubleConcerto, and fortunately I got it. After amuddled opening Starker revealed a cellotechnique that adequately proved why he isamong the world’s best. Violinist Gulli gaveaway some in sheer instrumental weight toStarker, but it was clear that the two men,both on the faculty at Indiana University,had rehearsed the Brahms until they weresatisfied with it, and I was, too. It was luckythat the two soloists were in a virtuosicmood, because Comissiona led the orchestrawith all the inspiration of Napoleon leadingthe Grand Armee on the retreat fromMoscow: the orchestra plodded and noamount of arm-waving, head-shaking or other theatrics from the poor man’s LeonardBernstein could shake them out of thedoldrums. It seemed that the CSO wasobeying, but not fulfilling.All three soloists returned for theBeethoven Triple Concerto, Starker againdominating. Buchbinder improved some, butit must be remembered that the piano part ofthe Concerto is distinctly subordinate to theviolin and cello; at any rate, I didn’t mind.What I did mind was Comissiona provingthat Beethoven was also beyond him asMozart and Brahms had been. Having seenComissiona at Orchestra Hall earlier in theyear, and now at Havinia, I can only hopethat he does not cross paths with the ChicagoSymphony again. He seems to get worseeach time I see him. English aristocrat leaves a rest home whereshe has been recuperating from a nervousbreakdown following the death of herhusband. She makes friends with herchauffeur, who becomes more than alistener—he is a friend, and a link with newpeople, whom she accepts, to the detrimentof their friendship. In the meantime, he hasfallen in love with her, fears her newindependence, eventually realizes that theirdifference is one of class, and is crushed bythe realizationIn many ways, this is a fine, involving filmI was a bit worried at first by Miles’nervousness—actually. Lady Franklin’snervousness—she was very real, and Iadmit, I felt for her, I believed her lonelinessand searching. Robert Shaw, as the chauffer(Leadbetter), responded perfectly—a touchof understanding, a little simple humor, butjust enough distance.My opening dissatisfaction with the dampsparseness of the film wore down. Itcomforted me to see Lady Franklin calmlycruising along next to Leadbetter in theRolls; it annoyed and upset me to have to putup with the dry lack of feeling of her mother.The interchange, all the feelings were cleaneven when the plot began to thickenLeadbetter teaches boxing to the kids in thevillage, and Lady Franklin, as part of hersocial involvement, sponsors achampionship cup. At the tournament, shemeets an ex-World War I captain, a“gentleman” with political aspirations. Asthey see more and more of each other,Leadbetter is forced to wait outside with thecar, and realizes that he and the Lady aren’tjust “man and woman”. Leadbettereventually tells off the engaged LadyFranklin and (Captain) Cantrie, and in afinal act of desperation, destroys hisambitions. Although the plot occasionally takes a turnfor the melodramatic, these incidents aresubmerged in the building futility ofLeadbetter’s position. The final scene isactually gripping—a seemingly extremeword for what is generally a terse but low-key film. What was it that dissipated thisexcitement after the audio-visuals wereover?I couldn’t understand it at first. While Iwatched it, my enthusiasm for the filmincreased, but when it was over, I felt empty.I remembered the reviews and quotes I hadread—Grand Prize at Cannes with specialcitation for acting, etc —and thought aboutthe acting. Yes, I was very impressed, butthen what was there’’ The characters werenever really anything but rather emptyparts -people that we didn't really know, butfelt comfortable with because they weren’tquite familiar enough to be completely stockWhy Lady Franklin fell in love with Cantrie,why Leadbetter fell in love with LadyFranklin— sure, they were all lonely, orambitious, or both, but I wasn’t reallyconvinced To say that The Hireling is tiredand unoriginal because of the “chauffer fallsin love with the Lady” plot is only partlytrue. There was enough in the direction, theacting, the photography, to convince, if theyhad some real characters to work withHaving discovered the source of myanxiety. I felt better about The Hireling. It ispossible to accept it. at very least, as a long,wonderfully done exercise. Comparisons toThe Go-Between are raised—both are basedon L.P Hartley novels—I prefer the morerecent film, which at the same time is moresubdued, yet has more bite. (What is moreobvious —poor-boy-in-rich-household orchauffer-loves-Lady?). It isn’trevolutionary, or even surprising, but itestablishes a relationship, an atmosphere,that is compelling.JAMESWAYPETERSONMOVING & STORAGEr „ 646-4411Call °R forua 646-1234 free estimatesCompletePre-Planned Moving ServiceLocal • Long Distance • Packing • CratingImport-Export. Ar Containerized StorageFormerly al General Office55th & FI Ms 12655 So. DotyChicago, III. 60633AUGUST UNION SERVICESRockefeller Memorial ChapelSunday Morning Worship 11 o'clockAUGUST 5EMERY A. PERCELLMinister of The United Church of Hyde Park, Chicago"A Christian Apology"AUGUST 12EDGAR A.TOWNEMinister of Hyde Park Union Church, Chicago"Anybody For Good News"CARILLON RECITALSSundays at 4:00 p.m.Guest Carillonneur, James Lawson,AuaUSt 5 Carillonneur, Riverside Church. NewYork.. Guest Carillonneur, Raymond Keldermans,MUCJUST I x Carillonneur of the Thomas Rees MemorialCarillon, Springfield, Illinois. STUNNING! BEAUTIFUL! GREAT!SA'UR0»» PL*,*,,PERFECT! BREATHTAKING!Bt 0 NARO Wl * v»*NN{ H S*N0K>H Mr< Au SPICTURE OF THE MONTH! A JOY!SEVENTEEN MA(WN£ N t t Mf SBEAUTIFUL! PASSIONATE!”jUOIMCKiS! neW»0O«M*GWlN(Paramount Pictures takes greatpride and pleasure in presentingto the American public the returnof the greatest love story of all time.P4K4MOI \TPKTl Kt> |»rv*rou4 BHf HI MIVFranco ZeffirelliProduct too ofRomeoJLLIETini ’Nwtii /iiimtin 'Nouum oi #mm miisiw s wo \ jiiiPG mixm guio.wi uiggiuio :: /fdANCO fWUSMI and MAS01ING D’AMICO /0W1NHMOMtll "‘*“rEXCLUSIVECHICAGOSHOWING A WALTER READE ,THEATREme [squire59 E OAK STREET • 337-1117 t ’intHour ncwi :A:w> TOReduced rate parking—Newberry Plaza Garage UoGEDby CAR REPAIRS !Sur//cA >4>- - -BRIGHTONFOREIGN AUTO SERVICE3967 S. ARCHER AVE.(Z blocks east of Californio Ave )“3oa. SattifactitM*ul Ssuwol'927-8000Special GOODYEAR Tire Sale4 Marathon B/W-560xl5 $68.00+ $i.7i fet4 Super-cushion B/W 600x15 $84.00+ $1.71 fet4 Power Cushion B/W E7814 $72.00+ $i.82fet4Continental Radial B/W 155SR15 $110+ $02 fet4 B/W 165 HR15 $118.00+si.82fet4 B/W 155SR13 $102.00 + $i.6i fetBRIGHTONFOREIGN AUTO SERVICE3967 S. ARCHER AVE.(Z blocks eost of Californio Ave )“3m. ^6+vf^u. £mmbl"3967 Archer Ave.1(2 BLOCKS EAST OF CALI FORKIA AVE )927-80001 MO BLOCKS EAST OF CALIFORNIAThursday, August 2, 1973-The Chicago Maroon-54Provost's committee hears dismissed librariansBy GAGE ANDREWSThe UC librarians released last June 15were interviewed last week by the three mancommittee appointed by the Provost toinvestigate their dismissals.Though the committee has emphasizedthat they are only a board on inquiry into thecauses of the releases, and are not a reviewboard, several of the librarians expressedgratitude for any opportunity to pk 'sent their( >se. Much of the interviews seemed toconsist of the librarians correcting pieces ofinformation provided to the board which thelibrarians termed “very sketchy, incompleteand inaccurate.”Four of the librarians—the so-calledKegenstein Four, consisting of PatCoatsworth, Sharon Irvine, Harvey Arnold,and David Green—had earlier expressedconcern over the circumstances of theirmeetings with the committee, feeling thatthey were being denied materials andprocedures which would aid them inpresenting their cases for reinstatement.The committee then clarified its task asbeing charged solely with determiningwhether the dismissals resulted frombudgetary considerations.Mr Jonathan Smith, chairman of thecommittee, said that the committee wouldnot serve as a review board for individualcases. Though the library does not have thisresponsibility, it is clear that if thecommittee finds that the dismissals were notthe result of budgetary considerations, areview board would probably have to be setup to determine if the actual causes for thefirings were whether the librarians werereleased for union organizing activities, asthe union charges.Both Patricia Coatsworth and SharonIrvine described essentially the sameprocedure before the committee, and bothfound the committee's information to be inerror in the same areas. Each was given anoral summary of the history of their librarypositions, apparently based on information which the committee had received from thelibrary administration.Ms Irvine was told that her position,circulation-reserve librarian, was created atthe time of the move into Regenstein. Sheproduced for the committee copies ofLibrary News and Announcements (put outby the administrative offices) and copies ofannual reports of the Director of the Librarydating back to 1952-53 to show that herposition had existed as far back as 20 yearsago A second point, that her office on thefifth floor on Regenstein demonstrated hermarginal utility for the circulation-reserveposition, she answered by pointing out thatshe had requested that her office be movedthere due to an acute shortage of office spacein her area.Ms Coatsworth met with similartreatment. She found it necessary to producecopies of the Library News and News andAnnouncements to show that her positiondated as far back as 1943. In fact, she pointedout that the position of documents librarianis one of the very few positions that has neverbeen vacant since it was originally filled.The Regenstein Four have been keepingbusy with other activities besides theirinterviews before the committee. The all¬campus union organizing drive was begunlast week, with canvassers going throughmany of the buildings on the west side of thequadrangle. Union cards have already beguncoming into the office in the Blue Gargoyle.Further canvassing will be done during thecoming weeks. Persons wishing moreinformation should contact the Gargoyleoffice at 241-7177.The union has decided to come to thesupport of the library in one way. Accordingto The Librarian Jackdaw (the unions’newsletter). Local 103A passed a resolutionto order its research committee to develop afund-raising campaign. The Jackdaw statesthat “a fund-raising campaign is necessarybecause the library administration has notbeen able to secure sufficient funds to meetlibrary needs, and because the money which the library administration has been able toobtain is not being devoted to those needswhich Local 103A considers top priority.”The official reaction to almost all activitiesby the union, or by others sympathizing withunion, has been form letters, red-tape, andno comments. A letter sent to Provost Wilsonreceived a reply from the office of thePresident, which stated in part:“As your letter suggests, the issuesinvolved are extremely complex. Somemight say they include the survival of a greatUniversity at a time when the governmentfor various, sometimes incomprehensible,As a part of the new politics, rhetoric,economics and law (PREL) undergraduateprogram here, the dean of the College hasannounced that law professor Philip Kurlandwill teach a course on Watergate next year.The course, titled “Constitutional Aspectsof Watergate” will be offered in the collegenext quarter. It will be one of threeundergraduate courses taught by Kurland,who has just been named William Kenanprofessor in the College.Kurland offers as his reason for teachingthe course his view that “the study of law,being an intellectual pursuit, can lead to amuch wider and deeper understanding of theworld.”As for his qualifications for teaching thecourse, Kurland, when he is not teachinghere, serves as counsel to the Subcommitteeon Separation of Powers of the US SenateJudiciary Committee. The subcommitteehas been chaired for many years by Senator reasons, has diminished its support for basicresearch and private higher education ingeneral. The issues are made more painfulby the fact people are caught up in them. ButI assure you that all of us share a greatconcern over them.”As for the committee investigations, they,like other responses, appear to be extr emelynarrow in scope, and thus exclude manyother questions of concern. The mainquestion—the reinstatement of thelibrarians—is one which will quite probablybe taken into court, especially if theUniversity itself makes no efforts to resolvemore issues.Samuel J Ervin, Jr (D-NC), currentchairman of the Senate Select Committee onPresidential Campaign Activities-the onewe are now seeing so much of on television. Itis more popularly known as “the Watergatecommittee”.Kurland also is a practicing lawyer, andhas appeared before various courts includingthe US Supreme Court. His most recent legalactivity was when he served as specialcounsel to the state of Virginia in its Mayappeal to the high court of a decision by USDistrict Court Judge Robert R. Merhigeordering the integration of Richmond(Virginia) schools by combining them withthe surrounding suburban school districts.Virginia, aided by Kurland, won the appealon a 4-4 tie vote which overturned Merhige’sruling.Kurland is also founder and editor of TheSupreme Court Review, published since 1960,which reviews and offers criticism annuallyof decisions by the US Supreme CourtKurland to teach new courseon Watergate and ConstitutionSTARTING WED. AUG. 1st HOW MANY BOOKS ARE FOR SALEaccent / TM°rp AT THE STUDENT CO-OPMORE THAN 10,000?U%««11V • INC. LESS THAN AT REGENSTEIN?august TAKE A GUESS AND YOU MAY WIN1st Prize $5.00 Cash & $5.00 Purchase at Co-OpclearanceCOI Cl 2nd & 3rd $5.00 Purchase at Co-Op4th & 5th One Free $3.50 ($5.98 list) recordOn August 9th & 10th the STUDENT CO-OP will take aninventory. The closest guesses to the actual inventoryfigure will receive prizes.vHLt! ALL ESTIMATES MUST BESAVE FROM 20% TO 60% RECEIVED BY 6:00 P.M. AUG.8GIFTWARE•SELECTED PLAYTHINGS ALSO CHECK OUR SALE OF OLD•GOURMET COOKWARE• TEXTS & PAPER BACKS ATHANDCRAFTED JEWELRY•AreAClAklAI uAtie e« 10°, 25°, & 50°UULA3IUNAL I1UIVII rUKNISnlNUa•FLOOR SAMPLE LAMPS STUDENT CO-OP BOOKSTORE•AND LOTS MORE AND RECORD SHOPaccent* 1437 53rd st. mi 3-7400 10:30-6:00 M-FREYNOLDS CLUB BSMT.SORRY NO FREE GIFTWRAP OR FREE DELIVERY Donald Virgil (Manager of Student Co-op) or 753-31126-The Chicago Maroon-Thursday, August 2, 1973ABOUT THE MIDWAYDynamite ducks?Students who were on campus last summermay remember a performance of the “AllStar Frogs’. While the concert wasenjoyable, some members of the audienceexpressed disappointment when theylearned that the performers were ratherordinary looking rock performers, and noteven slightly amphibious. To follow up thisevent a year later, SOQ has now scheduled adance for August 2 featuring “DynamiteDuck ”. An increasingly well-knownmidwestern group, the Ducks have playedwith Luther Allison, Siegel-Schwall,Ballinjack, Steely Dan, and a number ofother midwestern acts.“Because of Court Theatre, we are holdingthe dance behind Ida Noyes,” said SOQdirector, Richard Scotch. “We will still beginabout 7 pm, however, the same time as our regular Wednesday night concerts. In case ofrain, we will move into Ida Noyes. There willbe a larger problem if it rains onWednesday; the rain date for the WednesdayIvy Beard concert (Scott Joplin rags) isThursday, which means that the dance wouldnot begin until that was over, perhaps 9 p.m.”India associationThe new officers of the India Association ofthe University have announced anIndependence Day celebration set for nextSaturday, August 11, at International House.The celebration will consist of dinner at5:30 pm, with a cultural program followingat 8 pm. Tickets for dinner are on sale untilAugust 8th, and are being sold by the newofficers. Prices are $1.65 for adults. 70* forchildren.The new officers, and phone numberswhere they can be reached for tickets are as follows: President Paramdeep Singh Sahni(955-3608), Vice President Miss ReetaChowdhry (684-1362), Secretary TapanChakrabarti (home: 363-1571, office: 753-2655) and the following members of theadvisory committee: J L Raina (241-6338),Satyanarayan Shardwaj (947-9646), MissRanbir Sokhi (753-0005) and Mrs UshaSharma (288-8068).Chakrabati, who also serves as treasurer,has reminded members that membershipsexpire on August 15. The cost of renewal is$1. He also announced that the association-sponsored radio program “Purviya” willcontinue on WHPKInformation serviceThe Hyde Park Neighborhood Club hasformed an information and Referral Serviceto help bridge the gap between people in needand available community resources. The evidence of need for this service,is an outgrowth of the agency's work withsenior citizens and older teenagers.“Seniors in particular have referred theirquestions about housing, public assistance,Social Security, food stamps, andMedicare,” Mrs. Smith said Sheemphasized, however, that the Informationand Referral Service is available to anyonewho wishes it Staff member Ann Dansie willhead up the information and ReferralService.In order to assist persons in selecting andsecuring needed service, the Informationand Referral Service staff will maintain up-to date files of community health andwelfare resources.Persons needing information or referralsshould call Ms Dansie Tuesday or Thursdayafternoons between 1 and 5 pm at MI 3-4062^ (fawell 'pi&UAt J* 1645 E.55TH STREET J* CHICAGO, ILL 60615£* Phone: FA 4-1651 JSPECIAL ®DISCOUNT PRICES© FOR ALLm STUDENTS &FACULTY MENDERSELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900As Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago youare entitled to special moneysaving discount prices on allVolkswagen Service Work, allVolkswagen Parts, Accessoriesand any new or used Volkswagenyou buy from Volkswagen SouthShore.Upon presentation of your Univer¬sity of Chicago Identification card,our employees will show youregular price and your specialdiscount price of whatever youbuy.Remember, Volkswagen SouthShore is the closest factoryauthorized full service dealer inyour area. Our Parts Departmentis open Saturday 9 AM to 12noon.We re near the 1C or can offer youShuttle Bus Service.©VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHOREAuthorizedVolkswagenDealer 7234 S. STONY ISLANDOpen Doily 9 AM to 9 PMSolos, Ports and Sorvico DepartmentsOpen Saturday 9 AM to 5 PMPHonet 200-4900 OUTSIDE DANCE TONIGHT!DYNAMITE DUCKSOQ Thursday August 2,7 p.m. behind Ida Noyes. Free!(in case of rain-go inside Ida)Thursday, August 2, 1973-The Chicago Maroon-7MAROON CLASSIFIEDSCENESWomen's Peer Counseling GropCounseling skills taught by womenstaff of Chicago Counseling &Psychotherapy Center $40/8 weeks.684 1800SPACEResponsible fern UG seeks rm/boardm priv home for sch yr 73 74 possiblyin exch for babysitting and/ or hskping Kristina 752 3624GARAGE WANTED for small carvicinity 56th Kimbark Call 324 3624Efficiency cpt. drapes newly decmonths rent free Can also be hadfurnished Includes use of poolFlamingo Hotel PL 2 3800 apt 702 leavemessageProfessor and family seek Hyde Parkap’ or home to rent, buy (or care takemm 12 months) Call (608) 929 7659 (or>ry 447 1845)One bdrm apt avail immediately. 5455Blackstone apt 2A Modern safe, nr coop, IC, mini bus $175 mo inclds util.Call 288 2960 or contact janitor onpremisesStudentDiscountModelCameraT342 E. 55th493-6700 ,Most complete photoshop on South Side.THE VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterShort term leasesavailable. Well main¬tained, secure building.Attractive 1 Vj and 2'/?room studios. Furnishedor unfurnished. $127 -$172. At campus busstop.FA 4-0200 Mrs. GroakTAhSAM-WNCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.CLOSED MONDAYSOrders to toko out1318 East 63rd MU 4-1062 1 rm plus ki4 & bth UC area wntdbsmt/attc prfrd Paul 667 4357Clean straight male roommate neededfor apt. close to Regenstein. Startinglate Sept, own room & bath. Call 9559774 evenings.We need a 3 5 bedroom apt or hse. torent starting Sept. 1 15 Call: MarkJohnson BU 8 9870 after 9:30 pmFemale will share apt. with same.Own room $85 mo 51st 8. Lake 684 1442EXCEPTIONAL SO SHORE DRIVEAPT gorgeous 2 br in old elegant bldg.2 baths, hugh 5 rms deluxe dng & Ivgrms, w b frplc, cptd, htd, preferadults, garage avail $275, 221 66071 BR APT in gorgeous SO SHOREDR BLDG near beach, IC, & bus, 3rms 8. dinette, A/C, cptd, htd, ideal forsingle, very private, Sept occup.oarage avail $135, 221 6607Room mate wanted, huge cheap apt.Call Beth 752 09672 room and 3 room turn apts. at 5404Woodlawn 643 2760 or 667 5746 Mrs.GreenLive in Federikas famous bldg.Nearby, turn or unfurn 2 8. 3 rm. aptsfor 1, 2, 3, people. Refrig , stove., pvt.ba'h, stm heat. Quiet, Sunny, view.Parking, trans. $120 00 up Free Utils.Robinson, 6043 Woodlawn 955 9209 or427 2583 Short term lease or longerMedical student desires permanentquiet sleepinq room or furnished aptwith shower m private home. Pleasewrite Rich Scarnati PO Box 20229,Chicago, III 60620Co op for sale So Shore area nearlake, 2 bdrm, den, AC, fireplace, mod.kitchen, U of C neighbors, mo ass. $98Purchase price $8400 Call 768 7299CO-OP APT. FOR SALEBALCONY OVER EXPANSE OFLAWN One bedroom in post warbuilding. Free parking on premises.Coop atmosphere Close to U of Ccampus and IC Priced under $9,000Call 493 6351 or 493 5558TRAVELTwo seats available on UC charterre'urn trom London September 29thfor UC people only Call 955 4264PEOPLE WANTEDHalf time bookkeeper secretary forCourt House 8. Medici Office exp.helpful Must be good with numbers,call Hans Morsbach at 493 3398Par1 ime pizza delivery man usthave car & insurance Call Roger athe Medici *57 7394Dorothy Smith Beauty Salon5841 BlackstoneHY 3-1069Specializing in shaping of naturally wavyhair. Special attention paid to con¬ditioning of hair Use only the very bestof shampoos and conditioners L Orea'tints bleaches and rinses.Member of National Hair Dressers AssociationOpen-Monday through Friday7:30 a.m. until 7:30 p.m.Closed SaturdayDorothy Smith• EYE EXAMINATIONS• CONTACT LENSES• PRESCRIPTIONS FILLEDDR. MORTON R.MASLOVDR. AARON ZIMBLEROPTOMETRISTSHyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th ST.363-6363 Babysitter: my home at 5550 DorChester to care 3 yr old baby, 9 to 5 pmdurinq August and possibly duringfall. Call 947 5041 between 9 to 5pm or947 0057 after 5 pm.INTERVIEWERS for 1 mo. study ofHealth Care on south side of Chicago.Call 493 1585 weekdays or 288 2934weekends 81 eves $2.75/hr part or full'ime. Car desirable.Family needs grad student or studentwife to sit during day. Cal 955 6445.Babysitter wanted: my home, 4 days aweek, 1 3 yr old girl. 493 2287.PEOPLE FOR SALEWoman would like domestic work.Experienced, references. 363 2958Moving, 'rash removal, hauling callRob 241 5430Unconventional, out of the systemM A equivalent Australian graduate,'eachinq, editing 8. publishing expseeks any interesting work, Chicagoarea (312) 447 1845 or (608) 929 7659EXP TYPIST all kinds of papers 9476353 or 779 8034 Have dictaph. alsoExperienced manuscript typing onIBM Selectric. 378 5774typing cheap1 Call Ling 924 1705TYPIST exp. call 752 8119 eves.Portraits 4 for $4.00 and up MaynardStudio, 1459 E 53rd, 2nd floor 643 4083Moving? Need help? Hire my van andI Best rates. Jerry at 684 1175.FOR SALEFARFISA PROFESSIONAL elec,organ $800 or best offer 924 3146 eves.Portable TV, Dropleaf table, 6 chairs,Twinsize spring mattress, Exercisebike, Bookcase, Window fan, Hairdryer. Snow 'ires Call 288 4512Ap' Sale TV $75, lamps $2 ea., Fisher175T revr St 10, dresser $8, rug $3,more. Or best offer 324 8054APARTMENT SALE: all furn. 8.hsehold items must go Inexpens Sipractical Marsha 947 8531 or 753 437173" console color TV Magnavox $150,Merc Comet '66 running very well$350 rrib only 2 I '2 yrs old $18, tablelamp S8, waxer $8 363 4522 any timeLarge door which you can use for aable Name your price (reasonably)955 8952Couch, 8 feet long, green slightly wornbuf it has a larqe cover that comeswith it. $10, Call 955 8952BOOKS! ! I! fit!!! I40°oOFF at Chicago's most interesting oldbookstore Going out of business Oct31 20,000 bound books. 40°o off. Also’housands of paperbacks and long playrecords Bill Newman's Al Bookstore.111? N S'ate, Daily 2:30 9:30 p.m Sat.and Sun 1 30 6 00STENOUnusual 'yping position Must haveabove average skills in typing statistical charts, manuscripts, andquestionaires for survey researchorganization, located on U of Ccampus* Excellent benefits. Call 6845600, Ext. 322 for appointment.An Equal Opportunity EmployerRECEPTIONISTUniversity affiliated researchorganization needs receptionist toreceive and to help handle PBXswitchboard. Light typing and clericalwork, includes handling a,I companyairline and iravel reservations. Excelleni benefits. Call 684 5600 ext. 204.An Equal Opportunity EmployerMAIL CLERKUniversity affiliated organizationneeds individual to process incomingand outgoing mail, including someheavy packaqes Driving licenserequired Excellent benefits. Call 6845600 ext. 204An Equal Opportunity EmployerPRINTING ANDgraphic design for small business andcommunity organizations. We canprovide camera ready art and/orfinished printed pieces at a reasonablecost. Nebqrafics, 285 7600. Ask forDave, 10 5 weekdays.WANTEDCurrent Chicago restaurant menuswarned 'o start a Menu Mart, areference file for those "where shallwe eat?" 'imes. Ida Noyes 209 or x3591Trading your VW? I can pay you moreman dealer. Any yr or model 324 1537YOGA CLASSESA 2nd month long session of yogaclasses will be taught Mon 8. Wedevenings 7:30 9:00pm beginning Aug6 at 'he Blue Gargoyle in the Disciplesof Christ Church, 57'h 8. University inHyde Park. Classes will be taught byDobbi Kerman who has been teachingunder 'he auspices of Student Ac'ivities at 'he U of C 1971 73. Classeswill include: Asanas (Hatha Yogapostures), Pranayama (breath con'roI), relaxation, Meditation, andchanting 8 sessions for $16 For information and registration call Dobbi947 8621 or leave a message at SU 74435 until 9 pmSERVICESNow child Care Center opening inHyde Park A stimulating environment maintained by qualifiedstaff concerned with developing thewhole child Opening Sept. 4, 7:30am5 30pm Full and half day (am)proqrams $15 8. $30 Call 538 3357 or924 6097FREE KITTENBlack 8. white Female Kitten, about 15weeks old, must be given away. Litterrained, has shots, very lovable 8.Iriendly (Please, someone give her ahome). 978 3654 or 753 8266 Ask forS'eve SchichmanREWARD $50Irish seller, male, lost on 7 18, vie. of53rd Drexel, 197? rabies tag #575782Tol 752 2268 STUDENT DISCOUNTWeeknighfs at the Efendi! 955 5151SPEECHPERCEPTIONEXPERIMENTSStudents and staff: Participants inexperiments on speech perception.$2 00 per hour. Probably one two hoursession required. Call 3 4714 for infoand appointment.PANPIZZADE LIVERYThe Medici delivers 5 p m. to 10:30p.m. Sun thru Thurs. 5 p.m. to 11:30p.m. Fri. and Sat. 667 7394. Save 60cents delivery, if you pick it upyourself at 1450 E 57th St.CAMPINGEQUIPMENTRENTAL sleeping bags, tents, stoves,lanterns, packs. HICKORY 324 1499PLAY TENNIS6 indoor courts, 3 outdoor courts.Private & group lessons availableSouth Side Raquel Club, 1401 E. Sibley,VI 9 1235. GAY LIBERATIONGAY LIB OFFICE IS OPEN THISSUMMER! Come to Ida Noyes 301Mon., Wed., Thurs. between 7 and 9 30pm or call 753 3274CONSCIOUSNESS GROUP ONSEXUAL IDENTITY will meet everyThurs. at 7:30 pm in Ida Noyes (2ndfir) For gays, straights, bisexuals andundecideds. New people are especiallywelcome.PERSONALSWill ihe person who recommended theFrench Kitchen restaurant to usplease contact the Maroon at 753 3266IMPEACH NIXON Bumperstickers,3/$ 1 DON'T BLAME ME, I WORKEDFOR McGOVERN Buttons, 5/SI.O'her anit Nixon Buttons 4/$l MikeFowler, 5625 Woodlawn, 60637You control the horizontal, you control'he vertical at the Humvideo Show,Fri Aug. 10 8. 17; 7:30 10:00 in CobbBasement Coffeeshop. 50cTHE MENU MART, a reference file ofChicago restaurants to be opened inthe Fall in Ida Noyes. Collect menus(ethnic, cheap, expensive, interesting,etc.) for us now.Hillel Israeli Folk Dances will meetSun July 29 al 8 00 p.m. 5715WoodlawnWRITER'S WORKSHOP (PL 2 8377).Hyde Park's NewestBicycle Shop(facte1301 E. 53rd St.363-8376We carry the entireCazanave line.Also Alpina, Urago, Astroand French Racer.We do repair work on ail makes andmodels. Come in and see us for fast, cour¬teous service. We are right across fromKimbark Plaza.SERVING HYDE PARK ANDIHE SURROUNDING COMMUNITYHY 3-17745508 Lake ParkBudget rentsGeneral Motors& other fine carsSOQ FILMS PRESENTSBULLITT TUESDAY. AUGUST 7COBB HALL $100 $1.00 7:15SOQ FILMS PRESENTS FRIDAY, AUGUST 3STANLEY KUBRICK'S -PATHS OF GLORYCOBB HALL $1.00 7:15 & 9:158-The Chicago Maroon-Thursday, August 2, 1973