Chicago Moro onVOL. 85, NO. 43 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1976SG Raises Tuition FurorSG President Alex Spinrad makes a point in the recent SG meeting, as does Assemblymember Bill Diskin.Registered Voters ChallengedBy Dan WiseFifteen registered votersin a University marriedstudent building have beenordered by the ChicagoBoard of Elections to “showcause’’ why their namesshould not be removed fromthe voter registration rollsfor not living at the addressat which they are registered.Notices were servedWednesday to fifteenresidents, fourteen of themwomen, requiring them toappear in City Hall byTuesday, March 2nd, toaffirm that they still live attheir registered address. TheUniversity building in¬volved, which has a total of74 registered voters, islocated at 5107 SouthBlackstone Ave.The women were ap¬parently chosen becausetheir names did not appearon the doorbells in the lob¬by-according to buildingpolicy, only the husband’snames appear. The fifteenthresident, Rich Fogelsong,apparently is listed as“Richard” on the rolls, whileappearing as “Rick” on thedoorbell.According to ElectionBoard officials, electionjudges canvassing for voterremovals are supposed toobtain “definite knowledge”that a voter has movedbefore serving a “showcause” notice. According toJames Machinis, Chief Clerkof the Election Board, theelection judges, who aresworn in by the board but arechosen by ward com¬mitteemen, are supposed tocontact the buildingmanagement and to ring thebells. He added that, despitethe indication on the cardsordering the voter to appearin person, the board willaccept signed letters from the individuals who havereceived notices declaringthat they indeed live at theplace in question.Ms. Mickey Park, whoreceived a notice, said thatworkers for independentcongressman Ralph Met¬calfe’s reelection campaigncautioned her and otherchallenged voters that,according to the electioncode, they are required toappear in person. TheMetcalfe campaign, ac¬cording to Ms. Rubin, aspokesperson, is organizingcarpools to take the votersdowntown Saturday. Shesaid that her office has beenassured by election Boardofficials that individualsigned letters would be ac¬cepted but that they aretaking the voters to the officein person “just to be on thesafe side.”Ms. Rubin also indicatedthat Election Board officialshad told her that they wereaccepting the letters, whichis a departure from standardpolicy, because of the “greatvolume” of voter removalnotices that have been issuedso far.Mary Truman, the electionjudge who served the 15notices, failed to discovertwo voters who had in factchanged their addresses,according to Ms. Rubin.Ms. Rubin pointed out thatMs. Truman also erred infailing to obtain thesignature of the other can¬vassing election judge beforesubmitting the voterremoval notices. She notedthat it was “very curious”that her office has received anumber of similar com¬plaints of voter purges“centering in precincts inthe fifth ward. It is veryclear that there are a highnumber of independentvoters in this ward.”The Maroon Editorial Any person or groupBoard, in its regular wishing to make a presen-Tuesday meeting, will make tation to the Editorial Boardits decision on endorsements in behalf of a candidate forfor the March 16 primary office should come to theThe Maroon will endorse meeting Tuesday at 2:30 incandidates, both Democrat the Maroon Offices on theand Republican, in various third floor of Ida Noyes. Anyraces. presentation must be brief. She questioned 5th wardcommitteeman MichaelIgoe’s motives in appointingMs. Truman an electionjudge in this ward, since shedoes not live in the wardAccording to Mr. Machinis ofthe election board, it isallowable for the com¬mitteeman to appoint onejudge from outside theprecinct, if he does not havesufficient applicants fromwithin the area. Mr. Igoe,who has recently been in¬volved in a controversy overallegedly forged signatureson petitions nominating himfor reelection, wasunavailable for commentbefore presstime.Ms. Rubin described anincident where all of theresidents of an apartmentbuilding in the Woodlawnarea were served with “showcause” notices because thecanvasser thought thebuilding, which was stillstanding, “was a vacantlot.” Ms. Rubin noted thefact that one of the residentsof the building was an activeMetcalfe worker. By John MilkovichStudent Government fSG)drew the battle lines for amajor student-administration confrontationMonday night, as passing aresolution authorizing theSG’s Executive Council toplan demonstrations andpicketing to protest nextyear’s tuition increases.The increases, along withthe administration’s failureto justify or consult with thestudents over the tuitionhike, drew the ire of SGPresident Alex Spinrad,author of the resolution, whoasked assembly members ifthey were willing torelinquish control of theireducation to “those few whopretend to know better thanus.”Mr. Spinrad’s resolution,drawn in response to theadministration’s an¬nouncement of tuition in¬creases ranging from a hikeof $210 per year in theCollege to a high of $360 peryear in the Law School,called for the presence of anadministration represen¬tative at the next SG meetingto explain the increase. Theresolution also gave theExecutive Council theauthorization to conducttuition strikes, studentprotests, a media campaignand the right to enlist the aidof public officials in com¬bating the hike.A tense debate followedthe introduction of thelegislation in which itscritics argued that theresolutions forcefulmeasures would not affectthe decision of the Ad¬ministration and would onlyalienate and sever com¬munication between bothparties. Mr. Spinrad repliedthat students had already tried the “niceness ap¬proach” in such matters andasked the legislative body“where that has gotten us.”Mr. Spinrad said SG wasprepared to “harass the hellout of them (the ad¬ministration)” if necessary.The resolution wasamended to ask forjustification of the tuition byno representative of theadministration other thanPresident John Wilson whenundergraduate represen¬tative Marty Simonsdeclared, “We’re tired ofdealing with thesemiscellaneous ad¬ministration wimps-we wantthe head of this operation!”SG finally stamped its ap¬proval on the amendedlegislation by voting 44-19 infavor and has issuedPresident Wilson a formalinvitation to attend the nextSG meeting.In other legislative ac¬tivity conducted Mondaynight, the SG reviewed aresolution offered by theNational Lawyers Guildproposing that SG formallydeclare its opposition toSenate Bill 1. Senate Bill 1sanctions governmentwiretapping and allows thedeath penalty for reportersthat reveal governmentsecrets. SG membersdeemed Senate Bill 1 an infringement on citizens’rights and urged its defeatwith near unanimous con¬sent.A final decision on acontroversial proposaladvocating partial control ofthe campus media by SG hasbeen tentatively postponedpending a recommendationby CORSO It is expected,however, that CORSO willpresent its recommendationfor SG approval within thecoming weeks.Third-year geographystudent Roger Deschner waselected chairman of theElection and Rules Com¬mittee, filling the postvacated by the resignation ofBob Tomchik. Mr Tomchik,who unsuccessfully opposedAlex Spinrad in the last SGpresidential election, con¬tends that SG is not doinganything for the students.Said Mr. Tomchik, “It’sreached the point ofdiminishing returns.”Phillip Grew, SG PublicRelations Coordinator, hasannounced that there are 16vacancies in the graduatedivision of SG and 10vacancies in the un¬dergraduate division.Persons interested in fillingthese vacancies should at¬tend the SG meeting to beheld next Monday at 7 p m.in Harper 130.Booth Charges ForgeryUniversity ProfessorWayne C. Booth has claimedthat his signature on anominating petition for 5thward Democratic com¬mitteeman candidateMichael L. Igoe was aforgery.In a letter to the HydePark Herald. Mr. BoothKatz Discusses Jeffersonian DemocracyBy Michele Pleskow“Pure republican theoryhad only a very briefmoment of triumph inAmerica; 1776 to 1787 may bethough of as the republicanyears...1776 in particular,and the late 1770’s in general,constituted the Jefersonianmoment in Americanhistory.”Stanley N. Katz, Professorof Legal History at the LawSchool, made the “Jef¬fersonian moment” thetheme of the second “1776:The Revolution in SocialThought” lecture presentedWednesday in the LawSchool Auditorium.Mr. Katz dealt withThomas Jefferson’s thoughtson man’s nature, hisgovernment, and his right toproperty, concluding with adescription of the giving wayof Jeffersonian idealism toHamiltonain Federalism inthe 1780’s. He emphasizedJefferson’s notions of man’s right to property and theimportance of this right inconnection with his theoriesof republican government.He pointed to Jefferson'slegislative contributions inVirginia during 1776 as aconcrete example of hisbelief in property rights.“Jefferson was tremen¬dously proud of the billsabolishing primogenitureand entail and he was to laterclaim that they formed ‘asystem by which every fibrewould be eradicated of anancient of futurearistocracy; and a foun¬dation laid for a governmenttruly republican.’ ”Mr. Katz discussed theimportance Jefferson placedon the relationship betweenindividual propertyownership and the func¬tioning of republicangovernment.“In the early days of hiscareer Jefferson was firmlywedded to the notion thatland ownership and the tilling of one’s own soil wasnot only good economics butgood politics. It was only-through independent laborthat a man could divesthimself of subordination tosuperiors and cultivate thatinner strength upon whichrepublicans depended.”The problems in obedienceand enforcement that wereineveitable in a state inwhich authority came fromthe bottom, was the subjectof the latter part of MrKatz’s lecture.Mr. Katz illustrated thistheoretical dilemma asfollows: “in a republic. . . obedience wouldhave to be self-imposed,since government was ex¬plicitly denied any coerciveprinciple exixting in¬dependently of popularsovereignity.”“This notion of publicvirtue was at the core ofrepublican thought and it inKATZ TO 14 noted the inacurate spellingof his name on the petition,sent to him in France by afriend He pointed to thedifference in writing style asfurther proof that forgerywas committed.“I was distressed, but notespecially surprised." MrBooth wrote. A 14 yearresident of Hyde Park and aregistered Democrat. MrBooth is currently on a leaveof absence from the EnglishDepartment.Herman Battles, whosesignature on the petition asits circulator could result inan indictment of him. deniedany know ledge of the petitionor its contents. He told theHyde Park Herald that he“paid a neighbor” to cir¬culate the petition for himThat, action could also begrounds for criminalprosecution.Cook County State’s At¬torney Bernard Carey saidFriday that the Booth letterwas “sufficient ground” foran investigation. It isdoubtful that any decisionwill be forthcoming from MrCarey's office before March16, the date of the electionbetween Mr Igoe and hisopponent, Alan Dobry.Mr Igoe was slated by theRegular DemocraticOrganization to run for thecommitteeman’s post beingvacated by Marshall Kor-shak.NEWS BRIEFSConference On EconomicsThe University of ChicagoConference on theEconomics of FinancingGovernment will be held thisweekend on Sunday,February 29.The Conference willfeature a variety of speakersfrom the University and thebusiness community.Major presentations willbe made by: MiltonFriedman, Professor ofEconomics at the Univer¬sity; Robert Eisner,Chairman of Economics atNorthwestern and formeradvisor to George McGovernduring his 1972 PresidentialCampaign; Arthur Laffer,Associate Professor in theBusiness School; NatWeinberg, member of theNational Commission onSupplies and Shortages andformer director of the Special Projects andEconomic AnalysisDepartment of the UnitedAuto Workers; and JonGunthci, executive directorof the U.S. Conference ofMayors.Topics for discussion willinclude: revenue sharing,increasing fiscal burdens oflocal governments, thegrowing power of municipallabor unions, the federalgovernment as a competitorfor available credit, and theconsequences of deficitspending.The Conference will beheld at 2 pm in Mandel Hall.Tickets are $3.00 for generaladmission, $2.00 for studentsand staff of the Universityand Northwestern and maybe purchased at ReynoldsClub. For further in¬formation call 753-3591. Metcalfe *Ralph Metcalfe,Congressman from the 1stCongressional District willbe on campus today at 12:00noon in Reynolds Club.Mr. Metcalfe is currentlyrunning for re-election andwill speak on his campaignin the Hyde Park-Kenwoodarea. LectureArchitect Louis Skidmore,of the firm Skidmore,Owenings and Merrill, willdiscuss the architecture inthe city of Chicago as part ofPierce Tower ResidentMaster Kenneth Northcott’sseries, “Know Your City.”Mr. Skidmore’s firmdesigned such buildings asOAK FURNITURE-ANTIQUESRCFINISHID + AS IS1649 E. 55th667-43601-6:00 PMTUES.-SAT. DesksTablesChairsDressersBookcasesMuchMoreWe Also DoRefinishing9AM-9PM TDoyiAWekHYDE PARK PIPE AND TOBACCO SHO£1552 E. 53rd - under 1C tracksAll students get 10%L C "n:_ i:_< < T /Imported Cigarette*Cigareask for "Big Jim'Pipe*Pipe Tobacco* '•> f rthe Sears Tower and theHancock Center.The informal talk, to beheld Sunday, February 29 at 8:00 in Mr. Northcott’sapartment in Pierce Tower,will be followed by questionand answer period andrefreshments.IyIDDish FILM “UJitK subtitles nilleJ5"?l 5" cooodlouoriTHE CANTOR’S SON (iQHO)dLrerJtedLb^ ILYA MOTYLOFFj^vtVv rbo\sVN«. oe,Pibcxcba. r\eA , a/rv& P^icWafelU. of C. Court Theatre presentsEXITS AND ENTRANCESa revue about theatre directed by Nick Rudall to celebrate the opening ofTHE NEW THEATREReynolds Club, 1st floor Fri., Sat. & Sunday Feb. 27, 28, 29 March 5 (sold out), 6,78:30 P.M. $2.50, $1.50 students753-3581HYDE PARK'S BIGGEST CHEESE SELECTION AND LOWEST PRICESTltc Ffojiug Lax “BaxTHE GREAT SANDWICH SALECORNED BEEF *1°°ROAST BEEF *1°°HOT DOG 49*HAMBURGER *1°°SALAMI *1°°RUEBEN * 1 *°DOG IN A MANGER 75*DEUTSCHERDOG 69*CHEESEBURGER *1”HOT PASTRAMI *1°° $2**$ J 99THE NEAR GREATCHEESE SALEGREEK FETA Per Lb.ENGLISH WENSLYDALE Per Lb.ILE DE FRANCE BRIE NOVEAUX Per Lb. *2"ILE DE FRANCE FRENCH GOAT Per Lb. *369CANADIAN BLACK DIAMOND CHEDDARl!:2"PIPO-CREME Per Lb. *3"GRAND TOAST CREME H AVART Per Lb. * 179ENGLISH STILTON PerLb.*279CASINO MEUNSTER Per Lb. * 169HOURS:M-F 10A.M.-6 P.M.SAT. 10 A.M.-9 P.M.SUN. 8 A.M.-3 P.M. The Exclusive Agents for Dr. Brown's SodaTke Ryfag jCwc Bo* Sale thru March 25500 S. CORNELL241-7050 or 241-70512 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 27, 1976By David BlumThough little of PresidentJohn T. Wilson’s speech to aCommercial Club of Chicagoluncheon Febrary 11 con¬tained anything newsworthy,much lies between the linesof his prepared text.The speech, which was notpublicly released, wasdirected at an audience of 150 business and civicleaders who belong to the all¬male Commercial Club. Theaudience included con¬tributors — both past andpotential — to the Univer¬sity’s $280 million Campaignfor Chicago.The thrust of thePresident’s address was theplight of the privateMODEUCAMERHANIMEX LENSSALEPentax mt. 200m/3.5 5995Pentax mt. 35m/2.8 4495Can. mt. 35m/2.8 4995Mm. or Nik mt. 4999135m/2.8SAII Lenses Have A 5 Year Guarantee1342 E. 55th 493-6700IIIIIIIIIIBB University. Citing theUniversity of Chicago’sunique and superior staturein the academic community.Mr. Wilson carried on atradition of his predecessorsin speaking to the club, — butalso used the forum to ad¬vance the cause of theUniversity.On Monday, February 23,the Chicago Trubine adaptedMr. Wilson’s speech to theclub into an editorial, partsof which appeared in lastTuesday’s Maroon, sup¬porting private contributionsto the University of Chicago.“The University sent us acopy of the speech just as itsends us a variety of speeches and news releasesfor our consideration aspossible editorial subjects,”said John McCutcheon,editorial page editor of theANALYSISTribune. “I read it andpassed it along to oureducation specialist, AlfredAmes.”Mr. McCutcheon notedthat they receive speechesfrom a variety of interestgroup, and said that no morethan 1 or 2 a month becomethe subject or the startingSt. Gregory of Nyssa Lutheran Campus Parish Churchat The University of Chicagoinvites you to join in celebratingTHE FEAST OF THE TRANSFIGURATIOHSunday, February 29,1976Coffee and preparation at 10:00 a.m.Eucharist at 10:30 a.m.Classical guitar and violin musicIn Graham Taylor Memorial Chapel5757 S. University (NE corner of 58 & Univ.)cO>lMERCfiUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO CONFERENCE ONTHE ECONOMICS OF FINANCINGGOVERNMENTSponsored by FORUM, withMILTON FRIEDMAN NATHAN WEINBERGROBERT EISNER JOHN GUNTHERARTHUR LAFFERSUNDAY. 29 FEB. 1976 2:00 P.M.MANDEL HALL • 57th & UNIVERSITYGeneral admission: S3.OO UC student/staff/faculty: 52.00Tickets available at Reynolds Club Desk and the Student Activities Office SUMMER ROUND TRIPNEW YORK TO LONDON$265MUST RESERVE 65DAYS IN ADVANCE.CALL TOLL FREE9 TO 9(800) 847-7196NOVA CHARTER C0RP.ITHACA, NEW YORK. point of a Tribune editorial.“If we see a line ofreasoning that seems in¬teresting or worthwhile, thenwe’ll consider an editorial.Wilson’s speech containedsome ideas we supported andwishes to endorse.”Vice-President for PublicAffairs and chief Universityspokesman D.J.R. Brucknersaid Tuesday that he sent thespeech to the Tribune on therequest of one of theirwriters.“Out of fairness, we alsosent it to the Sun-Times andthe Daily News editorialboards,” Mr. Bruckneradded.Failure to give the Maroona text of the speech was “an oversight,” Mr. Brucknersaid. The Maroon firstlearned of the speech fromthe Tribune’s Mondayeditorial.Mr. Bruckner noted that itwas not “usual procedure”to release the text of aspeech made to a privatemeeting, though he concededthat such an event wouldwarrant Maroon coverage —a view echoed by theTribune’s editorial pageeditor, John McCutcheon.“If I worked for thestudent newspaper andwasn’t told about a speechthe President made and hadto read about it in theTribune, I’d sure be in¬sulted.”ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and Woodlawn Ave.SUNDAY • FEBRUARY 29 • 1 1 A.M.J. COERT RYLAARSDAMProfessor of Old Testament, Marquette UniversityProfessor Emeritus, The University of Chicago"THE WORD OF GOD"SUNDAY SEMINAR9:45 A.M. to 10:45 A.M.Chapel undercroft: Bernard O. Brown con¬ducts a study of Hunting the Divine Fox byRobert Farrar Capon.SUNDAY AFTERNOONAT THE CHAPEL4 O'clock P.M.PLAINSONG VESPERS: Feast of the Tran¬sfiguration of Our Lord.Larry J. Hofer, Homilist; Lowell Albee, Of¬ficiant; Thomas Weisflog, organist;Augustana Lutheran Church Choir, RolfCharlston, Choirmaster.Gilbert and Sullivansin Mandel HallFRI. FEB. 27 8 P.M.SAT. FEB. 28 1:30 P.M.8:00 P.M. GONDOLIERSTickets at Reynolds Club$4.00 and $2.50Hitchcock Films PresentsWOODY ALLENTAKE THE MONEY AND RUNFRIDAY, FEB. 276:30,8:15,10:00 COBB*1Friday, February n, IV/6 - The Chicago Maroon - 3EDITORIALSMetcalfe For CongressVoters in the local 1st Congressional District havean opportunity, and a responsibility to participate in ahistoric decision on March 16. For on that day, thepeople’s right to choose their own representatives,rather than to accept the hand picked puppets of apolitical boss, will be put to the test.In three terms as our voice in Washington, U.S. Rep.Ralph H. Metcalfe, a Democrat, has served withdistinction. His voting record in Congress has beenconsistently progressive, reflecting a great sensitivityto the needs and views of his constituents. At the sametime, Rep. Metcalfe has proven responsive to theindividual problems of 1st District residents byassiduously answering their pleas for assistance.However, Rep. Metcalfe has also added a welcomedimension to the role of Congressman. Unlike manyother local Democratic politicians, whose politicalsouls are owned by Mayor Richard J. Daley, Rep.Metcalfe has courageously demonstrated hiswillingness to speak out on behalf of his constituent’sinterests — even when those interests conflict withthose of Boss Daley.For 25 years, Rep. Metcalfe was a loyal member ofthe Daley organization. Then, in 1972, two prominentblack residents of the 1st District were brutallyassaulted by Chicago police. An enraged Metcalfeopenly defied Boss Daley by empaneling a BlueRibbon Commission to investigate police misconduct.Since that time, Rep. Metcalfe has repeatedlyplaced the interests of the people above the interests ofthe Boss. In 1975, he supported former Aid. WilliamSinger, an independent, in the Democratic mayoralprimary.Now the Mayor is attempting to crush his one-timelieutenant for these very things — for audaciouslyserving as a people’s advocate, rather than a soldier ofthe Machine. Boss Daley has slated his assistant,former Chicago Model Cities director Erwin France,for Rep. Metcalfe’s seat, and is using every form ofpressure at his disposal to force his choice on thepeople of the 1st District.Although we feel France’s undistinguished tenure asModel Cities head, coupled with his lack of legislativeexperience, renders his candidacy less than at¬tractive, his qualifications are not the issue.Ralph Metcalfe has done an outstanding job inWashington and Chicago, risking his political futurefor high principles. It takes great courage to confrontBoss Daley in the heart of this Machine-ridden city.Through threats, coercion, and a liberal sprinkling ofthe almighty buck, the Boss has enjoyed virtual freereign at the polls.On March 16, this free reing must be checked. Rep.Metcalfe must not be expledded for doing his job toowell. We urge our readers to reject Boss Daley’spower play and vote for Rep. Ralph Metcalfe in theMarch 16 Democratic primary.Public Information Goes PrivateStarting out from the Chicago Tribune’s editorialpage last Monday was that newspaper’s reflections ona speech John Wilson made at a Commercial Club ofChicago luncheon on February 11—aimed at solicitingmoney for the University’s “Campaign for Chicago.”The Tribune endorsed the principle of donatingmoney to an institution like the University of Chicago,which is largely dependent on private support.But the Maroon, even if it had wanted to report onthe speech, couldn’t have done so—because of whatthe University’s Vice-President for Public Affairs D.J. R. Bruckner called “an oversight” in not sending acopy of the speech to the Maroon.He sent a copy on request to the Tribune’s educationeditorial writer, who’d heard about the speechbecause he knows members of the Commercial Club.And Mr. Bruckner—“in fairness,” he says—sentcopies to the editorial boards of the Daily News andSun-Times. But he forgot to send one to the Maroon,the University of Chicago’s only newspaper.This isn’t the first time Mr. Bruckner forgot theMaroon. Earlier this year, the Office of Public In¬formation rushed an announcement to all the citynewspapers, The New York Times, and TheWashington Post, that a press conference wasscheduled to announce the merger of the Adlai E.Stevenson Institute of International Affairs with the4 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 27, 1976 University of Chicago. But if it hadn’t been for a tipfrom a newspaper reporter downtown, the Maroonwouldn’t have known about that either—because,according to Mr. Bruckner, the Office of Public In¬formation “forgot” to tell the Maroon about it.The Maroon has been criticized in the past, oftendeservedly, for not providing the University com¬ munity with comprehensive coverage of campus newsevents. We wanted to know about the Wilson speechand the Institute change-over so that we could keepthe University of Chicago community better informed.We are always trying to improve—but without thecooperation of the University’s own publicitymechanism, it will be difficult to succed at our en¬deavor.COMMENT SG: Knee-jerk Liberalism TriumphsBy Jan Rhodes“You don’t have thegraduate roll?” queriedStudent Government (SG)president Alex Spinrad,incredulous. In the middle ofcalling the roll at Mondaynight’s SG meeting, the SGSecretary discovered shedidn’t have the list ofgraduate studentrepresentatives.Mr. Spinrad turned to thechuckling group ofrepresentatives and spec¬tators in Quantrell Hall,draped himself over thestage’s podium, and pleaded,‘‘There’s a roll in the SGoffice if anyone who’s not arepresentative wants to goget it.”So ended the prologue toMonday night’s SG theatrics.Such in-depth analysis andincisive commentary wasequalled only in the final twoacts — the passage of two ill-advised resolutions.The thought behind bothresolutions, one condemningSenate Bill 1 (the CriminalJustice Reform Act of 1975),and the other denouncing thetuition hike and requestingaccountability fromPresident Wilson, arecommendable. But SG’sfinished products leavemuch to be desired.The one-and-a-half pageSenate Bill 1 (Si) resolutionis lengthy, as far as SGresolutions go. But then, so isthe 753 page bill, a draft for arevision of the Federalcriminal code. The resolution opens with anoverview paragraph, listseight vague populararguments against SI, andends in four short resolves,insisting that the currentcriminal code needsreforming and that Si is notthe way.In addition, House Bill10850 is urged as a substitute.No portion of HR1085 isactually quoted or referredto and scant references to Siare not thoroughly iden¬tified.The worthy person fromthe Lawyer’s Guild, the lawschool student organizationwhich submitted theresolution, quickly pointedout that the length andcomplexity of Si makes itimpossible for a lay personto comprehend the entirebill.One brave SG rep, wary toswallow the liberal bait,insisted that he couldn’t votewithout the facts before him.But that didn’t bother themajority; they rejectedEmily Turnbull’s suggestionto vote on each resolveseparately — a way tocondemn Si without sup¬porting HR10850 — andswallowed hook, line, andsinker.Never mind that no oneknew what HR10850 actuallysaid. Never mind that theresolution contained noexcerpts or references asproof of SG’s indictments.And as proof of SG’s con-petency and diligence.In typical knee-jerk liberal fashion, GS adopted theresolution.But there was yet anotherexample of GS’s lack ofcircumspection impatientlywaiting in the wings.A resolution on the tuitionincrease, heartily supportedby SG president Spinrad,was introduced in the finalminutes of Monday’sgathering. The resolutionstates that SG deplores theunfair tuition hike and,among other subpoints,requests President Wilson toappear before SG and an¬swer questions. It falls intothe category of just one morerotten thing the Ad¬ministration has done, andone more attempt by anembittered SG to assertpower.Someone aptly pointed outthat it is unusual to firstcondemn an action and thendemand justification. Thatdidn’t bother the majority.They happily debated theresolution and ironed out afew wording problems. Ms.Turnbull proposed a sub-stiture for Mr. Spinrad’sresolution, but no one paidany attention, since Mr.Spinrad kept ruling her outof order, which she wasn’t,and the assembly supportedMr. Spinrad’s ruling.SG would have been moreeffective if it had split thetwo parts of the resolution.First, demand thatPresident Wilson appearbefore SG and explain theincrease. However, SGknows that it might as wellDEPT OF MICROBIO: "DN ACALENDARFRIDAYFOLKDANCING: All levels, teachingfor one hour, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.INDIA ASSOC FILM: Garam Haw a,Judd Hall, 7 and 9 30 pm, $1.50. Misrepair" by Dr Mortimer Elkind, 4pm, CLSC 87GEOPHY COLLOQUIUM: RoyMackal on "The Hypothesis thatLarge Fish Predators inhabit LochNess' 3:30 pm Auditorium HenryHinds LaboratoryGEOPHY DEPT: "How LavasProduce Continents and Oceans" byAlfred Anderson, 1:30 pm Hinds 101FAR EASTERN STUDIES: seminarlecture by Richard Wilson on Chinaand the Third WorldchicogiMaroonEDITORSEditor Gage AndrewsNews editor John VailLayout j d PetersonAssociate editorsSports David RieserDarkroom Frank FoxNews Chip ForesterPeter CohnMike JonesDan WisePolitics David AxelrodContributing editorsDavid Blum Jan RhodesLisa Vogel StaffLandy Carien, Andrea Holliday,John Milkovich, Tom Meigs, MarthaConger, Aaron Filler, Scott Ziemba,Michael Dvorkin, Jean Tobin, JimKaplan, David Johnsen, Bob Zivin,Peter Eng, Mary Marfise, MikeSherberg, Ellen Clements, LibbyMorse, Ed Conner, David Jaffe,Cliford Krauss, Donna Jaffe,Miriam Schuchman, JohnHockenbery, John Docherty. R 11 phMohr. Kathleen BauersfeldBUSINESS STAFFManager Mike KlingensmithAd sales B.G. YovovichOffice Karol KennedyThe 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 studenfs,faculty or administration,EDITORIALS state the policy of thepaper, and unless otherwise nuted,represent tfje positions of theeditors. All dessenting opinion —LETTERS, COMMENTARY, andGAOFLIES— must be submitted tothe paper no later than two daysprior to the next issue, and must besigned The Maroon reserves the right to edit all submissions forpublicationCORRECTIONS may be broughtto the attention of the editors bywriting care of the Maroon office, orby calling the news office. Allcorrections will appear in thesoonest issue after the error isbrought to light.The OFFICES of the ChicagoMaroon are located at 1212 E 59thSt., Chicago, Illinois 60637. SUBSCRIPTIONS cover the threeregular academic quarters, and are$9 for the year, payable in advance.TELEPHONES of the ChicagoMaroon are: editorial office, 7533264, business office, 753 3266The OFFICE HOURS of the paperare 8:30 1 and 1 30 4 30 weekedays THE GONDOLIERS: Mandel Hall, 8pm Tickets at Reynolds ClubUC LAW WOMEN'S CAUCUS: paneldiscussion on "Remedies for SexDiscrimination in Higher Education"12:30 pm Law School Classroom IVIM'S: coed volleyball entries closeHILLEL: 6:30 pm, Adat Shalomdinner, H iI lei House $2.50SATURDAYDOC: Traffic by Jacques Tali, 7:15and 9:30 CobbTHE GONDOLIERS: Mandel Hall,130 and 8 00 pm. Tickets at ReynoldsClubHILLEL: 8 30 movie: The Cantor'sSon, Hillel House, $1 affiliates, $1.50others.CROSSROADS DINNER: homecooked meal $1.50a plate, 6 pm, 5621 S.Blackstone. Students welcome!KOREAN KARATE: Tae Kwon DoClub meets this morning at 11 am onfirst floor of BartlettREYNOLDS CLUB: now open from 1Call theMAROONCARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998as what you need from c10 used room size Rug to custom carpet. Specializingin Remnants & Mill returns al!a fraction of the origina:ost.iDecoration Colors anc•ualities Additional 10*/.iscount with this ad.free delivery demand that the RollingStones appear in Mandel.President Wilson hasn’t evenbothered to answer theirletter requestingclarification if his allegedbut infamous “universitywithout students’’statement.Then, after a refusal toexplain, condemn the tuitionrise and also Mr. Wilson’saction. If done in this way, noone can argue that SG actedunthinkingly orprematurely. An intelligentstudent assembly, trying toexhibit some grasp of wordlymatters, must at least givethe guy an opportunity tospeak. (Ironically though,one wonders what PresidentWilson could possibly saythat would satisfy SG.)SG adopted the two-pronged resolution, spurredonward by its frustrationwith its own inherentpowerlessness, and by a fire-and-brimstone call to actiondelivered by Mr. Spinrad,reminiscent of both BillyGraham and those bygonestudent protest days.‘‘We can all thank God welive in a free country,” saithMr. Spinrad — oddly enough,the same Mr. Spinrad whowants SG to exercise controlover WHPK and the Maroon.Too bad about SG’s per¬formance Monday night. Itabandoned an opportunity tomake a genuine, importantstatement of opinion, and toillustrate its corporate in¬telligence and competence.Maybe next time.5. So come play pool 8. foosballCONTEMPORARY CHAMBERPLAYERS AND DOUBLE CHORUS:8:30 pm in Rockefeller Chapel, free;Raply Shapey music directorSUNDAYBAHAI: informal discussion on "Whybe Holy," 6:30 pm Ida NoyesDOC: Samurai III by Hiroshi Inagki7:15 and 9:30 pm Cobb HallROCKEFELLER: 9:45 10:45 amstudy of Hunting the Divine Fox inchapel undercroft seminar room; 11am University Religious Service,sermon: The Word of God, preacher J.Rylaarsdam; Plainsong Vespers, 4pm, Pastor Larry Hofer will beHomilistCONCERT: I House, Home Room 3:30pmHILLEL: 11 am Lox and BagelBrunch, $1.75; 7:30 pm JewishWomen's Group Hillel House, freeCOMPUTER CLUB: weekly meeting,1 pm Reynolds Club N LoungeMONDAYCHESS: U.C. Chess Club, 7:00 pm, IdaNoyes, everyone welcome.KARATE: U.C Karate Club meets inIda Noyes, 6:30 pm 8:30 pm.IM'S: coed volleyball beginsKI-ArKlDO. Practice meditation andaction at 7 pm Bartlett GymGSB LECTURE: "EuropeanEconomic and Monetary Union:Where do we stand?" 3:301 pmRosenwald 15CHEMISTRY: Prof Yuan Lee onRecent Studies on Radical MoleculesKent 103 at 4 pmPIZZA !PLATTER1460 E. 53rdMl 3-2800FAST DELIVERY jAND PICKUP1The Chicago Maroon's Weekly Review of Opinion and the ArtsChicago Emerges as Folk Capital —"the new home of musicians and listeners."By David BlumMost aspiring young folk musicians, hitch¬hiking to New York City with guitar in hand,have probably never heard of The QuietKnight, The Earl of Old Town or TheAmazingrace.If fhey had, their thumbs would be pointedin Chicago's direction, and for good reason.In the span of only a few years, the nation'sentire folk scene has moved a thousandmiles west of Greenwich Village and caughtfire throughout the Second City.Today, folk music's biggest names arevying for Chicago's growing audiences. OneSaturday night in February, Odetta drew acapacity crowd to The Amazingrace inEvanston, while The Quiet Knight hostedTom Paxton.Backstage at The Amazingrace, Odetta —who achieved fame via the New York circuit— agreed that Chicago had become thenation's folk capital."There's more energy here," said thevocalist, best known for her renditions oftraditional folk ballads. "An unknown canarrive in town and actually get a jobplaying, because there are people here whowill listen."Enthusiastic applause for Odetfa'sopening act, Buffo the Clown, proved thatChicago's audiences are willing to acceptnew talent — even without a guitar. their continued efforts to satisfy both ar¬tistic needs and audience appreciation. Asrecognition, they have met with growingsuccess in booking big-name acts, such asRandy Newman, Tom Rush, and Chicago'sSteve Goodman, to capacity crowds.Futher down Lake Michigan's coast, deepwithin Chicago proper, is Lincoln Park —synonymous with musical activism in thecity ever since it was the home of demon¬strators during the 1968 DemocraticNational Convention. And Steve Goodman,along with a few other folksingers whooutlasted the protest, is now a co-owner andperformer at Chicago's top local folkshowcase — Somebody Else's Troubles —near the park.During the week, bartender, composerand co-owner Ed Holstein sings and oc¬casionally auditions local talent for apossible booking. On this night, however, thestage was turned over the Harry Waller, afavorite among club regulars.In the Old Town area — across the streetfrom Second City, Chicago's famed im-provisational comedy troupe's headquar¬ters — Fred Holstein, brother of Ed and alsoa bartender — manager at Troubles, camedown to the bar where he and so manyothers first became known as "Chicago'sOwn": The Earl of Old Town.Sweet Honey in the Rock"When I created Buffo, we faced a fightmarket," said Howard Buten, a formerRingling Brothers circus clown. "But threemonths ago, jobs began to materialize. NowI play here in Chicago two or three times amonth."After introducing Odetta to the crowd, oneof the club's managers — 25 year old Nor¬thwestern University graduate JefferyBeamsley — reflected on the success ofAmazingrace."We know that people want to hear goodfolk music, and we want to provide it morecomfortably than a night club atmosphereallows."Less than half of the capacity crowd sat inchairs — most were seated on the floor of theroom, which holds over 400 people. And,because no alcohol is permitted on thepremises, families were present in goodnumber, and children were a common sightat the club.The hall's $10,000 sound system is part of Owner Earl Pionke has seen hundreds ofmusicians pass through the doors of hisclub, and like the Holstein brothers, mostcome back to thank him for the opportunityhe provides. It was at the Earl where folkcountry star John Prine got his start — andlate last December, Prine came back go theEarl for a three day sell-out engagement.And while things like that keep the Earlout of fiscal hot water, it seems unlikely thatthe Earl would ever succumb to the hardship of recession — though the Old Townneighborhood has been in steady declinesince the 1960's. "I feel like I know the wallsat The Earl," says Steve Goodman, who alsorose to fame under the auspices of the OldTown night club. And most expect thosewalls to remain.Richard Harding once also owned a folkclub in Old Town, but this night he was at hisNew town venture, The Quiet Knight, whichhas succeeded in bringing such national actsas Tom Paxton to its stage. This, too, is a autoharpist who has performed at TheBottom Line in New York — have gottentheir start in Mandel Hall, the festival'shome.And for those who chose to remain athome, there was yet another optionavailable to folk afficianados: FM radiostation WFMT, known as Chicago's 'finearts' station.In 1953, an unknown classical music an¬nouncer named Mike Nichols — who is nowbetter known as a theater and film director— created "The Midnight Special," a pot¬pourri of Chicago folk music and comedy,now the city's top-rated show for adultaudiences during its time slot.The program also tries to provide anadditional showcase for unknown talent."When we hear somebody we like, we'llbring them into the studio to tape them,"said Ray Nordstrand, WFMT's generalmanager, who for years has been a majorforce in encouraging new talent. The showairs from 10:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. everySaturday night, and this week the show isending as Odetta is finishing her final set atAmazingrace.Beamsley, who is the club's host, tellsOdetta as she comes offstage that they haveinvited Sweet Honey in the Rock — aWashington, D.C. based group performingat the folk festival — to come onstage for abrief set. "It's all part of our efforts toshowcase new acts," Beamsley explains.As they conclude, Odetta reappears onstage to join the group of a capella singersfor a rare rendition of the hymn,"Amazing Grace.""It doesn't happen very often," saysBeamsley, "but it's a magical moment."And — by virtue of Amazingrace —Chicago has taken hold as the home of folkmusicians who seek work, and the listenerswho seek entertainment in the nation's newfolk music capital.Rudall Shines in“Exits and Entrances”By Dean ValentineIf you really want to enjoy yourself somenight this weekend (and the opportunitiesround campus aren't what they should be)then go see Exits and Entrances, a revuethat celebrates the opening of the NewTheatre in Reynolds ClubDirected by Nick Rudall, Exits is acompilation of material about the theater;and an excellent compilation it is, too. Theevening begins with a reading from DickensNicholas Nickleby and ends withMeyerholds famous speech against SocialistRealism as he faced the Stalinist tribunalwhich sent him to his death. But the beststuff, just as with Oreo cookies, comes in-between: Noel Coward songs, Cole Portermaterial, Peter Cook and Dudley Mooreskits (the one about a man with one legapplying for the Tarzan role is outrageouslyfunny), a Flanders and Swan pungent pun-fest on the origin of the song Greensleeves,and much more, all of it equallypleasurable, and most of it just as funny.My favorite was a Cole Porter tune en¬titled "Brush Up Your Shakespeare." Itshould be the theme song for all thoseEnglish professors who prefer their ob¬scenities second-hand by way of pun or song(continued on page 8)Friday, February 27, 1976 - The Chicago Maroon - 5Arlo Guthrietrade-off of sorts — Harding gave the lateJim Croce one of his first club bookings, andthe return on his trust in unknown talentcomes in part from Arlo Guthrie, whose onlynight-club appearances are at The QuietKnight.On the other side of town, at thisUniversity hundreds braved a snowstorm tohear such folk luminaries as ProfessorLonghair and Sweet Honey in the Rock atthe University of Chicago's 16th annual folkfestival.The festival — a Chicago tradition —attracts visitors from all over and includesperformers who rarely perform in otherorganized surroundings. The emphasis ismostly on traditional folk music, but per¬formers like Bryan Bowers — anu>.©L.o©-CCN TAI~SAMA»NCHINESE-AAAERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCAKTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS' 12 TO 8:30 P.M.Orders to take out1318 last 63rd MU 4-1062\★★★★—Roger Ebert,Chicago Sun Timt s“I was swept away bythe volcanic, slam-bang performances.”—Gene Sha*it. NBC-TVGIANCARLO GIANNINIMARIANGELA MELATO“SweptAway."A film hv LinaWertmullcr [gNOW PLAYING AT THECMktyie RUSHa tOAK The University of ChicagoDepartment of Musicand theFromm Music Foundation at Harvardpresent theCONTEMPORARYCHAMBER PLAYERSof The University of ChicagoRALPH SHAPEY, Music DirectorWorld premiere of the oratorioPRAISEby RALPH SHAPEYsoloist: Paul Geiger, bass-baritoneSATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1976 - 8:30 P.M.ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL, 59th & Woodlawn Ave.Free and open to the publicSYMPOSIUMECONOMICS OF<*GOVERNMENT $FEB. 29,2 P.M.SPONSORED BY FORUM MANDEL HALLCHECK OUR NEWEVERYDAY LOWMAGIC PRICESFLORIDAJUICE -ORANGES SC i rgtOSCAR MAYERALL MEAT /wWEINERS r, COUNTRY DELIGHTLO FATMILK BLACKLABEL 6 CansReg.$1.55(Warm Only)y2 gal.Reg. 85' HIGH LINEROCEANPERCHFILLETSSTORE HOURSMonday-Wednesday 9 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.Thursday and FridaySaturdaySunday 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 667-14446 -'the"Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 27] 1976Cabaret Opens Tonight in Reynolds Club OCourt Theatre will open its production ofCabaret tonight for a three week-end run inReynolds Club Theatre.This familiar musical is set in Berlin ofthe 1930's, during Hitler's rise to power. Thedecline and the decadence that made hisrise possible are reflected in the Kit KatKlub (the sleazy cabaret of the title) and inits strange and grimacing Master ofCeremonies; the encounter between SallyBowles (an English night club singer) andCliff Bradshaw (an American writer) isseen in the eerie light of this reflection.For Cabaret, Reynolds Club Theatre hasbeen turned into the Kit Kat Klub. "Thetheatre is small and dark," says MichaelHildebrand, director and choreographer ofCabaret, "and we decided to take advantage of that. Many of the threatre seats have beenremoved and replaced by night club tables,and we will be selling refreshments beforethe show and at intermission."Cabaret, with its night club setting, callsfor a number of elaborately staged musicalpieces, along with quieter and more in¬timate songs, and Hildebrand has taken fulladvantage of the opportunity. "Cabaret hasthe largest cast of any Reynolds ClubTheatre show in recent memory,"Hildebrand commented, "since you need alot of people to do flashy production num¬bers."Having a large cast presents problems,too, when they must all crowd into ReynoldsClub Theatre's inadequate backstage anddressing rooms. "By the time we've storedMICHAEL POLANYI(1891-1976)Fellow of the Royal Society and honorarymember of the American Academy of Arts andSciences, he had been Gifford Lecturer at theUniversity of Aberdeen, professor of physicalchemistry and later of social studies at theUniversity of Manchester, and finally, Fellowof Merton College, Oxford. In 1951 he held theAlexander White Visiting Professorship at theUniversity of Chicago. His many publicationsinclude Science, Faith, and Society (1946), TheLogic of Liberty (1951), Personal Knowledge(1958), The Study of Man (1959), Knowingand Being (1969), and, with Harry Prosch,Meaning (1975).4kAin■ liversityChicagc of> jPRESS W Terri Shanline Jeff Smiththe various sets and furniture and costumes— as well as the theatre seats we've takenout — and shared the dressing rooms withthe cast from Exits And Entrances, there isnot an inch backstage without someone orsomething in it."Cabaret will be performed Friday,Saturday and Sunday at 8:30 for three weeks, beginning tonignt; the Kit Kat Klubwill open at 8 o'clock. Tickets are $2, or $1.50for students, and reservations for either thecabaret tables or conventional seating willbe accepted at 753-3581. All performanceswill be in the Reynolds Club Theatre, 57thStreet and University Avenue.Alondau, March 1stRay Still, OboePierce Hall8 p.m.Admission free, Friday, February 27, 1976 - The Chicogo Maroon - 7TheGrey MAB to Re-create Prom Tradition on March 5A Prom scene circa 1955 (photo courtesy of University Archives).The Major Activities Board has an¬nounced that the University of ChicaqoWinter Prom is to be revived Friday, March5, at 7 pm, in the Hutch Commons complex.One is curious as to exactly what the nightholds in store...The old "Wash Prom," an occasionhonoring the Founding Father's birthday,was begun in 1894, an inspiration ofPresident Harper's, and was listed by theMaroon as "the major event of the campussocial season" for almost 72 years, until itsdemise, under an avalanche of counter-cultural activity, in 1967. Those folks - theyknew how to party. Back in 1904 the Prom was held in BartlettGym, "a building," according to that year'sMaroon "which more than any other oncampus combines beauty with utility, abuilding already endeared by two Chicagovictories, a building decorated with thetrophies of victorious Maroon teamsthrough 12 years of struggle," thuseminently suited to the purpose.While spectators, admitted free to thegallery, perused the crowd, couples (at $6 athrow) waltzed endlessly. The Maroonnotes: "there was no such thing as fatigue.And when 3 o'clock came with eight dancesleft on the program all were loathe to go." While "conditions in the checking rooms"were "boresome in the extreme" the oc¬casion was fond worthy, nonetheless, as anevent which "made it possible for the un¬dergraduated (sic) body to establish asocial record which is likely to stand."The same 1915 Maroon which advertises"Club breakfasts 15c and Up" at the Men'sCommons ("Good Food Properly Cooked —Inspect Our Kitchens") announces "themost unique decoration ever used for theProm...live cherry trees...the branchesladen with cherry blossoms, forming ar¬ches..." President and Mrs. Judson honoredthe affair with their presence in thereceiving line, while the dancing lasted til 2am — Grand March at 9:30 pm, supper(Chicken a la King and three rounds ofdessert) was served at midnight.The 20's found our lively campus swingingin Bartlett to hot stuff: "Junkman Rag,""By Heck," "Apache Intermezzo," "Goodbye Girls, I'm Through," and "Love'sHesitation (A Waltz)." Our revelers moppedthemselves off at midnight and sat down to adinner "planned for the benefit of those whoshall have cultivated an appetite in firstthree hours of dancing." At each place, a"Promaroon" (courtesy of the Maroonstaff) containing "personal remarks aboutthe illustrious persons present," was left toadd to the evening's sparkle.An advertisement in the Maroon an¬nouncing the 1935 Wash Prom warns thecampus gentleman, "In the excitement andjoyousness of the evening, do not forget thatthere is always the critical appraising eye offellow students on every detail of your appearance" and recommends "a youngman's garment... the coat has the smart dullgrosgrain lapels and falls from theshoulders with the soft, easy gracecharacteristics of the drape models..."(continued on page 5)LAST YEAR IN MARIENBADA FILM BY ALAIN RESNAISSUNDAY, FEB. 29th 4:00 P.M.CENTER FOR CONTINUING EDUCATION1307 E. 69th ST.FREE ADMISSIONIf you have been down to the STUDENT CO-OP latelyyou may have noticed a few record sales going on. Wed,your requests for more ODYSSEY records have beenheeded: one last shipment will arrive sometime today.Also with this shipment will be a collection of Colum¬bia's classical “twofers" (two records for almost theprice of one) which will be put on sale too. As if thiswasn't enough, Columbia's record of the month,Tchaikovsky’s Fourth Symphony with Lenny the Ace andhis New York Philiarmonic, will be on an extra-specialsale. All this (and the ad) from Columbia Recordsthrough the STUDENT CO-OP.Reynolds Club M-F 9:30-6:00Basement Sat. 10:00400SUNDAY, MARCH 7, 19762 Performance! - 4 p.m. and 8 p.m TICKETS AT HIUEl HOUSE5715 S. WOODLAWN 752-1127GREAT HALL, PICK-CONGRESS HOTEL - CONGRESS ST. AND MICHIGAN AVE.HltlEL AFFILIATES $5.00 NON AFFILIATES $6 00Proceeds will aid humanitarian programsthrough the JEWISH UNITED FUND - ISRAEL EMERGENCY FUND8 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 27, 1976Scuaiu ’Ki*K&Vi6^tau<vM......... ,vr„ 12 14 E. 53rd b I REET■SWAIN KIMBARK’S IMPORTEDWINE SALE 10% DISCOUNTon any (single) bottle of imported wine from $349and up. From our everyday low, low prices.Now's your chance to buy a fine Grand Cru orEstate Bottled Bordeaux, Burgundy Rhine, orMoselle at a price you now can afford.Buy an assorted case (12 btls.) and get a 15%discount.FOR EXAMPLEOUR PRICEVINTAGE1970 CHAT. LAS COMBES (MARGAUX) GR. CRUA fine 2nd growth, soft, femine, matures quiteearly and still long living.1969 CHAT. PALMER (MARGAUX)One of the most sought after and best know winesof the medoc, big & full.1969 COS D' ESTOURNEL (ST. ESTEPHE)Owned by the owner of the famous Chat. Margaux& one of the greatest of the great 2nd growths.VIRTUE1969 CHAT. PA VIE (ST. EMILLIOtt)One of the 12 great growths in St. Emilion. Big,generous.1970 CHAT. LA GRANGE (ST. JULIEN)One of the most improved chateaux's in themedoc. Slow maturing and has long life.1970 CHAT. LEOVILLE BARTON (ST. MIEN)2nd growth. One of the best of the St. Julien s.Great body and blend.1970 CHAT. BRANAIRE DUCRU (ST. JULIEN)Sturdy big wine. Greatly improved under thepresent owner.1970 CHAT. OLIVER (RED GRAVES)Owned by the great firm of Eschenauer pleasant,great character.RED BURGUNDY1969 CHAMBOLE MUSIGNY (BV SIGNAUT)Estate bottled, quite delicate. Great charm &finese.1970 CL0S ST. DENNIS (BV BERTAGNA)Estate bottled, one of the great growths of theCote De Nuit.1971 MERCURY (BY IA8UULE VERCHERRE)Underrated and underpriced Burgundy of 100%Pinot Noir grapes.1971 MORGAN (B0MAINE BES PIllET)Grand Cru Beaujolais, hearty and long living.GERMAN WINES1973 ELTVILLER TAVBENBERG REISLING KABINETBy Schloss Eltz. full luscious & fruity and a greatgrower.1971RUDESHEIMER BURWEG REISLING SPATLESEFull bodied, distinguished and a great vintageyear.1973 PIESP0RTER GOLDTRPFCHENEstate bottled moselle by M. Gorgen, one of thenicest wines you will ever find. SALE PRICE YOU SAVET 80°$764 85cT 70°*611 68°*6® 73°$5“ 6?$5“ 65c$4W 50°*5“ 60°$4« 550$413 40c$3“ 40°$332 37c3413 40c$3M 36*SALE ENDS MARCH 4PRICES SUBJECT TO STATE & LOCAL TAXESSWAIN KIMBARK LIQUORS1214 E. 53rd St. 53rd Kimbark PlazaPhone HY 3-3355 Prom(continued from page 4)Corsages and "buffet dinners served inthe Quad Club at midnight," rented tux's,grand marches, presidents waltzing withprom queens. Walter Jeschke, who in whitewig and knee breeches presided overcountless such UC aftairs, tells of goingthrough two shirts a night, of dancing tillthree, of 4 a.m. breakfasts in Hutch, anddriving up to Wisconsin at dawn to spend theweekend recuperating.All of which is not to say mat tradition atUC doesn't respond to the times: by 1964 theprom queen reported her roses missing...itwas found that they had been "devoured" atan anti-Prom partydown the street. In 1965an extra band was hired for the benefit ofthe young moderns who did not waltz, andticket proceeds were sent to "Buy Books for Negro College," according to a Maroonheadline.What can such a heritage lead us to expectfrom the MABers? The Board takes a '70'sapproach to culture—eclectic—and offers toamuse us in various ways. The price ofadmission to "A Touch of Class" includesperformances of University Theatre's"Cabaret" and "Exits and Entrances" aswell as a screening of "The Six Wives ofHenry the Eighth." There'll be chambermusic, a guitar and flute duet, and a moderndance group in performance as well. Thefeature attraction, waltzing and creativemovement to the music on the Don Coroneband, will occur in Hutch Commons, clearedof lunch tables and provided wth a specialdance floor for the purpose. A concession tothe time and the closing of charm schools,Mr. Corone's music will be alternated withmore current numbers from the disco.Flowers and pastry available at the door,and punch to be served. Rumors of a grandmarch...Plainsong Vespers at RockefellerPlainsong Vespers for the Feast of theTransfiguration of Our Lord will be held atThe University of Chicago's RockefellerMemorial Chapel on Sunday, February 29,at 4 p.m. Participants in the service,sponsored jointly by the Chapel andAugustana Lutheran Church of Hyde Park,include Pastor Larry Hofer, homilist;Bruce Tammen, officiant; ThomasWeisflog, organist; and Rolf Charlstonchoirmaster. The choir of Augustana parishwill sing a 16th Century Thomas Tallismotet, "Onata lux de lumine," for the Feastof the Transfiguration.The service music will be that of aLutheran plainsong rite published in 1901 bythe Geneva Council, a predessor of themodern Lutheran Church of America, and isbased on medieval melodies and chants ofthe Church, some of which are probablyderived from the chants of ancientJerusalem.The Feast of the Transfiguration recallsthe account in the Gospel according toMark, Chapter 9, of Jesus' transifiguration on a moutain with the Hebrew prophetsElijah and Moses, in the presence of thedisciples Peter, James, and John. Thecommemoration of this event derived fromEastern Church practices and becamegeneral in the western Church in the 15thCentury. August 6 was the traditional datefor the celebration of the transfiguration inEastern and Roman Churches. ModernLutheran calendars however place the feaston the last Sunday of the Epiphany season,as a remembrance of an epiphany whichconnects Jesus with the Old Testament andprefigures the Easter glory to come.The Christian custom of Vespers probablycontinues the ancient Jewish eveningsacrifice with its insence and lights. Called"Lucemarium" by the Early Church, theservice, well established by the 4th century,continued through the centuries as one of theseven hours of prayer and as one of the eightmonastic services. Lutheran reformers inthe 16th Century reduced the number ofcongregational services to two, Matins andVespers, which have continued in regularuse to the oresent.The Major Activities BoardPresents. 7 - }<(«/(A Evening of Cultcha...cFrK#a> ; “Marc/i 5f/j 197b7 pmHutchinson CommonsMandel HallReynolds dubFormal Dance with theDon Carone BandChamber MusicTheater “Exits & Entrances"Modern Dance TrioBalletFilm: “The Six Wives at Henry VIIITheater “Cabaret”Tan & Tao. Classical Fluteand GuitarAdmission $1 with"formal'7attire, $1.50 otherwise cnFriday, February 27, 1976 - The Chicago Maroon - 9 TheGreyCityJournal--TheGreyCityJournal Politic’s “Dying” is Innovative and Exciting3y Suzanne ListerThe Dream Theater Ensemble'spresentation of As I Lay Dying, at the Body^Politic, which was scheduled to closeFebruary 29, has been extended to run untilthe end of March. Faulkner's novel lendsitself beautifully to stage adaptation, andespecially to the Dream Theater's emphasisupon mime and movement skills. Thepresentation of the play is highly ambitious,and on the whole, quite successful.As I Lay Dying is set in Faulkner'smythical Yoknapatawpha Cour.ry,Mississippi, in the late 1920's. It is the storyof a poor farming family forced to make anOdyssean journey, through flood, fire, andpsychological torments, in order to bury therotting body of their mother in her nativetown. The novel and the play rely, for muchof the dramatic tension, upon techniques ofwithheld meaning and delayed disclosure.The overall effect is a combination ofpathos—even approaching the tragic—andburlesque.A previous reading of the novel is perhapshelpful, but by no means essential to theunderstanding and appreciation of the play.The interpretive slant of the production, asthe name of the company suggests, is uponthe dreamlike qualities of the action anddialogue. The play consists of an interwovenseries of vignettes and portraits, connectedmore by ties of theme, imagery, and emotionthan by conventional notions of achronological plot. The result of the ex¬periment is a presentation which has, otcourse, its highs and lows, but which makesthe fullest use of the visual and auditorysuggestiveness inique to the dramaticmedium.The Dream Theater performs without theaid of stage scenery or properties. The onlyphysical object which appears on stage, andwhich is to a great extent the unifying forcein the dramatic action, is a pine coffin. Theentire cast displays remarkable skills of pantomine. To compare the mime in As ILay Dying to that in this year's GoodmanTheater production of Our Town is to ap¬preciate its naturalness and the way inwhich mime may enhance the atmosphereof a play, without becoming an obsession ora distraction. The roles of animals areportrayed in pantomime by actors in brownT-shirts, with a minimum of nervous gigglesfrom the audience.The quality of the acting is uniformlygood. However, the most impressive per¬formance is given by David Moore as Dari Bundren. The role of Dari is exceptionallychallenging, and demonstrates that "Greatwits are sure to madness near allied; Andthin partitions do their bounds divide."Moore brings out a kind of wild-eyedcynicism in the character which evokes thefeelings of unease and ambivalence calledfor in the audience. The character of AddieBundren is, however, disappointing. Thetheater's publicity release refers to the"catalytic presence" of the dying mother,"the intent 'shoving' eyes of the dyingmatriarch." Kristine Cameron's per¬ formance does not meet the standardsrequired by such a demanding and centralrole.The production, all in all, is innovativeand exciting, and definitely worth seeing.The extended run is a great convenience forU of C students currently experiencing theend-of-the- quarter crunch. The play ispresented Thursday through Sunday at 8:00p.m. A student discount is offered onThursday, Friday, and Sunday. For ticketreservations and information, call the BodyPolitic at 871-3000.Mandragola to be Performed WednesdayBy Lindsay WatersWe do well to remind ourselves thatMachiavelli was more than a politicalphilosopher and historian, but also adramatist, because one of Machiavelli'splays is a gem. Machiavelli wrote LaMandragola in 1518 after he had been exiledfrom Florence. With some bitterness, heturned to humor in order to ease the grief ofhis political exile. Truly, Machiavelli sharesthe quality of bitterness with that othergreat Renaissance dramatist of city life,Ben Jonson. Also like Jonson, Machiavelli'scomedy owes much to Roman comedy in itsuse of stock characters. Yet La Mandragolais resoundingly Florentine. Its plot is aningenious and crude practical joke of thesort familiar to generations of readers ofFlorentine novellas. Its language is thepotent slang of the streets of Florence.Machiavelli named the play after themandrake, whose roots crudely resemblethe human form and which popular belief credited with superhuman powers, bothpositive and negative. Used correctly theplant could help overcome barrenness.Mishandled it could cause death.Machiavelli plays on the popular belief tocreate a work, Voltaire asserted, with atouch of hyperbole, "perhaps worth all thecomedies of Aristophanes."Under the auspices of the University'sRoman Languages Department, a group ofplayers, directed by Lindsay Waters, willgive a staged reading of La Mandragola, inits original Italian, in Harper 103, onWednesday, March 3, at 8:00 p.m. Of specialnote about this production is that it will beaccompanied by the music (arranged forthis performance by Greg Munford) whichVerdelot composed so that Machiavelli'sintermission poems could be sung for a 1526performance of the play. That performancenever took place, and the music was lost forcenturies only to be published a few yearsago by the University of Chicago Press andedited by H. Colin Slim. This production,then, will be a fuller production of LaMandragola that has been possible sinceMachiavelli's time.If more than anythingelse, you want love-Then l. Emmanuelle. will teach you tolove with all the freedom of man and allthe imagination of womanYou will say with me —nothing is wrong if it feels good.THE ALL NEWEmmanuel l*»The Jogsof a Woman.nothing is wrong if it fec&good.Let me be your guidein the art of love.Let me, Emmanuelle, take you to a newworld of pleasure — and believe as I do thatnothing is wrong if it feels good.IN COLOR A PARAMOUNT PICTUREADULTS ONLY (X) SO OSE UNDER 1$ ADMITTED (X)OPENS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27Showing Exclusively atl ,1 PUTT I HE AT REIp Michael ToddI OS DEARBORS SO. OF RASDOLPH10 - The Chicago Moroon - Friday, February 27, 1976 Industrial Engineers,Aramco has plans for youin Saudi Arabia.The Arabian American Oil Company has someexcellent career openings for Senior Industrial andManagement Engineers in Saudi Arabia.The challenge.We are looking for alert, aggressive engineerswho will undertake responsibility for significantindustrial engineering projects and studies involv¬ing manpower, equipment, and facility utilizationstudies; major cost reduction studies; and instituteorganization studies, job design, and job structuredevelopment.The qualifications.Because of the demanding responsibilities ofthese positions, it is preferable that you have anengineering BS plus an MBA or MS in IndustrialEngineering. You wall need a minimum of 5 yearsprogressively responsible experience. Dutiesare in project I.E. assignments and studies,and not in classical time study/MTM I.E. It ishighly desirable that your experience be in con¬tinuous process industries such as petroleumor chemical.Why work in Saudi Arabia?Working for Aramco in Saudi Arabia offers youseveral big advantages. One is the opportunity tosave because of your overseas premium and costdifferential. Another is our liberal vacation policiesthat give you the chance to travel worldwide. Andbesides being paid a top salary, you are offeredexcellent benefit programs. You will also find thatAramco provides fine school, hospital, andrecreational facilities.Send us your resume.If you’re qualified, we would like to hear fromou. Send us a resume of your work and salaryistory, and we will be in touch with you.EM*rfc D*vb, Employ*. IWiation. DeptAramco scrvcgs company1100 iliUm Building, HouUon Tom 77002 SEMINARY CO-OPERATIVE BOOKSTORE INC.5757 University, Chicago, Illinois 60637752-4381 9:30-4:00, Mon.-Fri.Thousands of titles in a variety offields, Come in and Browse throughour stock.BRENT HOUSEEcumenical Campus Ministry 5540 WoodlawnSunday February 295:00 Underground Church6:00 Supper ($1.25)7:00 Values for Human Survival:INTERMEDIATE TECHNOLOGYPaul T. Torda IIT Director of esjiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimmmiiimmmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:"^^MAFACVJBfc!| Murmt RALE/GH£ trefrf? for thosf who take§ ZeUS CYCLING SERIOUSLY 500BIKESON DISPLAYAUTHORIZE!) REPAIR OH AU MAKES• RAlfIGM • ZEDS • NlSMNd • WI6CO • FOiLISAim* S*aw***i T • ASo«l«(iNj HUbORid Spar>Met** Soa*Sportifimporter, ltd.• 226 w iRwfRACR AveCHICAGO685-0240nilllintlMItttlltlltllllinilllllllllHMIllMHHIHHIIIHHIlINHIIIIIHIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIK]“Miss Julie”: Another TravestyBy John LanahanThe shortest doctoral dissertation onrecord, I was once told, is titled "The Wit ofStrindberg." The conclusion of that four-page opus is that August Strindberg was notwitty. Imagine my surprise, therefore, whenI encountered the hilarious production ofMiss Julie currently at the Arlingtort. ParkTheatre. Until I had seen this show, I viewedMiss Julie as an attempt by Strindberg toharness his own sexual Manicheanism intothe form of domestic melodrama in order tocreate a dialogue of momentum and decay.Now I am convinced that any modernproduction of Miss Julie best belongs in r totally different dramatic category,burlesque, in the tradition of Buckingham'sThe Rehearsal, Fielding's The Tragedy ofTragedies, and Sheridan's The Critic.Wacky is as wacky does, and the director,Peter Medak, proved that serious drama isbest destroyed when the cast consists ofstatuesque caricatures, rather than in¬teracting performers. I was amazed howthree such professional actors could play asbadly as those in any undergraduatedirecting exercise. There was none of theelectric, sensual, and vicious interplaybetween the two main characters that wouldbe necessary in order to prevent this playIndian CinemaIn this country, worthwhile Indian cinemahas become synonymous with the name ofSatyajit Ray, other movies from Indiabeing regarded as nothing but song-anddance spectacles. However, in recent yearsa third cinema has developed in India:movies made by talented young people,generally connected with the Film Instituteof India. Devoid of spectacle, these moviesdeal with challenging, contemporarythemes in a sophisticated manner. One suchmovie, GARM HAWA (Hot Wind), will beshown this Friday, at 7 and 9:30 p.m. at JuddHall.GARM HAWA deal with the problemsfaced by the Muslims of India in the wake ofthe partition of the country in 1947. Theevents of that period still attract much at¬tention as is evident from the popularity ofthe recent bestseller Freedom at Midnightby Collins & La Pierre. For the Muslims ofIndia it was a dilemma of their own making,and in the changed political circumstancethey had to face problems of survival andidentity, of changing patterns of relation¬ship within the community and outside of it,and of defining one's future now that the sought after future of a separate Muslimstate was here, GARM HAWA is the firstfilm on a subject that remained tabooed tillrecently. It it interesting that a young,Hindu filmmaker, M.S. Sathyu, broke thetaboo, using for his script two Urdu storiesby a Muslim woman writer, Ismat Chugtsi.The film is about a middle-class Muslimfamily in Agra, the city of Taj Mahal, andthe problems that the patriarch of thefamily has to face in 1948 in trying to protectand maintain the fabric of family andcommunal life. Cinematically traditional (itwas Sathyu's first film) and devoid of anyfashionable gimmickry, the movie'sstrength lies in its depiction of some verypoignant situations in the life these peopleand in the superb performance by the lateBalraj Sahni in the chief role. The con¬clusion may be called by some as toodogmatic: the Muslim gains an awarenessof class struggle and throws in his lot withthe rising proletariat — something onewishes should have taken place — yet theauthenticity of characterization on thewhole succeeds in making the film worthwhile experience. The film has Englishsub titles. Admission: SI.50.•IfcfV* /V the critics agree!“Robert DeNiro is brilliant.a DEVASTATING performanceThe twist ending should leaveaudiences gasping.’’-Kathleen Carroll Near York Daily NearsFEROCIOUS! VOLATILE!No other film has everdramatized urbanindifferences so powerfully.''-Pauline Kaei New YorkerBRILLIANT. The first importantAmerican movie of the year."— Gary Arnold Washington Post"Robert DeNiro A STUNNINGveracious performance."~ Richard Schickel Time Magazine"Adults who want to see awell made film with aBRILLIANT performance byRobert DeNiro will hailTAXI DRIVER .— Gene Shahf. NBC TV"An absolutely TERRIFYINGmovie because of the way itgenerates tension. It's aSCORCHER. ’Mutual Radio"It is not an experience you IIsoon forget, for it is more thandisconcerting - it isSHOCKING.”— Frank R>ch New York PostROBERT DE NIROTAXI DRIVERA Bill MHIIIIPSMn,du.t, i MAMIN M I *S| SI l,U1JOCME FOSTER] AI BIRT HWXXSasTom HARVEY KEITEL]LEONARD HARRIS [PETER BOYLE as Wizard j aand CYBILL SHEPHERD as Betsy eMAUI VMRAlXR HI RNARi»III RRMANN MU MAI I MHIII IMS Ml IA PHM.UPSMARTIN V ORSfSl s I*.. iw. R _STARTS TODAYftlHJiini Omii'I l.iiroln Villas* IlmtinMikKwn|m*n i\orri<k|<“ RaiNllMirsI York I own FOR THE BESTLSATGREGMATTEST PREPARATIONProfessional instruction viacomprehensive analysiswith current materials.Call 782-2185TEST-PREP7 South DearbornChicago, IL 60603 Richard Dreyfussfrom becoming a high-class Mary Hartman,Mary Hartman. The production numberinvolving the singing peasants, in the middleof the play, while Miss Julie is offstageseducing the valet, removed all doubt frommy mind that this was in anv way a seriousattempt at putting on Strindberg's"naturalistic tragedy." Lovers of zanyfootlight high-jinks will, I'm sure, regretthat that crazy playwright August laterabandoned such realistic settings, andopened the way for Expressionist drama inan abstract form more suited to theemotional intensity of his art. In the contextof this show, such histrionic displays wereridiculous.Carolyn Seymour, as the title character,played her as one confused, haughty, andfragile. One might almost have thought shetook the part seriously, since Ms. Seymour'sperformance indicated that she knew whatStrindberg intended for the role. Ms.Seymour insisted, however, on a verylimited range of gestures; particularly,hunching over her chest, and holding herhands together in front of her, therebyreducing a potentially vibrant character to astatue. Richard Dreyfuss as Jean, the valet,was comparable to. let's say, Don Knotts asMacbeth. The humor just got too hot toCarolyn Seymourhandle when that lovable Mr. Dreyfuss, starof Jaws, The Apprenticeship of DuddyKravitz, and American Graffitti, with avoice somewhere between Peter Lorre andCary Grant, demagnetized whatever forcethere was to Jean's part. Mr. Dreyfuss heldback throughout the entire show, andprovided none of the sexual sensuality and(continued on page 8)The^JournaleditorPaul M. Millerassociate editorsKaren HellerBarry J. KaplovitzC.J. MeyersDean ValentinestaffMiles Archer Carl LavinGwendolen Cates Suzanne ListerW.T. Hobson Jonathan MeyersohnJohn Lanahan Harold RichardsMike SingerThe Grey Cy Journal is published each Fridayduring the regular academic year as part ot theChicago Maroon inquiries concerning subscriptionsand advertising should be addressed to BusinessManaqer, 1212 E 59th St , Chicago III 60632 TheEd itor myites commentsGIRLS - BOYSLook better for less atThanos Coiffures5500 S. Shore DriveMI-3-5582Student discount with IDTues., Wed., Thurs.Shampoo, Haircut andBlow dry StylingFeb. 27, 28, 29thMar. 5,6,7,12,13,14thTickets $2.00$1.50 StudentsKlub opens- 8:00 pmShow * 8:30 pmReynolds Club TTieater57th and UniversityCall: 753-3581 Our jetlares toEurope areless thanany otherscheduledairline’s.But onrserviceisn’t.If you are under 22. ouryouth fare is made foryou S360 round-trip inApril & May-$410 inJune, July and AugustGreat food and service,direct flights from NewYork and Chicago withconnections from othercities to Luxembourgin the heart of Europe.Fares subject to changeSee your travel agent,campus rep, or writeIcelandic Airlines,630 Fifth Ave . N Y.,NY 10020ICELANDIC Mother Dear's1607 E. 53rd 28B-4842Home Cooked Complete DinnersSandwiches Homemade DessertsWe Deliver11 A.M. 9 P.M.CN RusticContinentalStudiospresentstheROGER BOB SHOWHair StylistFeaturing Chicago'sGreatest JazzMusicians• Emanual Cranshaw. jibes• Jody Christian, piano• Amir lushdan. drums• Tiaz Palmer, bassGuest Star• Ronald Jones,classical pianistFeb. 29 3 P.M.-7 P.M.March 6Von Freeman, tenorMarch 13Geraldine DeHaas, singerGeneral Admission $5 at doorStudents and Musicians S356 A Cornell288-7080; *r*cfcy, February 27.7976 The CVic^o Mdroen : 11JTheGreyCityJournal-TheGreyCityJournalHALF PRICEWINTER CLEARANCEon• Leather Bags(Tano of Madrid)• Pewter Ware(Snorre Viking)Cheese KnifeServing SpoonBowlBottle Opener• Other Itemsat Hyde Park Bank Building1529 E. 53rd St.KIMBERLY& LEE Hy-3-8303AT THESE SPECIALLYSELECTED THEATRESi wm, i wm...Far Now“Entrances(continued from page 1)or Shakespeare. One line that refuses to stopbanging about my head goes like this:When your baby is pleading for pleasureLet her sample your Measure for MeasureA Peter Cook-Dudley Moore parody of, Shakespeare which ends with the death of aoo "saucy Worcester" isn't any worse.But the real pleasure in all this is wat¬ching Nick Rudall act. It isn't that rest of thecast isn't good; it is, especially RoryChilders who does a great Brendan Behanmonologue. It's simply that Rudall has avoice and a timing none of the others have.This may sound stupid, but the word* Ahatcome out of Rudall always sound as if they'dbeen swished around his mouth for awhilebefore being allowed out. It's no accident heperfor. * Sir Ralph Richardson with suchsuccess. Timbre! The revue could, for all its strengths, beimproved. Everybody and his culture could,I think, do without the two bombasticYevtushenko poems about the stage. No onewho doesn't read Russian can tell whetheror not Yvengy can write; but most peoplecan tell apart a master of the cheap andeasy sentiment and a poet. Mandelstam wasa poet: his "Memory of a St. PetersburgTheater is more moving than anyting in theshow; Yevtushenko's "O Stage" is sopompous you can't help chuckling. Beingasigned to the garbage heap might likewiseimprove the quality of anything GeorgeKaufman ever wrote, including the "carry-on-the-tradition" tripe that represents himand Ferber, his collaborator, in the revue.Still, that's only three unpleasantries.They don't seem very important whenyou're having such a good time watchingtwenty-five well-acted successful numbersBy all means, go and see them. They'll bearound until next Sunday, March 7. Another Travesty(continued from page 7)virMe brutality necessary for Ms. Seymourto have succeeded in her role. The resultwas just two wacky troopers of the boards,just cutting it up, and a good time was hadby all. Marion Belcher as Kristin, the cook,also showed signs of taking the partseriously, but by the third act her effortsonly buttressed the altogether victoriousabsurdity of this production.Special mention should go to StevenLauryn and Laura Shroeder, the propertiesmaster and assistant, respectively, for theirthoroughly successful efforts to booby-trapthis show. Between the bottle of wine thatwould not open, Miss Julie's Woolworth'sgreenfinch, and the bell, the clapper ofwhich fell out at the climax of the play, thesetwo goofy gremlins of the props table madesure that no funny-bone was left untickled.The set was not well adapted to an in-the- round production, and the sight lines tomany parts of the stage, from where I sat,were bad. The lighting was good, if bland;and the sound, most of which was live, waswell performed and effectively undercut thedrama of the poetry.Charles Ludiam's Ridiculous TheatreCompany is due to come here in May, withtheir campy production of Camille. Littledid I know that the seemingly staidArlington Park Theatre would give themsuch effective competition. But thenremember, when Waiting for Godot madeits American premiere, in Miami Beach, itwas billed "the laugh riot of two con¬tinents." So, for those of you who want tospend $7.00-$8.50 in order to see a travesty ofyet another classic piece of drama, theArlington Park Theatre is located at 3400 W.Euclid Avenue, in Arlington Heights, just offof Route 53. The show runs Tuesday-Sundaynights, and call 392-6800 for ticket in¬formation.EVERGREEN - LA GRANGE - NORRIDGE98th & western La Grange Norndge12 • The Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 27, 1976MARINA 1 • OLD ORCHARDManna City Skokie Pabst. Since 1844.The quality has alwayscome through.PABST BREWING COMPANY, Milwaukee. Wis.,Peoria Heights, III., Newark, N.J., Los Angeles, Calif., Pabst, Georgia.VICTORIA PRINCIPAL ROBERT AIDA WARREN BERUNGERMADGE SINCLAIR „ CANDY CLARK ...P 'jOucWOy Directed byGEORGE BARRIE NORMAN PANAMArtrfleflDyNORMAN PANAMA « ALBERTE LEWINloop by» kstmctuo GEORGE BARRIE, SAMMY CAHN, BOB LARIMERCOlOff BYffCHNlCOlW PRINTS BY OflUXf ■Director ol Ptiotogrepe,JOHN A ALONZOMum byJOHN CAMERON It takes the bestto challengeall the rest.BARRIE PRESENTS A BRUT PRODUCTION OFA NORMAN PANAMA ALBERT E LEWIN FILMELLIOTT GOULDDIANE KEATON PAUL SORVINO» « * p S * * 8 fMen Swimmers Take ParksideKathy Weber works out in preparation tor the tourney.8 Go To State TourneyThe women’s swim teamwill be participating inIAIAW action this weekendas eight members of theteam will travel to theIllinois Swimming andDiving Championships atNorthern Illinois Universityin DeKalb.Coach Martha Benson willbe sending Noel Bairey,Lynn Haynes, MeganPrimavera, Kathy Weber,Ann Merryfield, JeanneTanabe, Adrienne Moul, and Peggy Culp. Each womanwill be swimming in up tofive events and a relay atthe two day meet.Two relays that certain tobe entered are the 200 and400 yd Free-style. The teamof Bairey, Weber,Primavera, and Haynes willtry to match or better lastyears’ team which tookfourth in both the 200 and the400.The meet will start Fridaymorning at 8:00.SPORTS By Ralph MohrThe UC Men’s SwimmingTeam concluded their dualmeet season Tuesday inrecord-breaking fashion bydefeating University ofWisconsin-Parkside 61-52and setting three new schoolrecords in the meet. Thesenew records, combined withfour other school records setover the weekend, made theweek one of the mostspectacular for Maroonswimming.The first record againstParkside was set in theopening event, the 400Medley Relay. The team ofWayne Hooper, Backstroke;Bob Smartt, Breaststroke;Paul Mankowski, Butterfly;and Jon Rynning, Freestyle,broke the old record by twoseconds with a time of 3:57.3.Wayne Hooper then brokethe 500 Freestyle recordlater in the meet winningeasily in 5:15.7. This was sixseconds under the old recordheld by Kurt Bruens andmore than seven secondsfaster than Hooper’s besttime this year.Bob Smartt finished therecord breaking by leading off the 400 Freestyle Relaywith a 49.4, breaking the oldrecord by three tenths in the100 Freestyle. Since he wasfirst and therefore had astationary start it counts as arecord even though it waspart of a relay.Other first place winnersfor the University againstParkside were Jon Rynningin both the 60 and 100 yardFreestyle events, BobSmartt in the 160 IndividualMedley, Eric Lindbloom inthe 200 Backstroke, andChris Gomez in the 200Breaststroke. The othermembers of the victorious400 Free Relay besidesSmartt were Vanderlaan,Mankowski and Hooper.Four other school recordswere set last Saturday in theIllinois Priviate CollegeChampionships by the UCteam. Leading the recordsmashing were the fourmembers of the FreestyleRelay teams. Jon Rynning,Paul Mankowski, WayneHooper and Bob Smarttcombined their talents inboth the 400 Freestyle Relayand the 800 Freestyle Relayto break the old recordsbysubstantial margins. TheyBadminton Highlights ActionIf the IM badmintontournament proved anythingat all, it proved thatbecoming an IM championdoesn’t always take a lot oftime. Both the men’s and theco-ed all-University titleswere won after a maximumof two matches.In the men’s undergrad play, red division champDavid Sagen beat whitedivision champ DickRubesch while blue titleholder Bill Croft beat In¬dependent winner CarlHerzog. Croft then beatSagen for the undergradtitle. In divisional playBaldeva Prasad beat Barker[beTrj BEERjBEERj *2°° 64 Oz. PitcherJ (WITH COUPON)j Alsoj Super SundayJ Brunchi *3*°CAFE ENRICO1411-E53_ HY-_3_5300THRUAPR 3Ph. 922-2973STUDEBAKER # TUES. MAR. 9418 S. MICH., 60605 — Ph. 92z-zsz34JlliE HARRISIn‘THE BELLESPECIAL STUDENT GROUP RATES, 25 or more$1.00 OFF REG. PRICES. ALL LOCATIONS (EXC. SATS.)PR CCS ORCH 4 MEZZ 1« BALC 2nd BALCMON THRU THURS 0PM4 SUN MAR 14—7 P M $0 00 $7 00. 0 50. 0 00 $4 00FRI & SAT EVES—030 PM $9 00 $8 00. 7 50 7 00 $0 00WED 4 SAT MATS —2 P M $7 00 $6 00. 5 50. 5 00 $3 00 and then swept through therest of his matches by for¬feit. Be that as it may he wasgood enough to beat Croft tobecome the all-Universitychampion.In the mixed-doubles, co¬ed action, Fedor/ Lorellobeat Bloom/ Frank for theundergrad residence titlewhile Manson/ Langer tookthe Independent and Hop-son/ Barker took theDivisional titles, both byforfeit. Fedor/ Lorello then beat Manson/ Langer forthe undergrad championshipbut was later beaten byHopsin/ Barker, playingtheir first and only game towin the all-University title.Handball is finally finishedup this week with the semi¬finals to be played by todayand the finals to be playednext week. Also going on thisweek is men’s volleyball.The last day to sign up for co¬ed v-ball is today.I am not SpockTHE BIGGEST STAR TREK BOOK OF THEM ALLby Leonard Nimoy“. . .a most intriguing voyage through innerspace. . . -New York Times". . a remarkably pleasant and gentle taleof the only fictional character since Sher¬lock Holmes to have won the love of mil¬lions entirely by being rational. . . "Isaac Asimov$4.95 at your bookstore or fromA CELESTIAL ARTSU 231 Adrian Road. Millbrae. Ca , 94030Fun Unlimited PresentsTHE HYDE PARK BACKGAMMON CLUBJoin us for an evening of Backgammon.Learn the ancient game of kings or im¬prove your present game.Space LimitedCall 924-1781 x39Every Monday starting March 8,19767:30 P.M. Windermere HotelMembers Free - Guests $5.00 were three seconds fasterthan their own record in theshorter event and more thanthirteen seconds faster in the800 yard relay.In addition Wayne Hooperbroke the school record inthe 1650 Freestyle by almosttwo minutes. This event isswimming’s equivalent ofthe Marathon and would be83 lengths in old BartlettPool.Bob Smartt ended the record setting for the meetby placing third overall inthe 200 Breaststroke with anew school record.The Maroons have onemore meet on their schedule,the Illinois College In¬vitational this Saturday.They finished their dualmeet season with a record ofnine wins and five losses andeight school records brokenand one tied.UC VARSITY SCOREBOARDSwimming:UC Men 61 University of Wisconsin-Parkside 52Wrestling:Chicago State 47 Maroons 3Wheaton 34 Maroons 15UPCOMING EVENTSBasketball:UC Women at the IAIAW State tournament,through Saturday, Wheaton, III.UC Men at Rollins College, Sat Feb 28, 8:00,College Park, Florida.Swimming:UC Women at the IAIAW Swimming and DivingState Tournament, Fri and Sat, Feb 27 and 28,DeKalb, III.UC Men at the Northern Illinois InvitationalChampionship, Sat. Feb 28, 12:00, at Chicago-CircleTrack:UC vs Wabash College and Illinois BenedictineCollege, Sat. Feb. 28, 12:00, Field House.Wrestling:UC vs Loras College Sat. Feb. 28, 10:00, BartlettGymFencing:UC vs Ohio State University, University ofWisconsin-Parkside and Milwaukee AreTechnical College, Sat. Feb. 28, 10:00, BoucherGym, 53rd and DrexelGymnastics:UCat George Williams College, Sat. Feb 28, 1:30,Downers Grove, III.SPECIALDISCOUNTPRICESFOR ALL STUDENTS & FACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification card.As Students or Faculty Members ofthe University of Chicago you are en¬titled to special money savingdiscount prices on all materials usedon Volkswagen Service Work, allVolkswagen Parts, Accessories andany new or used Volkswagen you buyfrom Volkswagen South Shore.Authorized VOLKSWAGENVolkswagen SOUTH SHOREDealer 7234 S Stony tatondOpen Doily 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.Open Soturdoy Soles • 9 A.M.-51Pa- 12 Noon• 288-490Friday, February 27, 1976 - The Chicago Maroon - 13J*1*328*•^5 LET MB EXPLAIN WHAT'SHAPPENING, MB. DUKE. TT€SCENE IS LATE AUTUMN IN| THE YIMSN6 MOUNTAINS, THE; J TINT, LIBERATED VILLAGE OE•j ; UNO GREETS THE PAWN. b LITTLE CHILDREN COME\OUT TO PLAN. AS TOUCAN\SEE, THEY ARE DANCING ANDSINGING AND LAUGWNc 7HEYABE FILLS) HUTU THE JOIDOtiNGttOtf* Garry ThJdBEftk J ^iv I lilt f 111 iAND THE ARMYUNIFORMS THETREWEARING OFFER. BASK UNA NICE COUNTER- ANDVAN6,POINT. MR POKE.ATTENTION! LAST CALL!!The cheapest air¬fare home for springbreak is the new ex¬cursion or 30%discount fare. To beeligible for this fareyou must purchasethe ticket 14 days inadvance. So see usthis next week if youwant to take ad¬vantage of thisdiscount.MIDWAY TRAVEL 753-2301EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 LITERARY GUIDANCEBy Publishing AuthorPer sou! attartios—NOT a Mol SceneI'll help on THESIS. ARTICLES. STORIESWhere and How to SELLUnlimited CriticismFRANK MARKS—MU 4-3124 EUROPEk NS \/f^ gWV\ AM 7^ -ee 800-325-4867Utv.Travel Charters turn rested on the assump¬tion that individual living ina republican society wouldbe willing to exercise ahighly self-conscious form ofself-restraint.”Mr. Katz ended byexamining the intellectualopposition against therepublican ideal of govern¬ment that existed amongmen such as James Madisonand Alexander Hamilton.“Hamilton was above all arealist and he felt thatpolitics must come to termswith existing and potentialeconomis and socialdivisions in Americansociety.”“The emergence ofpsychological realism andthe rapid destruction of thebriefly flourishingrevolutionary faith inrepublican virtuenecessitated entirely newprinciples for the stablish-ment of gevernment.”Mr. Katz concluded byobserving that “It is bothfascinating and a little sad toimagine what might havehappeded if the Jefferson of1776 had prevailed.”• Eye Examinations• Contact Lenses (Soft & Hard)• Prescriptions FilledDR. MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363JAMESSCHULTZCLEARER#CUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10%student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6*33SellWe RentRepairTYPEWRITERSADDERSELECTRONIC CALCULATORSDICTATORSU. of C. Bookstore5750 S. EllisHours: M-F 8-5 S 9-1753-3303 WHY SHOULD “YOU” PAY FULLEXCURSION FARE TO FLY TO EUROPE?Fly with us and SAVE AT LEAST 50%FOR INSTANCE: YOUSAVE«270«>2 week New York/London round trip ^ ___Our price from New YorkCompared toLowest scheduled airlineexcursion fare *539°°Our price from Chicago $298°® YOUComoared toLowest scheduled airlineexcursion fare *724?* SAVE$426ooDepartures every week from April 7 thru October 242, 3, 4, 5 & 6 week duration to London • Frankfurt • Zurich. Availablefrom N.Y. and Chicago. Also Paris and Malaga available from N.Y.The U.S. Government now permits you to pay these VERY LOW RATES for your transatlanticair fare, provided a few simple rules are complied with:1. Reservation requests must be received nolater than 65 days prior departure.2. Fares quoted above are lowest minimumround trip prices. They are dependent on thenumber of seats sold and subject to a possi¬ble increase not to exceed 20%. However, inno circumstances will the $269.00 fare ex ceed $322.80, and the $298.00 fare exceed$357.60. Should increase exceed 20%, flightwill not be operated and you will be notifiedno less than 45 days before departure.3. Service charge of $51.37 is included inthe New York/London fare; $56.39 in theChicago/London fare.14 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 27, 1976 ISN’T IT WORTH IT?L°"<jJ°n/N®w York departures operated by GLOBUS-GATEWAY TOURS, LTD (SWITZER-tWT London/Chicago departures operated by CHARTER TRAVEL CORPORA¬TION. Both with Overseas National Airways, a U.S. Certificated carrier.SPACE IS LIMITED —DO NOT DELAY. SEND FOR YOUR FREE FOLDER NOWOR SEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENTGLOBUS/GATEWAY HOLIDAYS8 S. Michigan Ave., Dept. 6FChicago, Illinois 60603 (312) 782-1590Th**e tours sold by travel agents coast to coast. 2itini4.fiii.ir ♦ * NewfcOsedFurniture *J|| U AppliancesSCollectiblesMMl S 847-1203Tues. - Sat. 12-6W 1401 W. 51st St.Moving Services Available * iWith This Ad OnlyUsed Desks *25 and upUsed Chairs *10 and upNew Chairs *25 and up"each and carry"apmmm^quipment[ BRAND 1*^^SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8i30-5«00RE 4-2111WHYFBI?The Senate IntelligenceCommittee disclosed an FBIplot to discredit Antioch College.WHY ANTIOCH?Because of ourongoing search for alternativesto traditional American education?Because ofour commitment to social change?Because of our stress on personal \•growth in the educational process? \Becauseof our strong belief in combiningall facets of life with education?All of the above?We believe so.Inquire:Antioch CollegeCommunity GovernmentYellow Springs, Ohio 45387Mr-tv'KUttUMt■A^fca****/'*<*««»--:t--“Vttifif** j * , - i i »■CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEBtfl redec'd appt 2 bdrms 1 mod ktc hnfirepl etc 57th and Kenwd rent $350avail Apr 15 phone 752 5757x76 or 9550396 evngsRoom available for female inBlackstone Hall. Cannot be currentlyresiding in housing system. No mealcontract necessary 753 3776 Room 305.Roommate wanted own room in largeapt. on campus bus route and nearlibrary. Reasonable rent. Call 241 7256after 6.Furnished 8. unfurnished apts. Allutilities included, 5442 S. Harper. CallRon Hellbrunn, 493 2525.CHICAGO BEACH BEAUTIFULFURNISHED APARTMENTS. Nearbeach, parks, loop UC and 1C trains;11 mins, to loop buses, door. Modestdaily, weekly, monthly rates 24 hr.desk, complete hotel services. 5100 S.Cornell. D0 3 2400. Miss Smith.SPACE WANTED2 bdrm. sublease for spr. qtr. in HydePark. 643 9447 eves.U of C Faculty Member in need of atwo bedroom apt in Hyde Park. CallKris 947 6435 9 6 or 955 2268Grad student seeks studio or 1 bdrmApt. in Hyde Park. Call 241 6521.SPACE FOR SALEHouse in Beverly Shores Ind. 1 blockfrom National Park beach. 50 min.from U of C via train or freeway. CallRenard at Callahan Realty 219 9264298.PEOPLE WANTEDSecretary for research dept of nonprofit association located in HydeVERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGATTRACTIVE 1% ANO2 V, ROOM STUDIOSFURNISHED or UNFURNISHED$129,„ $209Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus StopFA 4-0200 Mrs. Groak Park. Experience with mag card typewriter required. Send resume andsalary history to Research DirectorInternational Association of AssessingOfficers, 1313 E. 60th St., Chicago,Illinois 60637.Sociological Research Project needstypist, 10 hrs/wk, $3.10/hr. Call SaraLindholm, 753 4355, Tues., Thur, Fri.9:15 300.Dog walker Wanted to walk dog 45minutes per day, early afternoon,mon fri. Pay $15 per week. Must beplanning on being in Hyde Park overthe Summer. Vicinity of 53rd andKimbark. Call 684 3908 any evening, 8pm 10 p m.If you are interested in fasting themonth of May, please call Lee Bruce,N07 8685Where else can you get free applejuice, insurance, a smile 8. help yourfellow human beings? Billings BloodBank! Call for appt 947 5579.Child Care Center wants teacher M F7 10 am 50 8. Dorchester 2.25/hr. CallMs Sinaiko 538 8325 or 493 2981 eve.PEOPLE FOR SALEExperienced seamstress will sew 8. fitany women's clothing. Reasonableskirts $10, dresses $20, hems $3 per.Can meet at school to pick up fabricand pattern or come to my apt. CallChris 493 3290 Hyde Park.Russian by native teacher, once ortwice a week. First lesson no charge472 1420 anytime.WRITING WRONGLY? English Gradwill proofread papers 8, essays forerrors in grammar & style. David 2680935.Swedish massage, many yrs. exp ,women only, Senior Citizenspreferred Residential calls only. Callbetween noon one, 5 6 p.m., #463 4171.Experienced cello teacher will takestudents of any age 324 2144MILES ARCHER MOVERS,Reasonable prices Call 241 5830 or 9470698 or 752 4910 for information.SCENESTHE GONDOLIERS glide into Mandeltonight at 8 pm and Sat. at 1 30 and 8pm. Romantic tours start at $2 50.Catch the Spirit of the Boogie Fridayat PSI U's Leap Party 9 30 pm UCIDrequiredSUFI TEACHING STORIES areading from the works of IndriesShah Tuesday, March 9 at 1 p.m. andUNIVERSITYORCHESTRABeethoven, Eroica SymphonyCopland, Appalachian SpringRimsky-Korsakov, Russian Easter OvertureSaturday, March 6, 1976 —8:30 P.M.Mandel HallAdmission FreeUniversity ofSan Fernando ValleyCOLLEGE OF LAWAnnouncing:FALL SEMESTER 1976• Full-time 3-year day program• Part-time day and evening programsTin* sc hool isFULLY ACCREDITEDby the Committee* ot B.ir Fx.miiners,State Bar ol ( alitorniaTel: (213) 894-r>7118353 Sepulveda Blvd., Sepulveda. Ca. 91343 Wednesday March 10 at 7 p.m. I IT,HUB bldgl, Mezzaine. 953 0233 forinformationPractice Yoga and eat lunch for $2starting asap limit 20 Dan KE6 9047India Assoc presents Garam Hawawinner of the best Indianfilm award of1974 with subtitles Judd Hall 5835Kimbark 27 Feb, 7 and 9:30 pm $1.50.The Center for Policy Study of theUniversity of Chicago will sponsor aforum, "The Business ofAmerica Selling the Consumer" onMonday, March 1 at 12:00 noon in theFirst Chicago Center of the FirstNational Bank of Chicago, DearbornSt. between Madison and Monroe TheForum is free and open to the public.No reservations.FOR SALESHEEPSKIN COAT: Men's, NewZealand made, brand new, unworn,beige suede outside, mid brownsheepskin inside Smart styling, value$300, will sell for $225. 493 3878.FOR SALE: Sunny yellow '74 Toyota,2-dr., 4 spd., radio. Great gas mileage$1900 or best offer. 363 8664 evensTexas Instruments SR 50CALCULATOR, NEARLY NEW, sellor trade for HP 288 7358 eves.Big pine desk with leather top $125 76908 day; 947 8181 wknds/evens.Save $$ buy our expertise inreupholsfering, refinishing andrestoring fine wood furniture We alsobuy and sell For free estimate call usat 267 6604 or come see us at 4619 NKedzie — Tradition Handcrafts.MODEL CAMERAHanimex Lens SalePentax mt. 35/2 8 $44 95Pentax mt. 200/3.5 59 95Can. mt. 35/2.8 49 95Min. or Nik. mt. 135/2.8 49 95These lenses all come with a 5 yearguarantee! Theoptical quality of theselenses is one a par with Vivitar lensesMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th 493 6700While they last boiled and frozenMaine lobsters 1-1/2 lbs. 5 50 each 7532233 Kari room 534 after 6 pm or leavemessageRIDE WANTEDMarried Couple needs ride to NYC NJarea. Leave 3 19 or 20 Return 3 28 willshare driving 8. expenses. Glen, 3246705.NEW SOCIETYCounter recruitment collective of the movement for a new society opposemilitary recruitment pressure in highschools open meeting at Blue GargoyleSun. Feb. 29 at 8STUD SERVICEA Number 1 Studs for hire. For ratesand info, call Nasser at 753 2240, room1414 Satisfaction guaranteed!INCOME TAXESHire a Chicago MBA to prepare anyFederal or State returns or schedulesyou need, minimum $25 Discounts forstudents with simple returns. Can alsoprepare individual, fiductary, corporate, capital gains and loses, homesale or purchase, textbooks 8. patentroyalties, consulting or tax shelters,farm, IRA's, Keogh plans for a priceCall 684 5813 after 6 pm or weekendsCREATIVESERVICESCreative Sabbath Services every Fri.night at Hillel, 5715 Woodlawn at 7 30pm. For more info call 752 5655WOMEN'SMAGAZINEPrimavera, the women's literarymagazine, is on sale in all Hyde Parkbookstores.BOOKS BOUGHTBooks bought 8. sold everyday, everynight, 9 11. Powells 1501 E 57thNOBLE YOGAElectrifies mind for sustained studyRelaxes body for energized workennables spirit for disciplined livingCall Sri Nerode of India HY 3 7454PAN PIZZADELIVERYThe Medici Delivers from 5 10 p m.weekdays, 5 11 Saturday, 667 7394Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourself.ATTENTION BIOLOGY MAJORS:The Biological SciencesStudent Advisory Council issponsoring a Faculty-StudentFun Fest at 5400 S. Green¬wood on Friday, Feb. 27 at8:30 P.M. All Biology students,please come, and have a funevening. Beer, cookies, cakeand other delicious refresh¬ments (and entertainment)will be there. So we hope youwill too. (U.C. ID required.)Also if you need tutoring inBiology for those upcomingfinals, contact Jon Indik at947-8036 and perhaps we canhelp.One more thing — anyBiology major interested infilling a vacancy on theStudent Advisory Council forthe rest of this academic year,please contact Mary Wilde at241-5147. UC WOMEN'S CREWCoxes! Oarswomen! Last chance tosign on with UCs new wave of rowingchampions No exper necessry CallBarb 348 6327 or Susan 753 0232We recently acquired many importand high end lines. To reflect theseadditions, we've changed our name toChicago Audio We still carry colorTVs and make repair referals Call241 5752, and leave a message if no oneis home. SARGENT SHRIVERFor information about R SargentShriver's candidacy for theDemocratic Presidential nomination,ca!l Landy Carien 1307X WoodwardCourt 753 2249 Please leave message. Lee 947 0032GAY LIBERATIONGAY COFFEEHOUSE, Friday, Feb27, 8 00 12:00 p.m. at the BlueGargoyle Come alone Come withfriends Come join us!PETS REAGAN '76Solid black kittens call 288 3120.LIBRARIANASSISTANTCollege degree; typing ability;language background; full-timeSalary 7525 per year Hyde Park areaCall Mr McNamar 955 4545 Equalopportunity Employer M/F.AUDITIONS fBlackfriars wrll hold auditions fortheir Spring production "Publish orPerish" Wed Feb 25 from 7:30 9:30p.m., and Sun, Feb 29 from 3-6 p.m. atINHSTEP TUTORINGInterested in helping neighborhoodchildren? The Students TutoringElementary Project needs volunteerstutor students in school work, such asreading or math, or to help in specialprojects such as art, music or scienceFor more information call Ron Schwartz,924 2664, or Rod Wing, 753 3541.CALCULATORS Free Market Students for Reagan arein need of your support Call BillSjostrom, 1521 Pierce 3 2240PERSONALSSTUDENTS FOR REAGAN needhelp See mental health clinic inBillingsMy Aunt Ron CarterJoin the epidemic. Get Spring Fever!PREGNANCY TESTS lOa.rn , 2p mSaturdays Southside Women's HealthServices Augustana Church 5500 S.Woodlawn Bring 1st morning urinesample $1.5 donationPregnant ? Troubled"5 Call 233 0305 forhelp Mon Fri. 10 a.m. 1 p.mWRITERS' WORKSHOP (PL2 8377)Karol Remernber Gertrude's"Anything Let's nope next week isonly halt as maudlinAnnouncing the SR56 and SR52 newprogrammable calculators fromTexas instruments Call for low priceson these and other Tl's and HewlettPackards 753 2240, 1916 aft; 24> 5496evesLOSTGold chain with enamel medallion inor near HP co-op LARGE REWARD ITiiOdl.wmtfd1342 E 55 St Chicago IL 60615493-6700BOB’S NEWSSTAND ANO GULLIVERS DISCOUNTS2 GREAT STORES. READ ON:Bob s carries 2000 different mags from all overAmerica. Europe and Africa, as well as weeklynewspapers from France, England, Germany andSwitzerland. We carry High Times, and 6 differentcigarette papers, as well. Bob's is now the exclusiveHyde Park outlet for Blue Boy, the new, slick gaypublication as well as Africa the international mon¬thly. You will find something you like, we re sure.5100 Lake Park 684-5100-HOWEVER-If the prices are too much for your pocketbook, tryGullivers discounts, open Wed. and Sat. only, 11K>0-5:00. Books, toys, school supplies, undergroundcomix, children's books, party favors, etc. ALL AT25 *• OFF OR MORE. 200 feet South of the KimbarkShopping Center. 5309 South Kimbark. If you can'tfind us on Wed. or Sat. call Bob Katzman at 955-0470.GULLIVERS IS NOW OPEN ON SATURDAYS. TOO. 11-5THERE IS NO MATTERThe physician seeks to improve matterthrough its laws.The metaphysician disproves matter byknowing that it has no laws.CHRISTIAN SCIENCE identifies man as hereally is — loving, fearless, uninhibited, whole,free - totally independent of matter and ofits false limitations.Check it out for yourself at our Reading Room57th St., next to the MediciFriday, February 27, 1976 - The Chicago Maroon -15CHEESE SPECIALSCHEESE PRICES ARE FORDANISH TYBO ONE POUND MINIMUM PURCHASES$J69fontina $|89PROVOLONE $J39ni irnn a n BRANDY FLAVOREDCHEDDAR SPREADS port wine $-|35HOLLAND EDAM $ J 99CALIFORNIA MONTEREY JACK $'|89SWISSEMMENTHALER $-|79FRENCH TABLE WINEHALF BOTTLE SALEENOUGH WINE FOR TWO AT A PRICEONE INDIGENT STUDENT CAN AFFORDNONE OVER $1" SOME AS LOW AS $125 12 forS1800Values Up To $2" Your ChoiceComplete Party ServiceAppetizers to Zinfandel 2427 East 72nd StreetBA 1-9210Dally: 10 A.M.-9 P.M, Sunday: Noon-6 P.M.16 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, February 27, 1976