Chicago MoroonHHHHMHHHHHHHHHHthe university of Chicago ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■Tuesday, may 4,Bellow Wins Pulitzer Prizemake the existingregulations more effective,”he said.Although officials haveexpressed unanimousenthusiasm for the newpolicy, opinions on theultimate resolution of thefood problem vary amongthe CQLR, the Board, andthe library administration.Mr. Wegener expresseddisapproval of the CQLRproposal for a stepped-upinspection procedure at thelibrary entrance.“I am very unwilling to goin myself for a lot ofsearching, lockering, and allthat stuff,” he said.Sources close to the libraryadministration havereported that the libraryadministration advocates atotal removal of the canteenfrom the library in June.Howard Dillon, AssociateDirector for Public Services[missions Report Stirs DebateStudent Governmentfissions Committeeon female andy enrollment at UCt a tender spot,g on a situationriedged by ad-is officers and ad-ation officials, asby students to be aproblem. An in-of just how seriouslyblem is being con-is the amount ofa that the release ofirt has generated.>py with the report’stations of its fin-m SG members whoce resigned, Daphnej, Undergraduate■y, and Niel Cher*member of theSchools Committee,is group which aidsnissions office injn and recruitmentUniversity, issued a>to the Committee’s, The response wasat the same SG[ at which thetee report was firstled.misrepresentinghistory and our\ efforts, they havei disservice to thesity and its stuand our present(at recruitment ofand minorities), and:ing ‘evidence’ intoceived ideologicalirorks to supportions arrived at far in5.”iue in the report aredata which decumenticline in minorityient in the University.2% to 8%, or the dropde representation inlege, from 39.4% toin the years 1970 to11975—although thereeen revisions of theical informationed in original report,sport’s critics haveid the reasons tothe committee has:edto the decline. Thettee has asserted thatire two fundamentalfor the shifts in thesrsity studentsjbn:i static, elitist con-of who potential UCSection of an Editorplete the unexpiredf Gage Andrews andinnouncement ofal appointments forsar will be among theof business at then staff meetingI at 7:30 in the» office, Ida NoyesU1 persons whoseare on the mastheadgible to vote in then. students are”2. “a lack of sufficientcommitment on the part ofthe university ad¬ministration to ensure ‘ef¬fective equal educationalopportunity’ and to takethe steps to ease the specialpains’ of either minorities orwomen.”"There has been a lack ofsufficient commitment onthe part of the university toensure effective equaleducational opportunity"Based upon this analysis,the committee has recom¬mended that the Universityshould step up its recruitingprograms for women andshould provide “con¬siderable greater funding”for “already existingsocial/cultural support ef¬forts such as Umoja (anorginization of blackstudents) and UniversityFeminist Organization’sWomen’s Center.” Thecommittee has also calledfor “intensive efforts” toincrease the numbers ofwoman and minority faculty.Arguing that tuition in¬creases “fall unequallyhard” on minority andwomen’s scholarships shouldbe implemented on an ef¬fective scale.”In his response to thereport, Dean O’Connellemphasized that although“all members of the ad¬missions office workvigorously to recruitminority applicants” theCollege “has not and will notintroduce two standards ofadmission, one for minoritystudents and one for all otherstudents. My impression isthat our minority studentsfeel as strongly about thismatter as does our faculty.”Mr O’Connell labeled theUniversity’s record withrespect to minorityrecruitment as one of “verymixed success.” Accordingto Christopher Smith,Assistant Director ofCollege Admissions andAssistant Dean forGraduate Admissions,who specializes inminority admissions, theUniversity accepted 81 blackCollege candidates last year,and enrolled 31. “The fact isthat we are competing forthe same students withschools with much betterreputations,” he said.The SG committee report,in its original form, claimedthat all “special recruitmentand academic assistanceprograms have beendiscontinued in the pastthree years.” The responseby Chernoff and Macklinstates that special programsfor minorties do exist, but“they are no longer labeledas they were in the past.” A $90,000 a year “TrusteeFellowship Program”supports 77 students, themajority of whom areblack,in graduate programs.Another project not directlyconnected with recruitmentor admissions but aimed atminority students is asummer high schoolprogram. Recently admittedminority freshehmen cameto campus to tutor highschool students and to attendremedial or regular classesbefore the regular academicyear. The program is ad¬ministered by the Office ofSpecial Programs, a com¬munity outreach arm of theUniversity."The College accepted 81black candidates, andenrolled 31."One controversysurrounding the SG reprotwas the assertion that a 1970“Pre-Academic summer”program which provided asummer of remedial classesfor disadvantaged buttalented minority studentswas discontinued because,according to Bill Ware, aformer College AdmissionsAdmissions To 8 By Sally PetersonSaul Bellow, Chairman ofthe Committee on SocialThought and considered bymany to be America’sforemost novelist, wasawarded yesterday thePulitzer Prize in Fiction forhis 1975 novel, Humboldt’sGift.Mr. Bellow had previouslywon three National BookAwards in Fiction for TheAdventures of Augie March,Herzog and Mr. Sammler’sPlanet, but yesterday’sPulitzer award was his first.Mr. Bellow said he was“delighted” with the award,which came just prior to thedeadline for a draft of ToJerusalem and Back: APersonal Account, thenovelist's first non-fictionwork. In it he records hisobservations on the Arabperception of Israel.Publication is expected inthe fall.Born in Quebec, Mr.Bellow is a long-termChicago resident. Heattended the University ofChicago for one year, butreceived his B.A. in Englishfrom NorthwesternUniversity.The Pulitzer Prizesawarded annually under theauspices of the ColumbiaUniversity School ofNew Canteen Policy ABy Peter CohnThe future of theRegenstein Library A-levelcanteen depends largely onthe success or failure of anew food containment policyinaugurated today by thelibrary administration.Graphics posted on themain floor of the library willinform library users of thenew' policy, to be enforced byfour monitors patrolling thefloors of the library and amonitor posted on A-level.Enforcement of theregulation restrictingconsumption of food to thecanteen will not begin untilnext week.A recent report of theCommittee on the Quality ofLife in Regenstein (CQLR)recommended a completerefurbishing of the canteenand the implementation of arigorous food containmentpolicy which would include inspection procedures at thelibrary's main entrance.The CQLR prefaced itsrecommendation with a callfor a show ing of good faith onthe part of library users,demonstrating that thecanteen can be kept in thelibrary without the violationof food containment rules inthe library reading areas.“We don’t want to spendmoney on a new canteen if itis not feasible andworkable,” said JanelMueller, Chairperson of theCQLR.Members of the LibraryBoard share Ms. Mueller'swait-and-see attituderegarding changes in thecanteen.Charles Wegener,Chairman of the Board,suggested that the foodproblem “should be handledbehaviorally.”“A lot depends on whathappens in the attempt to Journalism, are presented writing, including poetry,for excellence in several drama, and journalism ascategories of American well as literature.‘Test Of Good Faith’of the library and theadministrator in charge ofthe new containment policy,commented that ‘‘mypreference is that I'd rathernot have a canteen in thelibrary.”Mr Dillon also said thathis redctjon to the recentCQLR report was“negative ” He pointed tothe added cost of the securityguard the CQLR includes inits proposal for the canteenand the costs of “dislocationand renovation” created bythe move of the A-levelconference room suggestedin the report.The Universityadministration, which holdsultimate policy-makingpower in the library issue,has also delayed the makingof a final decision.“We are waiting for adiscussion within theLibrary Board beforemaking a decision.” said D.Gale Johnson. Provost of theUniversity and an ex officiomember of the boardCommenting on the newfood containment policy, Mr.Johnson said that “if itworks, then maybe we won thave to change policy, otherthan possibly refurbishingthe canteen.”"The board will meetwithin two weeks, and 1expect action to come eitherthen or by the end of thequarter at the latest,” headdedSaul Bellow, noted novelist and member of the faculty, hasbeen aw«rded the 1976 Pulitzer Prize in Fiction for his novel,Humboldt's Gift. It was the first time Bellow received theprestigious award.rOxnard: “Not A Professional Administrator”By Kathleen Bauersfeld“I am not a professionaladministrator.”According to CharlesOxnard, Dean of the Collegesince 1972, and Biologyprofessor. ‘‘At Chicago, thefaculty are kings. A dean atChicago is “a professor whofora short period of time hasbeen chosen not to lead fromthe front on a white charger,but to make the kind ofmilieu that allows the facultyto operate in the best kind ofway.”A professional ad¬ministrator is isolated,explains Mr. Oxnard. ‘‘If heis no longer a facultymember, he is no longerappreciative of the realbusiness of the University,which is faculty members,and what they do in relationto their research and teaching.”If the ultimate directionand growth of the institutionis to be through the faculty,the University cannot affordto have ‘‘an isolated despot”as a dean, claims Mr. Ox¬nard, which is the likelyresult of a ‘‘career ap¬pointment.” Because theChicago system of academicadministration is a series ofshort term faculty ap¬pointments, fresh ideas andapproaches periodicallyrevitalize it.Unfortunately, in the UCsystem “it is impossible for aprofessor to be completelyprepared to be Dean.” Mr.Oxnard explains that“coming from one division ofthe College, one is relativelyunfamiliar with 3/ 4 of thejob, those dealing with thethree other divisions.” Questioned about how hebecame Dean, he drylyresponded, “one is not toldthat one is going to be Dean,one is asked. Though I mustsay that when Edward Leviasks you, it seems as thoughhe has told you,” and that’swhy one accepts.“And I think that the highregard of the faculty forJohn Wilson applies inexactly the same way. Andso when Mr. Wilson asks youto do this kind of thing, one isvery heavily persuaded thatthat was indeed correct.”Encouraging graduateprofessors to teach in theCollege. Dean Oxnard fell“victim to his ownpropaganda.” He nowteaches in the Collegehimself, and tells of hisdiscoveries.Forced to consider biology in the wider perspective ofcommon core instruction,Dean Oxnard gained insightsinto the relation betweenmorphology and evolutionwhich he has since chan¬neled back into his research.He said that his writingsover the last two yearsclearly show his changes inthought which are a directresult of his college teachingexperience.Dean Oxnard continues tohold appointments at theUniversity of BirminghamEngland and the Universityof Hong Kong and hecollaborates with associatesall over the world.Dean Oxnard, though adevoted UC enthusiast whohas been on the Quadranglessince 1966, gives noguarantee of where he willbe in ten years. His vigorous spirit is independent of theEuropean tradition whichexpects a professor to bepermanently attached to oneuniversity. “That is why Icould never be a generalpractitioner in England,” insisted Dean Oxnardidea at the beginningwas expected to bepractitioner in thatown for the next 5upsets me!”HEWLETTjnSj PACKARDPre-Inventory Pre-Graduation Sale.Ideal gift for High School Graduate foruse in college.Choose the model that best answers yourneeds. Engineers, Scientists, businessmajors and others who require a highlyreliable Hewlett Packard Calculator.A Hewlett Packard representativewill be In the Bookstore to answer allthe questions and advise you In yourpurchase.Demo: Wednesday, May 5,1976 onlyTime: 10:00 to 3:00University of Chicago Bookstore New! The HP-27 Scientific/Plitfrom Hewlett-Packard.Gives you every preprogrammed scientific function HP has ever offered-plus statistics and finance.5750 S. Ellis AvenueRegular SaleHP 21 $100.00 $92.50HP 22 165.00 148.50HP 25 165.00 155.00HP 55 335.00 283.00HP R5 *witb fill, free application pack.nr w Valie $195.00 795.00 695.00HP 80 295.00 236.00HP 70 (4 only) 165.00 127.00 The HP-27 Scientific/Plus is themost powerful preprogrammedpocket calculator Hewlett-Packardhas ever built. It gives fast, accuratesolutions to virtually every calcula¬tion required inscienceand businessmanagement—and eliminates theneed for two separate calculators.You get:28 most-used math andtrig functions.Sines, cosines, tangents andtheir inverses in three angularmodes; natural and common logsand antilogs; pi; related arithmeticfunctions; coordinate conversions;angle conversion, addition andsubtraction in degrees, minutesand seconds—and many more. 15 important statisticalfunctions.Every statistical function usefulin both science and business, includ¬ing three new functions: variance,correlation coefficient and normaldistribution.Salt Oates: May 4 thru May 14 10 valuable financialfunctions.All fundamental financial functions required for both personal ijob-related problems. Two newfunctions—net present value and!internal rate of return for unevencash flow—facilitate calculatingcapital budgets and resourceallocation problems.All this, plus 20 memories,6convenient clearing options, dis¬plays in fixed decimal, scientific0|engineering notation.Only $200. complete withbattery pack, recharging unit, cariing case and detailed 216-pageOwner's Handbook. See the HP-2Scientific Plus todayCourt Theatre Presents Playing Tues. thru Sun., May 9tlMiss Julie by StrindbergDirected by Terry ZehrLast performance May 9th 753-3581 8:30 P.M. New Theatre$2.50, $1.50 With ID's2—The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, May 4, 1976BRIEFSFeminists To Rally On ERAM-ed by a vote ofrt from Studentment, the Universityjsts Organization; is launching an all-Lpaign to publicize a■ „.wide attended1 stration for the EqualAmendment (ERA),eld in Springfield ondemonstration isby the NationalLiiation of Women, which plans to bring outERA supporters from almostevery state, to converge onSpringfield and show theCountry, as well as theIllinois legislature, thatpeople do want the ERA.Other Chicago collegesand university campuses,including Chicago Circle,Northwestern andNortheastern University,have formed ERA supportgroups with the primary:son Answers NBCiSnyder doesn’t know[judson Hixson is a late1 entertainment in-ton himself.the host of the[drrow Show” will meetcompetition thistaesday night whenWHPK-FM stationtor and radio show■ makes a guest ap-Leon Snyder’s show. Planned as a discussion ofcollege radio, Hixson willjoin Snyder and the StationManagers of campus radiostations at Harvard andBerkeley at the invitation ofNBC and at the University ofChicago’s expense.The program will be airedat 12:00 am. Thursday(Wednesday night) on Chan¬nels. purpose of building supportfor the Springfield Rally forEqual Rights and selling bustickets to get people to thedemonstration.The UC ERA task force,organized by UFO, hastables daily in Reynolds Clubor in the dorms, wherepeople can find informationabout the ERA and can buybuttons or a bus ticket toSpringfield. Buses will leaveChicago early May 16 andreturn in the early evening,allowing students time tostudy that night.There will be a meeting ofthe UFO ERA task forceTuesday night, in theWomen's Center at the BlueGargoyle. All thoseinterested in the ERA or theMay 16 demonstration areinvited to attend and sharetheir ideas.For further information,stop at a UFO ERA table inthe Reynolds Club, or callCathy Gutekanst, 667-2930.RED LABELice 95IDREAM % Gal.C.R.L.iALTINE 491 Lb. Box|U$DA CHOICEI ROASTI STEAK $ n COUNTRY'S DELIGHTSLICED FROZEN 10 Ox.STRAWBERRIES3J1"LIBBY'STOMATOJUICE 49c46 Oz.TinSWIFT PREMIUMTURKEY ROAST1098/ PackageLight orDarkSALE DATES: 4-28 THRU 5-11226 E. 53rd(KIMBARK PLAZA)•URS: MON. - SAT. 8:30 A.M. - 7:50 P.M.SUN. 9-4:50 3 Profs Elected To NASThe National Academy ofScience elected threeUniversity Professors to itsmembership.The three new members,Ugo Fano, Philip Hauser,and Richard Swan, brings to49 the number of NationalAcademy of Sciencemembers at the University.Mr. Fano, professor ofPhysics, spent his earlyacademic career engaged in research under EnricoFermi. He also won theRockefeller Public ServiceAward in 1956. Mr Hauser,the internationally knownsociologist anddemographer, served aschairman of the AdvisoryPanel on Integration for theChicago Public Schools, his"Hauser report” in March1964, suggested models formore fully integrated schools. He is the LucyFlower Professor in theDepartment of Sociology andDirector of the PopulationResearch Center. Mr. Swan,Professor in the Departmentof Mathematics, receivedthe Frank Nelson Cole Prizein Alegra, which is presentedevery five years by theAmerican MathematicalSociety.CALENDARTUESDAYWOODWARD COURT LECTUREStephen Toulmin on Professionalismand The Human Responsibility. 8:30pmSOUTHEAST ASIA SEMINARDwight King, UC, "Cultural influenceson the conduct of government in Indonesia: an empirical probe ofGeertz's "Metropolitan super culture."Pick 118 4 pmSCIENCE FICTION CLUBMEETING 7:30 Ida NoyesPHILOSOPHY LECTURE RichardRorty, Princeton, on "Language,Philosophy, and The Death ofMeaning" Pick 16, 3:30 pmROCKEFELLER CHAPEL 12:15Edward Mondetlo, UniversityOrganist, will give a lecturedemonstration and recitalCOLLOQUIUM W.C. Lineberger on"Spectroscopy of Free Radicals" Kent103, 4:15 pmHAM RADIO: UC Amateur Societyoffers FCC Amateur Radio LicensingClasses, Beginners in Cobb 104, Advance in Cobb 102, both at 7pmEXCERCISE CLASS for women from10am to Ham in The Home Room ofInti. House. Jus* Si per session.YOGA CLASS taught at Crossroads7:30 to 9pm each week. 5621 S.Blackstone $10 for students, $15 fornon students per questerSEXUAL IDENTITY discussiongroup meets at 7 30 in Ida Noyes SunParlor. Women and men of all sexualorientations welcome.MIDDLE EAST LECTURE literTuran on "Cabinet Types andMinisters in the Second TurkishRepublic" Pick 218 4pmUC CONCERT BAND 7pm 245BelfieldAIKIDO Coordinate mind & bodywith the U.C. Aikido Club, 6:30 to 8:30pm, Bartlett GymBLUE GARGOYLE COF¬ FEEHOUSE Freshly ground coffee,pastries 8 30 to midnight.DOC Male and Female by Cecil BDeMille, 7 30pm Cobb FREEWEDNESDAYKARATE U.C. Karate Club meets inIda Noyes, 6 30 8:30 pmCOUNTRY DANCES Ida Noyes,8 00pmDUPLICATE BRIDGE Game at 7:00pm, Ida Noyes East LoungeROCKEFELLER CHAPEL RobertLodine, University Carillonneur, willgive a recital. Persons wishing a tourof the carillon and clavier room shouldbe in the Chapel Office no later than12:10 Recital is at 12:15.ECONOMETRICS AND STATISTICSCOLLOQUIM Peter Pashigian "ATime Series Analysis of the Number 8.Earnings of Lawyers" Rosenwald 113:30pmMAHANAGAR Satyajit Ray's film(The Big City) will be shown 7:30 pmin Harper 130, free Sponsored by theCommittee on Southern Asia StudiesCOG-COMMUNICATIONCOLLOQUIUM David Meyer on"Encoding and retrieval processes inlexical memory" Beecher 102 4pmCALVERT HOUSE Women'sdiscussion group: Sexism andliturgical language will be discussed7 30 pm Calvert 5735 S. UniversityLECTURE Dr Mike Mordan "TheOrigin of Frisco Rock" 4:30 Cobb 107LECTURE Lee Ironman Hess,Softball: A Means to an end or an enditself 6pm Jimmy'sLECTURE Dr. Mike Dvcrkin'American Society, Studliness next toGodliness 5:30 Cobb 206LECTURE The Dream Theory,Meadville Curtis Room 7 30pmBIO LECTURE James Rothman on"Transbilayer Asymetry and itsMaintenance in Biological Membranes" Cummins 101 4 pm ENGLISH LECTURE Florence Howeon "Feminism and the Transformation of The LiteraryCurriculum" Pick 16, 4.30 pmHA-SAONAH in modern Hebrew Pick218, 3pm, "The Jews of Cochin India"by Barney RubinBLUE GARGOYLE COFFEEHOUSE freshly ground coffees,pastries 8 30 to midnightDOC Boetticher's The Man from theAlamo, 7.30 and Seminole 9:00pmCobb $1THURSDAYThe Student-Faculty Committee forthe Physical SciencespresentsDr. Lewis BranscombIBM Corporation Chief ScientistSpeaking OnScience & Technology in IBM --How to have fun in industryFriday May 7 at 4:00 p.m. in Kent 103A discussion over wine & cheese will follow.All students, faculty and staff are cordiallyinvited. Admission is free. Ki-AIKIDO: Practice Ki Aikido from6 30 to 8.30 pm, BartlettPING PONG Table Tennis Clubmetting, 7 30 pm, 3rd fl. theater, IdaNoyes.SOUTH ASIA SEMINAR WalterFairservis on "The Harappan Script:A Possible Key to Ancient IndianSocial Structure" Harper 130 4:10VIROLOGY LECTURE Genetics OfRNA Tumor Viruses by RobertNowinsky CLSC 101 4pmCALVERT HOUSE 7:30 9:00, BasicCatholicism; Lutheran Catholicdiscussion 6pm Brent HouseHILLEL Israeli Folk Dancing 8 pm,Hillel Hotse, FREESSA LECTURE: Maraaref Rosenheimon "Seome Reflections on Runaways"SSA 4 30 pmRUSSIAN CHORUS Cobb 402 4pmDEBATE SOCIETY 8pm, instructionat 7pm, Ida NoyesFOTA: Open poetry reading, ReynoldsClub North Lounge 8 pmFOT A Norrr3n Blake, Folk Guitar,Cloister Club, Ida Ncyes 8pm $2.50general public, $1.00 studentsBLUE GARGOYLE COF¬FEEHOUSE freshly ground coffees,pastries. 8 30 to midnight. Live musictonight!FRIDAYFOLKDANCING All levels, teachingfor one hour, 7 30 pm, Ida NoyesTHE PERSIAN SOCIETY in Persian3pm Pick 205. "Islamic Modernism"by Fazlur Rahman, U.CTHE ARABIC CIRCLE in Arabic,3pm Pick 118 "Palestine and the UN"group discussion moderated by KhalilJahshanINSTITUTE DFSLAVIC STUDIES.Quality, low cost,small group studieson Eastern Europe.WRIT?. ISS P.0. Box 1122Wheaton, IL 60187''EmphasizingChristian concernfor the Slavicnations."CHICAGOPOETRYANDPROSEFESTIVAL open reading thurs, maybreynolds club lounge. 8 pmfor any person wishing to read a brie* selection of originol poetryjim hansonhenry kanabusjim mulac FOTA 76friday may 7reynolds club lounge3 pmSaturday may 8reynolds club lounge3 pm rsoding from their worksarnotd aprillbarbaro bargbelly codellreading from their worksHIS WEEK AT INTERN ATIONALHOUSEThursday, May 6IF... (7:15)<s*ttional House CLOWNS (9:30) Friday, May 7LAST TANGO IN PARIS (7 ft 11:451BUTCH CASSIDY (9:30)1414 E. 59th Yes, we have popcorn |• •. .»*. t ky.i » f/ .fli r f t > * v V 4• man Tuesday, May 4, 1976 - The Chicago Maroon—3COMMENTOn Friday. April 30th, anarticle appeared in theMaroon detailing thefinancial problems of theWomen’s Crew. While we aregrateful for the Maroon’sattempt to explain and winsympathy for our position,the complex nature of thefinancial issues covered andthe importance of an activitylike Women’s Crew in thegeneral scheme of studentlife dictate the necessity ofour offering the followingpoints of clarification:The Women’s Crew Clubnever asked the ad¬ministration for any moneyfor the purchase of our newboat. From our inception wesaw clearly that we wouldhave to raise the money forany new equipment our¬selves. Where we did ask forand expect financial supportto be forthcoming was fromCORSO, in order to defraycertain of our operatingcosts such as racinguniforms and boat clubmembership dues. Despitecontinued hesitation onCORSO’s part to award us anappropriation, we feelstrongly that the studentgovernment should supportan activity in which morethan twenty-five womenstudents each spend aminimum of twenty hoursper week.What we did expect fromthe Administration wasmore along the lines of a“facilitation” of our effortsto raise money and to ex-tablish ourselves. W’hile afew individuals within theadministrative frameworkhave done their enthusiasticutmost on our behalf, for themost part the help we havereceived has beenfragmented and begrudgingat best. Although certaintangible forms of assistancesuch as access to alumnifiles for fund-raising pur¬poses have been denied us.the real failure on theUniversity's part has beenone of attitude. This hasmanifested itself in a lack ofwillingness and/ or inabilityto solve the “problems” thatwe are told our existencepresents for the Universitysystem. An illustration of themanner in which theUniversity has dealt with Women’s Crew and per¬ceives us as “problematic”is best afforded by a historyof the contribution accountmentioned in Friday’s ar¬ticle.In January a “gift ac¬count” was established inour name by Paul Ausick inthe Dean of Students’ Office.This account allowed us toreceive tax-deductiblecontributions and gave us aplace to deposit funds ac¬cruing from the sale of t-shirts. It was understood byall from the beginning that$2,000 of the total depositedin this account was ear¬marked for expenditureearly in April as the downpayment on our new “eight.”It was also understood thatthe $4,000 remaining to bepaid on the boat would in alllikelihood be paid off nosooner than June 30, 1976: adeadline set by the CrewClub that constitutes awhirlwind payoff in the easy¬going rowing world traditionof boat purchasing. All teammembers agreed that formalownership of the boat shouldbe awarded to the Univer¬sity.When the day arrived inApril to begin the process ofreleasing the down payment,Club officers were suddenlyinformed that unless wecould pay the entire $6,000 onthe boat in a week’s timefrom then, we would have toclose our account with thel diversity ostensibly due to aUniversity policy againsttime payment purchases.Faced with these options atthe last minute, the CrewClub was forced to acceptaccount closure to get theUniversity to release the$2,000 down payment.This is the pattern ofsupport we have received todate; an initial ad¬ministrative assist abruptlyfollowed at some untimelypoint by a “hands off” policythat leaves us in the lurch. Inthe case of the gift account,had the time payment policybeen the actual problem,logic and fairness dictatethat the problem should havebeen brought to our attentionin time for a solution to beworked out. The result of thepattern of support that wereceived is that we were able to make the $2,000 downpayment, but under thestrain of the following un¬desirable and unnecessaryconsequences; we arewithout a functioningUniversity account, we willhave to set up an accountwith a local bank in order toproceed with our regularbusiness demands, theUniversity will not own theboat, our coach has per¬sonally assumed liability forpayment of the boat, and ourtax deductible status isunclear, making it im¬possible for us to proceedwith major fund-raisingefforts.We are sympathetic inmany ways with t_hebureaucratic constraintsunder which each of theUniversity offices withwhich we have come intocontact must operate. Thetruth of the matter is that wehave not been singled out forabuse so much as we aresymptomatic of a gap in theadministrative structure ofthe University; that is, theUniversity has not equippeditself to deal adequately withthe athletic club concept.This defi cit in ad¬ministrative preparednessspirngs from a generalizedfailure among those ofauthority to perceive theenormous potential for theenhancement of student lifeinherent in activities likeWomen’s Crew, and resultsin the sort of foul-ups andmisunderstandings evi-LETTERSThe Admission of Womenand Minority Students toto the UniversityI am informed that themembers of the StudentGovernment Assembly onMonday, April 19, rejectedby a vote of 25 to 18 the“Report on Women andMinority Admissions at theUniversity of Chicago,” sub¬mitted by its Committee onAdmissions and Curriculum,chaired by alumnus JohnCameron. Unfortunately,Student Government’s rejec¬tion of the report willprobably not receive the fullattention which the dailypress paid to theprematurely releasedoriginal report: a full-pageheadline and story in theSun-Times of April 19; a sub¬stantial article in theTribune of April 20; and aheadline and article onpages 1 and 3 of the ChicagoDaily Defender of April 20.I shall not try to repeathere the detailed response toand corrections of the SGCommittee report that havealready been published byother members of StudentGovernment. It is important,however, to make clear thatnone of us at the Universityis happy about the presentstate of minority studentenrollment in the University,which has indeed declined inrecent years, or the declinein the proportion of womenstudents in Jthe College of theUniversity. Both representserious problems with com¬plex causes, all of which wedo not fully understand. ButchicaoiMaroonEDITORSActing Editor John VailManaging Editor J D PetersonAssociate editorsSports David RieserDarkroom Frank FoxNews Peter CohnMike JonesDan WisePolitics David Axe'rodContributing editorsDavid Blum Jan Rhodes StatfLandy Carien, Andrea Holliday,John Milkovich, Tom Meigs, MarthaConger, Aaron Filler Scott Ziemba,Michael Dvorkin, Jean Tobin, JimKaplan, David Johnsen, Bob Zivin,Peter Eng, Mary Marfise, MikeSherberg, Ellen Clements, LibbyMorse, Ed Conner, David Jaffe,Cliford Krauss, Donna Jaffe,Mi r i am Schuchman, JohnHockenbery, John Docherty R e I p hMohr. Kathleen BauersfeidBUSINESS STAFFManager Mike KlingensmithAd sales B G YovovichOffice Karol KennedyThe CHICAGO MAROON s thestudent run newspaper serving theUniversity of Chicago and HydePark. The PUBLICATIONSCHEDULE is twice weekly, onTuesdays and Fridays, during theregular academic yearOpinions expressed in the ChicagoMaroon are not necessarily those ofthe university of Chicago students,faculty or administrationEDITORIALS state the policy of thepaper, and unless otherwise noted,represent t£e positions ot theeditors. All dessenting opinion —LETTERS, COMMENTARY, andGADFLIES— must be submitted tothe paper no later than two daysprior to the next issue, and must be■ijpyd, ,TJhe Maroon reserves the right to edit all submissions forpublication.CORRECTIONS may be broughtto the attention of the editors bywriting care of the Maroon office, orby calling the news office Ailcorrections will appear in thesoonest issue after the error isbrought to lightThe OFFICES of the ChicagoMaroon are located at 1212 E 59thSt. Chicago. Illinois 6C637 SUB¬SCRIPTIONS cover the threeregular academic quarters, and areW for the year, payable in advanceTELEPHONES of the ChicagoMaroon are: editorial office, 7533344. business Office, 753 3264The OFFICE HOURS of the paperare 1:30-1 and 1:30-4:30 waekadays denced in the relationshipthat has developed betweenthe University and theWomen’s Crew.The unique challenge ofthe club concept is theprovision of an athleticopportunity that is “open”along several dimensions; itis not closed, as are varsitysports, to graduate par¬ticipation, and the level ofathletic endeavor issomething left to thedetermination of themembers —a club canrequire more or less thanintramural participation andmay even, as in the case ofWomen’s Crew, exceed theUniversity of Chicagoconception of “varsity”commitment. Fully one-third of our members aregraduate students and eachof these women is among themost committed to the teamand the most grateful for theathletic opportunity itrepresents. At apredominantly graduateinstitution, and one whichmakes such heavy in¬tellectual demands on itsstudents, any activity thatfosters full personaldevelopment by allowing anequal expression of physicalexcellence should not becasually swept under thecarpet as something beyondthe energies of Universitypersonnel to deal with.We speak not only forourselves but also for otherclubs such as Men’s Crew, the Ski Club, the Rugby Clubetc., which seek to establishthemselves when we suggestthat the University make areal attempt to create a legaland administrative en-viornment not only con¬ducive to, but openly en¬couraging, the developmentof athletic clubs. As our caseso painfully illustrates, vitalsupport from the Universitycan come in many forms.Where the University cannotshoulder financial support ofsuch activities, there areother things it can do thatare of equal importance. AsWomen’s Crew has shown,determined individuals will,spend enqjrmous energies^:garnering toe moniesrequisite to pursue an ac¬tivity; but there are otherthings that no amount ofdedication will produce forthem. Tax deductibility isjust one case in point.The University hasrecently decided not to closeour account, but rather to“zero balance” it; while thisdoes not in any way solveany of the problems thathave arisen from the SAGAof the gift account, wewelcome the intention toseek some solution to ourposition that we are told thismove, this moratorium,represents. This cannot,however, be perceived asanything more than an initialstep in the right direction.The University is going tohave to think hard and come -k borne far.riadministrative d'before clubs suchselves will be made tlhome within its ™number of ideas?,the University mthis have alreadyforward; for inslay„jentirely new a,'category might be iwith the P.E. deparproviding the Lorganization f0operation of unitswithin this categoryWhile rowing DrCrew members withdeal of indiv]satisfaction, there canmistaking tmri0ya]|team feels for the Uniand the opportunity toits name; witnescheering at any reg£participate in. We vwith great pride and<our position as reiatives of the Univethe world beyoncPark; we have neefeeling that our sbehind us all the vtherefore look forwaday when the persiand dedication ofdividuals on Womerwill be seen IUniversity as deseiits utmost in termsport, financial ancwise.Ms. Urbas is astudent in politicaland is TreasurerWomen's Crew Clulit is clear to most studentsand faculty, I think, that theUniversity is making greatefforts to attract and retainto graduation both womenand minority students. Weneed the help of both stu¬dents and faculty in thiseffort, and we welcomeconstructive suggestions.The Student Governmentcommittee’s report, un¬fortunately, offers neither.And by misrepresenting bothhistory and our present ef¬forts, and by forcing“evidence” into precon¬ceived ideologicalframeworks to support con¬clusions arrived at far in ad¬vance, the authors of thereport have done a dis¬service to the Universityand to its students.Perhaps a few facts willilluminate the history of theproblems and their presentstatus;WomenOf the University’s 7,773degree candidates on theQuadrangles in Autumn1975, 2,616 (33.7%) werewomen, the largest numberof women to be enrolled atthe University in the last tenyears and perhaps in theUniversity’s history. Thenumber represents an in¬crease from 29% a decadeago and again representsprobably the highest propor¬tion of women students in theUniversity’s history, withthe possible exception of theWorld War II years.The Professional Schools,as a group, have anenrollment today that is30.3% women, as comparedwith 23% in 1965-66. InBusiness, Law, andMedicine, the Schools which, according to the SG Com¬mittee’s report, “providetraining for the most power¬ful or authoritative positionsin our society . . . and areoverwhelmingly male,”women have increased from1% to 20% over the pastdecade in Business, from 1%to 20.7% in Law, and from10% to 17% in Medicine. Inthe Divisions, the proportionof women students has in¬creased from 28.3% in 1965-66 to 36% today.Although the College todayhas a greater number ofwomen enrolled than in anyyear since 1970, the propor¬tion has indeed declined:from 39.4% in 1970 when theCollege had 871 women and1,341 men, to 34.8% this yearwhen it enrolls 836 womenand 1,565 men. And for theClass of 1979, the figureshave caused special con¬cern: only 30% of the classis female. We have no finalfigures for the Class of 1980,which has just been ad¬mitted, but we have somemodest cause for hope. Andwe shall continue, as wehave this year, to ask morewomen faculty to takespecial recruiting trips tohigh schools, although weare not sure if this is a fruit¬ful approach to the problemWe do know that theproportion of women ap¬plicants to the College hasnot fallen off in the Midwest,but has declined sharply inthe Middle Atlantic and NewEngland states where dozensof traditionally one-sexcolleges have becomecoeducational in recentyears, colleges with whichour College is a natural com¬petitor for able students. 1nd we know tharoportion of womelicants to Harvard,rinceton, andmtinues to rise sharisting to the attractij► high school wonlese newly coeducal;itutions. Our Deholarship competitijelped us a bit in our ii attract womenollege. But we need inue and to increase iirts, and we weiggestions and helpudents and faculty.Minority StudentIn recruiting and redinority students!niversity has met wilirtial success. AIM) not have hard sta^ddence to supporatement, I havelason to believe th•oportion of our mludents, bothjrgraduate and graho complete their ’the same as thatudent body as a wjention this becaiiccess of any realogram. I am convin best be measured joportion of those reh completeograms rather tlimber who enter tlIn 1968-69, the firsthich the Universitiled such informatkjlack students wereft the University, 3.41irollment of 8.335Jear, 380, or 4.8%,nailer enrollmentroximatelylack. Minority sUiuding Blacks.&of this year’s en4—Tht Chicogo Maroon - Tuesday, May 4, 1976From 4"proportion" 1071- reached1971-72 and haseach year since.irtion of minorityi„ the College, on,r hand, has notappreciably sinceA in 1970-71, 10.6%% 10.3% in 1972-73, 11% in 1973-74, 9.3% in 1974-75, and 10.4% this year.There are more Blackstudents in the College thisyear than last (the numberof freshmen Black studentsincreased from 22 in 1974 to31 in 1975), but the 133 Blackstudents in the College thisyear represents a drop of 33ivij|N THE NATION THIS WEEKpar^gmore than 100 years The Nation has stoodonsistencv, honesty and idealism. It's rootsdeep in tne experience of America's poordispossessed. More than one generation ofi workers have drawn encouragement andiration from its steadfast defense of the farmleers' cause. We believe in The Nation and in® L :deals it has always upheld. The Nationies what Ghandi taught:'In a gentle waycon shake the world.".Caesar ChavezCiflian Unite.I ft!i~ ^CCtX'iill | gf''?uiidrts. presentsClrt5ii? tii? (jVistiaiis ef'jgtin iTutc.nivtUUV presentation £f~ tier [Panama sculpture:s: p.m.ib. I 'j-cmidas :Poompieuc OrcaSycarUnioii, SaV Jfa/it/P\cnuTODEiftREWCtorv °\ orVl976)coo^000®ote s^ \\\\no'S bO466ston from the high of 166 in 1973-74.All of this represents arecruiting record of verymixed success. It alsorepresents a drastic declineof over $3 million in federalfellowship aid to ourgraduate students over thepast six or seven years.University aid funds forminority students, graduateand undergraduate, have notbeen cut back; on the con¬trary. they have been main¬tained and even increased,but it has indeed proved im¬possible for the University tosubstitute a dollar of its owntunds for every dollar it nolonger receives from federalstudent aid funds. The totalminority enrollment in theDivisions has declined,therefore, from 211 in 1970-71to 164 today, and in theSchools, from 261 in 1970-71,to 210. In the College, thenumber has risen from 240 in1970-71 to 254 in 1975-76. Our recruiting efforts arevigorous, although they arecertainly capable of im¬provement. Each of theProfessional Schools con¬ducts its own recruiting ef¬fort, and most have specialfinancial aid programs forminority students. The lossof some such programs, for¬merly funded by the govern¬ment or by outside privateagencies, however, has un¬doubtedly made recruitingmore difficult.In the Divisions, where theloss of federal student aidhas been felt with particularforce, the University hascontinued a program almostuniquely successful, to ourknowledge, in attractinggraduate minority studentsto the arts and sciences; theTrustee FellowshipProgram. The Universityhas spent well over $90,000 ayear in University fundsover the past six years tosupport 77 Trustee Fellows (of whom 71 have beenBlack) in Master’s andPhD. programs in theDivisions. The success ofthis program, however, liesin its results rather than inits recruiting power: only 14of the 77 Fellows have leftthe University without com¬pleting a degree, 23 areenrolled in 1975-76, andalmost 40 have receivedeither the M.A. or the doc¬torate from the University.We continue, so far withoutsuccess, to seek outside foun¬dation support to expand theTrustee FellowshipProgram. And the Univer¬sity continues to visit be¬tween 45 and 60 collegesand universities each year,from coast to coast, in an ef¬fort to attract minoritygraduate students to theDivisions and Schools.As for the College, norecruitment or specialassistance program forminority students has beenFOTA ’76 NORMAN BLAKE FOTA ’76WITH CHARLIE COLLINS(FIDDLE)NANCY BLAKE (CELLO)FOTA ’76 Cloister club/ida noyes8 pm thursdaymay 6Students $1others $2.50 FOTA ’76 dropped, although theymight well have changedtheir shape or their title in aneffort to improve their ef¬fectiveness. The College con¬tinues to bring someminority students to thecampus during the summerpreceding their freshmanyear, but they come now asboth students and as tutorsin the College’s extensivespecial program for juniorand senior high schoolminority students conductedby the Office of SpecialPrograms. That program,unmentioned in the StudentGovernment committee’sreport, draws well over 400high school students fromChicago to the campus eachsummer, and well over 150 ofthem continue in a year-longprogram on the Quadranglesunder the direction of theCollege’s Office of SpecialPrograms. Meanwhile,tutoring assistance has beenmade available not only forour minority freshmen butfor any freshman who needsand seeks assistance. Thisform of help has proved con¬siderably more effectivethan the original summerprogram for what , un¬fortunately, came to beknown as “high risk’’students.The College is seeking asecond admissions officer toshare the specific respon-sibilites of undergraduateminority recruitment, but allmembers of the admissionsoffice work vigorously torecruit minority applicants.The College writes each yearto over 3,000 minority highschool sepiors who haveO'Connell To8Events of the 1970 s have clearly indicatedthat the active voice of people, little people,is becoming less sought after by the localand national power brokers who own andoperate the private and public institutions ofAmerica. From coast to coast, in everyregion of America, little people are findingthat the Constitution andits Bill of Rights have little to do with thegovernance of their lives As a result, littlepeople, both of the poor and middle classesare beginning a slow and uneven rebellionTraditional political party lines are beingcrossed, people's organizations arespringing up across the nation and those inpower are beginning to sweat.It is therefore the purpose of this Conferenceto begin a series of dialogues between primeactors in the movement towards people’sparticipatory Democracy, and to provide aforum by which the concepts of communityorganization, development and educationcan converge at a focal point It is expectedthat this Conference will result inbroadening the conceptual framework of‘‘little people" involved in the struggle for anopen and free societyThis Midwest CODE Conference is the firstin a series of regional conferences to be heldin the United States in 1976. Other regionalCODE Conferences are scheduled to takeplace in Phoenix, San Francisco, San An¬tonio, Boston and New York City A finalreport, which will outline the National Stateof the Art of Commiaiity Organization.Development and Education is expected tobe presented in Montreal in April 1977The Conference Agenda emphasizes threesegments of critical concern: CommunityOrganization - effectively organizing peopleto act in their own self interest; CommunityDevelopment - the building or rebuilding ofcommunities which will truly respond to theneeds of people; and Community Education -an exploration of new and innovativetechniques in education which can facilitatecommunity organization and developmentEach registrant and guest will have an op¬portunity to enter into dialogue with theguest speakers in small discussion groups af¬ter each formal presentation Registrantswill also be provided with summaries of allpapers presented during the Conference as apart of their Conference materials In ad¬dition, each registrant will receive, throughthe mail, a Midwest Regional summaryreport after the conclusion of the Con¬ference"If there is no struggle, there is no progressThose who prefer to favor freedom and yetdepreciate agitation are men who wantcrops without plowing the ground They wantoceans without the roar of its manv waters.Power concedes nothing without deman dFrederick DouglassMarch 30.1849 Friday, May 7, 19766:00p.m Registration and Distribution ofMaterials7:15pm INTRODUCTIONDonald M. Androzzo, MA; ExecutiveDirector. The CODE Associates andRockefeller Foundation Fellow for1976.7:30p.m. COMMUNITYORGANIATION:SOME SECOND THOUGHTSJohn Hall Fish, PhD; Professor of Ur¬ban Studies. Associated College of theMidwest. Chicago. Illinois. Author ofBlack Power/White Control: TheStudy of The Woodlawn Organization,Chicago, Illinois. Princeton Univ.Press and Co-author of Edge of theGhetto8:15 p.m A TYPOLOGY OF COMMUNITYDEVELOPMENT CORPORATIONSAllison S Davis, JD; Partner in thelaw firm of Davis. Minor and Barnhill.Chicago, Illinois; legal expert in Com¬munity Economic Development Cor¬porations.9:30p.m Hospitality facilities: Entertainmentby "Together ".ending at 11:00pm 4:00p.m. LOCAL GOVERNMENT NEIGH¬BORHOOD DEVELOPMENTErwin France, PhD: formerExecutive Director, Chicago ModelCities/CCUO programs and Ad¬ministrative Assistant to the Mayor ofChicago5:00pm COMMUNITY EDUCATION ATWORK: THE CUBAN ALTER¬NATIVE TO NATIONAL DEVELOP¬MENTCharles Sean) Drurv. EducationalConsultant; former seaman and labororganizer, Spent several years in post¬revolutionary Cuba as a ruraleducator and organizer6:00pm Break7:00pm DEVELOPMENT OF NEW METRO-COMMUNITIES: ISSUES FOR THE1970‘S AND 1980 SLarry McClellan. D.MN, Professor ofUrban Studies, Governors StateUniversity, Park Forest South. Illinoisand President, Board of Trustees.Village of Park Forest South, IllinoisSaturday, May 8, 19769:00a.m. Registration and Distribution ofMaterials10:00 a.m.A CHALLENGE TO COMMUNITY'EDUCATORS IN THE 1970'S AND1980'SSamuel Sains. MA. Educational Con¬sultant and former Superintendent ofthe "Minute Man" program in Cam¬bridge. Massachusetts; EducationalExecutive of Xerox Learning Systems,Inc.11:15 a m ORGANIZING POWER IN THE 1970'SAND 1960 SEdward Chambers. Executive Direc¬tor of the Industrial Areas Foundationand Saul D Alinskv Training InstituteChicago Illinois Consultant to over100 people's organizations throughoutthe United States12:30pm Buffet luncheon in Hospitality Roomfor Conferees2:00pm W'CDC: A COMMUNITY DEVELOP¬MENT CORPORATION IN ACTIONLeonD Finney, MA. Executive Direc¬tor, The Woodlawn Organization andPresident. Woodlawn CommunityDevelopment Corporation, a multi¬million dollar community enterprisein business, housing and human ser¬vice development3 15 p m HIGHER EDUCATION S ROLE INCOMMUNITY ORGANIZATION.DEVELOPMENT AND EDUCATIONMary Ella Robertson, PhD; VicePresident for Community Services.Governors State University. ParkForest South. Illinois: former Directorof Planning and Management andProfessor of Social Policy, IndianaUmversitv-Purdue and Dean Schoolof Social Work. Howard University. 8:00p m INNOVATIVE ! PROFESSIONALEDUCATION -' THE UNIONGRADUATE SCHOOLVannie W Wilson.'Jr PhD; Coor¬dinating Professor. Union GraduateSchool, Yellow Springs, Ohio, formerFaculty Research Fellow Mount SinaiSchool of Medicine, New York. Cityand faculty. Meharry Medical CollegeNashville, Tennessee9:15pm A LEARNING PLAN THROUGHSELF DETERMINATIONDonald M Androzzo, MA: PhD Can¬didate. the Union Graduate School;emphasis in Community Organization.Development and Education10:00pm Hospitality facilities: Entertainmentby “Together", ending at 11 30p mSunday, May 9, 19769:00 am. Continental breakfast - HospitalityRoom9:45am THE CAJUN EXPERIENCECULTURAL DEMANDS IN SPECIALEDUCATIONC Kelley, MA: Educational TV Coor¬dinator for Foreign Languages. Stateof Louisana: former Instructor ofFrench. University of Chicago LabSchooi10:45a m TANZANIA: ONE DIMENSION OFNATIONAL URBAN POLICY IN ADEVELOPING COUNTRYCharlie Junior. MS; Urbanistrepresenting the Montreal Consultingfirm of IMIS Regional and UrbanDevelopment Planner: former In¬structor of Coastal Zone Management.University of Southern California11:45 a m THE POLITICS OF DEVELOPMENTAnne Marie Pollowy. B ARCHM.AEN.: Professor of Architecture inEnvironmental Psychology andBehavioral Studies. University ofMontrealTuesday, May 4, 1976 - The Chicago Maroon—5. . ■> YOh -'ll■-SATURDAY, MAY 88:30-12:00 P.M.IDA NOYES HALLTHE LASCIVIOUS COSTUME BALLMUSIC BYCATCH AHDCIRCLE OF CAPRICORHENTERTAINMENT includesART FILMS, MAGAZINES, ANDNOVELTIES BELLY DANCER JAMILLAHASSAN, NUDE BATHING IN THE POOL,STRIPPERS OF VARIOUS SEXESCOSTUME CONTESTS, AND SELECTIONOF MR. U. of C.ADMISSION BY U.C. ID LIMITED TO STUDENTS. FACULTY, AND STAFF$2.23 IN STREET CLOTHES. $1.23 IN COSTUME. WITHOUT CLOTHING FREEMUSTACHE CONTESTSponsored by Reynolds Club BarbershopEnter Now 2 PrizesLongest Handlebar Frankfurt *355“104 Rights on Condor and Pan AmericanZurich *359“50 Flights on Balair Optional Tours:London *298°°30 Flights on Overseas National AirwaysBest of Show Vienna *475"2 Flights on Pan AmericanCoffee & Cookies for allJudging is May 26at 1 PMNorth Lounge of Reynolds Club •Price* listed above arc lowest minimum roundtnp prices Frankfurt fares are between 1355.00 & 1425 00, London rates between 1216 00 &1336 00. Zorich rated beiween 1359 00 6 1396.08, depending on the season Rates can increase to a minmom of 20% Should increase e«<eed20*«flight must be canceled You have to be notified at least 45 days before departure Service charges from 156 39 to 1112 07 are included. taaesbetween 13 00 and 17 00 have to be added Reservation request can only be accepted untB 65 days prior to Mffct departure.A CHARTER TRAVEL CORPORATION TGC PROGRAMFOR RESERVATIONS AND BROCHURES CONTACTStudent Representative: Barbara LongerPhone: 643-49806—The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, May 4, 1976SNEAK PREVIEWTODAY!Come see the first Text/Fiche*at the University of Chicago BookstoreTuesday, Wednesday and ThursdayMay 4-6from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.*Text/Fiche. n. (tekst-fiys) 1. A new publication form.2. Pictorial microfiche, in full color or black-and-white,accompanied by a separate printed booklet. 3. A new kindof illustrated book.Some Text/Fiche* titles from the University of Chicago Press are:Sue Allen VICTORIAN BOOKBINDINGS (251 color photographs) <.Eastern Washington State Historical Society CORNHUSK BAGS OF THEPLATEAU INDIANS (335 color photographs)Dumbarton Oaks Collections PRE-COLUMBIAN ART (83 color photographs)International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House BRITISHMASTERS OF THE ALBUMEN PRINT (215 color photographs)The Oriental Institute THE 1905-1907 BREASTED EXPEDITIONS TO EGYPTAND THE SUDAN (1,060 black-and-white photographs)The Oriental Institute PERSEPOLIS AND ANCIENT IRAN (82 color photo¬graphs, and 917 black-and-white photographs)The Phillips Collection A COLLECTION IN THE MAKING (419 color photo¬graphs)John White POTTERY TECHNIQUES OF NATIVE NORTH AMERICA (335color photographs)Tuesday, May 4, 1976 - The Chicago Maroon—7O'Connell From 5done well in the NationalAchievement ScholarshipProgram or whose nameshave become availablethrough the College En¬trance Examination Board’sMinority Search Program.But the College has not andwill not introduce two stan¬dards of admission, one forminority students and onefor all other students. My im¬pression is that our minoritystudents feei as stronglyabout this matter as does ourfaculty.Again, at the freshman,transfer, and graduatelevels, we need every kind ofconstructive suggestion toimprove our very mixedrecord of success in at¬tracting minority students tothe University who willprosper here.Financial AidI have already referred tothe decline of some $3million in federal studentassistance over the past sixyears, almost entirely at thegraduate level, which the SGcommittee report prefers tolabel as a deliberate cutbackin University assistance toits students. There has beenno conscious reduction inUniversity student aid tominority students. I say“conscious” because studentaid for minority students,like student aid to all other students, is in many pans oithe University basedprimarily on demonstratedfinancial need, and in¬dividual awards may varyfrom year to year. But if theUniversity’s own student aidresources have not in¬creased in the past severalyears — and they have not —the SG committee might wellhave considered relativetuition levels at the Univer¬sity of Chicago and the otherinstitutions cited in its reportand at which it claimsscholarship levels have in¬creased. For 1976-77, tuitionin the College will be be¬tween $500 and $800 lowerthan at most of those in¬stitutions; the same is truefor our Divisional tuition.This means, in effect, thatall students at the Univer¬sity, including women andminority students, arereceiving the benefit of asignificant tuition dif¬ferential. And it has alsomeant that the Universityhas not had the additionaltuition income from which itmight in turn increase sub¬stantially its own scholar¬ship programs.A recent report of the Con¬sortium on Financing HigherEducation, a group of high-cost, private colleges anduniversities, including mostof the better-known easternschools, Northwestern,Chicago, and Stanford, in¬ dicated mai or me oucolleges and universities inthe Consortium, the Collegeof the University of Chicagohad the highest proportion ofits students on scholarship(62%, with the next highestbeing 55%) and, even moresignificant, the highestproportion of its un¬dergraduates receiving giftassistance substantiallyover $2,000 : 39%, with thenext highest school having31% in that “high need”category. If, as the SG com¬mittee report assumes, mostminority students fall intothe “high need” group, theUniversity of Chicago wouldseem to be doing reasonablywell in helping its studentsmeet their educational ex¬penses.Once again, I know thatthe College, the Divisions,and the ProfessionalSchools, one and all, willwelcome constructivesuggestions for improvingtheir ability to attract andretain women and minoritystudents. I hope that thereport of the StudentGovernment’s committee onadmissions and curriculum,quite properly rejected bythe Student GovernmentAssembly, will not dis¬courage other students fromcoming forward to help.Charles D. O’ConnellDean of StudentsAdmissions Report Draws FireAdmissions From 1officer, there was “a UCdecision to stop admittingthe kinds of students whowould need, and couldbenefit by, pre-enrollmentacademic assistance.” TheSG report also quoted RogerHildebrand, a former Deanof the College, who said thatthere was “faculty hostility”to the concept of admittingsuch students. '"The College has not andwill not introduce two stan¬dards of admission"Minority Recruit Record:"very mixed success"Mr. Smith, the Chemoffreport, and Loma Straus,Dean of UndergraduateStudents, quoted in the SGreport, all claim that theprogram was stoppedbecause it was not fulfillingits goals. Mr. Smith, whowas with the Universityduring the last year of theprogram, claimed that sucha program cannot workunless a committment hasbeen made “three or fouryears before they come tocollege. How can onesummer make up for yearsof bad schooling?”The arguments will un¬doubtedly continue, with all8—The Chicago Maroon - sides of the issue tradingresponses and corrections,denunciations and denials.No one denies that theproblem of decliningenrollments of women andminorities exists, and that itis serious. The argu¬ments are over thereasons why and the pos-sible steps to betaken to remedy the situation.Dean O’Connell says hedoesn’t “fully understandwhy” the recruitmentproblems exist. The SGCommittee offered someanswers—they may not beright, but they did provokesome discussion, whetherthe public debate now ragingwill produce any answersremains to be seen.flmmk&iDayRight now, up until June 15th, you can fly roundtrip fromNew York to Luxembourg for only $360.That’s $106 less than the youth fare you’d pay on anyother scheduled airline. (From Chicago you pay $401 andsave $106.) Ail you have to do is be under the age of 24.There are no booking restrictions. And no skimping onmeals or service. Because we give you the same serviceyou’d get from other airlines, without the same highcosts. So, if you’re planning on Europe, fly with us onIcelandic. We’ll give you more than tne lowest/ youth fares.W’e’ll give you the best deal.Ser yoar trurrl <ujrnt or irritr to /rrlandir ,-t i rli nr* Ilejpf. « ( \\, fidtt FifthArrmir. \)\ X) loojo. Or rail toll ti er: (xtmp "rtii-IJIJ.Save *106 on jet faresto Europe and bookanytime you want.Icelandic| LOWEST JUT FARES TO El HOPE OF AW SCHKPILKI) \1RIJ\K., May 4, 1976 By Dan WiseA comparison ofpromotional literature sentby the University of Chicagoand by NorthwesternUniversity to minoritygraduate school applicantsshowed that Northwesternmade “far more explicitcommitments to assist suchstudents once they arrive oncampus” than did theUniversity, according to astudy released with the SGAdmissions Committeereport.The report, was preparedfor the committee by SteveAskin, who also did researchon the original report. Herequested information fromseveral schools, and wrotehis report comparing theliterature he was sent fromthe University of Chicagoand from NorthwesternUniversity, the two schools’own words to compare theiractivities on behalf ofminority graduatestudents,” Mr. Askin wrote.There were differences notonly in the information onavailable services but also inthe volume of informationprovided by the two schools.The information packetfrom Northwestern con¬tained two bookletsspecifically directed towardsminority applicants—a 20page pamphlet “forprospective minoritystudents, to provide insightinto graduate andprofessional education” anda 16 page booklet detailingfinancial aid opportunities for minorities.The University of Chicagomailing, according to Mr.Askin, contained only onepiece of literaturespecifically directed atminority students. It was asingle sheet, printed on bothsides.“The more I looked intoNorthwestern, the more Irealized that they had moreto say because they do morefor minority students. TheUC simply doesn’t do as.»uch.” Mr. Askin com¬mented.The report comparesselected quotations from thepromotional materialconcerning each school’scommitment to equal op¬portunity of minorities:UC: “Increasingly, overthe years, the University ofChicago has made specialefforts to identify black andother minority students whoare interested in pursuingtheir educational andprofessional goals in one ofthe academic department sof committees of its fourgraduate Divisions.”Northwestern: “Over theyears we have willinglyconfronted the problem ofinadequate opportunities forracial minorities in highereducation.”The UC makes clear that“the University has nospecial policies for the ad¬mission of members ofminority groups or specialprograms for them afterthey have been admitted.”By contrast, Northwesterndescribes the activities and institutions that are relto minority students:“There is a strongactive Afro-AmerStudent Affairs office vservices—both acadand non-academicdesigned to increaseoverall opportunities fominority student. Thenequally strong and JBlack undergraduate 1graduate stud!organizations. Togetherand under the auspices iAfro-American StiAffairs, the academicand the administration,work to virtually assureBlacks and other minstudents will receivineeded and reqiassistance in all adeemed critical to suceNorthwestern UniversWhile the UC malcontains no inform)about members of mingroups in the UniveiNorthwestern includesformation on minenrollment, and a Himinority administrafaculty and staff.MAROONCLASSIFIEDSare the wato move it»* mmTwo campus revelers bear flowers and grins befittingpresidential candidates as they celebrate May Day, atraditional rite of spring, on the Quads.Minority Material ComparedBusiness Majors:Management pesitiens availableThe U.S. Navy has a limited number of management positions available toqualified business majors. The Navy Supply Corps is responsible for astaff phases of naval logistics. As a Navy Supply Corps officer, you IIdevelop and practice modern management techniques while serving in achallenging and exciting environment. If you want a position withauthority, responsibility and accountability, the Navy’s Supply Corps has itall. To apply, contact:Lt. Phil Dabney657-2169What you do now determines whother you’ll follow or whether you'll I*LETTERSHope Franklin, Distinguished Service Professor ofy, will present a lecture on “Racial Quality inlea: The Old Order Changeth Not" Wednesday, May30p.m. in the Auditorium of The Prudential Buildingidolph St. and Michigan Ave. The lecture, under thebices of the National Endowment for the Humanities, isof an annual series of Jefferson Lectures in themities. A reception will follow the lecture. Tonight in the library Iwas accosted by some goonwith a badge saying “SpecialLibrary Monitor,” because Iwas talking, for about 30seconds, to two of myfriends. He ordered us tostop talking, because wewere disturbing otherstudents.My first reaction was tolaugh. “Is he kidding?” and“am I in prison?” were thethoughts that ran throughmy head. He claims he’s theenforcer of the respect ofother people’s rights. Whathe is however, is the denierof trust, and the denier ofhuman self-respect. Arethings getting so unbearablein the library that we needpolicemen to keep it quiet?That we need security torespect one another? Thatthe administration doesn’thave enough “faith” in its“chosen students” to believewe can take care of our¬selves and live together?Next we will have to ask per¬mission from our friendlymonitor to go to thebathroom, so we don’tdisturb anyone as we walkdown the aisles.Personally, the next timeany monitor comes up to me(★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★JAPR. 26 TO DEC. 20,76 J540 ROOMSALL ONE PRICETAXINCLtFOR 1to4 PERSONS(THESE ROOMS UP TO $40. DAILY WINTER SEASON)540 DELUXE AIR CONDITIONED GUEST ROOMS(250 FULLY EQUIPPED KITCHENETTES) * REFRI¬GERATOR AND 23” COLOR TV IN EVERY ROOM5 POOLS * SAUNA * TENNIS * WASHERS ANDDRYERS * CHILDREN'S COUNSELORSMIAMI BEACH'S^W ft YOUNGEST RESORT ****************★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ON THE OCEAN AND 163RD STMIAMI BEACH. FLORIDA 33160SEE YOUR^ AGENT ORTOLL FREE 1*800*327*5271BOOKING NOW/FIRST COME/FIRST SERVED and tells me to be quiet out ofrespect for other studentsI’m going to scream as loudas I can. Moreover, I suggestthat everyone else who feelsold enough “to take care ofhimself” do the same. Thenmaybe we will scare the bigbad monitors away.In the interest of the ad¬ministration respecting us,and in an end to this policeforce,Bob SilversteinGraduate student in Soc. Sci.Editor:Why — oh — why do youpersist in this un¬substantiated assertion thatyou are a newspaper? WhileI acknowledge your highpoints, sparse as they maybe (Law School story, e.g.)the general content, likeyour story. on the StudentGovernment meeting (April16), defies even the pretenseof ‘news’ coverage. I cannotremember the last time thatI read such an openly-biasedarticle. The story wasstrongly slanted in favor ofthe Constitutional Com¬mittee, denigrating alter¬native opinions as reac¬tionary. You then managedto add insult to injury by quoting three people who allexpressed the sameviewpoint but did not eveninclude a single word fromanyone on the other side. Isthis what you call reportingthe news?I resent and deny yourinnuendo that I, as agraduate representative, amopposed to reform. I caneasily state that most of thegraduate and undergraduaterepresentatives are desirousfor a reformed studentgovernment structure, butone that will work towardsbecoming a participatorydemocracy — not a structurethat can encourage slatepolitics with representativeswho are responsible to thegroups that put them intooffice.Yes, I do want reform asdo most SG representativesbut the structure of therepresentation is a crucialfactor. If I, as a represent¬ative in the Assembly,choose not to agree with thecommittee’s recom¬mendation, this is my rightsince it is the Assembly, notthis or any other committee,who represents the studentsof the University of Chicago.The majority of represent¬Where to buyI mmW (/>4*Levis tor teet.CHICAGOMarshall Fields & Co.O'Conner & GoldbergCarson Pirie Scott & CoRegal Shoe ShopsCounty Seat-All StoresUniversal Shoe StoreLark Clothing StoresAURORAScotty's ShoesBender'sBENSENVILLEJean Scene of BensenvilleBOLLINGBROOKThreads UnlimitedCHICAGO HEIGHTSKline Dept. StoreCRYSTAL LAKENew Era Store for Men& BoysCRYSTAL POINTSpiessDeKALBZwick’s ShoesEugene Finn's Ltd.ELGINSpiess ELMHURSTRuby'sFREEPORTE & W ClothingLA GRANGEDad & Lad Tog ShopMATTESONGreat DivideJust PantsNORMALZwick'sROCK FALLSWeisesPrange'sSilver Dollar JeansSegal's SuburbanSANDWICHFrench'sSTERUNGWeisesWHEATONKmppen's ShoesWOODSTOCKGlodstone Inc. atives who voted to amendsegments of the proposedconstitution had legitimatereasons that we articulatedat the meeting. It is a pitythat you did not attempt toraise your standards andprint alternative opinions. Itcould have served as thefoundation for a betterrelationship between our twoorganizations.Leonard Winogora,SG RepresentativeEditor's reply: In regard toyour opening inquiry, wefind our assertion that weare a newspaper no morepretentious than yourgroup's assertion that it is agovernment. As you can see,it is very easy to denigrateeither the Maroon or StudentGovernment. It is also veryeasy to become inextricablyinvolved in the politicalinfighting whichcharacterizes bothorganizations. When thename-calling and politicking(in the pejorative sense)end. the businesses ofgoverning and of reportingthe news will be betterattended, as will theinterests of students.NEEDLEPOINTCREWELEMBROIDERY5210 Harper Ave.Hours: Tue.,Thurs.Fri.f Sat. 10-4Wed. 12:n-6 p.m.Closed: Sun.-Mon.324-2266S9BB9HBHAVE A DEGREE,*BUTTACK A JOB?CONSIDER RETRAININGFOR SOCIAL WORKIN ISRAELISRAEL! WHY?• Because the education youhave should not go to waste.• Because a Jew has a stakein Israel's future.• Because you're needed.• Because your work will bebe meaningful andrewarding.THERE IS MUCHMORE TO SAY.LETS TALK TODAY.Interviewers will visit herewithin a month. Act now!ISRAEL ALIYAH CENTER220 Sooth State St.Chicafo, IIL 60604(312)922-5930♦If (hat degree s an M S W. m havea special program to ■discuss with youTuesday, May 4, 1976 - The Chicago Maroon—9May Day marchers proceed underneath the Hull Court,way on their way toward traditional May Dayfestivities.It was only 45 degrees, and two days late, but everyone was happy at FOTA's annual May Day Celebration yesterday.j1 M A 1 i 01 1 ( [LAS 1 1 El 1 i/DATES TORUrNAME, ADDRE J 1SS, PHONECHAR(Thereall lett(ALL ACHEADIThereYourHEADI 3E: UC PEOPLE NON-UC PEOPLE50* per line 75* per line40* per line to repeat 60* per line to repeatare 35 spaces per line, including all letters spaces, and punctuation marks. Circers to be capitalized.)S PAID IN ADVANCENGS:s no charge for regular headings (ie. , For Sale, Space, People Wanted, etcwn heading (15 spaces) costs $1.00 (75* to repeat) per line.NG :le1iRH:lj10—The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, May 4, 1976' ' V*IFIED ADSMs. Wilson 753 3137.needed to take sunny53rd & Kenwoocl Call|Jat 288 0718 $100/ mocfe^ALE, reas, sunny, boron campus avail now(31508, after 4 to 10 pmIpK nr U of C. 14-5 rm. apts.L bldg Adults. Nr. 1C, bus,£ reas. BU8 0718yy furnished 2-1/ 2 rm. apt.To sublet 6/ 14-9/ 15,f jnc. utils. Near lake on "C"L 288 6120.jin & part board available begrschool year in exchange forjCysitting near campus CallW 18 5174.dip and housing availablei Delta Upsilon FraternityIjostly single rooms, parking,.near campus. Openings forCall Steve or Shannon, 753Lgrad student or staff) neededLjpt. Avail June 15. Rent $135^electricity. 53rd and Harper,loom also available for next1947 9596 after 5 p.m.ATE WANTED Starting Auti.room. Rent $82.50/ mo plusfalet available for entire aptQuarter Rent $149.95/ mofa5415 S. Woodlawn 288 8968faeSrms. newest luxury 6 apt(July or Sept. $325. Must befaults only. 684 5544.mat woman wants to sublet|pt for the summer. Would(exchange. E. Trexel, 234 S.liS». 41334, L.A. CA. 90012 213(flat 100000 2 condos Ml 39086(sublet Possible, fail option,pe 15. Convenient location, 57B»rk. Furnished, own room.I i$100/ mo. Call 955 2221.■ f apt for the summer? One■ needed to share East HydeT tt$87/ mo; Call Joe 288 3113.Ice wantedsiblegraduate student staffrtkhouse sitting this summer,kts available 324 1042.H (faculty couple wants to subletH Kit in Hyde Park July 1-31.tSAIUESIS. Dorchesteril MAINTAINEDBUILDINGtACTIVK 1V* AND|l'4 ROOM STUDIOSID or UNFURNISHKD138„ $221Ion AvoiloDiiityI^IUtilities included|*i Campus Bus StopD200 Mrs. Groakildthe person(s) whorowed" the beer|P P e r s forrgisnacht pleasef“rn to Ida NayesNo questionsliterary guidanceI ly Publishing Authoril attention—MOT a Mob SceneI ■ thesis, articles, storieshere ad How to SELL^limited Criticisml§i MARKS—MU 4-3124 SPACE FOR SALEOPEN HOUSE Sunday 1-6. Gracious 7rm condominium 2 blocks from thelake. Beautiful hardwood floors,refinshed woodwork, modern kitchen.3 bdrms. built-in dishwasher, washer,dryer. 5480 S. Everett 493 0932.PEOPLE WANTEDStudent Secretary Wanted. 12-15 hrsper week. Now through summer$2.25/hr. Call 753-4725 days, 493 1181evesWanted driver for woman inwheelchair. Call Mrs. Kaufman 667-7751.Wanted: Female student (nonsmoker), rm 8. bd in exch for minimalchild care and hsehold resp. Call 9477751.Reliable energetic sitter neededseveral afternoons and evenings perweek Two children ages 6 and 4. Hrs.flexible. $2.50 per hr. Call 241 5068.Where else can you get free applejuice, insurance, a smile 8, help yourfellow human beings? Billings BloodBank! Call for appt. 947 5579.PEOPLE FOR SALEExpert typing from Dictabelt orCassette Tape Recorder on IBMSelectric II Correcting Typewriter.Call Helene 947 5539 (9 5) and 731 4474(home)WRITING WRONGLY? English Grad,will proofread papers 8. essays forerrors in grammar and style. David268 0935.Expert manuscript typing, IBM"Executive" typewriter. Call Cindy at947 6353 (9:00 to 5:00) and 955 7680(home).SEATS NOW ,o°6pmOPENS WED., MAY 12-8 P.M.Previews Tues. May 11& Wed. Mat. May 12EVES: MON.-THUR. 8 P MFR1. * SAT. 8:30MATS. WED. A SAT. 2 P.MTickets also at TicketronGroup Sales 782-293622 W MonroeSHUBERT Ph CE 6-8240 SCENESSuper Rummage Sale United Churchof Hyde Park 53rd 8. Blackstone Sat.May 8, 9 4 Come EarlyOpen reading for poetry and proseThursday, May 6 8 pm, Reynolds ClubLounge. All interested are welcome.If you haven't picked up your SummerSession Bulletin available now ADM104 or Summer Session Office, 1307 E60th Street HAPPY BIRTHDAYDear Anne: We request the pleasure ofyour company fdr a dinner engageentThursday evening at JonathanLivingston Seafood. RSVP Nancy,Mike 8. Janine. is looking for a faculty advisor and afleet of boats, as well as informationabout the 1970 Sailing Club. Please callLandy Carien 753 2249 (1307X) LeaveMessageFOR SALE NORMAN BLAKECome and hear folk music at its bestThursday, May 6/ Ida Noyes 8PMNorman will be accompanied byNancy Blake (cello) and CharlieCollins (fiddle). Students $1, others$2.50 PHOTO GRAPHERSThe Maroon is looking forphotographers to join the paper'sphoto staff next year. Paid positions aealso available in the Maroondarkroom. Contact Peter Cohn at theMaroon, 3 3263.LAYOUTTennis Racquets; like new; Comp 2light; T 3000 light; Good Makplimedium; Spalding medium; Bancroftmedium; others. Call 753 2353 days.BARGAINS IN READINGClearance of books, magazines andoaperbacks now going on at theScholarship Shop 1372 E. 53rd St.Plenty of spring and Summer clothestoo. Visit us often; our selection ofmerchandise is enriched daiiy byincoming donations.1972 Super Beetle. New brakes, battery, muffler, tires. 10,000 miles, bodygood $1350 O.N.O. 721 5507.72 Fiat 128 excellent condition $1100 oroffer call 324 2088 Keep trying.PASSPORT PHOTOSColor, 2 for $9.00MODEL CAMERA1342 E . 55th St. 493 6700Photo I D's and appl ication photosalso available. FILM AT HILLELEXODUS Wednesday, May 5, 8:30p.m. Hillel House, $1.00 affiliates, $1.50others.BRYAN BOWERSAn amazing autoharpist. See him inThe Sanctuary (Gargoyle) onTuesday, May 11 at 8:30. Tickets onsale at The Fret Shop in Harper Court.FOUND The Maroon is looking for people interesfed and experienced in graphicsto join the design staff of next year'sMaroon Paid positions Bre availablein several technical areas of the paper Contact Peter Cohn at the Maroon,753 3263WANTEDBUSINESSMANAGERPrimavera, the women's literarymag, needs a woman volunteer to helpwith distribution 8. ads. For detailscall Janet at 752 5655.STUDENTSHaving trouble with a paper ordissertation? Free help developingideas 9:00 PM Sun Blue Gargoyle Tennis racket 8- tennis clothes. H.PBlvd. Owner identify. 684 5174.CHICAGO POETRY& PROSE FESTIVALJim Hanson, Henry Kanabus, JimMulac, Friday, May 7. Arnold April 1,Barbara Barg, Betty Codell, Saturday,May 8 Both events in Reynolds ClubLounge at 3pm and are Free to thepublic.EXOTIC FOODCOOKSAnyonedesiringtocookinternationaldishespleasecallsam7217517evenings.LOSTWould whoever found a soccer ball onQuads Sun 4/ 25 call Rm 3410,Woodward CourtHELP!The newly formed U of C Sailing ClubDO YOU THINK?Do you thinkyouthere are any Jeffersons or Washingtons runningfor the '76 presidency?Do you thinkthat there is an unprecedented amount of politicalapathy in the U.S., given the historical moment weare in?Do you thinkthat the responsibility lies with the electoraterather than with the candidates?Do you thinkthat the real issues.like "where are we going","where would we rather go", are being carefullyavoided?Do you thinkthat if we the people don't act now all may be lost?We do.And we want to do something about it.In order to do so we want to find,out how many of usthere are. If you agree with the above, mail thisback to us. We will publish the response in this paper.If you wish to write us, we want to hear from you.vov>x® s lOMSa « t v°6 \ . an Illinois not for profit organizationP.O. Box 11390 _Chicago 60611 ^"by your acts you shall be known‘ children? The Students TutoringElementary Project needs volunteerstutor students in school work, such asreading or math, or to help in specialprojects such as art, music, or scienceFor more information call Ron Schwartz 924 2664 or Rod Wing, 753 3541CALCULATORSFOR BEST PRICES ON CALCULATORS (T.l. ROCKWELL, NOVUS.CORVUS, MELCOR, H P., plus manyothers) and other business machines.CALL Jeff Guterman 753 2249 Room3311, Iv messagePERSONALSNOW RENTINGSafe quiet newly dec. cptd. free util, atcampus bus stop. DorchesterDevonshire Apts. 5118 S. Dorchester324 3939HI R E-AN-ARTISTIllustrations, portraits, free lance artwork to your order. Call Noel Price947 0698 eveningsBOOKS BOUGHTBooks bought 8, sold everyday, everynight, 9 11, Powells 1501 E. 57th.CHICAGO AUDIOSpecial sale on systems during April!!Buy a system costing more than $500from the list of participating dealers,and in addition to our already rockbottom prices, we will give you a $10rebate Call soon, the otter lasts onlyone month. 241 5752.PAN PIZZADELIVERYThe Medici Delivers from 10 pm weekdays, 5 11 Saturday, 667 7394 Save 60c,if you pick it up yourself.STEP TUTORINGInterested in helping neighborhood Did you lose the Maroon SummerSession issue Available now in ADM104 and Summer Session Office, 1307E. 60th Street.PM, we've got to stop meeting likethis! A MWRITERS' WORKSHOP (PL2 8337)Call theMAROONdtfam1342 E 55 St Chicago IL 60615493-6700(■J^888tt$888Mi»There fS a «difference}!!MCATDATLSATGREGMATOCATCPATVATSATFLEXCFMG <fcrr J5 rearsat nrtxmiaaU inters iataatt clastat■rahmnatus haa*tin* Materials•Cawsei that aitcoast aril hr u*«|tH■tag# tacitrhts to*(•news ol cussItssoos oat to* vol soffit moat trymat mall■Matt was foiMissrt ttsiaasNAf'tMEDBDSNARDENTBDMost ciaws start 8 we«ksprior to Exam :Spring & Fall compactsCHICAGO CENTER2060 W. Devon Ave.Chicago. Ill 60645(312) 764-5151Blackfriars PresentPUBLISH OR Pf RISKMay7.8 & 9Students $1. others $2 8:30 P.M.Mandel Hall50* more at the doorTuesday, May 4, 1976 - Tlie Chicago Moroor.—1 lBASEBALL TOURNEY OPENS TOD ABy David RieserThe Chicago BaseballMaroons have won their lastlour games, gone over .500,made Coach Angelus happy,and have every chance ofwinning the University ofChicago Invitational thisweek.The last three games haveprovided proof that the teamhas begun to gel. LastWednesday’s shat out ofWheaton was termed one ofthe best games of the season.Kawalek threw a two hitterand Dennis McNamarabatted in the winning doublein the ninth to give anindication of the team's styleunder pressure.This weekend the teamadministered a doubletrouncing to Kennedy-Kingwinning the first game 10-1and taking the night-cap withthe score of 15-7 before thegame was called in the sixthinning because of rain. EdConner went the distance inthe opener giving up only twohits in what was probably his best outing to date. JackLeVan pitched the secondgame, holding King to threeruns before being finallyrocked for four more in thelast inning. In fact, Maroondefense saved Levan from alot more grief.The sweep Saturdaybrought the team record upto 7-6, above what Angelusterms “the magic mark" of.500 ball.The team was unable totake a Spring trip this yearbecause of lack of funds andthe homestay has taken theblame lor the team’s earlylosses. “A Spring trip givesthe team unity," Angelus hassaid, “and we were hurtphysically and spiritually,by not having one."The physical part can’t bedenied, especially in light ofwhat the pitching staff hasbeen up to. With threereturning starters, thehurlers were thought to bethe least of the Maroon'sproblems. But Kawalekcame back with a hurt hand. Conner returned with a soreleg and Levan has beenstruggling to get back at all.All began the spring seasonwith serious controlproblems. However bothConner and Kawalek havestarted to find their fireagain, and both gave up onlytwo hits each in their lastoutings.In the early goings, thegloves and the bats havebeen carrying the team. Theteam has a compositeaverage of .308 (notincluding the Kennedy gamewhich couldn't have hurtanyone's stats) with twostarters hitting in the ,300s,two in the high 290s and two,Cliff Eisenberg and NorvalBrown, batting .400, .410 and.425 respectively, and quiterespectably. As the seasonprogresses even the hitting isimproving as the team getsmore power and more clutchhits.The Maroons are nowworking out of a set line-up.Center fielder Macnamara isJeff Larson slides in withnedy-King. (photo by David an easy stolen base in Saturday's game against KflRieser)I IT, George Williams andNiles are the other teamsinvolved with the Techhawkswith their close recruitingand their three all-state' pitchers seen as the out andout favorite.Chicago will open againstNiles College which sports a2-11 record. They have onevery good pitcher and theNiles Athletic Directorpromises that the team willbe competitive, but theMaroons should have littleproblem getting past them.1IT will open against GeorgeWilliams but unless GW hasbeen especially clean-living,they don’t have much chanceeither. Tech has beatenChicago twice already butthe first game was enough ofa blow-out and the secondgame enough of a squeaker i'laiuuua 1want to prove how wi» 'they were It could be (31game.For Coach AngeliHtourney will decidlseason lor him. “It’we’ve been shootingseason.” he said,inimitable prose,looked to Wednesday!said, “Hopefully the rlThe Tourney will stjirtTuesday at 12:30 wi(George Williams-lITThe Niles Chicago garstart at 3:00 with Coni|the mound lor the Msand John Meskill startilNiles. The consolation fwill start at 12:30 Wednfand will be followed u—,championship game at] 3:0All games will be plajStagg Field.SPORTSUC VARSITY SCOREBOARDBaseball:Maroons 10-15 Kennedy-King 1-7Softball:Chicago-Circle 6 Maroons 1Maroons 15 Carthage 3Tennis:UC men took seventh in the Whitewater Invitational IUPCOMING EVENTSBaseball:UC Invitational vs George Williams, 12^30,.Niles vs ULITues May 4; Losers, 12:30, Championship Game 3:00,May 5, Rain dates, Wed. and Thurs., same time. All gamjStagg Field.Softball:UC vs Triton, Thurs. May 6, 4:30, North FieldTennis:UC Women vs Concordia Teachers College, Thurs.Varsity Courts.Track:UC Men at Lewis University, Wed. May 5, Lockport, HI-Crew At MadisonMen Take 5thWomen Row WellRowing in their first raceagainst major rowingpowers, the UC Men’s Crewteam placed 6th in theheavyweight novice eight-man race and 5th in thenovice four-man race amongthe seventeen crewscompeting at the MidwestRowing Championships inMadison. Wisconsin lastweekend.The University ofWisconsin, host of thecompetition and thedefending national championcrew', took a majority of theevents over the nautical mile<1853.24 meter) course.Among the crewsparticipating were Purdue,University of Minnesota,Kansas State, WashburnUniversity, Witchita State,University of Nebraska,Oklahoma State and NotreDame.Both shells were coxs’nedby Mike ‘Napoleon’ Udell.Stroke oar in the eight wasCraig Rojek; stroke oar in the four was Ernie Troth.“I was pleased with ourcrew's performance," saidMen s Team captain MikeMoreno. “Teams like theUniversity of Wisconsin orPurdue have both excellentfacilities and a field of 20,000men from which to chose —we have neither. Theirnovice teams had beenpracticing and competing allFall and training throughoutthe Winter. We have beenrowing less than six weeks.The fact that we placed 5thand 6th is very creditable.”Coach Ron Wiand believesthat the performance of theNovice UC oarsmenportends a successfulconclusion to this year’sseason The UC Men’s Crewteam will enter two moreraces this season, one inMinneapolis, Minnesota, andanother in Grand Rapids,Michigan against MichiganState, Wayne State andGrand Valley College. By Susan UrbasThe weekend at theMidwest Sprints was anunfortunate debut in majorracing for the women’s crewas neither of the two boats —the open 4 nor the novice 8— placed in the finals.The novice 8 — consistingof rowers who had not beenin competition before thisyear — covered the 1000meter course in 4:18, whichwas not good enough to placein their heat.The bigger disap¬pointment. however was thedisqualification of the Open 4made up of rowers that hadrowed before. Cox’n SusanHill and rowers BarbraHornung, Susan Urbas,Laurie Moses, and LindaGould took second in their qualifying heat, firing off a3:53 to Nebraska’s 3:52.Coach Mark Maxon andadvisor Chuck Hewittwere both elated by theperformance and gave theman excellent chance towin in the finals.Once there, however, theteam’s inexperience showed.After a false start by KansasState increased tension onthe course the race got un¬derway.Chicago was unableto hold its course, went out ofits lane, and was disqualifiedfor touching oars withMinnesota to an extent whichcould influence the outcomeof the race. The race wasthen re-run with theremaining five boats withMinnesota winning in 3:50.12—The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, May 4. 1976Men's crew team prepares their 8 shell for a race. batting lead off with rookiethird baseman Chuck Woodsand shortstop Jeff Larsonfollowing and providing thespeed of the line-up. Firstbaseman Norval Brown batsclean-up and is followed byrookie right fielder MikeGiblin. designated hitterCliff Eisenberg and rookielelt-fielder Carl Herzog.Second-baseman SteveRoczniak and catcher PaulSwiontkowski round out theline-up.The UC Invitational isactually a floatingtournament that happens tobe on the midway this year.