The Chicago MaroonVolume 81, Number 37 The University of Chicago Tuesday, February 20, 1973SECC helps discover murder witnessSECC: Julian Levi is executive director of the South East Chicago Commission.Photo by Linda LorinczBy JEFF ROTHOn October 27, 1971, Dale Richmond, agraduate student at the University, wasattacked and stabbed 14 times at 1410 E 54th| St, not far from his home. On February 9,1973, over a year and three months after hisdeath, two Chicagoans. James Isaac Smithand Joseph Smith, were convicted of Rich¬mond’s murder. In the interim between themurder and conviction, an important role inthe Richmond case was played by a HydePark organization, the South East ChicagoI Commission (SECC).SECC, headquartered on the second floorof the Hyde Park YMCA, 1400 E 53rd St, hasthree main tasks: monitoring crime, en¬forcing housing and building codes, andserving as a focus for the creative activities| of the University and other local institutionsin the surrounding community. “South Eastj Chicago,” for the purposes of the Com¬mission, is the area bounded by 39th St on thenorth, 67th St on the south. Cottage GroveAve on the west, and Lake Michigan on theeast.The Commission entered the Richmondmatter immediately after the murder. It wasclear that witnesses to the crime existed. Toget them to come forward, the SECC, alongwith the Hyde Park YMCA and anorganization of local businessmen, offered a$10,000 reward for information leading toarrest of the murders. None was for-I thcoming. There were three known wit-' nesses, all women who were undergraduatestudents at the University at the time of theslaying. When finally located by the Com¬mission, all three had left Chicago. Whenasked to testify, one of the witnesses,currently working in Boston, answered with“a string of profanity and refused,” ac¬cording to SECC executive director JulianLevi.Another witness, now living with herfamily in Rockford, Illinois, also failed totestify. When SECC tried to contact her, thewitness’ mother expressed admiration andsympathy for Dr Richmond (the victim’s1 father, a Harvard child psychologist), butsaid “I do not want to have my daughteriy TIM RUDY*Neil Sheehan, investigative reporter forTie New York Times, told a campus audience"riday evening that it was important for theAmerican press, when attacked, not torespond with self-righteous indignation,”ut “to face up to our own shortcomings andur own failings at a time which is anmusual time for the press in the country.That is a time when we are seeing possiblyhe most sustained campaign in the last 50'ears to undermine freedom of speech andreedom of press in the country.”Sheehan is the reporter who obtained the'entagon Papers and played a major role inreparing articles on them for the Times,he journalist was the first speaker in thelass Media/ 73 lecture series sponsored byle Urban Journalism Fellowship programf the Center for Policy Study.According to Sheehan, Vice-Presidentgnew “is right for the wrong reasons.”gnew believes “we are too tough on him,e’re too tough on his government, we’re toough on the other major institutions in the<ciety....In my opinion the trouble with theess in the country is that we are not toughough on Mr Agnew, we are not tough enoughi his gnvprnment wpVp not tough enoughi the other major institutions in the country involved.” The third witness, currentlyresiding in California, could not be reached.As the months passed by after the Rich¬mond murder, and the case remained as farfrom solution, it was transferred from onegroup of police investigators to another. TheCommission continued to meet weekly withthe detectives assigned to the case. Finallythe third police team to be handed the casesolved it, discovering an eyewitness and acorroborating witness. The case was thensent to the State’s Attorney’s office, where itwas vigorously prosecuted.Both of the men accused of Richmond’smurder were black (as were both of theprosecution (witnesses). The Smiths, who arenot related, both had prior arrest records.One of the defendants had been convicted ofthe stabbing death of a black man on 43rd St,while the other is currently under indictmentfor that offense. In the Richmond case, thetwo accused were convicted of murder, butwere acquitted of a companion charge ofarmed robbery. Both men are now awaitingsentencing. Their attorney has indicated thathe intends to appeal the decision, stating thatthe murder conviction and armed robberyacquittal were contradictory. According toLevi, the failure to convict the defendants ofarmed robbery was a direct result of thefailure of the three female witnesses totestify for the prosecution.Commenting on their failure to testify,Levi said: “I find this kind of a situationastounding and indeed sad. I do not find it atall novel. The first time a situation of thiskind arose was in the fourth book of Genesis,when Cain remarked ‘Am I my brother’skeeper?’ I regard the conduct of these peopleas the ultimate in racism. The notion thatbecause the defendants are black somehowor other they are not to be involved in effectgives these people a license to prey...uponthe black community.”Levi continued, “I think a fair question toask is what people in the College are beingtaught about the ethical basis of society. Ican understand the refusal of someone totestify in a lawsuit when he acquires in¬formation as a result of a confidentialrelationship...But in this situation, when youand we haven’t been tough enough on pastadministrations.” Sheehan believes thepress fails not through boldness and courage,but through blandness and caution.The first amendment is “a unique liberty,”but faces attack because of the troubledtimes in which the nation finds itself. Sheehanfeels that the fear and uncertainty of thecitizenry has lead to a lack of sympathy forthe rights guaranteed by the first amend¬ment.The reporter lambasted the “terriblenotion” that has circulated since the secondworld war of the press being “a goodmember of the team....I think the pressrather should ruthlessly avoid partnershipwith any major institution, any government,or any political party....When you are amember of the team you are not producingnews and information and opinion thatstimulates and informs rather you areproducing...propaganda that dulls themind.”Sheehan reflected on the desire of thefounding fathers in fashioning the firstamendment. He feels the press was given aunique semi-governmental role. The presswas given freedom in order to protect theliberties of all citizens by guaranteeing a freeflow of information and opinion. Theirresponsibility was to polirp government forthe governed. Sheehan believes the im- set upon a stranger on the street and stabhim fourteen times, the person who refusesto testify, who handicaps the confinement ofthat kind of person, in the moral sense holdsthe arm that wields the knife the next time.”The Richmond case is in many respectscharacteristic of SECC’s activities. TheCommission never gives up, continuallystriving to insure effective official per¬formance. Another task, according to theexecutive director, is to “say what theauthorities themselves will find difficult tosay, for example, to speak out, as it has inportance of the role of the press is reflectedin the fact that freedom of press and speechare embodied in the very first of theamendments.The language of that amendment is “ex¬traordinarily simple.” Sheehan said areview of the constitutional debates andwritings of the early period of this nationprove that no law meant no restraint—thatthere was an “absolute right to speak and topublish.” Punishment for libel and slanderwas always available “if one was foundguilty.”Sheehan believes the founding fatherswere “quite conscious” of the implications“inherent in this unrestraint of freedom wasthe evil of abuse.” This abuse, though, wouldbe a temporary evil in contradistinction tothe permanent evil of a fettered press.The proper relationship between the pressand government “should be an adversaryrelationship, a deeply adversary relation¬ship.” Sheehan said that the relationshipmight often degenerate into antagonism, butthat would be a healthy sign and would notlast long because of the nature of our societywhere people in and out of government musttalk to one another.Sheehan feels the American press mustadopt the adversary role now more than everhpfnrp hpr'ausp fhp rpntral gnvprnmpnf in thpContinued on page 3 the Richmond case, against the refusal ofwitnesses to crimes to testify in court.The University is one of the majorfinancial supporters of the South EastChicago Commission. In the past, in fact, thepresident of SECC has always been thepresident of the University. Levi stressedhowever that the Commission is not aUniversity department. The University is notthe entire South East Chicago community.SECC “is a device by which the communityas a whole can mobilize itself to carry out itswork.”SECC is operated by a staff of five persons.Besides executive director Levi they are:Don Blackiston, a criminologist; IrvingCapitel, law enforcement coordinator:Patrick McCarthy, building inspector; andHelaine Billings, community organizationrepresentative. The organization aims atperforming a highly specialized,professionally competent job. SECC is not anarm of the police community relationsdepartment; the Commission processescomplaints of police misconduct just asquickly as it processes complaints of crime.Ms Billings, the community organizationrepresentative, keeps SECC informed ofwhat is going on in the community. Shedescribed her job as “having an ear to theground.” In the near future she said that theCommission would be engaged in somepublic relations work for the community. Inthe past, SECC has sponsored bus tours ofthe area. “Unfortunately students are socommitted to their own lifestyle they don’tget a chance to see what the surroundingneighborhood is really like,” she explained.Ms Billings also praised the “high quality”of police performance available to com¬munity residents. She has worked for severalyears with 21st district police commanderJames O’Grady and has been impressed bythe “sincere attempt by almost all the peopleI contacted...to do a good job. They had areal respect for the community.” MsBillings, who is also executive secretary ofthe East Hyde Park Organization, wasrecently cited by the Chicago PoliceDppartmpnt for her persona! work inenhancing police-community relations.Press should face failures - SheehanMarathon game set to raise funds [By MIKE KRAUSSA marathon fund raising basketball gamewill be held on campus the first weekend ofspring quarter. The marathon basketballgame will set Woodward Court againstPierce Tower in a grudge contest. However,everyone at the University will be eligible toparticipate in the game.The proceeds from the game will be used topay for some of the initial costs of con¬structing the new recreational swimmingpool, planned for the vacant field just northof the Bartlett Gymnasium. Total cost of thenew facility has been estimated around one-and-a-half million dollars.The game will be held in the UCFieldhouse, Friday night, March 30th, andend sometime after Sunday evening. Toparticipate, you must obtain a sponsor sheetfrom either the Maroon office in Ida Noyes,room 304, the Intermural office in BartlettGym, or one of the individual team captains.A marathon player must find at least threepeople or organizations to sponsor him in order to be eligible for the game. A sponsorwill pledge to pay whatever rate he sees fitfor each minute and point his player scoresin the competition. The best sponsoredplayers will get the first opportunity toparticipate. Anyone who would merely liketo sponsor a player in the marathon is urgedto contact the Maroon office.If the Pierce Tower team is yourpreference over Woodward Court, MarkBrickie, Rich O’Brien, and Curt Spiller, all ofShorey House, and Steve Friedman, MikeRoman, and Gerry Lanus are the initialorganizers. Anyone of them will be availableto explain details of the marathon as well asthe virtues of playing for Pierce Tower(phone 753-3740).At beautiful Woodward Court, SteveMoore, resident head at Upper Rickert, willcoordinate along with John Vail who is alsoof Rickert. They- will be assisted by PatConnolly and Denny Christen of the Flinthouses. Woodward, which houses the un¬dergraduate IM basketball championship team has boasted that Pierce Tower doesn’thave a chance.However, some confident people at Pierce,primarily in Henderson House, have men¬tioned that, “Those guys at Woodward arefull of more than just hot air.”In the midst of the confrontation will be athird major house, Burton-Judson. Theservices of varsity basketballer NorvalBrown have been enlisted. He and hispowerful Chamberlain House are likely toorganize BJ into the sleeper of the marathon.Brown claims, “We’ll determine who winsthis ball game. BJ controls the balance ofpower. If we go with Pierce Tower, then theywill definitely walk away with the game. Ifwe fight with Woodward Court instead,Pierce Tower might just as well not comeback to school after spring break.”Brown anticipates the infamous “BackRow” team from the Law School as well asthe All-University basketball champions,The “Zephers,” to side with the team BJgoes with. Teams like “Irvings Complaint,” the dastardly “brothers El Goucho,” “TheArtichokes,” Breckenridge, and Greenwoodare all rumored to be plotting to go thedirection of the BJ team.Brown said Sunday that he had alreadyreceived several interesting offers from bothPat Connolly of Woodward and Curt Spillerof Pierce. However, Brown doesn’t expectBJ to commit itself for a while yet.The organizers of the marathon haveexplained that the marathon is just one ofmany campus activities to be held thisspring. These future campus activities arebeing designed to help create newrecreational facilities.On the drawing boards in UniversityPlanning are six new bowling alleys for IdaNoyes and the rennovation of the fieldhouse,thus opening it for more general student use.Completion of facilities on the new Staggfield is also planned. However, the indoortoilet facilities for Stagg Field will probablynot be ready for the next football-soccerseason, due to lack of funds.CALENDARTuesday, February 20TOURNAMENT: Intramural chess, Ida Noyes, 6:45 pmFILM "Written on the Wind," DOC, Cobb, SI, 7:30 pmGAME: Our 14 4 Maroons take another step towards apostseason tourney hopefully against the NationalCollege of Education's basketball team, at the fieldhouse, 8pmPLAY: "Oh, What a Lovely War," final performance stagedby University Theatre Mandel Hall For time and price, call753 3581DISCUSSION: "Marienthal The sociology of an unemployed community," Hans Zeisel Bring a bag lunch to SS305, noonCOLLOQUIUM: "The anisotropy of the magnetic fieldpenetration depth in superconducting tin," Harvard profPatrick Tai, Rl 480, 4:15 pm,Wednesday, February 21SEMINAR: Chemistry speaker is Robert Letsinger ofNorthwestern, K103, 1:30 pmCOLLOQUIUM: "Seasonal adjustment of least squares,"Arthur Laffer, Rosenwald 11, 2 pm How about mostsquare’ LECTURE: SIMS introductory lecture, Ida Noyes, 7 pmFILM: "The Strong Man," DOC, Cobb, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: "Finnegan's Wake: A mood moulded world,"Quantrell, 4:30 pmTRYOUT: Dance tryouts, Reynolds club south lounge, 8 pm.POETRY: Ernest Lamison, Martha Mulligan, and sundryother Blue Gargoyle poets are—guess what?—giving apoetry reading at the Gargoyle, 7 30 pmThursday, February 22SEMINAR, PART 1: "Studies on early proteins induced bySV 40 chemical aspects," Stanford U prof George Stark,Abbott 101, 11:30 am Part 2 on Friday.PANEL: "Health care delivery: Panel on selected practices in the United States " Dora DeLee Hall of ChicagoLying In, 3 5 pmCOLLOQUIUM: "The physics of irreversibility," MarylandU prof Robert Zwanzig, Eck 133, 4:30 pm.LECTURE : SIMS lecture number 2, Ida Noyes, 8 pmTESTING: Pregnancy testing every Thursday at 8 pm Fordetails, phone 684 4698 or 288 0973MEETING: Gay Lib consciousness group, Ida Noyes, 7:30pmSATSANG: Devotees of guru Maharaj Ji speak at the BlueGargoyle, 7:30 pm.Chicago is aWinter CarnivalThe W.C. presents aPros® ChoirConcertNoonReynolds Club South LoungeWed. Feb. 21FREEalsoSkating Party postponed again. We ll try onemore time, for Tuesday, February 27. Call753 3591 for the latest info or sob story. FUTURE SITE:The Michael Krauss Memorial swimming pool and recreational build¬ing, to be built behind Bartlett Gym, awaits funding. Photo by Mike KraussAll students who willbe applying to medicalschool this summer areurged to meet withMrs. Jacques, the Pre-Medical Advisor, in IdaNoyes Library on Thurs¬day, February 22 at5:00 p.m. This will be animportant meeting todiscuss strategy for ap¬plying.2 - The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, February 20, 1973Sheehan fears for freedom of pressBy USA CAPELLThe First Amendment to the UnitedStates Constitution:Congress shall make no lawrespecting an establishment of religion,or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;or abridging the freedom of speech, orof the press; or the right of the peoplepeaceably to assemble, and to petitionthe government for a redress ofgrievances.“The struggle that’s going on betweenthis Administration and the media andits freedoms is really just beginning andI don’t know how the First Amendmentis going to come out,’’ commented NeilSheehan, New York Times investigativereporter, in a recent interview.Sheehan then sat back and quietlytraced the history of govern¬ment/media confrontations. The ad¬versary nature of this relationship goesback to the 1798 Sedition Act. The basicconcept of the first amendment hassurvived all these years, thoughSheehan is pessimistic about the out¬come of this particular confrontation.“The conflict over the first amend¬ment may be healthy,” he said.Sheehan hopes it will succeed inproviding a reassertion of freedom oftl press. But there is now a con¬siderable lack of sympathy in manyquarters. To Sheehan, Americans areliving in a time of fear and uncertainty,so much so that “people would rather be‘old what to read than to choose.”In this atmosphere the growinggovernment bureaucracy has been able4o increase its powers of restraintimmensely. It is these powers of whichSheehan is very wary. “The capacityto act and restrain those liberties itdoesn’4 like may lead to a drift towardauthoritarian government,” reflectedSheehan.In Sheehan’s opinion the firstamendment means “ he governmentdidn’t have the power to infringe uponthe press. The founding fathers gavethe press unqualified freedom. Ialways thought that they felt the power(of the press) was there; however, theSupreme Court says it isn’t.”“The point is: prosecutors should notbe able to use journalists as their in¬vestigators; they should not be turnedinto informers. Otherwise they cannotreport the news,” emphasized Sheehanin his diminutive manner.“A shield law has to be very simple orit could turn out to be a dagger. We mustprotect the public’s right to know and todo this we must freely print fact andopinion,” said Sheehan energetically.The shield law would not give repor¬ters special privileges or immunity if itis framed simply. “Journalists shouldnot be forced to give confidential in¬formation to a judicial body.”Sheehan is concerned with freedomyet he is aware of its inherent evils andshortcomings. However, a free press isstill necessary. Sheehan cited the ex¬ posures of narcotics rings and policecorruption as examples of salutoryinvestigative reporting all of whichcould not have been done without theknowledge that the informers’ in¬formation was confidential.Sheehan, as the reporter who helpedsynthesize the Pentagon Papers for TheNew York Times, was intimately in¬volved with the issue of restraint andgovernment pressure. However, heshrugs off the personal implication forhis reporting work.The most direct effect for Sheehanwas, according to him, when he wasinvestigated by the Justice Depart¬ment. “It took up 50 percent of my timefor six months which effectivelystopped me from being a journalist.”The broadcast media add anotherelement to the conflict. “The print media does not communicate with themasses anymore.” Ironically televisionand radio is not protected by the firstamendment, but operates under itstradition.The first amendment specificallyprotects the print media, thoughtelevision and radio were determined tobe different. The airwaves are con¬sidered public property. They aresubject to government restriction, forexample, in licensing regulation.Despite these restraints, “the networksseek to operate and report the news.”Sheehan feels the Administrationcurrently is endeavoring a dual'hrust against the media. The first is toimpose further controls on televisionand radio to contain them, and secondlyto “'ame and undermine the printLECTURE: New York Times correspondent Neil Sheehan spoke of the Law School lastFriday. Photo by John Vail media because they generate the in¬formation. Although they have a limitedaudience this information is picked upby the broadcast medium.” Sheehanused the Pentagon Papers as anexample. “Most of the public learned ofthe existence of the Pentagon Papersand got their summary ideas, and in¬formation from television or radio,” hesaid energetically.Discussing his own approach tojournalism and the Pentagon Papers, hequickly remarked that “I can’t saywhere I got them.” And he added, “Iwon’t discuss news sources.” Sheehanwill adhere to his principles.Sheehan is 36 and from Holyoke,Massachusetts. He received a BA fromHarvard in Middle Eastern History. Heremarked that at that point in his life hefelt journalists were “scribblers.”Finding himself on the draft list heenlisted in the Army. Beginning as apay clerk in Korea he looked for moreinteresting work. This lead to the Ar¬my’s information office then to theArmy’s publication Stars and Stripes.Sheehan moved to Tokyo where hebegan moonlighting for UPI and withineight months became their night editor(“I pulled the night shift,” he saidsmiling.) UPI then offered him a job andafter three years and two months in thearmy, he became UPI bureau chief inVietnam Sheehan was in Vietnam fromApril of 1962 until 1964.In 1964 he was hired by The Times and’hen proceeded to spend eight monthsas a New York metropolitan generalassignment reporter. In January of 1965.he went to Indonesia for six months and'hen returned to Vietnam for one year asthe Times correspondent. From 1966-68Sheehan covered the White House andthe Pentagon. Then, following this, hehad no specific beat; however, his baseof operations is Washington."Press must provide a cacophony of information"Continued from page 3executive branch has never before been “aspowerful as it is today.” The constitutionalsystem of checks and balances “no longerexists in fact” with the executive becoming acentralized state in the European sense ofthe word. Sheehan also feels theexecutive shows signs of authoritarianism,especially with its adept use of secrecy anddeception.Sheehan pointed out that during the courseof the Indochina war the executive was ableto reorder the constitutional process ofdeclaring war. The reporter said the pressreacted with “patriotic fervor” to the attackon American destroyers in the Gulf ofTonkin, but had they been suspicious enoughthey might have gathered some informationon the clandestine activities of US govern¬ment that had been going on six months priorto the North Vietnamese attack on theAmerican destroyers.The war power was originally reserved in reaction to the power of governors andEuropean despots who could launch war ontheir own authority. It is Sheehan’s beliefthat Congress was tricked into passing theTonkin Gulf resolution while “the governorsmade war.”The press must take on an adversary rolesince government has become “far moreadept at manipulating public opinion andcontrolling the flow of information than weever had in the past.” The adversary jour¬nalist must engage in a “relentless searchingout of the story, a relentless searching out ofthe information that government and theother institutions of society do not wish us tohave. ” The press must engage in a process ofalmost creative dissent searching out forwhat the source does not want to tell thepress or the public. Advocacy journalism is“based on...a disbelief that characterizesone’s attitude towards what one is given as ajournalist.”The New York Times reporter believesradio and television are now the means ofmass communication in society. Thoughprint journalism is protected by the firstamendment, radio and TV are not. Though radio and TV are licensed and regulated outof the best of intentions, Sheehan believessociety would be far better off if all the mediawas freed from the “shackles” of licensingand regulation. He favors limiting theFederal Communications Commission(FCC) to assigning frequencies and sellinglicenses. Sheehan advocates use of anti trustlaws to prevent newspaper monopolies.The attitude of the Nixon Administration isnot that unusual, but only a “more openattitude” than in past administrations.Sheehan admitted that one “can’t exerciseliberty...comfortably or neatly.” The psy¬chological discomfort of having to deal withuncomfortable information and of notbeing sure if one is getting the truth has led toa lack of sympathy with freedom of speechand press. Sheehan fears that many haveforgotten why we were given our libertiesand take them for granted. He also fears thatthe rise of the executive branch as a cen¬tralized state has led to a rationalization ofour existing state of affairs. The genius ofour country, Sheehan said, was in itsrepresentative institutions, but its wisdomconsisted in the fact “dissent and patriotismwere synonymous.”MAIL CONTRA| Why take chances when you can have the finest condoms rushedI to you by first-class mail?■ Conture: Lubricated. Form-fitting, to hold securely in place. AJ most effective contraceptive. □ 1 doz. $3. □ 3 doz $7I □ 6 doz $11.| Trojan-enz: Lubricated □ 1 doz $2 20 □ 3 doz $5 75! □ 6 doz $10I Fourex (XXXX): Lubricated natural skins, the ultimate in sensitivityI □ 1 doz. $7 SO □ 3 doz $21 □ 6 doz $39 50- Sampler: □ Assortment of 12 condoms. $4. □ Assortment of 241 condoms. $7.2 All made to exacting FDA standards. Money back if not satisfied.I Order today.Econscioua, Inc., 375 Harvard St., Cambridge, Mass 02138| □ Fnclosed is $ Or, □ send COD. (There is a 50cI handling charge for COD). Please rush in plain package underfull money back guarantee.I Name■ Street —— —-Zip-City StateYou have them in 3 days after we get your order. Q1 2? (OVERLANDiEXPEDIIIONi,I Encounter ( /' i.\ ir'Overlandannounce thattheir exped itiona •leave L ondon thro'summer, arriving in.1 kiiatmandu 10weeks later, < 670.Experimental expedition,to BE UN OS AIR ES,leaving Eos Angeles in^ July, to arrive efter5 m onths. i 1 3 30.“"A Iso autumn overlandto ,J 8 H A M N E S B L R f;.f3 weeks for <990.9 e tails-8 W.eat Hill Ct.Are private schools worth the money?-0'ConnellBy SAM FEINBERGPrivate universities continue to experienc >major problems both in meeting their ownexpenses and in helping their students to payfor their education, according to Dean ofStudents Charles O’Connell.O’Connell, who made his remarks as partof the Woodward Court lecture series lastSunday night, first discussed the problemfrom the student viewpoint. Of the 1,493private colleges in the nation, he limited hisremarks to a consideration of a “hand¬ful"—the dozen or so elite private univer¬sities whose standards of excellence areacknowledged by the academic world.Combining data from various sources,O’Connell noted that of a total of 80,000 fresh¬men with acceptable academic credentials(as determined by grades and SAT scores)and annual family incomes of $20,000 or over,less that a third elected to enroll at privateuniversities.The primary reason for this, saidO’Connell, is that very few students and theirparents realize the difference in qualitybetween private and state schools; theysimply feel that the expenses are too great,and that an education of almost equal qualitycan be obtained at a state university. In fact,an increasing proportion of students areneglecting all 4-year colleges in favor of 2-year programs. When faced with this at¬titude, the private schools experiencedecreasing applications, and. in this case,the financial aid services do not even havethe opportunity to help the student.O’Connell then offered statistics showingthat while tuition at UC has doubled in thepast ten years, the financial aid budget hasnearly quadrupled. He then observed thesame trend in an institution which “we oc¬casionally think of as comparable,” Har¬vard. UC and Harvard (although to a lesserextent) have distributed more aid in the formof grants than in loans. However, the recentelimination of National Defense Loans hasresulted in a new system whereby privateuniversities become federal lending in¬ stitutions. Thus, loans will play a greaterrole in future aid programs.O’Connell next turned to the financialproblems of the universities themselves, ashe recited a litany entitled ‘WashingtonDeliver Us!’—from dwindling enrollments,reduced research grants, and inexorablyrising costs. This plea, he noted, was alsodirected toward “demigods” such as theFord Foundation.Federal and state aid, however, have theirdisadvantages. O’Connell cited such in¬stitutions as the University of Pittsburgh andthe University of Buffalo which were“supported to their death”—that is, theybecame so dependent on state aid that theywere eventually absorbed into the stateuniversity system. He also stated that in thelater years of the Johnson administration,the federal government began to give grantswhich previously had been given only toschools of exceptional standards to lesserinstitutions in the interest of developing newareas of excellence. This, he said, has had a“devastating effect” on the private schools,and, on the positive side, it has only enabledthe lesser schools to achieve “a somewhatbetter level of mediocrity.”Rising costs are perhaps the greatestchallenge. At UC instructional costs haverisen at a rate of 8% annually and librarycosts at a rate of 15%. Income from allsources, on the other hand, has been in¬creasing by only 6% a year. In view of thesefigures, it is almost a miracle that UC canstill claim that 70% of the courses in thecollege enroll no more than 20 students.Finally, O’Connell dealt with the“ultimate” question: are private schoolsworth it9 In defense of these institutions, henoted their uniquely valuable contributionsto human knowledge. As evidence, he statedthat the great majority of Nobel prize win¬ners have received their advanced degreesfrom private schools. Also, the presentmembership in such distinguished societiesas the American Philosophical Society andThe National Academy of Science reflects aprivate school domination of over 70% in bothChicago is aWinter CarnivalWell we finally got some snow!To encourage you to get out and savorthe stuff, ourSNOWSCULPTUREContest Deadlineis being extended toMarch 2When you've made something, call us at 753-3591 and tell us who you are and where yoursculpture is. We have suggestions on techniquein Ida Noyes 209.Enjoy cases.O’Connell concluded his lecture on thisnote, as he expressed hope for the survival ofthese fine private institutions, despite all thier problems. Quoting from PresidentLevi, he said, “if The University of Chicagocannot be a great university, it would be wellfor it not to be a university at all.”WIRSZUP LECTURER: Dean of students Charles O'Connell confers with his secretarybefore last Sunday's lecture at Woodward Court. Photo by Hugh TaylorNOW...BUDWEISER MALT LIQUORsure mates a differenceMlintUitK-DUiCM, INC. • if. LUUli4 - The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, February 20, 1973ABOUT THE MIDWAYHPNC open houseThe doors will fling open at 7:30 amThursday, Feb. 22, as the Hyde Park Neigh¬borhood Club welcomes communityresidents to an “Open Door Day.”The “Open Door Day” is being held inconjunction with the club’s annual meeting.Board members Pamela Hawkins, 5468 SHarper, and Ruth Billingsley, 5630 S Kim-bark, are co-chairwomen of the day’s events.Visitors to the club will have an op¬portunity to observe the pre-school day careprogram, Tot Lot, student day careprogram, teen/ tween activities, open gym,a workshop for seniors, and a basketballgame between HPNC and Kenwood Centerteens.The doors will also be open at the club’sKenwood Center, 935 E 50th St, between 3:30and 5 pm.The annual meeting will begin at 7:30 pmat the club, 5480 S Kenwood. New officers willbe elected, volunteers will receiverecognition, and the student day careyoungsters will present a skit.Throughout the day, slides will be shown,exhibits displayed, and refreshments served.Jazz festivalOn Saturday, February 24, 1973, NIA andWHPK will present a jazz concert at 8 pm inMandel Hall. Among those featured will beKen Chaney and the Awakening, who are thehighlights of the concert. They are recordingon the Black Jazz label and have recently cuta new album entitled “Hear, Sense andFeel.” Although they are from Chicago,Saturday will be one of the few chances onewill have to catch their performance on theSouth Side.Along with the Awakening will beKalaparushia Difta and the Light, also ofChicago. They are premiere reed specialistswith the Association for the Advancement ofCreative Musicians (AACM). They will beplaying a type of free-form music which WH¬PK’s jazz-director refers to as “new musicof the highest calibre.”Also included on the bill is the NIA en¬semble which is new to the Chicago jazzcircle, but is swiftly rising. This groupconsists of people in and around the HydePark area.The sponsors for the concert are: NIA, thecultural arm of OBS; and WHPK, 88.3 fm, which offers jazz nightly until 2 am. The costof the concert is $1.50 with UC ID and $2without.Snow sculptureWinter Carnival, the winter program of theStudent Activities Office has extended theentry deadline of their snow sculpturecontest. W C spokesman Richard Scotchreports “We’ll accept any entry submittedbefore March 2. Only four sculptures havebeen made so far, and we’d like to see somemore.” Prizes include $50 in cash, bags offresh oranges and other delights. Peoplewishing to enter their creation should call theStudent Activities Office at 753-3591, andleave their name, address, phone number,and the location and description of theirsculpture.BlanknerFredericka Blankner, the owner of aWoodlawn apartment house who has beenattempting to save it from Urban Renewal,was awarded a Freedom Foundation Awardalong with newsman Dan Tucker, editorialwriter for Chicago Today. The award wasgiven to Tucker for his editorial, “MsBlankner Tries Again,” dealing with herfight for her building.Tucker was one of 43 principle recipients ofthe George Washington Award, given for“constructive words and deeds which havesupported America, suggested solutions tobasic problems besetting the nation, con¬tributed to responsible citizenship, and in¬spired love of country in 1972.”The national awards jury was chosen inDecember from national and localrepresentatives of veteran, service, civic,and patriotic organizations.Alumni chairmanRobert Reneker has been named chair¬man of the 1973 Alumni fund of the Univer¬sity graduate school of business.Reneker, a 1934 alumnus, is president andchief executive officer of Swift and Com¬pany. He is a member of the board oftrustees of the University and also of thecouncil on the graduate school of business.He is a national vice-president of the BoyScouts of America, and is identified with anumber of other organizations-business,civics, and educational-as chairman, Photo by Ugis Sprudzsdirector, or trustee.In 1972 the alumni fund of the graduateschool of business was under the chair¬manship of Raymond Carlen. president ofJoseph Ryerson and Son, Inc. That year’sgoal was $200,000; $242,000 was raised, 21percent above the target and 37 percent overthe 1971 total.Biomed seminarThe University has initiated a new series ofseminars on biomedical approaches topopulation problems.Seminars and lectures in the new serieswill be usually scheduled at noon on thesecond and fourth Thursdays of each monthin Room M-137 in the University’s hospitalsand clinics complex, 950 E 59th St. Suc¬ceeding topics in the series throughFebruary and March are: February 22:W.R. Dukelow, Michigan State University,“Ovulation in Non-Human Primates:Quirks, Qualities, and Questions.” March 15:Sune Bergstrom, Karolinska Institutet,Stockholm, “Prostaglandins and TheirImpact on Fertility Control;” and March 22:Dr Frederick Zuspan, the Joseph BolivarDeLee professor and chairman in thedepartment of obstetrics and gynecology atthe University. “Thermogenic Response andAmine Alterations From Oral Con¬ traceptives.” Other topics will be announcedlater.Dr Joseph Swartwout, associate professorin the department of obstetrics andgynecology and program coordinator of theUniversity’s biomedical center forpopulation research, organized theprograms, which are sponsored by theCenter. Elwood Jensen, Director of the BenMay Laboratory for cancer research andprofessor in the Ben May Laboratory and thedepartment of physiology, is director of theCenter.The Center is one of three federally-funded, biomedically oriented populationresearch centers established at U S medicalcenters during the last two years. It issupported by a $436,658 first -year grant tothe University’s division of the biologicalsciences and the Pritzker school of medicinefrom the National Institute of Child Healthand Human Development. The grant isrenewable yearly, depending upon theavailability of U S funds, for a five-yearproject period. Functions of the Center in¬clude: Basic and applied biomedicalresearch relevant to the world’s population;the encouragement of interdisciplinaryresearch; and the motivation of youngscientists to apply their talents and trainingto the population field.LETTERS TO THE EDITORLegal workshopUpon inquiring as to the reason for theelaborate preparations for dinner in theBurton Law Lounge, I was informed thatthey were for the meeting of The LegalHistory Workshop of the University ofChicago Law School. The title is certainlyimposing; its accuracy, however, is quiteanother matter.The Workshop is supported by theLeonard M Rieser Memorial Fund and itsaim is “to encourage and to facilitatediscussion on legal history among studentsand faculty members,” a worthy aspirationindeed And the Workshop might, thoughin a somewhat circuitous way, promote suchgoals. Perhaps the striking contrast betweenthe sumptuosity of the affair and its sombertitle will stimulate some enterprising lawstudent to devote some time to the study oflegal fictions in legal history. Others may besmitten with the desire to investigate theinfluence of Memorial Funds on thedevelopment of the study of legal history. Ifor one, though not a student of the law,would be very curious to know whichMemorial Funds were responsible for theresearches of such luminaries as Maitland,Mommsen. Vinogradoff, von Jhering andPollockMay I be so impertinent to suggest that theproductivity of the next Workshop wouldnot be adversely affected to any appreciabledegree if, say, the funds for some of theliquor were instead invested in a copy ofvolume ! of Karlowa’s Romische Recht-sgeschichte. a treatise of great importance which the Law School Library does notpossess. In exchange, I would be happy tothink pleasant thoughts of Mr Rieser or evento pray for the repose ot his soul, whicheverthe Memorial Fund might prefer. (Askingyour pardon M. N.)Richard AdamiakBillings billingThis letter is intended as a warning tothose students who may be victimized by acombination of unorthodox billingprocedures at Billings Hospital andnegligence on the part of the Student In¬surance Office.Some time ago I was hospitalized atBillings, and after being discharged was sentan itemized bill for the expenses that hadaccrued during my hospital stay. The bill asat the same time forwarded to Blue Crossand Blue Shield, as I was a member of theUniversity’s group health insurance plan,and to the Student Health Clinic, which at thetime (1971) covered expenses for the firstfive days of hospitalization.Insurance payments were soon made forall expenses incurred after the first five“posting dates” listed on the bill. TheStudent Insurance Office, however, figuredStudent Health’s portion of the bill somewhatdifferently: only those services actuallyperformed during the first five days wereassigned to SHC, regardless of when they*were “posted” by the hospital accountingdepartment. As a result of some ratherunorthodox bookkeeping by the hospital, asizable portion of by bill was “posted” during the first five days, but (according to theInsurance Office) was actually for chargesthat occurred afterwards. Consequently, thissum was paid neither by Blue Cross (whichshould have) nor by Student Health, but wasbilled to me. The Student Insurance Officeapparently neglected to inform Blue Cross(which also has an office in the hospital) ofthe hospital’s unusual billing system.Now this state of affairs has existed inhospital billing and SIO for some time; it washardly unique to my own experiences, asboth Mrs O’Brien (in the Blue Cross office)and Mrs Hayer (of SIO) acknowleged to me.I would like to believe that it continues toexist primarily from indifference and notfrom malice, but under the circumstances, Iwonder...how many students, less inclined,perhaps, to investigate bureaucraticnegligence and sloppy bookkeeping, havebeen fleeced out of hundreds of dollars?Howard LembergRegensteinWe feel obliged to call upon the Regensteinlibrary to live up to its responsibility for theflocks of students gathered under its roofevery day. We speak, of course, about themisguided provisions made for the canteendownstairs. You realize, as do we all, thatthis sterile place with its machines and itschairs (from which students can watch themachines) is an insult to University ofChicago traditions. Those of us old enough toremember can dwell upon the shabbyluxury, the muted tones, the open windows, the real coffee, the open conversation whichin days past greeted the library-boundstudent. We feel this important component ofour lives to be gone. It has been taken fromus by decree against the protests of students.So we must attempt to live with the bigwhite library as it exists, until such time asadministrators become sensible anyway. Wehave a proposal: a step forward in the marchof the machines, but one which would benefitthe health of the Regenstein com-munity —MACHINES THAT SELLPROTEIN. Before this suggestion createsuncontrolled reaction, we hasten to bespecific. We would have the vending com¬pany tear out one (maybe both) of the candymachines and replace them with othermachines selling sandwiches and the like(not pure protein, we grant, but much moresubstantial than all that refined sugar).The snack places and restaurants and thearea will doubtlessly protest that studentsshould ignore the canteen, take a healthywalk, and buy some regular food Un¬fortunately, in practice many (nay, most)students settle for a candy bar downstairsinstead of a good meal. Even the mosthealth-minded soul can only closh through somany cartons of milk.So wnat do you say, Regenstein ad¬ministrators? You have taken away theambience of the library coffee-place, give ussomething in return. Stand up for a healthydiet as the inherent right of all people Sayyes to protein.Committee for protein,Regenstein chapterTuesday, February 20, 1973 - The Chicago Maroon - 5Maroons rebound to 64-47 victoryBy MIKE KRAUSS , TOM YONDORF,and BOB EDBROOKEThe old adage that “On any day, any team,no matter how good it is, can be beaten,”almost came true Saturday in the fieldhouseas an undermanned and outclassed LakeForest basketball team gave the Maroons afirst half scare before succumbing 64-47.Employing a tight one-three-one zonedefense, the Foresters defused the dynamiteoutside shooting of Jerry Clark and snuffedout the inside game of Frank Edwards. Thevisitor’s heroics and Chicago’s lacklusterplay inspired the Foresters to a quality ofplay beyond their fondest dreams.By half time, Forrester fantasy andMaroon madness had produced a 26-26deadlock. During the first-half the fans,including some 40 potential Stagg scholars,were treated to an unexpected light show byCoach Stampf. who demonstrated just howmany shades of red there are in his efforts torouse his lethargic team.Stampf's locker room discussion at halftime gave new life to the Chicago attack, asEdwards and Clark both came out burningthe nets, while Luther Rollins, Barrett, andother Maroon windmills scrapped ondefense, controlled the boards, and whippedup some unbelievably wild plays.While the Maroons were busy gatheringsteam Lake Forest blew its last Duff.Tuesday, Chicago plays Chicago TeachersCollege and. on Friday night at 8 pm, theyhost Principia in the season's finale at thefieldhouse.The superior rebounding and fast break ofChicago State University devastated theUniversity of Chicago’s womens varsitybasketball team by a score of 58-23 Thursdaynight in Ida Noyes gym Using a heightadvantage and the ability to jump, which theUC girls seemed to lack. State was able totake many more shots at the basket than thestruggling Maroons. Ms Smogar of the Stateteam led all scorers with 16 points, often usinga high arching outside shot and thenmuscling into the basket for any necessaryfollow-up attempt.Chicago State dominated the boards atboth ends of the floor, and although theturnover totals were close, State hadpossession of the ball for much of the game.In Varsity Track the Maroons won two oftheir three contests in a multi-dual meet atthe Fieldhouse last Saturday evening.Scoring an easy 84-29 win over North ParkCollege, and dropping a close contest 48-65 toWabash College, the Maroons salvaged a winover University of Illinois - Chicago Circle58-1/ 3 to 54-2/ 3 by winning the final event,the mile relay.Chicago’s strong points were the 60-yarddash, won by Ron Price in the good time of06.3; the 440-yard run, won by John Ivy in 51.9, with John Hallstrom winning secondplace; and the pole vault, which was wonby Ray Diaz, and swept as Neil Seeleyand Ben Felts tied for second and third.The 880-yard run, won by Neil Seeley in1:59.6 was also a stand-out performance.The next varsity competition will beanother multi-dual meet against Universityof Wisconsin-Milwaukee, ValparaisoUniversity, and Illinois Benedictine Collegenext Saturday, February 24th, starting at1 pm.The UCTC two mile relay team won thetwo mile relay at the Olympic InvitationalMeet at Madison Square Garden last Friday night, running 7:26.0 to establish a new meetrecord. Manhattan College was a closesecond.In Gymnastics last week the Maroonscaptured four trophies at the Triton CollegeInvitational. Doug Carden won a secondplace in the floor exercise and the vaulting.He then took a fourth in the all-aroundcompetition. Dennis Sadowski picked up thefourth Maroon win with a third in the floorexercise.The Undergraduate Order of the “C”, thevarsity lettermen’s club, will hold a meetingon Thursday February 22, at 7 pm in theTrophy room of Bartlett Gymnasium. The president of the club, Steve Kroeter, an¬nounced that the topic of the meeting willdeal with improvement of Universityrecreational facilities. Additionally the newjersies ordered for the football, basketball,and gymnastics teams will be distributed atthe meeting. Those expecting a jersey shouldbe prepared to pay the balance of the $4.25cost at the meeting.In Intermurals this next week badmintonand volleyball will be the highlights. Play inmixed doubles of badminton begin Thur¬sday, Feb. 22. Mens volleyball play beginsMonday, February 26. The coed competitionwill begin Thursday, March 1.real worldquarter and is collected during registrationalong with other university fees. The fee willbe refunded to any student not wishing toparticipate in IPIRG, thus assuring that onlywilling students will contribute. The firstPIRGs established (in Minnesota, Michigan,and Oregon) have been so successful thatrefunds totaled less than 5%. of the moneycollected.IPIRG presently has official chapters atColumbia College, DePaul University, LakeForest College, Loyola University, Mun¬delein College, National College ofEducation, Northeastern Illinois University,Northwestern University, University ofChicago, and the University of Illinois-Chicago Campus. At each of these campuses,petition drives are being conducted todemonstrate student support for IPIRG.After registering a majority of studentsignatures, administration approval will besought in order to facilitate collection ofstudent fees.We are currently petitioning at theUniversity of Chicago campus; tables will beup on campus for the next several weeks. Ifyou are interested in helping petition, pleasecall 947-8659.The above described mechanism of PublicInterest Research Groups extend thepossibilities for research that thelaboratories and libraries of the universityprovide, into the society itself. The students’interaction with the professional staff andwith actual test cases are also of greatbroadening potential. PIRG studies providedata, and in the process students learn to docomplete, accurate, and objective research.They’re exposed to fields of study otherthan their own. Teachers who take on aPIRG study as a class project could giveacademic credit. The PIRGs can providesummer jobs for students; eventually, thehope is to create a public interest field, andprovide careers in it. Students of Illinoisunite!PIRGs relate students toBy BRIGITTE SCHWARZand CATHY STEPANEKNot that this isn’t a great University. Imean, grey bell towers, a phoenix rising outof the ashes and Ed Levi to keep us close toreality. (Remember, students, this universitycould function without you.) So why thisexistential warp, this feeling of where will itall end9The answer is to somehow make the lifethe student is living relate to the work thestudent is doing (or visa-versa) as well as toGADFLYthe world (the real world, remember the realworld?) that the student will enter once heleaves the academic community.The history of students and studentmovements that tried to relate to the societyis one of outraged idealism confrontingimmense problems in times of crisis. Andthough this was for many students thebeginning of a re-evaluation of theirrelationship with the university and withsociety, their position in both, the newawareness resulted in little legal and in¬stitutional change.As far as societal change is concerned,students now lack the political strength,large constant membership, and stablesource of income which would make thempowerful in the political sphere. They are avery transient group, and have little time tofamiliarize themselves with the communityin which their school is located. Their stay oncampus is punctuated by long summervacations, papers, exams, and concerns withcareer planning. As a result, student ac¬tivism tends to be a sporadic response to an occasional crisis followed by long periods ofinactivity.Schoolwork, on the other hand, tends toremain alienated from the societal concernsof the student. Papers and exams, even in¬dependent studies, rarely are directlytoward assessing the problems of society,and all too often academic work and concernwith the quality and directions of the societyseem to be mutually exclusive choices.Student-run Public Interest ResearchGroups (PIRG) can provide the necessaryorganization mechanism to maintain theimpetus of student action, as well asproviding the possibility of integrating suchwork with the student’s academic work.PIRGs are modelled on a suggestion madein 1970 by Ralph Nader, although, they arecompletely independent of him. He felt thatstudents were in a unique position given theaddition of a stable financial base and thecontinuity this provided, and given the timeand expertise a group of professionals couldlend. Together students and professionalscan work in a process of researching issuesof public interest; disseminating the findingsof this research to the public; lobbying at theappropriate regulatory or administrativelevel to effect changes in such areas as racialand sex discrimination, education, healthcare, community housing, occupationalsafety, environmental protection, andconsumer protection; and litigating whennecessary.IPIRG will be established as non-profit,tax-exempt corporation. This establishes itas a separate legal entity from the univer¬sity; therefore, it will not affect the taxstatus of the university. An independentannual audit of IPIRG will insure efficienthandling of the collected funds. With 70,000students in the universities presentlyorganizing, a collection of $1 per quarterwould mean a potential of $280,000 per year.IPIRG’s financial independence derivesfrom its student fees. The fee is set at $1 perJoe Cocker Ml IDD06S&EI MGUSH M Leon RusselIENCobb 7:15 & 9:30 Fri. Feb. 23 $|00UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSPRING GROUP FLIGHTRound trip to New York City *97Leave Friday March 16 at 7:45 p. m. from O'HareAirport bus from campus *2S0Return date is up to you.Stop by or call: Midway Travel Service1st floor, Administration Bldg.753-2303A TWA GETAWAY PROGRAM Students InternationalMeditation SocietyVpresents a leeture on tile technique ofTK\\SCEi\DEi\m\EimnoNas taught hyMaharisliiMalicsh Spontaneously develops lull creative intelligence.Provides deep rest lor increased energy in daily life.Unfolds lilt; lo a natural stale ol freedom.Vwi1 st lecture Wed. Feb. 21,7 p.m. 2nd lecture Thurs.Feb. 22, 8 p.m. both at Ida Noyos Hall, 1212 E. 59th St.FREE6 - The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, February 20, 1973MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEFor Rent: Apr 1 occ. 5631 Maryland 2bdrm apt sunparlor, sunporch$183/mon UC Hsg. att 10 pm 493 4963.Roommates wanted for spring quarterto share large South Shore apt oncampus bus route 643 5344.Attractive room Free use of libraryand color TV Located on campus. Call753 2297 after 5 pm Males only.TENANT REFERRALREASONABLE RENTTENANT REFERRALREASONABLE RENTALSDESIRABLE APARTMENTS turn,and unfurn.LAKE FRONT COMMUNITYSOUTH SHORE COMMUNITYSERVICES 2343 E 71st StSee MONICA A BLOCK667 2002 or 667 2004Need male for own room in big apt.57th and Maryland call 684 7994 after 8pmCHICAGO BEACH HOTEL BeautifulFurnished Apartments Efficiency, 1and 2 bedrooms. Near beach, parks,1C. trains 11 min. to loop buses atdoor Modest daily weekly monthlyrates 24 hr desk. Complete hotelservices 5100 S. Cornell Ave. DO 32400Male roommate needed in LittlePierce as soon as possible. Sunnyroom facing lake. Call 955 0660 after 6pmCooperative for sale: You seldom savemoney like this! 2 bdrms, 1 bath, clac.,STANLEY H. KAPLANEDUCATIONAL CENTERb organizing classesfor the folio wing tests:MCAT: May, 1973GRE: April, June,1973;ATGSB: . April, JuneAug, 73LSAT: April July, 73DAT: April 73TUTORING CLASSES START7 WEEKS BEFORETEST DATECALL EARLY(3)2)677-0779 1st fir Loc 69th and Paxton Immaculate Near shopping and lakeAsking only $9860 Americus 798 5700Male rmt for cent a/c apt 1400 E 57thLittle Pierce. 493 8845.PEOPLE FOR SALEEXPERT SELECTRIC TYPINGMedical Legal manuscripts, etc. Pickup and delivery. 374 0081We'll clean out your basement orgarage and haul away your trash. Call924 3560; 9:30 am 1:30 pm forestimateLearn Russian from native teacher.Trial lesson no charge Call 274 1420.Tax consultant will help prepare yourtax return Call 731 9636.Portraits 4 for $4.00 up MaynardStudio, 1459 E 53 2nd floor 643 4083Experienced manuscript typing onIBM Selectric 378 5774.PEOPLE WANTEDRetail salesman for 4756 S. AshlandMonday thru Saturday, hours flexible.Student to write brief research papers$3/page 225 8317; 5 7:30 pmRsch assistant needed, abstractinginterviews of ex slaves, about 15 hoursa week ideal for student wife leavemessage for Gary at 753 4517.Couples interested in second or thirdincome. Be your own boss Operatefrom your own home. Part time or fulltime Earn $100 to $1000 per month.Call 385 4069 for appointment.FOR SALENikkor 28mm f3.5 lens Ex. cond $90Call 288 7348.68 Bel air Chevy, V8, air cond, goodPrevent Attacks!Be safe - prevent criminalassaults. This new inventionstops any attacker - even agang - Instantly!Only $2.98 each;III. Itos. 5% Tx.By mail fromD & D DISTRIBUTORSP O BOX 47LANSING. ILL. 60438PACKAGEDIN A COMBINATIONGIFT-STORAGE BOXNO RISKMONEY-BACK GUARANTEE condition, $800 or best offer Call 6245499 evenings.'69 Austin America Excellent condition Green, lovable. Call 241 6826Must sell, owner in EuropeGood, dry Wis. oak $15 $17 per 1/4 tonUpstairs 8 basement deliveries. 9243560, 4845 Kenwood 9:30 am 1:30 pm.SOFA BED $100, gold brown, almostlike new, traditional style 624 2875.Fiat '69 station wagon great condition2800 miles book value 1700 make us anotter 363 32575500 S. SHORE DR.FLAMINGO ON THE LAKEHappy with your roommate? See us.We have the apt for you.Studio 1 bedrm turn unfurn. Shortterm leases the price is right Campusbus 2 blocks,Security shops elevator restaurant.Parking 24 hours switchboard.Mrs Adelman 752 3800PLAY TENNISPlay tennis rain or shine South SideRacquet Club, 1410 Sibley Blvd,Dolton, 147 and Calumet Exp. VI 91235REFRIGERATORRENTALMini frige: Pennies a day. Billedmonthly. Call Swan Rental 721 4400TRYOUTS!Calling all dancers, actors andmusicians: Tryouts for an originaldance theatre piece choreographed byEllen Kirschner (of "Mistress of theSilver Moon") will be held Wednesday, February 21 at 8 pm inBRENT HOUSEINSTITUTE5540 Woodlawn Ave.Fi'm Discussion"The City in Film"T.R. BASKINCandace Bergenand James Cain7:30 tonightALL WELCOME Reynolds Club South Lounge and onSaturday, February 24 at 11 am in theCloister Club of Ida Noyes The piecewill be performed fifth week of SpringQuarterGOING HOME SOON?Let your American Airlines campusrep handle all the details for youyouth fare, reservations, info, etc CallLarry Marden at 947 8867 after 6 pm.MAD DOGSDiscover the true meaning of holytrinity 8 Leon Russel's chest Fri.Feb 23, 7:15 8 9:30 Cobb Hall $1JOSEPH COCKER &LEON RUSSELWhy does Joe Cocker wear red white 8,blue shoes? To keep his feet together.MAD DOGS Fri. 23 at 7:15 and 9 30Cobb $1 00WANTEDExp audio technician to do maint &some switch design work for WHPK 5hrs a week Call 753 3591 and leavenamePAN 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 57thStISRAELI DANCINGTHIS WEEK at Hillel Thurs 8 10 pm.SECURITYBURGLARS WORRY YOU? Keepthem out! Rest easy with a newFORT/NOX door Just $245 installedCall 798 5700 todaySUBLET1375 E 54th St 2nd Floor 4 large sunnyrooms 2 bedrooms with porch lots ofclosets clean quiet very comfortable$157 per month HY 3 3314FELLOWSHIPINFORMATIONA monthly calendar of outsidefellowship award information isavailable to students in the Of¬fice of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club,Room 202.YES!THERE ISISRAELIDANCINGTHIS WEEK!Thursday, 8 00 P.M Hillel LOSTFemale PUPPY 5 mo black w/tan partHusky near Mus of Sci & Ind, 12 FebPlease call PB 3 2737,7 6537,288 3946;or leave messageDog lost, small white shaggy malecockapoo Hyde Park 1/19/73 HY 3 9600x663 "Christopher" $100 Reward!foundWhite envelope w/money on 58th &Blackstone Feb 15 at 12:45: 947 0420Golden haired male dog Found oncorner of 51st 8 HPB 667 2543.PUPPIESHalf Labrador Retriever half GermanShepherd Will receive shots Free togood home 734 0242Free puppies 6 wks old 324 6871.STORAGE SPACEWANTEDUC grad student going to India onFulbright fellowship needs attic, drybasement, or other space in Chicagoarea to store books 8 household goodstor 1 2 years beginning March 20, 1973.Payment in cash and/or gifts fromIndia Call 324 3765 after 5 30 pmTHE BLUEGARGOYLEUNITED FRONT OFLOCAL YOKELSBring your bread ($2 00) to feed theGargoyle on Saturday, Feb 24 at 8 00pm Gargoyle Friends of MusicalTalent, guaranteed unknown, will givea concert of traditional 8 contemporary folk music help us closethe gap between what we have andwhat we needPERSONALSAnna K Sorry, Mom wants me tomarry Princess Sorokina Besides,our kid is a little bastard Luv,VronskyFirst lecture in the "Growa Green Thumb Serieswill be on "Propagation"Noon Today in ReynoldsSponsored bythe PlantryDOROTHY 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 adwhen calling for appointment.DOROTHY SMITH V "I AM WICKED, I see that Oh, ifonly I were alone and no one loved meand l too had never loved anyone1Nothing of all this would have happened " (Raskolnikov) AWRITERS WORKSHOP (PL 2 8377)NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FORWOMEN is collecting evidence ofUNIVERSITY SEXDISCRIMINATION call 955 3347 foradvice or helpMADWOMANl understand that somebody namedDr Bart Heffernan has gotten aninjunction to stop all abortions inIllinois on the grounds that, in 1970, hehad gotten himself appointed by theU S District Court as guardian of allunborn children in Illinois Now I don'tknow how that holds up constitutionally and I probably should getbehind the ACLU to find out But in themeantime, until Heffernan loses thatpost, I can thing of a lot of things forhim to do What reluctant husband willbe willing to get up at 2 00 am and goout for dill pickles and pistachio icecream for his very pregnant wife whenhe isn't even legally responsible forthe cause of her yearnings'5 Call DrHeffernan He volunteered for the jobIn tact, any pregnant woman whocan t sleep at night because of thekicking of Dr Heffernan's ward oughtto call him up and make him talk toher and keep her company It'sawfully lonely lying awake when allthe already born are already sleepingAnd, why sit for hours in the waitingroom of a free clinic for your pre natalcare"5 Your baby's guardian is adoctor He has lots of money Go to aprivate obstetrician and send Heffernan the billl wonder how many pregnantwomen there are in Illinois? I wonderif Dr Heffernan has an unlisted phonenumber'5MADWOMANTONIGHT!All IlfUAT A LAST PERFORMANCE!V{ 1 AlfEI V WADUN VfHAI 1MANDEL HALL 8:30 i LUV EL I WAKTICKETS ^“/Students *2°®MALE OR FEMALEEARN MONEY DURING CHRISTMAS BREAKAPPLY NOWDRIVE A YELLOWJUST TELEPHONE CA 5-6692 ORAPPLY IN PERSON AT 120 E. 18th ST.WE HAVE WEEK-END WORK FOR YOU.LAST SUMMER STUDENTS EARNED UPTO $50 OR MORE DAILY.WORK DAY OR NIGHT, OR DURINGHOLIDAYS OR SEMESTER BREAKS.Work from a garage near home or school SHORE AUTO REBUILDERS, INC.1637 E. 75th StreetMi 3-8066South Side's Finest Body ShopOur 18th year in BusinessDiscover the World on YourSEMESTER AT SEASails each September & FebruaryCombine accredited study witheducational stops in Africa, Aus¬tralasia and the Orient. Over 7500students from 450 campuses h2vealready experienced this interna¬tional program. A wide range offinancial aid is available. Writenow for free catalog:WCA, Chapman College, Bex CC4C, Orange, Cat. 92656 presentMUSIC FROM MARLBOROFRIDAY MANDEL HALLFEBRUARY 23 8:30 P.M.The program will include a Mendelssohn Sextet,Ravel Sonata for Violin and Cello, and theSchubert "Trout" Quintet. General admission$4; student $2 ($1 discount to Alumni and CMSsubscribers). Tickets at Concert Office, 5835University Ave.; or at Mendel Hall on evening ofconcert.VOLKSWAGEN SOUTH SHOREAultioriied VW Dealer/ Open Daily—Cloied Sunday PHoOC7234 S. Stony Island BU 8-4900Tuesday, February 20, 1973 - The Chicago Maroon - 7THE CHICAGO MAROONFIRST ANNUAL HYDE PARKPHOTO CONTESTGRAND PRIZE*100Plus the option to become the Artist in Residen¬ce during the month of June at a newphotography gallery on the North Side: PHOTON-MONTAGE11 !4 E. Cedar (one block East of Rush inthe near north)CATEGORY:"PEOPLE'' FIRSTU.C. Students $5° gift certificateAble Camera1519 E. 53rd StreetU.C. Faculty, staffHyde Park residents $50 giftSwain Drugs53rd Kimbark Plaza“LANDSCAPE11U.C. Students $50 giftModel Camera1342 E. 55th StreetU£. Faculty, StaffHyde Park Residents To Be Announced SECOND THIRD*25 *10*25 *10*25 *10*25 *10All winning photos plus the other submitted photos of each winner will be featuredduring the month of June at THE PHOTON-MONTAGE.For details come to the office or See future Maroons8 - The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday. February 20, 1973