Vol. 87, No. 5 The University of Chicago Friday, July 29,1977Fall enrollment in College New UC alumni director chosenis expected toBy Jon MeyersohnThis fall’s entering College classwill be smaller than last year’s byabout 80 students, according to thedirector of College admissions.Fred Brooks expects 625students in the class of 1981,compared with 704 in the class of1980 Because of an over eight percent drop in applicants Brooksexpected this year’s decrease, butthe fin il figure surprised him."De1 pite the drop in applicants Istill thought we would have about650 students,” he said. “I am alittle concerned that fewer thanthat have chosen to come.”An entering class of 650 studentswould have been close to thenumber two years ago, when 659students entered the College. Butthe additional drop of 25 studentsmakes the class of 1981 smallerthan any class since 1974.Brooks atributed the drop to anumber of factors, particularly thehigh cost of private education andcompetition from eastern schools.More students are choosingpublic state or community schools,but those who have decided to go toprivate colleges seem to prefermore expensive eastern schoolsover Chicago“These are two independentfactors that cut into ourenrollment,” said Brooks. “Somestudents are choosing more ex¬pensive schools over Chicago andthe trend is for more midwesternstudents to go east to a private fall to 625college On the other hand, somestudents simply cannot affordprivate college and choose publiccolleges.”Brooks felt that students are alsodeterred from Chicago because ofits location. The University is at aparticular disavantage because itis both urban and midwestern.“We are doubly hurt in the eyesof a prospective student,” Brookssaid. “To be on the south side ofChicago and at the same timemidwestern places at a distinctdisadvantage.”This year’s figure for transferstudents is expected to stay closeto last year's, when approximately100 transfers joined the Univer¬sity’s undergraduate program.College class to 3Fred R. Brooks, director of Collegeadmissions, expects 80 fewerstudents in the class of 1981 thanwere in the class of 1980. Brooksattributes the drop to Chicago’slocation and to economic factors. By Adam SchefflerA year long search for a per¬manent director of alumni affairsat the University ended this weekwith the appointment of David RLeonetti, B.A. ’58.Leonetti, currently assistantdirector for administration of theUniversity Art Museum atBerkeley, California, will assumehis new post on August 15 He isalso expected to be namedsecretary-treasurer of the 85,000-member Alumni Association in thefall.Leonetti’s selection fills theadministrative gap created lastNovember 1 when the director ofalumni affairs Arthur R. Nayerresigned. The position has beenheld since Nayer’s departure byRuth Halloran, who will resumeher duties as assistant directorwhen Leonetti arrives next month.Leonetti’s appointment wasannounced by D. R R. Bruckner,vice-president for public affairs.Contacted Wednesday at LagunaBeach, California, the 40-year oldLeonetti said. “I feel wonderfulI’ve been away too long.”“The only interesting thing I’velearned,” he said, “is that peopletend to forget, unless they'rereminded, that the University isstill healthy. I will talk to the staffthe first year about ways to bringpeople to the campus — especially(people) in the metropolitan area.My friends in the suburbs have notbeen on campus for many years;it’s almost as if they had movedaway. In many cases they didn’treally know.“When I first came (for a recent interview) I was very excited. Itlooks better than ever.Flourishing, you might say. AndI’m a Chicago person from aperiod when it was notflourishing.”Leonetti last worked here in 1963as the association’s programdirector.“The early ’50s were, I think, themost difficult years,” he con¬tinued “I think the neighborhoodhas calmed down and becomerelatively stable.“I ve been reading The (HydePark) Herald series on the SouthEast Chicago Commission, and Irealize that I was there at the timeI didn't quite know what was goingon as a student It’s clear that itwas all very successful."The only problem I’ve got at themoment is that I can’t find a placeto live It’s not just inflation, like atBerkeley. It’s just not available ”In the meantime, Leonetti and hisfamily will live in the WindemereHotelDespite the off-campus housingcrunch, Leonetti said he thinks theUniversity is "in very good handsIf I thought it was struggling. Iwouldn’t have said yes.”Administrators, for their part,seemed to view Leonetti as anequally healthy choice.Bruckner, who said he decidedon Leonetti last month after“conversations” with “a numberof other people during the lastyear,” called Leonetti’s ap¬pointment “terrific.”“He’s worked for the Universitybefore, not only for the alumniassociation but in developmentwork. In California, he's managed David R. Leonetti has been pickedto head the University’s 85.000-member alumni association.Leonetti, who received a B.A. herein 1958, is currently the assistantdirector of the University ArtMuseum at Berkeley, California.a large institution. He has a gooddeal of executive ability, and he'svery enthusiastic about theUniversity.“He knows universities; hecertainly knows this university. Ithink it’s the best combination wecould possibly get,” Brucknersaid.The acting director, Halloran.said, “I'll welcome him with openarms. David is a splendid in¬dividual. well-qualified in every'respect. I know he’ll do an out¬standing job ”Leonetti’s specific duties werenot announcedIn general, he will be chargedwith furthering the purpose of theAlumni to 3Fishy taleBiologist studies new speciesBy Bruce LewensteinA research associate in the departmentof biology said Wednesday he had “anopen mfnd” on whether the 44-footdecaying skeleton dredged up by a.Japanese trawler last week is a whale,shark, a sea lion, or a plesiosaurRoy Mackal, a self proclaimedproponent of “cryptozoology,” said that,“The situation is still quite fluid.”Mackal has been studying possible newspecies, as well as old, for about 13 years.In addition to his University post, Mackalis the scientific director for the I^xrh NessInvestigation Bureau, a London based non¬profit organization that draws its mem¬bers from places such as the Smithsonianand the Roval Ontario Museum.Mackal believes that science should beready to accept cryptozoology as alegitimate area of study. “In fact, hesaid, “it doesn’t exist yet.”“But there’s already the field of exo¬biology for the study of extra-terrestialanimals. Why not search for new species ofanimals here on earth.”If the animal found off Japan is actuallya plesiosaur, it is believed to have beenextinct for about 165 million yearsThe marine reptile from the Mesozoic“Age of Dinosaurs” is not related to eithermammals or dinosaurs They are believedto have existed in two forms; short-neckedand long-headed or long-necked and short¬headed They resemble the modern seaturtle differing mainly in that both theirfore and hind flippers provided propulsion Mackal believes that there is a greatpossibility new species will be discoveredthrough research. In his search for thesenew species, he often studies old animalssuch as the plesiosaurMackal said that “to suggest there arenew' species is not so spectacular .” Butcryptozoology has not been recognized as aformal area of study in the scientificcommunity.“I’d like to offer a course in it,” he said“Right now the field has only been aroundfor a few years.”Recognizing that he is not part of thescientific establishment. Mackal felt thatspeculating on the possibility of aplesiosaur being found would be “stickingmy neck out.”But scientists in Japan are doing justthat. A Yokohoma National Universityscholar of ancient animals called therecent find a plesiosaur Mackal feels thatthis assumption may be premature “Tothe unsophisticated observer,” he said, “adead, decaying carcass can be spec¬tacular ”“Every report has to be checked-out, butjudging from experience this animal ismore likely to be a normal, everydayspecies found in the Pacific.”Unfortunately, all judgements have tobe made from four photographs taken byone of the trawler’s crew Mackal has notyet received the pictures.“I would like to see them,” he said Thetraw ler’s crew dumped the body back intothe waters off of New Zealand because itsmelled so bad Alumni gather here for a weekof lectures, intellectual revivalBy Andrea Holliday“The most wonderful thing is being a partof it again, being a participant in all thethinking that’s going on.”“Of course we’ve been back to visitbefore, when our children were here, but it’snot the same, you feel like an outsider — it’sso good to be involved again“I think people leave this University witha strong concept of the value of and need forcontinuing education. ”These remarks were gleaned from amongapproximately 90 alumni, alumni spouses,and friends of the University who aregathered this week at the Center for Con¬tinuing Education to participate in a noncredit educational program sponsored bythe Office of the University ExtensionMany of this year’s participants wereamong the 50 or so who took part in the firstannual Alumni College last year, whichTwo of the 90 alumni who gathered thisweek on campus share a sherry andremembrance at Robie House (Photo bySteve Strandberg) examined “Technology and AmericanLife.” Alumni College ’77 focused on thetheme "Life Cycle.” The University’s aimin sponsoring the program was “to immerseits alumni in the most current and livelythinking on the nature of the life passage incontemporary America.”Each of the 12 lectures dealt with a par¬ticular phase in life, from infancy to old ageand deathThe speakers were Kenneth Kaye,department of education; Susan Stodolsky.education and behavioral sciences; EdgarEpps, education; Arthur Schwart. School ofSocial Administration <SSA) andpsychiatry; Amita Boswell, SSA; MihalyCsikszentmihalvi, behavioral sciences andthe College; Salvatore Maddi. behavioralsciences and the College; Morton Lieber-man. behavioral sciences and psychiatry;Spencer Parsons. Divinity School; BerniceNeugarten. behavioral sciences; RobertHavighurst, education and behavioralsciences; and Carl Schneider, Mead-ville, Lombard Theological SchoolLectures and discussions were held everymorning, but the day’s activities did not endthere Participating alumni were invited totake tours, attend performances of CourtTheatre, recitals and concerts in Hyde Parkand at Ravinia, and visit Chicago’s ArtInstituteAmong the social events on the scheduleare a meeting with President Wilson andnumerous luncheons, receptions and sherryhours Exercise classes were held in themornings, and workshops in creativewriting, figure drawing, and playreadingwere* offered in the afternoons.HEWLETTlMj PACKARDQThe uncompromising ones.The calculations you face require no less.The new compact HP-21 and HP-25scientific calculators take it easy onyour budget — and give you thesame uncompromising design andquality that go into every Hewlett-Packard pocket calculator, regar¬dless of price.The HP-21 Scientific. $80•32 built-in functions andoperations.Performs all log and trig functions,the latter in radians or degrees;rectangular/polar conversion;register arithmetic; common logevaluation.•Performs all basic datamanipulations.The HP-97Full-ProgrammablePrinting Calculator.Provides battery-operationand thermal printing — inone self-contained unit.$750The new HP-97 Full-ProgrammablePrinting Calculator combines ex¬ceptional programming power andthe great usefulness of a quiet ther¬mal printer. What’s more, the HP-97operates on batteries as well asAC— so you can hae a printedrecord whenever and wherever youneed it. In addition, there’s an exra-large display for easy readabilityand a buffered keyboard so datamay be keyed in at high speed. The HP-25 ScientificProgrammable. $125•72 built-in functions andoperations.•Keystroke programmability. Theautomatic answer to repetitiveproblems.•Full editing capability.•Branching and conditional testtestcapability.•8 addressable memories.Both the HP-21 and the HP-25feature:•RPN logic system with 4-memorystack.•Full decimal display control.Come in and see these great newcalculators today.The HP-67F ully-Progr amm ablePocket Calculator.Provides the identicalpower of the HP-97.$450.The HP-67 is ideal for those whowant the powerful features of theHP-97, but do not require a printingcapability. The HP-67 is completelycompatible with the HP-97.Programs recorded on one unit maybe loaded and executed on theother—even the print commands,(e.g. when the HP-67 executes aPrint X command, it pauses, anddisplays the current results).Used separately — or together —these compatible fully-programmable calculators do thejob faster and with less chance forerror.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORETYPEWRITER DEPT.5750 S. ELLISM-F 8-5 Hk'G'U. S. Grade A Frying Chicken Legs ■49 poundUSDA Choice Porterhouse Steaks 1*89 poundUS DA Sirioin Steak 1.59 poundRath Black-Hawk Bacon 1.39 poundThompson Seedless Grapes ■69 poundCalifornia Red Plums ■39 poundFresh Green Onions ■10 bunchCountry Delight Sour Cream ■69 pintSale Dates July 28-311296 E. 53rd(KIMBARK PLAZA)HOURS: MON. SAT. 8:30 A.M.7:50 P.M.SUN. 9 4:50THEPUB’Eight imported & domestic beers on tap’Four bottled beers’Wines by the glass & c arafe’Munchies. sandwiches & a game room4:30 pm til midnight M-FIDA NOYES HALL1212 E. 59th2 The Chicago Maroon Friday, July 29,1977College class from 1The average verbal SAT scorealso stayed close to last year’saverage. There had been a declinein the scores since 1968, but lastyear the average was 636, up 15points from 1975.The percentage of women in theCollege is expected to remainabout the same as in 1976. but thereal number of women will declinebecause of the enrollment drop.The class of 1981 will be close to 35per cent women. In 1975 the figurewas 31 per cent.Brooks anticipates a p-proximately 50 minority studentsthis fall, down from 79 last year.The drop is partly attributed to thedeath of Christopher Smith inApril. Smith had been assistant tothe director of College admissions,with primary responsibly forminority recruitment.New College Dean Jonathan Z.Smith said he expects the Collegecan increase its minorityenrollment in the coming years.But he hinted that it will be hard toever get the female enrollmentover 40 per cent, even with in¬creased recruitment efforts.Smith attributed the problem oflow female enrollment to the highnumber of coeducational collegesin the east, a disaffection for anurban setting such as Chicago, andthe College’s midwestern location.20 per cent of this year's enteringclass will be from the mideasternstates. 53 per cent of the enteringclass come from the midwest andIllinois, with admission of Illinoisstudents up slightlv Eight per cent come from New England, sevenper cent from the south, eight percent from the west, and two percent from the southwestTraditionally, only half thenumber of students admitted to theCollege eventually attend. As ahedge against this perennial, 50per cent acceptance rate, close to1400 students were admitted.This year, however, what Brookscalls the “yield rate” dropped tocloser to 40 per cent, accountingfor the decrease in the expectedtotal of 650 students to an actualfigure of 625.This decrease was apparentthroughout midwestern schools,while in the east the yield rate wentup from last year Brooks felt thateastern schools were nowdepleting the midwest’s usualsupply even more than in the past.Brooks had no figures on thenumber of students returning tothe College. The number droppedlast year.The student housing problem oflast year seems to have beensolved by the additional housingunits in the Shoreland. The hotelwill be able to house 500 studentsthis year, 350 of them un¬dergraduates and 150 graduatestudents.Approximately 2200 students areexpected to live in dorms andUniversity apartments. Director ofstudent housing EdwardTurkington felt that “We will haveno problem housing all thestudents who want to live in thedorms and other students ac¬comodations.”Alumni week from 1association, described in its con¬stitution as establishing, en¬couraging, and maintaining “amutually beneficial relationshipbetween the University of Chicagoand its alumni ”He offered this personal in¬terpretation: ‘in the best sense ofthe word, ‘stay in touch’ — in bothdirections.”But, he added, “I suspect I andthe staff will have to take theinitiative in most cases. I’mprobably going to do lots oflistening to staff and boardmembers and a number of dif¬ferent kinds of graduates of theinstitution to see what they think.”Leonetti said he was “very en¬couraged by the support(University) officers express foralumni activities. (Chairman ofthe Board) Keneker understandsthat it’s important that theUniversity know' the people who leave it well. ”Leonetti brings considerablemanagement experience to hisnew job. At Berkeley, he hasmanaged the financial operationsof the museum and supervised itsdevelopment programs for thepast five years.He received a B A. degree inpsychology from the University ofChicago in 1958 and subsequentlyheld several posts with theUniversity, including admissionscounselor. He was director of thealumni association’s easternregional office from 1963 to 1966.After serving for a year asexecutive director of the Iowa ArtsCouncil, Leonetti became, in 1967,western regional representativefor the University. He organizedand administered the 160 milliondollar Campaign for Chicago funddrive in San Francisco, Denver,Portland, and Salt Lake City. Letters to the EditorEwing defendedTo the Editor:Your editorial in the July 22edition of The Maroon, with itscondemnation of Russ Ewing’sreporting, forces me to air somethoughts I have had on the MarkGromer case and the manner inwhich it was handled by the press.In the “ivory tower” we areinsulated from reality. We live“the life of the mind,” and mindsare what matter to us.But the rest of Chicago lives heretoo, and the media serves us all. Tothe rest of Chicago minds matter,but so does race And race is a bigissue to most Chicago citizens,both privately and in the media.What was our reaction when weheard of Gromer’s death? Deepdown I believe many of us felt “Ohno, they've got another one of us.”And maybe not so deep down I'llbet a lot of Chicagoans felt “Well,they got one of those spoiled honkykids. Watch the lynch mobs comeout on this one.”So then what happened? TheSoutheast Chicago Commissionoffered a $5,000 reward for in¬formation. Do they do that when ablack southeast Chicagoan ismurdered.’ (For that matter,would the reward have beer of¬fered, indeed would the whole casehave been so public, if MarkGromer, the UC student, had beenblack?)Russ Ewing is black. And he’sresponsible to the Chicago public,largely black. Perhaps he owed itto us all to point out that maybeblackie didn't just pounce dowrn oninnocent defenseless little whitey.Whatever the circumstances,doesn't it make sense to at leastconsider the other side beforeleaping to conclusions.’Lisa RyanHark the HeraldTo the Editor:Reading of the various articleson the death of Mark Gromer hasbrought up many variations of theoriginal news stories and hint at allkinds of possibilities. Of course. Ihope the case goes to trial soon andthat proper justice is meted out.But the most peculiar of all things that I have noticed about theincident is that the Hyde ParkHerald has avoided the storycompletely.', in the issue rightafter it happened and the issue ofthis week. . no comment what¬soever!Why?Marvin BaronBell airTo the Editor:Though we, the members of theUniversity of Chicago ChangeRinging Society, had thought itbest not to join in the w'eeklycorrespondence regarding ouractivity, recent letters contain twoassumptions which warrantcorrection The first of these is thatPublius’ energetic and articulatesupport of ringing reflects ringers’self-interest and lack of concernfor others. In fact. Publius is not toour knowledge a ringer, and his orher strength of feeling should notbe misconstrued as self-interest.The second assumption, so ap¬parently logical that even Publiusaccepts it, is the complaints led tothe muffling of bells during mostpractices. But in fact ringers wereaware of no complaints when wefirst decided to muffle the bells.We did, however, recognize thatnot everyone would enjoy thepractices or find it convenient toretreat from earshot. We alsounderstood that the ringing ofbeginners, necessarily involvingmuch repetition and unevenstriking, was essential if changeringing were to become (as it has)a viable student activity.Therefore we muted the bells, firstWith bits of carpeting and then withleather muffles designed for thepurpose. The same impulse has ledmany of us to undertake furnituremoving and other jobs, usually atvery inconvenient hours, to beginearning funds for the kind of soundcontrol that would let us decidewhat ringing would be heardoutside the tower and what wouldnot. Meanwhile, we welcome to ourpractices anyone who might findhis or her enjoyment increased orirritation mitigated by knowingwhat goes on in the tower or whowould simply like to be able to make an informed and rationalevaluation of the art.Change Ringing SocietyStudent plant-edTo the Editor :A cynical person might reach theconclusion that the Universityplans all of its actions so as toprovide for the general discomfortof the student body. I am just sucha personThe latest in a long series ofabuses has been provided by theplant department. Several timesnow. I have been rudely arousedfrom my slumbers because theseuntenured fiends have beenmowing the grass outside mywindow at 7:30 in the morning.That this occurs is incredible — itcan only be part of a general policydesigned to reduce the studentbody to a complacent mass. 'Sofar, this policy has apparentlyquite successful.) There arenumerous verdant fields about theUniversity where the grass couldbe mowed at 7:30 a m. withoutdisturbing anyone But does theplant department do this? No!Instead, they arrive in force at theonly undergraduate dorm that iskept open during the summer, andoperate their infernal machines atan hour when almost everyone isattempting to sleep! (Some of usmore so than others.)To the detriment of my bankaccount. I have been feeding thisinstitution for some time now. andmy check-writing hand has theirbite-marks to prove it!When. I ask, is this Universitygoing to do something in the in¬terest of the students ?Thomas M.C. FosterUC Chin-lessTo the Editor.I would be pleased if vou woulddo your job There is no fyler Chinat your university.Sandra HoyThe Editor replies: you must havebeen looking, Ms. Hoy.TEST PREPARATION FORliw School Aomiisior TutGranite Miimemeit A dm Tut6rumte Record EirmirrtiorMemcal Cohere Rom Test• PROFESSIONAL INSTRUCTORS• CURRENT MATERIALS» ADMISSION / APPLICATIONSTRATESY• LOWEST HOURLY COSTOF ANY PROGRAMW1 *A«| IM NMIMK782-2185It krtn omc VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGATTRACTIVE 1 V, AND2V3 ROOM STUDIOSFUltNISHEO or UNFURNISHEDSI 49 to $243Bosea on AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus StopFA 4-0200 Mrs. Groak \ \ LAST DAYSdH \ GUITARS CASE SALE7nt Save on discontinued modelsShop 0 \ of Yamaha guitars at old prices,while they last.v And save up to S25 on aSi/C s Harper X hardshell case, the best’m Harptr Court' ’ protection for your guitar.HD1-I04C / HURRY! 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KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 KimbarW Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Pork 3-83721/ane Jlee'TZeAtauiantDelkravt contone}# foodFmt Spocwl loncbeon$1.95Mo»-Ihun 11:30 AM 9:00 PMfn. 1 Sat. 11:30 AM 9:30 PMSun 3 00 AM 9:00 PMCLOSED TUCS643 3407 1316 E. 53rd St. ALL TOGETHERAt One LocationTO SAVE YOU MORE!speciaTDISCOUNT 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 LOCATIONMERITCHEVROLETm VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE7234 Stony IslandPhone: 684-0400Open My M PMJ Sat »-5 P.M.Par* Open Saturday tM u NoonThe 100 great books of summerCompiled by Karen HellerSummer is the time for all good people toput down their Plato and pick up some pulp.Half-way through the summer, some folkshave exhausted their obvious choices. Tiredof cruising Kroch’s, they hang around thePoint, Hutch and Jimmy’s waiting forsomeone to drop the name of a really en¬joyable book to read during the summerWhat’s needed is a University of ChicagoSummer Reading List, along the lines of thelists the local public library passed outevery summer for different ages. MortimerAdler has his list; we have ours. Maybe thiswill be useful for some people. Others mightjust give up reading, preferring to lie in thesun and bay at the moon. And that's all righttoo.John Wilson, President of the University:1. Man Called Intrepid by WilliamStevenson. Because of my WW II ex¬perience.2. The Palace Guard by Dan Rather Beston D C. scene.3. Choirboys by Joseph Wambaugh.4. Groves of Academe, by Mary McCarthy.Great book and writer.5. Great Railway Bazaar: By Train throughAsia by Paul Theroux.John Wilson: Stevenson, Rather, Wam¬baugh, Me Carthy and Theroux Dr. Leon Stock, professor of chemistry andin the College.21. Organic Chemistry edited by Robert T.Morrison and Robert N. Boyd. Peopletaking organic chemistry over thesummer will eniov it.22 A River Runs Through It and OtherStories by Norman Maclean.23. Treasures of King Tut.T. L. Beddoes, Ph D. candidate, EnglishLiterature.24. Gunslinger by Ed Dorn.25. Hopscotch by Julio Cortazar.26. Chance and Necessity by JacquesMonod.27. Cosmicomics by Italio Calvino.28. Guide to Kulchur by Ezra Pound.Morris Philipson, Director of UniversityPress.29. The Black Prince by.Iris Murdoch.30. Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf.31. Out of Africa by Isak Dinesen32. River Runs Through It by NormanMaclean.33. A Visit to Haldeman and Other States ofMind by Charles L. Mee, JrDaniel Seitz. Masters Candidate ineducation.34. Dracula by Bran Stoker. Not only thegreatest horror story ever written butalso has deep philosophical andpsychological discussions of the undead.35. Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis, Let¬ters of Devil to his assistant on how tosubvert a mortal. Only edifyinghumorous religious tract in existence.36. Captain Stormfield’s Visit to Heaven byMark Twain. The true nature of heavenis revealed.37. Mount Analogue by Rene Daumale.Unfortunately the author died in themiddle of writing it, but still a goodstory.38 Alice Through the Looking Glass byLewis Carroll. For those who feel theyare only pawns in (he game of life.Anthony Bruck, Ph. D. candidate,linguistics6 Jackson Pollock: Energy Made Visibleby B. H. Friedman Anecdotal, butconvincingly fifties. (Those self¬destructive artists!)7. Poems Retrieved by Frank O’Hara.8. The Empire City by Paul Goodman.9. Personae by Ezra Pound10. Los Angeles: Architecture of FourEcologies by Reyner Banham He likeseverything about L A.Lorna Straus, associate professor inanatomv and in the College, dean ofstudents in the College and dean of collegeadmissions.11. The Thom Birds by Colleen McCulloughWell written, can learn a great dealabout Australia. I now feel I knowsomething about what I knew very littleabout before.12. Idea of the University of Chicago editedby D.J.R. Bruckner Enormously im¬pressed by what past presidents havewritten about the University.13. Breach of Faith by P S. White Ex¬presses my point of view on Watergate.14 Plaques and People bv William HMcNeill. Combines my interests inbiology and medicine on one hand andhistory7 on the other.15. Phineas Finn by Anthony Trollope.Delightful, partially because I loveTrollope partially because of ThePallisers.Max W’iley, fourth year College student inanthopology.16. Any book by Raymond Chandler.17. The Return of Fu Manchu by Sax Rohmer.18. The Shadow of Dr Fu Manchu by SaxRohmer. Two best volumes (17 and 18)of series of thirteen Very interestingway of depicting the battle betweengood and evil19 Worlds in Collision by ImmanuelVelikovsky A pleasant thought as youmelt away in the summer heat:everything you thought w'as true is falseand everything false is true20 Babbit by Sinclair I^ewis. Paul Ausick, assistant to dean of students.39. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov. Best bookwritten in the past thirty years.40. The Castle of Crossed Destinies by ItaloCalvino. A marvelous magical tale.41 Frank O’Hara: Collected Poems.42 The Tale of the Genji by MurasakiShikibu.43. Invisible Cities by Italo CalvinoCompletely different sort of fictionexperience from what one expects.Paul Ausick: Nabokov, Calvino, O’Haraand Shikibu (Photo by Steve Strandberg)Ira Katznelson, associate professor ofpolitical science and the College.44. C.P. Snow’s Strangers and Brothersseries45 The Time of Illusion by Jonathan Schell46. Fall of Public Man by Richard Sennett47. Hard Times by Charles Dickens48. Washington Journal by Elizabeth Drew49. American Revolution: Explorations inthe History of American Radicalismedited by Alfred Young.Chris Miller, Ph D. candidate. EnglishLiterature.50. Gunslinger by Ed Dorn51. Daniel Deronda by George Eliot 52. A River Runs Through It by NormanMaclean.53. Sanditionby Jane Austen.54 The World and The Book by GabrielJosipovici.D.J.R. Bruckner, vice-president for publicaffairs and director of the Center for PolicyStudy.55. The Cat by Muriel Beadle.56. Wallenstein by Golo Mann.57. From Mandeville to Marx: Genesis andTriumph of Economic Ideology by LouisDumont.58. Rereading The Persian Wars byHerodotus.Morris Philipson: Murdoch, Woolf,Dinesen, Maclean and Charles Mee (Photoby Steve Strandberg)Michael Ryan, Harper Fellow, Western Civand history59. The Sot-Weed Factor by John Barth.60 Tristam Shandy by Laurence Sterne Ifind myself identifying with Tristam —what a disturbing thought.61 Rousseau’s Confessions. A must for allvoyeurs.62. Anything by Louis-Ferdinand CelineThe joys of urban civilization.63. Anything by Sean O’Faolon Recom¬mended for those who grew up inSouthern California and w ant roots.Howard W'inger. professor and dean of thegraduate library school64 Almanac of Words at Play edited byWilliam R Espy.65. The Image: knowledge in Life andSociety by Kenneth Boulding.66 The Celts by Gerhard Herm.67. History of European Printing by ColinBlair.68Historians at W’ork, Vol. 4: 20th Centuryedited by Peter Gay and Victor WexlerJonathan Z Smith, dean of the College.professor of religion and human sciences inthe College, and professor in the DivinitySchool69 A classic work that I have not previouslyread with the only requirement that itcan be read in small segments. Thissummer: The Journey to the West, thefirst volumn of Anthony Yu’s newtranslation70 A corpus of poetry This summer: a lotof Charles Olson71 A book of something I know nothingabout Should have something of aTime-Life character to it, good forconversation and flights of fancy Thissummer: Dragons of Eden:Speculations on Evolution of HumanIntelligence by Carl Sagan72. A current best-seller, good for leisurelyhot weather gossip. This sum¬mer: Passages by Gail Sheehy. Greatfun until I thought I recognized myself!73. A serious classic to be slowly ponderedin small bits. This summer: Critique ofDialectical Reason by Jean Paul Sar¬tre.74 A favorite classic to be reread andsavored with the only requirement thatit delight This summer: TristramShandy by Laurence Sterne. Tony Martin: Gaddis, Descartes, Marquez,George Hardy and Naipaul (Photo by SteveStrandberg)Tony Martin, fourth year college student inmathematics.75 The Recognitions by William Gaddis.76. Meditations by Descartes77 Hundred Years of Solitude by GabrielGarcia Marquez.78. A Mathematician’s Apology by GeorgeHardy.79. Guerillas by V.S. Naipaul.D Nicholas Rudall. associate professor ofclassical language and literature.80. A River Runs Through It by NormanMaclean (A very popular book—ed.)81 Three Years to Play by Colin Maclnnes82 Shakespeare: A Documentary Life.83. Children of the Sun by Martin Green.84 Pnin by Vladimir Nabokov.85. World of Our Fathers by Irving Howe.Tracy Lord, fourth year college student inhistory786. Candide by Voltaire. The best of allpossible books.87. Short stories by J ames Thurber88 Under the Volcano by Malcolm Lowrv89 Great Expectations by Charles DickensOr anything else by him90 The Floating Opera by John Barth Thebest writer around.Edwin Taylor, professor in biophysics andtheoretical biology and the College.91 Unended Quest by Karl Popper92 Great Railway Bazaar By Trainthrough Asia by Paul Theroux93. The C.S Lewis sci-fi trilogy; Out of theSilent Planet, Perelandra, and ThatHideous Strength. For the third time94 Bird Lives by Ross Russell95 The Selfish Gene by Richard DawkinsBecause it annoyed me so muchMark Neustadt. third year College studentin medieval studies and editor of the Grey-City Journal96 A Walk on the Wild Side by NelsonAlgren Summer is a good time to readpoetry.97. The Man With The Golden Arm byNelson .Algren98. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by*Hunter Thompson99. Black Gypsy by Archie Shepp Containsone of the best poems I’ve ever readabout Chicago100. Saturn by Sun Ra. Check out thebridge!Nicholas Rudall: Maclean, Maclnnes.Nabokov and HoweThe Chicago Maroon Friday, July 29,1977 5Twyla Tharp: Beauty to the point of repetitionBy Eden ClorfeneTwyla Tharp Dance Foundation, per¬forming at Murray Theatre, Sunday, July24, 4:30 pm, the pieces “Mud,” “Fugue.”“Eight Jelly Rolls,” choreography all byTwyla TharpTwyla Tharp's choreography can best bedescribed in terms of the varied images itsuggests: the image of someone franticallyattempting to grasp mercury (elusive), of awaterfall (random), of a silent movie shownin alternatively fast and slow motion (in¬constant), of an intricate plumbing system(complicated, detailed), of a parameciumcontracting and expanding (vacillating), ofa factory assembly line (repetitious), of asleepwalker (aimless)...Though Tharp's bodies almost alwaysmove with a grace characteristic of ballet,her choreography defies classificationbecause it embraces all dance styles —ballet (her company is the only modern'’company I’ve s£en where dancerssometimes dance in pointe shoes), jazz, pop,vaudeville, and even a bit of Broadway tap.The amalgam is not self-conscious, that is,we never feel she is treating us to apanorama of dance styles. It’s just that herwork is some of the more intensely kineticaround, and she will incorporate as manystyles as necessary to give us the mostvaried motion that she can.Far from being a confused hodgepodge,there most definitely is a style of movementthat can be labelled Tharpian. Dancersslouch, slink, stretch, slide, twist; limbs areloose and autonomous, seeming as if they•could easily be dismembered from thetorso; bodies proceed very quickly in onedirection and then reverse to thediametrically opposing direction withoutthe slightest loss of speed; movements areexecuted amusingly off-center; movementsseem compressed, as dancers move in theleast amount of time within the smallestamount of space; and most of all. dancersgo through the choreography (throughoutthere is a sense of going through, of timewithout measurement, lacking a formalbeginning and end The dance beginsbecause it must and ends for the samereason) with a hilarious nonchalance anddeadpan expression The Twyla Tharp Dance Foundation, acompany of 11 dancers, performed lastSunday and Monday at Ravinia’s MurrayTheatre for its first Chicago recital. It issomewhat ironic that she’s now establish¬ment, performing to completely sold-outhouses, for she was once part of the legion ofdance experimentalists, performing only inchurch basements and college auditoriums.Tharp gained national attention when shechoreographed for and appeared with theJoffrey ("Deuce Coupe”), and securednational attention when she choreographedfor ABT ("Push Comes to Shove”), usingBaryshnikov as her leading man.On Sunday people even were turned aw'ay.Anyone with the slightest interest in dancewas there to get a long awaited look at theTharp company and the choreography shemade for it But to many’s dismay or fortheir better understanding of Tharp, Sun¬day’s recital offered little beyond what theJoffrey and ABT pieces did.All three w'orks were in the same Thar¬pian style, one that was so fresh and originalin "Deuce Coupe" but had staled by the endof the recital. The only real differencesbetween works were music, costumes, anddecor The first work, "Mud,” a plotless, puredance piece (as all Tharp pieces are) in fiveshort sections set to "Six Country Dances”of Mozart, seemed a less ambitious re¬statement of "Push Comes to Shove.” Inboth is the same Tharpian parody of balleticdecorum and institutions.A group of three dancers, the corps deballet, constantly miss in their attempts tostay together. Partnering, too. dissolves asa male will throw his partner to anotherunexpectant male who catches her only atthe last minute, and catches her in the mostcontorted position.When the choreography offers its boldimages, its effect of scores of bodies indaring positions — daring in bothphysicality and originality — without anencasement of parody, or when the imagesare wild and daring enough to transcendparody, then all one can do is marvel atTharp’s mechanics Rut too often she cracksthe same jokes, jokes that were hilarious in"The Concert,” funny in "Push Comes toShove,” and finally humorless in this pieceThe whole point of the second work, isrepetition. Rose Marie Wright, ShelleyWashington, and Jennifer Way appear inKermit Love’s smart, black man-tailored, Rosalind Russell type costumes. They alsowear orange suede boots which, in additionto the dancers’ hand slapping and voices,provide the "music and material for thefugue.The whole piece is a series of dancefugues, of dance phrases or rhythmsinitiated by one dancer and subsequentlyassumed a couple of beats later by another.And it’s downright dull. Everything isexecuted with painful seriousnessTharp’s characteristic nonchalance carriedto an extreme. The patterns are either toocomplex or too insubstantial to be ap¬prehended or followed, so the choreographybecomes a random, tabular < as opposed tomovement and noise"Eight Jelly Rolls” is Tharps styletempered to the jazz of Jelly Roll Morton.Where the Mozart in "Mud" is morebackground music, more a contribution tothe total theatricality of the ballet theseeight Jelly Roll blues or stomps are im¬petuses for mood and movement. And jazz isprobably the best music for Tharp. When setto it, her choreography flows naturallyrarely looking contrived.Thematically, the same jokes are there.But if you ignore them and just concentrateon the high-voltaged energy, speed,unabated flow and ripple (especially inJennifer Way’s solo set to "MournfulSerenade”) Tharp's power comes through.So Tharp has a company of wonderfuldancers who seemed trapped in anunaltering style that proves tiresome for afull recital. Yet there is something behindthose repeated stylistic trademarks.The repetition, the mechanical and in¬different look about her w'ork are thequalities one tires of. But go to any disco andwatch couples hammering out the mostintricate steps of the hustle, combinationsyou’d swear they went to a special class tomaster, with the most absurd looks of in¬difference on their faces. The music is ut¬terly banal in its repetition of the samerhythm over and over again Tharp, withoutpolemicizing, underhandedly gives us amirror of our slick, efficient, ready-madepop culture which the disco represents.In this sense Tharp’s concept is totallycontemporary. Her only fault, I would say,is her steadfast fidelity to it.A chamber play insearch of a chamberBy Karen HornickFederico Garcia Lorca’s The House ofBemarda Alba takes place within a housewhose walls ring with the lyrical play’sgreatest single metaphor: the beating of astallion against his stable door, theclamoring of a stud who must run free withthe mares outside the lock.Bemarda Alba is about separation of thesexes, the effects of building obstacles to thefulfillment of natural drives. The charactersare all women. Bernarda and her fivedaughters. The mother, fearing "what theneighbors will say” keeps her daughtersimprisoned within their home, away fromthe village men. The daughters com¬municate with men only through grills in thewalls. To them, courtship is having a mancome to your window at night, seduction is"wearing practically nothing” and makingyourself visible to a male passing by in thenight. To attempt to make more of arelationship, to leave the house, is lethal;the only one of Bemarda’s daughters toleave the house (once they’ve all returnedfrom their father’s funeral in Act One)meets a tragic end, a fate Garcia Lorcaexpresses as inevitable. Still, the playwrightshows that hiding from life is worse thandeath. Bemarda’s daughters quarrel en¬dlessly and despise each other, theirmother, themselves. This is the play’sgreatest theme: freedom which leads onlyto destruction is preferrable to safe butinhuman confinement — which makes itdifficult to understand why Court Theaterchose to attempt to stage The House ofBemarda Alba outdoors!To be sure, Alba has a simple, tightly-knitstructure, an extended unraveling of plotand character, an emotional climax, a quick6 The Chicago Maroon Friday, July 29,1977 denouement, poetic dialogue, andcharacters who are certainly larger-than-life — in short, many of the markings of theclassical tragedies traditionally performedoutdoors. But Alba is a domestic tragedy,more in the tradition of Ibsen thanSophocles, better presented in a small roomwherein small issues, gossip and familyquarreling, can attain tragic proportions.One can, I admit, argue that Oedipus Rex isabout nothing if not family quarreling andgossip, but Oedipus deals with a tremendousmoral force and is aptly staged with theheavens as backdrop. Court’s production ofAlba is a chamber play in search of achamber. There are few plays that canreceive serious blows from their set, butCourt has found one Designer CharlesJenkins’s stage is beautiful, but the bran¬ches of trees at its top and the breezes thatblow across it meld what is supposed to bethe interior of Bemarda’s stifling home in away that is devastating.Simply by choosing to stage Alba as partof its outdoor season, Court scraped the playto its bone, forcing the very core of the play,its simple, indestructible structure to carrythe production. This might have worked (forthe most part, it did, in spite of my ob¬jections, I found Alba moving and each of itsacts better than the last) but there wereother problems ..The script, for example Court used a newtranslation by James Graham-Lujan I havenot read the play in Spanish, but a friendhas. She informs me much of the play’spoetry is missing from the new translation.One expects that from any translation, ofcourse, but she goes on to say that certainscenes, Maria Josepha’s second forexample, are peculiar when compared to the original text. Apparently eitherGraham-Lujan found Maria Josepha’sscene too difficult to render in English ordirector Frank Galati found it less vital thancertifying the woman’s lunacy. At any rate,the lines in question are delivered by JodeanCulbert Erwin who plays the mad grand¬mother in a high-pitched babbling of a non¬language that was impossible for thisreviewer to comprehend.Aside from several such moments ofuncertain quality during the play, many arequite successful. Galati, with all he hadgoing against him, handled his players well.The actresses were well blocked; theymoved freely about the stage, often forminginteresting tableaus, family picture albumgroupings, exactly what the daughters ofBernarda Alba cannot avoid becoming.Granted: Alba requires eight strongwomen and the chances of the ideal, eightbeing available to or obtainable by Courtare probably nil. However: it would seempossible to avoid a cast as uneven as thatused by Court.Annette Fern and Terri Turner Phillips are fine as the servants of the house, as wasKathleen Hart as Angustias, the eldestdaughter. Of all, (save Lilia Heston asBernarda) Hart is the best physically cast:she is as gawky and spinsterish as she mustappear to be It is Belinda Bremner’s Adelathat is the best performance, however. Shealone with her grace and reading skillsalvages the all-important third act.It would be nice to praise the heavies ofthe play, Megan McTavish’s Martirio andHeston’s Bernarda. I can’t McTavish playsthe hunchbacked daughter with too great areliance on her eerie eyes and with too littleattention to her lines. I found it surprisingthat an actress with such a role would un¬deract, but that is exactly what McTavishdoes. Heston, too, uses less than the properamount of energy called for by her role. Shelooks very much the Mother Superior of the"nunnery” Bernarda tyrannizes and has theright voice for it. On the whole, her per¬formance is unimaginative and onedimensional. Unlortunately, a weak Ber¬narda was the last thing this productionneeded.CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEM grad student seeks turn apt or housesit from around Sept. 1 through Dec.Flexible. 493 2894.Efficiency apartment available Aug15. On Harper near Co-op. $158 allutilities, furnished. 955-8239.ROOMMATE WANTEED: To sharespacious apt. Mostly turn., near trans.(52nd & Blackst.) Seeking someoneinteresting and/or responsible. CallTom, 241 6714, eves. $112.50 monthly +util. 'Room in very large apartmentavailable Aug 1 or Sep 1. Option tocontinue past Oct. Call 752 4250 $93mo.SENIOR FACULTY member seeks tosublet apartment for Aut Qtr, or SprQtr. No children, no pets. 753 3851.IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY. Room inprofessor's home with 3 otherstudents. For end of summer. Rentnegotiable. 947 9395.54th & Woodlawn. Own room for quietnon-smoker avail, immed. $100 . 4937513.Hanover Park, furnished 4 BR, 2Vabths, A/C, fenced yd, frlp, fam rm, 1blk to Elm sch, els to RR, nr shopping.837 8866. $435.Summer Sublet 1 or 2 private rooms incondo prime campus location. Shareliving room, new kitchen & bath. Rentnegotiable. Call Dennis or Dobbi 6433595. Ans. Ser. SU 7 4435.PEOPLE WANTEDAccompanists and instrumentalistswanted for rehearsals and orchestrafor Bernsteain's CANDIDE, to bepreformed by Court Theatre late Septthru early Oct. All mi sicians will paid.Call Louise LaPortj, 729 9415. Foraudtion appointment.Subjects needed tor psycholinguisticsexperiments, Department ofBehavioral Sciences. $2/hr. Toregister, call 753-4718Receptionist needed for active l-fydePark Real Estate Office. Call DoloresSkipper at 667 6666Gardener prt time 753-4428 day. 375-7435 7 9 p.m.PEOPLE FOR SALEInterested in typing evenings in myhome. Will discuss price. Barbara.373 3594 after 5:30p.m.For Experienced piano teacher of alllevels call 947 9746. SCENESHarper Sq. Child Care Center, 4800Lake Park: Full day program($40/wk); Half-day program($20/wk); 538-4041.FOR SALE1975 Inti. Scout 4 cyl., 4 spd, 4-wheeldrive, AM radio, 29,000 miles, $4,900 orbest offer. Call R. Vonil 276 2360.Church Pew, 16 ft. Oak LK NEW $175or bet. Call 433 5394,Encyclopedia of Social Sciences, bestoffer, or trade for Hastings ERE. 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Getting unstuck thru newways of dealing with difficultemotions, releasing blocked energyand aliveness. Psychodrama &Bioenergetics included. Also weekendgroups away from the city. Call theOpen Road, Phil Watt, 964 3082GMAT • GRE • OCATVAT • SATECFMG • FLEXNAT1 MEDICAL BOARDSNATL DENTAL BOARDSOuf t'ond '3'iqe o' programs preside. «•- o‘ test<rq know in* that enables js to ot'e' tt-e ^esf preparationa*a>ts0‘9 ro matter wn<c* course tane* Ox#'* "*8 yearso* #**p#»Fipoce and success Swan etosses Vo»uwinoushorn* study catena's Cou'Srs **3’ *'<* constantly UPdat*fl PprmanpTf renters open days evenings K weekends ati year Complete tape lacddtes tot review of Casslessons and for use o* supplement.»ry materials Make upsfor missed lessons at our centersSPRING,SUMMER.WINTER COMPACTSMOST CLASSES-8 WEEKS 3EP.EXAMCOURSES SOON TO COMMENCE:MCAT-DAT-GRE-LSATL2050 W DevonChicago. Ill 60645(312) 764 5151CtftUrt ** M*|0» U S Cd'*tSwitfffland PAN PIZZADELIVERYThe Medici delivers from 5-10:30p.m.weekdays, 5-11:30 p.m. Saturday 667-7394. Save 60 cents if you pick it upyourself.BOOKS BOUGHTBooks bought and sold everyday,every night 9-11 Powells, 1501 E. 57th.LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera is on sale in most HydePark stores 8. Bob's Newsstand. WEneed women to join the editorial staff.Call 752-5655 if you can help out.RAP GROUPA Women's Rap Group will meet everyTuesday at 7:30 p.m. on the 3rd floor ofthe Blue Gargoyle. For more info 7525655. MASSAGE-YOGA-MEDITATIONReenergize body-mind & spirit.Weekend massage yoga meditationworkshop Sat 8. Sun July 30th, 31st 11-5p.m. Energize and center with yougaand meditation, then learn Esalen 8.Rumanian total body massagethrough exchange. Expert instrucitonby Dobbi Kerman who has taught yogaon campus since '71 8. massage since'75. Massage as a form of caring andhealing has been practiced in MsKerman's family of 4 generations. Oncampus location in artist's gardenstudio. 2 days $50. Bring 4 friends 8.come free. Bring foam mat, a sheet &lunch to share INFO call Dobbi 6433595, 288 3706. ANSSERV.SU 7-4435PERSONALSAnnie B.S.: Have a wonderful tripDon't search too hard for your rootsWatch out for the gents, they pinchsomething fierce. I'll miss youmuchas. K.REWARD! For return of Blue 8. GoldUniv. of III. Nursing pin. Call Laurie at7 5691 or 891 5948Pregnant? Troubled? Call 233-0305 foraffirmative help. 10-2 p.m. Free Test.Writers' Workshop (Plaza 2 8377)POWELL'SBOOKSTORE1501 Eost 57th Street9 A.M.-11 P.M. Everyday955-7780 9 1020 S. Wabash Ave.8th FloorA.M.-5 P.M. Mon.-Sat341-0748MODELCAMERAAnnouncing a majorbreakthroughinblack&whitefilm.ILFORD HP5A major breakthrough in black & whitefilm Ilford HP5 is clearly the sharpest,brightest, fastest 400 ASA film you canbuy. Now available.1342 E. 55th St.493-6700PASSPORT PHOTOS While-U-Wait KENNEDY, RYAN, M0MGAI & ASSOCIATES. INCims rnnvmmitiDirectory of ValuesWe Know Hyde ParkReal Estate Inside OutHOUSES FOR SALEGRAYSTONE BUILDINGFREESTANDING 3-FLATOnce a Victorian townhouse can bedeconverted to a 9 room home. All 3apartments have woodburningfireplaces. New gas heat, new wir¬ing, new roof 9 month ago 49th andBlackstone Priced $50,000 Call DonTillery at 667-6666.HIGHLANDS HOMEPerfect family siz> 8 rms. in mintoendition screened porch overlookscr.arming garden 2 woodburningfireplaces. Large master bedroomsuite Panelled rec. rm $80,000 Tosee, call Eleanor Coe at 667 6666NESTLE INTOTHE GREENof Kenwood - 12 room home in“move-in" condition 4 baths plusair conditioning 2/precipitrongarage w/side drive. Rec rmw/bar. Lot 75 x 150. Asking $159,000ATTENTION: VETERANSTwo story colonial brick townhouseOne full bath, one powder room Ex¬tra room in full basement. V.Afinancing available. Near 74th andLake. $24,000 Call CharlotteVikstrom 667 6666AWARDWINNINGTOWNHOUSEThese splendid Weese designedhomes don't often come on themarket. This one has 3 bedrooms,2‘/2 baths, many extra features and alovely back yard retreat Parking$85,000 Call Richard E Hild at667 666656TH AND HARPERModel "E" townhouse w/3 BRs, IV?baths. Rec. rm., study. C/A Newlydecorated $92,500. To see, call Mrs.Haines at 667 6666 KIDS'PARADISEDelightful end-unit on secludedprivate street location. 2 play areas3 BRs plus sturdy, 2'/2 baths Possession 8/1/77. To see, call Mrs Hianes667 6666CLASSIC HYDE PARKTOWNHOUSE9 rooms, wbfp in living room, 2’/2baths, yard with fruit trees, off-street parking, convenient to publictransportation. Call Alfred Dale at667 66662-FLAT FORHANDY PERSONSouth Shore near Lake Low priceallows you room to upgrade stucco.2-6 rm. apts Also smaller owner'sapt on 1st floor Side drive. 50 x 155large lot. Gas heat. Bargain $23,000Conv. please. Call CharlotteVikstrom 667 6666NORTH of 47TH$27,500, 10,;2 rooms, 2 full and 2 halfbaths, circuit breakers, low taxes,lots of light Get in on the groundfloor of Hyde Park's expansionnorth. To see, call Richard E Hild at ,667-6666 (res. 752 5384).LIVE RENTFREEThis one gracious south Shore man¬sion at 68th and Jeffrey (now a 6-flat) can be lived in almost rent free2 car garage and off-street parking2nd floor patio and fenced back yardmake this brick home a good buy at$75,000 To see call Richard E Hildat 667-6666 (res 752 5384).NEW LISTINGSOUTH SHOREBrick 3 bedrm home, 1 bath,screened in rear porch, new 2’ 2 cartgarage with electric door, very neathouse Priced right at $30,000 CallFrank Goldschmidt at 667 6666APARTMENTSFOR SALEUNIVERSITY TOWNSare never without great ideas.Here's one of them A superb 4 roomcondo with working fireplace and agreat kitchen. On Blackstone southof 55th Available for immediate occupancy Only $35,000 Call 667-6666SPACIOUS8'2 ROOMS-ALL NEWLYRESTORED CONDOSunny solarium for your plants.Shiny new kitchen for Mom FIVEcount 'em bedrooms for all. Threecontemporary baths stunning sideby side living room and formal dining room lovely natural beauty ofoak floors over 3,000 square feet ofa comfortable life 55th near LakeLow assessments. $74,900 CallCharlotte Vikstrom 667 6666BRETHARTESCHOOL DISTRICT6 rm condo 3 BRs, 2 baths, largeLR, w/mock fireplace and balcony,gallery hall, formal DR, nice kit¬chen, large back porch, outdoor intercom 55th near lake Low assessment Call Don Tillery 667 6666CONVENIENCE PLUSThis well kept 1st floor 3 BR 2 bathcondo is a stone's threw from both 1Cand CTA transportation in BretHarte district with parking Includedin the low price Call George Bilger YOU'RE INVITEDANOTHER OPPORTUNITY"This week Sunday only, 1-4, or callfor private showing." South Shore'snewerst condominium units. 7315-17Coles Three still available Im¬mediate possession King sizedrooms - 2 bedrooms central airprivate patio $27,500 $28,000 and$28,500, Salesman on premises CallCharlotte Vikstrom 667 6666DORCHESTER7 room condo with 4 BR, formal din¬ing room. 2 baths Priced in low$30's For more information, callMargaret Kennedy at 667-6666HYDE PARKCONDOOne bedroom, 1 bath, nice kitchen,sun porch, large living room Lowassessment Price $17 000 Locatednear 51st and Woodlawn Call DonTillery at 667 6666NEW LISTING42 UNITS82nd and Woodlawn Courtway, newelectric, good income 3V2's and4>Ys. To see call Richard E Hild at667 6666 res 752 5384HYDE PARK SIX FLAT6'^ rms., 2 bath apts Woodlawnnear 53rd Street. $75,000 CallGeorge Bilger at 667-6666667 6666M M m fr im A1411 tat 57th Stmt, Cheats, Haws 60631667-6666Daily ♦ to5 Sat.»ta I. Or can 447-4444 Anyttma-The Chicago Maroon Friday, July 79. W77 70; jt SOQ BUS TRIPTOUR OF PULL/WAN VILLAGETours of this architecturally and historicainteresting village are offered by the HistoricPullman Foundation. The walking tour of thevillage is followed by a chamber music per¬formance. Admission to the tour is $.50 forstudents, $1.50 for others; the bus fee is $2.25per person. The bus will leave Ida Noyes at12:15pm and return by 5:00pm. Sign up andpay fee in the Student Activities Office, room210, Ida Noyes Hall by August 4. 7:15 8c 9:45 pmFriday - July 29th (2nd film will start laterthan usual because of lengthof the film)The Tall Blond Man with One Black ShoeSaturday - July SOth 7:15 8c 9:30 pmTuesday - August 2nd 7:15 & 9:30 pmAll films shown in Air ConditionedCobb Hall - $1.50HARDWAREft 53rd St - KIMBARK PLAZA4 -5 - 6.OFTHEONTH HOOVERBUFFETFRY PANWarming troy. Immersible 12*pan. Converts to broiler. Superaccurate control knob$49.95 now $29.95! ! PLUMB* FIBER-GRIP HAMMERPLUMBFiberglass handle. Permobond'®'head won’t loosen, break. Dura-Cushion Grip drives easy. FA57.16 o z.$8.99 now $3.97 >C A <*■>Decorator PicturedMIRRORSValues to $40% PRICE!! MISCELLANEOUSWHITEELEPHANTS•Discontinued quartsof paint•Free roller sleeve witheach quart of paint•PLUS MUCH MORE!!!ANDERSON’S ACE HARDWARE 1304 e. 53rd st. 493-3338• .FA ^ , ' :» ■ W - W ■v CO AOTywC^ (3'vv -A .J •.J TT..A,Jjg.;^ ,;tT :$£ ■ ■