TheVolume 84, Number 45 lx cAvi-Vw,Jk-v.icu• -‘ V, veil'/_u'^V cx- c jo Maroonf Chicogo Friday, April 4, 1975LATHKOP wins run-offNew alderman proposespolice spy investigationBy TIM RUDYRoss Lathrop defeatedveteran civil rights activistA1 Raby Tuesday to becomethe fifth ward’s newalderman. Lathrop, apolitical unknown when hefiled for office lastDecember, beat Raby, whowas considered the front¬runner, by over 400 votes. Hesucceeds retiring aldermanLeon Despres.Lathrop, on leave asdirector of the managementinstitutes program at theUniversity’s Center forIndustrial Relations,attracted 51.8 percent of thevote (6,102) to Raby’s 48.1percent (5666). Voter turnoutwas light.The new alderman told acrowd of approximately 120supporters at his 53rd St.headquarters election nightthat “we will be movingseveral pieces of legislationfor openers.’’Lathrop proposed thatshopkeepers be heldresponsible for thecleanliness of public areas infront of their businesses, thatthe police departmentprovide aldermen, on aregular basis with reports onthe crime situation in theirwards, and that the federalJustice Department beinvited to Chicago “to conduct an investigation ofthe police department to setour minds to rest in thiscity.”Chicago newspapers havereported recently that theintelligence division of thecity police departmentinfiltrated many civic andcommunity groups. BothUnited States Senators,Charles Percy and AdlaiStevenson, along with localUS congressman RalphMetcalfe have called for aJustice Departmentinvestigation.“I realize there is politicshere,” Lathrop said, “butthere also are questions ofsubstance.”Besides congratulating hiscampaign workers, the newalderman said that theward’s history of politicalindependence and politicalinvolvement “makes itworthwhile living in the fifthward and Hyde Park.”“We are prepared toendure any number ofcoffees, walk any number ofblocks to preserveindependent politics in thefifth ward.”Alluding to the often bitterelection fight, Lathrop toldthe crowd the “importantnext stop is the knitting-together process soimportant to us in Hyde Park . When it’s over (thecampaign), we are HydeParkers together; we extendour hand to the people whohave worked just as actively,just as passionately in theother campaign.”There were reports thatLathrop planned a pressconference with all of theformer aldermaniccandidates, including Raby,sometime this week, but Raby later told the Maroonhe would not be willing tohold a joint press conference“at this point.” Raby said hewants Lathrop to prove thathe is indeed an independentalderman and not a tool ofthe Daley machine before he(Raby) will support him but“if he is...independent, hewill have my fullcooperation.”Lathrop was pleased by hisLATHROP; Ross Lathrop won the aldermanic elections,defeating veteran civil rights octivist Al Raby. vote tallies across the wardand noted that his campaignhad “created a ward-wideprecinct organization notjust for the election... (but) towork in the next buildingsteps in the ward. We havegot to keep this organizationtogether and work on thethings that have to be done ”An analysis of the votetotals show that Raby took 37precincts while Lathrop took24 This is a gam for Raby offour precincts over fiveweeks ago and a gain ofseven for Lathrop. Otherprecincts were split in thefirst election between SidneyErvin Williams and SquireLance. A Lathrop workerestimated his candidatepicked up, on the average,six votes per precinct.In South Shore andWoodlawn, Lathrop gainedan average of 13 votes perprecinct while Rabyremained constant or lostover the first election Thiswas probably due, in oneobserver’s opinion, to acombination of the strengthof the Lathrop organizationand support from the regularDemocratic organization’sprecinct workers. The votethat W’illiams had previouslycaptured was split evenlythis time with many voters simply staying home.In several East Hyde Parkprecincts Raby lost a fewvotes. An observerattributed this to Raby’s tiesto Governor Daniel WalkerIndependents apparently feltRaby was less independentthan Ross Lathrop. In WestHyde Park both candidatesgained evenly.Marshal Korshak, fifthward committeeman, wasreported to have said that hisprecinct captains made thedifference in this contest.Raby told an interviewerthat he had expected to win.He issued the followingstatement;“I lost to an extremelydifficult combination of theregular organization votecombined with majordefections from the normalindependent vote in theward My workers gave anheroic effort, but we couldn’tbeat this combination. I praythat the new alderman of thefifth ward will prove to be anindependent as he says he isand many of his supportersbelieve If so. he will havemy full support in his term ofoffice ”State representativeRobert Mann, a localcontinued on page 3C-Shop offers new menuDemonstrators at Coraltalk may be prosecutedByMARIA CRAWFORD SCOTTThe University is in¬vestigating the possibility ofrequesting that the state filea criminal suit againstdemonstrators whodisrupted a lecture by JuanCarlos Coral on March 9th inKent auditorium.The demonstratorsjumped on stage and at¬tempted to seize themicrophone from Coralduring the question-and-answer period after thelecture. Several studentswere injured by thedemonstrators, and someare considering filing assaultand battery charges.The demonstrators, whowere well organized andnumbered from thirty tofifty, were Cubannationalists opposed to theCastro regime. They wereprotesting Coral’s support ofCastro.Coral lectured on repression in Argentinaunder the rightwinggovernment of PresidentMaria Estela Martinez dePeron.According to informedsources, the University’slegal office is currentlyinvestigating the cir-continued on page 2 By JIM NACHBAREdward Turkington hasannounced that, to promotethe “New C Shop”, a free icecream cone will be servedwith every hamburger andcarbed sandwich on Monday,Tuesday, and Wednesday ofnext week.Turkington, who isdirector of food services,said that he is determined tomake the C Shop an at¬tractive, good food servicethat will be an asset to theUniversity community. Hestresses that the most im¬portant difference betweenthe “Old C Shop” and the “New C Shop” will be thequality of the food.“Our goal is to provide agood food operation in thecenter of campus. Of course,increasing quality meansincreasing prices. Youcannot serve a good ham¬burger for what McDonaldscharges or get a good pastryfor the price of a twinkie Rutwe will make the quality ofwhat we sell worth theprice.”“We will be makingseveral changes over aperiod of time. The firstchange will be in the menu:we will make it more limitedand do a few things as well as we can. In the past, much ofwhat was served in the CShop was leftover fromHutch The leftovers wouldbe heated on steam tablesand served. We arediscontinuing that practice.All food served for dinner inthe C Shop will be prepared no earlier than late af¬ternoon.“We will be having abreakfast special from 10 to 1for those who like to sleeplate. We will also have a‘soup of the day’ which willcontinued on page 2Minor blazes set on Monday night,Regenstein library not evacuatedTwo very small fires wereset last Monday evening atRegenstein Library, thelatest in a rash of fires whichhit the University during lastexam week (March 17-21).Both fires consisted of afew burning papers onshelves in the stacks on thefourth and fifth floors, setseveral hours apart. Thelibrary was not evacuated and the fire department wasnot summoned because thefires had practically ex¬tinguished themselvesbefore they were detectedHowever, inspectionteams from the firedepartment did examine thefires, which caused nodamage.The city bomb and arsonsquad refuses to disclose whether or not they havepersonnel stationed oncampus trying to apprehendthe arsonist. According to anofficer on the squad,disclosure of their presence,if they actually were here,could keep the arsonist inhiding.The spokesman also statedthat no new leads haveturned up.t > X i Iff f | ♦ # ♦ t f f ( Inside thisissue:Arsonist page 3Final Gap GCJ2Midnight SpecialPhotos GCJ 4-5Movie Preview GCJ8f # ► • tPossible action against protestorscontinued from page 1cumstances to determine ifthere is enough concreteevidence to make a criminalsuit worthwhile. Informationis being gathered in anattempt to understand precisely what took placeand to identify thedemonstrators.If the University decides togo ahead with the suit theinformation will be passedon to the Cook County state’s attorney’s office, who will dofurther investigations andmay eventually prosecutethe demonstrators. The suitunder consideration willcharge the demonstratorswith disorderly conduct. “The University’s interestis in preserving the integrityof its meetings”, oneUniversity official said.The legal office will bemeeting with the state’sattorney next week toC-Shop adds ice cream conescontinued from page 1be of high quality andprepared in small batches.“There will be a number ofchanges put into effect thisMonday (April 7). We will beserving hot carved sand¬wiches, starting with hotroast beef, and possiblyrotating with corned beefand others later on.“We will start carrying anew line of pastries of very high quality. We will serveone entree from 5 to 7, andthis will also be of highquality.“Further, the C Shop willcarry a line of high qualityice cream starting Monday.Space limitations will hold usto six flavors for the presentand these will be differentfrom day to day. W’e willhave sugar cones as well asregular cones, and will offersundaes and such . ’ ’ Turkington said that the CShop will eventually servemore than six flavors andoffer hand packed ice cream.“We will serve the best icecream available in bulkquantities.“Another thing that willchange is the hours. We havebeen open from 10 to 8,Monday through Friday.Now, starting Saturday(tomorrow), we will be openSaturdays too. This Saturday we will be open from 9 to 4,but, as soon as staff can beacquired, we will extend thehours to midnight, Mondaythrough Saturday.“Unfortunately, we cannotchange the construction ordecor immediately, as thiswould necessitate shuttingdown while we made thesechanges. W'e do, however,have remodeling planswhich will be effected assoon as possible.”6522 S. COTTAGE GROVE AVE.PHONE: Ml 3-3500 OPEN DAILY TIL 8 P M • SAT C SUN TIL 6PM discuss the possibility of asuit, sources said.Meanwhile, the Maroonhas learned that a secretaryquit her job with theUniversity in a dispute overwhether she could par¬ticipate in the distribution ofliterature concerning theCoral lecture.The secretary took timeout of her lunch break to passout leaflets which en¬couraged people to attendthe Coral lecture.When she returned she wasadvised both by senior sec¬retaries as well as by herboss that she should stoppassing out the leaflets. Sheworked on the fifth floor ofthe administration where theofficials of the University have their offices.According to RichardFoglesong, president of thepolitical science studentsassociation and one of thesupporters of the Coralspeech, a “reasonableperson would conclude thatshe would be terminated” ifshe continued her activities.Many secretaries are hiredon a three monthprobationary period, and theUniversity could easily notrehire the secretary. “TheUniversity is smart enoughnot to outright firesomeone,” Foglesong added.The secretary later quither job. Foglesong main¬tains that she is deserving ofan apology from actingUniversity president WilsonHOLOCAUSTMEMORIALSERVICEtues apnl a7 pmo proc^rom oSselectedreadings ^romthe lilcra+ureihe holocaustat hill< FILMStues apn| 9fc "50 p m"DENMARK 'H3*and "JEWISHLEGENDS ANDTALES a *rilm b\febe Diesel5>IS wo odlaw n2~-The Chicago Maroon--Friday> April 4f 1975' ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELSunday, April 6 11:00 A.M.BERNARDO. BROWNAssistant Dean of the Chapel“THE COMMON LIFE”SUNDAY SEMINAR: “The Meaning ofLimits” April 6 through May 18, 9:45 to10:50 ajn.Lawrence M. Bouldln, UnitedMethodist Chaplain, leads a discussionquestioning theological and practicalimplications of Robert Heilbroner'sbook The Human Prospect, and thesecond report to the Club of Rome,Mankind at the Turning Point. ChapelUndercroft.3:30 P.M.Handel’s SAMSONThe Rockefeller Chapel Choirand OrchestraBox Office opens at 2:30 P.M.BiO SCI 230Balinsky Introduction to Embryology20 copies available — *6.75 to '9.00THE STUDENT CO-OPCHARTERSwe make arrangements for all types of chartersU-travel, Inc.Call 6*7-3000lBookstore begins new policywhich will get texts faster EDITORIALArsonistBy KURT HANSONSignificant changes in theoperation of the Universitybookstore are currentlybeing planned for “the verynear future,” bookstoregeneral manager LaurenceArthur revealed Wednesday.The changes will includecomputerization of textbookordering and a shift inlocation of the textbookdepartment, possibly out ofthe current bookstorebuilding, Arthur said. Thevacated space will be filledby an expansion of thegeneral books department.Although Arthur said thatthe plans were not designedto reduce the cost of text¬books to students, hepredicted that “one yearfrom now, our service will bequite high.”The newly-institutedprocedures includedreturning winter quartertexts to the publishersearlier, starting to load theshelves with spring quartertexts earlier, ordering booksat a “much better” pacethan before (in what Arthurdescribed as a “task force-sort of operation”), and“blitzkrieging” the last fewweekends with a full crew toget books on the shelves.The computerization of text ordering, Arthur said,will free personnel to do abetter job of checking to seethat requests fromprofessors are in and thatshipments have beenreceived. This quarter, onlyhalf of the textbook requestforms were received by thebookstore on time, he ob¬served.Arthur also stated that thenew location of the textbookdepartment has not yet beendecided on, but that there isa “possibility” that the movewill be completed by nextfall.As of Wednesday, textbookdepartment manager JohnPorter estimated that about70 percent of the requestedspring quarter titles, or 85-90percent of the requestedvolumes, were currently onthe shelves. Arthurestimated that of the booksordered on time byprofessors (within six weeksof the start of the quarter),95 percent were on the shelf.Porter predicted that bythe end of next week, at least90 percent of all requestedtitles would be on theshelves, excluding texts thatare out of stock by thepublishers. “In fact, I’dguess we’ll be close to that figure by the end of thisweek,” he added.Arthur enumerated fourmain reasons why requiredtextbooks might not yet be onthe shelves.‘‘First, the professormight not have gotten hisrequest in to us on time. If wedon’t get requests on time,there’s no way we can have1(K) percent of the books onthe shelf.“Second,” Arthur added,“the publishers might in¬form us that particularbooks are out of stock.” Hesaid that he had checked andthat this problem seems tohave increased quitesignificantly over the pasttwo years.The third reason hementioned was that theprofessor might have un¬derestimated the number ofpeople that would sign up forthe course, resulting in theordering of too few books.The fourth reason was thatof a clerical error by thebookstore — that, because ofsimilar titles, the textbookorder might have been sentto the wrong publisher.Arthur said that this seemedto be the least common of thefour reasons.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO ORATORIO FESTIVALRockefeller Memorial Chapel59th Street and Woodlawn Avenue “There have been manyproblems in the past,” Ar¬thur admitted. Since he wasappointed general manager,he and his staff “made a listof those problems and triedto eliminate them. Thisquarter there have beenvery, very few problems,”he said.“This is definitely the bestquarter that I’ve ex¬perienced.” Porter ob¬served. “I think it’s a sign ofpositive changes in the waythe bookstore is operating itstextbook department.”He added. “As far as I’mconcerned, this quarterrepresents a base-lineperformance. The quality ofthe service is only going to goone direction. I’m going tohave more books up at thestart of next quarter than Idid this quarter, and evenmore up the followingquarter.”Porter said that in a year,he hoped to have 90 percentof the titles up the first weekof the quarter. “But it’s acomplex job that requires acomplex level of coor¬dination, and it requires it ina hurry/' he cautioned“The textbooks, to me,”Arthur said, "are the mostimportant part of thebookstore. The other thingsare ancillary and enhancethe textbook department —the one section I feel needsand deserves the mostconcern.” Exam week of winter quarter was continuallypunctuated with fire alarms at Regenstein Libraryand Pierce Tower. Someone, either a prankster or avery sick individual (or individuals), kept setting firesthat caused five evacuations of the library andcompletely gutted two student rooms at Pierce.Some periodicals, mostly newspapers, weredestroyed (some of them are on microfilm) on thesecond night when the campus arsonist set a woodencarrel on fire in the fifth floor stacks. In the otherlibrary fires individual books were set ablaze in thestacks, but they were extinguished before anysignificant damage was done.Arson is a serious crime. Its potential for inflictinggreat harm to persons and property is undeniable. TheUniversity community can only sigh in relief that, todate, the arsonist's actions have not seriously injuredanyone or ruined a significant portion of the library.Relief isn’t the proper reaction though. Just thisMonday two minor fires in the fourth and fifth floorstacks were discovered Either the arsonist hasreturned from spring break rested and ready foraction or someone has decided to follow in his foot¬steps. Such perversion mast cease if this campus isgoing to maintain any semblance of an academiccommunity.Students, faculty, and staff were greatly in¬convenienced two weeks ago, especially students. Abuilding evacuation often meant that students withfinals had to interrupt their studies for several hoursat a time. We were glad to see most studentscooperative and positive when faced with new securitymeasures, quick evacuations, and long periods ofwaiting.Anyone upset with new security measures shouldrealize the University is dealing with a seriousproblem that lacks a simple solution. The importantthing is to catch whomever is responsible and help him(or her) if sick, or prosecute him if he is just aprankster.Attempts to trace the person (or persons) respon¬sible for the fires can be helped if you have any in¬formation about whom might be responsible: report itto the security force or the dean of students' office.Raby loses election to Lathrop;Walker ties were crucialcontinued from page 1independent Democrat andRaby supporter, was“deeply disappointed I thinkthe trend of minority voterapathy continued in thiscampaign "Mann said there was “Nodoubt in my mind that thepopular choice in the wardwas A1 Raby But the votesthat stay in the house don’tcount ”There were nearly 12,000voters Tuesday in the ward out of a total 30.000 eligiblevotersMann, along with retiringalderman Leon Despres.feels that Raby’s connectionwith Governor Walker wasthe crucial factor and notrace < Raby is black, andLathrop is w hite >Mann said Tuesday nightthat he would write the newalderman on Wednesday andoffer to continue the workingrelationship that he had withDespresSpeaking of Raby’s loss. Mann noted: “If you knowthis man s heart, this was agreat disappointment IfLathrop has his fanny inhock to the machine he’sgoing to lose a lot of hisconstituency ”Asked about his futureRaby said he will continue tofight for the causes he haschampioned in the past andthat. “Tomorrow 1 will pullout my index cards and thinkabout that ”Lathrop will beinaugurated on April 18The University of Chicago ExtensionpresentsKEN SASSClassical GuitaristTuesday, April 8 4 P.M.IDA NOYES LIBRARYFor Program Information and Tickets:Phone 753-3137or come to 1307 E. 60th Street"lV 1 fti'd^Apw |£ V<W 3£)M<**********************£* COLO CITY INN !**** *| by the Maroon |« New Hours: Open Doily J* From 11:30 a.m. ** to 9:00 p.m.* r** A Gold Mine Of Good Food"£ Student Discount:J 1 0% for table servicetf 5% for take homei jljj. Hyde Park's Best Cantonese Food J* 5228 Harper 493-2559 #********* jllo ndfpei 54 (r«or Harper Court) ^* Eat more for less. **(Try our convenient take-out orders.)* KIMBARKLIQUORSWINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINESTIMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct Unport*,bringing better value to youlTHE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOT IN HYDE DARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC.12141.53rd St.53-Kimbark Plata HY-3-3355With This Ad OnlyUsed Desks *15Used Chairs *5*uPNew Chairs *25"cash and carry"L BRAND X.*^J^a^SUPPLY CO8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30-3:00RE 4-2111 KARATEDemonstration7:00 PM APRIL 9-WED.IDA NOYES HALL1 212 E. 59th ST.U of C Karate Clubbeginner class: 6:30-8:00 pmstarts: Monday April 14Ida Noyes Halladvance class starts: March 31 UDITIONS!i»:<i Killing of Sister Georgeby Frank MatcuT. (4 female roles) to be performed May 22-25the C(8 male roles) ^to be performed June 5 8monday tuesdayaprU7&87:30-10 vesa RomancomedyatReynolds CJubUniversity of Chicago5706 S UniversityAll are welcome!SUNDAY FORUM9:15 AM BRENT HOUSE 5540 WoodlawnHUMAN ASPECTS OF MEDICAL CAREApril 6 Life and Death David Rorem, M.D.13 Hope in Relationship to Illness & DeathPhilip Anderson, Chaplain.20 Delivery of Health Care for Public AidRecipients Sheila Mahtesian, ACSW07 c . Steve O'Brien, MSW27 Some paradoxesErl Dordal, M.D.BOOK BARGAINSWE are pleased to be able to make availablechoice bargains on books at prices far belowthe original—possible because of theeverchanging interests in book-buyers thatlead to publisher overstock.SALE DATES: APRIL 7—12The UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5750 ELLIS AVENUEGENERAL BOOK DEPARTMENT4—-Tht-pijcago Maroon—-Apcii 4, 1975 .The End of the“Grey Gap”THE CHICAGO MAROON'S WEEKLY MAGAZINE OF CRITICISM AND THE ARTS Midnight Specialphotos p. 4,5Under Cassavetes' InfluenceBy Alan RothAt the beginning of Cassavetes’ film, AWoman Under the Influence, Nick Longhetti(Peter Falk) heroically, hut futilely, pleadswith his boss on behalf of the men on hisroad-working crew It isn’t much comparedto Charleton Heston making chopped meatout of Homan chariot drivers but the crewloves him for it and so does JohnCassavetes. The genius of Cassavetes is forfinding the exceptional and the beautiful in“normal” people, the types rejected bymany artists as humdrum and boring. His isa loving, humanistic cinema; people do goodthings and rotten things but there are noheroes and no heavies.In Husbands, his last film, Cassavetesdevelops this idea with three middle-class,middle-aged, executive types (Ben Gazzara,Falk and himself). They are involved insome infantile, and even cruel, activitiesduring the film but we don’t despise themCassavetes makes plain the longing for lostyouth and the terror of death lurking behindtheir every action Yet we don’t pity them,either. Instead we feel a commonality, asthough that could be us up there, agingdisgracefully, in twenty or twenty-fiveyears. He reaches the people in his audienceby talking about them and asserting theircommon humanity.The controversial, improvisational styleis a vital part of his humanistic messageWhile speaking recently at ColumbiaCollege, he explained his method Thescripts themselves are completely writtenout, but he trusts the actors to make up theirown characterizations. Each scene isrehearsed and Cassavetes determines thecamera placement and movement based onhow the actors play the scene. “If Peterwants to go someplace, the camera canfollow him,” he says. By having his actorsset the scenes, by putting people beforecamerawork, he stylistically follows thepeople-oriented content of his films. InWoman he has harmonized style and contentto the highest degree of his career and hasmade his most gripping and powerfulmovieMabel Longhetti (Gena Howlands) is ahousewife. In fact, she is a husband’s dreamof a housewife. She’s warm, loving, funny, agood mother and eager to please. Even afterNick stands her up she is happy to get out ofbed at six o’clock in the morning to cookspaghetti for him and his crew. When Nicktells her that she has been too friendly sheresponds, “Tell me what to be Nick. I can bethat.” Plainly, she is sacrificing herselfhood to her desire to be a good wife.Her sole claim to identity is her children.She tells the three of them, “I never didanything in my life but make you and youand you.” Mabel’s short skirts, sneakersand ankle socks mimic the dress of her five-year-old daughter, as does her behavior. Shesings and dances with her kids and sharestheir youthful, uninhibited, enthusiasm forlife; in short, she identifies with them.Consequently, she is thought a bit “wacko”by her neighbors and, too often, also byNick. In a world of people intent on beingadult and maintaining their dignity she doeswhat feels good and can say withoutremorse, “I make a jerk of myselfeveryday.”She cannot live without an identity anddesperately grasps at the straws of her’s.She raises her voice to Nick only once to say,“My name isn’t Ma, Nick. Call me Mabel.”When she begs to stay home with the kidsafter Nick threatens to have her committedshe resembles a cornered animal, realizingall is lost. She is so utterly without a sense ofself-worth that the suggestion that her homeand kids will be taken from her immediatelyinduces a nervous breakdown.Nick loves Mabel very much but can onlyrelate to her in terms of himself. When heorders her. to “be yourself” he is asking her to do the wild, funny things that amuse himand make her exciting to live with At thesame time, he is embarrassed by her whenpeople are around Nick wants her to becrazy in private and prim -and proper inpublic. His fear of losing his masculinedignity over her behavior forces him tocommit her.Cassavetes’ humanism manifests itself inthat it is Nick, not Mabel, who has changedby the end of the film When Mabel returnsfrom a six-month stay in the hospital she isproperly dressed, quiet and terriblyrepressed We can almost see her spiritaching to release itself. As it does, little bylittle, her relatives tell her to calm down, toshut up. Finally, Nick takes her side andthrows the relatives out of the house. Thishappens two hours into a two hour and fortyminute film but it is the first time he hasdone anything to affirm her worth as ahuman being. Later, the children show himthat Mabel is not all his, that she existsoutside of her relationship to him. Hercraziness is victorious over grown-ups’disapproval. Everything is not peaches-and-cream happy as the film ends but Nick’snewfound acceptance of Mabel promisesthat things will get better.Cassavetes has taken two old. simpleideas —the primacy of a lovingmale/ female relationship and the necessityof treating people like people, not ob¬jects—and made a film that is a stunningtribute to them The improvisational styleworks brilliantly to give us a set ofbelievable, well-developed characters whoseem more like real people than actorsThey act within a real-world frameworkwith all its loose ends and imperfectsituations Cassavetes has succeeded increating an environment that seemsspontaneous, a rare and extraordinaryartistic feat.As I said above, Cassavetes puts peoplefirst so acting is always the high point of hisfilms. The cast, which includes Cassavetes’parents, Howlands’ mo. er. and many oftheir friends, is uniformly splendid. Falkand Howlands bring a magical quality totheir parts that makes you doubt that theycould be anything but Nick and Mabel.Falk’s performance as frustrated, uncertainNick is flawless. Every line, every motionrings true. After seeing Woman I’m con¬vinced that he must play C’olumbo in hissleep. With luck, someone will take note andmore good parts will come his way. GenaHowlands’ Mabel is the best performance byan actress in years. She completely lets goof herself and becomes the character Heracting is so intense and uninhibited that shecan be painful to watch When Mabel hastiernervous breakdown, Howlands conveys allthe fear and messy emotions too strongly forus to avoid them, yet she never descends topathos. Watching her we feel, as Nick must,a confused, angry horror at watching abeautiful woman collapse Her performancemoved me more deeply than any I canremember.Bo Harwood’s score must not go un¬mentioned. It is bouncy and unpretentiousbut augments the film wonderfully, justwhat movie music should da. -. By Alfred LeaI had the lucky experience of being able tolisten to John Cassavetes in a hour and ahalf question and answer session atColumbia College downtown. The sessionopened with Cassavetes' general commentson the state of films today in America, andnot coincidentally moved on to a morespecific discussion of his current movie, AWoman Under the Influence, starring PeterFalk and Gena Rowlands and various othermembers of the Cassavetes and Rowlandsfamilies.Cassavetes was surprisingly at ease,courteous, and nonchalant, considering themyriad numbers of interviews and personalappearances he has been going through inorder to promote the movie This seemingwarmth is perhaps representative of thefeeling for human beings which is so explicitly presented in his latest picture.Cassavetes' initial comments about moviesin general, their production and development are similar to the underlying theme ofA Woman Under the Influence. He said thathe enjoys those aspects of making a moviewhich involve a small group or coterie ofactors working together to form a coherentfilm. In a similar sense, the picturepresented people trying to work together todevelop meaningful and coherent lives, or atleast was concerned with people and theirinter personal relationships, both good andbad.Cassavetes also provided the audiencewith some “behind the scenes" insightsabout his fellow directors. He was askedwhether or not any other independentdirectors producers existed today.Cassavetes replied that “Altman, Scorsese,Shirley Clark, Woody Allen, and formerlyRoman Polanski" were also independents.Apparently he valued his own independencebecause of the above reasons; it enabledhim to work with whom he wanted,developing this type of group interaction.The name Roman Polanski promptedsomeone to ask him why he had appeared inRosemary's Baby and The Dirty Dozen.Apparently as an actor dependent on thatprofession, he needed work. Cassavetes thencommented on the intentions of these filmsin terms of his own method of makingmovies, saying that The Dirty Dozen wasmore artistic than Rosemary's Babybecause the latter film was a “slowly dic¬tated design,'' conceived more com¬mercially than the former, which wasdictated more by Aldrich than anythingelse. Cassavetes moved on from thesecomments to begin talking about A WomanUnder the Influence and closed out thediscussion both by commenting upon anddefending his picture, Husbands.A Woman Under the Influence portraysMabel Longhetti (Gena Rowlands), livingwith her three children and husband, Nick(Peter Falk) in Los Angeles. Nick is aconstruction worker and Mabel is ahousewife. The conflict in the movie issimply how these two people are going to get along together if they fuse some of theirvalues and yet still maintain their persona?identity.Cassavetes remarked at the interviewthat he wanted to show that Mabel dideverything for her husband, children andfamily. I received this impression when Iviewed the film, Cassavetes was brilliantlysuccessful in this aspect. One perfectly,coordinated scene showed Nick bringing hisentire work crew home after they had beenup all night working on a broken sewermain. Mabel insists on cooking a largespaghetti breakfast for the whole kit andkaboodle. She wants to please everyone,especially her husband, but she works sohard at this role that she makes a completefool of herself. The awkwardness, embarrassment, and entire emotional complexity of Mabel's situation was perfectlyarticulated by the acting in scene. Incidentally, Leon Wagner, formerly with theCleveland Indians, played one of the coworkers.Cassavetes also mentioned that he wantedto show how so much of marriage consists ofpetty details. This idea was most admirablyenunciated by a scene after Mabel hadreturned from the hospital and the membersof the family prepared to eat supper Nickgets in a loud argument with Mabel's fatheron the menu; her father is irritated becausehe is not “a spaghetti man."Some members of the audience raisedquestions about the continuity of the film; atvarious points they claimed to have lost thethread of the narrative. I agreed with them,but since I do not make movies andpresumably neither do they, one shouldoverlook these possible flaws. Since otherpeople who have seen the film experiencedno confusion and since Cassavetes' ownstated purpose was successful, thesecriticisms are immaterial.Cassavetes most pertinent comment on AWoman Under the Influence was that heintended to raise questions about themarried state, especially for women Thefilm was uniquely perceptive in this aspect,because no total and complete conclusionscould be drawn from the ending of the movieexcept that a problem existed which had tobe explored Cassavetes realizes, and thefilm demonstrates, that no solutions existfor marriage and its inherent difficulties intoday's societyA Woman Under the Influence is totallysuccessful in that it is an extremely, movingfilm which deals completely on an emotionallevel with the audience. The film has nodefinite entertainment qualities, but Isuppose one could find it very entertainingin the most literal sense. Although the actingis pertect and Cassavetes' role as a directorwho meshed the entire emotional com¬plexities of the film, is beyond criticism, thestrength of the picture lies in the ability ithas to appeal to human feelings and produceemotional reactions to a situation towardwhich one must be sympathetic, or at leastappreciate it as a complex problemPeter Falk and Gena Rowlands uUAfomaa Under The JaUuaao*Friday, Ajirif 4. >973—TheCNctjgtrMd^iot>i-52-TheGreyCityJournal DdMCeBy Eden ClorfeneMerce Cunningham and Dance Companyreturned to Chicago for the week of March11-15 to give a complete dance happening.Aside from the regular performance, hisofferings were open rehearsals, GymEvents (which consisted of excerpts,sequences, and complete performances ofdances from the repertory), and techniqueand composition classes. Also present in thefestivities were David Behrman, John Cage,and David Tudor, the composers of thecontemporary music accompanying thechoreographyCunningham has always been amonumental figure in the modern dancearena. In 1947 he presented his first soloperformance in New York after alreadyenjoying a solo status with the matriarch ofmodern dance companies, Martha GrahamHe received instant acclaim as a virtuoso, agenius w ho believed and displayed dance aspure movement Unlike his colleagues of theday whose dances were representativepieces of passion, of combined styles, or ofsocial protest—reasons that led dancers torevel from the traditional balleticidiom—Cunningham’s works were void ofsuch themes. The body’s rhythm inmovement, its gestures and activitiesbecame central and emphasized, as opposedto their previous function as means throughwhich stories were told Movement formovement’s sake was his philosophy, andspectators would witness more bodilyexpression than they ever had before.The works resulting from this philosophy,in addition with his collaboration with thecontroversial John Cage and post-Dada Cunninghamdesigner Robert Rauschenberg gaveCunningham a notoriety, a status thatprovoked curiosity and attracted many tosee him. When he established his owncompany in 1952, his ideas expanded, andthe Cunningham-Cage artistry bloomed fullsail, rapidly becoming an institution in thedance world.Cunningham’s history explains the meritsof the March 15th performance. The liveelectronic music, played by the composersthemselves, created an intimacy betweenthe audience and all performers. This alsoproduced a special element of spontaneity,something that is always present inCunningham’s performances. It is obviousthat the dancers dance with a real sense ofenjoyment—they move confidently withinthe spirit of the moment The creativeprocess has not stopped in the rehearsalhalls, the dynamic energy between theongoing partnerships of dancer and dancerand dancer and composer is alwaysmaintained This is truly exciting; it is aninvaluable demonstration of the interactionthat occurs between artists whichdetermines the direction of the piece.The essence of Cunningham’s style wascaptured in “Signals.” All three composerswere involved in creating a strangecombination of various electronic soundsignals and noises. The dancers,personifications of the sounds, formedindependent single units, each representing a segment of the music. An incredible frenzyof motion covered the stage, but theintricate patterns were constructed withsuch precision that it was possible to clearlvfocus on and enjoy any one of the visualreflections of sound. The remarkable featwas that, despite the delicate sense oftiming, the dancers showed no sign ofconstriction to a carefully pre-determinedplan. One feels that the piece is evolvinginstantaneously, the experience of the pieceis as new to the dancers as it is to theaudience.Cunningham never fails to be amusing, asthe anti-meuning sentiment produces vervGR€Y G/1PLate this week we learned to our greatsorrow of the passing away of Mr. EnochSoames, whose delightful witticisms anderudition were fast becoming a necessarycounterpoint to the weary life of thestudent.Mr. Soames, though suffering from alingering malaise, was cheerful andcharacteristically enigmatic at our lastmeeting some two or three weeks ago. Wewere given to understand that his health hadsuffered during his long quest for the originof fhe myth of Aristofle, and his conditionwas diagnosed as terminal when even dosesof the finest wines failed to wash the ar¬chives' dust from his lungs. He had spent allhis time, almost up to the last, attempting toexplicate the confusion that, although peculiar effects. The “music” of his shortsolo piece consisted the noise caused byJohn Cage breaking a tree branch. OrCunningham can display a very funny aloofprescence, as he did in the untitled firstwork of the evening. At one point he carrieda baton like object, arbitrarily tapping otherdancers on stage.The evening was a series of images.Cunningham’s aim was to present dance asan independent art form, using purephysical motion as his drama He succeedsbecause the bodily images do indeed have alife of their own, and any other form of re¬inforcement would only be redundant.Aristotle has been known to millions as awriter of Greek philosophy, recenf reportshave indicated that his actual home was inthe University of Chicago.Enoch had devoted himself to his search,finally arriving at the conclusion that thesecret lay hidden in the archives of fhisUniversity. He had temporarily laid asidethe burden of his regular column in fhispaper, since he hoped fo complefe fheArisfotle story in time for this issue. We fearfhat, unless some manuscripts which hadbeen written earlier come to liqht, we haveheart the final words from Mr. Soames. Inhonor of his extraordinary contribution tothese pages (we believe that the honorificaward which is being announced in thisissue will go to his favorite worthy cause),the “Grey Gap" column will be officiallyended with this issue. A new feature willappear in this space next week.By Eli RossOAK FURNITURE-ANTIQUESREFINISHKD1703 1 35 th6*7-43001-6:00 PMTUES.-SAT. AS IS DesksTablesChairsDressersBookcasesMuchMoreWe Also DoRefinishing • EYE EXAMINATIONS• CONTACT LENSES (Soft & Hard)• PRESCRIPTIONS FILLEDDR. MORTON R. MASLOVOptometristsHyde Park Shopping Center1510E. 55th St.363 6363 t AM•* PM * D«V» A WmIiHYDE PARK PIPE AND TOBACCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - under 1C tracksAll students get 10% off,ask for "Big Jim''Pipe*Pip* Tobacco* Imported CigarettesCigar*THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE EMILY TALBOT FUNDsponsors a lectureMINA REES: Renowned Mathematician, Professor andAdministrator in Higher EducationTHE IVORY T( )WER AND THE MARKET PLACE:THE UNIVERSITY IN AMERICAQ THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1975 • 8:30 P.M. • WOODWARD COURT • 5825 WOODLAWN AVENUEADMISSION IS WITHOUT CHARGE AND WITHOUT TICKET6—The Chicago ,. iMUSICBluesman Hammond To Give UC ConcertAt a Newport Folk Festival in the early1960's, there was a blues workshoppresented by John Lee Hooker, MississippiJohn Hurt, Sonny Terry and BrownieMcGhee, and a "young white boy who singsthe blues." This boy was 19 year old JohnHammond—singer, guitarist, and harmonicist who at that point had been performing for approximately one year. Hispresence at that workshop was entirelyappropriate, though, since in those years ofthe big folk revival John's style was quite acontrast to the pseudo blues imitations thatwere unfortunately so common. Hammond's blues are, in the words of harpistTony "Little Sun" Glover, the "...real blues.Not the authentic blues of Mississippi, but ahell of a lot closer than what was passing forblues in most folk circles in those days."John has been influenced by theMississippi delta sound Glover referred to, especially the music of the legendaryRobert Johnson which has had an equallygreat effect (directly or indirectly) onvirtually every contemporary bluesman.His style is also derived from the likes ofLightnin' Hopkins, Muddy Waters, JimmyReed, and many others as well. Yet hissinging and playing are far from lifelessimitations or hollow re-creations of old78R PM race records. In his unique, dynamicstyle, he can preserve the intensity offeeling of the original versions of such songsas Johnson's "Crossroads Blues" or JimmyOden's "Goin' Down Slow" while at thesame time creating music that one knows ispure John Hammond.John's deep involvement with his music isnot surprising, considering his background.Son of John Hammond, Sr., (famous inmusical circles as the discoverer of BillieHolliday, Count Basie, Charlie Christian,Benny Goodman, and producer of Bob Dylan's first few albums) young John wasconstantly visited by the likes of Basie,Christian, and Holliday. Still, he washesitant about a musical career and attended Antioch College for a year beforemoving out on his own to make a marksinging the blues.Tony Glover, along with "Spider" John- Koerner and Dave "Snaker" Ray, gaveJohn encouragement, and within a year hehad signed a contract with VanguardRecords. Robert Shelton devoted a full pageof the New York Times to the brilliant newbluesman, and financial and popular suecess seemed sure to follow this criticalacclaim. However, John Hammond hasremained a "musician's musician" and histalents have been witnessed by too few. Toquote the liner notes of his album "I'mSatisfied " that this is so "...is attested to bythe likes of Jimi Hendrix, Robbie Robertson,Duane Allman, and...Delaney Bramlett Brilliant musicians to say the least, theyhave all respected John's music enough tohelp him make it, and no higher complimentcan be paid one artist by another. As tofans—well, the lucky ones who havefollowed this nonpareil bluesman from thebeginning have never been treated to a lowenergy performance."Find out the truth of that statement foryourself when John Hammond appears atMandel Hall Saturday evening, April 12 at8 00 p m. Admission is 13 50 and $2.50 for UCstudents and tickets are available throughthe Student Activities Office. The concertsponsored by Little Wing, a studentorganization whose members would like it tobe known that the future of similar concertson campus is very much dependent upon thesuccess of this one So, treat yourself to anevening of blues with John Hammond, andexpress your support for more studentsponsored concerts at UC.AWARDSStaff AwardsThe editor of the Grey City Journal ispleased to announce the presentation ofthe winder staff awards to: John Kuhns,for a series of distinguished articles ofart criticism; and to Enoch Soames,whose "Grey Gap" column providedmoments of levity throughout thequarter. Both persons will receive asmall check as part of their awards,which are presented monthly. CLASSICAL music==By Toby HofslundThe Ravinia Festival is moving downtownnext week for a gala benefit concert, and theevening will be full of firsts.The occasion: a benefit concert in Orchestra Hall Tuesday evening, April 8, 1975,at 8 p.m., featuring the Boston SymphonyOrchestra conducted by Seiji Ozawa andwith James Levine as soloist. And asregards "firsts," here' the list: it'sRavinia's first move downtown for a con¬cert; it's their first benefit; it's the BostonSymphony Orchestra's first Chicago appearance since Seiji Ozawa (Ravinia'sMusic Director in 1964 68) became its MusicDirector.Ozawa and Levine, Ravinia's currentMusic Director, will appear together in theroles of conductor and soioist for the firstlime. The program holds the Mozart "PianoConcerto K. 467, No. 21" tor pianist Levine Ravinia DowntownH UNIVERSITY THEATRE mm“SPRING QUARTER PRODUCTIONS 1975 ^April 18, 19, 20 THE PRIVATE EAR bv Peter Shaffer; SMOKING IS BAD FOR THE HEALTH bvAnton Chekhov; THE SAME ROOM, an oriqinal play by Michael Braude.Reynolds Club Theatre. 6:30 P.M. $1.50May 2. 3. 4and 9, 10, 11 COUNT DRACULA. Directed by Michael Hildebrand. Reynolds Club Theatre.8.-30P.M. $1.50May 11 17 Andre Gregory s Manhattan Proiact in a week s residenceMay 13, 14 ALICE IN WONDERLAND Ida Noyes Hall. 1212 E. 59th St. Seating limited to300. Latecomers will not be admitted. Reservations required. $5.00 generaladmission; $3.00 U. of C. students, faculty, staff. 8:30 P M.May 15 THE SEAGULL by Chekhov. Ida Noyes Hall. 1212 E. 59th St. Seatinq limitedto 300. Reservations required. $5.00 general admission; $3.00 U. of C. stu¬dents, faculty, staff. 8:30 P.M.May 16 OUR LATE NIGHT, a olav especially written for the comoanv bv Wallace Shawn.Mandel Hall. Reserved seating at $6.00, $5.00. and $4.00 with a $1.50 dis¬count for U. of C. students, faculty, and staff. 8:30 P.M.May 17 ENDGAME by Samuel Beckett. Mandel Hall. Reserved seatinq at $6.00,$5.00, and $4.00 with a $1.50 discount for U. of C. students, faculty andstaff. 8:30 P.M.Tickets for the Manhattan Protect writ go on tale April 21May 22. 23,24, 25 THE KILLING Of SISTER GEORGE bv frank Marcus. Directed by Michellefaith. Reynolds Club Theatre, 8:30 P.M. $1.50May 30, 31,June 1 BHAKTASURDAS or THE BLIND SAINT bvS.S. Nehru. An Indian mor-ality play directed by S. Sriram. 8:30 P.M. May 30, 31, at a place to beannounced. 3.00 P.M. matinee in Hutch Court on June 1.June 5, 6, 7, 8 THE PRISONERS bv Plautus, translated bv Nick Rudall. Directed bv SteveWeinstock. Reynolds Club Theatre. 8:30 P.M. ail nights except June 7 whenthe performance will begin at 7:30 P.M $1.50- "mr.-srr. and the complete Ravel "Daphnis andChloe" honoring the composer's centennialand featuring the chorus of the University ofMichigan at Ann Arbor.Like all cultural institutions, Raviniaapproaches its fortieth year with concernfor fhe fufure and fhe need fo bring fhisconcern even closer to home Ravinia isunique in many ways: whatever your tastein music, ballet, theatre and visual arts, it'sall there every summer in large quantity.Ravinia is also unique in that it has endedseasons in the black. The North Shoreaudiences have supported Ravinia ingenerous proportions. But that doesn't meanRavinia doesn't need help. In order toreceive Mr. & Mrs. Ray A. Kroc's $1,000,000matching gift (that's McDonald's, youSTUDENT HOUSING OFFICE PRESENTSCHCAGCSYMPHONYCPCPESTR/SENSEMPLESA CHICAGO DUOArnold Brostoff. violinSheldon Shkolnik. pianoStravinsky CJknow), Ravinia must still raise $500,000This benefit is to help Ravinia come closerto that goal.In addition to being summer entertainment, Ravinia serves a valuablepurpose for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. It provides nine weeks of employment for the CSO, thus taking a majorburden off the downtown OrchestralAssociation. Also, since the RaviniaFestival is an independent organizationfrom the Orchestral Association, it isresponsible for the raising of funds for thesummer — again, taking the responsibilityoff the Orchestral Association. What wouiddowntown do with a 52 week contractwithout Ravinia?APRIL 6 SUNDAY 3:30PIERCE TOWERADMISSION FREE & WITHOUT TICKETFor information call Student Housing Office, 753-4534rrirrr.' ererr err rrr rrrtrrr .•Friday, ApHf 4,-f975^T^e CtHce^o Merodn ^7 TheGreyCityJournolTheGreyCityJournal THE MIDNIGHT SPECIALSThree Midnight Specials, instead of the twooriginally planned, were filmed at the University’sBartlett Gym during tenth week of last quarter. TheOhio Flayers’ performance went so well during thefilming that they were given a complete show, whichwill be seen tonight at 12 on Channel 5. A three minutefilm about the University of Chicago will also bescreened, with additional three minute filmsscheduled for the next two weeks’ shows.CALENDARON CAMPUSFRIDAY, APRIL 4FORMOSA CLUB: 7 00 p m Ida NoyesCREATIVE SABBATH: 7 30 p m HillelFOLKDANCERS: 8 00 p m Ida NoyesDOC: "A Clockwork Orange" 6 00. 8 30, and 11 00 pm Cobb SICOLLOQUIUM: "Recent Developments in Virology" 1 30 p m CISC 101LECTURE: Montri Chenvidyakam, "Education in Thailand." 7 30. CrossroadsCONCERT: the Choir and Soloists of the First Unitarian Church 8 00 p m., 57thand WoodlawnLECTURE: Warren King "Thermal Shock as an Ice Multiplication Mechanism3 30 pm. Hinds AuditoriumTRAVELOGUE: "India" 8 00 p m I House students 50<. others SITHE ARABIC CIRCLE: Leonard Binder "The Arab Socialist Union 1964 68Cadre Party or Alliance ot Classes’" 3 00 p m Pick 506ON'DE'TUBE: part one of the "Midnight Special" see yourself.SATURDAY, APRIL 5CSA: Chinese Students Association, 6:00 pm Ida NoyesCEF: "Brinq Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia" 7 15 and 9 30. StCIRCUS: The Royal Lichtenstein Quarter King Sidewalk Circus 11:00a m. and8 00 p m., Mandel HallEATS: lunch at 1 00 pm, SI.50 dinner 8 00 p m with the Southeastern NigerianStudents Association, SI., at CrossroadsSERVICES: Orthodix at 9:15 a m. and Conservative at 9 30 a m. HillelBASE BALL: assuming a quick thaw the UC nine will take on Chicago Sfate in aDoubleheader I? 00 noon Stagg FieldSUNDAY, APRIL 6FOLKDANCERS: » 00 p m tda Noyes •CIRCUS: 3 00 p m Mendel’ nt*,‘ I » ’ ‘ *8—The Chicogo Moroon—Friday, April 4, 1975 CONCERT: Ustad Usman Khan Beenkar on the Been, with his nephew on theTambura, Afzal Hussain Khan on the Sitar, and P Raman on the Tabla 7 00 pm,Auditorium of the Lutheran School, S2 50, students SI 50SERVICES: Bernard Brown "The Common Life," 11 00 am, RockefellerChapelSEMINAR: Lawrence Bouldin leads a discussion on "The Meaning of Limits"9:45 a mORATORIO FESTIVAL: Handel's "Samson". 3 30 p.m Rockefeller ChapelLOX & BAGEL: 11 00 a m , Hillel SI 50JEWISH WOMEN'S GROUP: 7 30 p m HillelBRIDGE: 3:00 p m CrossroadsMONDAY, APRIL 7MEETING; tor students registered in Viral Gene Expression in Eukaryotic Cells12:00, noon. Zoology 29SIDNEY WILLIAMS: on "Agenda for the 5th Ward" at the monthly meeting ofthe Hyde Park/ U of C Democratic Socialists, 7:30 p.m. Blue GargoyleYOGA: classes begin today 7 30 p m Blue GarboyleUT WORKSHOP: the first theatre workshop of the quarter. 6 30 pm MandelKARATE: 6 00 p m Ida NoyesCHESS CLUB: 7 00 p m Ida NoyesFOLKDANCERS: 8 00 p m Ida Noyes.UFO: 8 00 p m Blue GargoyleCIRCUS: II 00a m and 8 00pm Saturday } 00 pm Sunday, ReynoldsClubOFF CAMPUSMISCELLANEOUSRETREAT Fr Dan Hartnett S J is the main attraction for the weekend retreatwhich will analyze the values of the American Dream Leaving from the Friendship House 6 30p m , Friday, 21 E Van Buren J20 00. for more info call 939 3347MEMORIAL SERVICE: a special memorial service in observance of the seventhanniversary of the death of Martin Luther King, Jr. The services will include areading entitled "Free At Last" and the Chicago Children s Choir, 10 30 a m , atthe First Unitarian Church, 57th and WoodlawnTHEATREThe Royal Lichenstem Quarter Ring Sidewalk Circus performs at Mandel Hallon Saturday at 11 am and 5 pm, and on Sunday at 3 pm. Admission is 75<University Theatre is gearing up for its spring presentations with numerousworkshops A stage combat workshop, taught by Joseph Martinez who staged thefights in last summer Court Theatre's Rashomon, begins this Saturday at 11 am inthe North Lounge of Reynolds Club The Movement for the Th eatre Workshop will meet Saturday afternoons at 2 pm in the Ida Noyes Dance Lounge Technicalworkshops begin Monday at 6 30 pm in Mandel Hall Auditions for The Killmq ofSister George and The Prisoners will be held Monday and Tuesday from 7 30 to9 30 pm in Mandel Hall.The Festival of Fantasy brings the children's play Anything You Say to theReynolds Club Theatre this weekend at II am, and 1 and 3 pm Saturday, and anextra performance at 1 pm Sunday, Admission is SI.50, SI 25 tor childrenSecond City has a new revue titled For A Good Time Call DE7 3992. For showtimes, call DE7 3992 Closer to campus. The Travel Light Theatre brings thepsychological comedy Line to the Blue Garqoyle on Thursday at 8 30 pmOscar Wilde: In Person continues at the Wisdom Bridge Theatre. 1559 WHoward, Thursday through Sunday Call 743 6442 They Seem To Die closes at thePlaywrights Center this weekend, 110 W Kinzie Call 664 0998 The DramaShelter. 2020 N Halsted, continues its runs of Sartre's No Exit on Thursday andFriday, and The Haunted Host on Saturdays Call 549 6020 The Goodmanpresents The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui at 200 S Columbus Drive Call 443 3800Raymond Miller's The Wooden Bowl, directed by Bob Curry, plays tomorrow andSunday in Park Forest. Call 274 2683 for details The Attic, 3132 N Broadway, willpresent the Out Cast Theatre Co in John Guare's comedy Cop Out, Monday nightsat 10 30 pm. This is the last weekThe Professional Performing Company, 6800 S Wentworth, wilt present performances of Hamlet tonight and tomorrow at 8, and begins The Death and Life ofSneaky Fitch on the 9th at 8 pm Call 962 3301 The long running Magnolia Clubcloses at the Victory Garden Theatre this weekend, 3730 N Clark. Call 549 5788Henry Fonda brings his one man Clarence Darrow show to the StudebakerTheatre, beginning the 7th Students with ID may get a SI discount on weekmghtshows The Pinworm Players brinq The Last Million Miles, an oriqmal absurdistcomedy by Chicagoan John Blades, through Sunday at the Body Politic, 2261 NLincoln Call 871 3000 The Lover and Other Strangers is playing at the VictoryGardens, 3730 N Clark, the eveninq of three two character plays has receivedgood preview notices Call 549 5788 The Magic Circle Theatre Co premieres anoriginal science fiction rock musical drama Plumed Serpent; The Fourth Voyageof Kristopher Kolumbus. Call 929 0542 The Old Town Players bring After TheRain today through Sunday, at 1717 N North Park Call 645 0145The amazing Organic Theatre opens the second half of their adaptation of theAdventures of Huckleberry Finn on April j Catch the first half now at 4520 NBeacon. Call 271 3010 And finally, the Goodman Children's Theatre has TheGreat Cross Country Race on Saturday and Sunday matinees Call 443 3800 forticket information and reservationsdanceThe premier feature of the week is the beautiful Ballet West at the AuditoriumTheater, Saturday at 8 pm and Sunday afternoon at 2 p.m. The Salt Lake Citytroop has gained wide actlaim as being among the best of the new ballet Companics, and have played to very favorable crowds during their previous appearances in ChicagoThe Saturday mqht proqram will consist ot tour ballets, featuring "Firebird"with music by Stravinsky from his famous piece of the same name andchorcoqraphed by William Christensen along fhe lines of the Russian folk taleSunday's matinee will present the full length production of "Coppeiia" withCynthia Young in the tirle role The two act ballet was choreographed by thecompany's artistic director, William Christensen The programs on bothSaturday night and Sunday afternoon come highly recommendedAt 1034 W Barry, MoMmq presents Sally Bowden on Sunday at 8 pm MsBowden, a New York choreographer who teaches with Merce Cunningham, willbe performing solo works Saturday, the United Mime Workers present "AnEveninq of Mime and Visual Composition" at 8 pm, Friday night they lead theimprovisitional jam session at 7 30 Call 472 9894A state wide dance conference is beinq organized for next weekend at theNational Academy of the Arts, 303 E John St in Champaign Call Glenn Mordineof Columbia College at 271 7804 for details Auditions will be held May 3 for theLyric Opera corps de ballet The auditions will be conducted by Maria Tallchief,who organized the corps in 1964 Dancers will appear in Balanchinechoreographed "Orfeo ed Eurtdice" as well as in "La Traviata" and "Othello"productions Additional information is available from Nancy VerBrundt at 3466tnCLASSICAL MUSICThe campus has several presentations in the next few days that are worthlooking into Handel's oratorio Samson is being produced at Rockefeller ChapelSunday at 3 30 pm, with student tickets being only 12 SO Richard Viksfromdirects and Frank Little has the role of Samson Tickets are available at theReynolds Club DeskPaul Tobias will play his Stradivarius cello in concert this Friday at MandeiHall, 8 30 pm He will be accompanied by Elizabeth Mosrhetti, pianist, in aconcert including pieces by Carter, Chopin and Ravel Tickets will be available inMandei the night of the concert, which is part of the University's Department ofMusic Chamber Music SeriesThe Student Housing Office brings Arnold Brostoff. violinist, and SheldonSkolnik, pianist, to Pierce Tower this Sunday at 3 30 for the first ol this quarter'sChicago Symphony Ensemble Series. Selections on the program are Beethoven'sSonata in D major, Delus’ 3d Sonata, and a Divertimento by Stravinsky Admission is without chargeElsewhere in the city, there will be a benefit for the Ravinia Festival, Tuesdaynight in Orchestra Hall Seiji Ozawa conducts the Boston Symphony Orchestra,with James Levine playing piano m the Mozart Concerto K 467 rurther detailsare available in the related story in the Grey City Journal.Northwestern University begins their Spring Brass Festival of concerts today,with 23 brass quintets appearing on campus for performances Completeschedules of the performance*, master classes, etc.. Is available by callmq 4*2'i - t • ' ’ • < • < ■ • '.''* *,* ! ». ’ ■. 5000. the Department of University Relations At De Paul, the 1975 Artist FacultyConcert Series has performances by Lorin Levee, clarinet, Robert Sandman,saxophone, and Melody Lord Karner. piano. Friday at 8 15 pm. admission freeAt the DePaul Center 25 E JacksonAlso, the Baroque Festival features Hyde Parker Teresa Orantes m OrchestraHall Saturday night at 8 30 pm The proqram, conducted by Gustav Meier, ineludes works by Bach. Handel. Lully, and Torelli.And two late listings classical quitanst Ken Saas will play in Ida Noyes libraryat 4 pm Tuesday and tickets for the Fromm Foundation Concert of 20th CenturyMusic are available from the Dept of Music The concert is next Friday, andpremieres a new composition by faculty member Shularmt RanARt ~ ~ ~~The David and Allred Smart Gallery. 5500 S Greenwood, has an exhibition olNineteenth Century European Bronze Sculpture open to the public Tuesdaysthrouqh Sundays The exhibition is the first viewing of a series of works which thegallery hopes to have available for studyduring the next few yearsApplications are being taken for exhibition space in the S7th Street Art Fair,June 7 and 8 Write to the Art Fair. 5442 S Hyde Park Blvd . Chicago. 60615 beforeApril 10The Museum of Contemporary Art. 237 E Ontario, has two events scheduled forits current "Bodyworks" show Friday at 8 pm is Laurie Anderson, and nextFriday is the last event The show explores the use of the arnst's body in the artwork Also at MCA is a retrospective of the sculpture and fetches ot GastonLachaise. Call 943 7755 for info .The Art Institute's feature exhibit is Paintings by Monet, showmq more than 100pictures from all phases of Monet's career The special fee is 50< for studentsEarly reports indicate that the exhibit is very much worth the trip Also at the Artinstitute are Willa Cather. A Pictorial Memorial, a photographic exhibit andthree exhibits in the print and drawinq galleries. 20th Century Prints, par 1 VI.Drawings. 1909 1919. and French drawings. Daumier to Toulouse LatrecAt the ARC Gallery. 226 E Ontario, is a two woman exhibit featuring sculpturesby Kay Rosen and prints and constructions by Diane Simpson Call 766 760 7 formore detailsFILMCEF brings the only Sam Peckmpan movie I ever walked out on this weekend,the "mucho macho’ Bring Me The Head of Alfredo Garcia, on Saturday at 7 15and 9 30 in Cobb for It DOC seems to have coordinated the violent kick byshowing A Clockwork Orangeon Friday at 6. 8 30 and It Kubrick's film, with themarvelous Malcolm McDowell, is most noteworthy, though not necessarily noted,for ifs sensitive examination of the relationship of music to the human psycheBeethoven will never be the same, and we haven't even mentioned the up datedversion of "Singing in fhe Rain "Other films which are having non commercial (i.e coats less than u a head) runs include Zeffirelli's Romeo and Juliet, a somewhat saccharine rendition ofthe Shakespeare play a* Wilbutr Wright College JaOO N Austin Avenue Call 7777900 for details The Rare Cinema series at the Drama Shelter (2020 N Halsfed,549 6020) is bringing several excellent films, including F W Murnau s PhantomTuesday at 6 and Wednesday at 8 Andre Deivauz's The Man Wha Mad Mis HairCut Short Tuesday at 8 and Wednesday at 6 and in their Czech film festival. JanNemec'S Diamonds in the Night on Sunday a» 4 and Monday at 6 pmThe Film Center of fhe Art Institute features Erich Von Stroheim's talents thismonth M? acts as a mad ventriloquist in The Great Garbo Friday mqht at 5 JOand 7 30 and next Wednesday brings his first directory' efforts, with BlindHusbands (1918) at S 30 and Foolish Wives (19211 at 7 30 showings are aFullerton Hall m the Art Institute and cost it 25 Also. Stan Brakhage is conducting a History of the Film Class and will be showing a number of importantexper imental and underground films on Monday afternoon at t pm Auditors mayattend the lecture and film by paying a two dollar admission tee Call 443 3737 fordetailsAt the Playboy All Night Show Friday are Bunuel's The Discreet Charm of theBourgeoise at 12 and Jean Louis Tnntiqant's And Hope To Die af 7 Saturdaybrings the sexual satire Flesh Gordon at 17 and 7 30. with a movie called Schlockfeaturing a piano playing gorilla at I pm Among maior (expensive) commercialfilms fhe early returns seem to indicate that Tommy is a severe rip off u eviewednext week ). and the pick hits are The Foot Musketeers and Woman Under TheInfluence (reviewed >n The Grey City Journal)FOLK/ ROCK/ JAZZRod McKuen reads and performs his peotry at Mr Kelly's. 1078 N Rush, everynight this week, having finally found the appropriate milieu lor his talentsWilliam S Bur rough s wears his sneakers with more style than McKuen does, ifthere were no other contrastAt the more youth oriented places around town there are two standouts LoudonWainwright tit is playing at the Quiet Knight, with a new singer named Mir aba iwhose recommendations include being the first American signed to Led Zeppel in's Swan Song label Wainwright. whose sardonic humor and terse phr asinq isinstantly recognizable, will play only through Saturday night Next week isWendy Waldman Call 348 9509 tor detailsAt Amazinqrace are the delightful pairing of Muni Farina, who came torecognition as Joan Baez's sister, and Norman Blake, one of the finest bluegrassguitarists around Performances are through Sunday at 945 Chicago Avenue inEvanston Call FAT CITYfor more infoSaturday brings several one shot shows The Old Town School of Folk Music af909 W Armifaqe brings fhe Osborne Brothers, regulars at fhe Grand Ole OpryCall 575 747? lor more info Women in Crisis Can Ash brings feminist singer CasseCulver to the DePaut University Center af 2324 N Seminary rickets ore 12 50 atth* door showtime at ■ pm . , . . . . * \ • \Friday, April 4, 1975—Tha Chicago Mat oon—9#HIMBy Alfred LeaI entered the Hyde Park Theatre withmany misgivings; I, like any other redblooded American male, dislike hairdressers, depositing them in my owntolerant way, somewhere between poodlesand toasters on the evolutionary scale.Naturally enough, I was not ecstatic over Washing Out ‘Shampoo ’the prospect of a promiscuous one; there aretoo many pets in the world and applianceswaste energy. Instead, I was pleasantlysurprised although not overwhelmed assome of the other people who have reviewedJAMESSCHULTZCLEANERSCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St752-6933INTERNATIONAL HOUSENationality DinnersNitli a iiffereit cuisineeach WedKsday 4:30—7.00 PMSAME UNBEATABLE PRICESANDSUPERS FOOD EVERY DAYTaste it-Yu’ll like it1414 E. 59th St.North Shoro Chap torSpiritual Frontiers l FetlwrstiipPr***ntDAVID SPANGLERFirtMrt (Fiabnt ■ •»Secret lift if Plats)Ttafcy.Aprillini‘1*erp»t Hew Af*"Fiwaj April 4 8 PHTiiiMri Coats tc AmericaFIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCHChurch St. A Hinman Ave.Evanston III.Donation $2 or S3.SOfor bothSO* students NIGHT AND HOPEAN ENCOUNTER WITH THE HOLOCAUST THROUGH TWOFILMS AND THEIR CZECH DIRECTOR114 n « I 4CWJuii nnAvr, tooSOCS SO pmert" brea-.tecL hallon erst a 1 irs^itutiE.H55- e 59"“ 3 OiAr^CAOS **DlTA ^>AX*LLiiTiO WILLfefc’wCL* '*VSL«ttN'Lc*. e* ’-tIndividual AttentionTo Most Small Cars31?-mi 3-3113foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.*■^5424 south kimbark avenue • Chicago 60615. April 5Sat. April 5Sun. April 6MAN BEL ttflbbrrY w r c ^KIKETS AT REYNOLDS CLUB DESK10—TheChicogo Maroon—Friday, April 4, 1975 11:00 am8:00 pm3:00 pm the movie. Shampoo is not a comment onpolitical America circa Election Day Eve1968, nor will it accomplish for cinema whatThe Rites of Spring did for music. But thefilm does present a realistically ifexaggerated example of the HollywoodBeveuly Hills area, at least I and any otherstar struck persons envision that area to be.For anyone who has not been able to readthe 50 million other reviews and articles onthe movie, Shampoo concerns the exploits ofone George Roundey, a hairdresser(Warren Beatty, who also produced andcollaborated with Robert Towne on thescript), on Election Day Eve and ElectionDay in 1968. George works at a hairdressingshop where he is in demand for both histonsorial abilities and his stud abilities. Hewants to open his own place but is frustratedby an unhip member of the bankingestablishment, who is incapable of accepting the fact that George does BarbaraRush's hair as collateral. One of the clientsof the shop, a wealthy women (Lee Grant)who enjoys George's dual talents, promisesto get her wealthy Republican husband(Jack Warden) to come up with a loan. Hejust happens to be keeping one of George'sformer flames as his mistress. George alsomanages to do a number with Goldie Hawnand fornicate with Lee Grant's daughter.If the plot appears entangled, it is supposed to. George has managed through hisown shallowness to get himself involvedwith all of these equally shallow people. Thefact that George is a hairdresser seems toserve as a metaphor for all of thesecharacter's relations with each other.Hairdressing is a superficial concern andcertainly a superficial way of communicating to other people. In the sameway, all of the characters of the film dealwith each other on superficial levels ratherthan bothering with each individual personality. This shallowness is the mainconcept of the film. Unfortunately therealization that George and his lifestyle aresupposed to be foolish did not come to meuntil the latter half of the film and for one person who saw the screening, not until Beatty himself characterized George as being a type of"dumb blonde." Beatty also said that"promiscuous people have feelings too,"which partially undercuts my interpretationof the film. I would prefer to rely upon hiscomment that the film itself is the mostarticulate statement of Beatty's thoughtsrather than anything he might have to sayabout the film. According to Beatty, couldhe have verbalized or written these thoughtsdown, he would have done so.Beatty also brought up the political implications of the film. He said that "althoughit's Election day ... none of these peoplevote." Jack Warden is willing to becomeinvolved with the business and financialbenefits of politics, but he still does notbother to vote and really thinks of politiciansin a negative sense. My reaction to this was,so what? I know that people do not vote andthat people like Jack Warden exist. Nonvoters have been told to vote all their adultlives by every conceivable public voice fromnewspapers to ministers and the percentageof the eligible voters who do vote, stillhovers around roughly 50 percent. Un¬doubtedly this aspect of the movie stemsfrom Beatty's well publicized involvement with liberal politics.In a like manner, my interpretation of thefilm's impact seems to be a reiteration ofwell known criticisms of the country.Beverly Hills does not serve as a metaphorfor the entire nation and those flaws which itdoes present, where they are applicable tothe U.S. in general, have been hammered atand exposed since the inception of thiscountry as well as from time immemorial.Consequently I do not see the picture as amajor statement or a powerful moralpolemic about anything. Luckily Shampoowas well written, well directed by Hal Ashby, and extremely well played by the actorsinvolved. Shampoo is.well worth seeing forthese qualities as well as any of the potential, philosophic overtones which one canglean from it.FILM:Imprisoned by AvenueBy Alfred LeaThe Prisoner of 2nd Avenue is a dumbmovie It is not funny; the jokes are at leastas old as Mamie Eisenhower and theyproduce an amount of boredom comparableto that produced when she makes her annualappearance on the evening news.Although humor seems to be the mainfocus of the picture, things fall so flat I wasforced to return to the popcorn stand foranother large Hershey bar and a strawberrysoda The film is based on the Neil Simonplay of the same name, who also contributedthe script for the movie. If these jokes aregoing to be representative of his comingwork, he should be permanently installed onthe New York City Dial-a-Joke staff, perhapsto usurp Henny Youngman’s prestigiousposition.Jack Lemmon plays an ad executive,married to Anne Bancroft, who loses his jobafter a long tenure with his firm. This happycouple lives in a high-rise apartment, sendtheir daughters away to college, make jokeswith the doorman and watch other peoplewalk their poodles. They also spend a great(j|‘al of time complaining about their air-conditio'ners and bemoaning theirapartment’s thin walls, through which theycan hear two stewardesses "in flagrantedelicto." When Lemmon loses his job, theloss coupled with the above problems,combine to enfold him in some ephemeralrich man’s urban blight. He begins toexperience feelings of anxiety anddepression. Lemmon seemed so miserableand his plight so exaggerated that Iexpected the film to turn into an aspirincommercial Luckily he does not make anyspeeches about the Dodgers in the 40’s or thePacific theatre during World War II. Anne Bancroft manages to get her old job back,which furthers Lemmon’s depression. Yetwith Simonesque and not surprisinglyI/ommont*sque optimism, things manage toperk up by the end of the film.Although Lemmon seems typecast in theultimate, blubbery Jack Lemmon role, AnneBancroft is wasted in )he film. Her Jewishaccent and her subMe emotional details areengulfed by the pasty-faced Lemmon, whostumbles around the apartment shoutingand/ or weeping whenever he feels that he isrequired to show any depth of humanemotion or feeling Unfortunately he doesvery little else to reveal his character. Whenhe is doused from above by an irateneighbor, aroused at Lemmon’s habit ofstanding on the balcony and cursing in aloud voice at the street, I was tempted tohurrah.The film seems to be caught in a dilemma.Apparently Neil Simon could not decidewhether or not to concentrate on New YorkCity jokes or the serious, emotionalproblems sure to be experienced by a man inhis fifties who has lost his job. With thelatter topic someone, perhaps even NeilSimon, could have filmed a respectablemovie. Instead Simon starts out to portray ahuman situation and drama but ends upstringing together a lot of crass Mel Brook’sstyle jokes, which are generally about NewYork City. Unfortunately the film has no feelfor the rules of the city; one comes awayfrom The Prisoner of 2nd Avenue with thefeeling that New York City is populatedwholly by cabdrivers, doorman, andadvertising executives. The city is shallowlypresented and since nothing else ispresented very much at all, the entirepicture stumbles without ever straighteningup and going somewhere.Vlant a Tittle ‘Moneyand get aTittle Money TlantPut $100 into your Hyde Park Bank savingsaccount-or open a new savings or checkingaccount with $100-and we ll give you yourvery own money plant kit free] The kit contains8 plant starter peat pellets in a special growingtray and a package of money plant seeds(Lunaria biennis).With a little water and a little love, your moneyplants will soon sprout and grow. They IIproduce delicate purple flowers in Spring whichturn into beautiful silver-dollar-size pods in Fall.The money plant is also known as ‘ money-in-both-pockets and ' Honesty' because theseeds can be seen through the pods. Theseiovely plants will add color and beauty to yourhome all year.Stop in and get your money plant kit today.Then start them growing tonight.Watch your money plant grow!s*T\.Fill the growing tray withwarm water until all pelletsare fully expanded Sow the seeds directly onto When the roots grow throughthe pellets and cover tray the pellet sides, your moneyloosely with plastic wrap plants are ready for plantingUncover when seeds start in soilto sprout \Hyde Park Bank& Trust Company1525 E 53rd St./752-4600Member FDIC“THE WtHstleSTOP bank”*111 ■ ■■ ,IIP-1'1tV»V tt.t» ,v r,~i\ V \ \ V YvtV ;n iS vV» W V« ,\U /; '.Fnddy. Apol 4,^975^^ Chicago Maro<yv^i^\\^“A - * M V - C\L .lTr> VI*.'-•Th«GreyCityJournalSTUDENT STIA new consulting and discount pujpm: sca/i < 'mdents. with over WJinm^eqm$0&it *Nw*bvmt pries* ydw wit/ beahk to md* ’$#$&*»* /mm$ iO0to $ toooC&H form ctppoifttflwni: Z4V%7%2. [unViytung.By toby Ldu Hofslun&Sounds of the syinpihony-^ihow they dochange from conductor to conductor!Consider the last4three guests in OrchestraHallSilvio Varviso, a Swiss conductor making|| Chicago Symphony Orchestra debut,presided over a rather shakey two weeks ofrhusic and proved that he is, after all. asecond-rate optTatic-cpndpctor and shouldstay in a provincial European opera house.He has no business conducting a majororchest ra like I he (’S()He took all the juices out Of Haydn’svibraid ^lrd Syrifvphohy and wasn’t muchbetter a re© m pan y ing the Chopin becauiseTiedidn’t go the way the pianist (James Tocco)did The orchestra tried to follow Toccowhite still nodding occasionally towardVarviso, so you can imagine the results.His St rauss and Wolf-Farrari, a frothy bitof furi called Serenade /or Strings, werefairly innocuous, and his one tour de force,Zimmcrmann’s Photoptosis, a montage ofsounds, colors, and textures, soundedsometimes like a B-12 and sometimes like afive-car pileup on the Dan RyanArtistic results improved greatly with thearrival of Riccardo Muti, currentlyprinciple conductor of London’s NewPhilharmonic Orchestra Discipline onceagain returned to all; strings blended,brasses played together and woodwindsseemed fairly content. Vivaldi’s Concertofor Strings and Gontinuo bounced along withbite and precision. Britten’s Four Seainterludes from 'Peter Grimes' containedmuch depth and direction. AndTchaikovsky’s First Symphony (on theoccasion of its CSO premiere) showed ifdoesn't deserve the neglect It: has received. ttiulini’sMahler’s Ninth Symphony, It seems theorchestra plays better for him than foranyone, ihclutiifig M usic Direct or Sir GeorgSolti The players love him andebhsiequcntlv plgy as if there were no,tomorrow/For Hit* first time this season thtestring had a depth matched, in this;country, only by the Philadelphia^(lilies t rLe /Jfifte brasses bailed but one■ lifter another With ring aridj•e And noneoLus in attendance will".breadf% of feeling 0iuliniachieved in the finale. It was like a greatreligious experience, an emotional peak Ifonly ( Jiulitu and the orchestra would reebrilthis!(fiulini fans, of which there are many inthis area, should try to hear this week’sconcerts holding three Vivaldi violinconcertos and the Schubert Mass in E flat'’with .soloists Phyllis ClftttL soprano, DhvtnStapp. me/./.o soprano, John McCollum andRbwrt Johnson, tenors. Paul Plishka, bass,and Margaret Hi His' Chicago SymphonyChorus,. ■ *lyooking ahead to the rest of April, therewill be a Solti Bruckner Fifth, the first CSOperfprrhance of the Roehberg “ViolinConcerto" with Isaac Stern as soloist, andSolti’s super spring special, the VerdiRequiem with Ix*ontyne Price, soprano,Yvonne Minton, mezzo soprano, LucianoPavarotti, tenor, and bass (iwynne Howell.Both performances are non subscriptionconcerts, and tickets are available at thebox office now. This is one of Solti’s springtour pieces, and the New York Carnegie HallConcerts are already sold out. There haseven been talk of piping it into Central ParkSo don’t miss it.Ton * UMv v bookat a bawl*? But :secaUI? fh* hadiTES fpr be' terBh"q arid quick rrmw,rfi« had read [oxj(•»-. »K1 Wu>w«tuh i*»*t*Ktv*M • Ho«)r,t SOqvrtvvlTommy..UwIHIIHm, -Ana Ma/qtel Olivet Reed Roger Daltrcy fJtoo JohaElk Oaplon Jolm 1 nlwistle Keith Moon Paul NicholasJack Nicholson Robert Powell Pete TownshendTina Turner * the Who* * -r. . ,• *•” «»-«* Pet* fowbthen# * *.*•• ^n,ft. ffoen 'RumHI.. • tbtylVMM « - *** >*;.IMMtHull.. mr,'■**#& r* Mm' * <»**»<*»- »dJ,JflLj »«i ^ rtmember.%Aftnn> raved is aJr Pvnny learned^iwayi read CLIFT?NOTES before thet BUtKllWALDENBOOKSEvergreenShoppingCenterChicago Cyj]MIDWEST PREMIERENOW PLAYINGt« QUlNTAPHONlC SOUNDBy Gage AndrewsContinuing the welcome trend towardsfree showings and performances whicht&gftn tenth week of last quarter, the Officeof Radio and Television announced anotherfilm which will be shown free lor Universityof Chicago student*.Day of the Locust, Nathanael West's novelabout Hollywood in the »930s, will have aprivate screening at the Playboy Theater onApril T9th at noon The showing will be foruniversity students, and will be followed bya seminar with the director, JohnSchtesinger, and the producer, Jerome Heilman. The two have previouslycollaborated on the critically acclaimedfilm Midnight Cowboy.Tickets for the showing will be availableon Wednesday, April 9th, from the studentactivities office in Ida Noyes Hall, Buseswill be provided on the day ol the showing,leaving from the Woodward Court parkinglot and returning after the filmDay of the Locust stars Donald Sutherlandand Karen Black, and will not be nationallyreleased until May 23rd of this year. This isSehlesinger's first major film since SundayBloody SundayKroch’s SkBrentano’slet us help ydtf;PLAN AHEADTo Become a CPATHE BECKERCPA REVIEW COURSECHICAGO LOOP312-346-7871DCS PLAINES312-346-7871 shampoo is I lie smashof th« year...FOR THESTUDENT WHO'SBEHIND IN...ALGEBRA... GERMAN...ECONOMICS... BOTANY...BIOLOGY... FRENCH...ENGLISH... PHYSICS...CHEMISTRY °M> SuCC«Mlol Studanu Rep>et«niCHEMISTRY “it is going ft> ho a smash,i think it will ho uno ol thohiggost pii lures in a long,' Icing time*'.'IMMHiMNfclNw -t*siteiisittho Ta dole v vita’ for tho IBTO’s!'' ' inditH c Hst: m w Vbf4 ihag.lZlfOwarren beatlvjulie i hrislie • «oldi*‘ haw n h >AND MANY OTHER SUBJECTSGreat for review . perfectto hetp you eaten up lastProgrammed formal Hpeps youfrom washng hme lets youconcentrate on areas whereyou nee/t the most help...CLIFFS KEYNOTE REVIEWSKroch’s JL Brentano’sTHE FULL SERVICE BOOKSTORES®29 South Wabash Avanua, Chicago, Illinois <0603 • DEarborn 2-7500BRANCH STORES' 516 N Michigan Aw • 62 E Randolph Si • 16S LsSanaSi1723 Sharman Ava €van*ionk« 1028 Laht'Sf OatTParh • Norm Man Old OrchardOafcbrooh Camar • Evargiaan Piai« • River Oak* • Lincoln Mail • Randhurtl CantarLu M6 r» H***',* Sound p*OHa<lK)n agamutatker.y 'obtie»v HuMev drunkvJuil P*ew the lop metal cau and th«V<«IU PII BONO ALARM oa.n>u.to the ea*% onnew.ng da;e\ ,qu, attacktf and, *$w*monv a>d Attra<t,vepalm o* you* hand When cao $uoot «4>en *et«a«4d 251 «> twainkto’co o” % Iff Vtr.inl |.it k vv.irden ltm\ ImII• rolwrt lr>M,ne. watren bealty.rulwrdsylDM-:>~6~>|Nul»)mai| *iwmHwgK >P f ‘ n * * < |NOW PLAYING AT THESE SPECIALLY SELECTE0 THEATRES . * tfA,. nSsss- . . oo^iLi .. isssr l i■ |ytRCBEEN. ... MERCURY ..... WDCffWti,T?—The Chicago Moroon-Apri! 4, 19^ ’ rp -> •STATE LAKEACCOUNTING AND■VFor those of you who liked the "Shampoo"preview the Office of Radio and Television andthe Office of Student Activities have arranged afree preview ofDAY OF IK LOCUST LITTLE WINGPtembDIRECTED BY JOHN SCHLESINGER(of Midnight Cowboy and Sunday, Bloody Sunday fame)STARRING DONALD SUTHERLAND and KAREN BLACK JOHNMr. Schlesinger and Mr. Jerome Heilman, theproducer, will be present to answer questionsafter the showing in a seminar at 2:30. HAMMONDAT THE PLAYBOY THEATRE,1204 N. DEARBORNSATURDAY, APRIL 9th NOON April 12 •8:00 P.M.Tickets may be picked up at Ida NoyesCheckroom Desk (two per U.C.I.D.t beginningWednesday, April 9. Free busses will leave IdaNoyes at 11 am Saturday. (Sign up at theCheckroom Desk.)For Information call the Student Activities Office 3-3591 Tickets: General Adm. $3.50UC Students $2.50Tickets Available April 4thCall Student Activities for Info.THERE’S A NEW "( SHOP COMING!(IT'S NOT HERE YET, BUT IT'S ON THE WAY)STARTING MONDAY, APRIL 7 THE NEW LIMITED MENU FEATURES:* BREAKFAST SPECIAL 10 AM-1 PM* HAMBURGERS ON HOT SESAME SEED OR ONION BUNS* SOUP OF THE DAY* CARVED HOT ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES* NEW LINE OF FRESH PASTRY DELIVERED DAILY* DINNER ENTREE SPECIAL 5 PM-7 PM* ALL NEW ICE CREAM SERVICE-6 FLAVORS ROTATED DAILYCONES, SUNDAES, SHAKES AND SODASAPRIL 7-8-9 FREE ICE CREAM CONEWith Purchase of a Hamburger or Roast Beef Sandwich"C” Shop Hours: Mon.-Fri. 10 A.M.-8 P.M.; Sat. 9 AM-4PMWatch For Expanded Evening and Saturday Hours, soon. W«’r» in Reynolds ClubT-rFciday> April** 1975—Ih« Chicago MaraoM-olJl' YVi »» - »VH> ’V«A I'yHr. i V, tH*'- - 1'TvTTTsi' S . * *•» ' % »:*;»• •»' ”1 » )rMaroon baseballers stalled by 'spring' weatherBy MIKE KLINGENSMITHWith ten inches of winterysnow blanketing the quads itis a bit difficult to envisionthe baseball season openerscheduled for tomorrowafternoon at Stagg FieldHowever, in the friendly butstuffy confines of theUniversity Fieldhouse thebaseball squad has beendiligently polishing theirskills for more than twomonths.The team got at least abrief opportunity to displaythese skills in a “spring” tripto Arkansas and Missouriover the break Althoughrained out of five conteststhe team managed to get in acouple of games. TheMaroons were victoriousover a previously undefeatedCrowder College , by an 8-4score, and also defeatedDubuque University in a 6-4contest.All of which lendscredibility to Coach JohnAngelus’ belief that hissquad will be a g(x>d hitting,solid defensive club whosereal question mark lies in thepitching staff Perhapsprimarily responsible for theimprovement in hitting is theaddition of a pitching machine which, according toAngelus, “throws faster thanmost pitchers that we face.”The Maroon squad is aveteran one, composedprimarily of juniors,although Aneglus feels thathe will get significant con¬tributions from a number offreshmen on the team Theteam lost two starting pit¬chers from last season’s 10-10 squad, and this is thereason for concern about thedepth of the pitchingrotation.Set as starters for thisseason are juniors PaulKawalek. Jack LeVan andEd Conner. Kawalek 6’2”,190 pound All-American willlead the staff. Kawalek is ahard thrower, with a goodassortment of pitches,particularly an improvedslider Last season hecompiled a 3.49 ERA whilestriking out 68 batters in only49 innings. Kawalek wasnamed to last season’s All-District team as an out¬fielder, where he will seeaction this season when he isnot on the mound.Jack LeVan, who captainsthe University’s varsityfootball team, will be thesquad’s second pitcher.LeVan saw limited action last season, but will becounted on to be one of themainstays of the staff thisseason. Angelus was verypleased with LeVan’s workon the southern trip, wherehe was the winning pitcher inthe Dubuque game.Ed Conner will round outthe starting rotation. Connerhad a very impressive 1.61ERA last season in 22 inningsworked He has an excellentslider according to Angelus.and also has very goodcontrol. With these threepitchers. Coach Angelusfeels that the team will be inevery game and will only runinto problems if weatherforces the team to bunch upgames on the schedule late inthe season.The eight positions on thefield are set with thefollowing regulars returningfrom last year:THIRD BASE * BOBGRIFFIN. Griffin is thesenior member of theMaroon squad, and has beena mainstay at third base forthe last three years. Griffinhas developed into a solidhitter, batting .311 lastseason He was also third onthe team in stolen bases lastyear with seven.SHORTSTOP * JEFFBROWN: Junior first baseman Norval Brown, here shown running to first base,gives the Maroons a solid glove at first.FRATERNITY BENEFIT: Jim Kaplan, president of the Intra-Fraternity Councilpresents a check to Susan Fenske, the Children s Activities Coordinator of WvlerChildren's Hospital. The money was raised by a benefit basketball tourney lastquarter which involved Phi Gamma Delta, Psi Upsilon, and Alpha Delta Phi. PhiGamm won the tournament, defeating Alpha Delt in the championship game.Wyler Children's Hospital is operated by the home for destitute crippled childrenin affiliation with the University.rj-- (14—tThe Chicago MorofcfV-^-Friday; April 4,i 1975 KAWALEK. Junior Paul Kawalek led the Maroons inhitting with a .375 average last season, and will bethe number one pitcher this year.I.ARSON. Larson has had agood spring and will be theleader in the Chicago infield.Playing both second baseand shortstop last seasonLarson demonstrated goodrange in the field and willsettle at shortstop thisseason. At bat, Larsoncompiled a .270 averagewhile leading the team inwalks, runs scored, andstolen basesSECOND BASE • STEVEROCZNIAK. The team’smost improved player,Roczniak figures to be theregular second baseman. Heis very solid in the field andis able to turn the doubleplay. Last season, as a freshman, Roczniak averaged.222.FIRST BASE * NORVALBROWN. Brown providesthe team with an excellentglove at first base, and in histhird year on the team willbring more experience to theMaroons’ infield Not only isBrown able to dig out thethrows at first, he also madea strong contribution at theplate with a .333 average. Inaddition, his 12 RBIs werethe second highest total onthe team.CATCHER * PAULSW’IONTKOWSKI. Juniorco-captain Swiontkowski hasdeveloped into a teamleader, and is one of the mostimproved players on theteam. He is a solid catcherand looks to improve uponhis 229 average of lastseasonLEFT FIELD * CLIFFEISENBERG. One of the twoseniors on the team,Eisenberg is the other co¬captain and will be theteam’s cleanup hitter Heturned in an excellent .370average last season,knwking in 12 runs, scoringII. and leading the team with three triples. A solid out¬fielder, Eisenberg may alsopitch a little this season Alsoslated for action in left fieldwhen he is not on the moundis Kawalek who was theteam’s leading hitter lastseason with a .375 averageKawalek led the team inRBIs with 13, and wassecond in runs scored andwalks. He led the team inextra base hits with fourdoubles’ two triples, and twohomeruns. He also contributes a cannon arm to theMaroons’ outfield.CENTER FIELD * DENNIS\l c N A M A R A. M e Na ma rawill once again be the leaderof the Chicago outfield In histhird year on the team hebrings experience to hisimportant position One ofthe stars of tin* Maroonfootball team, McNamara isa good athlete who compileda 266 average and knocked in 12 runs and scored 16 Hewas also second on the teamin stolen bases with eightRIGHT FIELD * RUSSELLLEE. Lee is one of the fastestplayers on the team, swiping5 bases last year as a parttime player Lee is a goodoutfielder with a very strongarm and is in his second yearon the team Althoughregistering only 16 official atbats last season, Leemanaged to score nine runsAdding depth to theMaroon squad will be“rookies” Lester Bern, afirst baseman, IsaacBridges, the fastest playeron the team, John Lekich, ashortstop, Eric Norment, athirdhaseman, Kevin Owens,a secondbaseman, and PeterWaite, a pitcher. In additionto these freshmen, seniorDon Weidemann, in his firstyear on the team, will be thebackup catcherWeather permitting, theMarinins could have theirbest season of recent times.Although Coach Angelus has“upgraded” the schedulethis season, he still feels thatthe team will have “at leasta 50-50 chance in everygame.” Tomorrow afternoonat 12:00. Chicago isscheduled to open theirregular season with ad o u b I e h e a d e r againstChicago State University atStagg Field.AwardsBanquetThe Order of the “C” hasset its annual Winter AwardsCeremony for Monday, April7 at 7 p.m. Athletes from thevarsity basketball, fencing,gymnastics, and swimmingsquads will be recognized forcontributions made duringthe past seasons.Lacy Banks, sportscolumnist for the ChicagoSun Times, will be guestspeaker. Banks joined theSun Times in August of 1972following three years as anassociate editor with Ebonymagazine. Regularlyassigned to the ChicagoBulls, his outside interestsinclude music, photography,acting, and he has been anevangelist since 1953.UC VARSITY SCOREBOARLLAST WEEK'S RESULTS:MEN’S BASEBALL:UU vs Kennedy-King CollegeUC vs Illinois Tech chilled outsnowed outMEN’S GOLF:UC vs Northeastern, Roosevelt, I IT snowed outUC vs Chicago Stale, I IT, DePaul snowed outMEN’S TRACK:Varsity, Alumni, & UCTC MeetNEXT WEEK’S EVENTS: snowed outMEN’S BASEBALL:UC vs Chicago State (2) Sat. April 5,12:00 StaggFieldUC vs Lake Forest, Wed. April 9,3:00 AwayMEN’S TENNIS:UC vs Harper College, Sat. April 5,10:00 AwayMEN’S TRACK:UCTC vs University of Illinois, Sat. April 5,1:00 ChampaignUC Development Meet, Sun. April 6, 4:30 StaggFieldWOMEN’S SOFTBALL:UC vs Northeastern, Thurs. April 10, 4:00 AwayWOMEN’S TENNIS:UC vs DuPage, Tues. April 8,3:30 KenwoodCourts .JMAROON CLASSIFIED ADSSPACE3 room l bed apt 1st tl vie S4th AHarper Avail 5/ 1 balcony adult Nopets t140 Call 764 7493Wanted Room in home or part byApril 15th, call 741 6937For rent 7 bed apt pn C Bus rt AvailApr IS. Call 741 6937 CHICAGO BEACH HOTELBEAUTIFUL FURNISHED APARTME NTS Near beach, parks, loop, UCand 1C trains, 11 mins to loop busses,door Modest daily, weekly, monthlyrates 74 hr desk Complete hotelservices 5100 S Cornell DO 3 7400Miss SmithSUBLETSSpace avail In HP Townhouse Pay orbabysit or both Kitchen and Lawnprivll 374 66374 rm/ t br, sep dining, sunny, 7fh ft,corner apt nr shpq & trans 1195 inclutils avail I June 947 0377eves/ wknds3 room 1 bed garden apt avail 5/ 1adult No pe‘i, *170 vie 54th A HarperCall 764 74933 bedroom apt . 54th & Woodlawn, *185per month Must act now Have twosubletters Call 684 1590ENGLAND, London Modern 3bedrooms, study, living dining room,kitchen, 1 1/ 7 baths, garden apartment. gas. central healing, availableafter June 30th tor sabbaticalresponsible tenants Call (717) 3676767 Sublet available summer sublet Twobdrm rent negotiable Call 363 3548SCENESHear instrumental style former lypracticed In the Mughal and princelycourts of India USTAD USMANKHAN BEENKAR, rodra Vina, withAlral Hussain khan and P RamanSunday, 7 PM, Lutheran School, t? 50A *1 50Award winning films Diamond of theNight A Dita Sax Sat April 5, 8 30Brrj^sted Hall, Oriental Institute *1Hit el Affiliates. *1 50 others ArnostLustig Will speak between filmsHear Ken Sass, guitar, play theclassics Tuesday, April 8, 4 PM IDANOYES LIB Tickets 753 3t376 ulliucr s Periodicals Cm.5309 South Kimbark Chicago, Illinois 60615(100 Ft. South of 53rd Street on Kimbark iNear Kimbark Shopping CenterPenguin, New Directions PaperbacksHuge Science Fiction Sectiony Many Obscure Small Press ReviewsMarvel Underground ComixMany Foreign MagsComprehensive Literary,Political, CulturalBlack Press ReviewsMany Film Photography MagsMother Earth News, All Back Issues. *16 \ r LlttlC 'vAdcj,!/ 's'Olivers—Chocolate Eclairs10:00 to 2:00 a.m.YOGAA BALANCE TO THE LIFE OF THE MIND A CELEBRATION OFSPRINGYoga classes Spring Quarter begin Monday, April 7th and'il 9tn atWednesday, Apri the Blue Gorgoyle 5655 University.Monday classes will meet from 7:30 to 9 30 p.m Wednesdayclasses will meet from 5 00 to 7 00 p.m.All students are encourages to practice yoga at their own levelin whatever class they participate.Classes will be led by Dobbi Kermon who has taught for studentactivities a* the University of Chicago 1971 • 1973 and at the BlueGargoyle 1973-1974.•Yoga will include Asanas (Hatha Yoga postures) Pranayamo(Breath control), relaxation meditation, and chanting8 two-hour sessions $25—16 two-hour sessions $45.Registration will be open until space is filled.Please weor comfortable warm clothes and bring a blanket.Clothes that stretch with you are preferableFor info, coll Dobbi 947-8621. Answering Service SU 7-4435 Recycle cans, bottle* and newspapersSat 10 4 54th Place and GreenwoodSun 10 4 6107 S BlackstoneFolkdancing becomes the TruePurpose of life in Ida Noyes 8 PM SunGeneral Level and Mon beginninglevel, with teaching, donation SO< Frigeneral level, no leaching, tree ComeJoin our frolic* Celebrate spring*Holocaust Memorial Services, Tues8th, Hillel House. 7 30 PM Films at8 30 Admission treeFree swimming instruction for adults.Tuesdays. 6 30 7 10 PM INH BeginsApril t for 10 wksURPE (Union tor Radical PoliticalEconomics) will sponsor readingqroups on Marx's CAPITAL to startfirst week ot April Please call Jim Hillat 788 4197 Si/e will vary with numberof people seriously interestedDINNER FOR 7 tor Under *10 M THDinner Specials The COURT HOUSEin Harper CourtIsraeli Folk Dancing, Hillel House. 8PM Beginners 9 PM Advanced 8.RequestsPEOPLE WANTEDCOLIEGE CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE Needed to sell Brand NameStereo Components to Students atlowest prices Hi commission, NOinvestment required Serious inquiriesONI. Y* I AD COMPONENTS. INC 70Passaic Ave Fairfield, NJ 07006Jerry Diamond 701 777 6814ACTIVISTS Need a challenqmgsummer iob? Work with anorganization for consumer protection,lighting redlinmq, dignity lor seniorCitizens and reform of our judicialsystem Part and full time iobs, advancement possible Call for an interview CITIZENS ACTIONPROGRAM 7/00 N Lincoln Ave 9797977Pianist needed by creative ia/7 ensemble Call Dave, 684 4568, or John,363 7669Wanted Women with normal sponfaneous per >ods for hormonal researchstudies Fee Call Dr Razdan. 9476164Female Models Wanted MidwestPhoto Assn seeks attractive modelstor fashion and figure assignmentsMuste be 5'3" or shorter, no experience necessary Salary *17 00/ hrcall 337 3/68Portraits 4 tor *4 and up MaynardStudios 1459 t 53 Tnd tl 643 4083TELEVISION BUSTED RonaldBlack can make it right againCHEAPLY, QUICKLY, andGUARANTEED'* Color or BAW Callanytime 667 5757| PIZZA jPLATTER1460 E. 53rdMl 3-2800! FAST DELIVERY jj AND PICKUP |I 1TAl-CCAM-YANCHINESE AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO S:30 P.M.SUNOAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8*30 P.M.Orders to toko out1311 lost 63rd MU 4-1063 The*!*, dissertations term papers,general off>ca eorres typed on late's!IBM corrective typewriter Ratesreasonable Phone 739 4757All typing, excp sec , IBM carbonribbon One copy FREE 684 0949CREATIVE WRITING Workshop bywriter columnist, help et theses, etcMU 4 3174MILES ARCHER MOVERSReasonable prices ExperiencedPersonnel Call 947 0698 or 757 4910 forinformationPEOPLE FOR SALEFor exp piano teacher call 947 9746HOUSESITTING SERVICES farelor plants, small pets, mall, etc CallLee Blackburn. 667 3341EXPERIENCED MOVERS will moveyou in one trip in van or enclosedtruck Insured service and carefulhandling At very low cost 3746775/ 788 1164FOR SALESofa bed gd rood Best Off 947 89507 pc ivgrm sef. Med, red *400 4 pcbdrm set, queen. *100 493 5039TAPE RECORDER Beil and HowellFour track Four speed reel to reelExcellent condition 947 951667 VW bug dependable *300 741 66161 small/ medium airline pet earner*10 947 0377 evesScandav teak dininq table A A chairs6x9 Karastan Ruq to match Endtables Lamps Excl cond 643 1965alter 6 PMWHPK TRAININGPROGRAMAnyone interested in joining WHPkFM should qo throuqh the traminqprogram Learn about radio A elecIronies Sat April 5. Noon 6 PM SunApril 6. either to AM 7 PM or 7 PM to 6PM South Lounge Reynolds ClubCLASSICALINDIAN MUSICUS T AO USMAN KHAN BEENKARlast active rudra vma player of theIndore school, in a concert ot vocal andinstrumental music With the sitanstAt/ai Husain Khan and P Raman,tabla This Sunday. 7 PM LutheranSchool ot Theology Auditorium *7 50Students tl 50 Presented by theCommittee on Southern Asian StudiesYOGAAncient Breath A meaningful MantraOriental exercises for youthfulnessPeace and lift Wm anxiety YogaMaster Sci Nerode DO 3 0155 Pecsonai or groupLOUIE S BARBER SHOPWilt style your hair a* youwould like it done1303 E. 53rd SI.FA 4-3878VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGATTRACTIVE 1 % ANDSYiROOM STUDIOSFURNISHEDor UNFURNISHED$129.o $209Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus StopFA 44)200 Mrs. GroakEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plazo)1200 East 53rd StreetHYdePark 3-8372summerineuropec H A R T f h st -ii iou* 800 i?S 4887 WOMEN S MAGAZINEPrimavara, the women's literarymagazine, is on sale in all Hyde ParkBookstores and at the Ida Noyes intodesk and the Reynold's Club Sendmanuscripts for our next issue toPnmavera. c/ o UFO. Ida Noyes HallJEWISH WOMEN'SGROUPMeets every Sunday at 7 30 PM atHillel House. 5715 S Woodlawn Formore Info call Janet at 757 5655YOGAStudy Yoga a balance to the life of themind A celebration of sprinq A shortwalk from every library on campus, atthe Gargoyle. 5655 University Mon7 30 to 9 30. Wed 5 00 to 7 00 For .nfose* display ad below or call Dobbi 9478671, SU 7 4415 (messages).WHPK MEMBERSAll staff members of WHPK FM arerequired to attend the framingprogram to be held this weekend Youmust attend both the Saturdaysessions and one of the Sundaysessions Those who are absent wilt bedropped from membership Questions,call Jane Gmsburg, 788 1181LOX & BAGELSBrunch this week Sun at Hillel. 11 AMtl 50 5715 WoodlawnYOGA CLASSYOGA instruction lor *10/ qtr AtCrossroads Student Center 684 60605671 BlackstonePARAPSYCHOLOGYThose interested In ESP. psychicphenomena, etc as regards researchand classes contact Dave McGoveran.753 3774 eveningsCREATIVE SERVICESEvery Frigay Nigh* at Hillel, 5715 SWoodlawn at 7 30 p m For more ,ntocall Jane* at 75? 5655RUGBYThe UC Rugby Club is looking tor newplayers for its spring season The cluboffers good competition in a soortresembling both football and soccer,camraderie. and an opportunity to getan early start on weekend drinking a*the post game parties No experiencenecessary Practices Tuesdays andThursday at 4 PM on Stagg or callDave Nufer at 955 0481BELLY DANCELESSONSJamilla 955 5019AIKIDOAikido that "other" martial art thatteaches true power mind and bodycoordinated Bartlett Toes A Thurs7 30LANGUAGE CLASSClasses in intermediate Chinese (Mon7 30) German dues 7 00) Frenchdues 8 00) and beginning and intermedate Spanish (Wed 7 10)Taught by native speakers cost is*5 qtr Crossroads Student Center684 6060 5671 Btackstone INCOME TAXSERVICEComputerized Income Tax Servicetor Hyde Park Should you itemizedeductions? file joint or separatereturns (if married)/ use incomaaveraging’ Our computer and staffwill prepare your return and help tominimize your taxes Act now, and getyour refund and rebate quickly Ratesfrom *5 *10 Call 684 5691 or 788 0433 7day* a week Located in Harper Court,5775 S Harper. Store C 6BOOKS BOUGHTCash for used books Powells 1503 Ei/i* si. ui imSTEP TUTORINGinterested in helping neighborhoodchildren? Student TutoringElementary Proiect needs volunteersto tutor students bi weekly in schoolwork or with special projects Formore information call Jay Sugarmanat 947 8804 or Mary Lou Gebka. 6438766STUDENT STEREOA new consultmq and discount buyingservice for stereo equipment, offeringfull options and all lines of equipmentSingle items and complete systems inevery price range, plus knowledgeableadvice Trade ms accepted, insi alia hon and setup work done Byappointment only call ?4I 5757call 741 5757SCIENCE FICTIONWANTEDWanted Science Fiction books andmagazines Especially want FASFback issues and pre 1950 Astounding^Call 741 5418JOURNALISTSWriters interested in working tor TheChicago Maroon contact the NewsFditor. 753 3765PAN PIZZADELIVERYThe Medici Delivers from 5 10 p mweekdays 5 11 pm Saturday. 6677394 Save 60 cents if you pick it upyourselfPERSONALSWanna listen’ Ken Sass. ClassicalGuitarPREGNANCY TESTING10 AM 7 PM Saturday *1 50 donationAugusfana Church a* 55th AWoodlawnBy The South SideWomen's Heal*n ServicesSouth Side Rape Crisis L'ne. 667 4014A referral and moral support commumty service We can help*WRITERS WORKSHOP 'PL 7 8377)Writing HELP by professionals forthesis reports, speech, etc MU 4 3174My Lady Hunssdon* Puffe’ JohnDonne Ken Sass ... 7S3 3317CLASSIFIEDSMaroon classifieds are charged by theline 75 spares per line 50 cents per linetor UC people 40 cents per line torepeat 75 cents per I me for non UCpeople. 60 cents to repeat Ads must besubmitted in person or mailed to theMaroon 1717 E 59th St , Chicago60637 No ads will be taken over thephone The ads must be paid in advance Deadline tor Tuesday’s paperis Friday a* 3 10 deadline forFriday’s paper s Wednesday at 3 30For further information call 753 1765MIDNIGHT OBSESSION OELIVERS THE GOODIES TO HYDE PARKThe lines! ouanty night lima snacks and treats•Hi t>a oeiivarsd dizact to you< doorCocMX Ck. CommA grpM VI* COO**# *0 • CNX#A cr*#*5| 0>4) fa$A*0*#4 ’wJg* t>'Oa•py.n**ad *4Ft C^’FCl'Oni' * 1-4*»«T*o »08 2 00A CO*ftO«M9w » 00*^1NibbI ItHia Cod#T>* £*Cff# 225 Ot pa#nv< Baftpr tUO#*tcofwpdF rtn>ppad \j— w«»CHOC—*# (CBMA b*f p8*M»M<OVft OOf*O0t /#?• CHoCCa*# acta** rov ** a*1 tomgnt *•© »o* I* 25A*# at *08M«ll U SO**o># $ i r-F tV* Ff*HOo c# Go*6a* 3t'*tow» AOi/Hrt '#0 ape*'Nphn 0*0*90% o* D**'#'••*» £at* BV TH# MmmpM Spaoa* ta»ao at ’*•Horpcl*W$* SpaC*4<’ Aa«Jt«6H» 1 *>! Hr**#A Do* ’.fpr-'mo aof CMvpat** *w'# to pfataO* of* or* ayt bafort d-taagntS4 00 55 00 ar<3 u JO DoaatTh# Cooa*Voax cixkb o< cf'©co*ai# cFup •'xi' <x paanwtOut*Of MO# 60/ I’ SCHonor $60/ 12 90r*a Hfomt*to Hon Pa* «| 12 40Caffaa Cm—T** p*c* ot 1*0 la*#* 1Dry >oa»iao c*.*»at *o%0r> -uaatao paanwitDry * >««tad BM"ofxHAoaaiaJ pOw*opOsaftd00*68*0 Tha Fm*» • •»*#«S>■ p«cn o* 'Ho<o 'fgti MjiOof Da**cKX.B*C0 -o% 'otJ ap«/*« *#*•< Q'aopaa oonono*Vov*# CHOn»# |2 9ftOftaaaSn#r» %‘to tor O* p.^sa^to ttuf’ac* .mpon«dSpar>.*f? oi<«at cr*a Oa n Vaw*»a«< *aviy Aopcan*Emavfancy Soppy AHVa!#an >unca* of i»* aofMi % *r»ott #spa**t*8«arxj oatt • poppfof cor* o>t* ai> :f* popp*ng»• tow ti r*a<3 to pop it Sam if v<x, *ooC tAna i2 oopo* t*g« S3 2STt* catf CaM Braaaiaat BaaA DO a filiad atfFi « DarQa.n M«oMr9k#nt to*Avo/ 0*Of* fOu '•»# 0**1 — 0C>O #ffari 4S aHt* thay «%t Sant to fOu oa ov' *atJ#<* *o< i of tr# avan.ng ot no"""| S3 00M (JO o*o t« 00 ooaaaCa* SoO# PopHt *>ap%! Com or or jo fxjp 'po* oaa»fl*ngar «# AN0 0» f*appaf D ui cd «$rWE DELIVER THE GOOOtES TO HYDE PARK IQ 00pm to 7 00 amxi" *v* sz oo i a r«tl otLiviet on »u•"•i i'»k sot fwwWfW oncxes Ov*e M ooOur vGm lew* jp«>Fridoy’. April 4, 1975—-Th« Chicoga Morooo—15% aWINES ON SALE ARE REGULAR QUALITY STOCKWINE PRICESTUMBLEFRENCH BEAUJOLAISPORTUGUESE ROSEGERMAN UEBFRAUMILCH3 forCHEESE SALESWISS EMENTHALER ‘1“.-BRIE 1"™ABBEY PORT SALUT SS_ 'I"..DANISH MUNSTER *1"-.SWISS GRUYERE(y—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 4, 1975 T