chicoglMaroonVOL. 85 NO. 11 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS FRIDAY. OCTOBER 3, 1975Dr. Frank Stuart.Billings DoctorRedefines DeathBy Martha CongerNew Illinois statelegislation, equatingcessation of brain functionwith actual death, resulteddirectly from the lobbyingefforts of a group of 14Illinois surgeons chaired byDr. Frank P. Stuart,Professor and kidneytransplant surgeon at UC-Billings Hospital.The new law, anamendment to the state’sUniform Anatomical GiftAct, allows a physician todeclare a patient dead if nobrain function exists, eventhough the heart may still bebeating by artificial means.Presently, six states havelaws defining or acceptingcertain conditions fordeath( California, Virginia, Kansas, Maryland, NewMexico, and Alaska).The amendment, signedlast week by GovernorDaniel Walker, reads,“Death ” means for thepurposes of the Act, theirreversible cessation oftotal brain function, ac¬cording to usual andcustomary standards ofmedical practice. ”“Improving technology forlife support and organtransplantation has forcedthe issue,“Dr. Stuart said.“(The amendment) givesdoctors more protectionwhen making decisions byclarifying legal conditionsfor death.”Chaplain Sidney L.McGuire of UC-BillingsDEATH TO 4ContentsCalendar 4Chile background 3Death redefined 1Despres sues 3Doar speaks 2Editorials 14Free Dance 3Freshman elections 3Friedman letter 14Harberger defense 1MAB 3Masthead 14Robbery followup 3SYL protest 1Scuba diving 3Soccer 13Woodward lectures 3Work/ study grants 4 CorrectionsTwo percent CS (militarytear gas), as advertised bySafe City Products ofCleveland, Ohio in theSeptember 26, 1975 issue ofthe Chicago Maroon, isillegal according to IllinoisState Statues, Criminal Radicals Plan Friedman Protest;Harberger Also Accused of RoleLETTERS FROM MILTON FRIEDMAN AND THESPARTACUS YOUTH LEAGUE APPEAR ON PAGE 14 OFTHIS ISSUE.By Peter CohnLeft-wing campus andarea organizations, at theinitiative of the Universitybranch of the SpartacusYouth League, have formeda united front to protest theinvolvement of Universityprofessors Milton Friedmanand Arnold Harberger inpolicy making for the rulingmilitary junta in Chile.The united front, officiallytitled the “CommitteeAgainst Friedman,Harberger CollaborationWith the Chilean Junta,” hascalled for a protestdemonstration today on thequadrangles in front of theAdministration BuildingCommittee members havealso begun the planning of “alonger term campaign.”Organizations representedon the Committee include theUnion of Radical PoliticalEconomists, the YoungSocialist Alliance, theIndians for PoliticalFreedom, and the UnitedStates Committee for Justiceto Latin AmericanPrisoners.Others endorsing theprotest include Studs Terkel,the Chicago radiocommentator and author;Norman Gelfand, AssistantDean of Students in theCollege; and John Friels,Chairman of the PoliticalScience Department at Roosevelt University.The Student GovernmentExecutive Council votedagainst endorsing theprotest. The Council issued aresolution explaining itsposition on the issue.“While condemning thewell-publicized brutality ofthe Chilean regime, theExecutive Council of theStudent Government cannotendorse the demonstrationcalled to protest MiltonFriedman’s allegedinvolvement with theChilean Junta.”Members of theCommittee base theircharges against Mr.Friedman on a September 21New York Times articlewhich reported thatFriedman is “the guidinglight of the junta’s economicpolicy.”The Committee accusesMr. Friedman and Mr.Harberger of havingauthored what the Timescalls a “shock treatment.” aharsh program of economicrestraint implemented by agroup of Chilean economicplanners known as “theChicago Boys” shortly aftera visit to Santiago byprofessors Friedman andHarberger last March.Observers have attributedthe current conditions ofwidespread unemployment,malnutrition, and starvationto the economic cutbacks.In addition to the Times article, the Committee citesa report in Chile-Americamagazine which maintainsthe March visit of Mr.Friedman and Mr.Harberger ‘‘wastransformed into days ofwork starting frombreakfast itself and which included days of Presidentialand Ministerial interviews,and a chat before 400officials of the ArmedForces“In this manner it was thatthe Chicago team gaveSYLTO 3Harberger Defends PositionBy Peter CohnArnold Harberger,Chairman of the Departmentof Economics at theUniversity, in response tocharges leveled against himby campus radicalorganizations, has deniedany official connections withthe current Chileangovernment.“My position is and hasbeen that I will not act as aconsultant to the presentgovernment of Chile,” Mr.Harberger stated Wed¬nesday.Milton Friedman. PaulSnowden RussellDistinguished ServiceProfessor in the Depart¬ment, refused to discuss theallegations. In answer to aMaroon inquiry, Friedmansubmitted a letter (printed inthis issue). “I have nostatement beyond this letterto make regarding thisissue,” Mr. Friedmancommented.The Committee AgainstFriedman, Harberger Collaboration with theChilean Junta has called fora demonstration today toprotest the two facultymembers’ “complicity in abarbarous crime against theChilean people.”Mr. Harberger admits tohaving made five visits toChile since the overhrow ofthe Allende government inSeptember 1973. On his mostrecent trip in late March ofthis year, he was ac¬companied by MiltonFriedmanWhen questioned about theextent of his contact withgovernment officials, MrHarberger admitted tohaving “been inside theoffices of the government onmany occassions.” He addedthat he has “never been inthe employ of the govern¬ment.”Mr. Harberger’s contactsin Chile arise from a long¬standing relationship bet¬ween the University ofChicago and the CatholicUniversity of Chile, and fromHarberger’s work in the study of the economies ofunderdeveloped countries.Also. Mr Harberger's wife isChilean.“At no time have I givenany advice to people of thegovernment of Chile inprivate that I have not madein public.” he stated.In response to charges thatthe Friedman-Harbergervisit in March resulted in acabinet reorganization andthe economic “shocktreatment” program. MrHarberger stated that “myunderstanding is that ourvisit was not theprecipitating factor in theprogram.“The program.” he con¬tinued. “got under way whenthe director of the planningorganization was looking atthe current state of themacroeconomic accounts.The fact that we had beenthere may have made iteasier for him to make hiscase.”Commenting on theeconomic program of theChilean regime, Mr Har¬ berger stated that “thegovernment budgetary-policy in the broad, and themonetary policy treatedbroadly, both in a generalway correspond to what Ibelieve and to whatProfessor Friedman wassaying.”the March visit wassponsored by the MortgageBank Foundation, a privateorganization which MrHarberger describes as“somewhat similar to theFord Foundation.”Professors Friedman andHarberger presented a“large lecture to a big groupof invited guests of aboutthree to five hundred ” MrHarberger described his talkas his impression of theChilean situation.“The main thrust of what Ihad to say was that theycould not get their economy-running with a 20% permonth inflation, and thatgetting inflation down tomanageable proportionsHARBERGER TO 2Doar Talks To LawyersBy Landy CarienApproximately 400students, faculty and alumnifilled the WeymouthKirkland Courtroom Wed¬nesday evening to hear aspeech given by Mr.JohnDoar. a member of the LawSchool Visiting Committee.Mr. Doar, a graduate ofPrinceton University, is bestknown for his work asSpecial Counsel to the HouseJudiciary Committee whichrecommended the im¬peachment of PresidentRichard M. Nixon. Mr. Doaralso spent seven years as thehead of the Civil RightsDivision of the JusticeDepartment, as well as twoyears as President of theNew York City Board ofEducation.In his speech, which lastedonly 35 minutes. Mr. Doaremphasized the reliability ofour system of governmentand the role of lawyers inmaking that governmentwork. He referred to lawyersas craftsmen, and said “as alawyer. I want non-lawyers to have confidence in thelaw.”He urged first-year lawstudents to remember thatthe Constitution “was notmade to limit power, but tocreate a workable govern¬ ment.”To illustrate the efficiencyand expediency with whichlawyers can work, Mr. Doargave two examples. InTennessee, in 1960, Blackswho registered to vote wereharassed and sometimesJohn Doar stops in the hall after the lecture. evicted from their places ofresidence. Some even losttheir jobs. Through the ef¬forts of the Justice Depart¬ment these individuals werefinally able to vote. Duringthe first week after theVoting Rights Act of 1965went into effect, over 9.000Blacks registered to vote.As a second example. Mr.Doar spoke of one of the mostmemorable days of his life -February 6, 1974.On that day, ChairmanRodino of the HouseJudiciary Committee ad¬dressed the House ofRepresentatives, which Mr.Doar characterized as “notone of the most attentiveaudiences in the world,”torequest that it authorize theCommittee's investigation ofthe Watergate scandal. Bythe end of his address, Mr.Rodino had captured theattention of a 11 therepresentatives present, andthe House voted 410 to 4 toauthorize the inquiry. Mr.Doar also noted that all themembers of the JudiciaryCOommittee were lawyers. Involvement DefendedHARBERCER FROM 1would require decreasing therate of monetary growth tofive per cent per month.”Mr. Harberger said.Com menting on thepresent economic situationin Chile Mr. Harbergerstated that “I am asdistressed by the unem¬ployment situation as iseverybody else.”In defense of his con¬tinuing contact with peoplein the Chilean government,Mr. Harberger stated that “Irefuse to turn my back onformer students, both thosewho are now in the govern¬ment and those not now inthe government. My loyaltyremains with these guys.People in positions ofresponsibility have one hellof a difficult job at con¬siderable personal andfinancial sacrifice.“I am with those poor guys who are trying to dosomething, who are stayingin Chile to get the countrycloser te. recovery. Eachstays for his own reasons,and I don’t try to secondguess those reasons.”According to Mr. Har¬berger, the University ofChicago has operated anexchange program with theC a t h o lie U n i v e r s i t y,financed by the Agency forInternational Development,since 1956. The program wasrenewed once, and thenterminated. Mr. Harbergerstated that all University ofChicago involvement atCatholic University ter¬minated in 1964.The University of Chicagowas also involved in atripartite University toUniversity program with theNational University of Cuyoin Mendoza. Argentina, from1962-67. Faculty from theCatholic University werepart of the staff in Argentina.Cardin suits your important appearances in Roger,the ideal expression of your classic taste and yourcontemporary outlook. The bold body silhouette, withrope shoulders, concave waist and gently flaredtrousers, is a sure figure flatterer. Wide lapels, highside vents and square flap pockets are the nicedetails The European fabrics enhance the elegancethe suit. Vested Cardin Suits from $ 160.00 BRIGHTONAUTO PARTSSPECIALFOR DO IT YOURSELF FANSCOUPONSPECIAL ONWINTERTHERMOSTATDVNIH * 1 19EachCOUPONPENETREX10W30all weather o\\l,.!,. *3”LIMIT TWOCOUPONAC ORFRAM OIL FILTERS$029X EachLIMIT TWO COUPONDELCO TUNE-UP KITS8cyl.GMS5.498 cyl. FORD $4.098 cyl. CHRYSLER $3.396 cyl. GM $3.396 cyl. FORD $4.096 cyl. CHRYSLER $3.39includes points, condenser androtor.COUPONAC ORCHAMPIONSPARK PLUGS79*LIMIT 83967 S. ARCHER(2 blocks east of California Ave.)927-8000FLEA MARKET3-4:30 p.m.-U.C. Students Only4:30-6 pm-UaC. Faculty & Staff. . . J ; ' '*• V #55TH & LAKE PARKHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERDespres Sues SeminaryOver Loud AirconditionerBy Mary MarfiseThere is an alley betweenthe McCormick TheologicalSeminary and the home offormer Hyde Park AldermanLeon Despres. Last summerthe Seminary beganrenovating their building,located on 56th andWoodlawn, which formerlybelonged to the now defunctShimer College. Therenovation consisted of plansfor a cooling system, whichwas put into use last June.The system’s condensor isattached to the east side ofthe building, across the alleyfrom the Despres family.When the air conditioner ison in the Seminary, thecondensor makes a lot ofnoise.Letters of complaint weresent to the Seminary, as wellas a petition with 50signatures by neighbors. Inthe middle of the summer,Leon and Marian Despresentered a lawsuit in theCircuit Court of Cook Countyagainst the noisy airconditioner.City ordinances requirethat no cooling systeminstallation be made if thenoise level exceeds a 55decibel limit, measuredbeyond the hot line. Theissues of the suit are whetheror not the level does go overthe limit, and whether or notthe neighbors were consulted about the installation. Theordinances also require thata consultation be made.President Stotts of theMcCormick seminary statedthat the equipment waschecked once when theinstallation was made. Thereport verifying this has notyet been located. Stotts saidthat he wishes no damage tothe ears of his neighbors, andthat he is hoping to cooperatewith the case findings.Renovation architects ofthe seminary building are inthe process of designingmufflers for the condensornoise. One of the plans was toplant a row of eight feet tallyew trees behind the system.Mrs. Billingsley, aneighboring landscaper,feels that the trees would notbe able to filter out the noise,and that it is doubtfulwhether the trees would beable to tolerate thecondensor exhaust. Anotheralternative would be to putthe unit on the roof. Thearchitects are still workingon the problem.The seminary says that thenoise level is definitely belowthe limit. The neighborsdisagree. The city regulatorshold that they can’t doanything until the airconditioning is turned onagain. With the wintermonths ahead, it may benext summer before the caseis decided Robbery FollowupThe man who attempted torob the Bursar’s officeMonday morning went tocourt Tuesday charged withmisdemeanor theft.Apparently another courtdate was set at the time,according to 21st Districtpolice aide Alton Brooks. Noother information wasavailable at press time otherthan that the man refusedbond.The man gave his name tothe police as WesleyMilhouse of Cleveland. Ohio.The Bank Americard foundon the suspect whenapprehended was apparentlyhis own, and not stolen, ascampus police firstsuspected.WoodwardLecturesFor the fourth straightyear, Professor and Mrs.Izaak Wirszup, ResidentMasters of Woodward Court,will sponsor the “WoodwardCourt Lecture-DiscussionSeries.’’ The series, which todate has included a total of 80programs, presents lectureson a variety of subjects ofgeneral interest to studentsand faculty.The series begins for thefall quarter on Tuesday,October 7, with GeophysicalScience Professor PaulMoore’s talk entitled“Hierarchies in Crystals.’’The remainder of theprogram is: “ShoppingCenters: AmericanLandmarks,’’ Mr. NeilSYL FROM 1counsel directly to Pinochet,through the intermediariesHarberger, Friedman, andLangoni, on the 21st ofMarch.’’Richard Rubenstein,Chairperson of theCommittee and Professor ofPolitical Science atRoosevelt University,describes his goal as “toprotest the complicity ofthese two respectedUniversity professors in abarbarous crime against theChilean people.‘‘The economicconsultation was in itself acrime, because it led to thereformulation of the economic policy at thehighest level, and alsoresulted in a cabinetreshuffling,’’ stated Mr.Rubenstein.The Committee seeks to“drive Friedman andHarberger off the campus”by making the situation “hotand unbearable.” SpartacusYouth League (SYL),members assert, however,that “we are not physicallythreatening them.”The SYL is not calling onthe Administration to takeaction, stating that studentsare to deal with the issuebecause “we do not seek tolegitimate the University.“In the extremely unlikelyevent that theAdministration did take action against Friedman,this would set the precedentthe University could use in afuture purge of leftistprofessors or students.”SYL spokesperson EmilyTurnbull has charged theAdministration withharassment. Allegedexamples of officialinterference include a ban onSYL anti-Friedman posterson campus and theprohibition against the use ofa loud speaker system attoday's demonstration. TheSYL has also reportedseveral incidents ofvandalism directed againstits members since thebeginning of the Friedmanprotest.Background On Chile juntaBy Margaret SavageChile’s “shock treatment”economic program aims atending the rise in inflationand decreasing the role ofgovernment in the economy.Public spending has beencurtailed, bank creditsrestricted, and the growth ofthe money supply restricted.Price controls have beendismissed as “ineffective,artificial.”The junta’s highesteconomic adviser’s areknown as the “Chicagoboys,” because of theirconnection with theUniversity of Chicago TheNew York Times describedThe junta’s highesteconomic adviser’s areknown as the “Chicago boys,” because of theirconnection with theUniversity of Chicago. TheNew York Times describedChicago economist MiltonFriedman as the “guidinglight” of the junta’s austerityprogram. According toArnold Harberger, Chair¬man of the Department ofEconomics, between eightand ten economic officials ofthe regime are graduates ofthe University.Junta economists claimthat their policies haveworked. The gap betweengovernment spending andrevenues has narrowed to12% since the fall ofSalvadore Allende. Ac¬cording to junta economists,the balance of payments deficit will be limited to $300million as compared to apredicted billion dollardeficit. The rate of inflation,although still phenomenal,has been halved from the 700per cent annual rate of theAllende period.Unemployment, however,has gone up to 20 per centsince the job rolls of Allendewere cut, and there has beena 20 per cent decline in in¬dustrial output during thefirst six months of 1975.Construction and automobileproduction has fallen bymore than a third, and theGNP is expected to declineten per cent from last year’slevel. Estimates are thatreal income for 1975 will fallby ten per cent compared Harris; October 12; “EthicalProblems in New DrugResearch,’’ Dr. LeonGoldberg, October 21;“Attitude Change: TheCompetition BetweenPeripheralist and CentralistView of Man,” Mr. MiltonRosenberg, October 26;“Objectivity: Introvertedand ExtrovertedHumanism.” Mr. MortimerAdler, November 4; and“Development Strategies inChina,’’ Mr. NortonGinsburg, November 16.Each of the lectures beginsat 8:30 pm followed by aninformal reception with thespeaker in the Masters’Apartment. All students andfaculty are welcome.Scuba DivingClasses in SCUBA divingwill be offered to Universitystudents through thedepartment of physicaleducation starting Monday,October 6. Registration forthe class, which will cost $55for the quarter, is in themain office of Bartlett Gym.Classes are limited to 20students,so earlyregistration is encouraged.Classes will be held eachMonday evening and lastfrom 7-9 p.m.The course will include thefollowing areas: physics,physiology, diving math,SCUBA mechanics, marineequipment, safety and firstaid, decompression tables,dive planning and a suc¬cessful open water diveunder the supervision of theinstructor.The first meeting will bePaul Ausick, AssistantDean of Students in theCollege, denies Ms.Turnbull’s charges ofharassment. He points outthat the SYL posters exceedthe 11 x 14 size limit onposters included in theStudent Code. The pasting ofposters on campus wallsfurther violates the Code.Mr. Ausick has permittedthe SYL to put its posters oncampus bulletin boardsMr. Ausick explains theloud speaker ban as ameasure to preventinterference with classesgoing on near the protest siteon the Quadrangle. The useof a bullhorn is permitted,however.with 1974, by 18 per cent with1974, by 18 per cent com¬pared with 1973 and by 40 percent compared with 1970. Arecent New York Timesarticle describesmalnutrition and starvationas widespread throughoutthe countryThe junta's repressiveinternal policies, includingthe torture and execution ofopposition leftists and theimprisonment of thousandsmore, have severelydamaged Chile’s in-ternational position.Because few countries*arewilling to tolerate theregime’s policies, forexample. Chile has beenforced to renegotiate itsenormous foreign debt. held in the Bartlett GymTrophy Room. Comeprepared to swimFreshman ElectionsTen positions are open forfreshman representative tothe Student Government.The deadline for filingnominating petitions isOctober 15 and elections willbe held October 20 and 21.Those interested areencouraged to attend thefirst meeting of the StudentGovernment AssemblyOctober 13 at 7 pm inBusiness Education 101. Forfurther information contactBob Tomchik, Election andRules Committee Chairman,at the Student Governmentoffice in Ida Noyes HallFree DanceThere is only one place tobe if you want to boogie this Saturday night.The InterfraternityCouncil is sponsoring astreet dance with fundsprovided by CORSO. Thedance is scheduled to beginat 9:00 pm and refresh¬ments will abe available at8:30 pm. University Ave.will be oiocked off from 57thSt. to 58th St. for an entireevening of get-down-to-itenjoyment. University I D.will be requiredThe entertainment will beprovided by a North sidegroup. Pegasus, whosemusic ranges from themelodic strains of StevieWonder to the raunchy rockand roll of Z Z Top They willbe performing from theporch of Alpha Delta Phi at5747 S. University. If it is toocold or wet to dance in thestreet, then we’ll dance onthe wooden floor within thefriendly confines of theAlpha Delt.Store ImprovesBookstockingThe University bookstore’stextbook department turnedin its best performance inrecent years this quarter,with an estimated 90% ofordered titles on the shelvesat the beginning of this week,according to departmentmanager John PorterOf the remaining 10%.about half are publisher’sout-of-stock or out-of print,he said. Porter estimatedthat the bookstore would beat about 94% of ordered titlesby the end of this week.Porter also estimated thatas of Monday, 96-97% of therequested volumes will be onthe shelves.He attributed the im¬proved performance to astreamlined procedure ofreceiving books and gettingthem from the receivingdocks onto the shelves. Thiswas despite the fact that hewas working with a smallerstaff than last year at thistime.“All the books that wereceive this week will be onthe shelves by Monday ofnext week,” Porter told theMaroon. “I anticipate a oneto two day lead-time for theremainder of the week,whereas last year it couldhave been as high as threedays.”Even better performancewill be achieved. Mr Portersaid, when the textbookdepartment switches over toa computerized orderingsystem and completes itsplanned move to the secondfloor of the bookstore.“We’re hoping to do thewinter quarter orderingunder the computerizedszstem.” Mr Porter saidExplaining why this quar¬ter’s texts had not beenordered under that system,as he had predicted lastspring, Mr. Porter replied:“It takes some time todevelop a system, and it tookus a little longer than wethought We decided to workup a quality program, anddesign takes time.”He added, “We set out tostreamline the entire text¬book operation at the sametime as we decided to workout the computer system.This included streamlining the receiving procedures tospeed up the time it takesbooks to get from ourreceiving docks to theshelves.”Porter said he also ex¬pected his department’sservice to be improvedwithin the next two quartersby a 40% increase in shelfspace. This will be a result ofa major bookstoreremodeling program, hesaid.According to bookstoregeneral manager LaureneeArthur, plans have beenworked on for a couple ofmonths now’ in preparationfor getting bids on the workIn the remodeling, generalbooks will expand to theentire first floor, currentsecond-floor storage andoffice areas will be movedout of the bookstore building,and textbooks will moveupstairs.The textbooks will bemoved to the wing of thesecond floor now occupied bystationery, the snack bar.and the supplies storagebeyond.Stationery, cameras,typewriters, gifts, and thesnack bar will all shift to thenortheast corner of thesecond floor. The displacedoffices will move to theCenter for ContinuingEducation, and the displacedstorage will be moved to theservice building just west ofthe bookstoreScheduling of the move iscomplicated by the fact thatit w ill have to be undertakenduring a slack period for thetextbook department. Arthursaid“Texts have to staydownstairs until the seventhor eighth week of thequarter.” he said, “and thenext quarter’s books wouldhave to be delivered to acompleted new section. Thiscould be the winter or springquarter, but it would mostlikely be the spring quar¬ter.”Mr. Arthur said he hopedto keep the second floor ofthe bookstore open duringremodeling, “but if there’sany hazard to customers inany section. I’ll close it.”Friday, October 3, 1975-The Chicago AAaroon—5i tj r.WorkStudyPositionsVacantBy Mike JonesApproximately $100,000 infinancial assistance isavailable from theUniversity through theFederally funded WorkStudy Program. These fundsare used by the University toprovide jobs for studentsinterested in earning moneyto help meet expenses.According to Mrs. AnitaSandke, the Director ofCareer Counselling and Placement, applications forthe program are coming intoher office daily, but “weneed more applications.”Applications forundergraduates areavailable in the College AidDepartment. Graduatestudent applications can beobtained through thegraduate loan counselors.These applicationsdetermine financial needand must be filled out as theprogram is based on need.When the need isdetermined, the applicationis sent to Mrs. Sandke’soffice. After an interviewwith the student, a job isfound depending on thestudent's interest.The program is funded bythe Federal Governmentthrough an act of Congress.“We get a grant from the Federal Government, andwe have expectations ofreceiving a supplementalgrant." The original granttotaled $114,000, but Mrs.Sandke indicated that someof that money had alreadybeen spent “becausestudents have already beencleared (for the program)and some was spent onsummer employment.”The supplemental grant,Mrs. Sandke believes, willtotal 40% of the original$114,000 grant, or $45,600.The final total of thesupplemental grant will notbe known until her officereceives officialconfirmation of the amount.The amount of money to bespent on the program, shesaid, “has been passed byCongress, but I’m holdingmy breath because proportionment isdetermined by the state.”She indicated that theoriginal amount to be givento the University was to havebeen 60 %, but thepercentage was reduced to40%. About the possibilitiesof further reductions in theamount of the supplementalgrant, she stated “I'mfearful of just how much wewill get until I get that letter(indicating how much thestate has given theUniversity.)”Jobs vary depending onthe interests and the futurecareer plans of the studentinvolved. Jobs are availableboth on and off campus, butthe emphasis is placed onputting a student in a job oncampus. Many departmentscreate openings in suchareas as tutoring and aidingCALENDARAny campus event, meeting ordeadline can be listed in the Marooncalendar Put the necessary information in writing and bring it to theMaroon office by 5 p.m. for the Fridaycalendar, and 5 p.m. Friday for theTuesday calendar If you send a listingvia FAC EX, be sure to leave at leasttwo days for transit We're sorry, butno listings for the calendar can beaccepted by phoneAll listings for the Arts calendarshould be addressed to the attention ofthe Grey City Journal editor, at theMaroon officeMONDAYLIBRARY TOURS: Last chance totake Orientation tour of Regensteintoday at 10 am and 2 pm. Meet on firstfloorHILLEL; Adat Shalom Shabbat mealsat Hillel House Professor JamesColeman speaks on "Youth in IsraelAnd The USA" at 8:30 pm.EXHIBITION. "The Creation oiCharles Hitchcock Hall, 1900 1902" isan exhibition of original documentsand photographs from the UniversityArchives and is on display throughOctober 13th at Regenstein.CROSSROADS: International StudentCenter hosts a "bring your own" SlideFestival (limit 101. Get acquainted by learning about each other and yourhome countries 5621 So Blackstone,MU 4-6060.THE STING: Cobb Hall, 6:30, 9:00 and11:15 pm, $1 00.ART: Distribution of Shapiro's "Art toLive With" collection. Bring I D 'S,$2,50, Ida Noyes Cloister Club, 4 pm.CREW: Are you Woman Enough?University Women's Crew meeting at4 pm, Ida Noyes Lounge. No experience necessary. Call Barb, 3486327 or Laurie, 752 1154 for information.KURDISH MUSIC: The InternationalHour present music from Iran, WHPK88.3 FMGEOPHYSICS: Heinz G Scharbert ofthe University of Vienna speaks on■'Some General Aspects ofMoldanubian Petrology with SpecialReference to the Granulite Facies andGarnet Perifotite Garnet PyroxeniteProblem” at 3:30 pm in theAuditorium, Henry Hinds Laboratory,5734 Ellis Ave. Refreshments at 3:00 inthe Common Room.FOLKDANCE: Ida Noyes, 8 pm, $ 50FRIDAYSOCCER U C vs Lake Forest, StaggField, 10:30 am.STREET DANCE: With live music: 9pm to 1 am Refreshments. Vicinity ofAlpha Delta Phi, 5747 S UniversityRain date, Sun,, Oct 5FILM: "The Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob," Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9 30 pm,$1 00CROSSROADS: Dinner Home cookedmeal with people from all over theworld 6 pm, $1 50 , 5621 S BlackstoneAUDITIONS: Blackfriars willaudition for "The Beggar's Opera"from 1:00 to 5:00 pm in Ida NoyesCELEBRATE. The 26th Anniversaryof the founding of the People'sRepublic of China, 7:00 pm, 925 WDi verseyAIKIDO; Practice meditation andaction with the U C Ki Aikido Club3 00 4:00 pm, Bartlett Gym,SATURDAYBRUNCH: Lox and Bagels at HillelHouse, 11 am, $1 75.FOLKDANCE: Ida Noyes, 8 pm, $ 50FILM: "Masculine Feminine" explores what it's like to be 20 years oldin Paris in 1965 Cobb Hall, 7:15 and9:30, $1 00GARGOYLE. "EmpatheticListening: A Skill for Helping andCommunicating" at Changes, 7:00 pm.JIGSAW PUZZLES: club meeting inIda Noyes, 2nd floor, 2.00 to 6:00 pmNew members welcomeMADRIGALS: The Chicago Monteverdi Singers will present a concertof virtuoso, 17th C madrigals at BondChapel at 8 30 pm FreeFLEA MARKET. Open to U.C.students with I D 'S from 3:00 to 4:30pm and to staff and faculty from 4:30 to 6:00 pm. If you have anything youwould like to sell at the Flea Market,call Student Activities, 753 3592.SUNDAYYOGA At the Gargoyle, 5655University, 5:30 7:15 pm taught byDobbi Kernan Bring a rug and $25 00.TOTAL ORGASM: Autumn QuarterWorkshop based on Jack Rosenberg'stext, Total Orgasm. 7:30 9:30 pm, BlueGargoyle. Get in touch with the totalflow of your own natural energy.FILMS: Two ethnographic films onKung Bushmen, "The Bitter Melons"and "The Hunters," at 2:30, Classics10, presented by the Committee onAfrican Studies.THE WILD ONE: Starring Brando at7:15 and 9:30 pm in QuantrellAuditorium, sponsored by the Order ofthe "C". $1.00.CHINA: SYL National SecretarySusan Adrian will speak on "Mao'sBloc with Nato: An Analysis of China'sForeign Policy", 7:30 pm, EastLounge, Ida Noyes.RALLY: At noon on the Quadrangles"Protest Friedman and HarbergerCollaborators with the Bloody ChileanJunta " "Free All Victims of theJunta's Repression "LOVE JOY'S NUCLEAR WAR: A 60minute color film about the dangers ofnuclear power plants, will be shown at8:00 pm at the Blue Gargoyle, 5655 SUniversityCARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Has what you need from a$10 used 9x12 Rug to acustom carpet. Specializingin Remnants & Mill returnsat a fraction of the originalcost.Decoration Colors andQualities Additional 10%Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY JAMESSCHULTZCLEANERSCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10%student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933shabbat rrieafs fWfefevenj Srida^ migf]tbeOjinniTiO) oei. 3IPopa<\4 pQ'U cnadvance bt5“7iS 'looodjaa^ price i2..SOtime,-ujitf thegurnetSon ^unifier in^OCaW 7 5-3-V??74-Th6 Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 3, 1975_ i\ii uuu.i' 'i,.i i ‘ ' .v»*r ’. The PUBis extending theHAPPY HOURto 8 PM each evening,andADDINGMONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALLin colorWelcome toBRENT HOUSEEcumenical Student Center5540 S. WoodlawnSUNDAY, OCT. 55:00 p.m. Underground Church6:00 p.m. Dinner - $1.257:00 p.m. Fireside DiscussionThis week at 7: Gibson Winter"Faith and Public Life" a professor with hisresearch.The Math Department isone department that doesuse the Work StudyProgram’s students. Forexample, students majoringin undergraduate math areused as tutors for moreelementary classes. Mrs.Sandke commented, “That’sa great job; making moneyand furthering a student’scareer with that type ofexperience.”Off campus jobs includeworking for social andcommunity organizationswhich are non-profit, non-demoninational and non¬ political. Examples in thepast have been the AmericanCivil Liberties Union,Planned Parenthood and theHyde Park NeighborhoodClub.The students involved inthe programs are paid anhourly wage. The programpays for 80% of the student’ssalary; the remainder ispaid for by the departmentor organization that employsthe student. No student isallowed to work more that 15hours per week during termtime. How the money isspent is left to the discretionof the student.DEATH FROM 1Dept, of Neurosurgerycommented, “the legaldefinition of death nowcoincides more with thecurrent medical definition.In the past, physicians wouldsometimes hesitate to followthrough on their medicaldecisions....for fear of legalrepercussions, lawsuits.”Chaplain McGuire, DrStuart and Dr. HaroldKalwans, Professor ofMedicine at Michael ReeseHospital, will discuss “TheRight to Die” during threeone-half hour programs nextMonday, Tuesday andWednesday at 6:30 am onChannel 7. These programs,moderated by C. RanletLincoln, Dean of theUniversity Extension, weretaped for UC’s “Per¬spectives” series.To explain the choice ofbrain death rather thanheart or lung failure, Dr.Stuart pointed out that apatient without brain func¬tion cannot continue heartand lung activity, whereasTAWAM-WCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A/rt, TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:3OP.M.Orders to take out1318 East 63rd MU4-1C625455 Blackstone Ave.Apts, available now and for the fall.1 Vi 3'/j roomsElevator buildingUtilities furnishedSee Mr White, janitor, or callMr. Block 761-1371orMARGRO REALTY CO.368-1427 the failure of the other twoorgans can be continued bymachinery until the organrecovers.By the provisions of thenew law\ the patient is deadeven if artificial main¬tenance preserves cir¬culation and breathing.“The law has made ex¬plicit what was only implicitbefore, ” Dr. Stuart said.Since death from braincessation happens verysuddenly, in comparisonwith the longer process ofheart or lung failure, deathfrom brain injury orhemorrhage allows removalof organs in the best con¬dition for transplantation ifthey are obtained within 15-30 minutes of the patient’sdeath.The UC-Billings transplantprogram for human kidneyshas had relatively goodsuccess, with 96% of thekidney patients alive after ayear with either afunctioning kidneytransplant or on machinedialysis, in comparison withan approximate nationalaverage of 75%survival afterone year.CHICAGOMONTEVERDISINGERSwill present aconcert ofvirtuoso 17th C.MadrigalsBond ChapelSunday Oct. 58:30 P.M.Free of ChargeSponsored byCollegium MusicumROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELSUNDAY • OCTOBER 5 • 1 1 A.M.E. SPENCER PARSONS,Dean of the Chapel“AT WORK ON THE FOUNDATIONS"SUNDAY AFTERNOON AT THE CHAPEL4 O CIockCHAPEL CLERGYEDWARD MONDELLO, University OrganistDALE TERBEEK, Counter-tenorThe Chicago Maroon's Weekly Magazine of Criticism and the ArtsCareerism in Rock:Trying toLearn to WalkLike the HeroesHe ThoughtHe Had to be IBy Barry J. KaplovitzUnless you've literally been able to keepyour head underground for the past twomonths, you have heard or seen or readsomething about Bruce Springsteen.Columbia Records, with an obssessivenessequaled only by the obssessiveness thatcharacterizes and defines Bruce's newestsongs, is promoting Springsteen and his newalbum, Born To Run, in a fashion that canonly be described as bullish. In three years,Springsteen has gone the route from star¬ring as a bar hand hero to makinq a critics'album par excellence to becoming a culthero, and now he is standing on the brink oftotal stardom, having released an albumthat is destined to be the Album of the Year,and touring the country to enthusiasticallyexpectant and responsive audiences.Well, after seeing him in concert twice inthe last week, and listening almost ex¬clusively to Born To Run for the better partof the last month, I'm glad to say that I'menthusiastically ambivalent aboutSpringsteen. To be sure, the claims madefor him are inflated, yet there is about +heman and his music a compelling aura thatno record company could manufacture:exciting flashes of genius in his music; apersonality that is both charming andprovocative; and, an honesty both brutaland humorous which authenticates andlends weight to his presence on stage and onrecord.Still, ambivalence wouldn't be am¬bivalence without those equally compellingreservations which accompany and qualifythe enthusiasms, creating that mixture ofleanings which results in that 'I like it, but..., feeling. And in fhe case of BruceSpringsteen, those reservations concern hisnewly-launched career, and by career, Imean not just the undeniable bid for star¬dom, but the way he (or his management, orhis record company) has chosen to presenthimself now; the role he has chosen forhimslef in his devotion to rock'n'roll, and therules by which he will henceforth be forcedto play out his career.When Springsteen first received somenotice in 1973 playing small and mediumsize clubs from New Jersey to Boston, talkcentered around what a wonderful per¬former he was. Despife his first release,Greetings From Asbury Park, and the newDylan'- hype which was Columbia's promotion angle (though, the only thingBruce and Dylan had in common was theirtalkativeness, and that was because Brucewas talkative all the time, on stage or onrecord), talk continued to be focused onSpringsteen's live performances. By thetime his second album, The Wild, The In¬nocent, and The E Street Shuffle, wasreleased a year later, the 'new Dylan' hypewas all but forgotten amid the rave reviewsas Bruce became 'The Critics' Choice.' Bythe time Jon Landau saw him at the Harvard Square Theatre and unknowingly ornot culminated the entire critical push withan emotional and forceful review containingthat now infamous 'I have seen the future ofRock'n'Roll' line, Bruce Springsteen was acult hero. Worse, he was an East Coast culthero.All too mindful of the minimal successachieved by such other East Coast per¬formers as Bette Midler, and The New YorkDolls, and the even r r e maddeninglymediocre success that the J. Geils Band, aband that was consciously brought along 'inthe right way,' has met with, Columbiaapparently thought it was now or never forBruce, so late last year they sent him off towrite the big hit single that he would need tomake the transition from cult hero to rockstar. After several months, Bruce came upwith 'Born To Run,' a song with three keychanges (which is at least one too many),poetry that no hard-hearted lover, rock staror not, would ever be caught dead reciting,and the most curious rhythmn trackrecorded in the last five years. The song, asMitch Ryder would say, 'Feels like a punch'... almost.That was followed by some frenetic springand summer months recording his latestalbum at New York's Record Plant, andBorn To Run was released during the lastweek of August Born To Run is exciting,—insome ways stunning is a better word forit—but its almost mono ambience, theconsciously stripped for power music andlyrics, and the obsessive, narrow profile bywhich Bruce both presents himself to thepublic and defines himself—all the songs areabout escape, and with one exception,automotive escape—suggest that this is analbum that will be played unceasingly fortwo months, but then will not see the light ofturntable for another six. It's a big, wide bodied, high-powered, obsessive album thatreminds me of Alice Cooper's Killer andBowie's Ziggy Stardust. Born To Run, as hasbeen said, lacks the musical and thematicheterogeniety that made the E StreetShuffle so gloriously varigated. Bereft of EStreet's many eccentricities and uncannyimprovisations, Born To Run will hold thelistener only for as long as he or she remainscaptivated by or can continue to endure itssingular conceit.Live, Springsteen fares a quite a bitbetter, mostly because he is and always hasbeen such an engaging performer. Thesongs from Born To Run are less obssessiveand clutching in concert and in many waysthey are more enjoyable and digestable inthe context of his older material and hiswinning personality. But they (especially'Born To Run' and 'Jungleland') are stillgenerally his weakest and least engaging,marred by the self-conscious, overly-seriousregard he holds for them, the portentousmanner with which he offers them to theaudience, and the somewhat amusing factthat he and his band can't quite performthem live. Still, regardless of whether or notwe're desperate for Springsteen or someonewho would mean the same to us(Rock'n'Roll's Alive and Well!) that hemeans now, I've never seen a performer sojoyously win the hearts of audiences.By this, I don't necessarily mean that he isable to hold audiences in the palm of hishand and speak to them whenever andhowever he wishes. Basically a club andcaberet performer, he is slow learning howto conduct himself in front of audiences ofmore than a thousand and he is quicklyunnerved by any lack of acceptance orresponse to one of his jokes or short stories.It is at such times that he can thankfully relyon his band, an outfit which is both as solidand flashy as his material demands, tocarry him to safety. Frankly, I can't see howhe'll ever play before audiences larger thanhalls such as the Auditorium can accommodate, unless he dispenses with hispersonality, and instead limits himself topresenting only a portion or version of it, ashe does on Born To Run. And if he doeschoose that option as a way of presentinghimself, there's a risk in that he'll wear onaudiences quickly and in a year he'll be just another mediumsize star (like The J. GeilsBand), and his case will be closed.His next album will be even harder towrite and produce. It won't be easy notgetting permanently trapped into the per¬sona he has streamlined for Born To Runand his new audience. It will be even lesseasy to recall the heterogeneity andspiciness of E Street Shuffle. It took Bowietwo legitimate albums, Alladin Sane andDiamond Dogs, as well as an album ofSixties remakes and a live album to finallyexhaust and jettison the "Bowie" he in¬troduced to us in Ziggy Stardust. And one ofBowie's favorite words is "impermanence."If Springsteen's E Street Shuffle is a lesscomplete version of Bowie's Hunky Dory,and Born To Run is his Ziggy Stardust, howlong will we have to wait for Springsteen'sYoung Americans? And Bowie, who is withthe exception of Elton John, the mostprolific rock star we've seen so far in theSeventies, and who has just recently addedblacks to his audience with his new single,"Fame," and who has just starred in a film(The Man Who Fell To Earth, currentlybeing prepared tor release) and completedboth the sound-track for it and his own newalbum, has hardly been a householdcelebrity these past three or four years, andmay only just now have a chance ofbecoming one. And very much in the tashionin which Bowie was introduced, Springsteenis being introduced, not as BruceSpringsteen, but as a Rock Star, fait accomplii.Albums, whether they are very good orvery bad, are hard to live down once theybecome part of the public domain. In mymemory, only The Beatles (as a group, notas individuals), The Rolling Stones, Dylan,Otis Redding, and The Who have been ableto live down a set of bad or obsessive songs.And there's a lot of the myth of the Sixtiestied to those artists. None of them ever hador have ever had to make a comeback nomatter what they have done. Springsteen,whose Seventies career in rock is more likeBowie's and J. Geils' than Dylan's and theStones', will doubtlessly be faced with theproblem of making a comeback if he makesonly one mistake. Talk of a "Springsteenlive" album to really showcase Bruce onlyawakens desperate memories of J. Geils'(continued on page 5)Friday, October 3, 1975-The Chicago Maroon - 5TheGreyCityJournal Get happy enough toDance in the Streetsat aBlock DanceWhen: Saturday night, 9:00 pmWhere: Between 57th and 58thon UniversityIn case ofcold or rain: Inside 5747 University(friendly confines)Sponsored by: IFC (with CORSO $)Refreshments AvailableAdmission by U.C.I.D.The Co-op's got it.We've been restocking. Cooks you'd ex¬pect to find, and some you wouldn't.Good stuff and crap. The basementwe're in is dirty, stuffy, and over¬crowded. We don't have much at¬mosphere. But we've sure got a lot ofbooks.You Don't Road Ambience.You Read Boohs.The Student Co-opReynolds Club Basement. M-F; 9:30-5:45.6-The Chicogo Moroon - Friday, October 3, 1975 TODAY is NIKONFACTORY DEMO DAYDEMO HRS. 10 A.M.-4 P.M.& MCtnuto,1519 E. 53rd St.Ph. 752-3030SPECTACULAR SAVINGSon the finest cameras in theworld...NIKON. LET A FACTORYAUTHORIZED EXPERT SHOW YOU WHYNIKON IS THE FIRST CHOICE OF THEPROS Nikkormat FT2NIKKORMAT FT2In true Nikon tradition, the FT2 continues the evolutionof the popular Kikkormat sir, the easiest way to enter theNikon system. There has been no compromise in the ef¬ficient, basic Nikkormat design nor in its rugged, reliableprecision construction. And, of course, Nikkormat aloneamong medium priced sir s continues to offer the mat¬chless quality of Nikkor optics.Above all, the FT2 doesn t obsolete any existing Nikonsystem elements. A full-fledged member of the system, itaccepts all current Nikkor lenses and Nikkormat ac¬cessories. By any standard, here is the outstanding valueamong today s fine sir s.With 50mm, F/2.0 Auto Nikkor LensONLY... 250 00With 50 mm, F/1.4 Auto Nikkor LensONLY *7 1,00 MOREKAFFENIORESTAURANT1550 E. 55thHyde Park Shopping Centeracross from Co-op SupermartGreek and American Foodat reasonable pricesOpen forBreakfastLunchDinnerFOR Travelling Orders(Carry Outs)Call 643-2240OPEN7 AM-11 PM EVERY DAYSpringsteenGrowing Up GreasyBy Jonathan RothsteinClap your handsStamp your feetFreehold RegionalCan't be beatI remember the Castilles—Note sent backstage at Bruce SpringsteenConcert by ex-cheeleader, Springsteen highschool classmate, and recent convert toSpringsteenmania.The Auditoruim Theatre filled up slowlylast Thursday night. .It was a surprisinglyolder audience for what passes these days asa rock and-roll concert. Most seemed to bein their mid-twenties. They had all made thetrip downtown to see Bruce Springsteen,currently being touted by the hype-machineas the rock superstar of the decade.The house light dimmed, dark figuresassumed the stage. Pockets of cheers rosefrom the almost packed house. The firststrains of "Thunder Road" came from thedark stage; cheers of recognition, and thenthe spots cameon suddenly revealing theband. Bruce Springsteen, posed in a punkstance—legs spread apart, electric guitarslung low—stood centerstage.The performer's clothing reinforced thepunk attitude; skin-tight tee shirt and jeans, sneakers, topped off by a black motorcyclejacket. He was flanked on either side byClarence Clemens, his saxophonist, and"Miami" Steve Van Zandt, playing leadguitar. Their three-piece suits and pimphats set them off from the smaller, leanerband leader. Clemens and Van Zandt lookedmean; Springsteen looked real scared.As the two and a half hour set wore on, itbecame apparent that he was scared.Springsteen moved from very funny, almostself-depricating posturing to a childlikevunerability, and back again. In many waysit was a witty performance.Could it be that this boy greaser really isthe prophet of our time?As any middle-class college studentknows, greasers, and "Greaser-culture," isa phenomena safely tucked away inamericana. In our nostalgia-conscioustimes, Greaser-culture finds safe expressionin movies like "American Graffitti" and"The Lords of Flatbush," as well as intelevision shows like "Good Times."In Freehold New Jersy, BruceSpringsteen's hometown, Greaserdom,slightly augmented by '60's Hippydom, isstill very much a reality. When Springsteenwas growing up, 'straight' greasers were animportant element of the High School socialscene. Springsteen was a 'band' greaser; hisband was the Castilles.Students at Freehold Regional, the localfeeder high school, broke down into twomajor categories; the greasers and those incollege prep. The latter were primarily thechildren of parents who lived in the affluentMANDEL HALLOCTOBER 11, 8 P.M.TICKETS-REYNOLDSCLUB DESKSTUDENTS OTHERIN ADVANCEAT DOOR $2 $3S3 $4 suburbs surrounding Freehold. The otherswere from a lower socio-economic class;their parents lived in town and workedmostly in the surrounding factories.Both greasers and college preppiesperceived Freehold in much the same light;it was a boring place to live. Students tendedto form close-knit cliques. Springsteen spentmost of his time with the Castilles. Much ofhis free time was devoted to sitting on thefront porch of his South Street home withfriends; playing guitar, watching cars (andgirls of course) go by, and all the otherthings bored high schoolers in small townsdo to survive the slowly passing days. Inquieter moments, when teenagers are proneto reflect on their post-pubescent angstcommonly known as 'adolescence'Springsteen's thoughts probably turned toan idea that loomed large in the world ofyoung Freeholders: Escape.Escape had two aspects. On thepedestrian level, in meant getting out, rightnow! Route 9, just outside of town, couldtake you anywhere. In one direction wasNew York, the big city, in the other layAsbury Park with it's boardwalk, strip,and beaches.Getting out as a nighttime or weekeendretreat usually meant going to Asbury tohangout. You could hanq on the beaches,play pinball, cruise in your car if you hadone, watch girls go by, and even try to pickone up if you could find the courage.Ultimately however, escape meantleaving Freehold and the surrounding areafor good. Preppies had a sure ticket. Theycould go out of state for college, their degreewould assure them of a life in some exoticand far-off place; New York, Chicago, LosAngeles.Straight greasers had very few options.Most ended up working in the factories ofFreehold, or else moved in to a similar lifein an even more hostile environment; on toplaces like New York, Chicago, Detroit, orLos Angeles. For these kids, escape was notonly from Freehold the town, but also from anothing existence as a lower middle-classfactory worker.The band greasers ticket seemed, to himat least, as certain as that of the preppie. Allyou had to do was get good enough tobecome rock-and-roll star. This meantpracticing, breaking in at local dances; andfinally moving up to the Asbury bar circuitwhere you were discovered,1 got a bigrecording contract, and made the move tothe big city.Most of Bruce Springsteen's friends fromthe old days still live in and aroundFreehold. Springsteen, incredibly, is'making it.'Musically, Bruce Springsteen reflectsthese origins, sometimes to an almostpainful degree. When he plays rock-and -roll, he plays good, bar band rock. Althoughsome rock critics can wax eloquent on thisparticular point, I am a firm beleiver in theold American Bandstand Adage; if it has a good beat, and is easy to dance to, then itdeserves at least a 73.At the Chicago concert, Springsteen hadthe relatively staid audience on its feet anddancing during his encore as he did amedley of Mitch Ryder songs. The band istight. Clemens sax gives the music a certaindriving force. Guitar solos by Springsteenand Van Zandt were at times inspired.Backup from keyboards, bass and drums jrounded the sound out nicely. It was good <*>rock-and-roll in a time when the commodityis in very short supply. I'm not so surethat one need say more than this...But there is more to say. BruceSpringsteen, in the minds of many peoplewho write about things like this, has arrived.Some have called him the new Dylan, othersthe new Stones; the Rock Prophet. I supposethe music and lyrical constructions reflectthese influences fo some extent. More ob¬vious antecedents are Manfred Mann, VanMorrison, and Motown; pretty good rock,bad social philosophy. Since the demise ofthe 'counter-culture,' does rock as socialphilosopny have meaning anyway? Did thisconcept ever have meaning?The lyrics that Springsteen writes areabout what one would expect from an in¬trospective individual—something we allseem to be these- days—who comes from anarrow, ingrown environment. The imageryreveals a concern almost exclusively for therange of interests that define the world of ahigh school greaser. Cars, girls (specificallythe importance of having 'a woman'), theboardwalk, fantasies of domination. Themajor theme, predictably, is escape;running, hiding out, the backstreets,leaving, moving.'Growin' Up,' a particularly evocativesong from the first album, 'Greetings FromAsbury Park,' examines this theme nicely:I swear I lost everything 1/ ever loved orfeared, I was the/ cosmic kid in full costumedress,/ Well, my feet finally took/ root inthe earth but I got me/ a nice little place inthe stars.'*Not always profound stuff, butSpringsteen always seems to write honestlyabout what he knows. You can't really faulthim for not knowing more. The lyrics fit wellwith the music, and as far as I'm concerned,this is the most important requirment.If one is in a truely generous mood, theymight label rock-and-roll a minor art form.In that case, Springsteen meets the require¬ment of the artist honestly reflecting his ex¬perience. It is this basic honesty that willprobably save him from all the hype.Audiences that react positively toSpringsteen, and such reaction seemsalmost universal, do not necessarily relateto the experiences he sings about per se, butrather to the act of self-examination andself-revelation that the performance con¬veys. This is more than enough to expectfrom any popular music performerBesides, its damn good rock-and-roll.The Eagle is where you meet your friends • - - even if you weren't planning fococktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . iate snacks,air-conditionedTHE EAGLEBass ale and Schlitz beer on tap5311 Blackstone HY 3-193310' BEERNITETUES.. OCT. 7thThe Cage-performed by San Quentin Drama WorkshopOct. 10*. 11, 12 Reynolds Club $1.50 Students $2.50 Otherstaw*, -;;-w.*w ... ... ■ . ■.pKWT.sjanpgj.ip,Friddyr,* October 3,' i 975-TKe Chicago Mairocn Y TheGreyCityJournalTheGreyCityJournal a SaviorFrom the StreetsSpringsteen*"^*"*By Mark Bushman( Author's Note:The thoughts and words attributed to JonLandau in the following are pureiy fictional,with the exception of those expressed in hiswriting. What follows is not to be interpretedas disparagement of Mr. Landau, nor asderogation of his honesty or ability in hisprofession.)My knock on the door of the Cambridgeapartment was answered by an irritated"Come in!" Landau was in his bedroom,taking the Let It Bleed poster off the wall. Ahalf-packed suitcase lay on the bed. Jon wasobviously disturbed: Joni Mitchell was onhis turntable, sobbing, "I wish I had a river Icould skate away on.""Gotta go to New York," he said, "Bruceis in trouble. Like all great artists, he'swracked with self-doubt. The songs for thenext album are absolutely great, Mark: the Kidnappingwork tapes make me stomp my feet withglee. But Bruce has re-written some of thesongs eight, nine times now. He works likeTolstoy. He's having trouble getting thesongs on tape in any final form; probablybecause he's aware of the vital importanceof the project. I feel it my duty to lend ahand. This album is going to be the mostimportant American work of art since MobyDick, and I'm going to co-produce it!""Moby Dick’ Come on, Jon, he might begood, but...""But, nothing. He's completed one track,called 'Born To Run.' Took him over threemonths to record it, but Bruce stuck to it.Springsteen: Obsessive, but still a charmer.V /It's without a doubt the most telling piece ofrock and roll ever recorded. Listen to thefirst line. (Landau sings) 'In the day wesweat it out on the streets of a runawayAmerican dream.' Now tell me that's not agreat line.""That's not a great line," I told him. "Itsounds like a high school English teachertrying to write a 'beat' poem. It also soundslike he re-wrote it eight or nine times."Springsteen might be in trouble, Jon; butfrankly I think you're in bigger trouble. Yourealize your influence as a rock critic, butyou went a, did a 'I have been to themountain' bit in spite of yourself. That lineyou wrote about Springsteen being 'thefuture of rock and roil;' Newsweek quotedit, for Christ's sake. Now Bruce has to liveup to that, or else he looks like a failure andyou go down along with him. Your boy hascaught a bad case of studio fright: he'shaving trouble playing the role of Messiah.So you have to resign your editorial position at Rolling Stone and co-produce the albumto save his neck; and, incidentally, yours."By now, Landau was pouting. "I'm notdoing it for my own sake," he insisted. "I'mdoing it for Rock and Roll."★ * ★The next time I spoke to Jon Landau wasafter the release of Born To Run. I sawSpringsteen perform at the Tyrone GuthrieTheater, a 1400 seat theater in the round inMinneapolis. Reaching home after theconcert, the phone was ringing as I walkedin. It was Jon, hoping that I had been con¬verted."What did ya think?" he asked."Thoroughly enjoyed it," I told him."Springsteen is a real charmer. He used theintimacy of the Guthrie Theater to greateradvantage than anyone else I've seen there:running up and down the aisles, crawling offedge of the stage on his belly. And he wonover the audience with his rambling, oftenhilarious stories.""I knew you would come around, buddy,"Jon said, delighted. "Now that you stand onthe threshold of the future of rock androll...."I broke in. "Hold it a minute. I enjoyed theconcert, that's all. But Bruce Springsteen isnot the Savior from the streets that youmake him out to be. The concert had a verynice, relaxed, bar room atmosphere, for themost part. Bruce screwed around with theaudience and with the band; just had a goodtime. But when he sang the songs from Bornto Run, he often became an uncomfortablesalesman for Columbia Records. Every lickwas in place; but Bruce was tense. Therewas too much false profundity and too littlegenuine spirit. When Bruce spread his arms,grimaced, and sang, 'The hungry and thehunted/ EXPLODE into rock and rollbands,' I thought of you, Jon. I bet you lovethat line. I don't think it's content lives up toit's pretensions."These are the untorgivable tlaws on thealbums, too: especially Born To Run. Thatalbum has been worked over moremeticulously than a PhD dissertation.That's what it is: a dissertation on Ethosand Pathos in Rock and Roll. And like mostdissertations, it's somewhat sterile, thoughsure, there are some moments that inviteyou to think. 'Meeting Across the River' isa good Hemingway/ West Side Story syn¬thesis; and 'Thunder Road' is a fine song,despite it's Roy Orbison footnote. But, Jon,if you could have heard Bruce singing'Thunder Road' tonight at the Guthrie, hisonly accompaniment his own piano, youwould realize how inappropriate those rockand roll guitars you talked him into on thealbum version are. He took chances when hesang the song tonight; punching out somelines and whispering others, varying hisphrasing all over the field. By contrast, itsounds like you, Mike and Bruce selected forrelease the most conservative, 'typical'version of the song you possessed on tape, a'specimen' car/ escape song For Posterity.(continued on page 5)HEWLETT E PACKARDWe’ve got it!The great new Hewlett-Packard HP-21 Scientific PocketCalculator. 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ELLISRIGHT ON CAMPUSFOR YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS LARGE ORSMALL—AIR, STEAMSHIP, TOURSCHECK OUR GROUP FLIGHTTO NEW YORK OVER THANKSGIVINGDON'T DELAY!MIDWAY TRAVEL SERVICELOBBY "AD" BUILDINGTEL. 753-2301-02-03NO CHARGE FOR OUR SERVICESEXCEPT NOMINAL FEE FOR RAIL TICKETS8-The Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 3, 1975 UNIVERSITYTHfcATU- INVITES YOU TO ANOPEN HOUSEFRIDAY, OCTOBER 103:30 - 5**30 pmREYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE5 7th + UNIVERSITY 3RD FLOOROPEN BOAHD MEETING IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWINGSp riCareerism in Rock: Trying to Learn(continued from page 1)Pull House and Lou Reed's Rock 'n' RollAnimal and Live, or even worse, Bowie'sDavid Live. Full House was largelyresponsible for the stifled career the J. GeilsBand remains trapped in today. One caneasily see Springsteen's "Kitty's Back," ajazz and soul-tinged shuffle that he hasrecently stripped-down and boogied-up forthe consumption of larger audiences,quickly turn into the albatrosse around hisneck that "Serves You Right To Suffer" hasbeen for J. Geils. Bruce's band would haveto be featured on any live recording, andthere's the danger that he would be virtuallyoverpowered by them as Lou Reed'sKidnappinga Savior(continued from page 4)"Born To Run is so goddamned serious. Atleast there were moments of humor and joyon The Wild, The Innocent, and the E StreetShuffle. Like 'Rosalita.' There again,though, most of the songs were afflicted withambitious but hollow attempts at CityImagery. His use of 'Little Eden' as ametaphor for the Jersey Shore is downrightembarrassing. And what is 'Let the blackboys in to light the soul flame' supposed tomake the listener feel, anyway? The lyric isa blind alley. It says 'blacks got soul' butnothing more; and certainly doesn't help thesong along. And it's hard to sound funky fantastic band almost overpowered him onRock 'n' Roll Animal. More than likely,though, the effort would result in an albummuch like David Live, in which neither thesinger nor the band shined, and the singer'spersonality hardly ever filtered through.Since Springsteen is now a "Rock Star," andnot the performer-personality he was upuntil this summer, he would now make thelive album he would never have madebefore, and it would almost certainly be likeBowie's, J. Geils', or Lou Reed's.But perhaps the most disappointing andsaddening thing about Bruce Springsteen isthat despite all the hype about him beingRock's Savior and the only real rock starwhen you're trying to cram, 'Sparks fly on EStreet when the boy prophets walk it hand¬some and hot,' into a brief three measures."I don't want to come down too hard onyour boy, Jon. I just mean to point out thatthe albums are quite flawed; and albumsare the litmus test, whether we like it or not.Bruce is a solid, middle weight talent; everybit as good as David Ackles or the late TimBuckley; and probably the best new thing onvinyl in the last three years. But he's not thetalent that Dylan, Joni Mitchell, or evenDavid Bowie have shown themselves to be intheir finest moments. Bruce might have it inhim, but I don't think he's shown it yet."An artist deserving of the title 'TheFuture of Rock and Roll' should be able tohandle an audience of fifteen thousand,don't you agree? I doubt that Springsteencan do it. He puts on a show, not a spectacle;and the best rock and roll is spectacle. IfRobert Altman's Nashville had been a filmabout rock and roll, Springsteen's band around, he is more like a man who haschosen a Rock Career. By career, I don'tmean profession — the way one earns aliving — I mean what one chooses to devotehis life to. This is made even moresaddening in light of the all too depressingreality of businessman bands like Bachman-Turner Overdrive, Loggins and Messina,The Eagles, Fleetwood Mac, and JethroTull. Springsteen's trying hard, maybe toohard; he has an affinity for the rock 'n' rollof the Sixties that more than matchesBowie's or Elton John's. He doesn't writeparodies or imitations, he extracts essencesfrom Sixties' songs and reinvents them inexciting ways. He never pines nostalgia forwould have been perfect for it. They are aparody of a rock and roll band just as HenryGibson was a parody of a Country.Westernsinger in that film: sufficiently authentic soas to be pleasant to watch, but not realenough to divert attention from the filmitself. Springsteen's Impression of a BarBand stars Miami Steve as the Jive Guitarplayer; and Clarence Clemmons as theproverbial Sax Man: a big, black Dude wholets his horn do all the talking. It's almostlike reruns of Naked City: fun, but hardlycathartic."Trouble is, Jon, aging rockers like youand I have been looking for a prophet for solong. And all we've got to show for our ef¬forts are Elton John, John Denver, and theEagles. I have the impression thatSpringsteen is a simple, good-natured guywho loves rock and roll. He started foolingaround with Dylanesque lyrics, and sud¬denly he's surrounded with desperate(continued on page 8) those times, yet everything he does echoesor recalls them for us. He is so obsessed withthis task which he has set for himself, andthe songs on Born To Run reflect thisobsession in such stirring but uncomfortableways, that sometimes it seems as thoughSpringsteen wants to be not so much a RockStar, of the Sixties or otherwise, but, rather,he wants to be a Sixties Rock 'n' Roll Songitselt, and burn out with the half-life thatwas so much a part of those songs.As the margarine commercial says, "It'snot nice to fool Mother Nature," and it'sNature's way, at least in Rock 'n' Roll, thataudiences in the 1970's will take thedefinitions by which artists introduce andpresent themselves to audiences, andfashion a trap out of those definitions inwhich to lock artists so that they can spendthe better part of the remainder of theircareers straining to escape thosedefinitions. In the Sixties, it was almostexactly the opposite, it wasn't good enoughto be as good as you were the last time out,audiences demanded that artists be almostBrand New. Record companies capitalizedon this because they rarely had to nurtureartists for more than a year before they'dget some kind of return or dump the artists,who'd then get a chance somewhere else. Inthe slower, sleepier Seventies, it takes threeyears on average to break an artist (Eagles,Linda Ronstadt, Aerosmith), so recordcompanies (and everybody else) are threetimes as mercenary about collecting theirtake.So everything builds towards the firstmoment that artist, audience, and recordcome face to face. Springsteen stands at thismoment right now. By the time thisappears, Born To Run will be no lower thanNumber Two on Billboard's Top 100.Springsteen has learned to walk like theheroes he thought he had to be. Havinggotten what he wanted, has he lost what hehad?CHECK OUR NEWEVERYDAY LOWMAGIC PRICESJELLO3 Oz.Reg. 24'ALL FLAVORS 19* COUNTRY DELIGHTCHOCOLATEMILK TUBORG BEER(Warm Only) OQ6 Cans 1 OjReg. 1.74HYGRADE ARMOUR TESTENDERHOTDOGS 79*1 Lb. Pkg. Quart U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEFROUND or $ 1 33SWISS STEAK 1 lb(No Grinding Please)STORE HOURSMonday-WednesdayThursday and FridaySaturdaySunday 9 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.9 a.m. to 8 p.m.9 a.m. to 7 p.m.9 a.m. to 3 p.m.HYDE PARK CO-OP SUPERMARKET1526 E. 55th STREET 667-1444Boogie Your Butt Offat a5747 University BLOCK DANCE Refreshments AvailableSaturday, 9:00 P.M.Friday, October 3, 1975-The Chicago Maroon - 9 cnTheGreyCityJournaloc3o r>-u>*Q)L_o0)XoV. THIS W€€K IM TH€ 4RTSCampus FilmDoc Offers: The Sting. You know allabouf it, you either want to see it or youdon't; if I revealed the ending I'd beshot, but if you're intelligent you'll haveit figured out anyway. Tonight, 6:30,9:00, and 11:15.Masculine - Feminine. DOC says:"What's it like to be 20 years old inParis in 1965? Godard takes two shortstories by Guy de Maupassant, putsthem in modern dress, and with pinchesof violence, horseplay, and sex, asksJean-Pieree Leaud just this question."Sunday at 7:15 and 9:3(LIt's Always Fair Weather, first of theStanley Donen series, is one of the lastof the great MGM dance films. Made in1955, Weather stars Dan Dailey, GeneKelly, and Michael Kidd. Wednesday at7:30.Animal Crackers. Finally availablefor public viewing after an 18 yearcourtroom battle, Animal Crackers isperhaps the wackiest of the MarzBrothers' films. Friday at 6:30, 8:30,and 10:30. Be the first in your neigh¬borhood.CEF offers: The Mad Adventures ofRabbi Jacob, a film with a complicatedplot that you won't understand evenafter you've seen the film. But you'llfind it very funny. ShapiroCollectionThe allnight wait for dedicated artlovers began yesterday morning at10:00 when the sign-up list fordistribution of the Shapiro Collectionbecame available for signatures. Thosewho signed were required to stay in IdaNoyes continuously until 8:30 thismorning when the numbers fordistribution were assigned. If youhaven't yet a number when you readthis, but would like to take a shot at oneof the works in the collection, a fewnumbers may still be available duringthe day on Friday. Distribution willtake place at 4:00 in Ida Noyes.U. TheatreUniversity Theatre is sponsoring aseries of workshops for students, staff,and community people who are in¬terested in theatre. There will beworkshops in voice, basic and advancedacting, technical theatre, and an in¬troduction to theatre for those whoknow very little about it. All workshopsare free, but some participation inUniversity Theatre is requested inexchange for coming to the workshops.If you would like to have a brochureon the workshops, call 753-3581 duringbusiness hours, or stop by theUniversity Theatre office on the thirdfloor of the Reynolds Club, 5706 S.University Ave. Livingston Taylorand Brian BowersTickets are on sale for the first MajorActivities Board-sponsored event of theyear: Livingston Taylor and BrianBowers, in concert at Mandel Hall nextSaturday night, October 11, at 8:00. At$2 for students and $3 for others, theyare available at the Reynolds Clubdesk.And . ..Vittoria de Sica's highly acclaimed ABrief Vacation continues at the HydePark, which has just introduced astudent-discount admission plan.Coonskin, successor to Fritz the Catand Heavy Traffic, and perhaps moretasteless, opened and continues at theOriental Theatre, Randolph near State.Nashville, the Robert Altman sub¬ject-matter-for-syndicated-columnisthit, continues at the Esquire, 50 E. Oak. Brian BowersyT.ie<;;joumQTHf CMKAfiO MMOOW S MIUT MRCWRf CRITIC'S* M0 'Ml MTSeditorPaul M. MillerstaffMiles ArcherBarry KaplovitzC.J. MeyersHarold RichardsDean ValentineAmy WeinsteinThe Grey City Journal is published each Fridayduring the regular academic year as part of theChicago Maroon. Inquiries concerning subscriptionsand advertising should be addressed to: BusinessManager, 1212 E 59th St., Chicago, III 60637 TneEditor invites comments»:«»>:«»>:<»>:« >:«:< »>:«>>;«»;«>>:< »:< »>:« >>;«»>;« >:»;« *;•;< >>;< >>;<»>;« »:•>;« >:•:«»;«>>;« >>:< »;ui”( i5?i »!!Ii i!JI«5Ii »!*!< r!»!« 1*>11* VVmHmtttttttt:¥tttttt>nj:ttMtttt•it:’¥>#;¥.¥:Htttttttttttttttttt SEMINARYCOOPERATIVE BOOKSTORE INC.We Sell BooksWe Stay Current InAnthropologyLiterary CriticismPhilosophyPolitical Science PsychologyReligionSouth Asian StudiesWomen's StudiesAnd More or Less Current InChina StudiesGay Studies Sociology HistoryLinguisticsIn addition to carrying course booksfor Divinity, Philosophy, PoliticalScience and South Asia. WEmtt¥:Mnmttttttmtttt:¥tttttt>«*:ttHttWEttMttnOnloin 2000 other Hyde Parkers and become a member ||New Longer Hours: 9:30 to 4:UfJ Monday thru Friday5757 University (Basement)752-4381 ttas:tttttt1-0-TKe Chicago ' Friday'.October T. '1,975 Now Open in Hyde Park’s Harper Court!Open 7 days. Off-street parking in city lot. 363-40882112 N. Clark (s&coln), Chicago.Open 7 days. Free parking at 2036 N. Clark. 528-8510Gift Certificates AvailableThe EARTH® brand shoe, the shoe that started it all, the first shoewith the heel lower than the toe, the shoe so unique it’s patented,now conies in a whole range of newstyles. Soft, strong, light, lined,puffed, quilted EARTH® brand shoesTall, short, leather, suede, fancy,sporty, hiking, dancing, walkingEARTH® brand shoes.EarthshoeUS PAH NT No Ttrmt/OMNIAThe International House "Everything” ShopA very special store forJewelryPotteryScarvesWood Carvings PlantsWall HangingsCardsStationery PipesCigarettesCandySundrieset aliaWatch for:Wednesday SpecialsOMNIA ChristmasFree Gift with this ad1414 E. 59th St.753-2283We take masterchargeSEMESTERIN ISRAELA program of study in Jerusalem, duringthe Spring semester of 1976, sponsoredby Wesleyan University. Speciallyarranged courses, conducted in Hebrew,on subjects including Tanach, modernIsraeli literature, Medieval JewishPhilosophy, Wesleyan credits tran¬sferable. For particulars, and applicationform, write to: Director, Semester inIsrael, College of Letters, WesleyanUniversity, Middletown, Connecticut06457.INTERNATIONAL HOUSE FILMSARE NOWOPEN TO THE PUBLICMaltese FalconBananasOn the WaterfrontSign of ZorroThe ProducersShameand a lot moreWednesdays 7 & 9:30at 1-House50* for residents$1.00 for non-residents(a bargain at half the price) M-TH 10-8F 10-6S-S 11-5 McCormick Theological Seminary is striking sculpture, which was placed on themaking its controversial move from Lincoln lot last week. The sculptor is John Kearney,Park to Hyde Park and has occupied the old the title is "Ramand it is entirely made ofShimer College Building at 56th and automobile bumpers.Woodlawn Ave. With them they brought thisString AuditionsforUniversity of Chicago Chamber Orchestrawill be held Oct. 6,7 & 8.To arrange for an audition timecall 373-7342, evenings.Tentative Fall program:Bartok, DivertimentoSibelias, Romanzein CBach, D minor Harpsichord Concertof*Coi.*DaTYINN"'*i;* given * * * *by the Maroon|**£* New Hours: Open DailyJ From 11:30 a.m.to 9:00 p.m."A Gold Mine Of Good Food" *****Student Discount:1 0% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park’s Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559(near Harper Court)Eat more for less.J(Try our convenient take-out orders + UNIVERSITYO R CHESTRAis still holding auditions for all strings,including principal cello. To audition,call the conductor, Jan Herlinger, at753-2613, 753-2615, or 947-0679, byMonday, Oct. 6.YOUTH IN ISRAELAND THE USA:theARMY, THE UNIVERSITY, THEYOUTH MOVEMENTS, THEORIENTAL AND WESTERNCOMMUNITIES COMPAREDPROF. JAMES COLEMAN dept, ofsociologywill speak onfriday oct. 3 8 50 pmhillel 5*715 woodlawnFriday, October 3, 1975-The Chicago Maroon - 11 TheGreyCityJournalIheGreyLityJournalX3V 0\Ws*o9e'V o\Ks^°9enMenuhin, NietzscheHighlights of Autumn L€TT€R<)Music CalendarYehudi Menuhin, world-famous violinist,will visit campus December 6 to give theWilliam Vaughn Moody annual lecture, theDepartment of Music has announced.Defails of the event are not yet available butMr. Menuhin's visit, which is being billed asa "lecture-demonstration," promises tohighlight the quarter's calendar of events.Also scheduled is special lecture-concert:"Nietzsche's Music and Nietzsche onMusic." Rodney Godshall, bassist, and JohnReeves White, pianist, will conduct theprogram in Breasted Hall on November 18.Admission to the hal I will be without charge.In addition, the Department hasscheduled two of the Chamber Music SeriesKidnapping concerts: The Vermeer Quartet on October17 and Guarneri String Quartet on October31. Individual admissions will be $3 for UCstudents and $5.50 for others, but a limitednumber of tickets for the entire series areavailable at $16, general; $14, UC facultyand staff; and $8, UC students.Other concerts for the quarter include:pianist Joshua Rifkin, "An Evening of ScottJoplin," November 15; Collegium Musicum,October 22 and 24; University ChamberChoir, November 7 and 8; UniversitySymphony Orchestra, November 22;University Chorus, November 23; andRockefeller Chapel Choir, December 7 and14. Information may be obtained from theConcert Office by calling 753-2612. To the Editor:Ooops! You goofed! Just a line callingyour attention to the fact the Ciral's Houseof Tiki, 1612 E. 53rd St., Hyde Park's bestknown and one of the oldest 4 a.m.restaurant and cocktail lounges, has beenomitted from the Grey City Journal "Guideto Eating." It was also omitted from the barguide in the same issue.Ciral's House of Tiki has been serving foodand liquor in Hyde Park over 20 years. It hasbeen in the present location over sevenyears after having been displaced by theBoard of Education to make way for theKenwood High School. Before that we wereconfronted by Urban Renewal when LakePark was widened to its present ap¬pearance.Serving Polynesian and Americancocktails as well as American andPolynesian Food, our Fish and Chips are oneof Hyde Park's favorite taste treats. Weopen daily at 11 a.m. until 4 a.m. we areready to serve you. Closed Sunday.I'm certain that the omission was anShapiro: Checking the Collection (seepage 6). (continued from page 5)Record People; buyers, sellers, and criticsalike; who are all convinced that he's theanswer to our prayers. Goodmatured guythat he is, he's trying his damndest tocomply. He's feeling the strain, though. Ashe said in Crawdaddy, (October 75) 'Youknow things have gotten heavier lately. It'slike you could feel things getting heavier. At the record company, in the band. All over.Doesn't seem like anything in particular,just things starting to weigh in.'"Give the kid a break, Jon. Let him playhis music; but don't expect him to save yourlife."Jon hung up.I put the Basement Tapes on the +urntable. oversight.Sincerely,Ted Ciral'sHouse of Tiki9 AM -9 PM 7 Day* A WeekHYDE PARK PIPE AND TOBACCO SHOP,1 552 E. 53rd - under 1C tracksAll students get 10% °^/^^\//ask for "Big Jim'' JPipesPipe Tobaccos Imported CigarettesCigarsKIMBARKLIQUORSWINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINESTIMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to you!THE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC.1214 E. 53rd St.53-Kimbark Plaza HY-3-3355prr>deo'''icoV'°wC^erobe«he Umvef* ’J specia\ "° qUenvied°n Par1s< r vjsea*2S S, '•»”HOTEL FURNITURE ISALE!from Chicago's largest hotelsSLEEPER-SOFAS 7 $79.95 & $99.95KING SIZE BOX SPRING& MATTRESS SET $99.95FULL SIZE BOX SPRINGA MATTRESS SETS $49.95TWIN SIZE BOX SPRING6 MATTRESS SETS $39.95SOFA & CHAIR SETVINYL COVERING ALL COLORS. . . $49.95LOUNGE CHAIRS $15.00 UPPULL-UP CHAIRS $10.00 UPTABLE LAMPS $2.95 UP7 DRAWER DESKS $29.95OPEN DAILY 9-5AMSTADTER FURNITURE7315 COTTAGE GROVE224-7444With This Ad OnlyUsed Desks *25 and upUsed Chairs *10 and upNew Chairs *25 and up“cash and carry"EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:00RE 4-2111, / . / ' f f . *, ..... ■ ■__ 1 _1 2-The Chicago f^aroon - Friday, October 3, 1975 CHICAGOMONTEVERDISINGERSwill present aconcert ofvirtuoso 17th C.MadrigalsBond ChapelSunday Oct. 58:30 P.M.Free of ChargeSponsored byCollegium Musicum HILLEL STUDIESHEBREW - Beginners ConversationalMr. Zohar Ben-Asher $30.00 for affiliates50.00 for non-affiliates Monday - 8:30 p.m.HEBREW - Advanced ConversationalMr. Zohar Ben-Asher $30.00 for affiliates50.00 for non-affiliates Tuesday - 8:30 p.m.YIDDISH - BeginnersMrs. Pearl KahanYIDDISH—Advanced ReadingMrs. Pearl Kahan Monday -7:00 p m.Monday - 8:30 p.m.PSALMS - Hebrew and English TextsRabbi Daniel 1. Leifer Thursday - 3:00 p.m.RABBINIC THEOLOGY - Readings in EnglishRabbi Daniel 1. Leifer Tuesday - 8:30 p.m.TALMUD -- Hebrew Text, Instruction in EnglishRabbi Moshe Meiselmon Wednesday - 8:00 p.m.MAIMONIDES -- Laws of Study of Torah Thursday - 9:00 p.m.PAUL VERLAINEWASa painter?a poet?a sculptor?The answer is on page 869 in Funk &Wagnalls Standard Desk Dictionary.And this highly praised source ofknowledge can be yours as a HydePark Bank customer.You’ll find this hook indispensable athome, in the office, or at school. It h^sover 100,000 entries and includes:• A pronouncing gazetteer of cities and countriesthroughout the world• An 800 page vocabulary section• Weights and measures tables, including completemetric system information• An abbreviations section• Biographies of distinguished people• And a secretarial handbookTo have your own copy, you need only deposit into a newsavings, a new checking, or into an existing savings account:Deposit $100 - $499 $500 - $999 $1,000 or moreDictionary Price $3.00 $2.00 FreeFunk & Wagnalls Standard Desk Dictionary also makes awonderful gift for your children or grandchildren and it’sjust in time as they go back to school.Why not hurry in and get your copy now. We’ll even pack itin a handy tote-bag for easy carrying. This special offerends October 15th.Member FDIC Why not hurry in today!This special offer endsOctober 15thHYDE PARK BANKAND TRUST COMPANY1525 East 53rd Street, Chicago, Illinois 60615312/752-4600THE WhiStleSTOP BANKILlV * •„ Maroon defender heads away a cross from the left wingSoccer SuffersSecond LossOf SeasonBy Jim KaplanThe University of Chicagosoccer team had little luckand even less skillful play asthe DePaul University BlueDemons walked all overthem for a 5-2 victory on acold Wednesday afternoon atStagg Field.Although the early goingsaw the Maroons displaysome of the solid play ofwhich they are capable , theywere unable to protect a 2-0lead when DePaul gainedcontrol of play and camefrom behind for a convincingvictory.Chicago came out fast andscored off a 10 yard JanNovak blast only 15 secondsinto the game. Then, whenTomasz Baumiller con¬verted a perfect head passfrom Rick Miller intoChicago's second goal at27:30 of the first half, itappeared the Maroons werewell on their way to a rompHowever, the complexionof the game changedradically 35 minutes into thegame when the Maroonswere called for aquestionable handsI PIZZA ;PLATTER1460 E. 53rdMl 3-28001 FAST DELIVERY jAND PICKUPi « violation. DePaul quicklyconverted the resultingpenalty kick and came backminutes later to tie the gameon a short kick out of a pile-up just in front of theChicago nets. A third goal,coming off a corner kick just45 seconds before half time,proved to be all the offensethe Blue Demons needed toseal the Chicagoans' fate asthe Maroons dropped theirsecond game in as manyoutings this season.Oscar Oehli, a formersemi-pro player for theNational Soccer League,mystified Chicago defendersall day as he led his BlueDemons to their secondvictory of the season againsttwo losses. His one mandribbling exhibition througha porous Chicago defenseresulted in one of DePaul'stwo second half insurancegoals which brought the finalscore to 5-2.While the sluggish overallplay of the Maroon hooterswas disheartening. thecomeback of Rick Miller wasone encouraging facet of thegame for Chicago. MrMiller, a fourth year studentcoming off a serious steelaccident w hich sidelined himafter a promising freshmanseason, contributed 90hustling minutes of playwhich inclueded a fine assistto the team's effort.The next chance to see thevarsity roundballers inaction will be Saturdaymorning when Lake ForestCollege invades Stagg Fieldfor a 10:30 am kick-off.OAK FURNITURE-ANTIQUESREFINISHED + AS 1$1649 E. 55 th667-43401 -6:00 PMTUES.-SAT. DesksTablesChairsDressersBookcasesMuchMoreAlso DoRefinishingFriday, October 3, 1975-The Chicago Maroon - 13n v rinmiiitui-AS i $ V i'l ) . t % tEDITORIALSAn Unfortunate InvolvementThe involvement of two University professors ofeconomics in the affairs of the ruling junta in Chile isunfortunate.Milton Friedman and Arnold Harberger have ad¬vised the Chilean government concerning the state ofthe Chilean economy. Whether these advisementswere made in the form of paid consultations or in theform of* informal meetings, the linking of theprofessors to the junta is inevitable.The junta’s rule has been charitably characterizedas brutal; the phrase currently used to describe theeconomic policies in effect in Chile is “shock treat¬ment.” The situation is one which deserveswidespread public attention, and which justifies asense of outrage.The consultations by professors Friedman andHarberger with the Chilean junta do not necessarilyam out to an affirmation of the junta’s policies; in fact,both professors denouce the activities of the regime.However, we feel that the men’s freely givenassistance is at odds with their avowed disapproval ofthe Chilean government.Mr. Friedman and Mr. Harberger have indicatedthat their efforts were exerted with the intent of im¬proving the situation in Chile. We doubt that they havechosen the best course to follow, if that truly was theirintent.The activities of the junta have been somewhatlegitimized by the professors’ association with theregime, and the prestige of their association with theUniversity of Chicago and the Chicago school ofeconomics accompanies the professors individualinvolvements. This legitimizing effect extends overthe whole Chilean regime, rather than limited to themen’s own area of competence.If Mr. Friedman and Mr. Harberger had been morethoughtful about the effects of their associations withthe Chilean junta, they would have seen that thepossible benefits which may occur from theireconomic advice are more than offset by thelegitimacy that the junta has gained from their af¬filiation with it. They ought to have used their in¬dividual and academic prestiges to condemn thejunta, rather than lending authority to it.Chicago MaroonEDITORIAL STAFF:Editor Gage AndrewsNews editorManaging editorDavid BlumAmy WeinsteinFrank FoxJim KaplanTanya GouldMartha CongerJan RhodesDavid Rieser Staff John VailPeter CohnJean TobinChip ForresterIrving LevinDavid AxelrodMike JonesLandy CarienKurt HansonBob ZivinThe CHICAGO MAROON is thestudent run newspaper serving theUniversity of Chicago and HydePark The PUBLICATIONSCHEDULE is twice weekly, onTuesdays and Fridays, during theregular academic yearOpinions expressed in the ChicagoMaroon are not necessarily those ofthe University of Chicago students,faculty or administration.EDITORIALS state the policy of thepaper, and unless otherwise noted,represent the positions of theeditors All dessenting opinion —LETTERS, COMMENTARY, andGADFLIES— must be submitted tothe paper no later than two daysprior to the next issue, and must besigned The Maroon reserves the BUSINESS STAFFManager Mike KlingensmithAd Sales B G. YovovichAssistant Karol Kennedyright to edit all submissions fcpublication.CORRECTIONS may be brouglto the attention of the editors fcwriting care of the Maroon office, cby calling the news office. Acorrections will appear in thsoonest issue after the error ibrought to lightThe OFFICES of the ChicagMaroon are located at 1212 E 59tSt. Chicago, Illinois 60637 SUESCRIPTIONS cover the threregular academic quarters, and arW for the year, payable in advanceTELEPHONES of the ChicagMaroon are: editorial office, 75'3264, business office, 753 3266The OFFICE HOURS of the papeare 8 30 1 and 1.30 4 30 weekedays14-The Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 3, 1975 SYL AccusesFriedmanEditor:The New York Times hasjust reported that MiltonFriedman, the University ofChicago’s foremosteconomist, has been a topeconomic advisor to theChilean junta. The Directorof the School of Economics,Arnold Harberger, also hasvery close’ ties with thejunta.The world-famousconservative economist hasfinally found a regime toimplement his economictheories. The New YorkTimes reports (“ChileanJunta Resists Critics,” 21Sept. 1975) that Friedman isthe “guiding light of thejunta's economic policy.”After Friedman returnedfrom a Santiago visit lastMarch a “shock treatment”authored by Friedman andhis Chicago Boys waseffected. It centers on theslashing of public spending,cutting demand and driving down real income to curbChile’s drastic inflation. TheTimes reports “the effects ofthe shock treatment havebeen devastating.” As the“price” for slowing inflation,unemployment has beendriven up to 20%, real incomeis slated to fall 18%compared to 1973, andindustrial output has fallen20% since January. “For theChilean working class,” theTimes states, “the statisticsrepresent a return to povertylevels not seen here in morethan a generation.”A more complete accountof the Chilean visit of two topChicago Boys can be found inChile-America No 6-7(Documentation andResearch Center “Chile-America,” Rome).Friedman, Harberger and aBrazilian economist, CarlosLangoni, were invited by theFoundation of EconomicStudies of the BancoHipocetario; it wasHarberger’s third visit sincethe coup. Chile-Americaquotes the Chilean magazine Ercilla (2-8 April, ’75): “The‘little visit’ was transformedinto days of work startingfrom breakfast itself andwhich included presidentialand ministerial interviewsand a chat before 400officials of the ArmedForces.” Chile-Americanotes that “In this manner itwas that the Chicago teamgave counsel directly toAugusto Pinochet, throughthe intermediate Harberger,Friedman, and Langoni, onthe 21st of March.” The visitwas followed immediatelyby a major cabinetreshuffling in line with theeconomic policy change. Thenew cabinet included asMinister of Economy, Sergiode Castro, a prominentChilean Chicago Boy.WE MUST PROTESTTHIS OUTRAGE! TheSpartacus Youth Leaguecalls on campusorganizations, unions andindividuals to join us in ademonstration on Friday, 3Oct. at 12:00 on thequadrangles side of the Administration building. Theslogans: PROTESTFRIEDMAN ANDHARBERGER: COLLA¬BORATORS WITH THEBLOODY CHILEANJUNTA! FREE ALLVICTIMS OF THE JUNTA’SREPRESSION! Everyonewho agrees with theseslogans will of course be freeto raise additional slogans,distribute their ownliterature, etc.We are not calling on theUC Administration to takeaction against Friedman. Inthe extremely unlikely eventit did act against him, thiswould set a precedent theUniversity could use in afuture purge of leftistprofessors or students. It isthe responsibility of thepeople who work and studyat the University - students,teachers, campus workers -to expose and protestFriedman’s criminalcomplicity with the Chileanregime.The SpartacusYouth LeagueLETTERSFriedman RepliesMilton Friedman sub¬mitted the following letter tothe Maroon, in response tothe article concerning himwhich appears in today’sissue. The letter is addressedto an anonymous professor,and is dated July 16 of thisyear. Mr. Friedman made noother comment.Dear (Professor )I hesitate to reply to yourhysterical letter of June 16,1975, because it is difficult todo so without descending toyour level of diatribe andinvective.Everything else aside, youdisplay a curious doublestandard. Some years back,I spent two weeks in theSoviet Union. I have morerecently made a number oftrips to Yugoslavia, where Iworked at and with theirCentral Bank and have givenlectures under the spon¬sorship of the Central Bank.Yet I have never heardcomplaints from you aboutgiving aid and comfort tothese totalitarian regimeswith their millions of in¬nocent victims. I approve ofnone of these authoritarianregimes — neither theCom muni st regi mes ofRussia and Yugoslavia northe military juntas of Cbiieand Brazil. But I believe Ican learn from observingthem and that, insofar as mypersonal analysis of theireconomic situation enablesthem to improve theireconomic performance, thatis likely to promote notretard a movement towardgreater liberalism andfreedom.Your remarks on Chiledisplay the same doublestandard. My impression isthat the Allende regimeoffered Chile only badchoices: either communisttotalitarianism, ora militaryjunta. Neither is desirableand had I been a Chileancitizen, I would if possiblehave opposed both — oralternatively have emigrated as you and othersdid faced with the Nazithreat. The institution of acommunist totalitarian statewould have meant, and in itspreliminary stages clearlypresaged, the elimination ofthousands and perhaps massstarvation, as it haselsewhere. It too would havemeant torture and unjustimprisonment, as it haselsewhere.As between the two evils,there is at least one thing tobe said for the military junta— there is more chance of areturn to a democraticsociety. There is no exampleso far as I know of a com¬munist totalitarianismdeveloping into a liberaldemocratic society. I hadhopes that Yugoslavia mightbe the exception, but recentdevelopments there havebeen in the opposite direc¬tion. There are examples —most recently, Greece — ofmilitary juntas beingreplaced and reverting todemocracy. Developmentsin Brazil are in the samedirection, though still farfrom complete or certain.The reason for the dif¬ference is not the superiormerit or demerit of thegenerals versus the com¬missars. It is rather thedifference between atotalitarian philosophy andsociety and a dictatorial one.Despicable though the latteris, it at least leaves moreroom for individual initiativeand for a private sphere oflife.To return to Chile, mybrief visit there persuaded me of one thing. Thelikelihood that the junta willbe or can be temporary andthat it will be possible torestore democracy hingescritically on the success ofthe regime in improving theeconomic situation andeliminating inflation.Failure will mean atightening of control by thisor a successor government.Only success will make thispossible liberalization, as ithas done to some extent inBrazil. This is a special caseof the general point I madeearlier. Insofar as we wereable to give good economicadvice, I believe that wecontributed to strengtheningthe forces for freedom, notthe reverse.Incidentally, on the at¬mosphere in Chile, it isperhaps not irrelevant thatat two universities, theCatholic University and theUniversity of Chile, I gavetalks on “The Fragility ofFreedom,” in which 1 ex¬plicitly characterized theexisting regime as unfree,talked about the difficulty ofmaintaining a free society,the role of free markets andfree enterprise in doing so,and the urgency ofestablishing those precon¬ditions for freedom. Therewas no advance or ex postcensorship, the audienceswere large and enthusiastic,and I received no subsequentcriticism. Could I have donethat in the Soviet Union? Or.more to the point, in thecommunist regime Allendewas seeking, or Castro’sCuba? Let me stress again. I donot approve or condone theregimes in Chile, Brazil,Yugoslavia, or Russia. I hadnothing to do with theirestablishment. I wouldfervently wish theirreplacement by freedemocratic societies. I donot regard visiting any ofthem as an endorsement. Ido not regard learning fromtheir experience as immoral.I do not regard giving adviceon economic policy as im¬moral if the conditions seemto me to be such thateconomic improvementwould contribute both to thewell-being of the ordinarypeople and to the chance ofmovement toward apolitically free society.Sincerely yours,Milton FriedmanSportsEditor:In the Orientation Issue ofthe Maroon, I feel that yourarticle on athletics here atthe University of Chicagohas misled a great manypeople. In my three yearshere at the University, Ihave seen interest in sportscontinually growing. Thefaculty, administration,students, even alumni - allhave taken an active interestin athletics here. And whatmore, they do care about theoutcome of the athleticcontests! They come andcheer and are very muchconcerned. While it is not theRAH-RAH! Big Ten school itonce was, the U of C athleticteams are backed by spirit-minded students and fans.Also, you make mention ofbleak athletic records. Didyou know that last year, allfour spring athletic teams(baseball, track, tennis, andgolf) had .500 seasons orbetter? More than half of the12 men’s varsity sportsteams had better than .500seasons last year. Thatdoesn’t sound at all bleak tome!As a varsity athlete, I mayparticipate for the fun of itall. But people, besides theparticipants, can and dohave fun enjoying both menand women’s varsityathletics. So let’s giveathletics here a fair shake.It’s a great deal better than.you have presented it, . <.Norval I. BrownCLASSIFIED ADSFOUNDSMALL GRAYISH BROWN DOGWITH WHITE FRONT, NECK,PAWS, 8. TALL. SHORT HAIR, NOWIN POSSESSION OF POUND HASUNTIL OCT 4 TO LIVE. CALLPOUND AT 247 5400, 3400 southlawndale.SPACE2 bedroom 5 room apt. $210.00 AdultsNo Pets E Hyde Park 764 2493Save money and time. 6 hours workweekly in exchange for smallbedroom Call 493 048311/ 2 rm kitchenette apt for Nov. 1$129/ mo., one person. 5442 HarperMl3 9389CHICAGO BEACH BEAUTIFULFURNISHED APARTMENTS. Nearbeach, parks, loop, UC and 1C trains,11 mins, to loop buses, door Modestdaily, weekly, monthly rates 24 hrdesk, complete hotel services, 5100 SCornell DO 3 2400 Miss Smith.PEOPLE WANTEDRoommate wanted (female gradpreferred) to share sunny 3 bdrm apt.w/2 others $110/mo plus utilities.56th 8. Harper 241 6349Auditions held for U of C ChamberOrchestra (strings only) will be heldOct. 6, 7, 8 To arrange an auditiontime, call 373 7342 evenings.Babysitter needed for 6 year old Mon.,Wed , Thurs.. Fri 2 20 p.m. 5:20 p.m.Call 947 6980 days, 241 7654 eves.SUBJECTS NEEDED Watch TV foran hr. Interesting task Must be 21 yrs.old Call X34727 or 241 6098Women's Crew wants you! No expnec., meeting today 4 p.m Ida NoyesLoungeReaders needed for blind student.Calculus, Econ 8, History. 752 3630Child care, life housework in smallHyde Park apt 30 hrs. wk. Girl 7, boy4 684 3918 after 5 30Subjects needed for drug studies inDept, of Psychiatry Earn up to $23 persession Must be 21 or over and in goodhealth Call 947 6983 for more information.Energetic person needed to take careof two active children several afternoons per week in my home. Willpay $2 25 per hour or $2 50 if you candrive Call Susan 241 5068Subjects needed for psycholinguisticsexperiments in the Behav Sci Dept$2/hr Call Mary Stockman 753 4734Room and bath for student in exchange for sitting and light householdVERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGATTRACTIVE 1 V* AND2'/* ROOM STUDIOSFURNISHEDorUNFURNISHED$129^0 $209Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus StopFA 4-0200 Mrs. Groak• Eye Examinations• Contact Lenses (Soft & Hard)• Prescriptions filledDR. MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363 help Call weekday evenings 7 30 9 30285 8394Do you stutter or stammer? If you do,we have part time work for severalstutters at good pay. U of C lab isstudying relation between reading andstuttering Call Randi Parry, 947 5332.WANTED Driver for '68 Dodge Dartto the Boston Mass area in Oct or Nov.Call Mr Tiernan 739 7711 ext 5232GONDOLIERS TRYOUTS October 5th(Sunday) 2 6 pm in Reynolds ClubSouth Lounge Singers, orch 8, techpeople needed for Feb, production bythe G 8. S Opera Co Communitypeople welcome For info, call 6843609PORTRAITS 4 for $4 and up MaynardStudios 1459 E 53rd 2nd FI 643 4083PEOPLE FOR SALEFor exp piano teacher call 947 9746TYPING done in my home IBMselectric Free pickup 8. delivery 3740081.Exp Mandarin teacher and tutor. Call363 5283 late eveningsFemale student looking for room inhome or apt. Can exchangebabysitting, dogwalking and/ or rentfor room in home References. CallChristine 752 8256 eves.Musician with college teaching exp.wants to teach voice and pianostudents of any age or level. Pleasecall 684 6912.French native grad student wouldtutor all levels on campus. Call 3540275Ph D. in English seeks part timewriting, editing, research jobJournalism experience 363-4176MILES ARCHER MOVERSReasonable prices. Call 947 0698 or 7524910 for information.Typist: efficient, experienced,inexpensive You write it, I'll type it.Julie . 324 4198 or 947 8652.SCENESFree Swimming instruction for adults,Tuesdays, INH, 6:30 7:30 pm. Bringsuit, towel, cap Begins Oct 7 for nineweeks.Wondering what to do with the kids onSaturday afternoons this fall? AnconaSchool is presenting its 2nd annualchildren's film series at the Hyde ParkTheatre Saturday afternoons at 1:00pm. Seven films will be shownincluding "Yellow Submarine,""Huckleberry Finn," and "TheFurther Perils of Laurel and Hardy."Tickets for the series of seven filmsare priced at $7 00 for children and$10.00 for adults. For tickets or furtherinformation call 241 5068 or 241 5714The Scholarship Shop, 1372 E 53rd St.has terrific clothes bargains fordiscriminating thrift shop addicts.Books, Brie a brae and furniture tooVolunteers run it to help support TheScholarship Fund at the U of C LabSchool Open Mon Sat 11 a m. to 4 mmChicago Women's Liberation Unionpresents Holly Near in concert Fri.Oct, 3 at the Midland Hotel 172 WAdams 8 p m 8. 11 p.m. $3 ChildrenfreeCampus Sportswear your mostconvenient place to shop The GiftShop lobby, Billings Hospital We offera great line of jeans, corduroys, bodysuits, tights, sweaters, and skirts. Alsoauthentic Indian jewelry, puka beads,hoops and chains Come see us!Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHair Designers1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900EYE EXAMINATIONS (SellFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSES We RentDR. KURT RepairROSENBAUM TYPEWRITERSADDERSOptometrist ELECTRONIC CALCULATORSDICTATORS(53 Kimbark Plaza) U. of C Bookstoro1200 East 53rd Street 5750 S. EllisHYde Park 3-8372 753-3303 DINNER FOR 2 Under $10 M THDinner Specials The court house inHarper Court.FOR SALETALISMAN, distinctive handmadejewelry Opening Oct 15 at 5505Kimbark. For more information call363 7150Modern walnut desk $50, 9 by 12 ovalwashable rug $45, occasional chairs$35 8. $15, coffee tables $10, TV stand,drapes, bookcase 684 3183BICYCLE for sale Mercier 10 speed$90 Call 324 2260 after 3 p.m.Household goods, bedspreads, throwrugs, red swivel chair, drapery rodsCall 493 8991ALLEY SALE: Several families'furniture, some clothes, householdparaphenalia. Refrigerator. Between56 8, 57th Streets, Kimbark 8.Woodlawn block Sat Oct. 4 12 41975 VW Beetle, 6000 mi, red 8. blk 9 by12 rug yr old $45 947 8827Big green office desk, of the sturdysteel post office variety, $40 Call 3637671, evenings exp teacher Youth, 4:30; adultbeginner, 7 00, intermediate, 8 00Private lessons too 5210 Harper, N071060IM REFS NEEDEDMeeting for all students interested inbecoming referees for women'sintramurals. Wed Oct 8, 6 30 pm.,rm 203 INHGAY LIBERATIONFIRST MEETING OF THE YEARESPECIALLY FOR NEW PEOPLEWed Oct 8th at 7:30 pm in Ida Noyes,Sun Parlor, 3rd FloorSPSS CLASSLearn to use SPSS Statistical Packagefor transforming data, computingstatistics. 6 sessions, begins Oct. 14,$25 Computer time provided Callbefore Oct 10 for registration 7538409FEMINIST MEETINGUniversity Feminist Organizationmeets Mon Oct. 6 at 8 p.m. in the BlueGargoyle For more info, call 752 5655ENERGIZE SINGERS will give a concert ofvirtuoso madrigals from the 17thCentury, Bond Chapel Sunday, Oct 58 30 pm FREEWANTEDTwo or four drawer file cabinet Sandyor Norm, 947 9390 evenings.WOMEN'SINTRAMURALSUndergraduates, Graduates, Faculty,Staff, Participate in Volleyball andTennis Singles Form a team, join ateam, enter as an individual. Entriesdue October 6 Further informationavailable in INH 201, 3 3574CO-RECREATIONALVOLLEYBALLStudents, faculty, staff welcome everyMonday night 7.30 9:30 p.m Obtainfurther information and the requiredlocker pass in room 201 INHCO-RECREATIONALBADMINTON STUDENT STEREOStudent Stereo is back in businessStudent Stereo offers consistentlylow prices to anyone interested in highfidelity sound We can get almost any(over 120) line Of hifi equipment foryou, at a savingsAll equipment is brand new, with fullmanufacturer warranty We also offerto inspect your equipment, do the setup and installation, and handle allinitial problems by replacing orrepairing the unit.We don't push any one line Ofequipment, since we take the same 5%commission on everything we sell. Ofcourse, we do tend to favor themanufacturers whose products have agood record for performance, valueand durability.Whether you are in the market for anew needle or a full 'high end' system,give us a call We think we can saveyou money, and our advice is freeStudent Stereo, evenings from 7 to10, at 241 5752WOMEN'S MAGAZINEPrimavera, the women's literarymagazine, is on sale in all Hyde Parkbookstores and at the Ida Noyes infodesk.Chandler's Inc. 80th AnniversaryTEXTBOOK WAREHOUSE SALEOur entire warehouse stock of over1/ 2 million textbooks new and usedboth nardbound and paperbackcurrent editions and out of prints 50%or more off list price CASH ANDCARRY ONLY All sales final.Monday thru Saturday October 6th to11th, 9:00 am to 5:00 pm. Chandler'sInc Textbook Division 1019 UniversityPlace, Evanston, III. One block southof Emerson and 1/ 2 block west ofMaple. Directly across from theEvanston city yardsFor Sale. 1970 VW Bus—96000 mi.,but motor, clutch & exhaust only 16000mil., will need body work 8, tires$975 00 Call Bresnahan, 241 6514 (inHyde Park.)4000 BTU GE portable aircond., brandnew. $80 Call 493 4190 even, wknds.Lyric Opera tickets Elektra Oct 14Two good upper balcony seats, $8 00each 241 7751AMERICA'S BESTMAGAZINE STOREBOB'S NEWSSTANDYES! 1512 DIFFERENT TITLESEverything from ecology to hanggliding Science fiction to eroticaThousands of underground comixMarvel, DC, as well British PressDaily, New York Times Daily, 6 a mSUN 7 a m Cigarettes, candy, coldpop, lottery tickets A great place to goand avoid reality Building looks likered brick bunker corner of 5100 LakePark Mon to Fri 7am 6pm Sat 7am9pm. Sun 6am 5pm. Truly a periodicalfreaks garden of earthly delights.PART-TIME JOBSLighting assistants for MandelProductions Training required $3 perhour when work is available 3 3581 forinfoHYDE PARK-KENWOODAPARTMENT RE¬FERRAL SERVICE:Assistance available to personsseeking housing in this neighborhoodthrough the South East ChicagoCommission, Call Helaine Billings at324 6926GUITAR CLASSESLearn to play guitar at The Fret Shop,starting Mon Oct 6 Small classes, Get in touch with your own naturalenergy flow Workshop based onbioenergetics, yoga, gestault. BeginsMon Oct. 6th 7 30 9 30 at theGargoyle. Based on Jack Rosenberg'stext., Total Orgasm Led by DobbiKerman.LOX & BAGELBRUNCHEVERY Sun morn at 11. Cost $1 75HILLEL HOUSE, 5715 WoodlawnARE YOUINTERESTED INFOLK SINGING?Yiddish 8. Hebrew folk singing groupbeing organized at Hillel House, 5715Woodlawn Bring your owninstruments Piano players wantedFirst meeting Monday Oct , 6, 8 P MLOVINGLOVING, ENERGY, 8. AUTONOMYA BASIS FOR CREATIVEINTERDEPENDENCE A workshopbased on Jack Rosenberg's text. TotalOrgasm, Begins at the Gargoyle Mon.Oct. 6,7 30 9 30 p.m Methodologyyoga, bio energetics, tantra, gestaltPrereq skim text 8. consentinstructor. Text at Booknook, Kroch'sor 1st meeting 8 sessions $30 Led byDobbie Kerman who has taught YOGAclasses on campus since 1971 Forinfor 288 3706, SU7 4435 (messages).YOGA & ENERGYWORKSHOPSNew rates allowing substantialsavings will be offered this quarter forthose wishing to participate in morethan one Yoga session per week or inany combination of Yoga classes andthe special Energy Workshop entitled,Loving, Energy 8, Autonomy, based onbio energetics, yoga, reich, etc 8 Yogaclasses, one/ week $25, 16 Yogaclasses, two/ week $40, a savings of$10 8 Energy Workshop sessions $30 8Yoga classes & 8 Energy Workshops,$40, a savings of $15 16 Yoga classes 8,8 Energy Workshop sessions $60, asavings of $20 Yoga classes begm thisweek, Monday Oct 6 8. WednesdayOct 8, 5 30 7:15 p.m. The EnergyWorkshop begings this week onMonday Oct 6 directly after Yoga,from 7 :30 9 30 pm All sessions are atthe Blue Gargoyle, 5655 S UniversityFor info call Dobbi Kerman 288 3706 orher answering service SU7 4435CONCERTThe CHICAGO MONTEVERDILOVING, ENERGY AND AUTONOMYA BASIS FOR CREATIVE INTERDEPENDENCEA workshop based on Jack Rosenberg s text TotalOrgasm. Methodology drawn from YOGA BIO-ENfcRGETICS, TANTRA. REICH, and GESTALT.The Workshop will be led by Dobbi Kerman whohas been teaching yoga on campus since 1971.The workshop will be held on campus at the BlueGargoyle, 5655 University on Monday eveningsbeginning Oct. 6 from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.Part of the work we will be doing will be alone andpart in pairs so it is recommended but not essentialyou bring a friend.Prerequisite-familiarity with text and consent of in¬structor. The text, Total Orgasm is available at TheU of C Bookstore or at the first meeting.This is a workshop and the text on which it is basedis an opportunity for mature individuals to exploremethods to enrich their own lives. It is not atherapy or a substitute for therapy.8, 2 hour sessions $30. Wear comfortable clothes &bring a blanket or rug.For further information call Dobbi at 288-3706, orleave a message at SU 7-4435• «« Every Wednesday night for ailstudents, faculty and staff, 7 30 9 30pm Obtain information and therequired locker pass in rm 201 INHBLACKFRIARSMembership meeting Tues Sept 307 30 Ida Noyes HallCOMPUTATIONCENTERFall quarter class schedule nowavailable Courses in FORTRAN,SPSS and JCL Seminars in WYLBUR,TSO and an intro to computers Cometo the Comp Center or call 753 8409 fordetailsMENNONITESNew to Hyde Park and interested inmeeting other Mennos? For info reinformal Menno group, call Sutters241 7028KOSHER MEATBuying Cooperative, Organizationalmeeting Thurs , Oct 9 , 5 30, Hellel. Allinterested persons are welcomePAN PIZZADELIVERY .The Medici Delivers from 5 10 p.m.weekdays, 5 11 Saturday, 667 7394Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourself CONCERTThe CHICAGO MONTEVERDISINGERS will give a concert ofvirtuoso madrigals from the 17thCentury, Bond Chapel Sunday, Oct. 58 30 p.m. FREENATURAL FOODSDinners & snacks at the Blue Gargoyleweeknights 6 p m Full Dinner $2 25OMNIASee our large ad, get a free giftUNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST. 1CLOSED MONDAYS684-3661HairstylingRazor cutsenaaaement 9k weddina rlnfisCUSTOM OISIONIO OtIOIMALS A LIMITID EDITIONSBACCARA cccrCOLO FROM UO SILVERff you like, youmay choosefrom a finecollection ofdiamonds andother gemsTO 6 ABEGINNING AUTUMN QUARTER ON MONDAY, OC¬TOBER 6TH AND WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8TH, YOGACLASSES WILL BE OFFERED ON CAMPUS AT THE BLUEGARGOYLE, 5655 UNIVERSITY.MONDAY CLASSES WILL MEET FROM 5:30 TO 7:15P.M. WEDNESDAY CLASSES WILL MEET FROM 5:30 TO7:15 P.M.ALL STUD NTS ARE ENCOURAGED TO PRACTICE YOGAAT THEIR OWN LEVEL.CLASSES WILL BE LED BY DOBBI KERMAN WHO HASTAUGHT YOGA FOR STUDENT ACTIVITIES AT THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 1971-1973, ANO AT THEBLUE GARGOYLE 1973-1975 AND AT THE ILLINOIS IN¬STITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY IN 1975.YOGA WILL INCLUDE ASANAS (HATHA YOGAPOSTURES), PRANAYAMA (BREATH CONTROL),ENERGIZATION, MEDITATION, RELAXATION, ANDCHANTING.8 SESSIONS $23—16 SESSIONS $45REGISTRATION WILL BE OPEN UNTIL SPACE IF FILLED.PLEASE WEAR COMFORTABLE CLOTHES AND BRING ABLANKET. CLOTHES THAT STRETCH WITH YOU AREPREFERABLE.INFO. CALL DOBBI 288-3706, ANSWERING SERVICE SU7-4435.A PERFECT BALANCE TO THE LIFE OF THf MIND.v » o .* V v. »J- «’* »v» V t i I t t lCHEESE SALE70 Cheeses to Choose from at Low Prices5 Flavors To Choose FromJARLSBERGGOURMANDISESWITZERLAND SWISS . . . Grade A Large Eye \SOCIETY BEE ROQUEFORT 2BRI E Flown in specially to insure freshness ^2BEL PAESE Original Italian 3DANISH ESROM PORT SALUT l7*WINE SALE 75 perPOUND79 PERPOUND85 perPOUND99 perPOUNDPERPOUND39 perPOUNDPERPOUNDMADEN HSU* SAUTERNECHABLIS A75!■ GallonFRENCH RED RHONE WINE COTEUX TRICASTIN 169■ FifthGERMAN LIEBFRAUMILCH 149■ fifthFRENCH BEAUJOLAIS 1791 FifthBEER SALECARLING'S BLACK LABELSCHLITZ 12 Oz.24 Cans39 12 Oz.CansComplete PartyService From2427 East 72nd STREETBA 1-9210 Appetizers to Zinfanoel351 East 103rd Street568-1811DAILY: 10 A.M.-9 PM.16-The Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 3, 1975 SUNDAY: Noon -6 P.M.