They signed the peace, but ,,, see page 3Kurland speaks on Supreme CourtBy JEFF ROTH“Those who blindly worshiped theWarren Coart as the epitome of good, largelybecause it reflected their own prejudices,will find the Burger Court an abomination,”predicted law professor Philip KurlandSunday evening.Kurland, who spoke on “The New SupremeCourt” as part of the Woodward Court lec¬ture series sponsored by resident masterIzaak Wirszup, continued: “For those whoequally blindly despised the Warren court asthe epitome of evil, largely because itrejected their own prejudices, the BurgerCourt will probably be regarded as an im¬provement.”Kurland began with the thesis that many ofthe current problems of American govern¬ment result from the failure of the Americanpeople to understand the institutional natureof the government. “Many of our present illsarise from our failure to comprehend thatgovernmental institutions, like other in¬stitutions of our society, are both more thanand different from the men who at any giventime happen to occupy the office,” he said.He contended that as a result, history hasseen the progressive deterioration ofThe first man to see a single atom ispreparing a laboratory that could helpunravel the basic secrets of such diversefields as cancer and metallurgy.Albert Crewe, Dean of the University’sdivision of the physical sciences, announcedtoday that a $429,000 grant from the AlfredSloan Foundation will make possible the.creation of a laboratory housing two newelectron microscopes.The instruments, called field emissionsource microscopes, will have a resolution of50 angstroms—one fifth of a millionth of aninch. With them, Crewe and his colleagues atthe University will have the highestresolution microscopes presently availableon the commercial market. They will be usedto do research in geophysics, metallurgy,and biology.In 1970, Crewe and two assistants focused anewly-developed electron microscope on asingle thorium atom, the first atom seen byman. The commercially-produced models representative government in this country, adeterioration marked by the steady erosionof individual freedom, accumulation ofnational power at the expense of local, andcentralization of that national power in theexecutive branch.One aspect of this has been the growingdependence of state and local government onfederal handouts. “When the lawyers for therich warned us of the dangers inherent in thenational income tax, we tended to deridethem for special pleading,” he said. “It is thenational income tax which has made thestates dependent on the charity of thenational government, charity which in itslatest form is labeled ‘revenue sharing’.”The growth of the executive power hasbeen extremely rapid since the time ofFranklin Roosevelt. Kurland stated: “Wehave arrived at the stage where thePresident asserts, without meaningfulchallenge, powers and privileges that wereonce those of the legislature, even to thepoint of assuming the power over the ap¬propriations process, which was thought tobe the primary safeguard of democraticgovernment.”The law professor argued that many well-meaning persons have applauded the ex-are based on Crewe’s developmental work ofthe late 1960s.Crewe, who is also a professor in the.departments of physics and biophysics, theEnrico Fermi Institute, and the college at theUniversity, has planned the new microscopelab. It will be located in the AcceleratorBuilding, an annex of the Fermi Institute onSouth Ellis Avenue near 56th Street.The facility will be designed to providegeophysical, metallurgical, and biologicalinformation not obtainable by any othermethod. Interested faculty members havealready indicated their plans for thelaboratory use. They include Julian Gold¬smith, the Charles Merriam DistinguishedService Professor in the department ofgeophysical sciences, who sees the new labas creating “prospects of a greatbreakthrough in the study of slow reactions,”adding observation of overgrowths of crystalseeds to a list of planned work; BernardRoizman, professor in the departments of pansion of the powers of the executive undercharismatic presidents such as Rooseveltand Kennedy, without realizing the con¬sequences. He repeated the warning ofJustices Frankfurter and Jackson that “evilmen are rarely given power; they take itfrom better men to whom it has been en¬trusted.”Just as the White House has increased itspowers beyond those granted by the Con¬stitution, so has the judiciary. Many whoacclaimed the Warren Court’s assertion ofpower are now very worried about what theBurger Court may do with that power.Kurland pointed out two important dif¬ferences between the Supreme Court and theother two branches of the federal govern¬ment which should be kept in mind. Thejudicial branch has no direct responsibilityto the people. Rarely has a Supreme Courtjustice even acted as the President whoappointed him expected him to act. Thejustices are independent, as the framers ofthe Constitution wished them to be, and thismeans that a change of justices, even achange of chief justices, does not necessarilyresult in a new court philosophy.The second difference between the courtand the other branches is that the judiciary ismicrobiology and biophysics and the com¬mittee on genetics, and Chairman of thecommittee on virology, who lists work withherpes-virus DNA and observations of cell-membranee modifications, undertakings of“tremendous potential value in un¬derstanding the behavior of cancer cells;”and Ole Kleppa, professor and director of theJames Franck Institute and professor in thedepartment of geophysical sciences andchemistry, and in the college, noted that thenew lab will have “great value in connectionwith our work on the physics and chemistryof surfaces and on amorphous semicon¬ductors. Also,” he said, “... for our ownmaterials preparation laboratory.”The grant provides for an operator, whowill be “attuned to the capabilities of themachine, rather than the particular scien¬tific problem to which it is being applied,”according to Crewe. Three research fellowswill also be involved in the project.The field emission scanning electronmicroscope uses a focused spot of electronswhich scans across the specimen. “Secon¬dary” electrons, knocked out of the specimenby this focused spot, are used as a source ofspecimen contrast. A picture is thusproduced which represents the surfacetopographical detail of the specimen. This issimilar to a light microscope, also used toexamine surfaces. But a scanning electronmicroscope provides approximately ahundred times higher resolution and depth offocus than the most powerful lightmicroscopes.Other equipment for the lab will includespecimen preparation gear—a vacuumevaporation system to coat specimens with athin layer of conducting material to providecontrast; freeze etch equipment for exposinginteresting surfaces; and an ultramicrotome for sectioning materials.Work on electron microscopes in anotherCrewe lab in the Fermi Institute mayprovide further technological improvements“spinoffs” which could be applied to these orother commerical machines.Microscope service laboratory costs forthe first two years will be covered by theinitial grant. After that time, machine andlab costs will be taken over by users. Thescanning microscope facility will be inoperation in April. WIRSZUP LECTURER: Philip B Kurland, UClaw professor, spoke on ’The NewSupreme Court" last Sunday evening.inherently a “governmental weakling,”Kurland pointed out. Judicial decisionsdepend on executive enforcement if they areto be effective. This weakness has meantthat many of the changes wrought by theWarren Court, in the fields of schooldesegregation reapportionment, andcriminal justice, for example, have beenmore apparent than real. Kurland citedJustice Holmes’ dictum that the courts arecapable of bringing about only molecularand not molar changes.Kurland said that the characteristics of theBurger Court still have not emerged. It hasgone farther than its predecessor in theareas of capital punishment and abortion,while drawing back from the extension of theWarren Court’s positions on criminal justiceand jury trials. One constant factor inSupreme Court history, he stated, has beenits “persistent contribution to the movementof power from the states to the nationalgovernment.” The court has used two meansto overrule state laws, the equal protectionand due process clauses of the FourteenthAmendment. While the Burger Court isunlikely to expand the equal protectionclause, Kurland said that we may well see aresurgence of the due process clause. Hewarned not to expect a judicial revolution,however.One area in which considerable expansionof substantive law by the court is stillpossible is the so-called “right to travel,”based on the Fourteenth Amendment’sprivilege and immunity clause. Thedevelopment of this as the third major clauseof that amendment has been foreshadowed,Kurland said, by cases in which the Courthas thrown out state residency requirementsfor welfare benefits and ballots.According to Kurland, the major defect ofthe Burger Court so far has been the same asthat of the Warren Court: “the failure toaccount properly for its judgements.” Heattacked both courts for tending to rule byfiat instead of reason.Summing up, Kurland said: “Perhaps theWarren Court was the right court for the Ageof Aquarius, that period of purple passionswhen reason was subordinated to emotionand righteousness was overcome by self-righteousness. But the Age of Aquarius isover; its funeral was held on November 7,1972. What the proper appellation will be forthe age that is dawning we do not know.”The Supreme Court nonetheless remains,according to Kurland, “the one govern¬mental institution above all others capable ofaffording some protection, however tem¬porary, to individuals and minorities againstthe incursions of majorities.”physics and thp Fnriro Fprmi Institutp adjusts the oscilloscopp an which hpviewed single atoms.$429,000 grant for microscope labLETTERS TO THE EDITORJoffrey balletTo The Editor:Your article on the Joffrey Ballet (“Jof¬frey Ballet: Seductive Addictive,” January26,1973) stated the Auditorium Theater will“sell any ticket at twenty-five percent off” tostudents presenting ID cards. I learned todoubt this policy at my expense and that ofthree friends Friday night, February 2, atthe box office.When I called the box office earlier in theafternoon for ticket information, I was toldthat student discounts for Joffrey Ballettickets would be given only throughFebruary 8.1 asked if tickets were availablefor the February 2 performance, and wastold they were. When we purchased ticketsshortly before the performance, we naturallyasked for the student discount. The man atthe ticket window refused. He said nodiscounts were given on weekends.The woman to whom I spoke on the phoneeither neglected to tell me there would be nostudent reduction for the performance Iwanted to see, or the Auditorium’s policy isunclear even to its employees. I suggest thatThe Maroon inquire into the exact policy, and that any student also check beforeassuming he will obtain a discount.Bonnie KaplanEDITOR’S REPLY: After checkingwith the Auditorium Theater, theMaroon learned that student discountsare available only for certain per¬formances. In the case of the Joffrey,students could receive discounts uponpresentation of a valid ID for thefollowing performances: Wednesday,January 31; Thursday, February 1;Sunday, February 4:Tuesday, February6; Wednesday, February 7; andThursday, February 8. A certainnumber of tickets at various prices areset aside for each performance to besold at twenty-five percent off, andstudent discounts are valid as long asthese tickets are not sold out.It should also be noted that while theAuditorium advertises that patronsmay purchase tickets on Masterchargeand BankAmericard, tickets paid for inthis manner will be mailed out and maynot be picked up at the time of purchase. CALENDARTuesday, February 6COLLOQUIUM: "Organic solids and one dimension spinexpectations," U of Pa prof Anthony F Garito, RIA 480, 4:15pm.FILM: “River of No Return," DOC, Cobb, $1,7:30 pm.BASKETBALL: The Chicago Maroons, with a 10 3 record,prepare to demolish Roosevelt U at the field house, 8 pm.DISCUSSION: "New research in race and ethnic relations",Stanley Lieberson, SS 305, sponsored by the Society of SocialResearch. Bring your lunch to the noon meeting.BRIDGE 1 Beginner'sand intermediate instruction in bridge,bridge, Ida Noyes, >.BRIDGE 2: Duplicate bridge, Ida Noyes, 50c, 7 pm.BRIDGE 3: Club championship, Ida Noyes, 7 pm.SPEAKER: "Control of synthesis of catabolic enzymes inescherichia coli and klebisiella aerogenes" (Huh?), MITprof Bonnie Tyler, Ricketts North 1, 5724 Ellis, 4 pm. Coffeein room 7 at 3:30 pm.Wednesday/ February 7LECTURE: "A crisis in confidence," Charles L Brown,president of Illinois Bell, Business East 103, 1 pm. (All selfproclaimed radicals have a chance to protest on the sheerprinciple of it.)SEMINAR: "Hydrogen atom recombination," Pittsburgh Uprof Fred Kaufman, K 103, 1:30 pm.COLLOQUIUM: Econometrics and statistics colloquium"Reporting of Bayesian studies," Harry Roberts, Rosenwald 11, 2 pm.SEMINAR 2: "The reactive sites of protein proteineaseinhibitors," Michael Laskowski, Abbott 101, 947 E 58, 4 pm. CONFERENCE: Frontiers of medicine "Modern approaches to gastro intestinal bleeding," Dr Richard WReilly coordinator, Billings P-117, fee: $15, 2 6 pm. Forinformation call 947 5271.FILM: (**•* highly recommended) Buster Keaton's classic"The General," DOC, Cobb, $1, 7:30 pm.FREE UNIVERSITY: Bike repair course "Hubs and wheelbuilding," 5621 S University, 7 pm. For further information,call Bill Fay 667 7444.TABLE TENNIS: Club meeting and instruction, 6 pm, 3rdfloor, Ida Noyes, 6 pm...LECTURE: "The quest for an organic society and culture,"‘ T L Brink, Swift 106, 4 pm.Thursday/ February 8SEMINAR: Medicine and the community "Population:moral issues," Billings P 117, 3 5 pm.PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM: "Recent ideas on partial differential equations" Charles Fefferman, Eck 133, 4:30 pm.FILM: "FP: 1," Sci Fi Films, Cobb, 7 and 9:30 pm.BASKETBALL AGAIN: The women's basketball teamtakes on Mundelein, Ida Noyes, 7 pm. - .TRACK: Frosh soph and indoor college relays, fieldhouse, 4pmCLUB: The Go Club goes to play Go in Ida Noyes, 7 pm.SATSANG: Devotees speak and answer questions, BlueGargoyle, 7:30 pm.FREE UNIVERSITY: Following on the heels of the folkfestival, the Free U has a Blues Class, Ida Noyes, 7 pm.CONCERT: Amazingrace presents John Prine and Wildflower in a benefit concert, Cahn Auditorium in Evanston(Sheridan and Chicago). 8 pm. For tickets and informationcall Don Cacioppo, 328 9657.MIRACULOUS WATERS THERAPYat The University of ChicagoHow many times in the last 24 hours did you risk a heart attack or anulcer — simply because you didn’t know a little fact about properbreathing?When was the last time you snapped at an imagined insult — and lost atrue friend?Are you missing respect and popularity — by a hairsbreadth — becauseyou’re overlooking a simple principle of human dynamics?Is insomnia ruining your life — because you’re omitting a 20-second,nightly routine?Are you starving yourself sensually — without even knowing it? Withoutknowing what to do about it?Do you cause secret misery to loved ones - when you’re actually tryingyour hardest to help them?□ Are you leaving yourself open to daily tensions that can snowball intodisastrous “blow-ups”?□If you are guilty of even one of these seven deadly sins, yoursolution may be a dip in fetid old Botony PondORattendance at next Sunday's dance/concert with the in¬credible MUDDY WATERSat 8 p.m. in Bartlett Gymnasium for a paltry $1.50SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 11thIf you are one of the lucky people who have learned to live successfully in this modernworld( why not share this great gift with a troubled friend or loved one? Introduce him orher to the electric therapy practiced by the master of Chicago blues music. MUDDYWATERS, with his Chicago blues band, aided by the rhythms of Hale Aust, and Woof. Youmay learn intuitivelyHow to conquer love-starvationSensual pleasure (you may never have really experienced it before)A simple body rhythm-more beneficial than strenuous exerciseBubble freedom - a giddy technique to clear your thinking. How to start likingyourself.Or. none of the above, in which case - tough luck.U.C.I.D. required; U.C. students, $1.50, staff and guests, $2.50. 8-12 midniahtSunday, February 11th, 1973 8ANOTHER W.C. EVENT TO HELP KEEP THE SNOW AWAY.? - The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, February 6, 1 *' i * »'/ ('/. ■ ' * * * .... .4 t .1973 rrrrm TTT1 JAnti-war groups react to Viet truceBy STEVE ASKINThis war might be over, but the task of thepeople who opposed it is far from done. Thatis the universal conclusion of activists fromvarious wings of the anti-Vietnam Warmovement in these days since PresidentNixon’s announcement of a Vietnam truce.“Signing a peace agreement makes littledifference for the way I’ve acted,” saidJoffre Stewart, who refused to register whenthe current selective service system wasfirst establishment in 1948. “Those who wereinvolved (in the anti-war movement) onlybecause of Vietnam have very narrow view.War is in the nature of the state and while thestate exists there can be no such thing aspeace.”Robert Fulton, a freshman at the Collegecurrently facing trial for refusal to registerfor the draft, reacted to the ceasefire’s effecton his trial. “I don’t know what influence itmight have on my case, ” he said (Nixon hassince announced his “no-amnesty” policy),“but it certainly won’t change the fact thatI’m anti-conscription and anti-war.” TheVietnam war did affect Fulton’s development as a pacifist. “I probably wouldn’t havedone it (refused to register) if there hadn’tbeen this war. It brought the problem of warin general to the consciousness of a lot ofpeople, including me.”Some Vietnam war opponents haverefused to pay federal taxes, deciding not toallow their money to be used to fight a warthey believe unjust. War Tax Resistanceactivists estimate that perhaps severalhundred thousand Americans have refusedto pay the telephone excise tax approved byCongress in 1966 to meet the rising costs ofthe Vietnam war. A smaller group haswitheld all or part of their federal income taxfor essentially the same reason. Many suchresistors have pooled that retained taxmoney to establish “Alternative Funds forPeace” which have been used to supportanti-war and local community organizationsand actions.On the day the cease fire was formallysigned in Paris (Saturday, January 15) about a dozen Hyde Parkers met with taxresistance activists at the local Friend’smeeting house, 5615 S. Woodlawn. A longtimetax refuser, a man who now prefers to beknown by the name Payno Warbucks, ex¬plained why he still will not pay federal taxesdespite the promised end to fighting inVietnam.Warbucks noted that the largest federalgovernment appropriations (over 60 percentof the total budget including national debtand veteran’s benefit obligations from pastwars) will continue to be for military pur¬poses and that money sent to Washington is“rarely used to meet the real needs ofpeople.”“One elderly women in the audience, along time peace activist suggested that “asthe federal government withdraws itssupport from social programs, they (the taxresistor’s alternative funds) could be part ofa citizen revolt to keep those activitiesgoing.” Her husband feared that fightingmight continue in Vietnam long after with-drawl of US ground troops and that massivemilitary aid to the Thieu regime would thenalmost certainly continue.Can tax resistance effect governmentpolicy? “After the phasing down of theVietnam War, this is not very likely,” ad¬mitted Warbucks. “Probably the movementwill level off to include only those who see it*as of value to preserve a tradition of dissent”or who feel it necessary to prevent theirmoney from being spent to purchaseweapons which might be used to kill people insome future war.Warbucks stance as a tax refuser con¬siderably predates the present U S in¬volvement in Asia. He stopped payingfederal income tax in the late 1950s, when herealized how much of that money was beingused for armament purchase and other warpreparations. He has not paid federal taxessince. Several years ago, Warbucks spentnine months in prison for that refusal. Sincethen he has kept his income below taxablelevel, choosing “to sharply modify my lifestyle to continue this struggle.”A local tax resistence group in Hyde Parkhas been most active off campus. Its coordinator, Mark Sherman, spoke oftentative plans to encourage involvement ofUniversity students and faculty.Medical Aid for Indochina (MAI) is anational organization which collects funds topurchase medical supplies for use in NorthVietnam, NLF controlled areas of the south,and neighboring sections of Laos andCambodia. Among the sponsors on thiscampus are biologists Richard Lewontin andLeonard Radinsky. Dr Radinsky has beenspeaking and showing films, recently to raisemoney and win support for the group’s ef¬forts. Other members have been visible onstreet corners and walkways, solicitingcontributions from passers by.“Every hospital above ground in NorthVietnam has been bombed...The UnitedStates has massively used anti-personnelweapons” in an effort to undermine themorale of the North Vietnamese and frightenthem toward submission. A movie madeduring a Spring 1972 visit to North Vietnamby American doctors and clergymen offeredsome substantiation for those charges,leveled during one recent presentation. DrRadinsky spoke of the medical aid effort as“a proof, which has meant much to theVietnamese, that not all Americans are theirenemies.”Carol Weinberg, another medical aidactivist, emphasized that with or without alasting peace agreement, the group’s effortsare very important. “Just because the war isover doesn’t mean that amputees aremiraculously healed or that any of thedamage is undone. The purpose of thisorganization is not as much political asmedical.”As of several weeks ago, almost a halfmillion dollars had been collected in a MAInationwide campaign to raise money torebuild Manoi’s Bach Mai Hospital,destroyed by the Christmas series of bom¬bing raids. Since MAI fund solicitation beganat U C last December, $1500 has beencollected here. Dr. Radinsky called this adisturbingly small amount. He wasespecially dismayed by poor response to amailing to faculty members who hadpublicly supported George McGovern’s presidential effort. He urged that morestudents and faculty members join the activegroup of about a dozen who are now workingto raise money for Indochina aid.Marxist-oriented groups on campus haveoffered varied reactions to the cease fireannouncement. The irregularly published‘wall newspaper,’ “Seduced and Aban¬doned” quoted a call to civil war once issuedby Lenin and expressed a hope “that thispeace won’t be a lasting one!” But theyviewed the agreement as a victory, albeit apartial one, for the Vietnamese revolution.The Spartacist League, a Trotskyite group,held a public forum in which they denouncedthe present and past communist leadershipin Vietnam. At their January 30 meeting inMandel Hall a spokesman condemned theParis peace agreement as “a sellout of theworkers and peasants of Vietnam.” Theycharged that this alleged sellout was part ofa pattern of misleadership by the NorthVietnamese and by the NLF in the south, that“from the very beginning (of the earlierstruggle for independence from the French)Ho Chi Minh consistently sold out the prin¬ciples of proletarian revolution.”The American anti-Vietnam movementhas been a loose and often unharmoniouscoalition, whose members shared one majorpolitical goal, but often had little else incommon. If active US military involvementreally has ended, it is reasonable to assumethat that fragile coalition will not survive.But, for most of those who were stronglycommitted to the anti-war movement, newstruggles remain ahead.Groups mentioned above can be contactedas follows: War Tax Resistance 764-3620 or(the local Hyde Park group) 667-8504; MedicalAid for Indochina meets Tuesdays. 8 p.m. atthe Blue Gargoyle, 5655 S. University. Toarrange a film presentation on bombingdamage and Vietnamese medical needscontact Leonard Radinsky at 753-3907; TheChicago Area Draft Resistance League canbe contacted care of the American FriendsService Committee, 407 South Dearborn,phone number HA7-2533; and SpartacistLeague / Revolutionary Youth Committeelists its phone number as 548-2934.NLRB refuses to process library union petitionBy STANLEY GWYNN.deputy director, University LibrariesThe University Library has learned thatthe National Labor Relations Board will notprocess a petition filed with the Board onJanuary 19, 1973 by Local 103-B, a unionseeking to represent the Library’s clericalstaff. The petition, asking the Board tosupervise a secret ballot election on the issueof union representation, was filed by theGeneral Counsel of the Distributive Workersof America which has sought, since March,1971 to become the bargaining agent for theprofessional and clerical employees of theLibrary.The NLRB is refusing to act in this matteruntil it disposes of a number of legalquestions which have arisen because of theUnion’s actions - most importantly, aComplaint filed by the General Counsel of theNLRB charging that the Library hasunlawfully assisted and interfered with alabor organization through the unionizingactivities of some of its supervisos.The Library Staff Organizing Committeeof Local 103-B has already asked theUniversity’s students and staff (see page 5 ofthe Maroon for January 16, 1973) to expresssupport for “a speedy employees election inthe Library.” Union demands for suchsupport can be expected to increase now thatthe Board has refused to conduct an NLRBelection during the pendancy of the litigationpresently before it.In the light of this possibility, it is im¬portant to make clear to the students andstaff of the University that a valid election onthe matter of union representation cannotnow be held either with or without NLRBsupervision, and second, that this impasse isa direct consequence of the novelty of theUnion’s own positions and actions. In brief,no election and no recognition of any union ispossible at this time, and any pressure on theUniversity to bring about either event will bemisdirected.The actions which have created thissituation ara rnmnW hut it may h» nnccihlpto summarize them in three paragraphs:* *1.- In mid-1970 the NLRB, as a consequence of being appealed to in a Cornell Universitylabor dispute, for the first time asserted itsjurisdiction over private universities havingannual budgets of over $1,000,000. Since then,the Board has heard a number of universitycases, and has applied or adapted to themthe provisions of the National LaborRelations Act as amended, and the principlesthe NLRB has developed since 1935. Both thelaw and its interpretations provide, amongother matters, that individuals properlydesignated as “supervisors” must be ex¬cluded from any bargaining unit certified bythe Board as appropriate, that a unit con¬sisting of both professional and clericalemployees is inappropriate, and thatbargaining unit determinations must avoidthe administrative chaos that would followupon the unwarranted fragmentation ofemployee groups for collective bargainingpurposes.2. Under date of March 6,1971, Local 103 ofthe National Council of Distributive Workersof America, ALA (a group which includes theTeamster’s Union, the United Auto Workersand the International Chemical Workers),asked the University Library to recognize itas the bargaining agent for all Libraryemployees — professional and clerical,supervisors and non-supervisors, andstudent assistants. Knowing that this mixconstituted a wholly inappropriate unitunder the National Labor Relations Act, theLibrary administration responded that theNational Labor Relations Board is the properagency for resolving such matters, and theLibrary immediately petitioned the NLRB toresolve the reporesentation question pur¬suant to a secret ballot election followingdetermination of an appropriate unit orunits. In the ensuing informal and formalhearings before an NLRB hearing officer theUnion conceded that the professional andclerical groups had to be separated, and theLibrary immediately agreed to hearings todetermine the composition of a professionalunit. Here, the issue at once became thedefinition of “professional” and “super¬visor”.The Union made it clear that it feels that “supervisor” in the academic setting mustbe defined quite differently than it is in theindustrial context -- a legal question whichwill have to be determined by the Board afterthe conclusion of the hearings. After only afew hearings, however, the Board, applyingthe established definition of “supervisor,”found that some of the Library’s supervisorshad been active in organizing the Union, thatthe Union therefore suffered from “super¬visory taint,’’and that the petition must ac¬cordingly be dismissed. Thereafter, theLibrary was precluded by law fromrecognizing that union, and Local 103, after afew months, reconstituted itself as twounions supposedly purged of supervisoryparticipation, and came back as Locals 103-Aand 103-B. Local 103-A filed a petition seekingto represent the professional staff, andGADFLYhearings began again, centering upon thequestion of what staff members must beexcluded either as non-professionals or assupervisors.3. After several weeks of hearings, aLibrary staff member pointed out to theNLRB that the same supervisors whoseactivity had caused the earlier dismissal ofthe Union’s petition were to be seen in Unionpicket lines at the Library, were involved inthe preparation and distribution of unionliterature for both Locals 103-A and 103-B,and had engaged in other activitiesevidential of employer enterference with alabor organization. After investigation, theGeneral Counsel of the NLRB agreed, and onMay 31,1972 issued a Complaint and Hearingagainst the University which had the effectof suspending the representation hearingspending disposition of the new charge.An Administrative Law Judge heard thatmatter and found tnat five of the nine named persons were indeed supervisors. Withrespect to the reconstitution of Local 103 intoseperate locals 103-A and 103 B, the Ad¬ministrative Law Judge noted: “A paperseparation of this kind is no more than lipservice to the technical requirements of thestatute. A fairer appraisal would be that theNational Union asked only for theprofessionals the second time around inorder to get its foot in the door, always in-,tending in the end to represent all the libraryemployees.” He did not rule on the ac¬tivities of the supervisors, recommendinginstead that the representation hearingsresume. This finding was immediately ap¬pealed by the General Counsel for the NLRBon the grounds that all nine employees meetthe Board’s definition of supervisor, andthat the evidence establishes that they didengage in unlawful organizing activities.Subsequently, counsel for both the Unionand the University filed cross exceptions inthe matter. (Contrary to the Union chargemade in the Maroon for January 16, theUniversity has not been acquitted of thecharge of interfering with a labororganization through its supervisors, and hasnot “appealed its acquittal on these chargesin order to delay an election among theprofessional staff.”) At present, therefore,all action is held in abeyance pending theNational Board’s review of the appealbrought by the General Counsel of the NLRB.For this reason, and owing to the fact thatLocal 103-B is a party named in the Com¬plaint, the Board has refused to process thelatest petition filed by that Union.In the light of the above events, thefollowing statements would seem to offer afair assessment of the causes of the currentimpasse:l. The Union’s basic contentions seem tobe at variance with numerous cases thathave already been decided by the NLRB inuniversity settings. The need to dispose ofthese variances has resulted in the dismissalof one petition, and has required long and asyet incompleted hearings on the propercomposition of a professional unit.Continued on page 6Tuesday, February 6, 1973 - The Chicago Maroon - 3—-\ - ;The Chicago Marooneditor-in-chiefLisa Capellbusiness manager news editor executive editor managing editorPaul Bates Fred Egler Fred Winston Breck Borcherdingassociate editorsJett Roth Mark Gruenberg Tim Rudyassistant business managerRich BakerstaffSteve Askin, Joan Cecich,|§teve [)Urbin, Don Gecewicz, Clara Hemphill, [ CD Jaco,Leonard lamberg, Keith Levine, Jay Pollack, Marc Pollick Arno Rothbart, Andrew Segal,David Sobclsohn, Mark Spieglan, Mike Strimling, Alex Vesselinovitch, Alan Wertheimersports editorMike Kraussphotography editorUgis Sprudzsphotography staffSusan Lyon Robert Newcombe Mike Benedik, John Vail Linda Lorincz Pat Le vifjt Brian RowePfts and entertainment editorElizabeth Russoclassical music editor pop music editor art editor film editor drama editorDeena Rosenberg Gage Andrews Fred Horn Dave Kehr Debbie Davisonbook editor culinary editor dance editorMark Ackerman Howard M Isaacs Nancy MooreFounded in 1892. Published by University of Chicago Students on Tuesdays and Fridays throughoutthe regular school year, except during exam periods and, intermitently during the summer. Of¬fices in rooms 303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637.Telephone (312) 753-3263. Distributee! on campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free ofcharge. Subscriptions by mail $9 per year in the United States. Non profit postage paid at Chicago,Illinois.STANLEY H. KAPLANEDUCATIONAL CENTERb organizing classesfor thefollowingtests:MCAT: May, 1973GRE: April, June,1973;ATGSB: , April, JuneAug, 73LSAT: April July, 73DAT: April 73TUTORING CLASSES START7 WEEKS BEFORETEST DATECALL EARLY(312)677-0779 DOROTHY SMITHBEAUTY SALON5841 S. BlackstoneHY 3-1069Open Monday throughFriday from 7:15 a.m. until8:00 p.m.Expert Tinting - Body-permanentsBleaching • Hair Cutting - as youdesire it. Please mention this ad YES!THERE ISISRAELIDANCINGTHIS WEEK!when calling for appointment.DOROTHY SMITH Thursday, 8:00 P.M. Hillel't NEW 73 JFS2193S“:VOLKSWAGENp$ 193.30 Down. $6*.«tjr Monthly. 36 Payments., Annual Percentage,, Rate to 14.34. Totalr Deferred price$2673.1$ MssTei lit™. SCCS800 MONTHLY,With OK Credit'*193 mw'# V0IL±VOLKSWAGEN SOUTH SHOREAuthorized VW Dealer/ Open Daily—Closed Sunday PhotM*7234 S. Stony Island BU 8-4900The University of ChicagoCLUB FOR RESPONSIBLE INDIVIDUALISMpresents the first of a series of lectures for Winter1973"New Directions of American Economic Policy""THE FUTURE OF EAST-WEST TRADE"By Professor Arthur Shenfield - Director, InternationalInstitute for Economic Research.Friday, February 9, 1973I 4 I 4 v > * Soc. Sci. 122' 4 - Tti# Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, February, 6, 1973 UC literati stimulateIIT Techawks, 66 to 54By TOM YONDORFIt was bread and circuses time on the UCcampus last Saturday, and a goodly crowd ofscholars filled the stands to be stimulated bythe contest between the Maroons and TheIllinois Institute of Technology. The gamewas built up as a contest involving two ex-highschool teamates Frank Edwards andTom Skahill, with a possible post seasontournament spot at stake for the Maroons.The long-hairs and the individuals cheeredthe techawks on to a 66-54 defeat at the handsof the UC literati.On the court, Chicago upped its record to10-3 with some of the finest defense theChicago area can call its own, and an of¬fensive display of firepower that culminatedin Edward’s 34 points.After the game Coach Stampf was sohappy that he called off Monday’s practice(yay!) Actually, practice was probablycancelled beacuse all but one of RooseveltUniversity’s ballplayers had flunked off ofthe squad, and so the game scheduled for thisTuesday has been scratched.UC began the game without the flu-riddenservices of guards Eddy Wilkerson and JeffSalberg. Kroeter and Rollins were the onlyexperienced back-court men that CoachStampf could muster. At the forwards Clarkhit from the outside for 17 points and Ed¬wards worked his best game of the year.Barrett played a good game at the centerspot with some help from Hines. UC’sproblem for most of the game was that IIT’s6’5” center Skahill seemed to be untoppableon offense.Skahill, on the way to his 24 points, alsomanipulated the refs into calling 5 fouls on hisone-on-one opponent Barrett. While he was inthe game Tony did an excellent job ofkeeping Skahill off the boards. Edwards wasa dominant presence on the boards at bothends of the court, and his fade-away, or to theside, jumper looked like something he oughtto package and take to the patent office.Shahill kept the Techawks with-in 15 or 20 points for most of the game. At the half UCwas up 38-23.Frank scored UC’s first seven points whenplay resumed, and Skahill scored Tech’s firstten. Clark contributed a couple of long doublegainers. The play of the Maroons was settinginto a pattern. Frank roaming about thebasket, Clark hitting from outside, Rollinsstaying in the armpit of the man he wasguarding, and Steve Kroeter smoothing thelumps in the offense while Barrett tradeselbows, teeth and gouges with Skahill.With a little more than ten minutes to go inthe game IIT started to catch up. EugeneClark had replaced Kroeter in the lineup, andhe moved into a forward spot, sending hisolder brother Jerry out to guard for the restof the game.The refs and UC foul-trouble seemedlinked in a causal relationship Saturday. Atthe ten minute mark IIT was within tenpoints of Chicago, largely on bad calls by therefs and foul-shots by the Techawks, whenBarrett finally succumbed to the laws ofprobability and fouled out. Jerry Clark wasplaying with four fouls. At this pointreverend Doctor Sherwin Waldman wastapped by Coach Stamf to stop Skahill.Musical guard John Bartok hit on a jumpshot, and UC called time out. When the teamscame back on court Edwards and EugeneClark put on a show that lasted the rest of thegame. When little Clark wasn’t jolting Techwith his driving left-handed hook shots andtimely game-making rebounds, Edwardswas stopping fast break attempts and con¬tributing the most important of his 34 pointsand 17 rebounds.The highly touted Tech press was beingbroken by the older Clark’s exquisiteballhandling and teamwork with Rollins. Butfar and away the dominant, if silent, hero ofthe game was senior Waldman. During thelast ten minutes of the game Tom Skahill didnot score a single point. He threw up garbageshots, and found it difficult to get a clear wayfor a rebound. Some-one kept getting in hisway. Lover, dog-wrestler and Chicagoan,Waldman stopped Skahill and IIT cold.CHICAGO IS A WINTER CARHIVALThe Winter Carnival is hereby takingcredit for the amount of hot air oncampus. In attempt to prolong our In¬dian summer for another few weeks, ourSKATING PARTY IS POSTPONEDTO THURSDAY FEB. 22If that doesn't work, it will happen onFeb. 27. You can rent skates at $1.00 apair for the evening if you come into IdaNoyes 209 up to Feb. 21, or bring yourown.Skating party Thursday, February 22North Field and Pierce Tower Music HotChocolate and Good Times For All.ABOUT THE MIDWAYMedicine awardsTwo University professors are among tenmedical educators and researchers whohave received 1973 awards for distinguishedachievement from “Modern Medicine,” aleading national medical journal.Dr Daniel X Freedman, Louis Blockprofessor of biological sciences and chair¬man of the department of psychiatry at theUniversity, and Dr Walter Lincoln Palmer,and Richard Crane, professor of medicineemeritus at the University, were chosenfrom among the more than 200 men andwomen cited for the prestigious awards,which originated in 1934.Dr Freedman was cited for his work inpsychopharmacology. He is probably bestknown for his discovery in the early 1960s ofthe relation of LSD and hallucinogens tobrain hormones. Dr Freedman came to theUniversity in 1966 from Yale, where he was aprofessor of psychiatry.Dr Palmer received the award “For alifetime of significant achievements inclinical gastroenterology and leadership inmedical education.” “Modern Medicine”says that Dr Palmer’s research, teachingand practice have dealt primarily withdiseases of the digestive tract, particularlypeptic ulcer, ulcerative colitis and Crohn’sdisease. In 1927 he helped organize the newBillings Hospital and the University’s schoolof medicine, where he founded one of thecountry’s first gastroenterologic sections. Heheaded this department for many years. DrPalmer served at Chicago from 1927 to theyear of his academic retirement, 1961. Hesince has been engaged in the privatepractice of medicine at Woodlawn Hospital.“Modern Medicine,” published everyother Monday, is distributed to nearly 200,000US physicians and surgeons. The 10recipients of its 1973 awards are named in thejournal’s January 22 issue.HEW grantThe U S Department of Health, Education,and Welfare has made a grant of $243,654 andhas pledged an additional $1 million tosupport work at the University’s center forhealth administration studies for the nextfive years.The immediate grant is for 1973. It willenable the center to continue to developprograms of research in the quality, costs,distribution, financing, and administrationof health services.The center for health administrationstudies, an interdisciplinary unit of theUniversity, is attached to the graduateschool of business. The center’s director isOdin Anderson, professor of sociology in thegraduate school of business and thedepartment of sociology.Sidney Davidson, the Arthur YoungProfessor of accounting and dean of thegraduate school of business noted that“Since 1966 the Department of Health,Education, and Welfare has made annualgrants totalling nearly $1 million to supportthe work of the center. The present awardcontinues that support at an increased an¬nual rate. It signifies the continued con¬fidence of national helath administrators,and of citizens’ and health field committeeswhich recommended the award, in the highquality of the Center’s performance and thenational importance of its work.”Anderson added that “The grant gives usan assured base from which to continue bothlong-range and short-range research in theorganization, economics, and sociology ofhealth care. It will enable us to move fartherinto the heartland of the health care systemand help to determine to what extent we canmeasure, manage, predict, and plan.“It will allow us to support facultymembers in the conduct of basic and appliedresearch in health care delivery systems,and to support innovative studies in this fast¬growing and exceedingly complex field.”The center’s activities include the conductof nationwide surveys to determine howfamilies use and pay for health services;studies of emergencies and outpatient ser¬vices of hospitals; comparison of staffingpatterns in general hospitals in the UnitedStates, Great Britain, and Sweden; alter¬native methods of delivering personal healthservices; and referral patterns amongphysicans. A nationwide survey of themedical experience of households, thefourth of its kind, now being completed, isexpected to affect the formulation of Mystery libraryrftni >*VPLEASEDONTSHOPHEREUFW BOYCOTT: Supporters of the United Farm Workers continue their Saturdayboycott at the Hyde Park A & P as pari of theii nationwide boyiult uf the chain.Lost Saturday, about 75 customers were turned away in 4 hours. Photos by ClaraHemphill Tuesday “We think it’s working out very well,” saidMarie Hauville of the Student ActivitiesOffice. “We regularly check on the shelvesand put the Student Activities Office stampin books that have been brought in for thefirst time. It’s impossible to know how manytimes the same books are recycled, but we doget some idea of the number of new booksthat are brought in.”The Ida Noyes Mystery Library wasstarted earlier this year with contributions ofpaper back mysteries from faculty membersand from the Student Activities Office staff.These have been supplemented by purchasesat neighborhood bookstores. Located in a(somewhat) secret location on the first floorof Ida Noyes, the Mystery Library consistssimply of a place to bring in and to pick upbooks. The idea is that you bring in booksthat you have read, and “trade them in” forothers.“There is a drain on the system,” said MsHauville, “and perhaps that is to be ex¬pected. But we’re delighted to see how manypeople bring in books too.” In addition tomysteries, the collection usually includesMime science fiction and westerns. “Welltake anything that is enjoyable reading,”said Ms Hauville:February 6,1973 - The Chicogo Maroon - 5health policy.In recent years, the center has attractedscholars who are applying economictechniques to analysis of a wide spectrum ofproblems in medical care, including methodsof financing, the economics of the hospital,and the entrepreneurial role of physicians.The center also has drawn on politicalscientists who are exploring the developmentof public policy in health care and the impactof diverse approaches to health carelegislation upon the delivery system.Endocrine grantA University endocrinologist has receiveda gift in memory of a woman who, for periodstotaling more than 30 years, was a patient ofphysicians from the University’s hospitalsand clinics complex.Dr. Edward Ehrlich, associate professor inthe department of medicine, has received$1,000 from the Georgia Faloona endocrineresearch fund.He will apply the donation to his currentresearch being conducted in the University’sdivision of the Biological sciences and ThePritzker School of Medicine. His work in¬volves the effects of insulin on the movementof sodium ions across cell membranes.The former patient, Georgia Faloona,suffered from a variety of endocrinedisorders and was a long-time patient in theUniversity’s hospitals and clinics. Followingher death in 1972, her two sons establishedthe fund.The purpose of the fund, they said, is tosupport basic and applied research in en¬docrinology at the University as a memorialto Mrs. Faloona and as a tribute to the manyphysicians at the University who directedtheir energies and resources to her care. DrEhilich is the first recipient of what is ex¬pected to be an annual award.Ryerson foundationThe Trustees of the University haveestablished a special lectureship at theUniversity in honor of the late Nora andEdward Ryerson.Responsibility for arranging the lectureshas been assigned to the University’s Centerfor Policy Study. Its director, D J Bruckner,said the lectures will be broadcast on radiostations throughout the nation and will beprinted and distributed widely.The entire faculty of the University hasbeen asked to submit nominations for theRyerson Lecturer for the 1973-74 academicyear. Every member of the faculty is eligibleto nominate and any member of the facultymay be nominated. A committee of threefaculty members appointed by Edward Levi,president of the University, will select thefirst Ryerson Lecturer from the nominations received.Levi said that “‘no lectures at theUniversity could carry a prouder designationthan the names of Nora and EdwardRyerson. We hope the Ryerson Lectures willprovide occasions for thoughtful, memorablediscussions reflecting the kind of originalcontribution to understanding and discoveryfor which this University stands.”The Ryerson Lecturer will choose his ownsubject, with the approval of the selectioncommittee. The lectures will be given to anaudience from the entire University.Bruckner, who is also the University’s vice-president for Public Affairs, said the in¬tention is to provide the lecturer with anopportunity to make an important presen¬tation to the University, and through it to amuch wider audience and to readersthroughout the world.The selection committee is scheduled toannounce the name of the first RyersonLecturer before April 1.Du Bois deathKenneth Du Bois, 55, of the University,died of cancer at 5 pm Wednesday, January24, at his home in the Hyde Park neigh¬borhood of Chicago.He was a professor of pharmacology anddirector of the toxicity laboratory in thedivision of the biological sciences and ThePritzker School of Medicine at the Univer¬sity.In 1972 Du Bois assured Chicagoans thattheir drinking water was safe from analleged plot to poison Lake Michigan.Earlier, he had also publicly stated thatsome substitutes for banned DDT might bemore harmful to man than the outlawedpesticide.Du Bois’ life-long interest had been thetoxicity of environmental chemicals, in¬cluding pesticides, metals, and various in¬dustrial chemicals. Though he was an in¬ternational authority in his field and wascalled on by the federal government forcommittee work, he also had a deep concernfor the local city environment and for LakeMichigan.He is survived by his widow, the formerJere Deroin, and three children: Elizabeth,14; Kenneth, 13; and Thomas, 9.Lester appt.Dr Thomas William Lester, Jr, hasreturned to the University as a professor inthe department of medicine, following 10years of teaching at the University ofColorado.Dr Lester, 57, is a 1941 graduate of theUniversity medical school and held ap¬pointments at the University from 1946 until1962. He received a distinguished service award last year from the University’smedical alumni association.Early in his career Dr Lester specialized inthe study of air-borne infections. In 1965 bebegan intensive research on tuberculosis.His work at the University is expected to bein the broad area of pulmonary diseases.After his 1946 appointment at theUniversity as an instructor in Medicine, DrLester was subsequently an assistantprofessor in the department of medicine in1948 and an associate professor of medicinein 1951. From 1950 until 1955 he was alsodirector of the University’s student healthservice.He became chief of staff of suburban CookCounty tuberculosis hospital-sanitarium in1955 and also became at the same time aclinical associate professor of medicine atthe University.In 1962 Dr Lester moved to Denver,Colorado, to become chief of chest medicineat the National Jewish Hospital. He also heldappointments at the University of ColoradoMedical School, rising from clinicalassociate professor of medicine in 1962 toprofessor of medicine in 1969.IPIRGIPIRG, the Illinois Public InterestResearch Group, is currently beingorganized at the University and a number ofother colleges and universities. It is an at¬tempt to provide the resources, expertiseand continuity which student movementshave lacked in the past. IPIRG will un¬dertake research and action projectsdetermined by its member students, and willinvolve many of them in its work. Areas inwhich IPIRG could make a considerableimpact include consumer protection, en-vironemntal preservation, racial and sexualdiscrimination, health care, and oc¬cupational safety. A fulltime, paid staff oflawyers, natural and social scientists andorganizers will be augmented by hundreds ofstudents, many gaining academic credit fortheir work. IPIRG’s means for bringingabout social and institutional change willinclude research, public education, lobbyingand litigation. IPIRG will be financed by anincrease of one dollar per quarter instudents’ fees, refundable to any student whodoes not wish to support these activities.At this time there are PIRGs operating infourteen states, and at least ten more arebeing organized. Northwestern, Universityof Illinois at Chicago Circle, Lake Forest andDe Paul are a few of the other schools in thestate where IPIRG groups are now active. Adrive to create general awareness and un¬derstanding of IPIRG, and to get a majorityof students to petition the University to in¬stitute the funding procedure, will begin nextweek. Anyone interested in working on theIPIRG campaign or in just finding out moreabout it, can come to Ida Noyes on Monday,February 12 (room 217) or Tuesday,February 13 (memorial room, 2nd floor),between 7 pm and 11 pm, or leave their nameand phone number in the IPIRG mailbox inthe Ida Noyes checkroom. A discussion ofIPIRG will be presented on WHPK (88.3FM)at 5 pm, Monday, February 12.• sNew record set in IM track meetBy MIKE KRUASSJim Reitman of Henderson house wonthree of the six running events and set a newIM record in the 440 yard run in last week’sReitman burned up the track with a 54.3quarter mile. He was a full 3.3 seconds aheadof his nearest competitor, Steve Kroeter.Besides winning the 440, Reitman crankedout a 9.45,70 yard low hurdle performance,four tenths of a second ahead of Vincenthouse’s Fujimoto. He then went on to defeatBreckinridge’s Marty Delong in the half milerun. Reitman ran a tough 2:11.4, eightseconds better than second place Delong.Reitman’s amazing performance sparkedHenderson house into a first place tie withVincent house. Both teams ended the eveningwith 133 points.Henderson house lost their chance for solepossession of first place by losing to Vincentin the 880 relay. Four-tenths of a secondmade the difference, as a determined Vin¬cent runner defeated the Henderson an¬chorman.In the field events Fujimoto of Vincentturned in an 18 foot 8 inch leap in the broadjump, 6 inches better than Shorey’s,Robesch.Frank Edwards of varsity basketballfame, tied with Upper Flint’s Manskie in ahigh jumping dual \.hich lasted most of thenight. Edwards took time out from highjumping to place third in the 70 yard lowhurdles and third in the 16 pound shot putwith a heave of 35’-ll”.Mike Fogel and Chuck Hanrahan, team¬mates on the varsity football team, battledfor first place in the shot. When the dustcleared Fogel of Psi U handily defeated Hanrahan by two feet with a put of 39’-l”.In the coed competition timing problemsprevented an official winner from beingdeclared, but unofficially, the people on topof Pierce Tower, Shorey house, have it.Nearly 400 students turned out for thecompetition. IM department’s free throwshooting competition comes up next weekand they are hoping for as large a tornout.Entrees are due in the IM office, Bartlettgym, tomorrow.Also in IM’s last week, the Law school’ssecond year students calling themselves theSPORTS“Back Row” edged out the Business school’sbasketball team to win the Maroon’s MostObnoxious Team of the Year Award. Theballoting was extremely close, but in thefinal polls the “Back Row’’ proved soabusive we were forced to give them theaward. The “Back Row” you will rememberwon the all-university football championshiplast fall. Now they’ll have two awards tohang in their law offices when they grow up.Coach Dan Tepke’s Physical Fitness classgot into full swing last week. The weighttraining room and track of Bartlett gymwere almost filled with Tepke’s avidstudents. There is still room for another tenundergraduates in the unique program.Tepka is especially interested in workingwith prospective varsity athletes. Dan wouldUniversity library ready to negotiatewith any union certified by NLRBContinued from page 32. The current difficulty, which seems tohave blocked all further action pending itsresolution, has occurred because the Unionhas repeatedly persisted in acting upon thebasis of its private definition of “supervisor”which would appear to be in direct conflictwith the definition provided in cne statuteand enunciated by the Board in numerousproceedings. The Union certainly has theright to seek adjudication of its novel con¬tentions regarding supervisory definitions,and the University has never challenged itsuse of Board processes for this purpose. Itshould be noted that it is neither theUniversity nor the Library adminisration,but rather the actions of certain Libraryemployees who meet the recognizeddefinition of “supervisor” which havecaused the delay and have blocked the very proceedings which could expedite suchadjudication.The University, far from being anti-union,has frequently cooperated in unionrepresentation proceedings which have ledto ongoing and amicable collectivebargaining relationships with eight unionbargaining units on this campus. Consistentwith this attitude, the Library has stated itscomplete willingness to bargain collectivelywith any union certified by the NLRB asrepresenting a majority of staff members inan appropriate bargaining unit after aBoard-administered secret ballot election. Itremains completely willing to do so, and isprepared to resume representation hearingsrespecting Local 103-A, or to assist theUniversity Personnel Office in represen¬tation hearings respecting Local 103-B, assoon as NLRB decisions permit either orboth actions.♦ ** * ** *** * * ajc- like to give those undergrads who wereunable to compete in varsity athletics duringhigh school the opportunity to participate inthe UC’s more open brand of competition.The purpose of the class is to allow allinterested students, to develop their naturalability. Clearly the class is one a studentwould not find in a large impersonaluniversity. Only at an institution concernedmore with the individual athlete, than withpure winning, could a class of this calibre bepossible. It meets in Bartlett gym between4:15 and 5:15 on Mondays, Wednesdays andFridays.The University of Chicago Track Clubdecided not to defeat the Universities ofTennessee and Wisconsin in a triangularmeet held in Madison last Saturday. CoachTed Hayden pulled out six of his top runnersmidway through the competition and flewwith them to Cleveland for the Knights ofColumbus meet being held there.The UCTC led most of the meet. The scorewas 48-47-47, when Haydon decided it wasbest to leave the competition. Hayden’s exitallowed the Wisconsin Badgers to defeatTennessee in the highly publicized grudgematch. The final score was Badgers 69,Tennessee 54, UCTC 48.The loss wasn’t really a defeat for theTrack Club who when their full team arrivescould defeat any Collegiate track team in thenation. The members of the UCTC are thereprimarily to compete as individuals, NOTnecessarily to beat the other team.Among the competition were UCTColympians Brian Oldfield and John Craft.Oldfield won the shot put with a heave of G4’-91/4”. Craft won the triple jump with 50’-101/ 4”.Mike Goodrich won both the 60 and 300yard dashes. Ken Sparks and Tom Bach went1-2 in the 1000 and Bob Steel won the highhurdles. It was at this point that HaydenSparks, Bach, Lowell Paul, Bob O’Connor,Tom Bryan and Ralph Baker departed forCleveland. This left 57 year old ArtMcLendon to run the half mile. According toa Tribune article he finished the event inSHORE AUTO REBOIDERS, INC.1637 E. 75th StreetMi 3-8066South Side's Finest Body ShopOur 18th year in Business ****t* CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Has what you need from a $10 FITNESS: Footballer Tom Rugo works outwith the new physical fitness class.Photo by Pat Levitt2:50.4, to a rousing ovation from the 2,000fans on hand.It was a lucky thing for the Badgers thatstar UCTC olympian Rick Wohlhuter was ona two week tour of New Zealand. HadWohlhuter been in Madison, Coach Haydenwould have been forced to win the meet.As Coach Hayden said, “We really don’tlike to win these things, because then wemight not be invited back.”The University table tennis club sponsoredand won the first University invitationalteam tournament Wednesday evening,January 31. Seven-set round robin matcheswere played by Chicago Circle, IITRoosevelt, and Chicago, in the Ida Noyestheater. The University team of Peter Duah,YC Wong, TW Chan, CY Ho, Paul Hsia,Robert Todd, and Stephen Cohen, was un¬defeated; but the tournement was notdecided until the last match, in whichChicago finally defeated a strong,aggressively coached team from Roosevelt.Roosevelt took second place, with a 2-1result, IIT was third at 1-2, and Circle“ponged out” at 0-3.SUMMER JOBSGuys & Gals needed for summeremployment at National Parks,Private Camps, Dude Ranchesand Resorts throughout the na¬tion Over 35,000 students aidedlast year For Free information onstudent assistance program sendself-addressed STAMPED enve¬lope to Opportunity Research,Dept SJO, 55 Flathead Drive,Kalispell. MT 59901,YOU MUST APPLY EARLYused 9x12 Rug, to a customX carpet. Specializing in Rem- ^^ nants 4 Mill returns at aJL^ fraction of the original cost. 7^ Decoration Colors and Qualities.^ Additional 10% Discount with Jtjj, this Ad. £* FREE DELIVERY *?************£ REGAL NOTESUNDERSTAND PLAYS, NOVELSAND POEMS FASTER WITHOUR NOTESWere new and were the biggest1Thousands of ton;rs reviewed forquicker understanding. Our subjects in¬clude not only English but Anthropology Art Black Studies EcologyEconomics Education History LawMusic, Philosophy, Political SciencePsychology Religion Science Sociologyand Urban Problems. Send $2 for yourcatalog of topics availableREGAL NOTES3150 O Street N.W.Washington, DC. 200007Telephone 202-333-0201 (OVERLAND ,',v>;EXPEDITION,/ '*Encounter {L/li#Overland 'yannounce thatheir expeditions •leave L ondon thro’summer, arriving in.KHATMANDU 10weeks later, i 670.Experimental expedition,tb BE UN OS AIR ES,leasing Los Angeles inJuly, to arrive pfterfaAl 5 months, < 1 330.’“"Also autumn overlandto.JOHANNESBURG.* 3 weeks for <990.0 e tails-8 W est H ill Ct.i*,d u"'a® A professionalABORTIONthat is safelegal &inexpensivecan be set up on anoutpatient basis by callingThe Problem PregnancyEducational Service, Inc.215-722-536024 hours-7 daysfor professional, confidentialand caring ha Ip.Atop The Hyde PorkBonk Building1525 f. 53rd St.955-5151RESTAURANTCHAMPAGNE BRUNCH »4°° tax incl.All you can oat 11-2:00 Sundays. FREE LECTURESEVEN YOGASTENSION DEPRESSION LIBERATION8:00 P.M. FRIDAYFEB. 9, 1973SRI NERODEVENtRABL.t 85 YEAR OLD YOGACHARYAIDA NOYES HALLUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOtvtKVUNl WELCOME ,212 EAST 5»th STREETAUSPICES OF THE SOCIETY OE EASTERN CULTURE6 * The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, February 6„) 973MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSSCENESPre Med Club lecture and discussionDr. Frank Fitch will speak on the Rhdisease 7 30 Wed. INH library.Films: As Six Become One, a study ofroles seen thru the lives of woman, andLavender, an exploration of therelationship of two gay women.Speakers. McGiffert Lounge, 5751 S.Woodlawn 7:30 Feb. 6, 50c admission,sponsored by The EcumenicalWomen's Centers.SPATEROOM Kenwood home. Campus huslim. kitchen priv. Student only 285 3673Attractive room for rent free use oflibrary and color T V. A great deal.Located on campus 753 22972 rms 3rd fl. private home 58th andBlackstone. Ideal for student, respondc/o Box 100, the Maroon.Lg sunny rm in pleasant apt. avail, sprqtr for fern nice rmmts. 54th andKimbark cheap 324 1426Nine room apt avail Feb. 1. Has backyard and is in good location. 5427Blackstone. Call 324 6914 or 445 1923after 4 p.m. Family or four roommatesat $61 25 each.Sublet avail immed. 5313 Harper. 5 rmand bale, in friendly ctyd bldg, lots oflight and space. 1C, campus bus.947 0846 anytime.CHICAGO BEACH HOTELBEAUTIFUL FURNISHED APARTMENTS. Near beach, parks, 1C.trains 11 min. to loop U of C anddowntown loop buses at door. Modestdaily weekly monthly rates. 24 hrdest. Complete hotel services 5100 S.Cornell Ave. D03 2400TENANT REFERRALREASONABLE RENTALSDESIRABLE APARTMENTS turn,and unfurnLAKE FRONT COMMUNITYSOUTH SHORE COMMUNITYSERVICES 2343 E 71st St.See MONICA A BLOCK 667 2002 or 667 2004Cooperative for sale: You seldom savemoney like this! 2bdrms, 1 bath, bale.,1st fir. Loc. 69th and Paxton, Immaculate. Near shopping and lake.Asking only $9860. Americus 798 5700.PEOPLE FOR SALEHave sitter need baby, would like toshare sitter expenses with otherparent at our home or theirs. Call DE27700, x708 or 288 6130 aft 6 p.m.Experienced University typist will doletter perfect typing. Call 955 8721evenings.Local moving, light hauling and trashremoval 924 3560.Tax consulant will help prepare yourtax return Call 731 9636.Portraits 4 tour $4.00 up MaynardStudio, 1459 E. 53 2nd floor 643 4083TYPIST exp. 752 8119, after 6:00 pm.Experienced manuscript typing onIBM Selectric 378 5774.PEOPLE WANTEDBaby sitter wanted; near campusM/F c 12 hrs wk flexible hours paydetails 667 3716 or 753 2878. Preferstudent but others O K.Immed. a pt time babysitter on wkdays morns, our place Call 667 8697.We need 4 people to recruit officeworkers, typists, clerks etc oncampus. Too pay plus bonus. Call BE8-6562 for details.FOR SALEPanasonic stereo AM FM, speakersand turntable About $50 947 9489 after6.Piano. Console $500. MI3 0583 p m.Good, dry Wisconsin oak $15 $17 per1/4 ton. Upstairs and basementdeliveries. 924 3560, 4845 S KenwoodGolden Retriever Puppy tel 363 3257'65 MUSTANG. Runs. Needs workAny reas. offer considered 684 3183Dorado Folk Guitar flawless cond.$80 Call 947 0950 Marantz, Sansui, Pioneer,, KLH, Dual,BSR, Sony and many others areavailable at the lowest pricesanywhere when you speak to Jan at262 35031964 Dodge 4 dr. sedan 1 owner stickshift sure grip diff. Heavy duty brake,clutch and battery. Engine and tiresgood Body sad $200 KE 8 1326.1964 VOLVO 544, rebuilt engine andfront end. 561 3712 asking $400TEN CENT COFFEEPICK HALL COFFEE SHOP(Albert's) open 9 2:30 Mon Fri. Freshfood daily, and SPECIAL homebaked goodies on Tues. and Thurs. inAlbert Pick Hall Lounge.STEREO SYSTEMSStereo Components. 20% 40% Off List.100% Guaranteed. All Major BrandNames Carried Call—Danny—2415037; After 6 P.M.VITAMIN SALEVitamin Super Sale All vitamins andminerals by 20% Hyde Park HealthFoods 1360 E. 53rd St.PAN PIZZADE LIVERYThe Medici delivers 5 pm to 11 pm Sun.thru Thurs. 5 pm to midnight Fri. andSat 667 7394. Save 60 cents delivery, ifyou pick it up yourself at 1450 E. 57thSt.ISRAELI DANCINGTHIS WEEK at Hillel. Thurs. 8 10 pmHEBREW CLASSESBeginning reading; intermediate andadvanced conversational classes:Every Wed. at 8:30 at Hillel House.WANTEDDesks! Call Carin or Mike 643 8384.PLAY TENNISPlay tennis rain or shine. South SideRacquet Club, 1410 Sibley Blvd.,Dolton, 147 and Calumet Exp. VI91235.5500 S. SOUTH DR.FLAMINGO ON THE LAKEHappywithyourroommate? See us. Wehave the apt, for you.Studio 1 bdrm turn unfurn. Short term leases the price is rightCampus bus 2 blocks.Security shops elevator restaurantParking 24 hour switchboard.Mrs. Adelman 752 3800.REFRIGERATORRENTALMini frige: Pennies a day. Billedmonthly. Call Swan Rental 721 4400GAY LIBERATIONGAY SEMINARIANS interested inrap/support group Contact JackYoakam 5757 S. University, Chicago60637 for further info. Next meetingwill be Wed. Feb 14, at 8 p.m.LOST$100 REWARD for return of lost dog,small white shaggy cockapoo. Answers to Christopher. HY 3 9600 x662.WINTER ART FORTHE QUADRANGLEA prize of $25 is being offered for thebest idea for a sculpture, happening,or mixed media work to take place inthe Quadrangle Entries will be judgedon how effectively they offset winter"greyness" and the feasibility ofconstruction or performance...Entriesshould be in the form of a writtendescription, sketch, or whatever elsewould make the idea understandableto the iudges. All entries All entriesshould be brought to the BergmanGallery (Cobb 418) before 2 pm, Feb.9, 1973 Judges will examine the plansand a winner will be announced thefollowing Tuesday The winning entrywill be constructed on the quads assoon as possible thereafter. For moreinfo call 753 4137. Sponsored by SAOand the Bergman Gallery.LOSTDog lost large male Weimeraner.Long tail, child's pet. "Kaiser" Pleasereturn. Reward. Call 955 4417.personalsFlying Club Instruction Rental NewSkyhawk Midway 281 3373Dear Hattie, The World's GreatestHousemother: Thanks for 21/2 years of trouble what's for desert? Love,Steve.Vronsky: Please call a very sick andvery sorry Anna in Evanston Thetrain is nearing the stationNATIONAL ORGANIZATION FORWOMEN is collecting evidence ofUNIVERSITY SEXDISCRIMINATION call 955 3347 foradvice or helpWRITERS WORKSHOP (PL 2 8377).Put a taco in your tummy. Lucita'sMexican Food, 11 am to 11 pm Fri Sat 1am 1440 E. 57th St. 955 0888Pregnancy testing Sat 10 4 Bring AMurine sample 5500 Woodlawn (inback).MADWOMANI bought myself a 1973 calendar ofmale nudes. Yes, I know that is afemale chauvinist thing to do, but Ifeel justified enough. My motives canbe divided into three categories:revenge, education, and whimsy.For revenge, the cheap pleasure ofturning the tables on the usual femalesex object syndrome and hanging uptwelve male sex objects is certainlyworth something I like to really lookthem over and pass judgements ontheir physical acceptability After all,women in this culture are accustomedto being rated physically on a pointsystem: face 10 points, legs 20points, ass 25 points, boobs 30 points.(If you paid attention and added themup, you'll see that they come to 85, not100. That's because the system startswith minus 15 for being a woman.)But we do hear also that men ratethemselves physically, if we are tojudge by those measuring devices onesees for sale in those cute shops inTimes Square (where do you buy thosethings in Chicago?). Is there thatmuch variation? Should men worry?Probably not After all jockey shortsdo not, as do bras, come in cup sizes.So much for revenge.As for education: women have fewopportunities of seeing nude adultmales. Even if women are"promiscuous" they still get toexamine only a limited populationAnd they are usually not exposed topictures of nude men in popularliterature Men's magazines arepacked with layouts of naked or seminaked women ard so are women's magazines: look at tne advertisements in McCall's or VogueEven X rated movies show lots offemale nudity What's in that for us?Any woman who doesn't undress in thedark has seen a surfeit of that Howabout some more uncurtailed shots ofmale charms? What are we going topeople our fantasies with if we see sofew specimens (specimens?)? Mustall our research depend on personalfield work rather than being able topage through the literature in thelibrary? Of course this assumes thatwe women have sexual fantasiesrather than merely romantic fantasiesthat are so tame that Doris Day couldstar in the movie versionAnd whimsy! Oh boy! Not only hasmy calendar afforded me many hoursof viewing pleasure, but it has broughtconstant delight into my life by mybeing able to share it with my friendsI showed if to my sister and she immediately ordered one for herself andone for her favorite barmaid And Ishowed it to my most radical friendAlas! She picked her favorite model bylooking at the faces What man wouldpick his playmate of the year by herface aione! I fear my friend has somedistance to go before attaining totalliberationBut the most interesting reactioncame from that nice forty five year oldman (you'll remember him from lastweek he liked Woody Allen) He accepted the calendar with perfect calmMy sister's male friends (aged earlytwenties) were made slightly uncomfortable by it I think that whenthey looked at the pictures they had anuneasy sense that if we (my sister andI ) could look unashamedly at thosemen, then we must occasionallyimagine what they themselves lookedlike without their clothes on An uncomfortable and unexpected invasionof privacy.But to get back to our hero, theF.F.Y O man bred in the intellectualcommunity of abstractions and fifteenyears of Playboy, comfortable withseeing other bodies as unrelated to hisown and regarding them as unmindingobjects He almost makes me see theerror of my ways in hanging up thissexist calendar But I really can'tresist I've hung it up in the bathroomand I expectantly await the reactionsof each unsuspecting guest who trotsoff to take a leak Will Mr Februarybe her/his favorite too?MADWOMANCLASSIFIED AD FORMDATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: UC PEOPLE - 50c per line for the 1st inserrion; 40c per line foradditional repeat insertions in consecutive issues.NON-UC PEOPLE - 75c per line for the 1st insertion; C0c per linefor additional repeat insertions in consecutive issues.35 SPACES per line, including all letters, spaces, & punctuationnarks. Circle all letters to be capitalized.ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE.HEADINGS: There is no charge for regular headings (e.g., For Sale, Space,People Wanted, etc.) Your own heading (15 spaces) costs$1.00 (75c/repeat heading) per line.HEADING:Tuesday, February 6v 1973 - The Chicago Maroon * 7r rTHECHICAGO MAROONIS PROUD TO ANNOUNCE ITSFIRST ANNUALHYDE PARKPHOTO CONTESTTHE CHICAGO MAROON IS SPONSORING A PHOTOGRAPHYCONTEST FOR THE Hyde Park Community. The winning photographs plusseveral honorable mentions will be printed in a special issue of the MAROONon May 1st. Prizes will be awarded to the top three winners in each category(four categories). A grand prize will be given to the best single picture orgroup of pictures from the same photographer. No one may win more than oneRrize. The prizes will consist of cash and/or merchandise. Check theIAROON in the next few weeks for details on prizes.THEME: The purpose of the contest is (display good photographs to allwhich would have normally been seen by few. The categories are “land¬scapes” and “people”.ELIGIBILITY: This contest is strictly for amateurs in the Hyde Park area.There will be two divisions: one for UC students and the other for Hyde Parkresidents and UC faculty and staff. No one on the MAROON staff is eligible.ENTRIES: Prints must be received no later than mid-night April 6,1973. AllEhotos must be unmounted, preferably 8x10”, black and white prints. On theack of each photo print name, address, category and the number of photossubmitted. Entry is limited to seven (7) photos per person. Photographsshould be put in an envelope with name, address, eligibility (UC student or UCFaculty, Staff, or Hyde Park resident) photo category and number of photossubmitted clearly marked on the envelope. Entries should be left in either theMAROON Office (3rd floor Ida Noyes) or in another location to be announcedsoon. Or entries can be mailed to:First Annual Hyde Park Photo ContestCHICAGO MAROON1212 E. 59th St.Chicago, III. 60637At the end of the contest unused photos must be picked up at the MAROON of¬fice by May 3, 3:30 P.M. or include a self-addressed, stamped return envelopewith your entry.Winning and unclaimed photos will become the property of THE MAROON.JUDGING: The judging panel will consist of THE MAROON photo staffand photographers from THE CHICAGO SUN TIMES..8 - 7r~ Uticogo Meroc a - Tuesday, February 6, 1973J.