Father a mediatorPsychologist studies parents’ roleBy BARBARA PINSKYAccording to a universitypsychologist, fathers contribute tothe child’s intellectual growthindirectly through the influence ofthe mother and are directly in¬volved in the child’s social andphysical development.“Psychologists are finallybeginning to realize that themother is not solely responsible forthe intellectual stimulation of thechild, or solely directs the emotiv eand verbal part of development, ’explained Alison Clarke-Stewart.Previous studies ignored thefather’s role and focussed on hislack of participation in child-rearing. Only as recently as 1970have psychologists studied thefather’s involvement.“The interest in the father’sinvolvement with the child is at¬tributable in a fair part to the women’s movement and to thefather’s increasing involvement inchild care since the mother isworking,” the psychologist ex¬plained.She presented her research,“The Father’s Impact on Motherand Child,” at a recent meeting ofthe Society for Research in ChildDevelopment in New Orleans.“Psychologists at the conferencewere intrigued with the findingsbecause the study observed howfathers act, and also looked at theinteractive nature of the family,”Clarke-Stewart said. There were 77studies on the mother’s role inchild development presented at theconference, but only five on thefather’s role.She cautioned that her findingswere ten ative because of the sizeand scope of her sample, whichincluded 14 children from a rangeof socioeconomic classes. Thefamilies were all white, and the children ranged from 12 months to30 months old.Clarke-Stewart’s research wasinnovative because it proved thatthe father had a mediating rolewithin the family. Clarke writes:“The chain of family influencethat affects children’s intellectualcompetence may be from motherto child, to father, to mother...themother stimulates the child’sdevelopment by talking andplaying with objects, and thechild’s competence is then reactedto by the father, inducing father-child conversation and play.”Thus the father contributes tothe intellectual competence of thechild as a result of the mother’sefforts, and interactions in thefamily are “circular.”Much of the study examined thechild’s responsiveness to play witheach parent. Clarke-Stewart ob¬served that the mother playedmore with the child at 15 months, Alison Clarke-Stewart: “'Hie interest in the father’s involvement withthe child is attributable in a fair part to the women’s movement and tothe father’s increasing involvement in child care since the mother isworking.” (Photo by Dan Newman)that parents were equally involvedat 20 months, and at 30 months thefather played more often with thechild. Mothers were involved inplay that was intellectuallystimulating while fathers wereinvolved in physical play. Theygave more verbal directions. encouragement, and criticismthan mothers did.She concluded that although themother-child interaction was frommother to child, the father-childinteraction was from child Icfather. If a child was intellectuallyFathers to 2Vol.86, No. 4?Chicago’s largest Teamsterlocal fights to represent350 UC clerical employeesBy DAN WISELabor organizing at Billingshospital isn’t over yet.Aggressive organizing byTeamsters local 743 culminatedlast month in a decisive victory forthe Teamsters in their bid torepresent 900 service workers atthe hospital and at other campuslocations. Local 743 unseated local1657 of the American Federation ofState, County, and MunicipalEmployees (AFSCME), which hasrepresented the workers for over30 years. The Teamster victory ina March 11 decertification electionsponsored by the National LaborRelations Board (NLRB) is ex¬pected to be approved by thefederal agency soon NLRB to certify them. They arenow involved in a campaign to addabout 350 non-union clericalworkers to their ranks. LastThursday, the Hospital EmployeesLabor Program (HELP), anorganizing arm of local 743 andanother union, submitted a petitiondemanding a representation ielection for hospital clerical ;workers.While contesting AFSCME’s jright to represent the unionized Iservice workers at the hospital ,earlier this year, local 743 !organizers were also quietly jsigning up clerical workers to !petition for a representationelection. The organizers say they jencountered little resistance from jClericals to 3Focus on College aidOffice balances giftsThis is the first in a series ofarticles on financial aid in theCollege, to appear on Tuesdays.Subsequent articles will discussthe impact of the Carter ad¬ministration on federal financialaid policy, the increased relianceon loans to finance un¬dergraduate education. the work-study program of the College,and the operations of the finan¬cial aid office.By ABBE FLETMANAs the cost of their educationcontinues to rise, students in theCollege are becoming increasinglyanxious and uncertain about theirsources of financial aid. Un¬dergraduates complain they knowrelatively little about how the sizeof their loans and gifts, and thebalance between them, is deter¬mined. And rumors about routine cuts in awards granted to second,third, and fourth-year studentshave contributed to a generalfeeling of apprehension andoutright fear as students begin toplan their finances for next year.Interviews conducted by TheMaroon revealed that studentsfear cuts in the gift portion of theirpackets from year to year. Theycontend they weren’t informedwhen they were prospectivestudents that cuts would be madein subsequent years. Although theyconfess that they don’t know how-financial aid is allocated, moststudents do not go to the aid officeto ask about their allowances.Complaints are often voiced aboutthe disparity in aid granted tostudents who choose to live off-campus And many students crythat personnel in the financial aidoffice “don’t know anything ” The University of Chicago Tuesday, April 26,1977SG group to present Regensteincoffeeshop proposal tommorrowBy MARY USA MEIERMembers of a Student Govern¬ment (SG) subcommittee willmeet tomorrow with dean ofstudents Charles O’Connell todiscuss the group’s proposal toreplace the vending machines inthe Regenstein A-level canteenwith a student-run coffeeshop.If O’Connell approves theproposal, the SG subcommittee onthe Regenstein canteen hopes tobegin the construction of thecoffeeshop this summer and moveto full-time operation in the fall.The proposed coffeeshop willoffer fare similar to that of othercampus coffeeshops, althoughsandwiches will not be sold. Plansfor the facility, drawn up by theoffice of planning and con¬struction, include the building of aservice counter and storagefacilities in the west end of thevending machine room in theand loansLFred Brooks: “Loans are a formof aid; earnings are a form ofaid.”Fred Brooks, director of CollegeAid, believes that the Collegeprovides a comprehensive aidprogram that enables all studentsto complete a degree program inLoans to 2 mMs*V :§The Student Government Subcommittee on the Regenstein Canteenhas proposed the removal of most of the vending machines from the A-level lounge, to be replaced by a new student-run coffeeshoppresent canteen, at an estimatedcost of $5,750 to $7,000.Initial funding for the renovationwould be provided by a loan fromthe Committee on RecognizedStudent Organizations (CORSO).SG estimates that $80 will becleared per day at the coffeeshop.enabling the repayment of the$7,000 loan in seven months.Jon Grossman, chairman ofCORSO and a member of thecanteen subcommittee, said thatthe coffeeshop “would provide more jobs for students and betterquality food at lower prices.” Headded that the replacement of theARA vending machines would“bring money back to theUniversity rather than to a privatefirm.” Profits will be channelledback into the CORSO budget afterthe initial loan is repaid.Management of the coffeeshopwould be under the supervision of agoverning board composed of thedirector of student activities andrepresentatives of CORSO, SG,and the library .Canteen to 3Nazi holocaust could havebeen stopped: BettelheimBy STEPHEN COHODESBruno Bettelheim. accepting theJewish United Fund’s Herbert HHyman educator of the yearaward. Sunday, said that becauseof world apathy the Jews would nothave marched to the death campsduring World War II if they hadthought that the rest of the worldcared.Bettelheim received the awardfor his life long contributions toeducation. He is the founder of the.University’s Orthogenic School, atreatment center for emotionallydisturbed children, and whoselatest book. “The Uses of En¬ chantment”, recently won aNational Book AwardBettelheim denounced Arthur R.Butz’s book “The Hoax of theTwentieth Century.” He said thatthe book has received a positivereception in England and Ger¬many and asked. “What would thereaction be if a professor at auniversity wrote a book main¬taining that blacks were nevermistreated and were never en¬slaved in the United States’7”Continuing, he told his audience.“You can imagine what wouldhappen to the man and theuniversity.”Bettelheim to 3Loans from 1the College. "We have a stated policy thatwe will make every attempt to meet theneed of our students" Brooks said. "Thecrucial question a student must ask is: hasmy need been met? Our students won'targue that their need has not been met, theywill argue that it has not been met in theway they would like it to be met. "Over 60 percent of the students in theCollege receive some form of financial aid.The aid is allocated in packets that areannounced in April for incoming students,and in July for returning students. Thepackets consist of a combination of the threetypes of aid: gifts, low-interest loans, andwork-study programs.The size of a financial aid packet isdetermined by both financial need andacademic performance. Both parents andstudents are expected to contribute to thecost of the student’s education.The determination of the financial need ofa student involves a long and tediousprocess of review. It starts with the sub¬mission of a Parent’s ConfidentialStatement (PCS) by the student’s family.From the information provided by theseforms, the College Scholarship Service(CSS) decides how much of a family’s in¬come may reasonably be devoted to collegeexpenses.The CSS findings are then reviewed by theCollege financial aid office. If there hasbeen a change in the parents’ financialsituation from the previous year, the officewill adjust their income figures and, ac¬cordingly, the awards for second, third, andfourth-year students. Students and parentsare not informed of these adjustments, andthis often leads students who do not knowtheir parents’ financial situation to concludethat their aid was cut without reason. Whilestudents can receive this information fromthe aid office, if they receive their parent’spermission, this practice encouragesmisconceptions about gift allocations.In considering a student’s financial need,the College expects each student to earnincreasing amounts of money during bothschool year and summer as they progressthrough the College. Expected earnings fora first-year student for 1976-77 were $1,000,including both term-time and summeremployment. Second-year students were expected to earn $1.2o0. third-year, $1,300;and fourth-year $1.400.The combined total from the parents’ andthe student’s contributions are weighedagainst a budget based on tuition, his or herroom and board, health insurance, books,personal expenses, student activities fee,daily traveling expenses and meals forcommuters, and orientation fee for first-year students. For 1975-76. the averageexpense budget for a student in a Universityresidence hall ranged from $5,235 to $5,780,depending on the type of contract. Theaverage budget for off-campus students was$5,210, and for commuters, $4,545.These figures do not always reflect theactual cost of budget item, according toBrooks. (The allocation for books for thisacademic year, for instance, was $150.) Thisis done for two reasons."The expense budget,’’ said Brooks, "isdetermined by what students say theyspend." Often, students fill out forms fortheir second, third, and fourth years inwhich they juggle figures to conform to theset budget. "It is in the students’ interest,”said Brooks, "to be honest, and not to try toconform to the figures we give them.”Brooks also said that most students earnmore than is expected of them according tothe budget and that the deficit between theactual cost of expenses and the expensebudget can be offset by these additionalearnings. Alternatively, he said, up to $2,500is available to any student as a FederallyInsured Student Loan FISL), at a sevenpercent interest rate, which may be used tooffset the deficit.Finally, when the parents’ and student’scontributions are subtracted from the ex¬pense budget, the result is the amount of thefinancial aid packet.Once the amount is determined, the officemust set the ratio of loan to gift. Again, twofactors influence the decision; financialneed and academic record.Students are expected to take out more inloans each year. Although students con¬stantly complain about this policy, Brookscontinues to support it. He believes that astudent’s earning power goes up every yearhe or she remains in the College. Accordingto Brooks, a student who continues to go toschool is better able to handle the financialburden of paying off loans than one whodrops out.fkWhite CloudBathroom Tissue4 roll pak 79CTwirl LiquidDetergent$-| 00Pink orLemon 32 oz. O for Raggedy-Ann ^Grapefruit Juice2 .or 99*Pink orRegular 46 oz. canCountry’s DelightChocolate Milk39* per quartCertified Red LabelIce Creamall flavors 89e a Vi gal.r Government Inspected MeatyJ Spare Ribs98C per lb.4/ Kraft Pure UnsweetenedOrange JuiceVi gal. jug 89* tBirds-Eye FrozenCorn on the Cob4 ear pak 79*Country’s Delight JewishRye Bread49* per lb. loafUSDA Choice Porter HouseSteaks$1 89per lb. -SALE DATES: April 27 thru April 3012261.53rd(KIMBARK PLAZA)HOURS: MON. * SAT. 8:30 A.M. -7:50 PM.SUN. LIn University gift dollars will be at virtuallythe same level next year as this year, saidBrooks, and as many students will go up inaid as will go down, depending on changes intheir financial situation. "It’s true,” saidBrooks, "that from year to year, gifts godown because students are expected to earnmore and to take out more in loans. But onan individual basis some people’s aid goesup, and some goes down as financial factorsin the family change. It’s just that peopleare prone to talk when need goes downrather than when need goes up.”Both Brooks and Lorna Straus, dean ofstudents in the College, agree that theCollege, faced with increasing enrollmentand inflation, has done amazingly well ininsuring that its students with financial needcan make normal progress toward a degree.“We still say that we attempt to meet theneed of every student,” said Straus.Brooks added that the University’stuition, which is lower than that of otherleading private Universities, is itself a formof aid that complements aid in the form ofloans and earnings.While students are still apprehensiveabout cuts in aid, Brooks feels that theCollege will meet the need of all its students.In addition, he said the Aid Office willreview any cuts that are made and willentertain petitions for increased aid fromstudents after the awards are announced. Fathers from 1superior at 15 months of age then it waspredictable that the father would be morelikely to talk and play with the child 15months later."This study was a landmark study,” saidBonnie Umeh, a graduate student ineducational psychology. "But the samplewas small and this must be taken intoconsideration. The study should be followedup with larger studies that capture a largerage period, from birth through the schoolyears, and a multiplicity of caregivers(fathers, etc.) as well. There are differenttypes of caregiving arrangements.""We need to look at more families, fromdifferent social and geographic places,”explained Clarke-Stewart. "We need todetermine if the difference between fathers’and mothers’ influence on the child isrelated to the sex of the parent per se or ifit’s related to the primary caregiver — whois around ihe most.”"The value of the study is that it raises theissues to be studied,” said Piotrowski, agraduate student in educationalpsychology. "We are making people sen¬sitive to the father’s relationship to thechild. Only recently has the father beengiven any emphasis; now we must exploreit more carefully."LAW SCHOOL INTERVIEWSCounselors areavailable daily at theUNIVERSITY OK SAN FERNANDO VALLEYCOLLEGE OF LAWto offer guidance and career planningCall or write USFV, 8353 Sepulveda BlvdSepulveda, California 91343. Tel. 213-894-571 1The College of Law offers a full-time 3 year day program as well as part-timeday and evening programs. The school is fully accredited by the Committee ofBar Examiners of the State Bar of California.2 The Chicago MaroonTuesday, April 26,1977 COLLEGE PROGRAMS DAYFriday, April 29 Cobb HallV3:00 p.m. - Quantrell AuditoriumDean Charles Oxnard“Liberal Education andthe Professions”4:00 p.m, - ClassroomsMeetings with concentrationcounselors. (Faculty willrepeat presentations at4:30 so each student mayattend at least two.)5:00 p.m. - Bergman Gallery - Cobb 418Reception for students andfacultyExtending a liberal arts traditionBy CLAUDIA MAGATPart of William Rainey Harper’s grandscheme for the University of Chicago was toexpose those outside of the elite ScholarlyCommunity to the great ideas of ourcivilization. Harper sought to provide forthis plan for intellectual democracy in theestablishment of the University extensiondivision.Like all other academic divisions of theUniversity, the extension division has adean and a budget. Since it is tucked away ina corner of the first floor of the Center forContinuing Education (CCE) on 60th Street,many on campus are unaware of the ex¬tension division, or believe that it is themain switchboard in the administrationbuilding. Yet the extension division isperhaps the University’s most direct link tothe real world.Allocations from the University help topay for staff, program production, andadvertising, but invariably Ranlet Lincoln,dean of the Extension, must go to foun¬dations, endowments, and alumni forsupport. The extension division rarelyshows a profit, because money generated bythe program usually just covers the in¬vestment of the extension. “We try to lose aslittle as possible, but are more concernedwith offering outstanding educational op¬portunities than with making money,’’ saysLincoln.The division offers the University’sresources in four major ways: The BasicProgram in Adult Education, the Arts on theMidway program, the Midwest FacultySeminars, and the Center for ContinuingEducation programs.The Basic ProgramThe Basic Program in Adult Educationenrolls about 200 students, who attendclasses at locations around the city and inthe suburbs. Lincoln says that he would liketo triple the enrollment, but cites in¬sufficient exposure, the $100 per quartertuition and competition from severalsimilar programs in Chicago as obstacles.Unlike other adult education programs, thebasic program seeks to provide continuingliberal education, as opposed to vocationaltraining.Lincoln says that the basic program is an“absolutely guaranteed useless if one isseeking academic credit, or vocational orcareer training.” The courses, which are asdemanding as regular University classes,are taught by non-university people as wellas by professors in the College and graduatedivisions. But the real teachers, Lincolnmaintains, “are the students themselves,and the authors of the books they read.” Thebasic program shares the University’straditional emphasis on scholarship andlearning for its own sake, although it doesnot offer degrees.Clericalsfrom 1University personnel officials. HELPorganizer Dennis McCrae, said he heard ofno instances of workers being questioned bysupervisors about the organizing drive.“There’s been so much talk and activityCanteen from 1Administrators in O’Connell’s office andin the library had not yet seen the proposalMonday and declined to comment on thelikelihood of its acceptance. Grossman saidthat O’Connell “sounded like he was willingto listen to a good proposal,” but describedadministration response as generally cool.Paul Ausick, assistant to O’Connell, saidthat if there is a canteen in Regenstein, itought to be run by students. “1 think it’s apretty good idea,” Ausick said. “Why shouldARA get all that money? The coffee downthere is awful.”The SG group is a subcommittee of SG’sstudent services committee and has beenworking on the proposal since the end of thesummer.The hours of the proposed coffeeshop,which would be open on a trial basis nextfall, would be 7:30pm to midnight Sundaythrough Thursday and 4:30pm to 9:00pmFriday through Saturday. During the trialperiod, some vending machines wouldremain in the canteen, although they wouldeventually be taken out. Ranlet Lincoln, dean of the extension division: “We try to lose as little as possiblebut are more concerned with offering outstanding educational opportunities thanwith making money ” (Photo by Dan Newman)Arts on the MidwayArts on the Midway, established in 1973,sponsors arts-related events and programs.The program’s most recent major eventwas the Chicago Festival of Comedy lastOctober. The festival included per¬formances by comedians who found in¬spiration and audiences in Hyde Park in the1950’s, as well as discussions on comedy ledby University professors.When planning the Festival of Comedy,Lincoln approached several endowmentsfor financial assistance and was turneddown. Eventually, a donation from theUniversity of Chicago Women’s Board wasused to finance the festival. The extensiondivision nevertheless finished in the red.The extension has also sponsored im-provisational dance seminars, combinationperformance/discussion events withmusicians and singers, and a variety ofother arts events. The University Theatre isan ongoing program which includes the NewTheatre and the Court Theatre. The theatrewas incorporated into “Arts on the Mid¬way” in 1973.“Arts on the Midway” is the source ofover at the hospital over the service workers B©tt6lh6im from 1that they either didn’t know about us or they j mistreated and were never enslaved in thedidn’t take us very seriously.’’said McCrae. United States?” Continuing, he told hisAdministrators say they were aware of audience, “You can imagine what wouldthe organizing drive but decided to offer no happen to the man and the university.”resistance. The fight will probably come Butz. a professor at Northwesternwhen the NLRB holds a hearing to deter- j University, maintains that the holocaustmine how many employees would have never occurred and that the Nazis had nocomposed an appropraite bargaining unit. A official policy to annihilate the Jews,union must enlist the support of at least 30 In an example of the continuing denial ofpercent of a proposed bargaining unit before the holocaust, Bettelheim told of an incidentan election can be held. 'Hie Teamsters say j that occurred when he was attending athey have signed up a “substantial conference on the holocaust in San Jose Amajority” of the 350 workers they propose to man approached him,“trying to sayorganize. The University will contend that something nice”, and asked if Bettelheimthe union is “way off the mark” and that would consider the holocaust a fairy talemore workers would have to be included to “I replied,” Bettelheim said that, no,compose an appropriate bargaining unit unfortunately, it was reality .And I turnedIf the clerical organizing drive results in and walked away.”another election victory, the Teamsters It is Bettelheim’s belief that it was thewould represent over 1,200 workers at the apathy of the world and especially thehospital making them a force in union Americans which contributed to the Jews’politics after a year’s absence from cam- j desperation. Referring to the recent film,pus. It was less than a year ago that another - The Voyage of the Damned, based on aTeamster group, local 710, w'as voted off , I**116 incident, in which a ship full of Jewscampus. They lost the affiliation of the 100- came to America hoping for freedom andperson University security force, which was denied permission to land, he told ofthey had represented since 1969. j being in the camps and of“the utter despairDissatisfaction with local 710 intensified that pervaded the prisoners, not justafter it was revealed that the union had because the passengers couldn t land butsigned a perpetual no-strike agreement with because of the apathy that came from thesethe University. The guards are now shores (the U.S.) which didn’t permit theserepresented by the University Police people to live instead of be murdered.”Association. Bettelheim was in the concentration campsmany of Lincoln’s financial problems, binceany aid-giving institution reviews carefullythe purposes of a proposed arts programbefore writing a check, Lincoln must be surethat the aims of an event are “educational”.There is a fine line drawn between “en¬tertainment” and “education,” and, as inthe case of the Chicago Festival of Comedy,endowments prefer that their dollars domore than provide some laughs for a bunchof manic University of Chicago students.Midwest Faculty SeminarsMidwest Faculty Seminars are held six toten times a year. They are the only op¬portunity for discussions among faculty ofMidwestern colleges and universities. Atvarious times, approximately 36 institutionsparticipate in the seminars. The program isthe brainchild of Lincoln, who saw a lack ofintellectual vitality” in the lives of manymidwestem professors at isolated schoolswhere library resources are small andwhere a professor might be the only facultymember in his field. Seminar topics areusually in the social sciences or humanitiesLast March, for example, there was aseminar on the “causes and consequences ofthe long-established antagonism between technology and humane concerns.”Seminars are held at the CCE and last fromthree days to a week. Participating in¬stitutions fund the program, but the CCEwhich operates under the extension division,organizes the events.Center for Continuing EducationThough the CCE is a part of the extensiondivision, it has a bigger staff and a larger,independent budget. The center, built in1963, contains numerous meeting rooms, anauditorium with conference and projectionfacilities, guest accomodations, a diningroom, a cafeteria, and a cocktail loungeThough designed specifically to be a con¬ference center, outwardly, it is just like ahotel.Since a full-time staff must be maintainedfor the center, it is a costly proposition forthe University. “The center probably im¬poses a financial strain on the University,but obviously the convenience of havingsuch facilities available nearby is wellworth any loss,” says Mary Conrad, CCEprogram coordinator. “The center has beensuccessful in accommodating conferences,and that is its primary function,” she adds.But the building’s unofficial “hotel”capacity has suffered, because MidwayAirport is no longer used for commercialflights and because few students and facultymembers are aware of its overnight ac¬commodations for their visitors.Although the University’s academicdepartments have always been the lifebloodof the center, only in the past three yearshas the University extensively used CCE’sfacilities. Approximately half the center’sevents are now University-affiliated.When a department or organizationdecides to hold a conference or seminar atthe center, Mary Conrad and her associatesare consulted on everything from thepublication and distribution of pamphlets, tothe scheduling of coffee breaks, to who willspeak, and who will be invited. Most im¬portantly, Conrad clarifies the objectives ofthe proposed program, thus insuring thatthe ideas of her clients can be successfullytranslated into a productive, and perhapseven profitable, event.Summer SessionTraditionally, the dean of the extensiondivision is the director of the Universitysummer sessions, although the summerprogram is not officially a part of the ex¬tension. Although the summer session aimsfor a broad audience — advertisements thisyear ran, in The New York Times, theChicago Tribune, the Sun-Times, and theDefender — Lincoln would like to see anincreased year-rot. ,d attendance of regularUniversity of Chicago students Due to moreadvertising and better offerings in recentyears, the sessions have fared as well as orbetter than other major summer programs,financially and in enrollment. The averagein recent years has been 700 people, andLincoln hopes for more this year.of Dachau and Buchenwald for a yearbefore coming to the United States in 1939.Bettelheim told how, after his arrival inAmerica, he and others tried to tell peoplewhat was really happening in Germany,“but nobody, Jews and Gentiles alike,wanted to hear.” In hopes of persuading theU.S. to end the slaughter of Jews in Europe,Bettelheim said that he went to the Pen¬tagon to ask the military to bomb Auschwitzbut was told that the airplanes couldn’t bespared.“It was this apathy that gave the Jews thedespair which allowed them to be led off tothe gas chambers,” Bettelheim stated. “Itis my firm belief that the history of Europewould have been different” if the w-crld hadbeen less apathetic, not only because of thelack of action but also because of its con¬tribution to the Jews giving up hope.At the end of his speech. Bettelheim said“the Jews wouldn’t have marched to thecamps if they had known that others cared.”“But the despair they felt from the apathyaround them, caused them to give up hope.”He asked his audience, “Don’t permitanother holocaust by permitting thatanybody, non-Jews or Jews alike, feel as wehad to feel in Europe ”The dinner for Bettelheim took place atthe Pick Congress Hotel. He is the Stella M.Rowley Distinguished Service Professoremeritus in the departments of education,behavioral sciences, and psychiatry.The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, April 26, 1977 3rGovernmentbythe studentsBy STEVE BLOCKBeginning tomorrow Student Govem-. ment’s year-long labor of rewriting itsConstitution will finally be put to the test.During the next four or five days, SG hopesto collect ballots from undergraduates andgraduates affirming the new constitutionwhich the SG assembly approved last week..The changes in the new document aremajor ones: SG asks for direct election ofthe top officers, a S3.00 quarterly activitiesfee (in addition to the $4.00 one currentlylevied by the Major Activities Board), newlatitude in spending this money, and theabolition of the weighted voting which nowgives each graduate student representativetwo votes. But a new set of written wordscan go only so far toward exorcising theimpotency and ineptitude which has con¬tinually crippled Student Government.Students laugh at SG, administrators ignoreit, and SG members quibble among them¬selves.Members readily admit that SG has itselfto blame for its bad image. In recent yearsSG has been more a forum for various leftistpolitical groups to mouth their party linesthan a body to represent the students. TheSpartacus Youth League (SYL) and theNew American Movement (NAM) oftenmanage to dominate SG discussion andpersuade other left-leaning students tosupport their views even if there are onlyabout a half-dozen SG members from NAMand only one from the SYL out of theassembly of approximately 50.Jon Grossman, chairman of SG’s Com¬mittee on Recognized Student Organizations(CORSO), the committee that disperses SGfunds, remembers that last year SG su|£ported the SYL resolution to condemneconomist Milton Friedman for his allegedsupport of the government of Chile. Theresolution resulted in endless discussion andquarreling over the nature and extent ofFriedman’s association with individuals inChile. As Grossman points out, SG ended upwith egg on its collective face.“It was a bad move,” said Grossman. “Itdamaged our credibility and weakened ourlegitimacy.”“When you deal with controversialpolitical questions, it results in a badimage,” said John Grossman, CORSOchairman This year more than last, SG hasmanaged to avoid embittered politicaldebate, not because of any internal reformsor political maturation, but because it ispolitically more homogenous.“This year’s assembly’s most outstandingcharacteristic is that there is no left-rightsplit, possibly because the right is notpresent,” noted Roger Deschner, former SGsecretary“Students have more to gain with SG as aproblem-solving task force instead of apolitical mouthpiece,” observed PhilipGrew, a SG vice-president. Grew wants tosee the assembly take actions instead of taking stands. He thinks that the positiveoutcome of SG’s service projects will helprestore SG’s esteem.“W’e are working on quite importantprojects,” said Grew7. He listed theRegenstein canteen project, courseevaluations, and efforts to reroute the mini¬buses as some of SG’s ongoing work.Margaret Dudney, SG president,disagreed with Grew7. “Too many in SG actpassively and would prefer quiet dialogueand research,” she said.The bulk of SG’s substantive work goes onin the network of committees and is usuallya result of the dogged determination ofcommitted individuals who Grossman dubs“prime movers.”“Characteristically,” he said, “there arerelatively few people doing work. ”Two years ago Grossman and then-president Stuart Sweet worked hard toestablish the Student Government HousingService, which is now under the auspices ofSG’s Housing and Transportation Com¬mittee. Grossman directed the service forthe two years before it was subsumed by theHousing Committee, contributing to SG’simproved reputation. In the midst of thetight Hyde Park-Kenwood housing market,the housing service has been a significanthelp to students, particularly graduatestudents Dean of students CharlesO’Connell points to the housing service as a“tangible product of hard work, energy anddedication.” The Housing and Tran¬sportation Committee this year has in¬vestigated fire safety at the Shoreland Hoteland other University facilities after a smallfire in a storage room at the lakefrontdormitory nearly escaped detection.The present web of committees was spunlast spring in a reorganization effort begunby last year’s energetic president AlexSpinrad, then a third year student in the lawschool The Student Services Committee hasbeen pondering the possibility of institutinga legal services program and has been in¬vestigating the student health services,especially the gynecology clinic. SG’sAcademic Affairs committee has revied thetruncated plus-minus grading controversyand is planning a program of courseevaluationsMuch of the committee work has yet todevelop into anything other than talk,despite the sincerity and concern of a fewprime movers, who, like Grew, often attendthree committee meetings daily. SG hasn’testablished itself as the center of studentaction, because many major student con¬cerns have slipped out of its hands. It was anindependent organization, the StudentSpeak-Out Coalition, not SG that managedto express student anger at the tuition hike.Also, the major activities on campus arenow run by an autonomous organization,MAB, which SG created.SG is still plagued by a lack of interest andattention. Only eight percent of the graduateand undergraduate students turned out lastspring to vote for their representatives. This year’s undergraduate secretary RogerDeschner, a long-time SG member,resigned from SG because he was “fed upwith being part of the weak voice.” Lastyear’s first SG president Fairborz Maissamialso resigned, depressed by the samesituation, and was succeeded by Spinrad.This year, six of the thirteen executivecommittee seats were deserted shortly afterpeople had agreed to fill the positions.SG suffers from the problem of a hugenumber of vacant seats. The size of SG isconstantly in flux because of the stream ofresignations and replacements. Meetingsare usually attended by 40 to 50 membersout of a total membership around 60. Grewsaid that the assembly would consist ofaround 116 members if all the seats werefilled. Most of the vacancies are in thegraduate student seats. Out of all graduatedivisions and schools only the PhysicalSciences division has consistently filled allof its seats. A few schools have left theirallotted positions vacant all year.Observers feel that without the support ofthe graduate students at this campus, SGcan never hope to be a true student ad¬vocacy organization, since graduatesconstitute seventy per cent of the Universityenrollment.“Grads are of a different mind than un¬dergrads,” said dean of students O’Connell.“SG is predominantly undergrad in voice —grads find it Mickey Mouse.” It issometimes suggested that the currentrepresentative system to totally revamped,bifurcating grad and undergraduaterepresentation, but linking the two groupswith an executive council.SG president Dudney vehemently opposesthis suggestion. Although she finds the lackof graduate support “regrettable,” Dudneybelieves that graduate and undergraduatestudent needs are “not at variance. We haveno need for separate houses. We are a unitedfront. The administration would like us to befurther divided.”Along with its faltering credibility andenthusiasm, SG suffers from a problem thatoften plagues student organizations madeup of transient members. Because the faceschange so quickly, SG has no self-identity.O’Connell points to SG's lack of stability.“Its interests veer sharply from year toyear, from service-oriented programs tolarger, extra-University issues. Inleadership, a steady hand is needed at thetill over a period of time. There is nostability at present, which results in burstsof energy, then apathy.”Many observers fault SG PresidentDudney for failing to instill in SG a sense ofdirection, failing to control SG’s internalbickering. The standard complaint in SG isthat nothing gets done, that there is toomuch fruitless discussion.“SG, if it’s reasonable, gets a lot done,”said Grossman “The problem is the oc¬casions when there is too much hot air,which results in bad press.”“People are not working together,”complained Robin Langan, SG assemblymember. “Direction is needed, and strongleadership is needed, but there is a lack ofstrength There are lots of ideas, but nocenter.”Deschner criticized Dudney for herinability to handle meetings. “Nobodyconcentrates On the issues at meetings.Nobody listens...the chaos just leads towasted time and energy,” he said Thevocal, politically oriented minority oftendominates discussion and Deroetuatesendless bickering over worthless points. SGmembers remember the resolutionsuggested by the SYL earlier this year,which also had the support of NAM. Anincredible amount of time was spentpresenting, debating, and amending their resolution to condemn Washington Postpublisher Katherine Graham for her actionsto break the Post’s pressmen’s strike. Theassembly never adopted the resolution, butthere was no way to put a quick end to thediscussion.The problem of factionalsim in SG is lesspervasive than last year, however. Thepolitical elements still manage to commandmore than their share of SG’s time, butseldom bows to their political demands, as itdid last year. Furthermore, SG does nothave the problem of a FOTA “faction” and aWHPK “faction” vying for control ofCORSO as it did last year. Grew andGrossman also insist that SG has improvedgreatly this year, adopting a more business¬like attitude. They say the discussion itemsshow better research and preparation thisyear than before He thinks that SG “shouldbecome more cautious, more thorough,”But he adds cynically, “that doesn’t meanit will look any better to the students — itwill always appear bad. ”The ultimate problem faced by SG is that,even once it can manage to commandstudent interest and mobilize itself, it stillmust battle the University administration,which has little need to pay any attention atall to the elected body of studentrepresentatives. The ubiquitous problem iscompounded by the fact that this year, SGPresident Dudney has no interest in theinstitutionalized means of communicationbetween SG and the administration, theFaculty Student Advisory7 Committee onStudent Life (FSACCSL). The SG presidentis invited to all FSACCSL’s meetings, butDudney has only attended about half thetime.“There has been less communication thisyear than ever before,” noted Paul Ausick,assistant to O’Connell. “It’s a two-way-street, and options are open FSACCSL is agood opportunity: access to O’Connell’soffice is always available throughFSACCSL.”O’Connell reiterates Ausick’s view. “SGdoesn’t go about its relations with theUniversity in the right way,” he said. “Ourrelations with SG are distant, but not un¬friendly.”Dudney has no interest in improvingrelations through FSACCSL. She would liketo make SG more acceptable to the ad¬ministration by getting to know Universityofficials through conferences anddiscussions. She has nothing but bittercomments to make about FSACCSL.“The meetings are a farce,” Dudney said.“They are an insult to any intelligent being.O’Connell talks people out of the issues. It’snot fair; it’s unrepresentative. SG may be insad shape, but at least it has an independentquality. The student body should be proud ofSG. It’s a good organization, especiallywhen compared to FSACCSL.”For students who have worked on SG,there appear to be two alternativescynical resignation or optimistic per¬severance.Steve Askin, an SG veteran who wasparticularly active last year in the report onminority admissions, has given up on thegroup. “SG now can’t be much of anything,”he said. “The students on campus don’tcare, and don’t participate in voting...theydon’t participate in the decisions on theirlives at the University of Chicago.”Jon Grossman, another long-time activistwho will graduate this year, still thinks thatSG has a chance to make a difference oncampus. “SG can be an organizationthrough which demands can be expressed tothe University,” he said “It is a uniqueconception, with the potential to be the mostactive service to aid everyone It can im¬pose and create services, tremendouslyimproving student life.”4 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, April 26,1977-IOpinion: SG constitutionNotLast ^he Maroon recommendedagainst the approval of the new StudentGovernment c .istitution in the referendumto begin tomorrow. In an effort to allow forthe expression of the opposing point of view,the president and vice president of StudentGovernment were invited to submit thefollowing opinions.By PHILIP GREWThe proposed new constitution whichstudents will have an opportunity to vote onstarting tomorrow is the product of morethan a year and a half of work on the part ofStudent Government. In recent years, SGhas been everything but useful or effective.It has often been dominated by special in¬terest groups. Much of its activity has beenfarcical. SG’s responses to the needs of thestudent community have usually been slow,ineffectual, or misdirected. SG has beenunable to provide students with the unifiedvoice they need and thus unable to furtherthe interests of the student body. Theseproblems have resulted not so much from apolitical or legislative incompetence on thepart of the students of the University ofChicago as from the inefficient, outmoded,and undemocratic structure of the presentmeans of representation.The proposed new constitution is not apanacea. It would, however, streamline thegovernmental process. One of the mainreasons that the SG assembly has beenunmanageable has been its size. Itstheoretical membership now totals over 110.The assembly has never been withoutvacancies in recent memory. Achieving aquorum has often been difficult or im¬possible. In such a large body all businesstakes a lot of time; a single vote can take tenminutes and a roll-call vote is praticallyimpossible. The size of the assembly mustbe reduced. If the proposed constitution ispassed the assembly would have a mem¬bership of about forty representatives.Under the present constitution, graduatestudents have two votes. This makescounting votes difficult and has adevastating effect on the democraticprocess. The double vote for graduatestudents has also been used to the ad¬vantage of usurpatory special interestgroups. It must be eliminated. The proposednew constitution would eliminate it.Currently, the officers of SG are electedby the assembly, from the assembly. Theresult is an ingrown government. The of¬ficers are responsible only to the assembly,not to the student community. This in-houseelection of the officers has served thepurpose of special interest groups anddeprived the officers of the autonomy, theconfidence, and the responsibility that theymust have, if students are to be effectivelyrepresented on this campus. The students ofthe University of Chicago sorely needleadership; the best means of providing thisleadership is the at-large election of SGofficers.Under the new constitution, the chair ofthe Finance Committee (which would takethe place of CORSO, and pass out themoney) would be elected at large. This is aninnovative and badly-needed provision. Thechair of the committee from which theassembly gets its money should not beresponsible to the assembly. Nor shouldRecognized Student Organizations (almostall of which get their money from CORSO)be able to line their pockets by controllingthe group which manages the moneythrough influence in SG. The at-largeelection of this position (CORSO or FinanceCommittee Chair) would put an end to alotof back-room dealing which, though it mighttrain a few students for “real life”, is un¬democratic and not in the best interest of thestudent community.This proposed constitution is not just forStudent Government. It would be theStudent Association Constitution andthrough a variety of its provisions wouldcreate a “Student Association”. As studentswe should share more than our commoncondition. This constitution can be seen asan attempt to create a student body out ofwhat is now a scattered series of limbs andorgans. a panacea, but a necessityOne of the most controversial aspects ofthe proposed new constitution is a fee ofthree dollars per quarter which would bepaid by all students. This provision seems tobe widely misunderstood. This money wouldnot, as The Maroon has alleged, be spent bySG. This money would be used to fundRecognized Student Organizations. There isa horrendous shortage of money for theseorganizations at present. The shortage hasmade CORSO’s job difficult, unpleasant,and time-consuming. No organization hasbeen able to receive the amount of moneythat it requested, nor even the amount that,in my opinion, it deserved, this year. WHPKprovides a service which benefits everystudent at one time or another. The stationcould have aired more sports, purchasedmore or better equipment, or printed moreprogram guides, had its budget not been soseverely cut by CORSO. The activities of theOrganization of Black Students (OBS) w'eredrastically limited by the lack of studentactivities funds. Similarly, everyRecognized Student Organization has beenthe victim of an unreasonable financialpinch. The Festival Of The Arts (FOTA) isat the moment in danger of having to cancelmany of its scheduled events because oflack of moeny. This is a serious situationand it must be reapired.CORSO is in an unworkable position. It isrequired by the present constitution tomaintain the approximate level ofallocation for each Recognized StudentOrganization. New organizations are for¬med almost constantly. At the same timethat CORSO is thus required to give outmore money each year, it has had its ownbudget cut. In 1972-1973 CORSO received37,800.00 dollars from the University. Thisyear it got only $30,000.00. This reduction ofmore than 20 percent has been accompaniedby an increase of about 5 percent in thestudent population (Tuition, during thissame period, has increased by more than 30percent.). The $3 per quarter fee proposedin the hew constitution would bring welcomerelief to this sad situation. It is a measurethat is long overdue on this campus whereour entire student activities budget issmaller than the speakers budgets alone, atother schools (our speakers budget was$3,600.00, this year, an amount easilyspent as a single honorarium). Howeverfrightening a three-dollar addition to ourskyrocketing tuition might seem from anindividual perspective, the fee would cer¬tainly be in the long term interests of thestudent community and may be the onlyhope for student activities.The current constitution contains a clausewhich states that “no political group, noquasi-academic group, and no religiousgroup may receive funds.” This clause hasbeen a thorn in the side of CORSO Muchtime has been spent debating whether agiven group was political or quasi¬academic. SG is certainly a political groupbut it has always received funds. In theproposed new constitution, the distinction ismade not on the basis of the nature of thegroup, but rather on the basis of the natureof the activity. The new constitution wouldnot, as The Maroon has claimed, "bar thefunding of religious organizations” butwould bar the funding of religious activities.This difference is very important. Under thenew provision, a religious group couldreceive funds for non-religious activity.Similarly, political activities may not befunded, although political groups are notautomatically banned from funding. If apolitical group wishes to have a bake sale, 1feel that they should be allowed to get a loanfor some advance advertising. The newdocument also defines “political” as ex¬clusive of University politics. This is animportant step forward. Activities w'hichare a part of University politics, such asSG’s AACSCOR, could be funded withoutviolating the constitution. In practice“political” has been taken to mean “non-University political” for quite fome time,the proposed reform would simply makethis official. This sort of reform is necessarynot only to save time and increase fairness,but is also necessary if we wish to maintaina certain dgree of srepect for our con¬stitution. It is much easier to judge whetheran event is political than to judge whether a group is political.Another aspect of this provision which hasreceived little publicity is that it prohibitseven indirect funding of political or religiousactivities. This much-needed measureshould put an end to the use of “frontgroups” by organizations in need of money.In the final view, then, this section of theproposed new constitution differs onlyslightly from the section it replaces, adds anew safeguard against the misuse of funds,eliminates some oppressive verbiage, andprovides for a more efficient means ofdistributing student activities money. Thisclause should be objectionable to no one whotakes the time to understand it. It should behailed as progress by all.The proposed new constitution is notanywhere near perfect. It could never be;for it is a product of the democratic processThis document is a compromise in its everyfacet between the many opposing forces inSG. It has been altered beyond recognitionsince it came before the assembly. No one inthe assembly likes absolutely all of it. Mostassembly members can find at least a smallpart of it that they hate. We have all com¬promised and we all agree that it would be significantly better than the constitutionunder which we are suffering at themoment.Passing a proposed new constitutionthrough the assembly is almost impossible.Last year it could not be done, although atremendous effort was made Part of thereason that the proposed constitution hasreceived relatively little publicity was theprevailing doubt about its chances forpassage in the assembly. The Maroon hasnot given the proposed constitution thecoverage it deserves; it has, on the con¬trary, done all it could have to hurt thedocument’s chances of acceptance. SG hasnot done all that it should to publicize thereferendum, but it has probably done allthat it could given its present structure. Ihope that the student body will do thedocument justice and do itself a favor. Iurge you to vote in favor of the document,and above all I urge you to vote in thereferendum. This is your big chance.Philip Grew, a second-year student in theCollege, is vice president of StudentGovernment.Grade school daysBy MARGARET DUDNEYLast Friday’s Maroon editorial showed acomplete lack of knowledge about thekinds of issues raised during debate overthe constitution and of the representativecharacter of the assembly during thedebates. The Maroon did not bother to senda reporter to witness the Constitutionaldebates, to interview parties from bothsides of controversial issues, or any of thestandard procedures followed by the staffsof real newspapers covering an event ofsuch importance to the student body as theadoption of a new constitution.To add insult to injury. The Maroon,proceeds to editorialize, to create publicopinion when it never sent out a reporter tocover the scene, when it did almost noinvestigative work. Hard-hitting jour¬nalism is not opposition to change for itsown sake, but rather interpretation andevaluation of events based on thorough,critical inquiry.But enough of telling The Maroon its job.An outstanding feature of the assembly onthe nights during which the constitutionwas considered was the diversity ofpolitical interests represented. Attendancewas relatively high. Freshmen and Collegedorm representatives controlled a higherproportion of votes than any other singleinterest group. Yes, progressive minded(“left”) grad students and other collegerepresentatives were important factors indetermining the present shape of the newconstitution. So what? Don’t they have aright to representation, too° the newconstitution is all the better for it. Many ofthe 6.000 grad and professional students who went to college elsewhere are ap¬palled at the way the UC administrationwields its “rubber stick” over the studentbody. Student control over student moneyis a “given” at most other universities,especially the state universities.To tag Student Government as too“irresponsible” to be trusted with so muchmoney, as The Maroon does, is a real in¬sult to the five students who have beenserving on CORSO this year and every'other year. Ask the members of anystudent organization if CORSO wasreckless or anything but thorough beforemaking an allocation. The true test offiscal responsibility is that CORSO wasable to distribute such an embarrassinglysmall amount of money equitably to somany worthy and needy studentorganizations.Presently, student organizations arefunded by a grant from the Administrationwho has sole authority over what theyearly amount will be. This form ofmonetary allocation, known as the“allowance” system, should be familiar toall students from their grade-school days.Certainly any student body required toamass so much debt in educational loans isresponsible enough to exercise studentcontrol over money for student activitiesand events.I hope the student body will rise abovethe small-scale traditionalism of TheMaroon and vote YES on the new StudentAssociation Constitution.Margaret Dudney. a fourth-year student inthe College, is president of StudentGovernment.Council on InternationalEducational ExchangeInternational StudentI.D. CardsCharter FlightInformationatStudent Activities Office* Ida Noyes 210753-3591The Chicago Maroon Tuesday April 26,1977 5“YourHomeBy DAVID BLUMKeep walking down Ohio Street, pthose corner restaurants where breakmore popular than champagne, paHoliday Inn jazz bar that spins rourround, past all the cars racing each olpremium parking spaces on the nearside, past the very edge of Chicago.Due east, almost three miles towahorizon, far from the curious Oakbathers and farther from their homethree men who hold vigil overMichigan and its vast natural resoThe Cribs are their home.Jim McCanna, Dick O’Donnell, anMartin spend every other week of theion The Cribs. Though their salaries aand their skills apparently refined, themen seem to enjoy their way of life cCribs, connected to the mainland byDick O’Donnell: a man who loves butter cookies6-The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, April 26,1977it, past allreakfast ispast theround and:h other tolear north).oward the>ak Streetomes, livever Lakeresources., and Jimtheir liveses are low, the threeife on Theby only a phone and a thrice-weekly tugboat thatbrings them newspapers, food, and an oc¬casional visitor.The Cribs were built at the turn of thecentury to pump fresh water from LakeMichigan into Chicago’s water supply. Thepipes there, almost sixteen feet wide,connect Lake Michigan to the massivewater filtration plant — where an intricatepurification process provides Chicago witha virtually limitless supply of water.Unlike cities with salt water outlets,Chicago benefits from a huge natural freshwater reserve that some say will never bedepleted. Jim McCanna, The Cribs’supervisor, says the lake’s level is goingdown ever so slowly — but there is little fearthat the supply of water won’t last forlifetimes to come.The pipes themselves are small andhidden from view. They draw water in from the lake almost like a siphon, pullingcountless gallons in daily from an area ofthe lake considered generally pure. Theyare protected by huge screens whichprevent large objects from entering thewater flow.Without obstruction, the water travels 2.6miles to the filtration plant which coversNavy Pier The plant itself is guarded on allsides by rented policemen and barbed-wirefences, protecting Chicago’s water supplyfrom potential sabotage.The Cribs sit without defense among thesailboats and fishermen who often surroundthe island. Most travel past with only acurious glance toward the structure; but afew — mostly vandals — have attempted asafe landing on the Crib’s concrete shores.Inside, the three men occupy themselveswith what little entertainment the cityprovides, what resources they create andexplore, and occasional visitors — mostlyreporters — brought out in a city-ownedtugboat that travels eastward three days aweek. The boat also brings boxes of food, abizarre assortment of condiments suited tothe tastes of The Cribs’ inhabitants.Jim Martin is a quiet, sensitive man —probably more so than his counterparts. Heunabashedly denounces television andtelephones, telling visitors of his love forbooks. He cooks and cleans, organizes thefood as it comes off the boat and preparesthe daily menu. The men have no specificassignment from the city, other than toprotect the cribs and maintain the properfunctions of the equipment, and eachchooses his own household function.Martin seems nervous at first, buteventually he warms to visitors and takesthem around their ample living quarterswith pride. Jim McCanna and DickO’Donnell are older — both long-termveterans of Chicago’s Cribs — and moreopen and honest. O'Donnell is married, andadmits his loneliness. McCanna, who livesin the Harrison Hotel in the south Loop,admits his almost frenzied desire to runfrom the dock as soon as they arrive onshore after a week on The Cribs But Martinadmits nothing.McCanna and O’Donnell take visitors onthe grand tour of The Cribs. They show offthe explosives container, where dynamite iskept to break up the ice during the winter -opening the unlocked door marked“Danger” with a curious lack of fear. Butthey explain that the explosives are usedonly rarely, in the event of solid chunks ofice that prevent continuous water flow intothe pipes Jim Martin: “Our job is 95 per cent vigil.”Otherwise, there is little work for thesethree men, more guardians than engineers.They rise early, sometimes by a crankphone call — some one asks for “Mr. Fish”or occasionally an obscenity — but other¬wise they keep normal hours while theweather is warm and the water calm.During the winter, at least one of them is upall the time, awaiting a crisis that has neverhappenedMore than with The Cribs, they seemobsessed with one another — their habits,their emotions, their way of speaking and ofliving. The three make constant fun of eachother, and it is apparent that not all of it is aspectacle on behalf of an occasional visitor.Thev are far from lonely, but only becausethey can be honest about their differences.They have no concern for their publicimage, though they have been profiled ontelevision, magazines and new spapersSitting around their kitchen table, mun¬ching on butter cookies and each laughing atthe others' capacity for coffee. Jim Martinmentions that he doesn't smoke or drink.The others are not quite so honest, perhaps“Do any of us smoke"1” asks McCannaThey alfshake their headsThe tugboat arrives around 9:30 amevery Monday. Wednesday and Friday, thecrew: exchanges a few words with theCribsmen. and pushes on toward the southside Crib at 68th Street. They drop offvarious copies of the newspaper, which JimMartin grabs for first reading, and oc¬casionally bring a message from thefiltration plant supervisor.The routine seems to amuse them, as theyunpack their groceries -- including a heavyabundance of yogurt and skim milk — andplan a tour for their visitors. Jim Martinprepares some coffee, and Dick O’Donnellsets the table for a feast of gourmet buttercookies“You really dig in. don’t you?” jibes JimMcCanna O’Donnell unabashedly admits his love of small treats, and fills a giantserver plate with the desserts. They allseem unaware of the aura which surroundsthem: their visitors sit in aw-e. amazed thatthey are totally isolated on this tiny island,forced to sit patiently through socialcourtesies and morning coffee.The island’s mystery’ is its distance andinaccessibility, as is clear from just a briefglance toward the shore Looking atChicago’s vast skyline, the visitors nowperceive the mystery as reversed, there isno sign of life, yet the buildings representthe periphery of the second largest city inAmerica. The three men on The Cribs laughwhen visitors suggest that they hold thepower to turn off all Chicago's water“I suppose we could somehow do it,” DickO’Donnell concedes “But we'd be thrownout of here in about 15 minutes.”They rarely look back at Chicago, exceptfrom the helm of the tugboat that bringsthem ashore every Monday morning. Fromthe dock they speed home, rarely ex¬changing words with their replacementcrew.“I don’t have anything to say to them,really.” says Jim McCanna “We’re alldoing the same thing ”The visitor's don't quite understand Asthe boat takes them home from a morningwith the three Cribsmen. they hardly speak,entranced by the approaching harbor andnumbed by the past three hoursJerry, a member of the tugboat crew,explains his method for catching fish — alittle melted cheese on the bottom of a dirtymop works better than a pole, he says — butno one is listeningJerry and the tugboat crew drop theirpassengers off at the comer of Michigan andWacker Drive The lunch-hour traffic on theMichigan Avenue bridge moves quickerthan the tugboat and perhaps faster than thewater travelling underneath them Theirmotion seems endlessThe Chicago Maroon Tuesday, April 26, 1977 7lose despite fast weekTwo mile relay gets close to recordBy FRANK MERRIWELLSome of the best times of the last couple ofyears were run last week by the men’s trackteam. It was oni\ ?<x) bad that the timeswere usually not good enough to beat thepeople they were run against.Last Saturday a two-mile relay team ranan excellent race in the Ohio Relays. Theyonly placed tenth in the prestigous meet butthey ran it in 7:55.4, faster than it has beenrun by a Chicago squad in the last 40 yearsThe relay started quick but un¬distinguished. Lester Savit led off with a legof 159.6 which is his best time of the yearMarchall Scmitt the only freshman on thesquad picked his second leg to set a personalrecord at 159.8 breaking two minutes fpr thefirst time.It was not until Tim Bastisan’s third legthat they broke the race open. Lowering hisfive day* old personal record by two secondsBastian turned in a blazing 156.4 for his half-mile and put the race within the realm ofexcellence. John Schuster anchored withanother barely sub-two half mile at 159.6 tofinish the job.Although still 5 seconds above the varsityrecord of 7:50, the time was the best sincethe record had been set in the early Thirtieswhen Chicago was still a Big Ten power.This performance was a welcome relief,coming on the heels of a 104-42 drubbing atthe hands of Wabash College last Tuesday.Always tough competition Wabash wasespecially psyched for the meet after theyr :: ' ' -w received word that the Maroons had beatenValparaiso. Pulling no punches they won allbut five events and swept several.They were aided by a bus driver osten¬sibly hired by Chicago who managed to findhis way deep into the Indiana corn fieldsbefore realizing that he was not where hewas supposed to be. The Chicago team wasan hour and a half late as a result and didn'tget quite as much warm up as they wouldhave liked.Chicago’s wins came in the field and thesprints Mike Karluc won the javelin afterbeing shut out of the rest of the weightsevents. Pete Wendel won both the long jumpand the triple jump while Rich Gordon, ChipPfaller and Neil Alers teamed up for seepsin the 100 and the 220.There were other excellent performances in the losing cause. Future star MarshallSchmitt lowered his mile time nine secondsto beat team captain John Schuster in themile. Unhappily both were shut out by theWabash runners. Bob Kahout ran a seasonbest 51.7 in the 440 but it was oniy good forsecond. Tim Bastian ran his best time everin the half only to be edged at the wire.Despite the loss, Ted Haydon was pleasedwith his team’s work. “It’s all relative.’’ hesaid, “we ran better against Wabash thanwe did against Valpraiso. But Wabash wasup for us and they have one of the best teamsthey've had in years.”The next home meet will be this af¬ternoon. Originally Lewis had been thescheduled opponent but they canceled due tolack of a team. Therefore the meet will seethe varsity taking on their own alumni andgraduate students on the Track Club Themeet will be held at Stagg Field and willstart at 4:00. Tim Bastian ran the fastest leg of the twoIM report leg <mile relay team at Ohio. (PhotoRieser) by DavidfByR.W. ROHDE wm soguxlBill and Alpha Delta Phi rose out of therain and dirt last week to win the all*University socim championships. Men’sfraduate champs- Bill beat Shorey 5-1 onaturday, while Alpha Delta Phi took LowerWallace 4-2 in their final game Tuesday forthe women’s crown.Bill spent most of the week fighting offprotests about their players, while Shoreywas out on the muddy Midway. Shoreygained the residence finals by beating PSI-U2-0 in the semi-finals, while Dodd-Meadsmashed Shoreland 4-0, and edged LowerFlint on Wednesday 1-0. But Shoreyprevailed easily in the finals, knocking outDodd-Mead 4-0, and then going on to victoryover the independent champions, Mellow-Yellow. 4-1. Bill, meanwhile, was forced into a rematch with Fantomas when it wasdiscovered that they had used an illegalplayer in one game. But Bill won a con¬vincing 3-0victory. and then went on to beatShorey for the championship.The real story, however, was the womenfrom Alpha Delta Phi. Alpha Dell becamethe first women’s socim champions bybeating Lower Wallace 4-2 on Tuesday,while missing one of their top players. AlphaDelt won their league earlier by beatingShorey.competition Saturday, as Dodd-Mead losttheir co-ed volleyball match to a team fromNortheastern Illinois, 11-1,11-4.Men’s undergraduate racquetball con¬tinues, and the tournament has finallyreached the semi-final stage. Remainingplayers include Upper Rickert’s SteveAnneken and Tim Lorello, Doug Dobson on Chamberlain, and the winner between twoShorey players, Brian Frankl and EricBuether.The racquetball tournament has also beenmarked by a couple of unfortunate in¬cidents. It seems that one of the w inners hasbeen playing against and then warming uphis opponents under the alias of GeorgeThompson. At least one time he has warmedup his unknowing opponent to the point ofexhaustion and then announced that he isactually the guy the poor kid has to playagainst.So far only one complaint has been madeto director of intramurals Bill Vendl butthere is nothing he can do as the ploy istotally legal.Unfortunately the restraints ofpublication keep this little trick from beingproperly characterized, but all racquetballplayers should be forewarnedALL TOGETHERAt One LocationTO SAVE YOU MORE!DISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago youare entitled to special money sav¬ing Discounts on Volkswagen &Chevrolet Parts, Accessories andany new or used Volkswagen orChevrolet you buy from Volks¬wagen South Shore or MeritChevrolet Inc.SALES & SERVICEALL AT ONEGREAT LOCATION Ci>i7T,Kfs SCW.IT/H»WIN),CO MttVWtlKfQ: A mini-brewery is:a) Hidden in a basement somewhere in Greektownb) The result of trying to make Broken Toe. Idaho,the beer capital of the world.c) The right way to pretest beer ingredients,dj Both (a) and (c).(c) If you answered this question (a),you obviously know something I don’t.And you are in a lot of trouble.Now. as for the correct answerYes. Schlitz actually does have a mini-brewerywhere they test-brew the ingredients that go intoSchlitz And if they're not right, they never gointo Schlitz.Which is something to remember the next timeyou're going into your favorite place for a beer.You know which one.SiflBnda StcinHUkfbean of Beer THERE'S JUST OHE WORDFOR BEER.AHD YOU KNOW Itm VOLKSWAGENsouth shoreV April 26, 1977 *S8* m ********♦***444********♦****************♦4*♦***** Bonnie Raitt will be making her 1977 Chicago Appearance onJ Wednesday May 11 at Mandel Hall 7:00 pm and 10:00 pm* All seats reserved Prices: $7.50 and $5.50 .+ $5.50 and $350 w/Act. Feei> Tickets will go on sale ar 930 am Apni 13 at the Mandel Hali Box Office ♦■*" Ar*ivift*N BoorH 4* '*■*■**»**★***★★★★★★ ★*★★★* *★'**★*★★★★★★? UMOJAandTHE ORGANIZATION of BLACK STUDENTS - U. of C.PRESENTSTHE 3R0 ANNUAL TRIBUTECREATIVITYSUNDAY MAY 1,1977-7 PM.INTERNATIONAL HOUSE1414 E.59th St.ADMISSION:$2.00TICKETS AVAILABLE AT O.&S. OFFICE1212 East 59th St.OR REYNOLDS CLUB BOX OFFICE5706 S. UniversityOLD TIMECONTENTION&■ GRAND ■SPRING PICNIC-« also FOLK DUNCE CELEBRATION *Sumy Mir 1; on the Quids.fc- boon'till »iohtAll Musicians Invited Especially; trissee coites ::qq, foot rages a-.oc, itmlers sscw too\XC AI3 M3CB M3CB MORE ~?vT.FREE: soda, barbecue grills, cbarcqal, ’.ceVcciYmeits, c wsolescuc eitertomev: too »——1" — ■ »e* > iSponsored by The restiva, of the Arts ( The folklore tonify in case te ot rain: Ida lores BailThe Chicago Maroon Tuesday* April 26, 1977 9CalendarTuesdayMeetingsInternational House Folk Dancing: 8pm, I-House.Hang Gliding: Film and information, 7pm,Ida Noyes.UC Gay Liberation Front: Rap group, 7pm,Ida Noyes 301. For info call 753-3274.Science Fiction Club: 7:30pm, Ida Noyes.Christian Science Organization: “DefiningOur Purpose,” 11:30am, HE 586.LecturesMicrobiology Club: “Anaerobic Bacteria inInfectious Diseases,” Michael Graves, 12pm,EBB 117.Department of English: “Famous LastWords: The Poetic Endings of Vergil, Goethe,Whitman and Eliot.” Lawrence Lipking, 8pm,Harper 130.Social Service Review Lecture: “TheModesty of Nature: A Social Perspective onSchizophrenia,” Philip S. Holzma, 4pm,School of Social Service Administration.Department of Slavic Languages andLiteratures: “Journeys to Glory,” a portraitof little known religious festivals in Poland,Marjorie Young, 4pm, Classics 10.Woodward Court Lecture Series: “Predictionof Earthquakes and Volcanic Eruptions,”Peter Wylie, 8:30pm, Woodward Court. The James Franck Institute Colloquia. “TheAnomalous Thermal Expansion of Glasses atLow Temperature.” Clayton Swenson,4:15pm. Research Institutes 480.Department of Mathematics: “Ramblings inNumber Theory: Squares,” I.N. Herstein,11:30am, Eckhart 133.Divinity School: “Ritual & Heroic Myth,”Theodore H. Gaster, 4pm, Swift CommonRoom.Department of Economics: Money andBanking Workshop, “Permanent Income.Permanent Prices, and Measurement Error inEstimating the Demand for Money,” ThomasHeagy, 3:30pm, SS 402; Labor EconomicsWorkshop. “Quality, Information andEquilibrium in Labor Markets,” KennethBurdett, 1:30pm. Ro 405: Law and EconomicsWorkshop, “Corruption,” Susan Rose-Ackerman, 4pm, Law C.ArtsDoc: “La Marseillaise,” 8pm, Cobb.WednesdayMeetingsSailing Club: Organization of the summerprogram — sailing/crewing/lessons, 7pm, IdaNoyes.Hillel: Students for Israel, “Israel’sEducation System,” Mrs. Esther Geva, 11am,Hillel.Karate Club: 6:30pm, Dance Floor, IdaNoyes.Country Dancers. 8pm, Ida Noyes.Bridge Club: 7pm, Ida Noyes. LecturesAstronomy Club: “Light Output of Super¬novae,” Dr. Sydney Falk, 8pm, RyersonAnnex N-276A.Department of Biochemistry: “Organizationof the Genes for Ribosomal Components in E.coli,” Dr. Masayasu Nomura, 4pm, CLSC101.Christian Fellowship: “Anthropology andChristianity: Cross-Cultural Encounters,”Bill Kornfield, 7:15pm, Ida Noyes Hall, EastLounge.Econometrics & Statistics Colloquium withInternational Trade Workshop: “The TradeBalance in Monetary General Equilibrium:Some Economic Results,” K. Clements,3:30pm, Rosenwald 11.Department of Economics: ResourceEconomics Workshop, “Disaggregated In¬tertemporal Models with an ExhaustibleResource and Technical Advance,” DeanMorton Kamien, and Nancy Swartz, 1:30pm,SS 402.Divinity School: “Myth & History,”Theodore H. Gaster, 4pm, Swift CommonRoom.ArtsRockefeller Chapel: Robert Lodine,University Carillonneur, in recital,12:15pm; “Rockefeller Chapel.Doc: “The Woman in the Window,” 7:30pm;“The Paradine Case,” 9:15pm, Cobb.ThursdayMeetingsOuting Club: Slide show and talk by DavidChristie, 8pm, Ida Noyes Library. History and Philosophy of Science: Studentlunch, l-2pm, Classics 21.Debate Society: Instruction, 7pm; meeting,8pm, Ida Noyes.Judo: 6pm, Bartlett Gym.Table Tennis Club: 7:30pm, Ida Noyes.Changing Ringing: 12noon-lpm, locationannounced at Monday & Saturday meetings.LecturesGenetics Training Program: “Gene Mappingin Man Using Somatic Cell GeneticProcedures,” Frank H. Ruddle, 2:30pm,CLSC 101.Divinity School: “Techniques of Myth,”Theodore Gaster, 4pm, Swift Common Room.Department of Physics: “PrecisionMeasurement of the Free Electron SpinMagnetic Moment Anomaly,” Robert VanDyck, Jr., 4:30pm, Eckhart Hall 133.SG Speakers Committee: Mike Deutsch ofthe Committee to Stop the Grand Jury andothers will speak about the recent attacks onthe Puerto Rican community in Chicago, 7pm,Cloister Club, Ida Noyes.Department of Biochemistry: “SubcellularDistribution and Multiple Forms of 3-Mercptopyruvate Sulphurtransferase fromRat Liver,” Dr. Aleksander Koj, 2:30pm,CLSC 101.ArtsDoc: “Limelight,” 8pm, Cobb.Law School Films: “Ball of Fire," 8:30pm.Law School Auditorium.MORTON DAUWEN ZABEL LECTURE SERIES1 The ASUM Program1 and TEhc Idnioersitu of Chicago1 The Department of AnthropologyI jointly present THE DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISHandDAVID SMITH1 Research Associate at the Institute for Cancer Research THE OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRSpresentJAMES MERRILL1 Fox Chase Cancer Center1 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Author of Nights and DaysI who will lecture on the topic j and Divine Comedies1 Some Social and Genetic Aspects of Leprosy: j in a reading of his own poetry1 Mactan Islands, Phillipines1 Thursday, April 28,1977HH f Tuesday, April 26,19778:00 p.tn.1 4p.m. LAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM1 Swift 106 1111 East 60th StreetH * •'. The Publie is Invited10-The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, April 76, 1977CLASSIFIED ADSSPACERmmate wanted for bdr w/prvt bathin Ig beaut apt: 363-7417.Spacious apt for summer $225 permonth 3 bedrooms 752-2520.Sunny I'? rm apt.,exc loc , avail May1st., $132/mo., incl util. Call 363 8318eves. Must rent by May 1.Summer sublet spacious 2 br Ir drpiano porch laundry 2 blocks campus$180. Call 241-5314,1 BR apt, huge sunny, 2 air condmodern, 24 hr security, 55th $285 5 7pm after 11 -241 7203.Lake Front Cottage Priv. Sand Beach,Fireplace, Red Brick Patio, 1 bedrm,10 min U of C, rent May 1, Swim,Canoe, Sail, Fish. 731 8378.SINGULAR THIRD PERSONWANTED. Looking for housemate toshare 3 bedroom apartment 54th &Ellis. Available June 1st, $275 a month.Hardwood floors! Call 752 1000, rm.609. Leave message.LITTLE PIERCE. 7 mins, fromlibrary, air cond., etc. 1 bedroomavailable for sublet from May 1 thruSept. 30. Option for 77 78. Rentnegotiable. Call Marco 493-6645evenings.Summer sublet-fall option for onemale. 1400 E. 57th. 667 6847,Summer sublet with Fall option 51st &Univ. 3 bedroom; turn, $240. Call 3245718 or 493 7093, 324-4372.Summer Sublet, spacious 2 br. lr, dr,piano porch laundry 2 blocks campus.$180 Call 241-5314.2 rooms for rent in 13 rm. home sharedwith 5 other students. Nr. coop, 6blocks to campus-on bus lines. Freewasher dryer, storage space, 3 baths,all the amenities of home. Quiet safelocation in 5400 block of Dorchester.$90-100/mo. 947 0331.Two rooms available in apartment onKenwood & 57th. 947 8498FOR SALEHOME AND CAR STEREO,RECORDING SUPPLIES! Bestpriceson Bose, Phase Linear, Marantz,Pioneer, Harman Kardon, BIC, Teac,JBL, AR, many more! Call Leston, at753-2240 rm. 1424. Leave Message.ILFORD HP5 in stock.MODEL CAMERA1342 E . 55th St. 493 67001971 Superbeetle $450 288 5799.OLDS '68 Cutlass Supreme A/C,Radio, New Tires $500 Best Offer. 6843675 eves.CASSETTE TAPE SPECIALWe now have in stock Fuji cassettetapes considered by many as the stateof the art music tape. To introduce thistape to Hyde Park our first shipment isbeing offered at a full 1/3 off list.MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th St. 493 6700PASSPORT PHOTOSWhile you wait.MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700STEREOS. Components, TV's, SmithCorona and Olympia Typewriters,refrigerators, I won't be undersold bycompetition! 752 3818. PEOPLEWANTEDTEACHERS at all levels Foreign andDomestic Teachers Box 1063 Vancouver, Washington 98660,Person to locate subjects in Hyde Parkfor research project 20 hrs or less /$80,486 5579.Babysitter weekday mornings 9 to 12for a 5 month old sleepy head. CallCummings 288 4549.Motel room clerk, So. Shore Dr. 3 or 4dys/wk, 4-12 pm or 12-8 am shifts open.Will train. 374-4500 between 10am and4pm.PIANIST NEEDED for Tench Churchof Christ, Scientist, Hyde Park, forSunday morning and Wednesdayevening services. Call 373 7642 or 4931044.Preschool teacher 2-3 yr olds degreeand experience required. 12:30-6:00pm, 684 6363Substitute preschool teacher hoursflexible exp. req 684 6363.COUNSELORS WANTED Phys Ed.majors, athletic students, drama,WSI, cooed overnight NY Statechildrens camp. Apply David Ettenberg, 15 Eldorado Place,Weehawken, NY 07087.SECRETARY. Intelligent fulltimesecretary for manuscript and lettertyping, filing; some knowledge offoreign languages and/or copy editinga plus. 753 8163.OUTDOOR WORK SATURDAYS-Earn $25. Opportunities for dynamicstudents. Fight pollution and end yourown personal recession at the sametime. Call Ken Arway at Citizens for aBetter Environment. 939-1985, MonFri.PEOPLEFOR SALETypist: Any material typed neat andaccurate. 624 3192.Typing done. Pick up and delivery.Price negotiable 768 7206.Interested in typing evenings in myhome. Will discuss price. Barbara,373-3594 atter 5:30 p.m.HIRE AN ARTIST—Illustration of allkinds — even on short notice. NoelPrice. 493 2399.RESEARCHERS-Free lance artistspecializes in the type of graphic workyou need. Samples references onrequest. Noel Price493 2399.For experienced piano teacher of alllevels call 947-9746.TYPING SERVICE/HY PK./6674282.DISSERTATION TYPIST in Evanston. Long exper. UC Selectric. 328-8705.SCENESA Matter of Life or Death- A discussionon nuclear disarmament and themovement for the Transfer Amend¬ment. Sponsored by the Southside NonAmerican Movement. For more in¬formation call 752 3174.TEST PREPARATION FORLiw School Admission TestGruuite Msuoemeit Aom TestGmouite Recoro EiimiiitiorMedicu Cohere Aom Test• PROFESSIONAL INSTRUCTORS• CURRENT MATERIALS• ADMISSION / APPUCATIONSTRATEGY SPRING SPECIALS*Clothing*Household Items*MOTHER S DAY GIFTSDOLLARS & SENSE1312 East 53rd StreetOpen 10 to 4 Monday-FridayjLOWEST HOURLY COSTOf ANY PROGRAMW» MARI INI Ml INI NCI782-21851$ •tartan Ctaci And SUNDAY, MAY 1st12 Noon to 4 P.M.SO.SHORE BEACH APTS.LUXURY ON THE LAKE7447 SOUTH SHOREStudios A vailableStarting $155.00fModern hi-rise bldg in pleasant surroundingsLwith central air cond , private beach, commissary,'beauty shop, indoor and out door parking avail(For an appt., call 768-3922 or visit our officelM-F 9-4 30DOWNS, MOHL & CO.Equal Opportunity Housing Ezra Quantine Ragtime MemorialBand at the Blue Gargoyle Fri Apr 298. Sat Apr 30 at 8 00. Tickets at thedoor or Fret Shop. A Sanctuary Ex-trafaganza.Social Life lacking? Meet new feet.Join the Folkdancers in Ida Noyesevery Sunday, Monday and Friday,except May 13 and June 10.Make sure spring arrives on time thisyear. Participate inWalpurgisnakhq fSaturday, April 30.Torchlight parade from Hutch Courtat 11:30, midnight sacrifice, dancingafterwards, beer, cider, and food. Joinus.Y^AR ROUND CHILD CARE: full orhalf-day programs; 7.30a.m. 6p.m.,ages 2-6; 3 classrooms; professionalstaff. Parent coop preschool: 684 6363.SUMMERWORKEarn $2500 this summer. Must be hardworker. Call 328 2136.SPRINGSpring is here,Eternal youth.Drink your beer,Old Wayne C. Booth.-JIM TABLE TENNISTOURNAMENTPlay in the UC Tournament and Winone of six large Trophies!Date: May 5, 7, & 12.Sign-up Deadline: Sat., April 30Entry Fee. $1.00Contact: John Hodges955-0168TWO APT SALESCONDUCTED BYAT HOME SALESSAT APRIL 309:30AM-2:30PM1st Apartment: 5716 Stoney Island,Chgo. Antique cane settee; dining rmtable 8. 6 empire chairs; fine china;antique chair; pr pink chairs; Frenchneedlepoint chair; silk covered bench;6 piece twin maple bedroom set;Queen Anne desk, cloisonne; sewingcabinet. Much misc.2nd Apartment 5762 Stoney Island:Couch; end tables; cocktail table;mirrors, pictures; pr. chairs; kneehole desk; lamps; 4 Amer. KirmanOrientals; mah. 18 Cent, dining rm setwith china cab.; drum table; linensbric-a-brac, dishes; utensils; dinetteset; mah. 6 pc. twin bedroom setperfect cond ; records from 40; muchmoreSYMPATHY FORTHE DEVILPlease allow me to introduce myself;I'm a man of wealth and taste... atWalpurgisnacht, midnight April 30,Hutch Court.GAY LIBCOFFEEHOUSE Sat., April 30, 8-12pm Blue Gargoyle (5655 University).UC Gay Lib 753-3274.SPSS CLASSLearn to use SPSS statistical packagefor transforming data, computingstatistics. 6 session, $25. Computertime provided. Register before April28. Call 753-8409 or come to Computation Center.UCSAILINGCLUBInterested in sailing and/or lessons forthe summer? Come to iN? meetingWed. 27, at 7 p.m. Ida Noyes or call493 6645.• Eye ExaiiflsUons• Contact Lenses (Soft l tbfdt• Prescriptions FilledDR. MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOHaRlSTSHyde Park Sfcoppwg Center1510 E. 55th363-6383 PROGRAMMABLECALCULATORSCOMMODORE PRIOO-outperformsthe TI-56 at a price that can't be beatCall Jeff at 753-2249 Room 3410 LeaveMessageE.R.A. MEETINGERA planning meeting for the Mar 4Chicago rally. Special quest: Atfirmative Action Officer MargaretFalters to discuss the status of womenat U of C April 27 at 7:00 in theWomen's Union Lounge. BlueGargoyle Rm. 22ASTRONOMY CLUBAstronomy Club presents a publiclecture by Dr. Sydney Falk on LIGHTOUTPUT OF A SUPERNOVA, WedApr. 28, 8pm in Ryerson Annex 276 A.May 8 Trip to Yerkes will be planned.Study Russian, Onlyplace in ChicagoEvening hoursReading, writing grammar,conversation for beginner,intermediate, advance atLoop College 64 E. Lake StreetLow tuition. Earn Collegecredits. Get appointment cardfor early registration-April 29May 6 in room 1113. Semesterstarts August 22. Info call269-0066-7STUDENTS FOR ISRAELWEDNESDAY, APRIL 27th-12:00 Noon, Hillel House5715 Woodlawn AvenueHEAR: MRS. ESTHER GEVA speak on:"ISRAEL S EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM"Bring a Bag Lunch - Drink ProvidedCHICAGO:'‘The driver of the car pointed a gun at me and said, "Don't move." The menidentified themselves as FBI agents...They told me that since I hadn't talkedto them, I would have to talk to the grand jury."HEAR: DID YOU KNOW —JOSEFINA RODRIGUEZof the Comite Pro OrienlacionComunal, andchairperson ot theChicago Committee toStop the Grand juryandMICHAEL DEUTSCHAttorney for subpoenaed activistsTHURS. APR. 284 PM ClOFSTfff CIL*• DA NOVIS HAUStTH A WOOOtAWNSponsored by theSpeaker's Committee Eight Puerto Rican activists and 1 fromNew Mexico have been called before aspecial Grand Jury in ChicagoThough accused of no crime, they faceindefinite jail terms.In New York. Raisa Nemikin and MariaCueto, members of the EpiscopalChurch's Hispanic Affairs Commission,have been imprisoned tor refusing totestify concerning Church affairsSince last fall, the Puerto Rican community of West Town has been under astate of siege by the FBI. which hasillegally searched homest intimidatedpeople at work, held people at gunpoint and set up roadblocksThese things are part of a nationalcampaiqn to suppress, jail, and destroyall sections, "underground"or "aboveqround", ol the Puerto Rican people'sstruggle for independence EZRA QUANTINERagtime Memorial Band with JudyTenuta, Chicago's Queen of CampFri. April 29 & Sat. April 30 at 8 00 atthe Blue Gargoyle. Tickets at the dooror the Fret Shop.PAN PIZZADELIVERYThe Medici delivers from 5-10:30 p.m.,Surt.-Thurs; 5-11:30 Fri. and Sat 667-7394. Save 60 cents if you pick it upyourself.BOOKS BOUGHTBooks bought and sold everyday,every night 9-11 Powells, 1501 E. 57th. FREEFREE: "Recording Basics Books"No purchase necessary U. of CBookstores Photo Dept While Supplyof 200 lastsFREE Scotch T-shirt with purchaseof any Scotch audio product. U of C.Bookstore Photo Dept While Supplyof 200 lastsLOST & FOUNDLOST: Soccer ball lost Monday 4/18One Brine. 32 panel, black and white,UC teamball misplaced in Bartlettlocker room. Please return. Call Jon at493 2556 if you have info.HP-22 Calculator LOST late Tues Apr19 in 2d Regenstein. REWARD. Pleasecall 288 4884, 5:30 7:00TELETYPEMACHINES 'Models 15, 19 & 28's. ROs, KSRs &ASRs $25 up. PWR SPLYS, PanelRack Cabinets, METERS, ETC.Cheap C. G. Goodman 752-1000,FREE CONCERT:^STUDENT MUSICMusic By David Baubien, RichardBrown, Peter Burkholder, MonroeCouper, Bruse Horst and GeraldLevinson. Augustana LutheranChurch (55th and University), Fri.,April 29th at 8:30 p.m.PERSONALSWriters' Workshop PL 2 8377Pregnant? Troubled? Call 233-0305 foraffirmative help, 10-2 p.m. Free Test.Pregnancy Testing Sat. 10-2Augustana Church, 5500 Woodlawn.Bring 1st morning urine sample, $1.50donation. Southside Women’s Health324 2292. SUMMER SUBLETMale roommate needed to share onebedrm apt. furnished or unfurnished.Available now. AC, quiet, close tocampus. Rent negotiable. Option torenew. Contact Bill, evenings, at 363-4300, etc 211.VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGATTRACTIVE l1/, AND2 Vi ROOM STUDIOSFURNISHED or UNFURNI$HEDSI49 to $243Short TermBased on AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus StopFA 4-0200 Mrs. GroakFASTSPEEDYRAPIDSWIFTPRONTO wt cuss ninm putvrvnmPRINTING...IF YOU NEED IT FAST WE’RE AS NEAR AS YOUR PHONE...OUR SERVICES INCLUOE•Copying •Bus,ness Cards*r0’‘ Copia*•Folding •Mailierj .Copying*•Collating *Flyprs Duplicating-Fas*•Binding »Ac! Books•Wedding tnyitalion*.Church Bulletins•Padding Etc •Thasis - Term PapersEnvelopes .Funeral Programs *•Letterheads FWHIfist Hyde Park Bank Bldg.UJK 1525 East 53rd StreetROSS Chicago, III. 60615INSTANT PRINTING WHILE U WAIT Suite 626Hyde Park Unitarian Cooperative School56S0 S. Woodlawnest. 1958•A Unique nursery school & kindergardengeared to each cbildn't needs.• A Parent Cooperative •>'•Experienced teachers•5 morningsOpenings available for September for childrenaged 2 years 9 months through 5Call 753-1813 or 752-3912APRIL 299:00 P.M.ASPECTS OF JEWISH LIFEIN ITALY IN THE 19th &20th CENTURYPROF. ARNALDOMOMIGLIANOAlexander White VisitingProf. Depts. ClassicalI Languages & Lit. __& History & Committe?On Social ThoughtAT HILLEL5715 WOODLAWNALKA-SELTZER. FORYOUREXTRACURRICULAR DATE:April26TIME:11:30to1:30LOCATION:ReynoldsCluOnthedatelistedbelow,we'llbegivingawayfreesamplesolAlka-Seltzeron yourcampus.Andthat'snotall. Fourofthesamplepackswe'regivingawaywillcontain$25winningcertificatesgoodfora$25prize(booksorcash).So,ifyourelucky,we'llrelieveafewofyourfinancialpainsaswell. Onlyoneprizeawardedperperson... prizevalue$25.Nosubstitutionofprizes permitted.Originalprizecertificatemust___accompanyrequesttoclaimprize,and cannotbemechanicallyreproduced.HHiHiIHAlkaSeltxer'torupseistomachwithheadacheMMilesLaboratoriesIncC197712TheChicagoMaroonTuesday,April26,1977