The Chicago MaroonVolume 84, Number 42 The University of Chicago Friday, March 7, 1975WHPK acquires collectionBy DAVID BLUMThe family of Dr. DirkDeYoung, a formerUniversity clinic employeewho died recently at age 38,has given his collection ofover 5,000 classical recor¬dings to WHPK-FM (88 3),radio station of theUniversity of Chicago.Dr. DeYoung was an avidrecord collector, andfollowing his death hisparents expressed a wishthat his collection be madeavailable to Universitystudents. Dean of StudentsCharles O’Connell, whohandled the transaction,decided that WHPK would be the best possible outlet forthe recordings.The addition of theserecords to the presentclassical record collectionwill give a tremendous boostto both the quality andquantity of classicalprogramming, according toWHPK program director.Jane Ginsburg.“We will be increasingfrom 12 to 41 hours ofclassical shows each week,including all-night programsMonday through Thursdaynights,” Ginsburg said“Nearly one-third of our totalprogramming will beclassical.”The collection is com¬prised of selections of composers from all eras ofclassical music. Accordingto Martin Sumner, classicalrecord librarian for W’HPK.the gift will provide thestation with a completelibrary of the standardclassical repertoire in allmajor forms of music.“There is a large emphasison Russian and BritishOperas, including nearly allcompositions by BenjaminBritten Nearly ail ofHaydn’s symphonies arerepresented, as well asdifferent versions of theBeethoven symphonies,”Sumner said. “Thiscollection should fill most ofthe gaps we’ve been suf¬fering with in the past.” With the collection WH¬PK s record library nowincludes approximately 6,500classical records. WEFMand WNIB, two Chicagostations with primarilyclassical programming,have collections of over10,000 records. WFMT,Chicago’s only other 24-hourstation that plays classicalmusic through the night,owns a library of 24,180recordsWHPK plans a specialbroadcast commemoratingDr DeYoung, during whichseveral selections from theDeYoung MemorialCollection will be heardDetails will be announcedearly next quarterBlumberg survey stirs assemblyNoticeThis is the last news issueof the Maroon this quarter.Next week the Maroon willpublish a special tenth weekissue. Regular publication ofthe Maroon will resume onTuesday, April 1.Our first issue of nextquarter will contain anendorsement in the localaldermanic race. We en¬courage all Universitypersonnel to vote onTuesday, April 1. Several campus streetshave no parking for anumber of days because thespace is needed by NBC forthe Midnight Special, beingheld March 11 and March 12.Both sides of Universitybetween 56th and 57thStreets will have no parkingstarting this Sunday mid¬night until Thursday mor¬ning. On Tuesday andWednesday it w-ill be closedcompletely to traffic, exceptfor local traffic.There will also be no parking on the north side of57th St. between Ellis andUniversity starting frommidnight last night until themorning of next Thursday.A barricade will be placedin front of Reynold’s Club, onthe south side of 57th streetfrom midnight tonight untilthe next Thursday morning.The town meeting, whichis also being filmed by NBC,will also cause a street tohave no parking. On 59thstreet between W’oodlawn and Kimbark there will be noparking starting frommidnight last night until 6:00Saturday.The dates for closing thestreets for parking were setfrom recommendations bythe city police department.Illegally parked cars willbe towed away to StaggField. University campussecurity will handle allclaims to cars which havebeen towed away. Towingwill be at the owner’s ex¬penseBy PETER COHNBILL SINGERSinger visits campus tospeak on Raby's behalfAlderman William Singer,who recently lost his bid forthe Democratic mayoralnomination, will visit theUniversity next week tospeak on bahalf of fifth wardaldermanic candidate AlRainThe program, which isbeing sponsored by Studentsfor Raby, will be held onFriday, March 14 from 12 to 2p.m. in the south front loungeof the Reynolds Club.Singer’s appearance willmark his first major cam¬paign activity since theFebruary 25 primaryelection, and the theme of hisremarks will be “Why we must continue to have anindependent voice in the citycouncil.” Singer will alsodiscuss his mayoral cam¬paign.Raby. who finished first inlast month’s aldermanicelection, will face RossI>athrop in a run-off electionon April 1 . The winner willsucceed retiring AldermanLeon Despres, who hasserved as the leading in¬dependent in the council fortwo decades. The Student Government<SG> assembly approved a$3,843 Committee onRecognized StudentOrganizations <CORSO>budget recommendation onMonday, March 3.Included in the allocationwere: a $1,775 loan to LittleWing, a student organizationplanning to bring musicianJohn Hammond to thecampus in the spring; a *$938grant to SG: a $275 grant tothe concert band; and $375grant to the He-Man. a groupsponsoring an outdoor dancenext quarter; and a com¬bined $100 grant $400 loan toWalpurgisnachtThe assembly also ap¬proved a $250 appropriationto fund a survey of studentsin the College. DavidBlumberg. a sophomore inthe College who will conductthe survey next quarter,presented his proposal to theassembly Blumberg intendsto distribute the 20-pageNBC crew causes parking brouhahaon University ave., 57th and 59thWAITING: Scores of students wait at Ida Noyes Wednesday to collect their ticketstor next week s Midnight Special performances.questionaire to 800 students.Questions will cover allaspecis of the College, in¬cluding the curriculum, thedormitory system, andstudent life.Several representativesopposed SG funding beacusethe results of the surveywould be of value to thedeans and the ad¬ ministration, who haveexpressed an interest in thestudy Blumberg informedthe assembly that theUniversity administrationand the departments wereunable to fund the surveybecause of statutoryprotections of studentprivacy.The delegates reached an informal compromise,agreeing that SG should seekcompensation from..theUniversity once the survey iscompletedAt the same meeting, theassembly elected KathyHannum to a vacant CORSOseat and Peter Borwnchairman of the SpecialAffairs CommitteePhoto by Mik# Shield*Insidethis issue:UC necktie p.3Tickets P* 4Swim team1 p. 14fFibers may cause cancerUniversity professorsMartha Warnock and An¬drew Churg presentedevidence of a link betweenlung cancer and asbestosfibers that can be found inthe lungs of “almosteveryone in an urbanpopulation” at a pathologyconvention on Wednesday.The two reported that inmost cases the asbestosfibers in the lungs probablyhave no effect, but there maybe some connection in lungcancer patients with a largenumber of fibers. Warnockand Churg. both of thePritzger School of Medicine,noted that the associationbetween long*term oc¬cupational exposure toasbestos and the develop¬ment of lung cancer isalready well known.While attempting toconfirm other scientists’findings that iron-proteincoated fibers could probablybe found in the lungs of almost everyone, Drs.Warnock and Churgexamined autopsy samplesand found that severalpatients with lung cancerhad high fiber counts.Subsequent studies showedthat fibers were present inalmost all members of thecontrol and cancer groups.In most cases, thescientists said, “the smallamounts of asbestosprobably have littleclinical...effect.(However.)...there doesexist a special subgroup withboth relatively high countsand tumors.”In these cases, they said,the limited evidence“strongly” suggests somekind of link, even though thepatients had no known ex¬posure to asbestos.The most obvious ex¬planation is that the patientswere at risk because of someunknown occupational ex¬ posure, Dr. Churg said. “It isour impression, however,that the number of(asbestos) bodies found inthis group is far smaller thanwould be found in the lungsof most occupationally ex¬posed workers, with orwithout carcinoma.”With regard to the effectsof smoking, Dr. Churg saidthat since asbestos andsmoking are known to have amultiplicative effect incausing lung cancer, “it maybe that even relatively smallamounts of asbestos areimportant’’ in thedevelopment of cancer inpatients who smoke.However, he said,“although we do not havesmoking histories on all ourpatients, we assume thatsmoking is not the majorfactor influencing our resultssince we do have smokers inboth the high and low countlung cancer groups.” The Chicago MaroonTim Rudyeditor In chiefPaul Yovovich JeH Rothbus/ness manager managing editorMike Rudy associate editorsMike Klingensmith Ann Thornetporit editor ossfsfonf business managerDove Axelrod contributing editorstaffDavid Blum Chip ForresterMike Bojonowski Peter Gollonis Mary MortiseTom Branson Kurt Hanson Jim NochbarJeanne Dufor* Mary Ann Hudson Tony OaksAnne HikerKevin Komroczewski Jon RhodesTony BarrettEric BuetherGory FieldChip Forrester Suzonne Kleir photo stafflinda GouldCharlie HarveyJohn LawlerJanice Lyon Ross LyonSusie LyonEugene Michoel Steve Durbinnews ed/forMaria Crawford ScottJohn Vailpho*n editorTom McNamaraJonothan RothsteinElizabeth RussoMike SingerMork SpieglonDean ValentineMary Kaon*Lisa VogelJeH MutchlerRosalia PomachowskiOavid Rias*'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 (312) 753-3266.NEW-BSfc NOW»^|hoSwm-to o*FREElMOTOROLA STEREO TAPE PLAYER 356UY-OF-THE-WEEK'73 CHEVROLET IMPALAV8 Automatic Trans Power Steering Power Brokes.Tinted Gloss leather Interior Radio. Whitewalls 12 000Actual Miles. Stk. 3529 74 CHEVY CAPRICESfactory airconoiORIGINALLY $5495 SAVE $1800*3695Wt»» less With fw G*otit Tiodv ' (lottu S*y! '>g' Fawt* S'ee’ <4Puietwi 8 oh»> Pu*»et W t-ckxws Puswe< Sea's tUN«i Dao< i.m6>* a*' A.i' v«« »' too* WttifwoH lute Rod" • P*ed* .#•-214574 VEGA HATCHBACKAutomatic tuns boths i d* mouldingswr.itew.ttls radio nta>'Stk Nc. 357572 CHEV. VEGA?Di ilalctiback Autobans Radio WhitfoaUsStk 361?72 CHEV IMPALA STATION WAGONV8 automatic bansbumtt staging tael ancond tadio tack *1988•tiiltwalls Stk No 3621 ‘2288’1288 12/1212 MONTHS OR 12.000 MILTSMECHANICAL INSURANCE COVERAGEFOR USED CAR BUYERSMOW AVAILABLE! 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COTTAGE GROVE AVE.PHONE: Ml 3-3500 open daily til 8 p m • sat l sun til 6 p m■ I'lll'MI 'll'e iifih '2-The Chicago Mafoon-Friday, March 7, 1975'rn// vtt’*ii; THE MEANMG OF WORSHIPSunday Forum 9:15 a jn.at Brant House5540 Wood lawnLEADER: JOEL LUNDEENALL WELCOMELutheran Campus Ministry\ MINESTRONE CONCERT \Friday, March 7, NoonReynolds Club-SouthCollegium ChorusBring your LunchFreelKIMBARKLIQUORSWINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINESTIMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to youlTHE ONLY TREE WINE SHOP HI NYOE NARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, RK.1214 E. 53rd St.53-Klnberli Plaza NY-3-3355!|il it. If littlti.UtiUKICJtllllltllS t' 'iftU • r t * - i 11 ' £ 11. f' v P f T* f 0 JLU&jlUMJ, HETF ME"Ht we GCTTA COMflrtf ,--Srus #T s^EDr_. r-,®7•4 r \ ‘••■i GCF MA»J, IM KinDA SCAffO--VKnou, W au/tk' otmM CAMMfSUH{*£ uEvf FuMfD THiS Show, TVRECEPTION CoMHlTTff JUMPSOUR THROPiTS w(TH *U-KiVJtiSA SCtlwV ACTS; TRYimy T'&rr attention O'- j^ V 1>1'H HH «AW, THIS AIN'T JUST flHY CAHWS--THis is TV WWttlTf OF CHICAGO- weOF TW HOST LlTEMTr aw' wmucewTUNNfS^iTfS IN TM‘ fWTlRE COWTRV" Acx&rf WHERE TV STUDENTS HAVf A TIMf-HCHOEfOJJJrtiw foa cdolnejv i£m-*AomwnsyOFMWO- MAW, TWfT, stun" «»»»► «*Tt» »r‘ftf.. AW „<VT* »S *“ •*«* '"IU }S*ff yfAH, TOOtr RtfrrtT«Of COURSE -- So 40ON IM TO*f Aw'HAVE NO FEAR*!r\ >*W^,- Pit^ . w :.mil LETS(fey* ,8B!sN _w \ »TJS• i'M * • Y > ' -j»: w> ■■- Dfcfc- "IAuDTWYMKW TtfPRESIDENT OF THAT Pt**w Kn*««**-rwv< - ■ n■ • *„v N]#PK Iff*' Jr '^1 -•i oh AftJka/+dr >Iste* «r su[A:,; wf'Saks remodels old school tie LETTERSTO THE EDITORWith the departure of bow-tie trendsetter Edward Levi,a renaissance in the moretraditional necktie has hitthe quadrangles.Spearheading the newfashion is an offering fromthe prestigious Saks FifthAvenue, which has unveiledfor spring a University ofChicago necktie complete with the official Universityseal.Apparently many peoplehave been dissatisfied withthe University tie which hasbeen on sale at thebookstore. “It’s a terriblesleazy thing.” said one, “andshouldn’t cost more than14*.” The new Saks tie sells for$7.50 and is available at themany Saks stores across thecountry. It is supposed to beof much better quality thanthe bookstore model, and itdoesn’t look twenty years outof style.One of the peopledissatisfied with the oid tie was Harold .Metcalf, dean ofstudents in the businessschool “I thought somethingshould be done about it.Naturally, being with thebusiness school, we turned tothe private sector. Saks wasthe first to respondAccording to Saks, the tiehas been selling well CondosConsidering the fact thatmuch of Hyde Park’s decenthousing has been wrenchedaway by developmentcompanies and converted toCozy Condominiums whoseprice removes them from ascope feasible to most HydeParkers; considering thatthe persons inhabiting theseapartments, and who wereevicted to make way forFireside Chats, were largelyU. of C. students. I do notunderstand how any amountof money justifies fillingentire pages of our ownpaper with advertisementsfor these hell hounds.M RosenthalCollegeA letter to the editor, toJohn Wilson, and especiallyto Richard Taub and to allthe other teachers at theUniversity of Chicago:I was sickened by thearticle. “Cohler and Taubcomment on tenure;”sickened but not surprised,because I already know howthis University grants anddenies tenure. I knowbecause I went to theUniversity for one year anddropped out because of thelack of concern theUniversity shows for itsundergraduate students.One expression of this lack of concern is the University’sfailure to provide itsstudents with teachers.Instead, it gives us“superstars” who either donot care about teachingundergraduates or who ,would not know hot to goabout teaching them even ifthey did care because theyhave lost contact withhumanity. And maybe I’mbeing heartless but pleaseallow me that privilegeI am tired of professorswho show no concern fortheir students, who stand atthe front of the class andpolemicize, who assignpapers and wait months tograde them, and who do notgive any constructive inputwhen the papers are gradedI am tired of the attitude thatundergraduates have novalue, that teaching themcauses the professor to “losetouch with changingscholarship ”If some of the professorswould bother to talk with usthey might receive somenovel approaches to theirsubjects. At least theremight be some free ex¬change of ideas I realizethat it is difficult to researchand teach at the same timeand that the situation ismade more difficult byrequiring everyone tobecome a superstar. And bythe way, that superstardomcontinued on poge 4THE VISITING COMMITTEE to theROBERT ARDREY DEPARTMENT OF MUSICauthor of presents/ AFRICAN GENESIS. IKE TERRITORIAL IMPERATIVE MARGARET HILLISAND THE SOCIAL CONTRACTDirector, Chicago Symphony ChorusSpeaking onTHE ART OF THEI INFORMAL LECTURE-DISCUSSION8:30 PJM. CHORAL CONDUCTORFRIDAY MARCH 14 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 19755:00 P.M.WOODWARD COURT IDA NOYES LIBRARY . 1212 EAST 59TH STREET5825 $. WOODLAWN (No. 3 in the Series "The Conductor’s Art”)II! Hi twdUAlyticketantHdMkHr than* * '^ rbicwt.vjb' 1 io;t»M :t»c:»/l!Friday, March 7, 1975 The Chicago Maroon 3renaanement Sk weddins vino*CUSTOM DISIONID ORIGINALS A LI MIT CD COITIONS ByE/4REAEA CCCttGOLD FROM $*0 SILVER FROM SIS 477-tillIf you like, youmay choosefrom a finecollection ofdiamonds andother gemsJAMESSCUl/LTZCLEANERSCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd S».752-6933 HYDE PARK SHOEREBUILDERS1451 E. 57th ST.493-1247We Sell and RepairSHOESHigh Quality:Men’s Genuine LeatherDress ShoesWork ShoesGym Shoes (Converse)Individual AttentionTo Most Small Cars31?-mi 3-3113foreign car hospital & clmic, inc.w^^"^5424 south kimbark avenue • Chicago 60615“Steppenwolf explodes andburns in image and color.”— Kevin Kelly, Boston GlobeH UK I vV-V if jfw-it \1-\V vt IK s>i x K\ LX AVSN Jt t WMW Hs] I rtf SVM >1 f i <>-'>fiimi{ PIkRf < If \VNTI ( ARl A Hf)M ANfllloi ^ tA 1 (f RMANN :t W Vu)x ( ,(( )R( ,t ^ KI/\tfi\INI!SHMAN indKK HARM ‘(fRl ANl)I gi il-wPhxk*.- ft HR NV-VAT Wtittifi iml!Vn T»*rj Lx FRf 01IAIMsDist. by IVR fI MS IM Ri4\w J> R*• JT. ' -*• WM LANGE OQT^olk, system INOW PLAYINGAT THESE THEATRESU.A.MARINA1& 1MarmaCity ADELPHIChicagoEDENSNorthbrook WILLOW CREEKPalatineU. A. CINEMAOfkfcrook S Pana-VueAutomatic Viewer$11.99S Pana Vue 3Folding ViewerOpS Pana-Vue 1Viewer• T,tf»etor ccoven-enr •» ?tMTbase lor choice ot jngws• •3 440Pocket Camera Outfit• New electronic shutter automatic exposurecontrol • Sharp 30 element t 95 lens • B'ighrvtewt-od**' • Double exposure prevention con¬trol • Uses the new tirop-in 1 to film cartridgethat giyes you up to 3’? x sharp colorprints • Comec boxen complete a .fh detach -able wr.st sf$42.00Universityof ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis 2nd FloorPhoto Dept NBC caters to adultsThe Student Activitiesoffice has announced that thenumber of tickets distributedfor the Midnight Special isnot more than the number ofavailable seats. Each ticket,on the reverse side, explainsthat distribution is at timesin excess of studio capacityand that therefore a ticketdoes not guarantee ad¬mittance.But Student Activities didnot distribute in excess of studio capacity a ndtherefore everyone with aticket is guaranteed ad¬mittance.On request of NBC no oneunder 16 will be admitted,even if they are with aparent. Proof of age maytherefore be requested. NBCexplained that the MidnightSpecial program is geared tothe 16-28 age group and theydo not want the show associated with a youngergroup.Also in cooperation withNBC no cameras or smokingwill be permitted because itwill interfere with thefilming of the show.Student Activities alsoannounced that thedistribution of tickets to themovie “Shampoo” will takeplace today at 2:00 on thefirst floor of Ida Noyes Hall.LETTERS TO THE EDITORcontinued from page 3is required, at least in part,to draw more students, whowill again be denied aneducation.I don’t know, but maybethere’s a little resentmentfor one who can both teachand research at the sametime, and do both well.At any rate, I am surprisedthat the undergraduates donot protest this abominablesituation of being treatedlike worthless imbeciles.Some of them do protest, byleaving the University whenthey face this lack of con¬cern. And I guess some ofthose who stay are juststarstruck or they do notknow where else to go whenone of the best educationalinstitutions in America failsto do its job. Maybe they justwant the prestige of thedegree. I do not really know,it remains a mystery to me.But if the University hasno concern for un¬dergraduate education, itshould stop pretending that itdoes. It should become agraduate institution. But Isuppose that that will neverhappen because theUniversity depends at leastto some extent on the tuitionthat it receives from thecollege students and themoney that it will receivefrom them as alumni.And now in closing I willoffer a statement to thestudents who do not feelupset about this situation. Ifyou are not upset you arestupid, because you arebeing stepped on!! Unless ofcourse you want to bestepped on and then youshould be concerned becauseyou are sick.Linda PeacockTheftTo “Unsigned”, respon¬sible for the letter in theTuesday (March 4) Maroon,concerning the theft of Mr Stafford’s rugby picture:Was this letter a joke? Isimply cannot believe thatanyone who admires the“artistic craftsmanship” ofa photograph could alsopresume that monetaryreimbursement would in anyway compensate for the lossof such a work. You do notseem to consider that Mr.Stafford may be as ap¬preciative as you, if not moreso. of the qualities which sodistinguish the photo, andtherefore Mr. Stafford couldnever be compensated for itstheft, much less estimate itsworth. Humph.If your letter/ confessionwas in earnest, f would liketo offer a more agreeablesolution to this problem, a solution which satisfies boththe victim and the per¬petrator of the heist. Itseems to me that since thephotograph is already inyour possession, and sinceyou are willing to pay Mr.Stafford’s estimate of itsvalue (which may run intoseveral figures, you know),you might as well use themoney to have the picturecopied by a professionalphotographer, and thendiscreetly return the originalto its former location in thegallery. This way, you couldhave the picture blown up toposter-size if you so desired,and we could all get a look atthe photo which inspired thebrouhahaPhilip de O’iveiraCALENDARON-CAMPUSFriday March 7FORMOSA CLUB: 7 00 p.m., Ida NoyesCREATIVE SABBATH: 7:30 p m., HillelFOLKDANCERS: 8 00 pm, Ida NoyesTRACK MEET: 6 30 p m., Mandel HallCONTEMP CHAMBER PLAYERS: 8 30 p m., MandelTRACK MEET: 6 30 p m., Field House.CONTEMP CHAMBER PLAYERS: 8:30 p.m., Mandel HallUT: "Zoo Story" and "Boor," 8 30 p.m., Reynolds Club TheatreHITCHCOCK PRESENTS: "The Wrong Box," SI, 6 30 , 8 30, and 10 30 CobbPeter Sellers, Peter Cook and Dudley MooreDISCUSSION "Human Rights in South Korea" with Linda Jones, 7 30 pm.CrossroadsLECTURE: Keith Browning. "The Meso Scale Structure of Rainfall Systems inthe British isles," 3 30 p m., Henry Hinds AuditoriumARABIC CIRCLE: Ali Zaghal, "The Kurdish Problem in Iraq," 3 00 p m Pick506LECTURE Randall Holmes "Regulation of Toxigenesis in CorynebacteriumD.phteriae," 4 00 p m CISC 101.TICKETS: to "Shampoo" distributed free at 7 00 pm , from "fhe desk" IdaNoyesSaturday March 8CSA Chinese Student Association, 6 00 p.m., Ida NoyesUT Zoo Story" and "Boor," 8 30 p m., Reynolds Club TheatreFILM "The Angei Levine," 8 30 p m., Hille)U SYMPHONY: conducted by Jan Her linger, 8:30 p.m , Mandel HallCROSSROADS: lunch at 1 00 p m . SI 50, and at 8 00 pm , a Bowling Party "allat the Crossroads Student Center.CROSSROADS: lunch at 1 00 p m., SI 50 and at 8 00 p m , a ’ Bowling Parv " allat the Crossroads Student CenterJAZZ:JAZZ: Joseph Jarman and Leonard Jones, 8 00 p m ,LFF: "Day At the Races," 7:15and 9 30 p m , Cobb, SISunday March 9FOLKDANCERS: 8:00 pm. Ida Noyes.BRIDGE: 3 00 pm, CrossroadsLOX & BAGELS: 11 00 a m., Hillel, SI 50 Ida Noyes Library, $? 00continued on page 13Department of Music (in cooperation with UT)Presents Two Chamber OperasTHE COMTEMPORARV CHAMBER PLAYERSRalph Shapey • Music directorCaptain Cook • Bo LawergrenThe Stronger • Hugo WeisgallFRIDAY* MARCH 7MANDEL HALL • 8:30 P.M.ADMISSION is FREE AND WITHOUT TICKETI4-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, March 7, 1975Inside: A Sampling Of Recent FictionThe Chicago Literary ReviewBook Supplement to the Chicago MaroonVolume 3, Number 2 The University of Chicago Friday, March 7, 1975Legends In Their Own Timeby Simon SchuchatThis Sunday, as important a literaryevent as any in the four years I've beenat the University will take place whenAllen Ginsberg and William Burroughsread together at Mandel Hall. It will beGinsberg s first poetry reading here inseveral years, and it will be the firsttime Burroughs has ever read inChicago. It’s also one of the first timesthat these two seminal figures incontemporary American writing haveread together; it begins a series of jointreadings in Chicago and elsewhere.Both gentlemen were foundingmembers of the “Beat Generation,"along with Jack Kerouac, GregoryCorso, Neal Cassady, Herbert Huncke,and others. The Beat Generation was aliterary revolution whose culturalimplications (absolute freedom, heavenon earth, an end to the human war)were vigorously attacked by theAcademy and the popular, “middle¬brow" press.Ginsberg, after years of Dostoevskianturmoil in New York and “on the road,"went to San Francisco, where, with theaid of a friendly psychiatrist, heabandoned his guilt feelings about notbeing a "normal,” straight American.That is. he decided he was only himselfand if that was strange, so be it. Soonthereafter, in the first flower of the“San Francisco Renaissance,’’ hewrote the first of the works whichbrought him fame; “America,”“Sunflower Sutra," and. especially, thelong poem “Howl.”These peoms, formally as innovativeas anything written since the Imagists,enraged many by their frank, outspokencontent — drugs, sex (especiallyhomosexuality, mystic revelationfreely espoused, and the middle-classmorality of Eisenhower Americarejected. Freed by his earlier act of self¬acceptance, Ginsberg declared himselfand his companions Saints. In the longand glorious career that followed, hehas as much as possible justified theclaim, with masterful humanexpressions such as Kaddish, his elegyto his mother. As a literary figure, hehas gradually been accepted, receivingthe National Book Award last year forThe Fall of America, his most recentbook of poems.Meanwhile, William Burroughs wasexploring the world of junk. Scion of awealthy St. Louis family, graduate ofHarvard, Burroughs became involved,out of boredom, in the heroin scene of New York in the forties, became anaddict and then, in 1957, wassuccessfully cured by treatment withApomorphine, which is illegal in thiscountry.Burroughs was the first to point outheroin as the emblem, the metaphor ofWestern technological society. It is all afunction of The Algebra of Need—needfor junk, sex, power. Right now, forinstance, America is going throughwithdrawal pains as our supply ofoil—the industrial addiction—becomesfirst more costly, and soon, nonexistent.Burroughs exposes all this in the mostbitterlv hilarious prose since JonathonSwift.Naked Lunch, his first major work, isa landscape peopled by such creaturesas The County Clerk and Doc Parker(who chuckle over the time old Docaccidentally filled a morphineprescription with Saniflush), andinventions such as the Giant TalkingAsshole. Since Naked Lunch, Burroughshas developed his literary method, the cut-up. in two short books (Minutes toGo and The Exterminator) and threenovels (Nova Express, The SoftMachine, and Ticket that Exploded), allcrammed with the brilliant hits thatcome of rearranging parts of the whole.He’s also written another, moreconventional novel, The Wild Boys,about the parthenogenic mutants of thefuture who will open fire on civilizationin the near future: "Wild Boys have noname and no navel. They have erasedthe concept of identity.”Burroughs, although he is in NormanMailer’s words, “the only Americannovelist living who may conceivably bepossessed by genius,’’ is moreinterested in calling attention to thepresent emergency, the evil inherent inour civilization which at present seemsabout to bring the whole earth downwith it, than in creating works of art.new artifacts of that same sick culture.His is the clear eye and unsentimentalvoice which sees the house burning longbefore others have even noticed the warm atmosphere and beganpanicking.Burroughs and Ginsberg’s historicconnection with University of Chicagogoes back to 1958, when combinedintrigue by some portions of theAdministration and The ChicagoTribune forced the resignation of thethen editor-in-chief and poetry editor ofthe Chicago Review. Irvin Rosenthaland Paul Carroll, ostensibly forpublishing only the work of a small,“beat” clique. In fact, the nearsuppression of the magazine cameabout because of the Review’spublication of sections ot Naked Lunch;its first American appearance. Thereverberations reached as far as Timemagazine and the affair helped catapultGinsberg and, especially, Burroughs,into “American culture ”, setting themfirmly on the road to fame. But whatwas shocking then has since beenaccepted, and so they will be here.Most recently, both have publishedbooks of interviews (Allen Verbatim,edited by Gordon Ball. McGraw-Hilland The Job. with Daniel Odier, GrovePress) where they present views on allmanner of subjects from CIAinvolvement in the opium trade, to thedeath of Ezra Pound (Ginsberg) andScientology and Reich's orgone theory(Burroughs). Especially worthy ofattention in Ginsberg's book are theconversations between Ginsberg,Robert Duncan, and Kent State studentson “Recent Twentieth CenturyPoetry;" among the gems are bothDuncan and Ginsberg’s memories oftheir first meeting.Burroughs’ book includes, in additionto the interviews, many of his shorterpieces written during the sixties whichhe inserts as examples accompanyinghis responses. The Job was firstpublished, actually, in 1969; this editionis revised and includes Burroughs’ takeon Watergate, “Playback from Eden toWatergate." Ginsberg's book is firmlyplaced in the here and now; Burroughsperceptions range across time andspace to present “the long view .”Sunday, then, at three pm in MandelHall. William S. Burroughs and AllenGinsberg, two of the finest writers,sharpest eyes, and clearest heartsliving in America, will read their worksand generally make their presencesfelt. As all poetry should be, the readingwill be free. It will be more than worthattending.Friday, March 7, 1975-The Chicago Maroon-52TheChicagoLiteraryReview The A merican Scene: Exploring Social RolesThe Case Of The Philandering TheologianA Month of Sundaysby John UpdikeAlfred A. Knopf$6.95Reviewed by Miles ArcherWith his new novel. Month of Sundays.John Updike has continued the developmentof his own particular voice. In his previouswork, starting with The Poorhouse Fair.Updike's concern has focussed on thesituation of the individual locked in themiddle class—the white. Protestant, middle-American, middle class—and the problemsof existence with which such an individual isconfronted.Updike's characters do not live in the in¬tellectual world of Sartre, where charactersthink out and analyze their actions, nor dothey live in a neo-Romantic Hemingwayworld where soldiers in a perpetual war areforced to live in an almost anti-analyticalpresent.The world that Updike presents liessomewhere between these two. Hischaracters are educated, but not in¬tellectuals, a Protestant minister, a highschool teacher, a used car salesman. Theyare caugnt up with the making-ends-meet situation of the middle class. The result isthat they have time to realize theirexistential problems, but not so much timethat they can approach them in an analyticaland intellectual manner, nor so little time fora Hemingway-style “moment of truth"either.The voice of the average, middle-aged,middle-class. middle-American. in themiddle of the twentieth century'is Updike’svoice. Month of Sundays, the new book, dealsdirectly with this situation.Written in the form of a diary of a thirtyday stay at a rest home, the narrator—asophisticated, well read, forty-ish Protestantminister—wrestles with his problems. Hehas been sent to the home because of hisvarious "indiscretions.” for rest andrelaxation. He is to relax, play some golf anda few hands of poker, and. for one hour (11a m. to noon) every day. to keep a journal.Month of Sundays, is this journal.At the start, the narrator is clearly nervousabout the diary and about being in the resthome. The first entries are written in a verydefensive manner, self-consciously clever,filled with puns and replete with quotes fromvarious philosophers and clerics and in¬tellectual discussions. This switches to an almost bawdy section in which the ministerdescribes the various affairs that led to hisbeing sent to the rest home, affairs describedwith a highly defensive sexual explicitness.Gradually, as the month wears on, thisself-consciousness diminishes and the readeris presented with the slow unfolding of thisperiod of crisis in the minister’s life: theworld he lives in. and the doubts, fears andproblems that arise from that world.The first part of the book can be annoying,with its strained self-conscious clevernessand its talkiness. While it is clear that theproblems the narrator is dealing with arevery important to him. it is sometimes hardfor the reader to find them important. Thereis definitely the possibility that, if one is notsensitive to the problems of the forty-plusgeneration, the book might very well go flat.Throughout his career, Updike has dealtwith the passage of this generation throughits own special set of spiritual crises. We cansee this book as an extension of thischronology. Even if their problems may bedifficult to appreciate by one on the outside.Updike’s achievement in capturing the spiritof this generation is admirable. This is whathis “voice" is so uniquely capable of doing,and it is nice to hear the sound of it again. S 5 S 5 s1 z 3 69 iO aa AZ.AS’ "Ik rr'Ll- X3 7JS S S S iiv A*> 14* ^ n n » £4i so 31 —IW II,I*The Plight Of The Faculty WifeThe War Between the TatesBy Alison LurieRandom House$6.95Reviewed by Meredith AnthonyThe War between the Tates is Cornellprofessor Alison Lurie’s fifth novel and firstbest-seller. The subtlety of characterization,which has always been her chief strength,has reached a high point here, while herweakness for unconvincing and rather sensational plot episodes mars this noveleven more than it did her previous work.The novel, while badly flawed, isimportant today not only for the utterly truedepiction of the professor’s wife, Erica Tate,but more importantly for the daring withwhich Ms. Lurie presents this “gentle,rational, even-tempered woman” who wakesup one morning and admits to herself thatshe hates her adolescent children. These twoare overdrawn, as are many of the minorcharacters, but they are humorouslySEMINARY CO-OP BOOKSTORELETS YOU IN ON A SECRET:WE RE HERE ...AND YOU MAY FIND US\ WORTH LOOKING FOR.i •Over 7.OC0 titles in a wide varietyof fields. 18.000 books An end-of-yeor rebate (ca. 5%)—and orderprivileges-for membersOpen l l .00-4:00 M-FBasement of Chicago TheologicalSeminaryHaaiS OrttrtlfctAvthUtHnn>S described, in a parody of Hobbes’ descriptionof life outside the state in The Leviathan, as“rude, coarse, selfish, insolent, nasty,brutish, and tall.”Equally entertaining and perceptive is thecharacterization of Erica’s friend Danielle:“People who do not much like Erica admitthat she is pretty, while those (a largernumber) who do not much like Danielleadmit that she is good-looking.” Danielle is,moreover, a newly divorced, reactionaryfeminist who tries to raise Erica’sconsciousness. She points out the tellinganomoly of their names: “They’re not real names, only the feminine diminutives ofmen’s... I don’t like the idea of being calledLittle Daniel all my life.”The body of the novel, however, alternatesbetween Erica’s interior monologue and herhusband Brian’s. His character is flat anddislikable, and his logic does not evenmarginally ring true. It may be that men do,in fact, justify their actions with such shoddyexcuses, but one expects something moreconvincing in fiction. Erica’s character, onthe other hand, could hardly be more finely(cent, on next page)A#'Jp* SPRING BREAK SPECIAL!FOR U of CSTUDENTS. FACULTY. AND STAFFINCLUSIVE TOUR CHARTER!■ Round-trip air transportation via TWA Trans World Airlines■ Complimentary meal and beverage service in flight■ Transportation between airports and hotels■ Three nights at the Ramada Inn m Orlando■ Walt Disney World, admission and 8 attractions■ Bus transportation within Florida■ One night at the Red Carper Inn m the Tampa/St Pete area■ Transportation and admission to Busch Gardens■ Three nights at the Seasons of Lauderdale in Ft Lauderdale■ All baggage handling at airports and hotels■ The assistance of an MTI Representative■ All tips and taxes for the aboveOWTOUR PRICE PER PERSONDouble occupancyChildren under 18(sharing room with parent)— ONLY $249.00save 40% compared with regularprices while enioymg this delight¬ful Florida vacation Air fare isreduced through a special TWAround-tnp chartered flight✓ & :sO $199 00While you travel, a satisfyingmeal free stereo entertain¬ment and complimentarybeverage add to your plea¬sure Your hotels offercolor TV refreshing swimsdelicious cuisine andluxurious comfort4&MUJER TOURS, Inc.“FOR INFORMATION ANDRESERVATION CONTACT:KURT HANSONAT 753 2249 (ROOM 2403)6-The Chicago Maroon-Fridoy, March 7, 1975.taO uM 01)33111.*) o.fT-C W rbioM .vobnSf(Tate* cont.)detailed or more consistently drawn. Part ofAlison Lurie’s art is that we learn of Erica’slimitations and faults not from her husband’sversion of events but through hfer own. Wecome to find her cold, self-centered, andinhibited, but nonetheless believable, fromher clumsy attempts to handle the eventsthat jar her quiet life.These events themselves are phoney,overdramatized, and populated bystereotypes. Ms. Lurie ob6tinantly refuses tostay within the limitations of her talent. Herfirst chapter establishes a few characters and a setting with rare perception. Aseemingly successful woman, a wife, motherand free-lance artist, is nevertheless vaguelydissatisfied with her situation. Then sheabruptly discovers that her husband, apolitical science professor with frustratedambitions, is having an affair with a student,a vapid, childish hippy.What follows is a clutter of tacky episodesthat Ms. Lurie should never have attempted.Scenes out of the youth culture, a pot party, afeminist demonstration, an abortion, and ananti-war march, are described with adesperate and vain lust for authenticity thatbelies the excuse that they are seen through the eyes of a middle-aged couple. Herfailure, and even her desire to attempt anaccurate pop-culture, campus milieu,unfortunately dates Ms. Lurie just as herfailure to make Brian’s interior monologuering true categories her as merely awoman’s novelist.One wishes that she had written theexciting and needed novel that seemed to bepromised in the first chapter, a perceptive,honest look at a crisis of motherhood. Of allthe topics that have become acceptable sincethe feminist movement gained strength, thisis one of the few relevant subjects that haveremained unapproachable. It is all right to opt against motherhood only provided onedoes it in time. One wonders about those whodidn’t find out until too late.Nevertheless, Alison Lurie’s delicateinsight into the character of her dissatisfiedfaculty wife is a minor milestone in thevoicing of a woman’s inability to cope in oursociety. Erica’s friend Danielle accuratelysums up the situation in her parody ofAuden:“Cleopatra’s lips are kissedwhile an unimportant wifewrites “I do not like my life”underneath her shopping list.”Domestic Untranquility — Cutting The LossesManual Laborby Frederick BuschNew Directions.50eviewed by Pat Cecchini“I’m sure that narrative leads tosanity, and slowly, carefully, chiselingthe details, I must make what’shappening come from what’shappened; that will tell me what’s tocome. I have to organize, pull it intolines, directions. I will not go mad.Anne won’t go mad. We’ll survive.”So writes Phil Sorenson as he begins a dailyjournal of his collapsing marriage halfwaythrough Frederick Busch’s Manual Labor.Sorenson is trying to keep his wife Annefrom going off the deep end — to keep herfrom literally jumping into the AtlanticOcean off the coast of Maine, where theyhave come to salvage the wreckage of theirrelationship Married 10 years, this once-promising couple, he a poet, she a painter,have arrived at an emotional and spiritualimpasse, brought about by a series of life-denying catastrophes, most recently a full-term miscarriage and a brutal domesticaccident which leaves the husband partiallycrippled After many losses “Now we’rewhat we started with, we re the entiredynasty we began.”And so they come to Maine, to an old farmhouse as badly in need of repair as theirmarriage, and they start to work, to fixthings, because “You forget with yourhands.” as Phil says in the book s openingwords.This novel is overwhelmingly self-conscious, almost academic in itsexperimentation with narrative voices andtelling devices, and it comes dangerouslyclose to preciosity. Roughly divided intothree unequal sections three voices tell thestory. The first 16 pages form a prologue inwhich one of the stillborn children of Anneand Phil is the speaker, “I am a baby whodied, the voice of romance, and these aresome of the dreams I have witnessed in theactual world ” In a series of little scenes thattake place in New Hampshire the voiceintroduces us to his parents as they go aboutthe business of repairing their house. Thesescenes are related in the continuous presentwhich moves forward in time, bringing usfinally to the catastrophe which forces thesecond miscarriage and drives the Sorensonsto MainePhil is cutting the grass with his self-propelled power mover; the sun is setting.Anne has drinks waiting on the porch and allis rural tranquillity In a sudden freak of anaccident, however, the mover mows downPhil’s thumb as he reaches into the grass toexamine a toad he has found there. In theevening at the hospital where her mutilated husband lies sedated , Anne has her secondmiscarriage; she is nine months pregnant. Inthe hospital bathroom, “My brother spun inthe water and sank.” The psychicdevastation wrought by this double mishap issuggested in a final brief scene spoken bythe stillborn:“Our mother at the kitchen window inanother night. The moon was mistedand their mountain glowed like ice. Inher long white nightgown she satstraight up in her chair, her armsagainst her chest, hands against herchin. Her face was wet. She watchedour father, dizzy and bandaged. crawling in little circles, tearing at thegrass that has grown high again to findhis orphaned thumb."The second section of the novel is Anne’s“letter" to her mother, a rambling, inchoatedocument that utilizes the techniques of thestream-of-consciousness monologue. She hasno intention of ever mailing this letter,though she stays up into the night writingobsessively. The letter serves both asexposition, filling in the details and facts ofthe Sorenson’s married life and Anne'syouth, and as revelation of Anne’s(cont. on poge 8)TheChicago LiteraryReviewThe Chicago Literary Review appearsseveral times each academic year as theliterary supplement of the Chicago Maroon.This issue was edited by Meredith Anthonywho wishes to thank Ann Thorne. CLR’sregular editor Creath Thorne, and the ArtDepartment's Harold Haydon for theirassistance and advice. The drawings in thisissue are by Karen Moline and Lori Siegel.The entire contents of this supplement arecopyright 1975 by the Chicago Maroon.STUDENT HOUSING OFFICE PRESENTSCHICAGO Lisl len, Jack, you want books wid class,syMPHCNyORCHESTRA 0 r wid ambience (whatteeor dat is!)ENSEMBLESContemporary Arts Quartet^Nf\ Otakor Sroubek * Violin Pi sit got 'em at a place wat got class.Fred Spec tor - Violinx— s ^ William Schoen - Viola SDon Mol me - Cello /'Nf . ) -Program include-> 1 J Wh odder dore for courses, or just to be1J t \ Quartet bvrArriaga Beethoven J J/ \ \ Quartet Opus 59<^/o 3. and C \ y-N/ ) 1 String Quartet (1963) by J l V J\ ( \ ^’cbto Mamtya / / da eyes wid. And we're gonna sell yacheap tunes to go along wid.So ya better get ta from us.- OR ELSE.Mar. 9 SUNDAY 3:30 \ S J TH STUDENT CO-OPWoodward Court l jj LADMISSION FREE & WITHOUT TICKET W *' rfFor information call Student Housing Office, 753-4534 P m nKeyno Ms Club Basement M-F 9:30-5:45.S: 10-4Friday, Morch 7, 1975-The Chicago Moroon-7 TheChicagoliteraryReviow-3ChicagoLiteraryocFrom Italy—The Novelist As TherapistInvisible Citiesby Italo Calvin©trans. by William WeaverHareourt, Brace. Jovanovich® $6.50P Reviewed by Lindsay Waters^ There is n© story in Invisible Cities. Thereis a conversation-"for the most part, a one*way conversation. Marco Polo describes toKublai Khan the cities in the Khan’s empirethat Marco Polo has visited. The youngItalian traveller wishes to amuse the aged,melancholy Khan who has all the wealth andesteem the world can give but who sensessomething lacking. His empire seems “anendless, formless ruin.” Marco Polo picturesfifty-five cities. Each bears a woman'sname: Diomira. Zaira. Chloe, each city wiltentice or repel the venturesome visitor ’Marco Polo describes a city as the visitorwould see it: “Proceeding eighty miles intothe northwest wind, you reach the city ofEuphemia ., .” There is something odd abouteach city. Hypetia yields the pleasures of the flesh to the visitor but only if he learns to lookfor them in unconventional places. “1 had tofree myself.” Marco Polo tells the Khan,“from the images which in the past hadannounced to me the things 1 sought.”To enter Melania is to enter a Romancomedy The visitor is caught at once in adialogue between such stereotypedcharacters as the braggart soldier and theparasite. The visitor knows that Melania is acity where people play roles and are en¬tangled in thickening plots; hut the citizensof Melania. so caught up in the roles theyplay, are unaware of all this.Marco Polo’s descriptions of citieshighlight the odd and the curious thus con¬veying the special qualities that characterizea city more exactly than sociological,economic or geographic analysis. Themixture of ideals and realities that a citizenor a visitor juggles in his mind when hethinks of a city is the reality which underliesa city, motivates its inhabitants, determinesits future. Marco Polo penetrated the opacity of thecities to bring these accounts to Kublai KhanIn like manner the listening Khan mustpenetrate the opacity of Marco Polo’s fic¬tions. that is, realize that they are fictionsThe described cities are not “real”; they are‘‘invisible.” After he sees what Marco Polo isdoing, the Khan himself begins to imaginesuch cities, which he describes to MarcoPolo.The Khan as well as the reader, whoseexperience should parallel that of the Khan,has learned something about the nature offiction-making. All fictions are patternsgiven to nature or experience. We say thatart makes sense of life, allows us to see orderin life. The danger is ' that we can becomeinattentive to life. We see life imitate art.rather than the opposite. “The city.” saysMarco Polo, “must never be confused withthe words that describe it.” Invisible Citiesstrives to make us aware of the distancebetween art and nature. There is a play, agive, in any rope that would bind themtogether It is the play that we are chieflyaware of in reading Invisible Cities. Aplayfulness makes the descriptions of thecities delightful.• EYE EXAMINATIONS• CONTACT LENSES (Soft & Hard)• PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED St aver, BooksellersDR. MORTON R. 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Only available after1:45, while they test. Sent to you on our lastdelivery of the evening, er, morning. $3.00,$4 00, and $8/00 boxes. mCokf Soda Pop * *RC, Pepsi, Coke, orange, 7-Up, root beer,ginger ale, AND Dr. Pepper 12 oz. can 45cYou can novor »t*p twice in th« same streamWE DELIVER THE GOODIES TO HYDE PARK 10:00 p.m. to 2.00 a m.■■•Aft . Minimum order $2.00,delivery charge 50c.Our order lines open at 9:00 p.m.FREE DELIVERY ON ALLORDERS OVER $6.00. fAM-tPMHYDE PARK 7 Days A WeekAND TOBACCO SHOP.1552 E. 53rd - vlultr 1C tracksAll students get 10% ottAask for “Big Jim''Pip**Pip* 7oboeco» Imported Cigarette*Cigar*mv;:;:Sm■r/‘I -!W: UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRAISOLA JONES, Mezzo -Soprano_• i ■ / * • ... * ,,t • ( v: ^ ‘Mahler. K1NDERTOTENL1EDERBeethoven. KING STEPHENSchubeH. FOURTH SYMPHONYSaturday, March 8—8:30 P.M.Mandel HallAdmission Free ^SPECIALPRICESFORALL STUDENTS& FACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification cord.As 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 Volksw Jkifmmmmi!§Si’It..Authorized If:Volkswagen W8-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, March?, 19?5From Greece—The Novelist As PhilosopherSymposiumby Nikos Kazantzakistranslated by Theodora Vasils andThemi VasilsThomas Y. Crowell$5.95Reviewed by C'.D. JacoNikos Kazantzakis holds a position inliterature not unlike that of Aldous Huxley.Both were essentially men of letters as op¬posed to masters of any particular genre.Huxley wrote philosophical and literaryessays, journalistic pieces, and novels; heonce said that his novels, most notably Apeand Fssence and After Many a Summer Hiesthe Swan, were convenient vehicles for hisideas, disguised as characters.Until the publication of Zorba the Creek in1943. Kazantzakis’ fictional works werevehicles for a similar type of didacticcharacter. At the forefront of these isOdyssey, a long poem in epic form that ex¬presses—in an eclectic manner bordering oncomplete obscurity—Kazantzakis’cosmology.That cosmology, composed of equal partsof Bergson, Darwin, Neitzsche. the CopticChrist, and the Hellenic gods, is incompletelyexpressed in Symposium. The problem withthe hook is that the story behind itspublication and its place in the historical flowof Kazantzakis' works are more interestingthan the volume itselfSymposium was written by Kazantzakiswhile in Vienna in 1922. hut did not appear inprint until 1971. This translation by TheodoraVasils and Themi Vasils (both of Oak Park*is the first appearance of the “new ” work inEnglish.1922 was a watershed year for Kazant¬zakis His disgust with modern Westerncivilization was at its zenith He had recently abandoned Greek nationalism, had not yetembraced Leninism, and was beginning todelve into the Buddhist orthodoxy of thevanity of human wishes. Spiritual Exercises,his basic doctrinal work that was to bepoeticized in Odyssey, was written in 1923Kazantzakis' doctrine of the “transitionalage” was at work in Symposium, as well asin Spiritual Exercises and Odyssey. The“transitional age.” briefly, was his beliefthat humankind's ability to spontaneouslyenjoy the earthly and material had beendestroyed by Christianity. Yet. with theadvent of Darwinism, the “pure” spiritualitynecessary to Christianity no longer existed.With both Apollo and Jesus dead, civilizationwas in a limbo, unsure and impotent.Kazantzakis. in Paris before World War I.was profoundly influenced by both Bergsonand Neitzsche. From Bergson he receivedthe basic intellectual formulations of thetransitional age; in fact. Bergson helpedKazantzakis evolve his doctrine into anentire cosmology since life, Bergson said,was a period of transition between the voidsof pure spirituality that existed before birthand after death.Kazantzakis’ indebtedness to Neitzsche isdisplayed in his passionate, doctrinare prosethat attempts to synthesize philosophy, art,and morals. From Neitzsche. Kazantzakisevolved his idea of “heroic pessimism.” ofheroic assertion and struggle within thehounds described by the knowledge of theabyss at either end of life.So Dionysius replaced both Apollo andJesus Movement, revolt, and activismbecame the keys to salvation, and evolutionitself became a god The greatest sins werecomplacency, stasis, and the soft, flabbyliberality of the West.It was this idea of a struggle taking placebetween the ineluctable modalities of theinvisible that led Kazantzakis to admireMussolini. Lenin. Greek nationalists. Mao. and black nationalists at various periodsduring his life. The mode of strugglemutated, but the fact of struggle was constant.In 1922. Kazantzakis abandoned Greeknationalism after Greece’s attempt to invadeAsia Minor in 1921 ended in completehumiliation at the hands of Turkey. Thatsame year, he was attracted to OswaldSpengler’s idea of the immediate decline ofthe West, and to Buddhism. The"decadance” of post-war Vienna was theflint Kazantzakis' metal neededSymposium, like almost everything priorto Zorba. is carried along not so much bydesign, characterization, or motivation as byrhetorical passion In late 1922. according tothe Introduction. Kazantzakis wrote a friendexpressing his desire to transcend Hope,“the last form of combat.” in preparation forpeace and union with the voids.That combat rages through Symposium.And yet. there is not an immediacy to it thatrivets the interest. The didactic voice, nomatter how passionate, tends to stupifyrather than to revive and engageThe Symposium, features Arpagos, theprotagonist, Kosmas, the man of action.Petros, the poet, and Myros. an old friend ofArpagos Arpagos is Kazantzakis himself,and the other three represent realacquaintances The hook centers aroundArpagos’ attempt at confession as hedescribes his search for a God or GodsHe is not looking for the diety of the NewTestament, full of love and light, not even theJudeo-Christian form of the Old; he isseeking a synthesis of Christian and Hellenethat will scourge the earth with fire andswordArpagos also chides Kosmas for at¬tempting “to exorcise the ennui of life withdanger, and you don't understand that it’snot in your power to escape that you servean end superior to you ” The escape from life’s transition, even by struggle, is im¬possible; a harmony is only achieved byuniting with the void and transcending hopeHe also attacks Petros’ poetry: “Can youchange the world’s tempo like that? Can youseparate a man’s life in two; before he hearsyour word and after he hears it...and if youcan’t do this, what do I care about yourwork?...swayed by the winds of FrankishEurope, you warm over the dead gods Butthe Franks are gone: Their gods fell andshattered to pieces ”Petros, then, is reminded that hisdedication to an ideal is useless unless thereis passion and fire in his words, and unlessthe “worship of logic” of Western civilizationis cast asideUnlike Plato’s Symposium, the Svmposium of Kazantzakis is filled with doubtuncertainty, and ephemeral desires Plato’suniverse was well-ordered, and man stood atits center: Kazantzakis’ universe was achaos that man could not only not control, hutmust surrender to in order to be fulfilledIn that sense. Sy mposium is worthwhile inthat it is a previously unreleased article offaith, and a milestone along Kazantzakis’literary and theological path Outside of that,there is little of intrinsic interest in thepassionate prose of the hookThe importance of Symposium in the flowof Kazantzakis’ ideas is summed up whenKosmas asks Arpagos if he is seeking a newreligion.“I don’t know, my friend, and I’m notconcerned with naming my struggle and themethod of my liberation with words I seek aplace where I can stand sure-footed, whereyou. too. can stand Call it Religion. God.Chimera. Song. Delusion—what do I care0 Icall it Liberation ”"I don’t know, my friend, and I’m notconcerned with naming my struggle andthe method of my liberation with words Iseek a place where I can stand sure¬footed. where you. too. can stand Call itReligion. God. Chimera. Song.Delusion—what do I care° I call itLiberation ”From Russia-The Novelist As GodThe Seven Days of CreationBy Vladimir MaximovAlfred A. Knopf$10Reviewed bv Cecilia VoreIn the beginning. The Seven Days ofCreation promises to be a full-bodied story inthe best tradition of Russian realism. Everycharacter is vital with his own idiosyn-cracies. every event builds dramatically.The novel is an act of creation Here, in aboutfour hundred pages of print, is a world in allits multiplicity, a world that is exciting to discover and sink into for the same reasonswe become involved in continuing-storyuniverses from Peyton Place to Yok-napatawpha County. In the seventy-yearscope of this novel, there is just a lot of timefor us voyeurs to grow attached to the humanbeings who are focused in the old third-person omnicient binoculars. VladimirMaximov’s main achievement in The SevenDays of Creation is. I think, that he can tell agood story That may sound limited, but aslong as Merv Griffin introduces GeorgieJessel as the world’s greatest story-teller, a truly good story will always be for me anoble and rare accomplishment.Maximov was horn in 1932 and grew up inorphanages after his parents were killed ineither the Stalinist purges or World War IIIn 19K9 he protested .Solzhenitsyn’s expulsionfrom the Writer’s Union and was himselfexpelled in 1973 and finally exiled from hisnative land the next year Perhaps it is thesensibility of the orphan/ exile, cut off fromhis roots, that dictates the sequence of daysand memories and gives the hook its back-ward-inward vision. The novel’s super¬structure is time and the main creative act isto re-encounter the past and. from thatdynamic encounter, discover a meaning for the presentEach of the novel's first six parts, or“days.” is devoted to one member of theI^ashkov family, a family of the “drivers”rather than the “driven ” Monday is thestory of the oldest brother. Pyotr Vasilievich.powerful in the Railroad and the Party in hisyouth, facing a lonely old age after hisdevoted daughter. Antonina, marries andleaves home to start her own life at age forty.Tuesday belongs to the second brother.Andrei, and his memory of the cattle drive heled across several hundred miles during theGerman invasionWednesday, the day of the third brother,(cont. on poge 8)ACECYCLE SHOP1621 E. 55th St.Chicago, IL 60615/643-0622Service is ourBusinessBicycle Sales &ServicesDiscounts for University ofChicago People THE ANGELLEVINEa. fc»lnr*«j ba%>& onrrf\oia/wbvj^ C.'vjtcKJAN KADAftZERO MOSTElHKRW&ELAPONTE\ KILO OSHCACTTvcxncA S cd5? IS COoodlcuuiw(Witfto4 %. loOyd/WftjbfcMOK.: $1-00%oc»l SO THIS WEEK FEATURINGRussianGermanSpanish andPortuguese Language BooksRussian Language BooksMilitary History BooksCrafts BooksMusic Books75,000 New & Used BooksBooks lor:Tho ScholarTho BrowserTho CollectorPOWELL'S BOOKSHOP1S03 E. 57th 9 A.M. to 11 P.M. EverydayPETER COOK HITCHCOCK HALL PRESENTS DUDLEY MOOREFRIDAY 6&O*B&O»1Q:30PETER SELLERS OUANTtaL fl MICHAEL CAINEFriday, March 7, 1975-The Chicago Maroon-9 TheChicagoLiteraryReview-56-TheChicagoLiterary*a>>Q>DC Lessing’s Radical Rags: Exploiting Her Small And Personal VoiceMyitery Thwote* itonA Small Personal Voice: Essays, Reviews,Interviews.by Doris LessingAlfred A. Knopf.$6.95Reviewed bv Shirley Kistier BakerFor years Doris Lessing’s reputation in theUnited States consisted of an impression thatshe was an aging writer who continued toproduce vaguely depressing novels aboutcommunism long after radical politics hadbecome passe amoung intellectuals.Younger readers who missed the radicalismof the thirties and the reaction of the fiftieswere not likely to be sent running to theirbookstores in response to a review which said“Oh - Doris Lessing - is she still writingabout politics?’’Recently, however, Lessing has becomeright on target intellectually, much to herown surprise. Political activism once againwas “in” (only to be “out" again in so shorta time). Also, novels with femaleprotagonists were being actively sought bypublishers. The woman who wrote SummerBefore the Dark, the woman who could writea five volume saga of the aptly-namedMartha Quest, suddenly found herself proclaimed a mouthpiece for women’s “lib.”Lessing became fashionable. She hadsomehow' shed her drab, shapelessideological dresses and her low-heeledcommunist shoes and emerged in full-fledged eye-catching radical rags.And because Lessing is “in”, we get art¬fully packaged puff pieces like the collectionof miscellanea assembled here here. ASmall Personal Voice is a strikingly-jacketed. solidly bound book - much betterthan the semi-paperbounds currently beingproduced under the misnomer “hard¬covers.” Unfortunately, the pieces whichhave been assembled therein - the in¬terviews. essays, and reviews - need not havebeen gathered. Ail have previously beenpublished elsewhere.One of the longer pieces reprinted here isactually the introduction to Lessing’s GoldenNotebook and would certainly have beenread by anyone interested enough in Lessingto bother reading this collection. Neitherwill the reprinted interviews and essays onLessing’s father, on radical politics, onblacks and South Africa, or on Sufismprovide much new material for anyone whohas read Lessing at all. The too transparentpurpose of this book is to provide some easy cash for all involved and tenure for ProfessorSchlueter who edited these pieces.Still, even in a collection that shouldn’thave been assembled, there are some tellingpoints made:1. Those who, a few years ago, heard AnaisNin talk at U. of C. and who followed theleads given in that talk to such neglected butdelightful writers as Lesley Blanch will beexcited by Doris Lessing’s essays on OliveSchreiner and Karen Blixen.2. Those who take Lessing’s writings to besomething more and other thanautobiography or political polemic willdelight in her discussion of the shape of hernovels and her attempts at writing the novelsof ideas which both she and Rebecca Westfeel are missing in English literature.3. Finally, the disillusioned graduatestudents who chose literature because theyloved it but discovered that what “matters”is not literature but criticism, and evencriticism of criticism, may take solace here.They may not want to spend the $6.95 for thisbook, but might be moved to buy The GoldenNotebook in paperback to read Lessing’sinnocent devastation of the dreams ofacademics.As remedies go, the CBS Radio MysteryTheater may notbe as effective as holding your breath or walking around witha bag over your head, but it's a lot more fun.Every night of the week, MysteryTheater brings you tales ofsuspense, terror and intrigue. It's a great show, but thatisn't the only reason we want you to listen to it.You see, we re the importers of Vinya” Rose wine, and we reone of the show's sponsors. As you might suppose, wewant people to know about Vinya.Vinya is light and crisp sml refreshing. And it s available ina variety of sizes. 18 short, it's a classic Portuguese Rose.So why not pidt up some^nya today, amUeep it by your sideduring tonight's MysteryTheater.That way, when you’re scared out of your wits, you'll knowwho to thank. PEACE CORPS REPRESENTATIVEGENERAL PLACEMENT OFFICE- MARCH 12BUSINESS PLACEMENT OFFICE-MARCH 12SONY TC-40AMiniatureBattery OperatedActionCorder withBuilt-in CondenserMicrophone SONY TC-45Deluxe MiniatureBattery-OperatedAction Corder withBuilt-In Condenser• Microphone andAutomatic Shut Off SONY TC 55Sub-MiniatureBattery-OperatedAction Corder withBuilt In CondenserMicrophone andAutomatic Shut-OffTuck one away. In a purse, in a pocket, in a briefcase. Thedependable Action Corders from SONY are ready to recordwhenever you want them to. Each features SONY'S famousbuilt-in condenser microphone and a full-range speaker forcrisp, rich sound.TAPE RECORDERSUniversity of ChicagoBookstore5750 S Ellis 2nd FloorPhoto DeptA product fromSUPER§COPE.* You never heard it so good*The Anti-War Novel Meets The Anti-Novel WarOn All Frontsby Jay Robert NashDecember Press$5.00 *Reviewed by CM). JacoThe hackneyed sine qua non of war novelsis that they are all anti-war novels. Theproblem with the form is that it can easilylead to either overblown allegory or an at¬tempt to re-create the impact of Goya’sHorrors of War on paper.Jay Robert Nash’s On All Fronts is a forestof wooden symbols. This is not because thereis little character development, but ratherbecause there is none at all. The book couldbe said not to be several things; what it ismost obviously not is a novel.Nash dimly sketches the horrors of war inthe 20th Century in 19 separate sections,ranging from “Germany, 1914,’’ through“Ireland, 1922’’ and “The South Pacific,1942,” to “Korea. 1951” and “The SinaiDesert. 1973.” Into these locales he crams noless than 30 separate vignettes on death,dying, and dismemberment.There are no continuing characters, sinceeach figure is left either dead, aggressivelytriumphant, outraged, or quietly stunned atthe end of each section. There are only theArchetypes: the Suffering Civilian; theDying Soldier; the Dead Soldier; the Soldier-Who-Realizes-The-Absurdity-Of-All-This-But-Is About-To-Get-Snuffed-Anyway.In the last 10 years, we have had im¬personal vignettes from Vietnam, twoMideast wars, and a hundredscore rocketattacks, bombings, civil wars, border “in¬cidents” and toppling governments broughtinto our living rooms at six and 10 p.m. Weknow the face of conflict and privation at least as well as Goya didWhat we need from literature is a look atthe soul underneath the face A novel aboutthe struggle of the I.R.A. or Khymer Rougewritten sympathetically? Fine, as long as wecan understand the forces behind thosestruggles in human terms. A novel con¬demning humankind’s oldest form ofrecreation, unsympathetic to the struggles ofany government or group0 Good, if it is anovel whose characters engage us, sym¬pathetically or not, because we are givenreason to become involved.Nash is neither an Ernie Pyle nor aHemingway; his abbreviated exhibits readlike hastily assembled human-interest wardispatches. There are only two scenes in thebook that would be any good if filed from the front.One concerns the futile attempts of anItalian platoon to surrender to Allied troopsin Libya. None of the English commandershave room or supplies for 700 captives, so theItalians keep marching, hoping to find agarrison that will patrol in theOne concerns the futile attempts of anItalian platoon to surrender to Allied troopsin Libya. None of the English commandershave room or supplies for 700 captives, so theItalians keep marching, hoping to find agarrison that will take them The other long(four pages) piece is about an Americanpatrol in the Korean War that finds severalMarines executed by the North Koreanslying in a ditch, hands tied behind theirbacks. The blustering sergeant, the quin¬ tessential lifer, orders his patrol to shootevery one of the dead Marines after a boobytrap is discovered concealed under one of thebodies.The rest, however, are not only numbing intheir impersonal nature, but are filled withprose that is often embarrassing. A man,lying in bed with his wife, is about to leave hissouthern Italian home to fight in World WarI:“Darling. I must go.”“Not yet. please not yet." She held ontohim “They are going to take you faraway to the North where someone willhurt you Please, my dear, dear darling.please0”“I am a soldier now. I no longer playgames upon the hillside You must un¬derstand.”“I don’t understand I don’t un¬derstand.” she said fearfully. “I willnever understand ”As in every other statement in the book bysomeone enamoured of “duty,” the ironyhere is lost in a depth of stagnant prose Indescribing the Winter Palace at St. Peters¬burg, Nash rhapsodizes:“Inside the edifice of the tsars, an or¬nate past hung in golden tiers labeled withcenturies of architecture ”The combination of prose alternatelybathetic and lackluster and a format moresuited to a collection of newspaper columnsis deadly. The Foreward states that for 12years the manuscript “.. made the rounds ofpublishing houses in the guise of a novel.”Presumably, hidden in the dust cover of ThePoseiden Adventure.USEDBOOKS With This Ad OnlyUsed Desks *15Used Chairs *5*uPNew Chairs *25"cash and carry"BOUGHT AND SOLD r BRAND jT * CO.Paperback andHardbackAny Quantity 8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30-3:00RE 4-2111JOSEPH O’GARABookseller1311E. 57th St.363-0993 ! -SAVEGAS- |DRIVE A: ((/ Peugeot-Renault (() or Subaru l1 sales-service-parts (LESLT IMPORTS jTWecc is now aFINALS HAVEN^or wcortj VIC.ALL NIGHT EVERY NIGHTor TSNTVV weekCome in and enjoy the feelin’g!Bottom Ut} CatytcCofcc WotFoo4TANSTA AFL~ Pierce Tower MODELCAMER/tr \“I RECYCLE AS FAST AS3'h SECONDS, HAVE AGUIDE NUMBEROF 28 (ASA 25), GIVE200 FLASHES FROMA SINGLE 9V ALKA¬LINE BATTERY, HAVE ABUILT-IN HOT SHOE,TWO-YEAR PARTS ANDLABOR WARRANTYHANDY EXPOSURE GUIDE-AND VIVITAR QUALITY."theVivitar 100Electronic FlashSpecial *14951342 E. 55th St.493-6700We Specializein Repairs 6 ulliwrs Periodicals Dd.5309 South Kimbark Chicago, Illinois 60615(100 Ft. South of 53rd Street on Kimbark)Near Kimbark Shopping Center_ 955 04701000 INTERNATIONAL PERIODICALSAND PAPERBACKSFOREIGN LANGUAGE FASHIONPOLITICAL LITERARYEUROPEAN SPECIAL INTERESTBLACK PRESS INTERIOR DESIGN10% OFF WITH THIS ADNdner Little V\agdzmesDEAN JAMES LOMBARDof theJOHN F. KENNEDYSCHOOL OF GOVERNMENTHARVARD UNIVERSITYwill be interested in meeting with 3rd yr.students on Thursday, March 13, from 9 a.m.to 11 a.m. to discuss the School’s PublicPolicy Program which leads to a Master’s orPh.D in Public Policy. This Is a very selectprogram of about 35 persons a year withcareer goals in public service.FOB AN APPOINTMENT CALL EXT. 3-32S2CAREER COUNSELING AND PLACEMENTREYNOLDS CLUB ROOM 202m- 4 * i »'•*•!» 4 fUTwt* Friday, March 7, 1975-The Chicago Maroon-11 TheChicagoLiteraryReview-78-TheChicagoLiteraryReview (Seven Days cont.)Vasilii. is my personal favorite. It is the storyof a communal apartment house in Moscowand the interaction of its many tenants. Butthis is also the day when I began to long forthe end of the week, when Maximov’s quirksbegan to irritate a little. By the time I hadfinished Thursday with Pyotr's grandson in alunatic asylum. Friday with Antonina andher husband in central Asia at a mysteriousconstruction site of “little tiny rooms” thatpredictably turn out to be prison cells, andSaturday home again in Uzlovsk withPyotvr. those little quirks had gone beyondirritation and developed into a full-fledgedgrind.In the end. Maximov takes his role asauthor/ Creator a little too seriously andstarts preaching some of Russian literature'smost hackneyed dogma — the inherentpurity of the peasant and the final redemp¬tion ol a mystical religion. Some of his“creatures” slip over the line from characterto caricature, and these hysterical pettyStalins unfortunately infect the trulycomplex characters with their tinniness.Stylistically, too. Maximov becomesclichedand boring. The flashbacks that formthe largest part of the novel usually hinge onsome otherwise insignificant object or event— a smoked ham. a glimpse of an oldacquaintance. At first this significance ot theinsignificant has its fascination; objects have power, come alive. But after twohundred pages or so, you get tired of havingcharms dangled before your eyes while theauthor chants. “You are getting sleepy... youare getting sleeeeepy...”Kach “day" finally ends with a Maximov-ex machina revelation of vague origin andvaguer meaning that somehow answers allthe character's doubts.On the Russian calendar Sunday is the lastday of the week, a hopeful position since theRussian word “Sunday” is also the word for“resurrection.” Maximov makes excellentuse of this double meaning, the poetry in theword itself. He leaves the Seventh Daysimply a blank page titled, “The day of hopeand resurrection.”Yes. in the end everyone gets religion andlives happily ever after, however unhappilythey had been living ever before. I usuallyassociate this kind of didactic senility withan older author at the end ot his careerTwain in his Mysterious Stranger, or Gogolin Selected Passages from Correspondencewith Friends, rather than with an author,like Maximov, in his early forties Perhapsthis is a hopeful sign. Perhaps, after thisearly bout with didacticism Maximov willpass on to the greater artistic achievementthat his talent for story-telling promises. Butfor the present, when the blank page that isthe Seventh Day appears, we can only beglad that the creator decided to take a rest.<5© years agewe saved studentsas much as d •«cn a diamond ring.Bark in 1 !•_' 1 ! In < 'It.11 It-'limi u .i' \«• i \ hi^And win ii n t .iiiic in i;i-Miny rnuuyi-tl. -lu-di iil- win- M i\ mil ii 'ii ii in .i < I'.n .i^iimiiip.im lli.it pii>mi-i d ihi in vh\ lii” -,i\-iiii^' mi .i ili.iiimnd 11114I In 1 ii|ll|i,lll\ u.i- S \ I’tvk \ 1 ui tin-di.iiiiiiiid' iIha 'iild built .1 1 f|iut.it ii*11 ili.it.dluW' 11 ii ■ 111 in 'ill \ . 1 r 111 \ l-.ni I > 1.1 r: n > 1 id -In 1111 ii • 141 • -ludiiil' .ill .11 in" tin- I uitiiiStall-'And wr all' 'till hi • I pi 1114 -1 in b 111 ' ~;im a«tmirli ;i' air -How do ui do it' S11111>11 ■ \\i l aitdlii-m-ia 'ti-p m tin- makini: ut .1 1111:4. Itmiibusing ilii- rough diamond' and in.ikint:our own 'i-lli ng> in • 11111 g I In- ring din-it Uto \ou I lii'ii' an' tin middit-man pmlit' Indrive up t In pro eIn but. wi ll- '•> rontident ot mil InwpiHi-' and line quulits that we rover lhem-in our exclusive Vaults Fair guaranteeit not rompletels '.iti'lnd sour bill pmilia'i- prut- relunded within .'SOdas•*Si-nd lor mil’ tree, lull mini 1 1 page cata¬log. Or si.'it mu diamond -hnisronni' at•Vi K VVa.'hington in Chicago Itwe stilldc.\ iniityflitV/ )timnHuls |55 East Washington St Chicago Illinois 60602Send me the proof; the free Vanity Fair catalog, jName 1Address ICity State ZipSchool . (Manual Labor cont.)profoundly imperilled mental state.Moving from past to present to distant pastto more recent time, her voice shifts frombitter hilarity to deepest depression, her tonefrom lascivious conviviality to obviousdesperation. The author shows Annejumping from one thought to another by aprocess of word association, and herexpression is generally determined by thetraumatic experience of the miscarriage;she is obsessed with sex and blood, suicideand death Bush gives her some reallystomach-wrenching speeches; “The onlypreserve I know tshe has been telling us thather husband works in a forest preserve) isred and slimy in jars. 1 make it out of berriesand myself. If I went to a doctor he’d takeall my clothes off and fill me full of sperm.I’d blow a half-made baby out my navel inthe middle of month nine.”The third section ot the book belongs toPhil, to his “Narrative”. He faces theircrises head-on and after rolling around in thechaos of Anne’s earthy monologue, wewelcome his rationality, his sublimity,his...masculinity, I suppose. Phil takes lifeday-by-day. and reports even the mostminute repairs of the house, in their lives.Anne goes shopping by herslef one day, theymake love with no problems, finally he takesout the power mover: “It was a veryunmetaphysical mowing. All I cut was grassand I don’t remember what I thought about,but I stopped thinking of thumbs, limbs, howopen you are to the world when you’re cut. Ionly mowed. ..I worked and the work gotdone.”The book ends in affirmation, with Anne’sfinal pronouncement, “We’ll survive.” TheSorensons know how to work out their badtimes by surviving history, by starting anewwithout denying the past. The novel dealswith a rather ordinary domestic situation;its interest for any reader is in its technique.Since the book is so literary our awareness oftechnical considerations intrudes on even afirst reading of Manual Labor: we areforced to keep asking what the author isattempting in this passage, with thisnarrative device. Because domestic uncompatibility and the trials of modernmarriage is such a traditional, popular, evenhackneyed theme in this past century, weexpect perhaps too much from new writerswho address themselves to it. This is no WarBetween the Tates.There is one major problem that the bookpresents: it seems that ever since SylviaPlath sliced her thumb instead of an onion,the woman’s voice in fiction and poetry hasbecome increasingly bloody, shockinglyfrank, even gothic. This earthiness definesAnne Sorenson in her monologue. Phil, on theother hand is a rational speaker, a maker oforder by his poems and narratives. Thereseems to me to be a very old kind ofarchetypal breakdown here, pre-modernway of regarding the sexes at work. “I’m aclock made of tissues and ooze”, saysAnne; her concern with the blood and oozeof her self is what makes her go crazy. Thecatastrophe of miscarriage has taken placein her body, to be sure, and thus she isnaturally more obsessed with things visceralthan Phil, who asks; “But must I see theblind eyes and blood*7 And must I hear hergrunting, watch her body throb*7” Somethingabout the creation of these charactersseemed hollow to me; they are too perfectlyman and woman, sexual and spiritualopposites.The tale itself is not particularlyinteresting, nor are Anne and Phil verymemorable characters, but Mr. Busch, whois. incidentally, the author of a study of JohnHawkes’ fiction, can create visual imagesthat suggest real insanity. Parts of Anne’smonologue are chilling and the gothic feelingof Anne herself being a haunted andabandoned house in one of Busch’s neaterachievements.Call753 2060JL CatnfHi4 <jj Se^ivioe Or348 6128*low Cost Audio-Visual Services on th« midwoy1 225 to** 60th StreetCopy Prep • Typing • Type Set » Printing • Mounting • Photography • Recording • Equipment RentalOverhead Cels • Slides • Filmstrips • Posters • Charts • Graphs • Displays • CCTVFoat Economscol Service* on Compua. Call Dot) SOOdS For Sample*. Price*. ondEstimote*HeadFoodeiill S Notes help you think (oryourself m literature They rewritten oy expertsto guide you munderstanding andappreciating con¬temporary'*sss*c novelsplays and poemsEcology we re working onDuring me pas! M years Ciitl sNotes nas used over 2 400 000 tonso* paper us-ng recyc ed pulpMore than 200 titlesavailable at:WALDENBOOKSEvergreen Shopping CenterChicago* The Organic Theater CompanypresentsADVENTURES OFHUCKLEBERRY FINN/PART 1Directed by Stuart GordonWed.-Sun. $2-$54520 N. Beacon 271 - 2436Four Jeff Awards NominationsBest Director - Stuart GordonBest Actor-Brian HickeyBest Actor-Bruce TaylorBest Actor-lack Wallace“. . .An astonishingly comprehensive pro¬duction, one that tnumphs by means ofcreative imagination . . . Huck Finn is alive•ltd swell ” Dettmer. Tribune“, .Flawlessly orchestrated You almostwished you could be onboard.**-Syse.Sun Timer**.. .A rare and memorable piece oftheater . .. The Organic actors give them¬selves to the piay with selfless devotionand deep understanding "-Christiansen. Daily Newt"One of the best-acted and most creativelyentertaining shows tn town .. with extra¬ordinary performances by Bruce Taylor.Brian Hickey, Jack Wallace, and JoeMantegna. I can't wait to see Part Two "-Gold, Tribune'} *-•* l a* 1‘J i V'd* 'I. *» l * j..i.&.'v i •:<< H.ivui »J U Ar12-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, March 7, 1975CALENDARcontinued from page 4CORAL: Juan Carlos Coral, "Repression and Right Wing Terror in Argentina."2:00 pm, Kent 107GINSBERG AND BURROUGHS: reading from their works, 3 00 pm, in MandelHallSEMINAR: Bernard Brown and "Creative Fidelity," 9 45 a m.. RockefellerChapelSERVICES: preacher Bernard Brown, "The Witness," 11 00 a m.. RockefellerChapelCONTEMPORARY ARTS QUARTET: 3 30 pm. Woodward CourtCEF: "The Bicycle Thief" and a Scott Bartlett short "Moon '69," 7:15 and 9 30p m., Cobb SIUT: "Zoo Story" and "Boor," 8 30 p m , Reynolds Club Theatre Friday, "California Split" and "Gumshoe," Saturday 12.00 and 2 00 am, 1204 NDearbornRARE CINEMA: "Vive La Muerte" by Arrabal, 4 00 pm, Sunday and 8 00 p m.,Monday at the Drama Shelter, 2020 N HalstedFILMGROUP: "Lights," "The Outer Circle," "Encounter," "Element," "FlyBites," and "Solidarity," 8 00 p m_. Saturday, at the NAME Gallery, 203 W LakeARTMonday March 10KARATE: 6 00 pm, Ida NoyesCHESS: 7 00 p m , Ida NoyesKARATE: 6 00 pm, Ida NoyesCHESS: 7 00 pm, Ida NoyesFOLKDANCERS: 8 00 p m , Ida NoyesUFO: 8 00 p m.. Blue GargoyleLECTURE: K Subrahmanyam, "The Geopolitics of the Indian Ocean," 4 00p m.. Pick 506OFF CAMPUSFILMCEF: "The Bicycle Theif," 7 15and9 30 p m. Sunday, Cobb SiPLAYBOY ALL-NIGHT: "Macon County Line" and "The Magic Christian,", WOMEN: 50 years of the Women in Vogue, until the end of the month, Goodspeed108GASTON LACHAISE: a retrospective starting Saturday at the Museum o*Contemporary Art, 237 E OntarioBODYWORKS: photo montages, video tapes, and other media explorations of theartists' bodies opening Saturday at the Museum of Contemporary ArtCLASSICAL MUSICIVY BEARD: an all Bach Organ Recital. Sunday, at 4,00 pm, at the 1stUnitarian Church, 5650 S. Woodlawn Free will offering is askedORGAN RECITAL: Lloyd Davis plays works of Hindemith and Brahms, 3 00pm, Sunday at the Bryn Mawr Community Church, 7000 Jeffery BoulevardJOHN BROWNING: in concert Friday, 8 00 p m , at the auditoriumCONTEMPORARY ARTS QUARTET: 3 30 pm , Sunday, Woodward CourtHEINZ HOLLIGER: virtuoso oboist and avant gard composer in his only U Sappearance on Monday at 8 15 pm, Friday, atHEINZ HOLLIGER virtuoso oboist and avant gard composer in his only U Sappearance on Monday at 8:15, the Museum of Contemporary Art, 237 E OntarioDONALD PECK AND MICHAEL KELLER a flute and piano concert. 8 15 p m ,Friday, at the DePaui Center Theatre, 25 E Jackson theatreMAGIC CIRCLE "Alice in Wonderland," 8 30pm, Friday and Saturday, 615 WWellingtonBODY POLITIC "The Last Million Miles," Friday and Sunday, at 8 30 p m ,Saturday 8 00 and 10 30 pm, 2261 N LincolnROOSEVELT: "A Midsummer Night’s Dream," with Kenneth Welsh, 8 00 p m ,Friday and Saturday, 430 S MichiganDRAMA SHELTER "No Exit," Friday, at 8 30 p m and "The Haunted Host,"Saturday. 8 00 and 10 30 pm, 2020 N HalstedKENNEDY KING "Ceremonies in Dark Old Men," 8 00 pm, Friday andSaturday, 6800 S WentworthGOODMAN: "The Philanthropist." 8 30p m , Friday and Saturday, 7 30, Sunday200 S ColumbusX BAG "Best One of 'em All," 8 00 p m , Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, 500 E67th StPLAYWRIGHTS' CENTER: "They Seem to Die," 8.30 pm, Friday andSaturday, 110 W Kin/ieSTAGE 2: "Once and For All," midnight, Friday and Saturday, 8 30 pm,Sunday, 200 S ColumbusJAZZ/ ROCK/FOLK/BLUESEARL ROBINSON in a tribute to Ernest DeMaiO. 7 4S p m , Saturday, at thePick CongressDOUG CARN with Streetdancer. Friday through Sunday, at Amazmgrace. 845Chicago Ave , EvanstonGLENN OHRLIN: 9 00p m , Saturday, at the Old Town School of Folk Music, 909W ArmitageDAVID BROMBERG: Friday through Sunday, at 33. the Quiet Knight, 953 WBelmontJAM AND DANCE: Baraboo and Wilderness Road. Corky Siegal. andStreetdancer, 4 00 pm., Sunday, 1034 W BarryETHEL MERTZ: Feminist musician, 7 30 p m , Sunday, 937 W Diversey, $2 00MOSE ALLISON and Terry Callier, Friday, Saturday, at Otto S. 2024 N Halsted:icApril absentee votingThose local voters whowish to vote in the April 1mayoral and aldermanicrace, but who will not be hereon election day may requestan absentee ballot from theBoard of Election Com¬missioners.The voter must send aletter to or appear in personat the board’s officerequesting an application foran absentee ballot. The of¬fice is located in city hall, 121N. LaSalle (269-7968).All absentee ballot’s must be returned to the board bynoon on April 1.CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Hot what you naad from a*10 utod 9 x 12 Rug to acustom car pat. SpecializingIn Remnants A Mill returnsat a froctlon of the originalcost.Decoration Colors andQualities. Additional 10%Disco urn with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY PIZZAPLATTER1460 E. 53rdMl 3-2800FAST DELIVERYAND PICKUP Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHair Designers1 620 E. 53rd St.' 288-2900OAK FURNITURE-ANTIQUESRCFINISHID + AS IS1703 C. 53th667-43801-6:00 PMTUES.-SAT DesksTablesChairsDressersBookcasesMuchMoreWe Also DoRefinishing LECTURE Cain Anderson, "Public and Private Health Care in America," noon,Sunday, 1st Unitarian Church, 57 and WoodlawnGINSBERG AND BURROUGHS: will also be at Northwestern. Monday, at 8 00p m , in the Norris University Center, 1999 Sheridan Rd , EvanstonLECTURE Morton Kaplan.on the "Middle East Situation," 7 30 p m , Sunday atthe Imperial Room of fhe Del Prado Hotel. 5307 S Hyde ParkROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELSunday, March 9 11:00 A.M.BERNARD 0. BROWNAssistant Dean of the Chapel"THE WITNESS”U.S.D.A. CHOICEBREAST OFVEAL mMEAT DfPT.LIQUOR DEPT.JAVERNANDSUPERIEURQ29Monday-WednesdayThursday and FridaySaturdaySunday 9 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.9 a.m. to 8 p.m.9 a.m. to 7 p.m.9 a.m. to 3 p.m.HYDE PARK CO-OP SUPERMARKET1526 E. 55th STREET 667-1444Friday. March 7. 1975 The Chicago Maroon 13Superstars are competingin new intramural contestAs this quarter draws to aclose, some pattern isbeginning to appear in thefirst Intramural Superstarcontest.Two mandatory events (40yard swim. 60 yard dash)and two optional events(bowling and basketball freethrow) have now beencompleted. Each participanthas been graded on an ob¬jective scale for each of theevents.Currently, varsitybasketball star AnthonyBarrett leads all of hiscompetitors with a raw scoreof 3795 points for four events.Barrett amassed this totalby placing strongly in eachof the four events in which hehas participated.A pair of undergraduatestrail closely behind Barrettin total points, but actuallylead him on the basis ofhaving entered one fewerevent. With an entry in handPeter Waite has ac¬ cumulated 3725 points whilePaul Voiland has 3500.Waite helped his cause byswimming the 40 yards intwenty seconds flat for 1500points. Voiland picked up hispoints by shooting well in thefree throw contest and doingwell in the other two events.Mike Klingensmith is also incontention among undergradmales with 3320 points forthree events.Cal Johnson and Larry Joycurrently lead graduatemales. Joy has 3505 points,picked up primarily in freethrows, while Johnson hasdone well all around ingetting a cumulative 3280.Among faculty and staffmales, Bill (“The Coach”)Simms leads with 3340points. Simms did well bothin the pool and on the track,and is still in contention forthe overall championship.David Dennison leads staffcompatriot Bob Edbrooke,2850 to 2775.Sad to say. no Billie Jean Kings have risen from theranks of Universitywomanhood to challenge theBobby Riggses.Undergrad RebeccaChagrasulis leads all of thewomen entrants with 2345points. Grad student JoanMarie Reifsnyder has 2170points in only two events;college student BarbaraHornung has 2150.Bob Smartt of the varsityswimmers has scored themost points in a single event,getting 1595 markers for his18.1 effort in the 40 yardswim.Among the events comingup next quarter for thebudding superstars arebicycling, weight lifting, andan obstacle course (allmandatory), and optionalperformances in archery,riflery, the 200 yard swim,and the 880 yard run.With all of those scoresunrecorded, it is probablysafe to say that the com¬petition is still wide open.Swim team wraps up 74-75 seasonIndividual performers shineNOEL BAIREYJUDY BANKSKATHY WEBER3y JEANNE DUFORTIn a sport where a team’ssuccess is the sum total ofthe accomplishments of itsindividual athletes, it stands to reason that a ten-womanteam will consistently finishbehind twenty-womansquads. Necessarily, thatsmaller team’s success mustbe measured by overallimprovement rather than byhow often it beats thecompetition.The women’s varsity swimteam is such a squad and.while it didn’t win manymeets this season, a few ofits athletes did turn up someimpressive credentials.Noel Bairey, ranked 3rd inthe state in the 200-yardindividual medley and 4th inthe 100-yard butterfly,qualified for the MidwestRegionals this past weekend,although illness forced her tosit it out.Senior Judy Banks turnedin one of the finest per¬formances of her career atthe Regionals, placing 9th inthe 100-yard backstroke and16th in the 100-yard freestyle(bettering her previous bestby two seconds in an eventthat she usually doesn’tswim). She is rated 3rd in thestate in the 50-yardbackstroke.Kathy Weber also earned atrip to Central MichiganUniversity for the Regionalsby virtue of her 1:03.2 timefor the 100-yard freestyle(10th in Illinois). Lynn Haynes combineswith the other three to giveChicago's 200-yard FreestyleRelay team a 4th place staterating. School commitmentsforced the team out ofcompetition for theRegionals.The under-sized pool in IdaNoyes certainly didn’tcontribute to a successfulseason. The team was forcedto take to the road for each ofits six meets, and its onlydiver, Mary Bryde, wasunable to practice for mostof the season.On the bright side,however, the ten women whoturned out for the squadmade it the largest squadCoach Martha Benson hashad at the University ofChicago. “We are a veryyoung team,” she says, “andwhile Judy will be very hardto replace, I’m pretty op¬timistic about next year.”She notes that next year afew of the meets will bescheduled at home (but thevisiting teams won’t bewarned of our facilities inadvance).In terms of past per¬formances, the 1974-75 swimseason has to be declared asuccess. And, as CoachBenson observes joyfully,“We have nowhere to go butup!”Pongers fall to UWMDespite a valiant effort,the table tennis team lost tothe University of Wisconsin,Madison, table tennis teamin a match last week.The match took place lastSaturday, March 1, atMadisonThe leading scorer for theUniversity was Duong Vu,who lost only to Paul Wong,former Wisconsin statechampion, in a very closecontest. The other membersof the University team wereEdward Lin, Bob Todd, B. L.Ramakrishna and James Photo by J*d StuortVOLLEYBALL CLUB; The undergraduate volleyball club opened their first seasonof competition at Northbrook on February 13th. The inexperienced spikers lostmatches to both Northbrook Red and White teams, but the experience gained willbe put to good use at their first tournament on April 15th. Serious un¬dergraduates interested in team volleyball should attend practice Fridays at 5:00IN AND ABOUT I MsLower Rickert leads point raceWei.The team, which is anactivity of the Universitytennis table club, washampered by the absence ofthree of its top four players.Club president James Weisaid, “I’m sure we couldhave put up a much bettershowing with (those others),but it was still an interestingmatch.”The University ofWisconsin table tennis teamis very highly ratednationally. In men’s volleyball, theundergraduate red title wascopped by Shorey House,while Thompson took thewhite division and LowerRickert won the blue. TheMad Bombers finished on topof the Divisional bracket andEpod took the Independentcrown. The Mad Bomberswent on to win the All-University championship.The co-ed resident “A”crown was won by Lower-Rickert-Upper Wallace, andShorey won the “B”championship. In Divisionalplay, the MBA Spikers tookthe “A” division while Irvingwon the “B”. Lower Rickert-Upper Wallace won the play-offs to become All-University champs.Cheung Leung dominatedIM badmonton as bothdivisional and All-Universitychamp in the men’s and(together with BethRobinson) coed com¬petitions. Dick Rubesch wonthe Undergraduate RedLeague. Dave Sagan and BillCroft took the White andBlue League crowns,respectively, while CliffTabin wound up on top of theIndependents. BeckyChagrasulis and DickRubesch defeated .dll comers;‘ in’ fne coed ‘undergraduate ‘division, while Renata Endrulat and David Mitz-man took the independentcrown.In women’s IM’s recently,the billiards title was coppedby Angela Stewart. MerryBoldt and Susan Hopsoncombined in the badmintoncompetition to beat thevarsity vasketball duo ofBarb Brink and MargueriteKelly in the finals.IM standings to date:Men’s Total1. Lower Rickert 17232. Ipper Rickert 15193. Psi Upsilon 15074. Thompson South 1279 5.Thompson North 1004Coed1. Lower Rickert/ UpperWallace 14962. Shorey 6473. Upper Flint 8044. Fx»wer Flint 4435. Upper Rickert/ LowerWallace 440The women’s IM depart¬ment has scheduled softball,archery, tennis doubles, andtrack and field for nextquarter. Entries for men’ssocim, fencing, and tabletennis (singles) close April 3.Track records setSeveral members ofthe University’s tracksquad established newvarsity records in theirevents last Sunday atthe Illinois Track ClubMeet at the Universityof Illinois - Champaign.Senior distancerunner Dan Hildebrand,an All-American crosscountry runner, set twonew marks. Hildebrandbroke an 18 year oldmark in the two-milewith a 9:09.5 clocking on. I &nd4y,, flVftMPg* > 11 > w > *Maroon harrier came back in the afternoon tobreak his own varsityrecord in the mile,turning a 4:15.7.In addition toHildebrand’s marks,freshman A1 Haynesbroke what Chicagocoach Ted Haydonbelieves to be a 20 yearold standard for the 880yard run. Haynes balzedto a 1:54.9 finish.The Maroons will hostthe Chicago and Mid¬west Conference IndoorMeet, tonight at fi.30 inthe Fieldhouse.14 The Chicago Maroon Friday, March 7, 1975MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEIdesperately need a place to live inHyde Park from spring break on CallSteve at 973 1831 evenings.Room, share bath on campus for childcare Spring quarter 947 6303weekdays 9 53 room 1 bed apt 54th Harper No petsAvail $/ 1. Call 764 7493Cobb Hall Sat March 8 7:15 & 9 30SI The MARX BROS In A DAY ATTHE RACESEverything for comfort andconvenience in this young 3 bdrmhome w/ 3 baths, rec room plus officeand workshop Fully equipped kitchen26x26 On U. of C bus route. Low 30'sCall Mrs Rid Ion 667 6666Kennedy, Ryan Momgal & AssociatesFraternity house looking for 2 malestudents to fill room for SpringQuarter Call 955 9648 and ask forRoger Or leave a messageFOR SALE 2 BDRM COOP APTModest downpayment, monthly costsSI50 to income qualified buyer Aircond modern kitchen, sunny lathfloor 4800 S Lake PkREBATES! I am paying rent on a newapt Must find male to take overhousing contract 241 5794Room wanted for Spring Quarter,perhaps summer also Call MurrayManus, 753 3754 Leave Message Take over my contract in Snell Lgsingle Kitchen privileges Call 7532233 Leave Message For Cindy 120Snell if no answer21/2 room furnished kitchenette,*139 00 per mo for April 1st or soonerLease One Person 5442 Harper MI39389CHICAGO BEACH HOTELBEAUTIFUL FURNISHEDAPARTMENTS Near beach, parks,loop, UC and 1C trains, 11 mins to loopbusses, door Modest daily, weekly,monthly rates 24 hr desk Completehotel services 5100 S Cornell DO3 2400Miss Smith.For rent Furnished reception room,business office and consulting office orfor mental health practice, three tofour days per week, ground floormedical building near 1C 731 3777Furn room in Hyde Park. Availablenow Male with ref only Mr LuckettCall 241 6332 anytimeHYDE PARK TWO BEDROOMCONDO APRT for sale In excellentcond Reasonable, Oak floors, modkitchen & bath, 1453 E 56th St Asses*52/mo 337 2400, or MI3 2332BarbaraAvailable March 30 One bedroom aptin South Shore Three blocks fromlake, one block from campus bus, 1C,supermarket, and Party Mart *110per month Call Steve 978 3654 31/2 room apartment with kitchenfacilities avail for Spring Qtr for 2people in Greenwood Hall Please call955 7353 Keep Trying!Single room & oriv bath in privatehome *85/ mo 3 biks from campusCall 324 4481 avail. March 1. Forfemale studentSCENESN Y C charter bus *46 round tripfrom campus Fri nite 3/ 21 Call 7533754 N W F 8 10 PM Ask for PhilThree of America's foremostcontemporary composers, DAVIDBEHRMAN, JOHN CAGE, DAVIDTUDOR will give an informal musicperformance on Wednesda -, March 12at 8 45 PM in Ida Noyes Cloister Club*2 50 tickets available in Mandel HallBox Office daily 116.A DAY AT THE RACES w/ theMARX BROS Saturday, March 8 7:15& 9 30 *1 CobbIVY BEARD IN CONCERT Organrecital 1st Unitarian Church, 5650Woodiwan, Sunday, March 9, 4 PMFree AdmissionLecture by Milla J. Ohel, TheHasmoneans and the Herodian Period(The Second Temple Period At Hillel,8 00 PM March 11Have lunch at the Blue Gargoyle andbring your favorite lunch suggestionsfor our springtime meno. Lunch 11:302 00 PMMERCE CUNNINGHAM ANDDANCE COMPANY at the U of CMarch 12 15 Ida Noyes Gym Events,Thursday and Friday at 8 PM, Danceprogram at Mandel Hall, Saturday at 8PM Tickets for all events at MandelHall Box Office, daily 11 6 StudentDiscounts availableSG JAZZ March 8, Joseph JarmanReturn from Exile, with LeonardJones 8 30, Ida Noyes Lib >2 00 donNew York City for Spring BreakCharter Bus direct from campusleaves 3/ 21, returns 3/ 30 Cheaperthan flying Call 752 8916 eveningsYou will be surprised how goodNATURAL FOODS can taste, if youcook them the MARCROBIOTICWAY For lessons call 363 4126DINNER FOR 2 for Under *10 M THDinner Specials The COURT HOUSEin Harper CourtPEOPLEWANTEDHyde Park real estate office hasposition open tor a full time leasingclerk receptionist Also seeking a parttime account clerk, good typing skillsimportant Call Mrs Bilger HY3 2525Help wanted Part time TV attendanthospital in area No TV knowledgenecessary Good salary, GraduateStudent Only. Call Mr Eastman 6762226Child care, drivers license studentpreferred in exchange for room,board, plus pay, on campus family,spring quarter 947 9054 eveningsNeed a babysitter on weekdays call752 3961WANTED: Graduate student(preferably in social work or relatedfield) to work part time with a Jewishyoung adults group in southernsuburbs Someonw who can workduring the summer and continuethrough next year For moreinformation or application, callCollege Age Youth Services at 3466700Come to see A DAY AT THE RACESw/ the MARX BROS tomorrow 7:15 &9 30 COBBPortraits 4 for *4 and up MaynardStudios 1459 E 63 2nd fl 643 4083Seek warm, reliable, fulltime,permanent babysitter forkindergartener and infant from July I753 2583 Student needed weekends to help cleanand renovate basement No skillsrequired; *2 50/hour Call 643 3435evenings weekendsOPPORTUNITY, sparetime, earn upto *100 weekly in your homeaddressing circulars! List of firmswith offers sent for just *2 00!Guaranteed1 WG Smith Enterprises,PEOPLE FOR SALETeenager seeking job after schoolwrite Joe McDowell 5216 S DrexelThesis, desertations. term papers,general office corres typed on latestIBM corrective typewriter Ratesreasonable Phone 739 42572 F students looking for rent freefamily living situation in exchange forbabysitting, etc Negotiable CallBarbara from 5 30 6 30 374 7386All typing, exp sec . IttM caroonribbon One copy FREE 684 0949UC F seeking family to live with inexchange for babysitting, etc , 1 yrexp Call Kris 667 1803Exp qualified babysitter Call No 73538 eve or weekends and ask forThomas RobertsonFor exp piano teacher call 947 9746Ovality corpefnry and cabinetry atreasonable rate Call Don 955 0525Ronald Black is back fixing Tvs 4radios again! Expert Color ServiceCall 667 5257 ANYTIMCNatural Foods cook seeks part or fulltime employment Call 363 4126Exp cello teacher will take alt ages324 2144TAX RETURNS. Prepared byexperienced accountant Reasonable684 1930MILES ARCHER MOVERSReasonable prices ExperiencedPersonnel Call 947 0698 or 752 4910 forCREATIVE WRITING Workshop bywriter columnist, help on theses, etcMU 4 3124Robert Stone Movers 324 6225Student Movers light moving in aDooge van Guaranteed low rates 24hr serv 548 0045 9 5 924 6928 or 924FW » PMFOR SALE'65 Chevy 63000 needs littie repair butruns well *75 Call 241 5512Summer in Europe Pick up in Paris1974 VW campmobile 14,000 miles*3800 Suianne 643 7300 or 525 8328'6/ MUSTANG V8, new tires, battery,muffler, *450 363 4300 apt 304Bookcases, rugs, lamps, kitchenware,toys, new clothes (size 10, 12) lotsmore. 363 5228.MARX BROS, A DAY AT THERACES COBB Saturday, March 8,7 15 & 9 30 *1TYPING SERVICESUNSHINE TYPING SERVICEReasonable rates Some Free Editing2*8 7735JOURNALISTSWriters interested in working for TheChicago Maroon contact the NewsEditor. 753 3265PAN PIZZADELIVERYThe Medici Delivers from 510 p.mweekdays, 5-11 pm Saturday, 6677394 Save 60 cents if you pick it upyourselfRIDES WANTEDVNIVERSITT OF CHICAGO THEATRE PRESENTSAN EVENING HI CONTRAST:ZOO STORY THE BOORby ChekhovDirector: Marianne Murphyby AlbeeDirector: Jody Lynch 8:30 p.m.$1.50MARCH 6.7.S.9 Special Discount to UC Studentson Thurs. A Sun. onlyi SI.REYNOLDS CLUB TNEATN 57th A BMVERSfTY AVENBECHARTERSwa arrange all types of chartersU-travel, Inc.Call Leslie Cole at 667-3900TICKET DISTRIBUTIONfor the special premiere ofSHAMPOO(to be shown Thurs., Mar. 13,7 PJL)will be held at2 P.M. Friday, Mr. 7at Ida Noyes HallTwo tickets per valid U.C.student, staff or facultySponsored by the Office ofRadio and Television andthe Student Activities Office.SMMdlhf't .( «ill JO " ' I R T. aide wanted part time. Wk dayand wk end AM s approx 26 hrs/ wkNo exp nec Trans a must LarabidaChildren's Hospital 363 6700, ext 309An Equal Opportunity EmployerVERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGATTRACTIVE 1% AND2 Vs ROOM STUDIOSFURNISHKDor UNFURNISHED$117.o $209Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus StopFA 4-0200 Mrs.Oroofc Ride wanted to Boston (and/ orreturn) over spring break Will sharedriving and SS Call Vikki 684 5498HICKORY!Camping EquipmentRental324-1499ir.oJI *• K ,n 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 projects Formore information call Jay Sugarmanat 947 8804 or Mary Lous Gebka, 6438266REFEIGERATORRENTALMmi frige Pennies a day Freedelivery Call Swan Rental 721 4400FREE CONCERTUC Collegium Choir and solo groupMusic by Ockeghem and 10th c ItaiMarch 14 & 15, Fri , Sat Bond Chapel8 30 PMFOR RENTRap'd Ram Rent a Van Rent a DodgeMaxi van only *20 00 per day Freemileage 24 hr service 548 0045 9 6,924 6867 or 924 6928 after 6BLACKFRIARSAuditions for Anything Goes TneBlackfr.ars spring show, SaturdayMarch 8 in Ida Noyes Theatre, 2 to 5PM Actors, singers, dancers neededfor this Cole Porter extravaganzaTech people for lights, costumes, setbuiidmg should also come byMARXIST MEETINGSaturday. March 8. 7 15 & 9 30 *1COBB The MARX BROS m A DAY ATTHE RACESCOLLEGIUMUC collegium Musicum Motet Choir,H Brown, director Free concert Fri.,and Sat March 14, 15, 8 X PM BondChapet Ockeghem & ioth C ItaliansPEACE CORPSPeace Corps is a good alternative foryou However, time is running out toget in Because of the economicSituation it is becoming more difficultto get in Peace Corps and programsDegmning in June & July are rapidlytiling up It you are getting a degree InEduc, math, the sciences. French,Business, or economics, you mayqualify to get in Peace Corps To findout see Peace Corps Representativesat the Business Placement office orGeneral Placement Offices, March 12-BREAKFAST!Sunday, March 9, is Laefare, theFourth Sunday m Lent, and also StGregory of Nyssas Day Come andcelebrate with St Gregory of NyssaLutheran Paris at a festive breakfastand table Eucharist Sunday, 10 15 atChicago Theological Seminary, 58th &University.PASSOVERIS COMINGFirst Seder. Wed March 26 Markyour calendars & save the date torHillers Seder Workshops. History &Traditions of Passover. Mon, March17, 8 10 PM.. Making a SederHaggadah Rituals, Food, Tues Mar18. 8 10 P MRegister now for Passover meals andSeder placements Deadline is 3/ 14SG HOUSINGWe have 37 listings of availableapar'ments and houses You can navethem too Call 753 3273 anytimeTAKCArM-WfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO •:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO ti90 PMOrder* to toko outISIS lost 43rd MU 4-1042 WE DELIVERTHE GOODIESThe finest cherry macroons directo toyour door 1/ 2 doz *1 35 Dozen *2 50Other goodies too Ask Call MidnightObsession 10 00 PM 2 00 AM 791 1771S25 REWARDFor sate return of hand writtenmanuscript in green book bagDisappeared from bookstore Sat Mar1 Call Sec Germanics Dept 753 3883or call 363 1526LOX & BAGELSBrunch this week. Sun at Hi lid. 11 AM*1 50 5715 Wood! awnCREATIVE SAbTBATH SERVICESEvery Friday night at Hitlet. 5715 SWoodlawn at 7 30 p m For more infocall Janet at 752 5655YOGAProfessors, degree candidates.Students conquer hypertension withpersonal instruction from 88 year oldV. Nerode of India DO3 0155 HY37454WOMEN'SMAGAZINEPRIMAVERA, the women's fiferarymagazme, is on sale for *) 50 at the IdaNoyes information desk and theReynolds ClubZOO STORY &BOOR2 one act plays. Mar 6 9, 8 30 PMDiscount speoai tor UT studentsThurs or Sun only *1 RC TheatreCALCULATORSTo insure delivery of NEW SR 16 orSR51 or other Ti by finals week at ourlow prices you must call at 753 2240rm 1518. 241 5496 by 3/ 10AUDITIONSOrcuia. Private Ear. Blind Saint.Mar 7. 6 30 8 30. Mar 8. 1 » J » RCNorth Lounge 3 3581CLASSIFIEDSMaroon classifieds are charged by meline, 25 spaces per line 50 cents perline for UC people 40 cents per line torepea' 75 cents per line for non UCpeople. 60 cents to repea’ 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 tor Tuesday'spaper is Friday at 3 30 deadline forFriday s paper is Wednesday at 3 30For further information call 753 3265PERSONALSDefy Daley Write in Quinn Brisben(Socialist) tor Mayor April 1. Write forliterature Quinn Brisben. 784 E 100thPlace. Chicago. IL 60628PREGNANCY TESTING10 AM 2 PM Saturday *1 50 donationAugustana Church at 55th t,WoodlawnBy The South SideWomen's Health ServicesSouth Side Rape Crisis Lme, 667 4014a referral and moral supportcommunity service We can help1WRITERS WORKSHOP (PL 2 8377)Writing HELP by professionals forthesis, reports, speech, etc MU4 3124LOUIE S BABER SHOPWill style your Hair os youwould Ilka It dona.1303 E. 53rd St.FA 4 3878EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbori Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde-Pork 3-8372WINE AND CHEESE SALESPREAD CHEDDARSIDEALLY SUITED TO MAKE TO DIPSOR TO SPREAD FOR SNACKINGCHOOSE FROM:VERY SHARP HICKORY SMOKED ONLY $ 175 PER LB (»*9ui«r price *2.4*)GARLIC BLUECANADASI 99BLACK DIAMONDBEHMARKCHRISTIAN IX with cumin and Caraway Seeds .. SI 29... ■ per lb.DANISH DLUE SI 49ESROM PORTSALUT SI 49GRAND TOAST HAVARTI SI 49TYBO SI 69ENGLANDSt 95ALE CHEDDARCHESHIRE SI 79STILTON GRADE A’ PRIME S189SWEDEN FRANCEBRIE 40% Butterot $1991 per lb.BRIE NOUVEAU so% Butiertat S909HOLLANDEDAM SI 95GOUDA $195ITALYDEL PAESE SI 99• per lb.GORGONZOLA Ripe $199PARMESAN Full 4 yr. Aged $999NORWAYNOKKELOST with Spices or Without $159■ per lb.TILSITER $129■ per lb.JARLSBERG Bulk cut SI 39FONTINA S1 25per lb.FRENCH IMPORTS AT LESS THAN DOMESTIC PRICESBORDEAUX RED WINES OF GOOD VINTAGES1964 CHATEAU GERBAY1969 CHATEAU DU GLAHA1970 CHATEAU M0NTGALL0N1970 CHATEAU PARET-BEAUSEJOUR $Q 98 Each0 Finn 3»s10001972 CHMEJMICINTIOUSSELS *1" lorMIX OR MATCHFifthNEWSTOREDally 10 a.m.-9 p.Sunday Noon-6 p. Complete PartyService From2427 East 72nd StreetBA 1-9210 Appetizers to Zinfandel351 East 103rd Street568-1811 NEWSTOREHOURSDaily 1 1 a.m.-9 p.Sunday Noon-6 p.16-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, March 7, 1975