The Cl€Volume 84, Number 36 iFriday, February 14, 1975Four candidates for fifthward alderman addressed alorum at the law school onWednesday afternoon. Eachof the candidates reiteratedtheir previously expressedopinions about issues of thefifth wardAl Rabv, the front-runningcandidate emphasized hisdesire to continue the ward'stradition of independenceRabv, a longtimecommunity activist and civilrights leader, reassured theaudience that he hasdissolved his ties withGovernor Walker. Herecently resigned from hisoffice on the Illinois Housing Development Authorityunder Governor Walker.Squire Lance, presentlyemployed by GovernorWalker, expressed hisconcern for the inter racialcharacter of Hyde ParkLance stated that the timehas come for blackleadership of the fifth wardRunning a campaign on hispast communityinvolvement. Ross Lathropdivided his communityconcerns into four areas:crime, housing, education,and business development.Lathrop’s pastaccomplishments includeefforts to redevelop business on 53rd street, andinvolvement with the HydePark-Kenwood CommunityConference. Lathrop iscurrently director of theManagement InstitutesProgram at the University’sIndustrial Relations CenterRemarking that he enteredthe race because he didn'tlike any of the othercandidates, Sidney ErvinWilliams is running as the“fifth ward’s native son’’.Williams said that, ifelected, he would establish award council, composed ofrepresentatives elected fromeach precinct. WILLIAMS: Hyde Park s native son speaks at the aldermanic forum.The University will in¬crease tuition rates by aslittle as $210 and as much as$390 for the 1975-76 academicyear for each of the undergraduage and graduateprograms and for theprofessional schools.Beginning autumnquarter. 1975, the tuition fora normal three-quarteracademic year will be:College (undergraduate),$3,210 <1976-75: $3,000);Graduate divisions. $3,420<1974-75: $3,310);the Pritzker school ofmedicine, $3,420 <1974-75:$3,210);law school. $3,690 < 1974-75:LATHROP: aldermanic candidate Ross lathrop calls $3,300);himself an "independent s independent." graduate school ofAldermanic candidates discusslocal issues at public forum business. $3,750 (1974-75:$3,450);and school of divinity,education, library science,and Social Service Administration. $3,360 < 1974-75$3.1501.In order to help studentsmeet the costs of privateeducation, the Universitywill continue to support andoffer a w ide range of studentaid. according to CharlesO’Connell, dean of students.“At the present tive,”O’Connell commented,“more than 5,000 of our 7.800undergraduate students arereceiving financialassistance through theUniversity in the form of fullor partial scholarships,fellowships, traineeships, orresearch assistantships.More than 2.000 studentshave taken educational loansthrough the University. Weshall have a comparably full range of student aidavailable in 1975-76 to helpstudents meet their in¬creased expenses.”For 1975-76 the Universitywill devote $5 million fromits general funds for directstudent aid and more than $1million in endowedscholarship fundsSince 1973 the Universityhas been a direct lenderunder the federally insuredstudent loan programO'Connell pointed out thatthe University also expectsto have more than $2 millionavailable in National DirectStudent Loans with defferedinterest and repaymenttermsThe 1975-76 tuition rateshave been approved by theUniversity’s board oftrustees, acting on therecommendation of theadministration and the dean's budget committee InDecember the committeesuggested that tuitions beraised at least $70 perquarter from current levels.According to a recentsurvey by the New YorkTimes , the average tuitionincrease at a number ofprivate colleges anduniversities was 10 percent."Yale University, forexample, will be the firstmajor private institution toraise tuition above $4,000 foran academic year to $4,050.Stanford University an¬nounced the largest increasein its history, 13 percent, to$3,810/At the University ofChicago the new tuition ratefor undergraduates will beseven percent higher thanthe 1974-75 rate Tuition ratesin the divisions will be 6.5percent higher.Tuition rises 7 percentin next academic yearUC fails to complyBy MIKE RUDYThe University is refusingto comply with an order fromthe Department of Health,Education and Welfare(HEW) regarding the firing of Don Martin, a campussecurity guard.The order from HEWdirects the University to re¬instate Martin, restore hisseniority rights, and provideback pay for the period in which he was unemployedfollowing his termination bythe University. TheUniversity has rehiredMartin but has not reinstatedhis seniority or paid the lostwages.Inside this issue:Automation p.2UFO meets p.8Sports p. 14Bob Dylan GCJ 1 with HEW orderMartin was fired by theUniversity in July, 1971,after he was arrested on acharge of illegal possessionof a weapon and lost hiscertification as a specialpoliceman. Martin claims hehad the weapon because hewas on his way home fromhis job as a Universityguard.Martin was acquitted onthe weapons charge,whereupon he sued the policedepartment to recover hiscertification. At the sametime he filed adiscrimination complaintagainst the University withHEWThe guard was hired by theUniversity on August 3, 1970as a member of the securityforce. On July 29.1971 he wasfired following his arrest by~ the Chicago Police Depart¬ment and subsequent revocation of his cer¬tification as a specialpoliceman by the policedepartment.All special policemen mustbe certified by the regularpolice department ofChicago. At the time Martinlost his certification thepolice department had theright to revoke certificates ofspecial policemen withoutcause and w ithout a hearingon the caseMartin was arrested by theChicago police for possessionof a weapon Martin says hehad a gun in his possessionbecause he was on his wayhome from working as aguard on campus. He wasacquitted on the charge butcould not get his job backbecause the city would notrecertify him.Martin sued the policedepartment (Martin vs. Conlisk) in Federal districtcourt in September 1971.Judge Philip Tone’s decisionprovides an outline of thefacts in the case:“Plaintiff (Martin) allegesthat he was issued a cer¬tificate of appointment as aspecial policeman but thatthe certificate was revokedby defendents (policedepartment) without noticeor hearing eleven weeksafter he was arrested andcharged with unlawfulpossession of a weapon...-whereupon he wasdischarged from his em¬ployment with the University of Chicago.‘‘In revoking plaintiff’scertificate, defendants actedunder the authority of aprovision of Chapter 173 ofthe Municipal Code whichcontinued on page 3Automation of Library delayed* -t lBy TOM McNAMARAAutomation of Regensteinlibrary’s circulation system,originally scheduled tocommence this academicyear, has been postponeduntil at least SeptemberA pilot program to be installed in Regensteinreserve, however, istentatively scheduled forspring quarter.Library officialsattributed the delay todifficulties in coordinatingthe activities of the library’sVarian mini-computer with the main IBM 370/ 168computer located in theUniversity computationcenter. *Bar-coded identificationcards consisting of a set ofvertical lines which can beoptically “read” into the newcirculation system with a light-pen to identify eachuser were issued to studentsearlier this year. Similarbar-coded labels are beingplaced -on most materialscirculating from thelibrary’s collection touniquely identify each item.When the new circulationsystem becomesoperational, books may becharged from anycirculation station by simplyscanning with the light-penthe bar-coding on the user’sidentification card and thebar-coded label on eachbook. The system will createa loan record by associatingthe uniquely coded book anduser identifiers for eachcharge transaction. A duedate slip for the back of eachbook will be immediatelyprinted by the terminal, andin the computer a loanschedule will be set to notify“, 0'ir° rvitVY MONXAbrand **nAiH80n.ffiS5S»»m LESSWITH YOURTRkDE-lN!FREE *50BONUS CHECKWith Any Car IU OF CFREE motorola pSTEREO TAPE PLAYERLWITH ANY USED CAR174 VEGA HATCHBACKAutomate "ans bofl» side mou'C "gswhitewalls radio heater Stk Nc35752288 12/12t2 MONTHS ON Q .000 MLES 71 CHEV. STATION WAGON9 passenger automatic trans a»conditioning radio whitewalls StkNo 3605 CHEVY7SJ“63\NST0Cv.2S=.4388173 IMPALA CHEV.1 V8 automatic 'tans pcwe* steeringJ power prates timed giass leatherI interior radio wtn’ewalis 12.000 actmiles Stk V 3529 72 CHEV. IMPALASTATION WAGON714573 CHEV. NOVA1 V8 automatic 'rans power s'ee’ g| fac' an cond .mfl roof racio.whrtewal s 2 doo. coupe Stk Nc3564 70 CHEV. STATION WAGON9 passenger V8 radio automatic |„ trans power biakes power steering,V8 atuomat.c Pans power fleering ,,hltewaHs Stk ^ m2Fact air cond radio rack *hitewaitsStk Nc 362149887* CHEV VEGA2 d' HaJchbac* automatic transradio whitewalls Stk No 3617 78870 MERCURY MONTEGO4 door 6 0/ automatic trans powersteering radio whitewalls Stk No7088 4288 788 NOVAPrtt*SSSES,v DON T#,B f 6522 S.<DON'T GO HALFWAY LIMITED TIME ONLY!OPEN SUNDAYS•M Chevrolet SEHABLA^ ESPAN0L6522 S. COTTAGE GROVE AVE.PHONE: Ml 3-3500 open daily til 8 p m. • sat c sun, til 6 p m2—The Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 14, 1975 patrons should materialsbecome over due.The new circulationsystem, a product of $1.7million in grants and eightyears of research and vyork,has been hailed as one of themost advanced anywhere inthe world.At a time when the numberand cost of publications isincreasing much morerapidly than library budgetsthe new systemis regardedas essential in the library’sattempt to maintain anadequate collection.The automated systempromises to stem theskyrocketing cost of libraryoperations by: replacingmost of the three-by-fiveinch card files presentlyused to store data, reducingthe manpower required tomaintain the files,eliminating most of thepresent duplication of files,and freeing space now filledby manual files and associated work areas.The automated circulationsystem will allow the libraryto provide several newcirculation services andincrease the efficiency andeffectiveness of somecurrent services. Among thenew services will be theability to query from anypublic service location theloan records of the entirelibrary system. Thus a userin Eckhart library will beable to determine if a bookfrom Regenstein or Harperlibrary is charged out andwill be able to request arecall on the book from theterminal in Eckhart.Another new capacity willbe the ability to query allloan records by patronname. This means thelibrary will be able toidentify all items on loan toeach library user. Thisability will also allow thecontinued on page 1 3ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELSunday • Feb. 16 • 11 AM.CHARLES SHELBY ROOKSPresidentChicago Theological Seminary“PARADOX AND PROMISE”SUNDAY SEMINAR9:45 to 10:50 A.M. Bernard O. Brown, AssistantDean of the Chapel, leads a study of GabrielMarcel s book, Creative Fidelity in the ChapelUndercroft.iiiiiiimiimiiiimmiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii£I FIRESIDE CONCERT I| KATHLEEN TERBEEK || in a program of || Lieder || Tuesday • Feb. 18 • 8 P.M. || Brent House • 5540 Woodlawn fI FREE {| (Music Society recorder recital || cancelled because of illness) |iiiiimiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimHYoung Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHair Designers1 620 E. 53rd St.288-2900PIZZAPLATTER1460 E. 53rdMl 3-2800FAST DELIVERYAND PICKUPYou, too can achieveinner peace andtranquility throughdynamic-passive per¬sonal interaction!Only three hours aweek required!Come to the Univer¬sity Bridge Club anyWednesday at 7:00P.M. at Ida Noyes. Ifyou come this week(2/19), besides innerpeace, each entrantwill receive a prizecommensurate withthe club's shoe-stringbudget.prision reformsMorris discussesBy CHIP FORRESTERIn a lively and fascinatingtalk, Norval Morris, theJulius Kreeger professor oflaw and criminal justicediscussed radical and in¬novative aspects of prison reform. Drawing key ideasfrom his most recent book.The Future ofImprisonment; Morrislooked at the problem in blarger context.Morris gave a briefstatistical overview of crime, attempting to set thestage for radical proposals ofprison reform He mentionedthat “there has been moreresearch in the last decade incriminal justice than in alltime together.” Morris alsostated that the recent pastStudent Housing office announcesassistant resident head openingsBy MARYANN HUDSONThe University iscurrently accepting applications for two staffpositions: those of residenthead and resident headassistant The deadline forapplying for one of theseveral openings is March31.According to a jobdescription published by theUniversity, resident headsand their assistants “provideinforjnal guidance andsupport to the student , (andhelp) make possible for himthose experiences which willcontribute to his education "An applicatnt must havebeen a student, administrator or facultymember for one year by nextautumn A contender for theposition of resident headmust be 25 years old, andassistant resident headsmust be 20 Applicants must“have familiarity with, and interest in, general liberaleducation as evidenced byacademic background."Personal interviews bycommittees composed offaculty, staff and studentsfollow general meetings forall applicants in winter andspring quarters. A studentmay help interview con¬tenders by contactingmembers of house and inter¬house councils, who areapproached for help by EdTurkington, housingdirector.Decisions on applicantswill be made by the middle ofspring quarter so that newstaffers can becomeacquainted with their workand with students There isan additional “orientation"period prior to the start ofautumn quarter. The jobdetails do not lend themselves to lectures, saysTurkington. so most of the“orienting” is actuallyacheived on the job and through discussion withother resident heads andmasters. Some literature isprovided to the new staffmembers during the three-day period.“Resident heads receive afurnished apartment, meals,salary stipend, and an ex¬pense allowance. Assistantresident heads receive roomand board." Salaries rangefrom according to the jobdescription. $900 - $2,000.Current holders of thesepositions do not reapply;during the school yearfeedback on theirperformance is sought fromthe house councils, residentmasters, and students ingeneral. Generallyapplications number four orfive times the number ofopenings in the system. Thisyear there are expected to besix to twelve openings forresident head positions, andten to fifteen openings fortheir assistants. has s^en the “beginnings of aserious data base on com-me."Morris pointed out thatlittle had come of all thisintellectual and practicaleffort “The rate of homicidehas doubled in the cities inthe last ten years” and thatis not attributable to bettercounting either, he said.“This University,” hementioned, “will spend over$2 million on its securityforce even with an economyas slow as it is.” Andperhaps most important, allthese grand efforts of at¬tempting to understand thecriminal world “have noteven changed the rhetoric ofcrime control.” An in¬dividual is still an idealisticliberal in favor of reform orsits to the right and is infavor of deterrance, MorrissaidMorris explained thepeculiar problem of imprisonment because “it isthe largest power sanctionedover the individual.” This,therefore, necessitates acareful look at the systemthat banishes about 210,000adult males from oursociety.The study of prisons isdifficult because they have“such widely diverse en¬vironments. from relaxingplaces to sinks of banish¬ment.” Morris sees it “asdifficult, therefore, to offergeneral principles for such adiverse situation.”Campus guard sues policeComplains of UC discriminationcontinued from page 1expressly provides that thecertificate of a specialpoliceman not employed by acommon carrier may berevoked withoutcause...Plaintiff alleges thatthis provision...deprived himof due process rightsguaranteed by the Four¬teenth Amendment ."The case was decided inMartin's favor with thejudge stating: “I can find norational basis for providingfor revocation without causeof the certificate of a specialpoliceman employed at afixed place while requiringcause for the revocation ofthe certificate of a specialpoliceman employed by acommon carrier. Thisdiscrimination againstCorrectionTwo a 1 dermanic can¬didates were incorrectlyidentified in a front pagephoto Tuesday Squire Lancewas incorrectly identified asSid Williams. We regret theerror.The story concerning theinauguration of Levi in aJustice Departmentceremony also lacked thelead paragraph. special policemen inplaintiff's class violates theequal protection clause ofthe Fourteenth Amend¬ment. The ordinance alsoviolates the due processclause of the FourteenthAmendment.”Following this decision inhis favor. Martin wasrecertified as a specialpoliceman by the policedepartment and was rehiredby the University on September 19. 1972.At the same time Martinsued the police department,he filed a discriminationcomplaint with the regionaloffice of HEW. In July, 1974HEW issued its report fin¬ding the University guilty ofdiscrimination in firingMartin despite the fact thatthe firing was in accord withthe municipal code.The HEW report quotesfrom a decision of the USdistrict court of centralCalifornia issued in a casesimilar to Martin’s. Thecourt declared, “any policythat disqualified prospectiveemployees because of theirhaving been arrested once,or more, discriminates infact, against Negro applicants. This discriminationexists even though thatpolicy is objectively andfairly applied as between applicants of various races."This report cites anotherCalifornia case (Gregory vsLitton), which held “thatbecause blacks experience adramatically higher arrestrate than whites, an em¬ployment policy whichserves to exclude applicantson the basis of an arrestrecord is is discriminatory."The HEW report concludes“the contractor (theUniversity) must reinstatecomplaintants (Martin) toeither the position of securityguard, or comparableposition, which must alsoinclude all promotionalopportunities; all com¬plainants must be com¬pensated for loss of payduring their periods ofunemployment. Finally,each complainant's seniorityand other employment rightsmust be fully restored by thecontractor.”Martin has been rehiredas a security guard. Thisaction was taken nearly twoyears before HEW issued itsreport. Martin has not beengiven his seniority rights orback pay for the fifteenmonths he was unemployedbecause the Universitycontends that it was merelyobeying the law in firingMartin after he lost policecertification. The guard claims that hecould have been recertifiedwith no trouble if theUniversity had helped him“All it takes is a recom¬mendation from theUniversity of Chicago." hesaid.Martin explained that toreceive certification, oneneeds a recommendationfrom a prospective employerand in his case University-officials said he could berehired if he was recertifiedbut refused to provide arecommendation.D.J.R. Bruckner, vicepresident for public affairs,denied that a recom¬mendation from theUniversity would have in¬sured Martin’s certificationBruckner said. “TheUniversity’s position is thathe (Martin) was terminatedby circumstances beyondour control. We’ve beencaught in the middle bet¬ween the Chicago policedepartment and HEW.”University Officials arecurrently negotiating withHEW to arrive at some kindof settlement in this case.“We re maintaining ourposition and HEW ismaintaining theirs,” saidBruckner. If an agreement isnot reached, HEW could turnthe fcase over to the JusticeDepartment for prosecution In a brief historical sketchof the birth and growth ofprisons, Morris credits theQuakers of Pennsylvaniawith having created the firsttrue prison. Prior to 1790serious offenders, who wouldmost likely be classified asfelons today, were not held inprisons but rather receivedsome alternate form ofpunishment.The Quakers maintainedthe erroneous notion that“there was a link betweentime and treatment," saysMorris. “They also,” hesaid, “believed that theycould use the prison to curethe criminal of crime andserve the community byreducing crime.”This has led. mentionedthe author, “to powerfulvoices in the US calling forthe abolition of prisons.”“They are urging amoratorium on the con¬struction of prisons" until amore viable solution isfound. Morris does notbelieve this is the answer Healso discredited threefrequently - mentionedalternatives which were: 1)declaring less behaviour tobe criminal; 2) the use ofsmaller community-orientedfacilities; and 3) to lock uponly those determined to bedangerous to societyMorris said that thenatural inclination in lockingup the dangerous was to“overpredict dangerousness substantially.” This was thepath of administrative safety“If in doubt keep him in.”Also by deciding lessbehavior to be criminal, suchas victimless crimes, Morrisfelt the reduction in prisonsentencing would beminimal because “thecriminals don’t go to prisonfor such crimes, even now."A very provocative pointbrought up by the authorconcerned the fradulentclaims of parole board of¬ficials on the capacity topreduct communitybehavior by the observationof prisoner behavior Morriscondemned them of“knowing it is a fraud thatthey can predict futureprisoner behavior and thatthe reality motives were thatthey just do not know whatto do with them.”There is also, he said, inthe minds of these officers“a sense of deserved punish¬ment which completelycorrupts the process of re-educative rehabilation.”His alternatives to thepresent systems includeremoving the benevolentsentimentality that peoplehold about prison reform,and insuring that prisonersknow what time they are tobe released and under whatkind of program release theywill participate in Morris isnot in favor of “morecaging" but rather moreprincipled alternatives to theprison system.Friday, February 14, 1975 - The Chicago Maroon—3LECTURE: Norval Morris speaks on crime at theWoodward Court lecture.Author Evelyn Reed discusses women's rolesAn enthusiastic crowd of 55gathered Monday night tohear long-time feminist andinternationally knownMarxist anthropologistEvelyn Reed speak on theevolution of women from aposition in the matriarchalclan to the rise of thepatriarchal family. Monday as part of a nationaltour to launch her latestwork. Woman's Evolution,which is the product of sometwenty years of research.Reed, the author of twelvebooks and pamphlets and amember of the SocialistWorkers Party, spoke Reed’s motive in speakingand writing, she said, was tosupport and stimulate thedevelopment of thetheoretical and criticalcapacity of women toovercome the male misin¬terpretations of human, andwomen's, history, and to learn about the present andfuture through an appraisalof the past. Reed noted thather work should be just thebeginning, and that the twocritical fields needed toachieve this are biology andanthropology.Her speech attacked thewritings of anthropologistsand male supremicists whoseek to justify the subor¬dination of women throughan anti-evolutionary and anti-historical analysis ofhuman society. This anti¬evolutionary approach,which reversed the originalconcepts of the pioneeranthropologists like Morganand Tyler, came intoprominence around 1910,primarily as a conservativereaction to the logic of thefounding concepts whichlead to the conclusion that ifsociety has not always beenwhat it is today, then it neednot stay the same in theCALENDARFriday February 14ON CAMPUS LABELLE: 8 00 p.m. Cahn Auditorium Emerson and Sheridan Evanston $4 00HIGH SIERRA: Innabrook and Lights by Blessed Realm 8 00 p n> Liberty Hall2440 N LincolnFREDDIE HUBBARD: and McCoy Tyner 8 00p m Arie CrownWRESTLING: vs Chicago State 4 00 p m BartlettCHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: 7 00 p m Ida Noyes HallFORMOSA CLUB: 7 00 p m Ida Noyes HallCREATIVE SABBATH: 7:30pm HillelFOLKDANCERS. 8 00 p m. Ida Noyes Hall.UC BALTIC CLUB: an information desk will be set up at 12:00 noon ReynoldsClubINDIAN FILMS: "Calcutta 71" and "Interview" 7:00 p m Breasted Hall.TRAVELOGUE: on South America 8 00 p m I HouseLECTURE: Rock Deformation, Some Information Squeezed out of Rock. 3 30p m Hinds AuditoriumFILMS: "West Side Story" at 7 00 p m "Cool Hand Luke" at 10:00 p m. CobbLECTURE: Johan Stenflo "Gamma Carboxyglutamate; A New Amino Acid andIts Role in Prothrombin Function" 12 30 p m. Cummings 101SG DANCE : just "One Step Beyond 8 :00 p m Ida Noyes SI 50WOMEN'S COFFEEHOUSE: 8 00 p m Blue GargoyleLECTURE Milla Ohel "The Continuing Endurance of the Uprooted Hero inModern Hebrew Literature " 8 30 p m Hillel.ARABIC CIRCLE: Valentine s Day special Ragouq Mustafa "Notes on Kitab alZahra and Courtly Love" 3 30 p m Pick 506 Sunday February 16ON CAMPUSALDERMANIC FORUM: 7 00 p m Blue GargoyleHILLEL: Brunch, "Lox and Bagels" 11 00 a m SI 50 and Israel Kaleidoscope2 00 p m 5715 WoodlawnSEMINAR: Bernard Brown on "Creative fidelity" 9:45a.m Rockefeller ChapelSERVICES: Charles Rooks "Paradox and Promise" 11:00 am. RockefellerChapelCONCERT: all Bach Concert 3 30 p m Rockefeller ChapelFOLKDANCERS: 8 00 p m Ida Noyes HallDOC: "Les Carabiniers" 7:15 and 9:30 p m Cobb SI.OFF-CAMPUSOFF CAMPUSTHEATRE: "The Crooked Path" and "Champion" 8 00 p m. The Little TheatreNortheastern Illinois U Bryn Mawr and St. Louis.CONCERT: Chicago Symphony Orchestra Andrew Davis conductor 8:15 p m.Orchestra HallMARIMBA ENSEMBLE: 3 15 p m. Lutkin Hall 700 University Place EvanstonEDDIE HARRIS And Terry Collier Amazmgrace Mam and Chicago EvanstonCOMEDY COLLEGE Kingston Mines 2354 N Lincoln PAIR BOND: a collection of plays by Robert Patrick including "CleaningHouse," "Still Love" and "Camera Obscura" a midwest premiere 8 00 p.m atthe Drama ShelterCROSSROADS: Bridge 3:00 p.m and Lecture/ discussion with Richard Shwederon "How Relevant is the Concept 'Personality'? " 7 30 p m Crossroads StudentCenterBGA: Bill Hood talks about the Better Government Association 1755 N NorthPark AveCONCERT: The Hyde Park Chamber Orchestra with Harold Klatz. conductor3:30p.m. at K.A.M Isaiah Israel Congregation 1110 E. Hyde Park. Free.Monday February 17Saturday February 15 ON-CAMPUSON-CAMPUSUC TRACK vs Circle 11 00 a m Field HouseMEN'S BASKETBALL: vs Roosevelt 2 00 p m Field HouseCEF: "Thieves Like Us" 7:15 and 9 30 p.m CobbSlFIRESIDE CONCERT: George and Gerri Armstrong 8:00p m B JCSA: Chinese Student Association 6 OOp m Ida Noyes HallINDIAN FILMS: "Padatik" and "Chorus" 7:00p m Oriental Inst S2CORKY SIEGEL: B 00 pm Blue Gargoyle $2OFF CAMPUS LECTURE: Amos Shapira "Civil Rights of Arab Citizens in Israel and theOccupied Territories" 12:30 p.m. Law School Court RoomUT WORKSHOP: "Trim, the Finishing Touch" 6 30 p m MandelMAR INAL SEN: will discuss his movies (he will be present at both showings)4 00 p m Foster Lounge of the South Asian Language and Civilization DepartmentUFO: "Women and Health Care" 8:00p m Blue GargoyleKARATE: 6 00 p m. Ida NoyesCHESS: 7 00 p m Ida Noyes.FOLKDANCERS: 8 00 p.m Ida NoyesRECYCLE: A meeting for all concerned 4 00 p m Reynolds ClubMEDIEVAL MUSIC: workshops at 10 00 a m. and 1 30 p.m. Lutheran School ofTheology Concert with the music of Henrich Isaac 8 00 p.m in the auditorium.ERITREAN NIGHT: dinner, film, speech, cultural show entertainment 7:00 p.mLutheran School of Theology S5 00LUNCH: SI 50 Crossroads Student CenterFILM: "Climate of Change" "South Africa's Floral Heritage" and "SouthAfrica's Animal Kingdom" 2 30 p.m Chicago Academy of Sciences 2001 N. Clark. OFF-CAMPUSRECITAL: Elizabeth Fischer and Laurence Davis 8:15 p m. Lutkin Hall 700University Place EvanstonSEX COMEDY: "Noon" 10;30 p.m. The Attic 3132 N. Broadway.THEATRE WORKSHOP: At the Odyssey Community Theater 2001 N Devon forinformation call 252 3521. future. This is precisely thepoint, Reed stated, forwomen were not a second-class sex in the past andshall not be in the future.The wealth of data thatexists, far from proving thatwomen have always beensubordinate to men, showsconclusively that inprimitive society womenwere held in the highestesteem because of their vitalsocial role, Reed declared.Women were the chiefinnovators of technologicaladvances, the majorproducers of agriculture andhandicrafts, the settlementmakers, organizers of sociallife, and very often the keypolitical leaders.Studies of tribal life in theAmericas, Africa, and thePacific demonstrate thatthese previous socialsystems revolved aroundwomen, who were theleading figures and the chiefarchitects of the risingproductivity of agricultureand labor that raised humanexistence from a barbaric toa civilized level.Like wise in the animalworld social organization isnot along the “Papa bear,Momma bear, and Babybear” model, but rather it isthe female who cares andprovides for the young, whilethe male is usually notallowed near the young untilthey are able to defendthemselves.The subjugation anddegredation of womensimply did not exist inprimitive times, in fact quitethe opposite was true, Reedexplained. The subor¬dination of women to menand male-oriented society isthe result and inevitable by¬product of class society andthe private property system.Not until capitalism andthe creation of the family(which did not existpreviously) were womensystematically suppressed,and their social roles andvalue ‘distortedneeds of class,owning society,being robbedeconomic independencecould women be forced intotheir present economic,to fit theproperty-Only byof their emotional, and socialdependence, and subjectedto the male orienteddefinitions of "femininity”and social usefulness orrather uselessness.As the victimization ofwomen, Reed stated, comesdirectly from capitalist classsociety, the liberation ofwomen will only be completein a new society, a socialistsociety where human needscome before privateproperty. The modernmainstream anthropologistswho attempt to justifycurrent cultural values andsocial roles are anti-historical and anti-revolutionary preciselybecause it is the history ofhumankind that proves thatthey are wrong, and theevolution of previoussocieties which points theway to a new future.Questioned about thefamily Reed noted that thepresent nuclear family is nolonger a producing unit, aswas the extended family, butstrictly a consuming unitwhich at this point is“blowing apart” at theseams. The family isessentially an economicinstitution whose mainvirtues, such as love, af¬fection, and sex, could becarried on just as wellwithout the family structureand restrictions.Concerning social life in asocialist society, Reed saidthat the specific forms couldnot be completely elaboratedin advance, and that theSoviet Union and the otherbureaucratized socialistcountries were not models ofsocialist life.Since in a socialist societythe material needs of allwould be met by the societyas a whole, personal inter¬relationships would nolonger be based on social oremotional dependence andpeople would have the firstreal opportunity to discoverwhat is best for them. Also ina socialist society womenwould be able to regain theirrightful place as full,complete, and leadingmembers of society, animpossibility undercapitalism, Reed noted.K.A.M. Isaiah Israel1100 Hy4t PwfclMSUNDAY MORNING LECTURE SERIESSpring Season l‘J75— N«» l^rturrrnor MCVH.II J K\N|»: imm ( «.J ..far1'r.^k., .4 ... A... latuat Jo.,.Il«« Ku..|4II 4tul ill* J.K m* fUltrl'a Mnrir.MMCI M ON \l III It \| \\H M.U TNIN n I MI l Mini V k\M|\ IIHI.OIam .. ... tl. III.Wj»J i.x -.irujitjMigI1*r La aim I L|ujIiI« of Ik- Vxr.Kaaqxmai «4 it* Vi lam •«» I»hIh nival High..I Mir kunitl l«f J I) IfMBi Vrthamitn ti.J•• l*K4i jnJ 4 iiupriM ,4 ih* Miurm VcigLih Orgjn«n.J HerCJMil* \..u MmhiM >•*«*- foi1*1 KIM - No I**r1urr pr* 1’KOt Hill II* <•. M.IBAI.H\ »4I .4 .ajf • Jlam Hn4 Alik* I. I>4. nugfa iNX ImI IIj|»|m ihm| to ihr Mm«I#hI XIo\«*iiwi»I ?*nli 99 I»K jO>M*ll II 'NX \K I NX Ol |l.riilin (onlrol ...ol NX orl.l l'o|H«UloII Mlltl J\lk Kit. lit. K A*r4 30E KM DK JOHN r. 1*4*1.Ikon SKIl1 11# \ j|.« .in MjIi umtiI on lit# Jcw«: Stf|» Forward'Mmr Old stuffa*2 NX for llo t.iwl of lif.mi nw in /ii mini \n CKO. t.fcIMt.k W.sTO'I.O^I !>.- I'iiI.Ih' ImI.i-.-4 inSKI FAPO T.', - V. Ix-rtMr.lit. '.Ml..I..*, ... >.»viH J.-.r. : Ifur Nnni,«lALL LECTURES BEGIN AT 10 30 A M ADMISSION FREE The Chicago MaroonTim Rudyeditor In chiefPaul Yovovich Steve Durbinbusiness manager news editorMike Rudy associate editor i Mario Crawford ScottMika Klingeotmith Ann Thome John Vailsports editor assistant famines* manager photo editorDove Axelrod contributing editor Tom McNomorostaffDavid Blum Chip ForresterMike Boionowski Peter Gollonis Mary Marfise lonothon RothsteinTom Bronson Kurt Hanson Poul Miller Elizabeth RussoPeter Cohn Clora Hemphill Jim Nochbor Mike SingerPeter Droper Mary Ann Hudson Tony Oaks Mark SpieglanJeanne Dufor* Kevin Kamraczewski Anne Riker Dean ValentineSuzanne Kleir Jan Rhodes Mary Keanephoto staffTony Barrett Linda Gould Jeff MuschlerEric Buether Charlie Horvey Poss Lyon Rosalie PoznachowskiGary Field John Lawler Susie Lyon David RieserChip Forrester Janice Lyon Eugene Michael4—The Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 14, 1975 The Chicago Maroon is published twice a weekduring the academic year. Advertising and sub¬scriptions are handled by the Business Manager(Paul Yovovich), 1212 E. 59th St„ Chicago, III. 60637..Phone 1312) 753-3266^I IThe Jeffrey BalletTHE CHICAGO MAROON’S WEEKLY MAGAZINE OF CRITICISM AND THE ARTS Blood on the Tracks—p. 3SPECIAL BOB DYLAN ISSUEThe BootlegsBy Gary Os'erbachThroughout Boh Dylan's career, friends,fans, and profiteers have recorded dozens ofhis performances, both public and private.Many studio out-lakes, some of which werenever re-cut and released, have also beenpreserved. From the talking blues and oldfolk ballads of 1961 to the height of hiselectric performances m 1965 and 66, andstraight through his 1974 tour with the Band,these recordings have, for belter or worse,appeared on various bootleg albums whichremain in circulation.The collection of Dylan bootlegs isassuredly a wasteful venture for those whonever cared for Dylan. But for those whohave admired lus work, tin* bootlegs servenot oniy as a chance to hear Dylan perforinsongs never before released, but also toround out the portrait of Dylan the artistfrom txiih a musical and historical per¬spective The release of John WesleyHarding with its quiet, acoustic reflection in1968 after twenty months of silence fromDylan signified as great a change as themove from folk to "folk rock" three yearsbefore The "basement tapes" done with theBand in 1967 capture Dylan in transitionmuch belter than any interview has, orcould The technical quality of these tapes,like many of the bootlegs, is understandablypoor, as it they were taped over the phone.And while I am an unabashed Dylan admirer. some ol the bootlegs are worthspending your money for, and some are not,unless you want to have every song Dylanhas ever sung, and every performance ofeach song, and you also have money to burn.M> aim is merely to tell interested fans ofDylan what is in circulation, and to give anidea of the relative quality of each album forthose who may consider buying some. Withthree exceptions (marked by asterisks), thealbums are definitely available in Chicago.For the date and place of some of the songs.I rely on Sandy Gant's "Discography ofUnreleased Recordings." c!972 from BobDylan by Anthony Scaduto (Signet 1973).TALKING BEAR MOUNTAIN PICNICMASSACRE BLUESThis is a collection ol fourteen talkingblues and folk songs, only five of which werewritten by Dylan. Recorded from 1961 to1963. most of the songs were part of Insstandard repertoire when performingaround Greenwich Village in 1961 and 62There are three Dylan songs worth hearingon the album "Talking Bear MountainPicnic Massacre Bluer" is a humorousaccount ol an ill-lated outing undermined bycounterfeiters printing bogus tickets,resulting in a day ol panic instead of pic¬nicking. with Dy Ian at Ins talking-blues best."The Death of Emmett Till" is one ofDylan's earliest stabs at social injustice, ashe rages against bigotry in the South. Thesong exhibits neither the subtlety norimagery of Ins later accounts of individualsup against a brutal and deaf society, asevidenced in the final verse:This song is just a reminder toremind your fellow manThat this hind of thing still livestoday in that ghost-robed Ku KluxClan.But if all of us folk that thinks alike,if we gave all we could give.We could make this great land ofours a greater place to live.Finally, a forty-second cut entitled"Talking Hava Nagilah Blues" is a ratheramazing self-parody, as Dylan shouts eachsyllable of "hava-nagilah" and collapsesinto a yodel, after first acknowledging thatit was "a foreign song I learned in Utah.” The album will appeal to those who neverforgave Dylan for growing out of the old folksongs (don’t worry — he doesn’t get any(continued on page 4) Living The BluesBy Ted Du Port!It started innocently enough. There I was,fifteen months ago, trying to get into thegood graces of a woman. Just when I was about to send in my $7.95 for How to Pick UpGirls, fate intervened. "Ted, did you knowMona likes Dylan7" came crackling throughthe Woodward Court grapevine. Wait aminute! My only impression of that BobDylan wouldn't earn him anything above 31/ 2 on a 10 point scale of interest. Mymodest record collection at that time was afaintly schizoid mix of Cat Stevens, Beatlesgreatest hits, Nilsson, and a lumpy assortmentof movie soundtracks. I did rememberonce putting on "Blowin' in the Wind" frommy sister Suzanne's Bob Dylan's GreatestHits and then disgustedly turning it offbecause if didn't sound at all like the Peter,Paul and Mary version. Thrown over all thismixed up confusion was a dark tarpaulin ofguilt for not trying to learn about classicalmusic.I wasn't helping my own case very much.While in Mona's room, itself a maiorstrategic victory, I committed a faux pas bylaughing when Dylan started singing "MrTambourine Man." Instead of the nicesmooth Byrds version came a raspy voicethat sounded more like the nocturnalsquealing of a Greenwood radiator thananything else. And I was displayingdismaying gaps of knowledge for the Dylanexpert I had led her to believe I was, noteven knowing the title of Dylan's latestalbum. Things definitely weren't movingfast enough. Drastic action was necessary.I phoned Suzanne and, under threat ofphysical force, arranged to get her Dylanalbums so I could make it look like I'd hadthem all along On the train back to HydePark I looked over the three albums: TheFreewheelin' Bob Dylan, Bob Dylan'sGreatest Hits and John Wesley HardingThe ploy worked well enough when Monastrummed through my albums about a weeklater and asked to borrow John WesleyHarding. "Go ahead. By the way, that's myfavorite Dylan album," I nonchalantly lied,for in fact I'd never listened to any of therecords Oh, what a tangled web we weave...But things weren't quite what they seemedMy cute little game was in fact a culturaltime bomb about to explode in my grinningface.The first time I heard any of the GreatestHits album was on a king hell Sony systemthat brought out every harmonica riff andorgan note. It was the first time I'd everheard "Just Like a Woman" and themagnificent "Positively 4th Street," buteach of them made its impact immediatelyinstead of after the three or four listenings itusually takes me to respond to a new song"Positively 4th Street" punched me in themouth threw me down the stairs and pickedme up again; all I could do was dust myselfoff and timorously push the repeat switch.The rest of the album, attentively listenedto, proved to be no less riveting Playing theacoustic tracks on the first side made methink of the deprecating attitude manypeople, once including myself, have towardDylan's uncultivated voice, leading them todismiss the whole body of his work In lightot what the man has to say, that's likecriticizing the sartorial idiosyrcracies ofsomeone at the door warning that the houseis on fire. In any case, the transition fromthe plaintive strains of "It Ain't Me, Babe"to the elemental first drumbeat of "Like aRolling Stone" didn't leave me much roomfor argument.Now I was the one to go around borrowingrecords. Someone had a double disc setcalled Bob Dylan'sGreatest Hits, Volume II,and this album fleshed Dylan out for me bygiving a more comprehensive framework ofhis Sixties odyssey than did the ten songs ot(continued on page 2)Dylan in Copenhagen in 1966. Photo by Urban Gwerder All photos used are bom BobDylan/ The Band. Tour 1974, copyright 1973 by Stephen Pickering and Echo, Echo Limit' •:Friday. February U. 1975 - Tha Chicogo MoroonTheGreyCityJournal RCCORD9(continued from page 1)the original greatest hits. Volume II alsoexhibited a phenomenon that will probablyaffect people who are, as I was, unfamiliarwith most of Dylan's work:, finding out thatcertain familiar songs are Dylan songs. Inmy case these were "All I Really Want too Do" and "Stuck Inside of Mobile with theMemphis Blues Again," with its famouswail, "Awww, maamaa, can this reeeally beth'end..." In some ways, Volume II is betterthan the first greatest hits: the songs flowinto one another naturally, and the result isa carefully variegated but competingcollection, probably resulting from the factthat Dylan produced the album right downto the Bangla Desh concert cover photos.Trivia hint: keep your Volume II in a boxwith other records and Dylan will, appropriately enough, develop a halo on theback cover.Having now heard tantalizing songs frommost phases of Dylan's career, the rush wason to check out the original albums. What Ireally gave thanks tor during Thanksgiving'73 was that Hegewisch Discount Recordshad Highway 61 Revisited and NashvilleSkyline in stock I must confess that I didn'tthink Highway 61 as a whole could stand upto "Like a Robing Stone," but I wasn'tprepared for "Desolation Row ' or "Balladof a Thin Man," a pulsating, disorientingrock poem unlike almost anything you'relikely to hear Nashville Skyline is about asdifferent as can be from Highway 61, ant’though the album isn't really up to Highway61 standards, it's great listening ar.d lots offun. New listeners would be well advised toskip the Johnny Cash liner notes and gostraight to the music.I now had five Dylan albums and thesingle "Knockin' on Heaven's Door,"currently making it big on the Top FortySome people around me started picking upinterest in Dylan and I likewise met otherswho'd been into Dylan for many years. A new album, Dylan, was released and wasdeservedly a flop, being merely out takesfrom Self Portrait which CBS had issued asa reprisal against Bob, who, it was rumored,was bolting the Columbia stable and starting his own label. But there was other talkof another new album, already recorded,which was to be Dylan's first "real" album in three and a half years.By this time I was in well over my head.Over the next few months I picked upBringing It All Back Home and Another Sideof Bob Dylan. The ides of March found mesuddenly with a lot of time on my hands, so Inot only invested in the new Planet Wavesand the classic Blonde on Blonde butplunged with renewed vigor into TheFreewheelin' Bob Dylan and John WesleyHarding. Being a Dylan junkie is sometimesnot a very pretty thing. For me it meantallocating a minimum of thirty to sixtyminutes daily to spinning sides. I wouldconstantly search the media for any scantmention of those five magic letters,especially Time's People section (though, ifthe truth be known, Roiling Stone's RandomNotes is much more fertile hunting ground).This state of affairs has continued prettymuch unaltered to the present day, withperhaps a small diminution of evangelicalfervor on my part. Contemporary Dylanaction includes, for the record, the newalbum Blood on the Tracks, which mycarefully reasoned analysis places as Bob'sbest disc since 1968's John Wesley Harding,and discovery of the best book on Dylanyou'll find, Song and Dance Man: The Art ofBob Dylan, 1972, by Michael Gray. Thebiggest windfall for the tightly knit HydePark Dylan cadre has been the sudden,massive infusion of Dylan bootlegs, which isdealt with in another article and whichshould keep all of us going for at leastseveral months. Need I add, as a final note,that we're all breathlessly waiting for CEFto show some class by scheduling Don't Dylan at the Isle of Wight in 1969Look Back And that's basically wherematters standPart IIPiling out ot the car, we run under theChicago Stadium marquee, which reads"BOB DYLAN & THE BAND. SOLD OUT" and into the main lobby. Why here's TV?'sJohn Calloway, decked out in a Sanforizedtrenchcoat, earnestly ferreting out the whysand wherefores of this teen scene Don'tforget the tribal aspects, John. "And why(continued on page 3)Dylan"The Passion of Christand Six Momentsin Western Literature"Lenten Vespers, Wednesdays, 7:30 p.m.Augustana Lutheran Church of Hyde Park5500 S. Wood lawn AvenueFebruary 19, Good Friday, 16 13 Riding Westward By John Donne.Mr. Anthony Yu, the Divinity SchoolFebruary 26. Parker's Back, by Flannery O Connor. Mr. PrestonBrowning, the Department of English, the University of Illinois atChicago Circle.March 5. Selections from Herman Melville. Mr. Merlin Bowen, theDepartment of English, the University of Chicago.March 12. Selections from T.S. Eliot. Mr. Nathan Scott, the DivinitySchool.March 19 Two Sonnets of Gerard Manley Hopkins. Mr. Joseph Siftler,Interim Pastor, Augustana Church.4March 27. Maundy Thursday. The Eucharist and Sermon, 7:30 p.m. TheHymn by Martin Luther. Christ lag in Todesbanden. Mr. Joseph Siftler,Preacher. Sunday • February 16, 1975 • 3:30 P.MROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL59TH STRf f T AND W0ODLAWN AVf NUE •CHICAGORICHARD VIKSTROMconductingTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIR ANDORCHESTRAJ. S. BACHMAGNIFICATCANTATA 4Christ in 1 odcsbandcn”THIRD SUITE IND MAJORFOR ORCHESTRATICKETS Reserved $7 00 Chance! Seating $6 50General Admission $6 00 Students $2 50Senior Citizens $2 50Group rates available upon request f or information call 753-3381 or753*3389ON SAL E Cooley's Corner, 5211 Harper CourtReynolds Club Desk, 57th Street and UniversityThe Brxik Nook, 15 38 E 55th StreetMAILORDERS Rockefeller Memorial Chapel59th Street and Woodlawn AvenueChicago 00637Please make checks payable to The University of Chicago and enclosestamped, toll addressed envelope6—The Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 14, 1975ReCORDSi(continued from page 2)are you here?" he asks a seventeen yearold, who immediately plunges into an updated Dylan sell out rap that' has Bobcharging high ticket prices so he can underwrite six Phantoms for Israel. Right.Now back to Walter for his Perspective...We're let into the auditorium, get to ourassigned seats and hunker down for theobligatory forty minute wait. This is notonly the first night of the first city of the firstBob Dylan concert tour in eight years, it'smy first rock concert, and nobody knowswhat the evening holds in store. The conventional wisdom, though, is that the Bandplays for an hour, intermission, and thenDylan and the Band for another hour. Notthe best o' all possible worlds, but complaints are decidedly minimal. The stageitself holds boundless fascination: in addition to the array of instruments and 1200volt refrigerator si/ed Fender amps, thereare several rocking chairs, a beat up couch,a welcome mat and a bunk bed. Looks likeyou can have your cake and eat it, too.The house lights dim (glorious cliche,that) and the volume of the crowd rumblinggets turned way up. A bank of red, white andyellow spots focuses brilliantly on the stage.The audience suddenly screams andeveryone is standing because Bob Dylanfairly runs up onto the stage followed by thefive members of the Band. Damn hell Rightnow it's hard to focus on Dylan or anythingelse. After some very brief tuning they jumpright into a piercingly loud upbeat "HeroBlues," an old Dylan song unfamiliar tomost fans because the only recorded versionof it is on a bootleg. The crowd is somewhatsettled after the first song, and Bob gets offa rock and roll "Lay, Lady, Lay." We'rebehind and above the stage and Dylan willperiodically turn around and play to theaudience behind him. Yep, it's the same oldDylan, skinny and a bit taller than I expected. The same frizzed hair, with thatjust washed look and cut on the short side.His face is a cross between the Bringing ItAll Back Home and Blonde on Blondelooks—definitely not the NashvilleSkyline—New Morning family man Bobwho's edging toward chubbiness fromeating too much country pie.Dylan's moving now from song to song,waiting only a few seconds for the applauseto die down before jumping into the nextone The audience, for its part, is suspendingdisbelief and quiets down whenever thetentative chords of a new number waft outacross the stadium. It's not easy to knowhow to act when you're being bombardedwith "All Along the Watchtower," "It Ain'tMe, Babe," and "Leopard Skin PillboxHat," all of which are interspersed withgood Band tunes, not to mention never Dylan's Concertbefore heard songs from the unreleased newalbum, tentatively titled "Love Songs." Atone point the Band tunes down and Dylanwarns us, "Don't go away." Intermission.When the lights go down again, anotherbroad whelp of approval issues as Dylancomes out alone with his acoustic guitar andharmonica holder in place. Surprising usagain, he's momentarily drowned out aftersinging, "Come gather 'round people,wherever you roam...," which must be thefirst concert performance of "The TimesThey Are A Changin'" in roughly a decadeHis voice is easier to hear than in theelectric numbers, and it sounds closest tothe rich, bass voice of Nashville Skyline. It'sincongruous, in fact, to hear him do songs like"The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll" inhis present natural voice. He's not concentrating on any one type of song, though, moving from "It's Alright, Ma (I'm OnlyBleeding}" to "Song for Woody," off of hisvery first album Dylan automatically getsan ovation when he begins blowing someharmonica riffs. When he leaves the stage,people in the audience spontaneously lightmatches and keep up a deafening minutelong ovation, the only disadvantage beingthat you can't hold a flame and applaud at♦he same time.The Band returns now, sans Dylan, andlays down a couple of songs. A lot of peopleare still coming down from Dylan, though,and the Band's first few numbers don't getoverwhelming response. This sceneabruptly changes when Dylan bounds backon stage They do two more songs and theend of the concert's in sightDylan and the Band take an unusuallylong time tuning up for the next song At last a tentative rhythm is found and the drumsbegin pounding ever louder; when GarthHudson's organ intro comes through, it'sfinally clear that this is the one most of ushave been waiting for. They're playing itway, way too slow but that's fine with me.Watch out mama, here comes the first line:"Once upon a time YA dressed so fine..."Dylan's temporarily drowned out by a lot ofpeople who almost just can't take this one.The Band is a tightly coiled steel snakewhich accents the song's underlying tensionwith machine gun bursts of drumbeats. AndDylan's voice above the music, uniting it, itsreasons for existence This is Dylan at hisbest, singing the best song he's ever writtenAnd at the end of each verse, when he takesoff, goes over the brink, I and about fivethousand other people can't resist joining inwith him How does it feel?How does it feel?To be on your ownWith no direction homeLike a complete unknownLike a rolling stone.By Gary Os'erbachNo, Bob Dylan has not come out withanother Highway 61 Revisited or Blonde onBlonde. He never will. And if you are stillwaiting for Dylan to recapture the glory ofpast albums, find something better to do.You see, Dylan may look back, but he willnever go back. He’s grown. On his newalbum. Blood On the Tracks, Dylan doeslook back at the separations, the lost loves,all of the hurts - and tries to make sense of itall. Fortunately, he has no easy answers, sowe join him on his explorations. Whetherevery line of every song isautobiographicals is less important than theconvincing way in which he conjures up themood and drives home the idea that eachsong is part of him. Dylan sings of wounds,suffering, and salvation with news, renewedfeeling and power.Several of the ten songs are straight¬forward in their sorrow, as he longs for thedeparted lover. And while these effortscome off as honest and at times moving, thereal power of the album lies in the talesDylan spins of individuals in action.‘Tangled Up In Blue," probably the best cuton the album, tells of involvements andseparations from the Great North Woods toNew Orleans, powerfully describing bothfalling in love and the search to regain itafter falling out. Dylan’s voice soundsamazingly natural, as it does on most of the album. "Simple Twist of Fate" is a subtlestory of a man unable to love because offorces beyond his control, and is effectiveboth in images and action ‘‘Idiot Wind. ’while lacking the intense searching of"Tangled Up In Blue," does not lack personal punch. It is wide-ranging in its at-tacks-bitter attacks which you really do notexpect to find here, especially after the quietlove song “You’re a Big Girl Now.” Suddenly Dylan is whining:Someone's got it in for me/ they'replanting stories in the press/Whoever it is / wish they'd cut it outquick/ but when they will I can onlyguess.... ("Idiot Wind )From there, Dylan spends seven minutesbeing fed up with being misunderstood, notonly by the public, but by a particularperson It sounds like a real catharsis forDylan, as he rips off the words in his mostvengeful manner, finally concluding that hetoo is an idiot.The longest song on the album (8:50) is“Lily, Rosemary, and the Jack of Hearts,” afantastic story of human relationships,which in its setting and images defies totalcomprehension, even after several at¬tempts. You end up scratching your head,because you know something is happeninghere, but you don’t know what it is. Lastly, "Shelter from the Storm” is a rejoicing forsalvation; beautiful, and not prosaic likesimilar attempts on Planet Waves. Dylanwas saved from destruction; now the “one-eyed undertaker blows a futile horn "The accompaniment ranges from com¬petent to superb, and always takes a backseat to Dylan’s vocals Five of the cutsfeature Eric Weissberg and Deliverance,bass, and organ, while five were re-done inMinnesota with local musicians (includingDavid Zimmerman, Bob's brother). All inall. Blood On the Tracks is Dylan's beststudio effort since John Wesley Harding,released seven years ago At 33, Dylanunderstands more about his relationshipswith people than ever before. And he bringsthat understanding into his search for moreanswers. He emphasizes not his happiness,but the pain in attaining it. After lamentinghis losses, he concludes:But me I’m still on the road, headin'for another joint/ we always did feelthe same/ we just saw it from adifferent point of view/ tangled up inblue("Tangled Up in Blue”)Dylan has put his self out for public in¬spection; put his blood on the tracks. Theresult is a personal album which, on thewhole, is both entertaining and full ofmeaning.FIRESIDECONCERTSot.. Feb. 15George & Gerri Armstrong.Traditional Folk Music. JudsonLounge. 1009 E. 60th St. 8 p.m. FREE * AM -8 PM 7Doy»AW»»kHYDE PARK PIPE AND TOBACCO SHOP.1552 E. 53rd - under 1C tracksAll students get 10% offask for "Big Jim''Pip**Pip* Tobacco* Imported Ogarett**Cigar* TAI-SAM-M*CHINESE AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCAKTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPfN DAILY11 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS1 2 TO 8:30 P.M.Ordar* to taka out1318 lait 63rd MU 8-1062Special Ualudm't Day VanceJIMMY REED JR. &ONE STEP BEYOND(Played at John Brimm concert last quarter)February 14 8 p.m. $1.50Ida Noyes HallTickets available at Mandel Hall & at the door. University of Chicago Law Students AssociationAnnounces a Noon Hour Lecture byProfessor Amos ShapiraPROFESSOR OF LAW HEBREW UNIVERSITY JERUSALEMVISITING PROFESSOR YALE UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL“Civil Rights of Arab Citizens in Israeland the Occupied Territories”MONDAY. FEBRUARY 17 AT 12:30 P.M.LAW SCHOOL COURT ROOM HUE. 60th CJFriday, February 14. 1975 - The Chicago Maroon—7 TheGreyCityJournal4-TheGreyCityJournal RECORDSDylan Bootlegs(continued from page 1)money from these bootlegs), and also toextreme Dylanophiles.BLIND BOY GRUNT: THE KINDESTCUT*If you think you would enjoy Talking BearMountain, then add this one to yourcollection. Most of the material was taped inMinneapolis in 1961, and it sounds like it. Itis mostly Dylan’s interpretation of folk-tunes and four Woody Guthrie VD songs.Again, young Dylan begins to attack societytor punishing the outcasts which it produces,in adolescent-sounding words. “The Balladof Donald White" concludes with the obviousmoralConcerning all the boys that comeDown a road like me.Are they enemies or victimsOf your society?Fourteen of the sixteen cuts appear onother bootlegs. The other two (“Only aHobo/ Talkin’ Devil" and “John Brown")were written and recorded by Dylan in 1962and released on Broadside Ballads in 1963under the pseudonym “Blind Boy Grunt,”thus the album’s title. woman (the latter in “Denise, Denise,” anout-take from Another Side of Bob Dylan).The 1961 material which appears on TheVillager also appears here, but the morememorable cuts are the three later ones.“Number One" is an instrumental recordedwith The Band in 1965, and is unmistakablyin the “Positively Fourth Street" mold.Dylan also recorded two songs made famousby Johnny Cash, “Folsom Prison Blues”and “King of Fire" while in the Nashvillestudios in 1969, and they turn up here, withDylan's voice at its country best in these tworollicking efforts. The sound on the album isp<xjr, but the addl'd attraction of the threelater cuts makes this album a good buy ifyou want to get some old Dylan, but not toomuch.THE VILLAGER*This is a double album, and again it iscompletely early Dylan, 1961-63. Onecomplete record is Dylan live at theGaslight in 1962, singing “Talking BearMountain...," “Song to Woody," and severalforgettable interpretations of older folkmaterial. Record two is mostly from 1961,and like the first record, the sound is fairlyabominable. And much of the second record appears on another better and cheapersingle album, Let Me Die in My Footsteps.So if you are thinking of buying TheVillager, don't.FRIENDS OF CHILEFriends of Chile, a set of Dylan concertperformances from 1962, 1965, and 1974, isfrom a historical perspective priceless, andfrom a technical perspective nearly wor¬thless. Dylan's Carnegie Hall performanceof September, 1962 is captured in four songs,and is highlighted by the cutting humor of“Talking John Birch Paranoid Blues," inwhich a satiric Dylan searches for Com¬munists in his toilet, his TV set, and his ownhead. Hrs popularity is evident as the crowdhangs on each word, bursting out in laughteras Dylan shoots off his irony and topicalhumor. The Forest Hills concert of 1965 isfeatured with one song, “I Don’t BelieveYou," from Another Side of Bob Dylan. Oneof Dylan’s first live performances with anelectric back-up, at which the crowdfrequently booed, “I Don’t Believe You"comes off as a mocking put-dow n of hisalleged fans, although the sound on therecording is frankly pitiful. Finally, oneentire side is devoted to the “Friends ofChile” gathering of May 1974, at whichDylan appeared. He sings “North CountryBlues" from Times They Are a-Changin'and finishes with “Blowin’ in the Wind,"accompanied by Pete Seeger, Phil Ochs, Melanie, and Arlo Guthrie. It’s not often youhear these five folkies together, and youbarely do here. They sound drunk, or justold, although the crowd is understandably inparadise. As a whole, the album can be*viewed more as a documentation of thechange in Dylan’s audience over twelveyears than as a collection of greatest hits.And the former you could just as well reada bout-for free.VISIONS OF JOHANNA“Visions of Johanna" is an appropriatetitle only for side two, five cuts fromDecember, 1965 with Dylan and the Band inthe studio. Side One is comprised of variousout-takes, concerts, and demo tapes, from1962-63. These previously unreleased songsare more interesting historically than forintrinsic musical worth. A catchy, bluesyDylan tune entitled “If I Could Do It AllOver, I’d Do It All Over You" is irresistable,but the others are not. Side two though isvintage Dylan of the Highway 61 Blonde onBlonde period. “I Wanna Be Your Lover" isa fast-paced rocker exploding withDylanesque images-colliding walls, bulletsin eye sockets-and personages, such as theundertaker, the judge, and a "dignifiedRasputin". “Can You Please Crawl OutYour Window", the flop follow-up single to"Positively Fourth Street" is simplydynamite. Between Dylan’s bittersweet(continued on page 5)LET ME DIE IN MY FOOTSTEPSThe title song was recorded in 1962, and isan early Dylan plea against war and all itshorrors. The other Dylan compositions,from the same period, include the familiarthemes of travelling, rambling on the road,the fear of war. and the ambivalence of a£************************** GOLD CITY INN i**********#************* given * * * *by the MaroonNew Hours: Open DailyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9:00 p.m.A Gold Mine Of Good Food"Student Discount:1 0% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559(near Harper Court)Eat more for less. ***********■X***************(Try our convenient take-out orders.************************ IfKIMBARKLIQUORS•WINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINESTIMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to youlTHE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC.12141.53rd St.53-Kimbark Plaza HY-3-3355 ^jgjiOsefe ^aOsidbgoope1SUndLouu ^dWxJOAM \Q> oA» 3l'.OOpm.' 1 ^ oooodlouuoTVGymoj ^ onrutffc jj&AOfl£c sJhQajc^uLyivj ^jyvdLOut a&out pno^cxnrwo egQJwdL "VaOLAi^ jl/yv. juiAcxgCFOR ALL STUDENTS& FACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification cardAs Students or Faculty Members ofthe University of Chicago you are en¬titled to special money savingdiscount prices on all materials usedon Volkswagen Service Work, allVolkswagen Parts, Accessories andany new or used Volkswagen you buyfrom Volkswagen South Shore.AuthorisedVolkswagen^ Dealer SOUTH SHORE7234 S. Stony IslandOp«w Daily to 9 P MOpwn Saturday Sol«*-9 A.M.-5 P.M.Port*-9 A M -i 2 Noon^^^Phone 288 dve we&kenp Otar;8—The Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 14, 1975RECORD*Dylan's Unknown LPs(continued from page 4)pleas to a woman, and Robbie Robertson’srecognizable but brief guitar licks,#thelyrics, musicianship, and overall effect grabyou and hold you.After a rather tired “From a Buick 6” re¬take. a fresh “Visions of Johanna" recap¬tures Dylan's vision of this period. Like allof the other songs on side two, the quality ofthe studio recording is good, and for aIxiotleg album superb. The fifth and lastsong on this side, “She’s Your Lover Now”is another winner, and stacks up well evenagainst the best songs on Blonde on Blonde.Continuing the “Like a Rolling Stone" and"Positively Fourth Street" tradition in itsrejection of and lecturing to former friendsand lovers, it also has the more mysticalvisions of various Blonde on Blonde songs. Ifit is true, as Dylan claims in the song, that“Pain sure brings out the best in people,"then Dylan was almost mortally wounded.With the same voice inflections as “Sooneror Later One of Us Must Know," this songhas it all. The passable quality of therecording on side one combined with the rawpower of side two make Visions of Johannaone of the best of the bootlegs, and an albumworthy of adding to your collection.HELP'The same “She's Your Lover Now” alsoappears on this album, the title of which istaken from a raspy recording of Dylan’sinterpretation of the Beatles' song of thesame name. Earlier Dylan is wellrepresented here in two cuts from the 1963Newport Folk Festival, perhaps Dylan’smost triumphal performance. Joined byPete Seeger on “Ye Playboys andPlaygirls" and by Joan Baez on “With Codon Our Side.’’ Dylan's role in the protestmovement of the early sixties can be sensedboth In his involvement in the songs and thecrowd's enthusiastic response.An echo-ridden “Love Minus Zero/ NoLimit-’ from Bangla Desli is disappointing,but “Sitting on a Barbed Wire Fence" (listedas “Killing Me Alive”), a funky good-times song with a compelling organ andelectric accompaniment, makes up for it.One added tidbit on the album is the in¬troduction given him in a coffee house inNew York in 1961 as “a fellow who performsin various coffee-houses, he plays theharmonica, he plays a lot of songs by WoodyGuthrie, he plays a lot of his own material,he comes from Gallup, New Mexico.. .BobbyDylan!” The made-up legend of Dylan theroaming orphan had already taken hold.This coffee-house segment is purely ofhistorical interest, and it is doubtful that youwill ever hear Dylan frolicking with JackElliott like this again: “You said you’d askme/ you said you’d ask me/ to the seniorprom. Found out I had acne/ now you won'task me/ to the senior prom," amidst doo-wah’s and yelping. The various rare bits andpieces form a disconnected but amusingalbum of some historical import.ZIMMERMAN: LOOKING BACKHere is a classic album of Dylan in concert in the sixties, a double-record set withno disappointments. There are seven songsfrom his successful Town Hall concert ofApril 1963, when “Blowin’ in the Wind"already was a smash hit, and Freewheelin’was about to be released. Dylan was ap¬proaching the pinnacle of folk stardom Thesound quality is excellent, so grx>d that onecut, "Tomorrow Is a Long Time." wasplaced on Greatest Hits Vo/. II. There aresocial commentaries on the inhumanity ofreform schools ( “Walls of Red Wing"), andon boxing and the lack of moral justificationfor it ("Who Killed Davey Moore9"). Thereis a lighter touch on "Bob Dylan’s NewOrleans Rag" and “Ramblin’ Round". Anacoustic side from Dublin or Bristol, May1966. follows, with a moving performance of“Visions of Johanna,” “4th Time Around.” “Just Like a Woman” and “DesolationRow.” But even these vivid glimpses ofDylan pale before the eight songs from theAlbert Hall concert of May, 1966 with theBand. All of the songs were done withelectric back-up, even the ones from hisearlier albums, Bob Dylan. The Times TheyAre a-Changin’, and Another Side...,precipitating a confrontation between Dylanand the social critic-folk singer gone mystic-rock and roller and the fans who refused toaccept that change.Amidst heckling and disruptive hand-clapping (not to be confused with applause),Dylan and the Band grind out one rockerafter another, with Dylan’s voice at its mostbizarre, mystical, drug-induced peak “JustLike Tom Thumb’s Blues” and “Baby LetMe Follow You Down" are devestating, and“I^eopard-Skin Pill Box Hat" nearly ex¬plodes with electrical energy But it is thefinal confrontation between Dylan and theaudience which makes the concert a near¬legend.After “Ballad of a Thin Man" the hecklingcontinues, climaxed by a shout of “Judas!"to the freak on stage. Dylan, warming up hiselectric guitar, sneers back “I don’t believeyou.” The bass begins, Dylan drawls,“You’re a Liar!," the volume rises. Dylanshouts, away from the microphone, “...afucking Liar!,” as the drums, organ, andguitars burst into “Like a Rolling Stone," aseven-minute version which is probably thebest recording of this Dylan classic inexistence. Whatever you may look for inDylan bootlegs is here on this album;powerful music, excellent sound, and asense of history w hich has not dimmed overthe past nine years.ISLE OF WIGHT*Isle of Wight contains fourteen of theseventeen songs Dylan performed at the Isle of Wight Festival in August of 1969 Thesound is extremely tinny, and Dylan’scountry voice at times is simply out of placewith the Band’s backup “1 Threw It AllAway" and “It Ain’t Me Babe,'' both doneslowly and quietly, come off well in spite ofthe quality of the recording, and make foreasy listening But otherwise the album haslittle to offer outside of serving as a recordof Dylan’s return to live concerts and toEngland after a three-year absence Forextreme Dylanophiles./untitled)Of the fourteen songs on this bootleg, mostappear on other bootlegs, including “HardTimes in New York Town,” chroniclingDylan’s first impressions of New York, andalso numerous cuts from Minneapolis, 1961The remaining cuts are “All Right Mama."an out-take from Another Side. “Percy’sSong" (listed as “The Rain and the Wind”),a soft, effective tale of a friend whose lifewas ruined by chance and by society’s rules,and “Down in the Flood," a cut from the“Basement Tapes” recorded with the Bandduring Dylan’s layoff in 1967 This particular selection was re-done and releasedon Greatest Hits Vol 11. and sounds muchbetter on that album The over-all technicalquality of the album is p<x>r, except for somerecordings from 1965, all of which appear onother, better bootlegsGREAT WHITE WONDERThis double record is the first, mostpublicized, and widely circulated bootleg.Twelve of the twenty three cuts are 1961efforts-older folk tunes interspersed withDylan talking to friends and interviewers(including his bragging about his likeness ina photo to Marlon Brando and James Dean).As I can only listen to a limited quantity of1961 Dylan performances in one sitting,much of the album goes unlistened to Acouple of the songs appear on other bootlegs,(continued on page 8)MODELOCAMERA1342 E. 55th St. - 493-6700"25 Years in Hyde Park"SOUND MOVIESPECTACULAR!Come in and__let us show mdtTSUI**you how easysound moviesreally are!S3 Super 8 Sound Movie CameraAmong its many features:• Chinon Reflex Zoom lensf/1.7 f-7.5-60 mm• Thru the Lens Reflex Viewing• Automatic ASA speed range25-160|t Variable speed power zoomwith manual control• Automatic thru-the-lensCDS exposure controlwith manual override Brent House Ecumenical Center5540 WoodlawnD. 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Swivels, as well as Arm ChairsTables-5 feet, 6 feet, 7 feet"cash and carry"C**d*LX IPMENT&UPPLY CO8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:00RE 4-2111 u»Friday, February 14, 1975 - The Chicago Maroon 9 TheGreyCityJournalTheoreyCityJournal THGdTRGTHE BEARDBy Dean ValentineAdmitting that I don't understand MichaelMcClure's The Beard may be aninsignificant step for a man, but it's a hugeleap for a drama critic. Cases of extremecritical confusion lead either to castigation| of the author for "obscurity" or to■° wholehearted bravos for "insight" and"profundity." Nothing would make behappier than believing Michael McClure asignorant as I am; nobody, after all, likes torun around advertising his stupidity. Alas!I'm afraid the fault lies with me, not withhim. Doubtlessly the play concerns thenature of sexuality, the nature of seduction,and the nature of attraction. Any placewhose characters were Billy the Kid andJean Harlow would. What the play saysabout these provocative themes is, however,beyond me. So, if you will, take this reviewwith a grain of salt, ashot of tequila, and gosee the play yourself.Billy the Kid and Jean Harlow, caught in ablue velvet eternity," have transcendedtime, but not sex. Like two wary animals,they circle each other, parry, claw, andfeint, until finally the thin line betweendisgust and desire is erased and the curtainfalls, the Kid and Harlow furiously engagedin a bit of cunnilingus. Which reminds me ofa favorite tune:She wore blue velvet,Bluer than velvet were her eyes,Softer than velvet was the night...Conversations in The Beard do not occur onsuch an ethereal level. Most of the dialoguecan be overheard in any of a thousand truckstops in the U.S.THE KID YOU'RE A BAG OF MEAT! Awhile sack of soft skin and fat held in shapeby a lot of bones!HARLWO: So?THE KID I think your hair's blond!HARLOW Really blond? THE KID: Yes!HARLOW: Your're a sack ot shit!This kind of obscene language led toharrassment of the play by the SanFrancisco Police Dept, in those innocentdays of 1967. It's difficult to understand why.The play is a satire of American sexualthought; and like all satires, it contains astrong element of putitanism. Compared,for instance, to Strindberg's Miss Julie, TheBeard seems almost hopelessly innocent.And after Last Tango in Paris, it alsoseems a little dated.But this is not meant to take anythingaway from the play. It is still an enjoyablepiece of theater, and it is continuallyinteresting, whether you understand it ornot. The dialogue, hovering between ritualand street talk, is funny and sharp. Constantrepetition of certain phrases ("Before youpry any secrets from me, you must first findthe real me. Which one will you pursue?")creates an almost hypnotic effect: you can'thelp being drawn in.John Green's Billy the Kid is perfect: He,s everything we expect our outlaws to be:endearingly tough, adolescently sexual, andboyishly charming with a little bit ofnastiness thrown in for good measure. He isso likeable, in fact, that it's hard to see whyit takes so long for him and Harlow to getdown to the nitty-gritty of it all. Actors likehim are rare in this impoverished town; itwould be a pleasure to see him more often.Winifred Valentine's Harlow doesn't leavesuch a strong impression possibly becauseshe drops a few lines as if they were chunksof cement; the thud is deafening in a playwhich depends so strongly on maintenanceof a fluid rhythm. But she is seductive andbitchy, and her curses are delivered with amarvellous sense of comic fiming. She holdsher own against Mr. Green, which is nosmall feat.Though Kristine Cameron's directing iscompetent and sufficient, I wish she wouldMUST BE SEEN TO BE DISBELIEVED!TODAY is the beginningof STUDENT RUSH’ Nowon Wednesday and Thursdayevenings, you can enjoy THEMAGIC’ MAN at ONLY S3.S0I per ticket with your studenti I.D. (compared to the regular$7.50 ticket price). Alltickets that are unsold fifteenminutes before curtain timewill be offered to studentswith student I D. cards on a* iist-cc me-first -served basistor this “Student Rush”.Tl is offer is designed tontroduce you to the mostspectacu ar event now goingon in downtown Chicagothe world premier of a hitm igical musical comedy.TUT M/MTC MAN, featuringgrand scale magical illusions.For this month only youcan see THE M/iGIC MAN atthe magical price of $3.50;after that, 'o see DavidCopperfield you will have topay the regular public priceof $7.50.Master magician DavidCopperfield is the star Hecan, of course, produce cardsout ot thin air, find a dove in A MEW 1913 MAOICAL MUSICAL COMEDYan empty silk handkerchief,and do all the ordinary magica magician might do. He doesthese things in THE MAGICMAN. but then he performsillusions that are never seenall in one place at any onetime He vanishes people Hemakes people appear out ofempty boxes floating in air.He changes one person intoanother. He escapes in one ofthe great classic illusions ofall times from an elaboratelylocked and bolted trap all injust seconds. He will do theimpossible right before youreyes, in a live performance, inthe intimate (5(X)-seat) FirstChicago Center. THE MAGICMAN must be seen to bedisbelieved. You’ve heard oflevitations, but have you everactually seen one? A girl risesfrom a couch and floats up,up, and over the head of amagician. Is it done by wires?No, because he passes a solidsteel hoop completely overher floating body! This isonly one of the manyillusions in THE MAGICMAN.Wednesday and Thursdayevening performances are at 8p in Get there by 7:45. Thisadvertisement will not bemade in metropolitan papersor on radioTHE MAGIC MAN is nowplaying at the First ChicagoCenter Theatre, One FirstNational Plaza, on DearbornStreet between Madison andMonroe. It you park your carin the bank building thecharge is only $2.15. Also thesubway stops in the bankbuilding.Don’t miss THE MAGICMAN at the incredible pri^eof $3.50. Once seen, neverforgotten. Billy the Kid (John Green) and JeanHarlow (Winifred Valentine) meet inthe blue velvet eternity of Michael McClure's "The Beard" (until March2) at The Body Politic, Thursdaysthrough Sundays. (Photo: Ron Nielsen)refrain from those occasional lapses into having the Kid shoot his gun into theheavy handedness. Playing America the distance beyond the audience, though cute,Beautiful before the curtain rises may be a only belabors the obvious,great help in understanding the play; butTHE JEWISH JOKE:Jewish Humor (9feJewish ExperienceMR. MOSHE WALDOKS(HILLEL)DIRECTOR, TUFTS UNIV.MONDAY FEBRUARY 17th8:00 P.M. at HILLEL5715 WOODLAWN10% DISCOUNTON ANY ITEMWITH THIS AD(Offer good thru Feb. 28)Needlepoint KitsPainted CanvassesTapestry YarnsCrewelCrochet CottonsEmbroidery FlossComplete line of Yarnand Knitting Accessories1633 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS,60615493-3523THE MOBBITby J.R.R. TOLKIENOne of the best wonder tales ever written...now on records.SPECIAL 4 RECORDBOXED SETZPL 1196/9*<|»«Tial M a»wlt«- lio\c«l setK/, PM I !**>/«/Performed by Nicol WilliamsonjtVKPOXIMPORTSSPIN IT\Im» availahlf al olher leading record -lore*.10—The Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 14, 1975MI1C€Two Views of The Jojfrey BalletBy Eden ClorfeneThe first two weeks in February mark thetime when those in Chicago who starve fordance can devour the long awaited feast,served in style by New York's City CenterJoffrey Ballet. Every course is dessert withthis troupe as their offerings cater topalettes of a wide range of preference.The Joffrey survived the true test in theworld of dance immediately before theirarrival with their successful tour in Russia,the country that heralds dance as thenational sport. Their youthful, uninhibited,and original style apparently was awelcome discovery and change for theRussians, for it commanded an incrediblenumber of 47 curtain calls.So, riding on the fast moving wheels ofsuccess, the Joffrey presents us with threelocal premieres; Twyla Tharp's "DeuceCoupe II" (newly arranged version forJoffrey dancers minus her company),Gerald Arpino's "The Relativity of Icarus,"and Leonide Massine's "Pulcinella " Alongwith these come revised productions of oldballets, revivals of the company's pastsuccesses, and favorites from the standardrepertoire that include "Trinity," "TheGreen Table," and "Kettentanz."Some have labelled Tharp's "DeuceCoupe" one of the most significant ballets ofthe decade. The main reason that promptsthis statement is the novelty in idea andformat It is anchored on the notion that thiscentury is the century for dance, that thiscentury has witnessed the evolution anabirth of many different dance styles. Dancehas risen to a highly respected and expanded art form with the contributions ofMartha Graham.George Balanchine,Jerome Robbins, Merce Cunningham, toname a tew.Tharp's piece is a masterpiece because it accomplishes so much in so little time. It is ahistory lesson, a celebration, akaleidescope of all the styles, and an effective piece of humor. Set to the music ofThe Beach Boys, the difterent sectionspresent us with the styles danced independently of each other, blended together,and contrasted. The pace never stops as thekaleidescope reveals images after imaqes,sequences of motion that melt into furthersequences of motion. Sometimes the pacebecomes a bit too hectic when the stage isoverbrimming with contrastingmovement.The ballet achieves its height in the finalsection, "Cuddle Up." Each branch ofdance, ballet, modern, jazz, and rock,becomes smoothed into one flowing streamof movement. The dancers here are payingtribute to their art, their lives. And it is apoignant, reverent, moment. Yes, they allagree that it's come a long way.Gerald Arpino is one for spectacle. Most ofhis lengthy works employ some kind ofgimmick and attraction other than dancing.Sometimes the combination ot dance andmotif produce a valid piece of theater, othertimes, ornamentation is self conscious andcontrived, and does not add any dimensionto the ballet itself. "The Relativity ofIcarus," with the predictable gimmick, is alittle bit of both.It is based on the Greek myth of howDaedalus and Icarus escape the Cretanlabyrinth. Father and son escape with waxwings, but Icarus flies too close to the sun.Their wings melt and they both fall into thesea and perish. Arpino's version of thisinvolves a soprano, singinq Jack Larson'stext of the story, Rouben Ter Arutunian'smagnificently designed representation ofthe labyrinth, usinq a raised platform(continued on page 8) By Minna DavidsonThe CITY CENTER JOFFREY BALLETis in town for another engagement at theAuditorium Theatre. The company openedon Tuesday, February 4, and will continue toperform through this weekend with matineeand evening performances scheduled forboth Saturday and Sunday. They havebrought with them about fifteen one actpieces by a variety of choreographers. Forthe most part, their dancing is of highquality, as usual, and the company is aspleasing as ever to watch.During the remainder of their stay, theywill perform close to three quarters of theirChicago repertoire.Two pieces of Robert Joffrey's ownchoreography, "Pas des Deesses" and"Rememberances," will beoffered. The firstis billed as a "revival" of what is essentiallya classical ballet. When I saw it seven oreight years ago, the dancers wore longballet tutus, and looked graceful andrefined. The whole piece seemed related tothe famous lithograph of Taglioni, Grisi,Grahn, and Cerrito in Pas de Quatre. Tnesecond is Joffrey's most recent work. It is aromantic piece set to music of RichardWagner.The choreographic efforts of GeraldArpino, the Joffrey's associate director, willbe represented by four of his works. Thecompany will perform "Trinity," "Kettentang," "The Relativity of Icarus," and"The Clowns.""Trinity" is set to the rock music of AlanRaph and Lee Holdridge. It goes beyondstrict classical ballet and employstechniques drawn from jazz and moderndance. Arpino was inspired to choreographit while participating with the company in asix week residency at Berkeley in 1971. Hehoped to capture in it something of the spirit there. Whether or not he succeeded inproducing exactly the effect he wanted, hedid manage to endow "Trinity" with ayouthful vitality which makes it an excitingand beautiful dance."Kettentanz" ("Chain Dance") is a lighthearted series of short dances set to themusic of Johann Strauss Sr. and JohannMayer."The Relativity of Icarus" is Arpino'snewest piece of choreography. It is performed to modern music which is based on apoem about Icarus. The poem is half readand half sung by a soprano during the courseof the performance. The dancing takes placeon and around a large structure made of araked platform and several mirrors in thecenter of the stage. People with conservative tastes might disapprove of thepiece as many of the dancers' movementsdo not come from the standard repertoire ofJoffrey Company dance steps The two maledancers spend most of their time doing whatsome might see as mere permutations ofacrobatic stunts Because of this, thereseems to be a mixed reaction about theartistic success of this piece. I am not sayingthis to discourage would be viewers, but toencourage them to go, see for themselves,and draw their own conclusions Regardlessof what one thinks about it in the long run,"The Relativity of Icarus" is interesting, tosay the least, and certainly a breathtakingdisplay of the dancers' versatility andphysical abilityThe works of other choreographers willalso be presented. "Big City," anotherballet by Kurt Jooss, who choreographed thehighly successful "Green Table" will beoffered, as will "Deuce Coupe II," TwylaTharp's "Beach Boys" ballet, "Monotones Iand II" by Sir Frederick Ashton, and "N.YExport, Op Jazz," a formal presentation ofthe elements of popular dances of the F if tiesby Jerome Robbins.Individual AttentionTo Most Small Cars31?-mi 3-3113foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.*■^5424 south kimbark avenue • Chicago 60615 3h \3rdShopSI 10 S Harper-'in Harper Court*NOl-iObC SUNDAY SALE10% OFF ON ALLNEW YAMAHA GUITARSSunday, Feb. 16 ONLYWe are now open eachSunday from 11 30-3:30Minnie’s An AngelMinnie RipcrtonPerfect Ant’dincluding:Reasons The Edge Of A Dream, Our LivesTake A Uttle Tnp/Everv Time He Comes AroundMinnie Riperton plays her voice like aninstrument She makes it soar and wailthrough an incredible five octave range, andshe makes beautiful music all along the wayPerfect Angel displays Minnies sensitivewnting talents as well as the amazing voicethat people began to notice when she waslead singer with Rotary ConnectionHer new album also has two songswritten just for Minnie by one of her biggest fans. 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An equal opportunity employer M fFriday, February 14, 1975 - The Chicago Maroon — 11 >slTheGreyCityJournal8—TheGreyCityJournal CULTURG GULCH ==DANCEThe two lop shows in town this week arc the tm.il perlormances ol the Jotfrey at the Auditorium this weekend(see reviews ot earlier concerts in this issue), and thesecond weekend ot performances by the Chicago Ballet at1016 N Dea bornThe Chicago Ballet will be dancing Stevenson's "BartokConcerto,' Petipa Balanchine's "Kaymonda pas de clix.and Evans' "When Summoned free ti< kels areavailable, in limited quantities, to all performances simplyby calling Mane Hauville of the Student Activities at /SJ3591MoMing Collection presents Xanadu at 4 pm Sundayat 1034 W Barry And the second presentation ol theMonday night dance set ins in Ida Noyes is al 8 pm, with theU ot C dance group dancing under tlvi Moore's guidanceFILMCEf brings koberl Altman's Thieves Like Us to CobbHall Satur day night al / IS and 9 )0 DOC otters Godard'sLes Carabmiers on Sunday at / IS and 9 10 A Kiss BeforeDymq (/ 30) and Hitler's Madman (9) on Tuesday, andThe Palm Beach Story (/ IS) and Easy Livrnq 19) onWednesday nightThe best picks ol the downtown films seem to be Murderon the Orient Express, which succeeds as mystery morethan as film. Young Frankenstein, whn h has netted MelBrooks all sorts ol accolades. Stardust, which will bereviewed in ihis paper next week and the ever po ul.irGodfather It The Playlxry All Nighl Show this weekendfeatures O Lucky Man and Start The Revolution WithoutMe toniqht, and Paper Moon and Downhill Racer onSaturday nightThe f 11m Center, m t ullerton Hall m the* Art Institute,will show Polanski *, Macbeth tonight at S 10 and H anilfrit/ Lang' The Testament ot Dr Mabuse on Wednisd.iyat 5 30 and / 40 (shows are $1 25)D4fKC= —(continued from page 7)surrounded by mirrors, and three dancers the sun, Daedalus, and his son,IcarusRather than a direct adaptation, Arpinoportrays the frustrations of a father and sonrelationship The ballet could easily beinterpreted as a commentary onhomosexuality because the two men, with noother clothing than G strings, spend most oftime intertwined within frightfully daringacrobatic positions. Arpino flatly denies thispossibility, the close physical contactsignifies their imprisonment in thelabyrinth, and to each other. It is in partcreated for dancer Russell Sult/bach,Icarus, who is the company's acrobaticdaredevil. These slow moving series ofposes, although impressive, get tiresomeafter a while; Arpino has proved his point.There is a strained effort to be Significantwith all the fancy embellishment, but thechoreography fails in its attempt to reveal Tho Rare Cinema (2020 N Halsted) is showing TheActor, starring John Gielgud. Nicol Williamson and HaroldPinter al 2 pm Sunday, and the Chicago premiere otWajda's Samson will bi* at 4 pm the same afternoonOndme will present films and lectures at the Museum otContemporary Art tonight at 8 pm. and King Vidor *. Duelin the Sun will be shown there Tuesday at 6 pmCLASSICAL MUSICSunday at J 30 there will be an all Bach recital inRockefeller Chapel, with the Chapel Choir and OrchestraAlso Sunday, at 3 30 pm in the K A M Isaiah IsraelTemple at 1110 E Hyde Park will be a program by theHyde Park Chamber Orchestra, with Harold Klat/ conducting The program will include pieces by Bach. Brittenand Mo/artUniversity Niqht at the Chicago Symphony is thisWednesday Also worth considering is the upcomingperformance on Feb 26, with the Chicago Symphony StringQuartet and Andre Previn on the piano playing Kodaly andBrahmsKathleen Terbeck smgs a program ot Liederon Tuesday,f eb 18, at 8 pm in Brent House f ree The Music SocietyRecorder Recital has been cancelledFOLK, ROCK & JAZZOn campus, there will be a dance tonight with One StepAhead in Ida Noyes Hall at 8 pm Charge is SI SOThe Quiet Knight has ex Byrd Gene Clark throughSunday night, with shows at 9 IS and It 00 pm Al Otto's(?0?4 N Halsted) will be blues singer guitarist JohnnyLong, through Sunday, and beginning on Wednesday isOdettaJethro Tull is scheduled tor the Stadium on Wednesdayand Thursday ot next week Watch newspaper ads tortickets on sale the ruling has come down that sellingIn kels by .ids does not constitute scalping, and thus youthe depths of the soul. On the other hand,Ann Marie DeAngelo is truly captivating asthe allurinq tempress, the Sun. Herminiature body whirls and shines, she'scool and aloof to the human predicamentarour.d herOne might question why Arpino goes toextraneous means for such an obscurestory It appears as if he uses the Icarusmyth to propel his theatrical ideas and todisplay his knack for production But it isstill a worthwhile work in its eye pleasingmerit.Arpino's older works are still fun to watch.The company had since matured with thepremieres of "Kettentanz" and "Trinity,"and perform them as if the choreography issecond nature. The works will continue tosurvive because like good wine, they improve with age.The company remains in Chicago untilSunday. If you haven't caught them, it isstill possible to see them at their best, astheir five remaining performances includethe vintage pieces and the premieres. can't be* arrested tor itAt Amasmgrace this weekend will be sax player EddieHarris (845 Chicago Ave , Evanston), and beginning onWednesday (through Thursday only I will be a double bill otRandy Newman and Ry Cooder.Corky Siegel will play Saturday night in the Sanctuary otthe Blue Gargoyle. 5655 S University, at 8 30ARTThe Berqman Gallery continues its show ot turn ot thecentury poster art on the 5th floor ot Cobb Hall The SmartGallery's show ol Color in Art is open tor a tew more weeksDowntown, the Art Institute is showing an exhibit Iromits collection ot Indian and Persian miniatures TheMuseum of Contemporary Art will keep the Made inChicago exhibit tor enough longer tor you to go see itTHEATREThe Philanthropist by Christopher Hampton opens Feb18 al the GoodmanThe Community Discount Players present Sophie Feb 14and 1 Sal 1034 W Barry al 8 pmX Bag s 3d production ol the season, Best One ot 'em All,is showing at 500 E 6/th Shows are 8 pm on weekends andF ridaysThe Blackfriars are conducting a theatre workshop olSaturday mornings from to 30 to 12 30 in Ida Noyes HallThe Travel Light theatre comes to campus with itspresentation ot Elaine May's Adaptation, Thursday nightsin the Blue GargoyleThe final performances ot Norman, Is That You? will bethis weekend at 6800 S Wentworth (33/ 4366)Performances ot UT s A Flea in Her Ear begin nextThursday, and will run for one weekend onlyColumbia College will present Goodbye Sweet GeorgiaJones starting Triday at 325/ N SheffieldLove on a Dark Night at the Playwright's Center (losesR€CORD^= =The Bootlegs(continued from page 5)and sound better on them. Most of theremaining material is from the ‘‘basementtapes", and effectively captures Dylan inthe pre-John Wesley Harding months. Hisvoice has the gentle, tempered, but forcefultone as on John Wesley Harding, and thesongs emerge from his own reflectionsarising from the rather sudden transitionfrom the crazed, stoned tours of 1965-66 tohis more sedentary existence of 1967 “IShall Be Released,” one of my favoriteDylan songs, is sung with the feeling lackingon Greatest Hits. VoI. II.The tape's, not meant for commercialrelease, are of a poor audio quality, hut thesound of a man searching for salvation isclear.In the day of confession, we cannotmock a soulOh when there’s too much ofnothing, no one has control.(‘‘Too Much of Nothing”)Nothing is better, nothing is best,Take heed of this and get plenty ofrest.("Nothing Was Delivered")It is indeed a senst* of grateful rest andpeaceful questioning which is evident in thesongs. And by the way, if you happened tomiss Mr. D.’s appearance on the Johnny(’ash Show in June, 1969, it has beenpreserved here, with Dylan performing"Living the Blues” at his best. This is thelast cut on the album, which has severalhigh points, hut being a double reqord israther expensive considering the inferiorityof the sound.(untitled)Here are six more “basement tapes" oftolerable quality, with Dylan’s voice deepand eerie as he spins tales of drinking,partying, travelling, and women inengaging fashion. They are followed byDylan’s first single, the ignored "Mixed-UpConfusion” (listed as "Hung Over, HungDown, Hung Up"). Released in 1962, it is aswinging chaotic tune with a muted electric-guitar in the background. "I’ll Keep It WithMine,” a loving plea from 1966, is anotherhighlight of the album, the remainder ofwhich is mostly Dylan 1961-63, ending with"Rambling Gambling Willie," a classic taleof a roving gambler who was shot in thehead as he held aces and eights — the deadman’s hand. The strength of the basementtapes alone makes the album a worthwhilepurchase.DYLAN ASPECTS/ ON TOURThis is a patchwork double recordcollection of live and studio performances,with one complete record devoted to Dylan’s1974 tour performances in Chicago,Philadelphia, and Charlotte. Most of thesesongs appear on Before the Flood, and thePlanet Waves cuts are forgettable, but"Song to Woody” and "The Lonesome Deathof Hattie Carroll” sound at least as good asthe originals. The other record consists ofvarious songs which appear on otherbootlegs. But these are among the best of thebootleg material: "Just Like Tom Thumb this weekend, at 110 W Kinjie (664 0998)The Chicago City Theatre Company presents CartSandburg's The People. Yes Feb 14 16 at 8 30 pm, 3438North Elaine PlaceThe Drama Shelter has Sartre’s No Exit on Thursda/and Friday nights, and the Haunted Host on Salurda /nights (549 6020)Magnolia Clubcontmues al the* Victory Garden Theatre3/30 N ClarkHuck Finn begins at the Organic Theatre, with StuartGordon directingThe Beard continues its run at the Body Politic (225/ NLincoln) on Thursday through Sundays (549 I6JI)The Beard continues its run at the Body Politic (225/ NLincoln) on Thursday through Sundays (8/1 3000)The Jane Addams Center al 3212 N Broadway hasVeronica's Room on Fridays and Saturdays 1549 1631)Theatre First shows Dear Me, The Sky Is Falling thisweekend at 2936 N Southport Saturday shows arc sold out,but tickets are available tor FridaysGeorge and Gerri Armstrong play in aFireside Concert this Saturday at 8 pm inBurton Judson. George Armstrong hastraditionally opened the Folk Festival withhis bagpipesTonight at 6 pm, there will be a BobDylan radio special on WHPK, 88.3 FM.The three hour show will featurerequests, bootlegs, and surprises, andhas been planned in conjunction withthe authors of the articles in this specialDylan issue.Blues” from Albert Hall, "It Ain’t Me Babe”from the Isle of Wight, “Talking BearMountain Picnic Massacre Blues,”"Talking John Birch Paranoid Blues,” "IShall Be Released," the singles "PleaseCrawl Out Your Window” and "GeorgeJackson” and a superb studio out-take of"It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue.” So eventhough Dylan forgets most of the words to"Most Likely You (Jo Your Way” in theconcert cut, the album is definitely worthpurchasingBOB DYLAN/ THE BANDIf you didn’t happen to Ik- in Charlotte,North,Carolina on the night of January 17,1974 to catch Dylan and the Band, don’tworry It’s all here. Unfortunately, all of thesongs were done better on some otheralbum, either txnitleg or legit, with thepossible exception of "The Ballad of HollisBrown.” If not for Before the Flood, thisalbum would be a must despite the terriblesound Now it is merely a collector’s itemYou may be asking if in fact all of thebootlegs are not just that — items to becollected merely for the sake of having. Isthere really much intrinsic worth besidestheir relative rarity9 For some songs theanswer is “no.” But for much of thematerial, the answer is an unqualified"yes.” Some are musical masterpieces.Others fill in gaps in Dylan’s development,making the words and music and his"legitimate” work clearer and more con¬nected.The words and melodies which makeDylan’s songs interact in producing the totaleffect of Dylan’s music. Reading the wordsor humming the tunes does not do his workjustice. But combined, the lyrics, melody,and Dylan’s voice produce a vision, bothwithin the listener and of Dylan. Whether itis a vision of social justice, mystic intuition,careless love, or country pie, it is powerfuland honest. Much of the difficulty inlistening to Dylan 1961 interpreting others’work is that the songs remain mere per¬formances. You are left with only thereverberations of Dylan’s unique voice. Butfrom 1964 on, the songs begin to becomepersonal and more honest, as Dylan openshis self to find demons staring out andangels prancing down below. His continuingattempt to dissect the self in poetic songs isas evident on many of the bootleg albums ason his legitimate albums.I would not buy a Dylan bootleg withoutbeing a Dylan fan (though fanaticism is nota pre-requisite) because if you are going toshell out five bucks for a Dylan album, youmay as well get one that’s of good technicalquality, and there are sixteen legitimateones to ehoose from. But if your Dylan fan¬dom has been confirmed, buying someDylan bootlegs is heartily recommended, inorder to understand Dylan the artist and,well, just to hear some damn good music.They made him a rock starThen they made him a god.COLUMBIA HCTURFS k A (iOODTlMES ENTEKPHISIS PKOL* KTICSDAVID ESSEX ADAM FAITH LARRY HAGMANWrittenK KAY CONNOLLYPmtWJN, DAVID PUTTMAN.,,»(SANFORD UEBERSON Dtrvciedhv MICHAEl APTEDR 4 Columbia Pictures A Division ol Columbia Pictures Industries. Inc1 ■N.-J.S4 I*. '4(4 »»•'•* .1 *. »* •! H 'JflUS XNti'APIS ,MIDWEST PREMIERENOW PLAYING A WALTER READE THEATRE™ ^squire58 E OAK STREET • 337-111712—Tha Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 14. 19757#r couttess is Acm* A*msrThe public ee*tnr by rrs actionsok ay on Puicirt - - aajo i'll juirSAY THAT IF THetrs COMM 5TSn GMOUUCMnoM* IT UBe oYtA AfY DCADBomu“l4UtH*?I / !Get te»josCou**5ho£ JrSinger and RabyAutomation of circulation system postponed exchange vowscontinued from page 2library to renew most itemson loan to any individualwith a single command to thesystem Upon presentationof a valid ID card theattendant will instruct thesystem to renew all itemscharged to the ID card, then scan the bar-coding on the IDcard with the light pen Thepatron will receive a list ofall items which have beenrenewed and the new duedateIn addition to providinginformation on theUniversity collections, the automated system will havethe capability for eventualadaptation to largernetworks of shared data basesystems among severallibraries. The need todevelop sharing programswith other research librariesis urgent because research libraries across the countryare rapidly running out ofspace to hold the everincreasing number ofvolumes published each yearin the United States andabroad, and the money topurchase and maintain thoseitems Mayoral candidate HillSinger and fifth wardaldermanic candidate AlKaby exchanged endorsements Wednesday at anews conference held inSinger's headquartersIn making the endorsement Kaby said ofSinger, “I have every con1 C ] L ASSI [1 1 r I E ] D I A 1 FORMDATES TO RUN _NAME. ADDRESS PHONECHARGE: UC PEOPLE NON-UC PEOPLE50e per line 75* per line40c per line to repeat 60* per line to repeatThere are 35 spaces per line, including all letters,spaces, and punctuation marks. Circle all lettersto be capitalized.All Ads Paid in AdvanceHEADINGS: There is no charge for regular headings (i.e., For sale,Space, People Wanted, etc.). Your own heading (15 spaces)costs $1.00 (75* to repeat) per line.HEADING1%Friday, February 14, 1975 fidence that he will turnChicago around and build thesafe fully working city that itcan and must be for allpeople "Singer in turn said, “Al'sabilities as a negotiator andarbitrator are a crucialtalent an absolute requisitein the city council "Kaby in endorsing Singersaid. “Kor too long reformminded people in Chicagohave tended to talk rightevery day in the year butvote wrong on election dayIt's time to call a halt, timeto stop the myth that theproblems of this city will getworse if we remove Daleyfrom office The fact isanother four years ofKichard J. Daley could bethe worst years of all I ampleaseo therefore to join myCongressman, Kalph Met¬calfe, in making a positivemove for change I know BillSinger. I have worked withhim in the past, and I haveevery confidence that he willhelp turn Chicago aroundand build the safe fullyworking city that it can andmust be for all people ”Singer said of Kaby.'While most peoplerecognize Al Kaby as aneffective leader andspokesman on public issues.I think too few are familiarwith his abilities as anegotiator and arbitrator Ihave had the pleasure ofworking with him in anumber of situations wherethis has been a crucialtalent, but nowhere was itput to better use than at theIllinois ConstitutionalConvention. Few peoplehave shown the ability tobring together such diverseelements and philosophiesthan Al did in helping createthe new constitution Thisskill is an absolute requisitein the city council He is theworthiest successor to lA*onDespres, and I heartily urgemy supporters in the fifthward to elect him aldermanAl Kaby, in his aldermanicrace, is opposed by KossLathrop, Squire Lance, andSid Williams The ChicagoTribune endorsed Kabyyesterday.Singer is opposed byMayor Daley, FdwardHanrahan, and state senatorKichard Newhouse- The Chicogo Maroon— 13High school scholar-athletesattend Stagg-Dudley weekendBy MIKE KLINGENSMITHThe University men’s andwomen’s athletic depart¬ments are currently spon¬soring their first joint Stagg-• Dudley weekend on campus.This is the fourth year for themen’s Stagg weekend, but itis the initial effort by thewomen.The Stagg-Dudleyscholarships are four yearfull tuition grants awardedon the basis of academic andathletic excellence in highschool. There are threeStagg scholarships and twoDudley scholarships, con¬sistent with the ratio of mento women in the college.Both Amos Alonzo Staggand Gertrude Dudley werepioneers in amatuerathletics in this country,of course is famous as one ofthe most successful footballcoaches of all time and as aninnovator and proponent ofthe game. He is enshrined inthe football Hall of Fame asboth a player and a coach.Gertrude Dudley wasdirector of women’s athletics at the Universityfrom 1898 to 1935. She servedas women’s varsity coach inseveral sports, and thedepartment slogan under herdirection was, “play forplay’s sake.” She believedthat, “physical exercise andplay are indespensable to awell-rounded life and aretherefore necessary to awell-rounded education.”The purpose of theweekend, according toUniversity Recreation andFacilities Director, JohnSchael is, “to allow thescholars to meet faculty,coaches and to get a feel forthe University. It presents uswith an opportunity todemonstrate that we have agood, small college athleticprogram.”The Stagg Scholarprospectives, some 45 innumber, will come from asfar away as Pennsylvania,although most are tromIllinois, Indiana andMissouri. This is the largestnumber of visiting Staggprospectives to attend theannual weekend event. Lastyear the men’s departmentSATURDAY BASKETBALLYou have to get up prettyearly in the morning tokeep track of theUniversity’s w o m e nbasketball team. Thesquad will host Nor¬thwestern UniversitySaturday morning in acontest at Ida NoyesGymnasium as a specialevent for the Stagg-Dudleyweekend. The Maroons arein the midst of a threegame winning streak andare the third seated team intheir state qualifying region.In the afternoon, the mentake to the court tochallenge a tall squad fromRoosevelt University.Advance word has ii thatRoosevelt has a 6’9” centerwho is a real attraction.The cagers record is 7-5 onthe season, and this is theteam’s last Saturday af-t e r noon game. TheMaroons wind up theirhome schedule Tuesday |evening against Mt. |Senario (Wisconsin). hosted 22 students. There are82 applicants for the threescholarships for next yearAlthough there are onlyseven potential Dudleyscholars attending theweekend’s festivities, thereare 38 applicants for the twoscholarships. The womenvisitors will come from asfar away as Massachussets,Ohio and Pennsylvania.For the most part, theStagg and Dudley candidateswill take part in the sameactivities this weekend. Theprospectives began to arriveyesterday and will spendFriday morning attendingclasses and taking ad¬missions interviews. Themen will attend a varsity wrestling meet at 3:00 thisafternoon, while the womenwill have a reception withthe varsity coaches. Fridayevening will be taken up witha reception, dinner, and SockHop at Woodward Court.Basketball will be theorder of the day on Saturday,as the women’s varsity willplay Northwestern at 10:00in the morning, while themen challenge RooseveltUniversity at 2:(K) in theFieldhouse. In-between thetwo games, there will be aluncheon for the visitingstudents. The weekend willclose with a reception at thehome of UC sports enthusiastBernie DelGiorno followingthe men’s game.AMOS ALONZO STAGG: The grand Old Man ofChicago athletics is enshrined in Football's Hall foFame as both a player and a coach.Women cagers win 3rd in rowWOMEN S BASKETBALL 1975: Athletic Director MaryJean Mulvaney (left) and Coach Pat Kirby (right)shown iwht six of UC's modern basektball stars.14—The Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 14, 1975 The quickest way to forgeta pair of defeats is toproduce a winning streak —something the women’svarsity basketball team hasfound out since itsdisappointing sojourn toBoston. The cagers havechalked up three wins ineight days are are confidentof gaining a berth in the statetourney later this month.Last Thursday, theMaroons handed Lewis an83-49 defeat and followed upthat performance with a 68-50 romp over DePaul onFriday night. On Tuesdaynight, the women took to theroad and came up with a 50-49 victory overNortheastern, in a battle ofstate title contenders.Against Northeastern,Chicago jumped out to anearly 6-0 lead, butNortheastern took chargeand built up a 31-25 half-timelead. An overabundance of UC turnovers and a veryeffective fast break by thehost team combined to keepChicago on the short end ofthe score until Vadis Cothranhit a turn around jumperwith 3:38 on the clock to givethe Maroons a 42-41 lead theywere never to relinquish.High scorer in that gamewas Cothran with 18. LauraSilvieus added 14, includingeight for nine from thecharity stripe. Cothran alsopulled down 12 rebounds tolead all players.The Maroons hostNorthwestern Saturdaymorning at 10 a m. in IdaNoyes Gum. Next week’sgrueling schedule sees thewomen play host to Circle onTuesday night, travel to takeon an always toughConcordia squad the nextnight, and then move on tothe State QualifyingTournament over theweekend. WOMEN S BASKETBALL 1913: Gertrude Dudley (upperleft) is hown here with her 1913 women s varsitybasketball team.UC Varsity ScoreboardLAST WEEK'S RESULTS:MEN’S BASKETBALL:Maroons 46 Lake Forest 43Illinois Tech 70 Maroons 62WOMEN’S BASKETBALL:Maroons 68 DePaul University 50Maroons 50 Norlheaslern 49WOMEN’S SWIMMING:Lake Forest 63 Maroons 50NEXT WEEK’S EVENTS:MEN’S BASKETBALL:UC vs Roosevelt University, Sal. Feb. 15, 2:00FieldhouseUC vs Ml. Senario, Tues. Feb. 18, 7:30FieldhouseWOMEN'S BASKETBALL:UC vs Chicago Circle, Tues. Feb. 18, 7:00 IdaNoyes GymUC al Concordia College, Wed. Feb. 19, 7:30River Forest, Ill.| WOMEN’S SWIMMING:Stale AIAW Championships, Fri. and Sat. Feb.21-22, at George Williams CollegeINDOOR TRACK:UC vS Wabash College and Ul-Chicago Circle,Sal. Feb. 15, 11:00 FieldhouseMEN’S GYMNASTICS:UC al Triton Invitational, Fri. Feb. 14, 7:00Triton JCFENCING:UC vs Tri-State, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Sat. Feb. 15MEN’S WRESTLING:UC vs Chicago State University, Fri. Feb. 14,4:00 Bartlett GymMEN’S SWIMMING:UC vs University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Tues.Feb. 18, 3:00, Bartlett PoolUNIVERSITY TRACK CLUB:Rick Wohlhuler and Ken Popejoy vs Filbert Bayi(Tanzania) in the mile at The San Diego IndoorGames, Sat. Feb. 15Pal Maisdorf, Dixon Boughman, Angelo Nutall,and Bruce Fischer al The Cleveland Knights ofColumbus Meet, Sat. Feb. i5Angelo Nutall, Lowell Paul, and Glen Harold atThe Toronto Star Maple Leaf Indoor Games, Fri.Feb. 14.MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEFor rent Furnished reception room,business office and consulting office orfor mental health practice, three tofour days per week ground doormedical building near I CSpace available at Cobb Hall on FriWEST SIDE STORY 7 COOL HANDLUKE 10 Valentine's Day SpecialTwo for 11 00 OLD ELEGANCE. Spac 1 bdrm apt indel* SS Dr bldg, lake view, ornateceilings, din rm, full kit, cptd, Idry,East S Shore good security 8. tenantsPvt 1190 771 6607, 474 52837 1/ 2 newly decorated 1/ 7 block 1C 8.bus Adults Phone Plousky 788 0676fern rmmt wanted 7 woman aptPrivate rm 8. bath 18 7 50 PM callKaty 788 7687Efficiency II10 month Kitchen, privbath Occupancy Date negot 363 3873Large sunny newly decorated roomavailable in huge luxuriousapartment 187 00 363 1769 Kathy orSteveHigh fashion coach house nearuniversity, one large studio bedroom,priv yard Immed occup 1375 2415545WHY PAY RENT Buy a coop apt54th Pi & Wdlawn, 4 big rms, modernbath 8, kitchen in beautiful older bldg186 Monthly asses 110,800 955 3927Room available in Little Pierce aptfrom Spring Quarter onwards Rent184 per month Females only Phone363 5267 evenings 1400 E 57th StI bdrm apt startinq now! 51st andHyde Park Across from park, busses,shopping Call 753 7589 Susan, daysRoom for Woman 145 734 4361jamesSCHULTZCLEANERSCUSTOM OU AUTYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd S».752-6933WIN A SPORTS CAR!!or, play Duplicate Bndge at theUniversity Bridge Club Wednesdays7PM Ida Noyes This Week OnlyPrizes to every entering pair PLUS apri/e to the overall winner CHICAGO BEACH HOTELBEAUTIFUL FURNISHEDAPARTMENTS Near beach, parks,loop, UC and 1C trains, II mms to loopbusses, door Modest, daily, weekly,monthly rates 24 hr desk Completehotel services 5100 S Cornell D03 2400Miss SmithSCENESFriday, Feb 14 at Millet, 5715Woodlawn, Milla Ohel, Israeli Authorspeaking on The ContinuingEndurance of the Uprooted Hero inModern Hebrew Literature 8 30 PMSanctuary Corky Siegel Concert withRondi Charleston Feb 15th at 8 00PM The Blue Gargoyle 17 00You can get a peanutbutter and tellysandwich and coftee for 55c at the BlueGargoyle Lunch served II 30 2 00PMSunday, Feb 16, Hillel, 5715Woodlawn, 2 PM Come A meet IsraeliShiechim, find out about programs ofstudy, work, and travel in Israel, atthe Israel KaleidoscopeVALENTINE DAY SPECIAL Friday,Cobb WEST SIDE STORY 7 COOLHAND LUKE 10 Two Films for 11Monday. Feb 17, 8 00 PM, Hillel, 5715Woodlawn, Moshe Waldoks (HillelDir , Tufts Univ I speaking on TheJewish Joke Jewish Humor andJewish ExperienceBoard games on loan at Ida NoyesCheck Desk Playing cards for salealsoBurton Joseph, Playboy Foundation,executive directory speaks on "BigBrother in your Bedroom" at 7 30 PMFeb 18 m Ida Noyes TheaterMOTHER RIGHT is coming out toHyde Park. Sat , Feb 22 at the BlueGargoyle, 8 30 12 00 Tickets are 75<in advance at the Reynolds Club desk,11 25 at the door Buy now, play later! (Judy says, "You deserve a breaktoday" with lunch at the BlueGargoyle II 30 7 00 PM dailyLmda Sweeney presents "Godesses 4Amazons" — a slide show at gaywomen's coffee house Fri Feb 14 8 12PM at the Gargoyle All women arewelcome• EYE EXAMINATIONS• CONTACT LENSES (Soft & Hard)• PRESCRIPTIONS FILLEDDR. MORTON R. MASLOVOptometristsHyde Park Shopping Center1 510 E. 55th St.363-6363V4mHm’$ fof SocialCOOL HAND LUKEWEST SIDE STORYBkk Movies for only *1.007:00 Cobb Hall Feb. UDANCE!!!Jimmy Reed Jr. &One Step Beyond(Played at John Brimm Concert last quarter)February 14 8 p.m. $1.50Ida Noyes HallTickets available at Mandel Hall & at the Door SELF DEFENSE streetfighting forwomen Tuesdays 4 5 30 or 6 7 30 1258 wks in Gargoyle Call 327 0851DINNER FOR 2 for Under 110 M ThDinner Specials The COURT HOUSEin Harper CourtPEOPLE WANTEDAuthor needs part time assistant,effective typing, work periodsnegotiable 643 8395People Wanted to Attend WEST SIDESTORY at 7 4 COOL HAND LUKE 10Fn TWO FILMS FOR II 00Babysitter needed for 1 1/ 2 year oldboy Mon Fri 8 5 PM In my apt atDel Prado 493 9600 ex 856 eves andweekendsWanted! Campus rep to handlepromotion of chartered trips for springbreak If interested in making someextra money call Linn Corfield at 8878890Make 115 for two hours driving eachweek Must have car Call 446 2770Wanted For New Human CancerResearch Project Full TimeTechnician with experience in electronmicroscopy including specimenpreparation Prefer experience also incytochemistry and/or cytogeneticsSend resume by Feb 25 to G IOncology. Box 400 , 950 E 59th St.,Chicago, IL 60637Fulltime Waitress Lunch 4 DinnerJohn or Alan 667 4008PORTRAITS 4 for 14 and up MaynardStudios, 1459 E 53 St - 2nd Floor 6434083PEOPLE FOR SALEMusician with college teaching expwants to teach voice and pianostudents of any age or level Pleasecall 684 6912Student Movers Light moving in aDodge van Guaranteed low rates 24hr serv 548 0045 9 5 924 6978 or 9246967 6 PMChinese Cooking Lessons andDeemSum Lessons (chin teaappetizers) Call Barbara at 744 3026or 324 3227TAX RETURNS Prepared byexperienced accountant Reasonable684 1930 ZORKE m stock1 Come and see theRussian Leica Type camera New189 95 w/ case Model Camera 4936700TELETYPE 4 ELECTRONIC equipof all kinds Goodman 752 1000 ext 5161966 Dodge Coronet 500 , 67000 milesgood running condition, body dented1700 947 9649Huge oak roll top desk 1600 Swivelchairs 150 walnut coffee tables 150Chest 145 Antique mahogany bedroomfurniture w/ new double mattress 1350bear rug 1125 2 alberts prints variationII series, 1800 ea 2 large plants 155 eaantique doll buggy 130 Vacuumcleaner 120 Call 241 5535 evesHUMIOIFIER northern model 77 2 galcold mist Used one winter Excellentcond 110 00 947 0054Renault Sedan Wagon '69, Red w/ blkvinyl buckets Very Comf Four cycl23 MPG am/ »m Best ofr 324 7875Furniture for sale Cheap Call 3636838 after 5LOSTI red Moroccan wallet Reward forreturn Call Clara days 947 7105Set of keys reward1! 753 2249 1407XLost Brn Pipe 1st wk of q btw Pierce4 Hitchcock rwd 753 2740 rm 1602CORKY SIEGELConcert with Rond' Charleston a* 8 00PM Feb 15 Tickets 12 00 The BlueGargoyleHEALTH CAREUFO meeting Mon Feb 17 8 PM BlueGargoyle Basic facts on pregnancytesting, abortion, OB Gyn etcRABBIT SPEAKSPlayboy Foundation ExecutiveDirector Burton Joseph speaks on"Big Brother in Your Bedroom" Feb18, 7 30 PM in Ida Noyes TheaterDIPLOMACYPLAYERSDiplomacy freaks seek fellow freaksCall 32150 room 707 or 735 INDIAN FILMSIndia Association presents Films ofthe leading director Mrinal Sen Feb14 Interview 4 Calcutta 71 Feb 15Padtik 4 Chorus Oriental Institute,58th 4 University, 7 PM The directorwill be present Synposes in Englishprovided 12 per day, at the gateWHPKWould you like a show on WHPK’ Ifyou want to be on the air springquarter, fill out a program requestform available at WHPK's officesMitchell Tower in Reynolds Club(This applies to people currentlybroadcasting, too1) Direct the form toJane Gmsburg, program directorDeadline Monday, Feb 24 NOTEWHPK needs staff in new and publicaffairsPLAYBOYExecutive Director Burton Joseph ofthe Playboy Foundation speaks on"Big Brother in Your Bedroom" Feb18, 7 30 PM in Ida Noyes TheaterCALCULATORSCompare our prices on New FactoryFresh Texas Instru Calc 1 yearwarranty All models Call 753 2240Room 1518 or 241 5496 evesTENNIS LESSONSALL AGES AND SEXDIRT CHEAP PRO667-4038 BET 7 & 9PAN PIZZADELIVERYThe Medici Delivers from 5 10 10 p mweekdays, 5 11 pm Saturday. 6677394 Save 60 cents if you pick it upyourselfGAY LIBERATIONLinda Sweeney presents "Goddesses4 Amazons" — a slide show at gaywomen's coffee house Fri. Feb 14 8 12PM at the Gargoyle All women arewelcomeLOX & BAGELSBrunch this week, Sun at Hillel, 11 AM11 50 5715 Woodlawn WOMEN'S MAGAZINEPRiMAVERA, the women s literarymagazine, is on sale for 11 50 at the IdaNoyes information desk and theReynolds ClubCLASSIFIEDSMaroon classifieds are charged by theline, 35 spaces per I me 50 cents perline for UC people. 40 cents per line torepeat 75 cents per line for non UCpeople, 60 cents to repeat Ads must besubmitted in person or mailed to theMaroon, 1212 E 59th St , Chicago60637 No ads will be taken over thephone The ads must be paid inadvance Deadline for Tuesday'spaper s Friday a* 3 30 deadline forFriday's paper is Wednesday at 3 30For further information call 753 3265CONDO SALE55.000 Madison Pk 6?4 5499 3 baths, 4bdrm w' wall to wall rarp Livrm,firepi. dishwasher seif cin ovenWash, dryer, drapesCREATIVE SABBATH SERVICEEvery Friday night at Hillel 5715 SWoodlawn at 7 30 p m For more mfocall Janet at 752 5655JEWISH WOMEN'SGROUPMeets every Sunday at 7 0 PM atHillel House, 5715 S Wood* awn Formore mfo call Jane* at 75? 5655PERSONALSHankering to play cards1 Ti ry can bepurchased at Ida Noyes Drun S’oreTables ava-iaoie on reques*COMING SOON F lm c'ttn. D#v>CMason ("Essays on UnforgettableFilms I've Heard About") wi1 lectureon his new hit play The Eveoowhappy birthd\yTo my most gallant and r obie S>'COMING SOON Demo lec' on 5e»and the Single Male " By famettheoretical sexologist J RaymondDouglas. I can play games too Whotoad an why do you need her 1 Bunn yBABYSITTER My home Infantpreferred Call 947 8742MILES ARCHER MOVERSReasonable prices ExperiencedPersonnel Call 947 0698 or 752 4910 forinformationRobert Stone Movers 324 6225CREATIVE WRITING Workshop bywriter columnist, help on thesis, etcMU 4 3124Russian by Exp Native teacher Triallesson no charge 472 1420 CE 6 1423FOR SALERED 69 FIAT 124 SPORT COUPElightly used, excellent condition11.000or best offer Call: Keith Fearon996 7680 day 684 1530 night FOR RENTRapid Ram Rent a Van Rent a DodgeMaxi van only 120 00 per day Freemileage 24 hr service 548 (X)45 9 6, 9246867 or 924 6928 after 6RIGHT TO JLIFJEThere will be a meeting, 17 Feb 75 at7 00 PM in the Sun Parlor (Ida Noyes3rd Floor I for all who are interested informing a right to life organizationThe intent of this endeavor is to studythe problem or abortion and topromote some rafiona1 alternativesJOURNALISTSWriters interested in working for TheChicago Maroon contact the NewsEditor, 753 3765 BOOKS BOUGHTCash for used books Powells 1503 E57th St 995 7780STEP TUTORINGInterested in helping neighborhoodchildren? Student TutoringElementary Project needs volunteersto tutor students bi weekly in schoolwork or with special proiects Formore information call Jay Sugarmanat 947 8804 or Mary Lou Gebka 6438766REFRIGERATORRENTALMini frige Pennies a day Freedelivery Call Swan Rental 721 4400HYDE PARK SHOEREBUILDERS1451 E. 57th ST.493-1247We Sell and RepairSHOESHigh Quality:Men’s Genuine LeatherDress ShoesWork ShoesGym Shoes (Converse) VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGATTRACTIVE 1% AND2Vt ROOM STUDIOSFURNISHEDorUNFURNISHED$n7,„ $209Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus StopFA 4-0200 Mrs. Groak EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plazo)1200 East 53rd StreetHYdePark 3-8372FOR THE BEST ti AKTioueLSAT : )°Y* Ebl-Li AHpJfZAlN. showMCAT 5>UN. F£L£>. /£ ry p„5kane countyDAT :. *T64-K4NPALIRC>. /$T.CMRLE5,lll\No$GREATGSBTEST PREP7 South DaarbornChicago, IL 60403 &UN.FB&.I6^S; 362 - *><>99 -Z19-9790 ; CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Has what you need from a*10 used 9 x 12 Rug to acustom carpet. SpaclallxlngIn Remnants A Mill returnsat a fraction of the originalcost.Dacoratlon Colors andQualifies. Additional 10%Discount with this Ad.FREE DEUVERY PREGNANCY testing10 AM 2 PM Saturday SI 50 dona’ oAugust an a Church a» 55*h >WoodlawnBy The South Sid-Aomen s Health ServiceSouth Side Rape Crisis Line 667 40!-A referral and moral Supportcommunity service We can help1WRITERS WORKSHOP (PL 2 8377Writing HELP Oy professionals ro.thesis, reports speech etc MU 4 3124MAROONADSare theway to reachHYDEPARKand theUNIVERSITYOFCHICAGOCommunitiesCall theMAROONbusiness office753-3266forinformationand ratesFriday, February 14, 1975 - The Chicago Maroon 1 5MM CHEESE SALE IfCANADABLACK DIAMOND *1” ..Par Lb.DENMARKCAYENNE PEPPER ‘1*’ 1UPer Lb.CHRISTIAN IX With Cumin and Caraway Seeds Per LbDANISH BLUE %Vf ribESROM PORT SALUT 'Lb'GRANDTOSTHAVARTI $1PerLbMOZZARELLA *l"r Lb'TYBO *l*p’.rlb;ENGLANDALE CHEDDAR »1” LbCHEDDARCHESHIRE * 1 p’er Lb.STILTON Grade'A'Prime Per LbFRANCEABBEY PORT SALUT *1"Per Lb.BEAU PASTEUR *1** lkBEAUMONT ‘2ft, Lb.BRIE * ^ Per Lb.BRIE NOUVEAU *2”Per Lb.CAMBREE Blend of Camembart and Brie $^Per LbCREME-DE-PYRENEE *Per Lb.GOURM ANDISE Cherry, Walnut or Garlic $ 1 p>er ^GRAND REYBINO ALMOND 534p’er LbGRAPE SEED Covered with grape seeds $^Ver LbMORBIERE PORT SALUT 53” 1LPer Lb.PIPO-CREME Creamy Blue S2S9PURE GOAT CHEESE «2 j?" [bRAMBOL WALNUT ‘SperLbROQUEFORT Society Bee S^Per LbST. MARCELLIN Grape Leaf Covered *2’’er LbST. P A U LIN Port Salut Type 51 Ver lbTOMME DE SAVOIE J2perLbSCHLITZCOKE GERMANYBIANCO_ _ li# . •.Flavored with Ham orRAVCHK ASE Salami or plain •••• 1 Per Lb.SIM1 Per Lb.HOLLANDEDAM...GOUDAITALY $105'Per Lb.$1*5"Per Lb.BEL PAESEGORGONZOLA Ripe ...PARMESAN Full 4 yr. aged $1**Per Lb.$1**'Per Lb.SOMxPer LbNORWAYBLUEGJETOST GOAT a Pure GoatNOKKELOSTTILSITERSWEDENFONTINA ..JARLSBERG $145'Per Lb.$015xPer Lb$15*' Per Lb$12*'Per Lb.$1251 Per Lb$135'Per Lb.SWITZERLANDEMMENTHALER Large Eye-Graded A Prime • • • •GRUYERE Harder and Nuttier than EmmenthalerRACLETTE Fondue $ 1 4*'Per Lb.$ 1 **'Per Lb$ 1 **1 Per LbUSAMONTEREY JACK From CaliforniaNEW YORK HERKIMERPROVOLONESPREAD CHEDDARSVERMONT CHEDDARWISCONSIN BLUE6 Pack £ ■■.Cans I 49 $ 1 4*1 Per Lb$1 59'Per Lb.$145'Per Lb.$175' Per Lb$15*1 Per Lb$1 291 Per Lb.Complete PartyService From2427 East 72nd StreetBA 1-9214 351 East 103rd Street508-1811^ailj^ajn^^pjii^^unday^Noon-J^iiK16—The Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 14, 1975