The Chicago MaroonVol.87, No. 20 The University of Chicago Friday, November 4,1977Many schools reviewingholdings in South A fricafor possible divestitureBy Richard BiernackiThe University of Chicago is theonly major U. S. university thatroutinely uses its endowmentstocks to vote against shareholderproposals that would stop U. S.corporations from investing inSouth Africa, a Maroon survey hasfound.Harvard, Yale, Princeton,Columbia, Northwestern, Stan¬ford, and the state universities ofIllinois, Wisconsin, Massachusetts,California, and Minnesota have allstarted to take steps to guaranteethat their investments do not givesupport to South Africa’s apartheidpolicy.Roger Anderson, a member ofthe University Board of Trustees,is also chairman of the Board ofDirectors of Continental Illinois,which makes loans to SouthAfrica.But the University’s ad¬ministration and Trustees alwaysvote in proxy with management onstockholder’s South Africaproposals in order to keep in¬ vestment policy non-politicalIn keeping with this practice, atop administration official saidFriday that the administrationbelieves the University shouldcontinue to vote against proposalsthat would halt investment inSouth Africa because, “We shouldnot be an agent of social change ”The University owns $50 millionworth of stock in 21 U. S. cor¬porations that have substantialinvestment in South Africa.Though many of the universitiesinterviewed by The Maroon saidthey relied upon Washington’sInvestor Responsibility ResearchCenter for surveys of U. S. com¬panies’ labor practices in SouthAfrica, the University’s standingProxy Policy statement states,“The University does not belong toany organization concerned withsocial responsibilities ofshareholders.” The Chairman ofthe Investment Committee of theBoard of Trustees, Edward Blair,admitted to The Maroon that theUniversity has never asked anycorporation to report on its laborpractices in South Africa.The Trustees’ Proxy Policy alsostates, “To date the University hasnot voted against management onany proposals relating toecological, environmental, ordiscriminatory matters.”In contrast to the University’sblanket support of management,Yale University usually abstainedthis year on stockholder’sSouth Africa to 6 Former President Ford teachestwo classes during surprise visitBy Claudia MagatFormer President Gerald R.Ford visited the UniversityTuesday as the guest of his formerattorney general Edward H. Levi.During his four hour stay, Fordattended a luncheon and conductedquestion and answer sessions withlaw school and College students.Ford, who arrived at 11:30, wasgreeted warmly by students whosaw him. Because the visitreceived scarce publicity mostmembers of the University com-mvnity were unaware that Fordwas on campus. Apparently,University officials had not beeninformed of the visit by Levi untilearly Tuesdav morning.The former president attended aluncheon with 42 faculty and ad¬ministrators who had been invitedby Levi. President Wilson was notpresent. During lunch, which 'washeld in the second floor lounge ofBurton-Judson Court, Ford isreported to have answered somequestions about politics.Following tne meal, Ford walkedto the law school, stopping once tochat with a University secretary.The former President was to havetaught Levi’s Elements of Lawclass, but according to students, heopened the floor to questions.Among topics discussed were thePanama Canal Treaty, executiveveto power, the Nixon pardon, andthe Bakke case. One student saidFord had answered questions“directly and specifically.”Student reaction to Ford’s an¬swers was generally positive. Inthe course of the session, applausebroke out several times.Ford to 2 Former President Gerald R. Ford visited campus Tuesday at tneinvitation of former attorney general Edward Levi. Ford stayed forfour hours, lunching with Prominent faculty and administratorsand teaching two classes. (Photo by Jeanne Dufort)Ford on Bakke, Congress“I’m not going to rule myself inor out as far as 1980 is con¬cerned,” former President Fordtold 30 PERL College studentsTuesday. According to studentsinterviewed by The Maroon, Fordanswered a wide range ofquestions during the 50-minutesession in Harper 284.Accompanied by former at¬torney general and Universityprofessor Edward H. Levi, Fordentered the room tanned andsmiling. Earlier, one participantlaughingly cautioned students toclear a path so “no one trips andbumps his head.”The PERL session had beenarranged on short notice, asapparently was Ford’s visit to theUniversity. Students fromprofessor Philip B. Kurland'sLaw I class were invited Tuesday morning to hear Ford. Severalstudents went home to changetheir clothes. “First PrinceCharles, now Ford!” exclaimedone student.Although there was no ap¬plause, everyone stood whenFord entered the door. Afterlighting his pipe, he commentedthat his greatest disappointmentas president was that ne had notreduced the unemployment rateamong minorities and the young.He thep proceeded to fieldquestions from students.According to participants, halfthe questions concerned foreignpolicy, in particular the SALTtalks, the Middle East, andcongressional control of foreignaffairs.Answers questions to 2Ex-chancellor Kimpton dies‘Innate modesty’ rememberedBy Abbe FletmanLawrence A. Kimpton, formerchancellor of the University andwartime chief administrator ofthe Manhattan Project diedMonday at his home inMelbourne Beach, Fla., after along illness According to theBrevard county sheriff’s office.Kimpton apparently took his ownlife.Kimpton, an educator andadministrator, held manypositions during his life, in¬cluding president of the SouthEast Chicago Commission(SECC) and vice-president ofStandard Oil (Indiana).Bom in Kansas City, Missouriin 1910, he received B A andM.A. degrees from StanfordUniversity, and a Ph D fromCornell University in 1935.He served as dean of a smallCalifornia college from 19.36through 1941, operated a cattleranch for a year, and then servedas dean of the liberal arts collegeof the University of Kansas City.In 194.3, Kimpton came to theUniversity as chief ad¬ministrative officer of the atomic bomb project He became dean ofstudents and professor ofphilosophy and education in 1944and dean of faculties two yearslater.Kimpton left the University forthree years to act as dean ofstudents and professor ofphilosoDhv at Stanford Univer¬sity, but returned in 1950 as aprofessor and vice-president incharge of development.Kimpton succeeded RobertMaynard Hutchins as chancellorof the University in 1951 and is thelast person to hold that post Forthe next nine years, he served ashead of the Universitv.Former president of theUniversity President GeorgeBeadle said that Kimpton mademany contributions to theUniversity academic programsand urban renewal proiects.“He did a spectacular job ofturning around the decay of theneighborhood,” said Beadle. “Hewas instrumental in initiatingand organizing the SECC that didso much to aid the neigh¬borhood ”Because of the problems of the Lawrence A. Kimpton, chan¬cellor of the University from 1951to 1960, apparently took his lifeMonday following a long illnessdecaying community, duringKimpton’s tenure, morale waslow among the faculty, and manythreatened to leave theUniversity, according to Beadle.But Kimpton “greatlystrengthened the whole morale ofthe faculty of that time,” saidBeadle.Kimpton to 2 Film big campus business;Doc and CFF consolidateBy Karen HellerIncreased competition and adrop in the number of availablenew profitable films have forcedthe two largest campus filmgroups. Documentary Films (Doc)and Contemporary EuropeanFilms (CEF) to merge.Doc, the country’s oldest campusfilm group, voted Monday 11-to-onein favor of the consolidation. Themerger, to become effective nextquarter, was approved by CEFmembers the previous Monday bya vote of 26-to-threeThe consolidated group, in¬formally referred to as “Super-Doc,” will adopt a compromisename for winter and springquarters. Beginning in the fall ofnext year, the group will again becalled Doc.Super-Doc will acquire Doc andCEF’s equipment, film dates andprofits. Doc has four projectorsand CEF owns three. Doc alsoowns the screen in QuantrellauditoriumCurrently, Doc offers filmsTuesdays, Wednesdays, Thurs¬days and Fridays. CEF showingsare on Saturdays, Sundays andsome Thursdays. If the division ofthe dates remains unchanged. each quarter the consolidatedgroup will present films 16 out of 20week-end dates.The merger was made forseveral reasons CEF was notsatisfied with the schedule it wasforced to show to make a profit Inthe fall of 1975. competition fromInternational House Films, in¬dependently-organized but well-attended. vastly reduced CEF'sprofits. Anticipating a comparableI House schedule the followingyear. CEF’s 1976-1977 season wasfilled with contemporaryAmerican films, classic Europeanfilms and even classic AmericanSuper Doc to 2InsideEditorial p. 4Letters p. 4GCJ p. 7Calender p. 17Sports p. 20Answers questions from 1“The role of Congress in foreign affairsshould be a heck of a lot less that it hasrecently been,” Ford said. He declined toanswer only one question — whether theU.S. should exert economic pressure onIsrael to force them to recognize the PLO.“That’s too controversial,” he said.Although the Nixon pardon was notdiscussed, Ford said that Watergate hadmade it more difficult for the President torelate with trust to Congress. “Because ofWatergate, this trust was eroded,” he ad¬ded.Ford criticized the Carter Administrationtwice said a student. Ford believes Carter ismaking “a mistake in tactics” in planningto reconvene the Geneva Conference withSoviet participation. “Keep the Sovietsout, ” he said, “it’s none of their business. ’’Fora also cautioned Carter to be realisticabout human rights. Carter’s human rightspolicy “should deal with the issue in apragmatic way,” he believes. “We muststrike a balance between interests andprinciples.”A question about admissions quotas andaffirmative action brought on tenselaughter, said one student. Ford declaredhimself “a firm believer in affirmativeaction,” but added, “there are con¬stitutional problems with arbitrary settingof quotas.” He cited “expanded enrollment”as a good alternative.Ford warned the Supreme Court not to“fudge on the Bakke case,” or there wouldlikely be a huge glut of new cases that wouldfollow.When Kurland informed Ford that hisplane might leave without him, Ford rose toleave. Walking backwards out the door, hewished the students good luck.Participants said they thought Ford hadenjoyed the exchange as much as they had.“It was fun,” said one student. The con¬census was that Ford had been “direct” and“knowledgable in his answers.”“As a speaker, he is not that bad,” saidanother. “He answered his questions for¬thrightly and honestly.”Ford from 1But students expressed mixed feelings as towhether Ford was conducting a pre-1980“campaign stop.” .At 2:30 Ford left the law school for HarperLibrary, where he spent 50 minutes withCollege students from Philip Kurland’s LawI class. With 30 students at¬tending me session. Ford answered 18questions.“I was amazed at his wealth of knowledge,” said one student. Anotherparticipant said, “We were honored by hisvisit.”Security around the former President wastight. Students’ belongings were checkedbefore entering the room, and two Maroonphotographers were pushed out of Ford’spath by Secret Service agents.After leaving the University, Ford flew tothe University of Michigan, where he willspend three days teaching. Since the 1976election, the former president has visitednumerous campuses across the country.According to a University professor, Fordenjoys talking with students.Kimpton from 1Beadle thought Kimpton’s greatestacademic contribution to the University wasthe recruitment of new faculty members.President John Wilson agreed thatKimpton helped improve the Universityneighborhood. “He gave the inspiration, theleadership and the example of courage tothe men and women who saved it in verydifficult times,” said Wilson.Kimpton was known primarily as anadministrator. “I gathered from thefaculty.” said Beadle, “that Kimpton was aspectacular administrator. ”Edward Levi, former Universitypresident and law professor, had these comments “Lawrence Kimpton becamechancellor of the University at a crisis timewhen drastic and difficult action wasrequired. Extraordinary budget problemshad to be met. The area problems were suchthat many persons believed they could notbe solved and the University would have tomove. Kimpton gave extraordinaryleadership to the University with a fullrecognition of historic purposes and uniquequalities which had to be preserved, and, asis always the case, strengthened.He did not give lip service to thesequalities; he made them possible by hiswillingness to face the issues that had to bemet. He was a person of great talent andinsight, innate modesty and courage, wholoved the University, appreciated its past,and made its future possible*He is survived by his widow, Mary; hisson, John; and a stepson. William. Privateservices will be held f«r the family. Amemorial service he1 v is :>eing planned.Super Doc from 1films, though few of their offerings werecontemporary and European.There are few’ new American films thatwill attract a large campus audience. Gary Beberman. current Doc chairman, couldthink of only one film, “Annie Hall” that isready for campus distribution this year. Docbid for and won the right to show the filmlast spring when the film groups’ offeringswere decided. New American releases helpsubsidize recent European films which oftenhave high rental prices and lower returns.A merger was proposed last year byformer Doc chairman Arno Rothbart, butCEF rejected it, fearing that Doc’sAmerican and auteurist orientation woulddominate the schedule. “They were afraidwe’d show’ Frank Capra films every othernight,” said Beberman.“The new group will offer more Europeanart films previously shown by Doc. We’llprobably show films by Fellini and Wert-muller, something Doc wouldn’t have donein the past,” he said. “But we’ll also be ableto absorb the loss of recent popular films byshowing a more varied schedule. ”Beberman will assume the post ofchairman in January. Paul Lawrence,current co-chairman of CEF, will superviseEuropean scheduling, while Matt Nayden,the other CEF chairman, will be responsiblefor booking popular movies. Another per¬son, to be chosen by Beberman, willorganize the American series.Tentatively, European films will be shownon Thursday and Sunday, popular films willbe presented on the week-end, and theAmerican and auteur series, Doc’s mostnoted and strongest orientation, will beoffered Tuesday and Wednesday.Looking to the future. Beberman stated,“As a large organization we’ll book morefilms with each distributor and receive aconsiderable discount on film rentals. Thiswill help us to expand and diversify our filmofferings We’ll be able to show importantbut less profitable films, make a largercontribution to FOTA (the spring Festival ofthe Arts), and engage in other film-relatedactivities, such as reviving Focus, Doc’sfilm journal which last appeared in thespring of 1973 .”Two professorsinjured in crashTwo University professors werehospitalized at Billings following a caraccident Monday evening.Paul B. Moore, professor of geophysicalsciences was in fair condition in the in¬tensive care unit on Thursday afternoonEasley Blackwood, professor in thedepartment of music is in good condition.THE DREAMERFULL LENGTH FEATURE FILMhebrew with english subtitlesStarring Toy,a Taxiktora. RixUn $BartA Utxina.ADMISSIONaffiliates ooothers $ i50Israels ostial entr\j i/\ the ^K> Cannes P.Wr> Festwat.SAT. NOV 5 8 00 pm at hillel 5*iS uoooLauu A PRIVATE MIXTUREfrom(312) 288-51515225 S. HARPERCHICAGO,.ILL. 60615 Where you can findImported CigarettesImported CigarsImported PipesImported dry cigarsImported Pipe Tobacco& Other Accessories£ MARATHON MAN Sat. Nov. 5,/ ' PAISAN Sun. Nov.6u 7:00 & 9:30pm Cobb Hall / 7:00 & 9:30pm Cobb HallF2—The Chicago Maroon-Friday, November 4,1977Law requires handicapped aids;cost is largest national problemLibrary canteenin two years9,By David BurtonDifferences between Student Government(SG) and director of University librariesStanley McElderry over proposed changesto the Regenstein canteen seem to bedisappearing slowly.Last year the SG Student ServicesCommittee submitted a detailed proposal toestablish a “human-run coffeeshop/canteenoperation to replace at least some of thevending machines” in the current Regen¬stein canteen that had Dean O’Connell’ssupport. After “careful revision the Libraryrejected the proposal, McElderry said.“The proposal asked for too much, toosoon and that the proposal involved hugeand significant investment which in thelibrary’s judgement probably notwarranted,” said McElderryThe library recently announced that itplans to move the canteen to A ll, currentlya conference room, within two years. “Akitchen, restrooms and a coat room will beavailable,” McElderry explained. Themove will also enlarge the canteen andallow bookstacks to be placed in room A-18.the canteen’s current location.The relocation will take place only afterthe a t library is moved, the computer areais revised and the conference room isreplaced by one on the first floorBy Andrea HollidayIn response to a request from thegovernment of Iraq for assistance, ar¬cheologists from the Oriental Institute willwork to salvage two archeological sites thatare threatened with destruction, one byscavengers, and the other by flood watersfrom a soon to be built government damThe institute will have to abandon theirlong standing dig with the ancient city ofNippur for at least two years to dig the twothreatened sites.Eight miles northeast of Nippur,scavengers have been spoiling a historicallyimportant site. They are plundering thearea for the 4000-year-old artifacts that lieburied close to the surface, relics of anAkkadian city and graveyard. TheAkkadians were the earliest Semites inMesopotamia and the settlement is thought A study examining various Libraryrenovations by the firm Metz, Train, Olson& Younger, Inc. was instrumental in thedecision to make those changes.The SG Student Services Committeewould like the new canteen to be a human-run operation. The chairman of the com¬mittee, Philip Grew, said, "if the moving ofthe canteen is definite, this is the first thatSG has heard of it. We are glad a decisionhas been made. I am sure this will increasethe likelihood of meaningful discussion.”McElderry, referring to the type of ser¬vice to be provided, said only that it must becompatible with the rest of the Library. ”“We are confident that a human-runsnack shop will be set up in Regenstein, buttwo years often turns into three or four. Atleast if the move to A ll is definite ourproposal can be revised to be applicable,”said Grew.Both the Library and SG expressed verystrong interests in working together to“straighten things out and correct anymisunderstandings,” McElderry said.to date from 2:150 to 2200 B.C.“The Akkadian period produced some ofthe most exquisite art in the history ofMesopotamia.” said McGuire Gibson,director of the Institute’s Nippur expedition.“Yet it is almost a mystery period Therehave been no extensive digs of it.”The team, which has just arrived at thesite, hopes to unearth most of the citywithout having to go through the tediouskind of work that they have been doing inNippur, where in one excavation they had tocut through 20 layers of buildings“This site is interesting because theremains of this very early period are justbelow the surface, not, as would be ex¬pected, buried beneath many layers, saidRobert Biggs, a professor in the departmentof Near Eastern languages andcivilizations. “It is likely that what we will By Peter BlantonFederal regulations requiring structuralchanges for the handicapped threaten to becostly for the University.HEW issued regulations last Mayrequiring that universities and hospitalsreceiving federal funds must have madetheir programs and activities available tothe handicapped by last August. Structuralchanges needed to make buildings ac¬cessible to the handicapped must be com¬pleted by mid-1980The installation of ramps, wide doorelevators and special toilets to ac¬commodate wheelchairs may cost close to$2 billion nationally, nearly matching the$2.4 billion that universities received infederal funds last year, according to oneestimate.At the University, these structuralchanges will require a large expenditure,according to Margaret Fallers, who is incharge of University Affirmative ActionPrograms. The large number of olderbuildings on campus will make renovationexpensive and difficult In the past, theUniversity made structural changes only torepair buildups. Although some newerbuildings are accessible to the handicapped,maior remodeling efforts are projectedfind will be well preserved ”Gibson and Biggs have traced the outlineof a large building, thought to be an ad¬ministrative building, just below the topsoil.“If we can find a sufficiently large sampleof undisturbed graves containing funerarygoods and skeltons.” Gibson said, “This sitecould reveal considerable information aboutthe various classes of Akkadian society . ”Bone samples from the graveyard willalso be analyzed, using newly discoveredtechnique to test for genetic compositionand certain diseases. They will look forevidence of schistosomiasis, an infectiousdisease that today is crippling inhabitants oflarge areas of Africa. Asia, and SouthAmerica. Scholars are seeking the origin ofthe diseaseSoil and water will be studied in order todetermine ancient climatic changes and theearly courses of the Tigris and Euphratesrivers “The attitude at the University,’’ saidFallers, “is to accommodate invidivualsimmediately, and make structural changesslowly, as the money comes in.” Classeshave been moved to make access easier fora student in a wheelchair, or even tem¬porarily handicapped student on crutchesA student in the Shoreland had a roomwith a door especially built for a wheelchair,and the University "arranged for a van totransport him to and from campus Thenewer buildings, including Pick andCummings, meet the code. A wooden ramphas recently been installed at the lawschool, and the front doors of Regenstein arebeing changed with the new regulations inmind.The constitutionality of the regulationshas been challenged by some institutions.Converse College in# South Carolina hasargued that the HEW regulations violate theFifth Amendment ban on taking privateproperty w ithout just compensationA bill presently under consideration inCongress would provide $6 billion in federalgrants to aid institutions carrying out theregulations. Until the law is passed. Fallersconceded, “money may be a big problem,but the University is working in both thespirit and the letter of the law. Our intention‘c go forward with the changes ”Next fall, the team will move to the sitethat will soon become the basin of theHamrin dam French. German, Russian,British, and Iraqi archeologists will beencamped on the site, hurrying to salvagerelics before they are submerged“We don’t really know what is there,except that it dates from the Neolithic Ageto almost yesterday and that there’s a lot ofit,” said Gibson “These sites lie along amajor trade and invasion route betweenIraq and Iran and at the border of southernand northern Mesopotamia Therefore, thearea should contain important materialsthat can give us information on therelationships among various ancientpeoples; the Babylonians and the .Assyriansat the time of Sennacherib (700 B.C.), forexample. The city of Gannanote, which ismentioned in many historical works andwas a key city in controlling this area, islocated in the path of the Hamrin damwaters.”Oriental Institute plans two digst CHILDREN OFHOLOCAUST A UNIQUENOV. H AT HIU.EI 5>I5 WOODLAUNFRIDAY % VO PM EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd Street493-8372 DOROTHY SMITHBEAUTY SALON5841 S. BLACKST0NEHY3-1069Call for appts.7 A.M. -7 P.M.Monday thru Friday,closed SaturdayHair Styling - PermanentsTinting-Facials-Skin CareCAT SHOWWINDERMERE HOTELSaturday Nov 5 *10 am - 5 pmAdults $1.50Children .75benefit for feline research Used Desks, Chairs,Files, Drawing TablesEQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:00RE 4-2111EPISCOPAL WEEKLY SERVICESSunday - 9 amEucharist, Rockefeller ChapelTuesday - 4:30 pmEvensong, Bond ChapelThursday - NoonEucharist, Bond ChapelFirst Janies Bond This Y ear: Jean Vigo'sTerrenee Young’s I/ATALANTE S JDR. NO 7:15& 9:30 pm 81.50 Cobb7:15 X 9:30 pm 81.50 Cobb Both from DOC..The Chicago Maroon-Friday, November 4, 1977—3EditorialTime to actThree years ago the South African governmentagreed to begin breaking up the apartheid policythat effectively established the country as one ofthe most politically repressive in the world. Now,three years later, little significant action hasbeen taken. South Africa still employs draconianlabor practices and wholescale discrimination.Yet, many major American corporations stillinvest in or loan to South Africa, and anyUniversity that wishes to gain a high rate ofreturn on their investments is likely to put theirmoney into corporations such as IBM or GeneralElectric that blithely explain that good oldAmerican labor traditions will vanquish op-pression wherever they invest.Hogwash. And the University of Chicago, orany other institution that invests in corporationsdoing business in South Africa, must be heldaccountable for these actions. Though ad-ministration policy dictates that the Universitv“is not an agent for social change,” there can beno doubt that it is morally reprehensible for anywealthy institution to invest in the future ofpolitical repression.The Maroon has discovered that the Universityis one of very few major academic institutionsthat has taken no action to correct these in¬vestment atrocities. At Columbia, the chairmanof the Board of Trustees, Arthur Krim, called forthe University Senate to establish a committee toexamine the morality of university stockholdings in companies that invest in SouthAfrica. At Harvard and Yale, students andfaculty are participating in investigations oftheir stock holdings. And, the Universities ofIllinois and Wisconsin have recently decided notto continue investing in companies that promotepolitical repression in South Africa.In keeping with these forward-sighted and fair-minded proposals, the University of Chicagomust come forth to form a Faculty Senatecommittee to examine the University’s holdingsin companies with investments in South Africa.This committee must be formed immediately,and would do a great disservice to itself and theUniversity community if it did not include atleast one student member.Though we consider it morally repugnant thatthe Board of Trustees would issue a Proxy Policystatement absolving the University of politicalresponsibility for their investments, it comes asno surprise, as the chairman of our Board.Robert Reneker and five other Trustees are alsoon the Board of Trustees at Continental Illinois, acompany that lends extensively to South Africa.Other companies the University invests insupply technical equipment to South Africa thatis used to hold hundreds of political dissenters injail and to produce two-way radios that haveaided South African police kill and estimated 600persons since the 1976 Soweto riots.The time has come for the University to re¬examine their investments and cease con¬sidering the problem matter a “trustee-problem.” Quite the contrary; because of theirobvious vested interests in the current SouthAfrican situation, the Trustees cannot be trustedto decide on the moral implications of SouthAfrican investments. Both the Trustees andadministration attitude toward the problemproves once again how saddeningly narrow andconservative the University is when consideringmoral and political issues. Therefore, this is anissue that must be apted on by students andfaculty.4—The Chicago Maroon Friday, November 4,1977i-w t, < m •’ (V f *> ’ t ra r« f iiy.: f n * r Letters to the EditorRole modelsTo the Editor:Abbe Fletman’s article on gays atUC is good as far as it goes, but 1 fearit presents a rather one-sided andnegative image of university gay lifethat might even discourage potentialparticipants from joining it.Specifically, the article seems tolament that gays tend to have gayfriends, but this is quite natural —mathematicians have mathematicianfriends. Baptists have Baptist friends,blacks have black friends — andundoubtedly had the author talked tothe same people about differentaspects of their life other interest-groups of friends would have beendiscovered The author speaks of thedifficulties involved in coming outThis term, though, covers two dif¬ferent processes, which are not likelyto happen simultaneously. One is thefirst actual physical encounter with amember of the same sex, and theother is acknowledging and feelinggood about one’s homosexualityfirst within oneself, then to a few closegay friends, then perhaps to the gaycommunity in general, and, in¬creasingly, to the world at large.Different individuals will be at dif¬ferent stages of this development, andit is a cardinal rule in gay societynever tc bring anyone further out thanthat person has already come. Thearticle seems to deal only withyounger people, presumably un¬dergraduates; but it ought to beremembered, and particularly by theMaroon, that undergraduates are aminority at this campus There aremany gay people at the graduate andhigher levels, who find in theuniversity gay community acongenial and sizeable range ofacquaintances in a setting tran¬scending the New Town bar, etc.scene which can be so impersonal andindeed frightening. It seems to methat the younger gays to whom thisarticle is primarily addressed canbenefit very greatly from knowing thematurer people they can meet atHyde Park gay functions (watch theMaroon classifieds!) who serve asworthy role-models for those whohave never known homosexualsrespectably. So a gay person isprobably better off — not worse off —at the university than in many othercommunities.Peter T. DanielsMorally repugnantTo the Editor:Congratulations to Mr Biernackifor his article on University in¬vestment in companies in SouthAfrica, the finest piece of in¬vestigative journalism to appear inThe Maroon in recent memory. As areporter, Mr. Biernacki could notcomment on the statements ofUniversity officials and trusteesHowever, I feel that certain of thesestatements should not go un¬challengedAn unnamed “University Officerhigh in the administration” claimedthat the question of University in¬vestment is solely a “trusteeproblem.” However, the ad¬ministration does take the view thatUniversity policy cannot be guided byany considerations of politicalmorality, the only course being to“get a good rate of return on en¬dowment funds.”This view strikes me as morallyrepugnant and irresponsible In ad¬dition, it is inconsistent with theBoard of Trustees’ Proxy Policystatement, which recognizes “ TheUniversity’s constitutionalobligations to improve the cultural orsocial values or oerformance of oursociety.’” Mr Blair, chairman of theTrustees Investment Committee, alsogrants the existence of Universitysocial responsibility. He states. “ I don’t want to invest in liquor orcompanies that make pinballmachines or are involved in LasVegas or gambling,’ ” Why does hisconcern not extend to companieswhose investment and salessignificantly aid one of the mostrepressive and the most raciallydiscriminatory state in the world'1Blair claims the Universityre-p sibility is best served hy in¬creasing American investment,because “economic growth in SouthAfrica, aided by American capital, isa prerequisite for black politicaladvancement.” This argument seemsto rest on the assumption thatcapitalist economic growth is in¬variably accompanied by growingeconomic equality and politicalfreedom. However, in the case ofSouth Africa, this argument ignoresthe fact that the supply of cheap blacklabor guaranteed bv racists laws hasbeen and continues to be the cor¬nerstone of economic prosperity.While blacks have received a fewbenefits from this prosperity, themass of the population still livesbelow the poverty line < as defined bythe South African government).The passage and application ofcontinually more repressive laws andextra-legal repression make anyserious discussion of political freedomludicrous. (Brazil provides anotherpowerful counter-example to themyth of the glories of economicgrowth. Its “economic miracle” wasmade possible by the repressivemilitary regime which took power in1964, and has been accompanied bydramatically increasing materialinequality).American companies, and foreigncompanies in general, far fromseriously changing the system ofapartheid, have by and largeacquiesed in the system from whichthey benefit Certain corporationssuch as Polaroid have instituted smallgeneral wage increases for blackworkers (partially due to pressurefrom their American workers), andothers have pledged equal pay forblacks and whites doing the samejobs. However, since they have notchallenged the color-bar which keepsblacks from jobs reserved for whites,’ the latter promise has no real1 significance.Given that the University refuses totdivest itself of investments withcompanies deeply involved in SouthAfrica, it also refuses to act as aresponsible shareholder in thesecompanies As treasurer Mary Petriereveals, “ ‘we vote with management,but we read resolutions, and we do seeif management is reasonable ’ ” Onemust wonder if management isalways reasonable’, and what(University policy might be if it werenot. Mr. Blair also admits that the(University’s policy has never in¬cluded asking companies about theirllabor practices or sales in SouthlAfrica.To conclude, the University’s in¬vestment policy and its actions (or!nonaction) as a shareholder do notj fulfill the duty of social responsibility[which the University admits it has.(While much stronger action will bei necessary to aid the struggle againsti apartheid, the minimal measure ofj divestiture of investments withj companies significantly involved inj South Africa is a beginning, and wouldi constitute a responsible UniversityI policy.People interested in the currentsituation and liberation movements inI Southern Africa should contact theUniversity of Chicago Committee oni Southern Africa (at 947-0019 or 493-I 3109) or attend South Africa Night,Nov 10, 7:30 pm at InternationalI House Homeroom. *Scott StirtonUniversity of Chicago Committeeon Southern Africa Kudos to MaroonTo the Editor:Kudos to The Maroon for the veryinformative, well-written article onUC's close corporate connection withthe South African government. Thequality of the article itself and thecourage of The Maroon to print itstartled me along with many others. Ifeel you are really beginning to fulfillyour job as journalists by letting thestudent body know what goes on in theseats of power.Biernaki, the author of the article,gets my special commendation forpulling that comment from a “highadministration officer” about how theUniversity “should not be an agent ofsocial change.” (Could that have beenJohn Wilson’’ If so he should bedismissed on the grounds ofignorance.) That quote really says itall about the level of academic in¬tegrity atUCI just hope Kudos can be extended tothe student body for reacting to thoarticle by exerting pressure on theBoard of Trustees to cut UC’s cor¬porate connection with South AfricaThe Trustees and the administrationclearly feel no qualms about wherethe money comes from that pays forthe freedom to do teaching andresearch. Surely, however, thefaculty and student body won’t tiesuch moral cowards. Let them at leastface up to the hypocrisy of “liberaleducation” at the price of viciousSouth African apartheid.Especially, our student governmentshould address the issue andspearhead a campaign to end thisshameful hypocrisy. If they fail in thisduty, the student body should holdthem responsible for this negligence,say by not re-electing them nextspringMeanwhile, I hope concernedstudents, faculty and staff will gettogether to exert what pressure theycan to get UC’s endowment money outof South AfricaMargaret I^ee DudneyCare where?To the Editor:Over the past two weeks, thepolitical science department has beenfeatured in The Maroon regardingfaculty vacancies and the APSAawards. While we the undersigned donot necessarily disagree withanything that was said, we are con¬cerned over both the authors and thereaders perception of student life inthe department.The article concerning the four newfaculty members was somewhatmisleading. The three facultyrecently hired, do NOT compensatefor those not teaching this quarter.(Easton. Mansbridge, Peterson,Przeworski, Schmitter, Tso not inresidence; Barry, Katznelson. Lip-son, Nie, Prewitt, L Rudolph, S.Rudolph. Tarcov, in residence but notteachmg in the department Of thenew iaculty, only the temporary-member is teaching in politicalscience this quarter ) Needless to say,the course offerings are thin Withstudents crowded into the few classesoffered or seeking refuge in otherdepartments: Is this an example ofwhat our department chaircalls”, the kind of care we like to giveour graduate students’”'Lee BaileyBruce ConfortoKathleen GilleJames GreerChristopher RudePatent liesVice-President of public affairsD.J.R. Bruckner, in a letter to lastFTtday’s Maroon, took issue with aMaroon editorial which referred tothe inaccessability of administrationofficials. In response, Mr. Bucknerwrote. “As far as I know, none of theofficials mentioned in the editorial;President Wilson, Provost Johnson,Vice-President Kleinbard, has everrefused to see students.” And fur¬thermore, “No student has to ap¬proach the President through me.”That Mr. Bruckner, in the righteoustone of his letter, should make suchassertions, is truly unbelievable; bothstatements are patent lies which he isperfectly well aware of.Last Winter Quarter, I and othermembers of the Speakout Coalitionrepeatedly attempted to meet withPresident Wilson or Provost Johnsonto discuss our call for disclosure of theUniversity’s financial affairs and amoratorium on the $300 tuition in¬crease and all cutbacks untildisclosure. We were repeatedlyrebuffed by the administration andrefused meetings with Johnson orWilson, and we were referred to Mr.Bruckner himself or dean of studentsCharles O’Connell. Specifically, weattempted to make an appointmentwith Mr. Wilson or Mr. Johnson forthe purpose of presenting them withpetitions with the signatures of almost2500 students in support of ourpositions. We were referred to Mr.Bruckner, and told to convey ourmessage and give our petitions toPresident Wilson through Mr.Bruckner. (Because of illness on thepart of Mr. Bruckner, it was DeanO’Connell who we actually metwith.) Yet, Mr. Bruckner has theaudacity to write The Maroon. “Nostudents has to approach thePresident through me.” I have nochoice but to regard this as adeliberate and conscious falsehood. I,and certainly other students, wouldlike some sort of explanation of thisfrom Mr. Bruckner in the pages of theMaroon.Roger HorowitzEqual miseryTo the Editor:I can’t tell you how much I enjoyedyour article on the unhappy lives ofhomosexuals. What a pleasure it wasto discover that theirs is just asmiserable a lot as that of usheterosexuals on campus. God forbidanyone should enjoy their sexuality. Itjust isn’t the American way! Andsingle people especially! Why thethought of anyone trying to live afulfilled sexual life and be a suc¬cessful student is absurd! Thank youfor reinforcing the all necessaryimage of the evils of carnality lest weforget ourselves and find a measure ofjoy in life. Susan Gwen TurkP.S. There are plusses for gays youknow. An article not tilted to thegloomy side of homosexuality wouldbe appreciated. Or if you want tocontinue in the vein of discouragingpeople, how' about one on theproblems of living a hetero life in thedorms.Sing praiseTo the Editor:It is high time that praises be sungto this great university for affordinggreat opportunity to the Great BlackMusicians for great free publicitythrough WHPK and The Maroon, forfree agents, and for what has beencalled great white audiences Therehas been no other individual or groupthat has had such access to thisuniversity even though none of itsparticipants are enrolled Racistissues have been intimated on bothsides, but the wedding continues As itsays above, praises be sung.Lois Q Reynolds More twaddleTo the Editor:.It seems to me that M. T. Rvan’sremarks in the October 28th issueconcerning the Oxnard Affair areequally appropriate in reply to Mr.Bruckner’s remarks. I was especiallystruck with the appropriateness of theword “twaddle” to characterize hisremarks.U. RaulukRevolutionarydegreesTo the Editor:I have been going to school here forover a year and I’d like to getsomething off of my chest. It has to dowith the YSA, SYL, and other suchrelated organizations. It’s not reallytheir slogans and “beliefs” thatbothers me — they have the right tobelieve whatever they want tobelieve. What bothers me is do theyreally believe in what they preach9 Isay no. If they were true to their causeand true to their “beliefs” they wouldnot be going to school here; rather,they would be working in a factory,intermingling with their fellowworkers and, in general, living the lifeof workers while they pass on theirbeliefs to their comrades. Insteadthey go to this institution which isfunded by capitalist money; they arederiving the benefits of this capitalistmoney earned through the “ex-loitation” of the working class. Iave to wonder what thesehypocritical “leaders” plan to dowhen they get out of college; I wagerthat they assimilate themselves intothis capitalist society and becomelawyers, teachers, and evenbusinessmen, for why else would theybe trying to earn college degrees.How are college degrees going tohelp them bring about this“revolution”9 Are they going to makethem better leaders of the proletariatby teaching them the ways of acapitalist society9 No. If they weretrue to their cause they would quitschool now. and bring their case to the“exploited” masses; rather, theyblabber on and on to the students ofthis University who are planning tobecome professional people orsomething of that sort, but notlaborers. What these contemptiblepseudo-communists are doing is atravesty to the ideals of communism.They are enjoying life at thisUniversity thanks to capitalist moneyearned at the expense of the “ex¬ploited” working class.I don’t agree with those who aretruly devoted to communism, but atleast I can respect them for beingdedicated to their cause. These YSAand SYL members I cannot respectfor they no more believe in com¬munism than the workers of Americathat they are trying to unite; yet theysay that they do believe in com¬munism These people can’t havetheir cake and eat it too. Either theyquit school and become true com¬munists or they stay in school andaccept this capitalistic society;anything else is hypocrisy.Gunnar GunnarssonPeculiarmathematicsTo the Editor:I suggest that you check themathematics in this articleMistakes like these turn anassumedly serious article into a badjoke.The Illinois state legislaturehas rejected ERA three times,each time by a small margin inone house In any other state,ERA would have passed,because Illinois is the only statethat requires a three-fifthsmajority to pass an amendmentMost states require onlypluralities or two-thirds votes.Hildegund Ratcliffe Tennis snowballsTo the Editor:Kudos to University planners.Having rejected the ridiculoussuggestion that superfluous housingmight be constructed on the empty lotat 55th St. and Ellis Ave., it appearslikely that the construction of themuch-needed tennis courts which theplanners decided upon will be com¬pleted in time for the first snowfall.Cold-in-my-tentRSB gangsterismTo the Editor:On Tuesday, November 1, DavidKellogg of the Spartacus YouthLeague (SYL) was assaulted by amember of the Stalinist“Revolutionary” Student Brigade(RSB), youth group of the so-calledRevolutionary Communist Party. AsKellogg was selling newspapers infront of Cobb hall, the RSBer at¬tempted to snatch the papers away ashe has in the past. Later, inside Cobb,this frenzied Stalinist thug jumpedKellogg, ripping up his papers,punching him in the face anddamaging his glasses. Kelloggdefended himself against this assault.This is the latest in a long series ofacts of hooliganism for which theRCP/RSB has become notorious onthe left. In addition to physical at¬tacks, the RSB also excludes the SYLfrom its “public” meetings, such asthe recent RSB meeting on Kent Stateat the Blue Gargoyle.We remind the RSB that the ad¬ministration is no friend of leftists. Byirresponsibly provoking physicalconfrontations the RSB invites ad¬ministration repression against allleft organizations on campus.Like all Stalinists, the RSB resortsto gangsterism and exclusion becauseit cannot defend its reformist politics.Recently at Kent State, the RSB withits mindless “fight back” rhetoric hasadvocated a liberal-moralist strategy,voting for negotiations with the Kentadministration and against the callfor ROTC and cops off campus. TheSYL, on the other hand, has been theonly group active at Kent State put¬ting forward a revolutionary analysisand fighting to push forward thestruggle for which students atJackson and Kent died: the struggleagainst U.S. imperialism and its warmachine, including ROTC, whichtrains officers for more My Lais.In Boston the RCP/RSB lined upwith the racist Louise Day Hicks inopposing busing, calling for the“smashing” of the busing plan. At thesame time, they oppose suchelementary democrats rights as theERA for women. Furthermore, theRCP/RSB propagate vicious anti-homosexuai bigotry, callinghomosexuality “an ugly blot onsociety” and advocating the “right”of parents to demand the dismissal of“notorious” homosexual teachers.The erstwhile Maoist RCP/RSB, forover a year now, has said nothing atall about the purge of Mao’s personalcoterie, the “gang of four.” and therecent restoration to power of TengHsiao-ping, denounced by the RCPRSB in the past as an unregenerate•capiiansi roaaer. Meanwhile, theydefend China’s alliance with U.S.imperialism, which includes supportfor the strengthening of the anti¬communist NATO alliance and directcollaboration in the imperialist in¬vasion of Angola two years ago.Unable to deal with the Trotskyistprogram of the SYL, the RSB“defends” its reformist politicsthrough goon attacks and cowardlyexclusionism. The SYL now. asalways, defends democratic rights -our own as well as those of all leftgroups. Brothers and sisters of theRSB, make no mistake. We are notpacifists. We will not tolerate yourthug attacks. Your goon tactics willonly continue to isolate you. If youwant genuine political struggle, weagain invite you to a public debate.Spartacus Youth League ConnectionsBy Eric Von der Porten“Hey, wait a minute,” I asked myself, “what is JulianLevi doing getting himself appointed to the board ofdirectors of the Hyatt Corporation9” You know Julian,don’t you? Lifelong Hyde Parker, teaches urban studies atthe U. of C. Hobby: urban renewal. Pet peeve: beingreferred to as “the brother of former attorney generalEdward Levi.”So Julian is on the board of Hyatt. “So what?” you askThe so what is that the Pritzker family owns 34 percent ofthe Hyatt Corporation. You remember the Pritzkers don’tyou? In 1968 they gave $12 million to the University and sohad the medical school named after them. “So what?” youask. That’s what I asked.I decided to investigate, to attempt to discover what isbehind these apparent connections among the Pritzkers,Julian Levi, and the Universitv. I discovered a storv thatbegan back before the founding of the University, back in1881 when a 10-year-old Russian immigrant namedNicholas Jacob Pritzker came to Chicago with his family.Nicholas started to work that same year as a newsboyand bootblack, but he gradually worked his way up in theworld until, at age 17. he landed a iob as a druggist and wasable to enroll part-time at Northwestern University. Hereceived a Ph.G. from Northwestern in 1892 and an LL B.from De Paul University in 1902. By 1913, he was doing wellenough as a lawyer that he was able to send his son,Abraham N. Pritzker, to Northwestern for a year, to theUniversity of Chicago for two years (Ph.B., 1916), and thento Harvard Law School (LL.B. ,1920).It turned out to be a good investment. Today, at age 81,A N. Pritzker is the patriarch of a family that has built afinancial empire valued at over $1 billionA N. began his business career in 1920 as a lawyer in theChicago firm of Pritzker and Pritzker. It was in these earlyyears that A N. met Milton Reynolds, who was later tobecome Julian Levi’s father-in-law. Julian himself was atthis time a student at the University of Chicago. Hereceived his Ph.B from the College in 1929 and his J.Dfrom the law school in 1931. He met A N. through Reynoldsin the early 1930’s when he was a young Chicago lawyer.The two men have been close friends since then.Julian left Chicago in 1946 to go into the ball point penmanufacturing business in Europe. Then, he says, in 1952“the University made the enormous mistake of havingKimpton and Beadle go out to lunch with me; thev’ve beensuffering from that ever since.” Their “mistake” was toask Julian to become executive director of the then four-month-old South East Chicago Commission.Since 1962, Levi has maintained close ties with theUniversity. As executive director of ihe SECC, he has beeninstrumental in formulating, and in getting federal andcivic support for the University’s Hyde Park urban renewalprogram. His current position as chairman of the ChicagoPlan Commission and his numerous political connectionsmake him extremely valuable to the University.One highly placed administrator referred to him as“vice-president of the University for government affairs ”The source backed up this statement by revealing thatJulian is the only non-officer of the University to attendPresident Wilson’s staff meetings.The foundations ot the PntzKers' involvement with theUniversity are somewhat less clear. Over the years, thePritzker’s have helped the University in many wavs Whilethe 1968 gift is the only major donation which the Pritzkershave made to the University, they have also, for example,occasionally given funds to help support visiting com¬mittees to the medical school.However. A N denies that his motives for supporting theUniversity are related to the fact that he and severalrelatives attended the University. He said that thehighlights of his stay at the University were, 1) getting hisname in “The Daily Maroon” of 1916* for scoring the mostpoints in a water-basketball game and 2) placing second inthe University-wide pool championship.When asked to explain the reasons for his benificencetoward the University. A N. said. “The Universitv ofChicago is a very important institution to Chicago, and ifit’s important to Chicago it’s important to me Chicago tookmy mother and father and I feel very attached to it and toAmerica.” But. he adds. “I suppose I could just as wellhave given to Northwestern.” A number of Pritzker familymembers are alumni of NorthwesternHowever, the longstanding association between Levi andA.N. appears to be a factor in the relationship betweenthe Pritzkers and the University. On several occasions forexample. A.N. has worked with Julian to lobby for oragainst state and federal legislation that effects theoperations of the University.Considering the history of the relationship between A.Nand Julian, it should not be surprising that Julian should beasked to serve on the board of the Hyatt CorporationThe Hvatt Corporation is currently attempting to recoverfrom conflict of interest charges concerning the Pritzkers’ownership of hotels that are leased to the Hyatt Cor¬poration. which is controlled by the Pritzkers.According to Julian, part of the “get clean” project is theappointment of “outside directors" who “are not employedby the Coiporation in the usual sense ” As one of three suchoutside directors. Julian is the chairman of the newlyformed audit committee. This committee will supervise thecorporation’s auditing procedures and will review salariesand bonuses.Allen 'Uirner. spokesman for Hvatt, said that Julian is aperfect choice for that position \>ecause he is a man of“great intellect and unquestioned integrity.” He dismissedremarks that it might nave been better if the new boardmembers had not been associated with the Pritzkers in thepast by saying that “you have to choose someone youknow.The Chicago Marocn-Friday, November 4, 1977—5South Africa from 1proposals directing U S. companies to haltnew investment in South Africa. However,the Chairman of Yales Advisory Committeefor Investor Responsibility, JeoffreyHazard, said that Yale voted againstproposals directing companies to com¬pletely withdraw from that country becauseYale trustees doubted those proposals couldbe carried out.Hazard, a law professor at Yale, said hethinks it is “nonsense” to argue that auniversity endangers freedom of inquiry bytaking a stand as a corporate body on SouthAfrica investment.“When a university votes, it votes as acorporation and not for any individual in it,”he said. “As a stockholder the issue ispresented to you. To vote for management isto vote. You still have to take a politicalposition.”Hazard stressed that Yale has only“modest aspirations” to weaken apartheidby means of its stock votes. Commenting onthis University’s administration stance onSouth Africa, he joked that Yale “is not anagent of non-social change nor of social non¬change.”One of the student members of Yale’sinvestor responsibility committee, KrissSjoblom, said he was surprised to learn thatChicago has no student/faculty committeeto advise its trustees on how they shouldvote on controversial shareholderproposals“Forming a committee is a typicalmoderate reaction, a way of going to themiddle ground and getting careful reasoneddecisions without a big splash. The com¬mittee doesn’t take an active role in socialchange because it doesn’t go out and getproblems. It passively considers problemsbrought to it,” he said.“When a university owns stock in a cor¬poration,” Sjoblom continued, “once astockholder resolution has been put to it, itcannot just sit on the fence. It makes apolitical decision whatever it does. ”Harvard abstained this year onresolutions that would halt new bank loansto South Africa or that would withdrawindustrial investments from that countryBut it voted in favor of a Union Carbide stockholder resolution calling a halt to newfactory expansion in that country.Harvard’s assistant treasurer, GeorgeStigler, said “We believe proxy issues maybe a viable wav of effecting change in SouthAfrica. Voting with management is apolitical vote. Clearly our votes do notsatisfy all segments of the community, butneither would a vote with management. Wedon’t want to politicize investment per se,but given the responsibilities of the investor,you have to look at the political im¬plications.”Stigler added that Harvard’s AdvisoryCommittee on Shareholder Responsibilitykeeps the trustees “soberly informed” ofU.S. corporate practices in South Africa.The committee, made up of four students,four faculty members and four alumni,recommends to the trustees how Harvardshould vote on stockholder resolutions ofbroad public concern.The trustees accept “more than 90 per¬cent” of the committee’s recommendations,Stigler said. The trustees’ major reason forrejecting recommendations, he said, is thatthey believe some South Africa resolutionsfavored by the committee are “seman¬tically ambiguous.”The secretary of Harvard’s AdvisoryCommittee, student Larry Stevens, told TheMaroon that in voting on South Africaresolutions. “The key issue for the Com¬mittee was the extent to which we coulddiscover labor practices of the companiesinvolved. You have to look at it on a com¬pany by company basis.”“Most of us are still trying to learn asmuch as we can about a very complexsituation.” he continued. “You’re dealingwith a fantastically repressive regimethere, which makes analogies with black-white relations in the American South in theFifties simplistic.”Of the nine other universities surveyed byThe Maroon;• Princeton’s trustees abstain fromvoting on stockholder’s resolutions thatwould stop U.S. business operations in SouthAfrica. The trustees’ spokesman, StephenAiles, explained that Princeton does notvote in favor of these resolutions “on the theory that it is oasically not at all clear thatdiscontinuance of (U. S. business) activitiesin South Africa would be beneficial toblacks.” As a compromise, Princeton haswritten letters to all its companies active inSouth Africa urging them to sign astatement promising they will offer equalopportunities to blacks.• Columbia's chairman of the Board ofTrustees, Arthur Krim, asked his univer¬sity’s Senate last month to form a com¬mittee to investigate the morality ofColumbia’s South Africa investments. Krimsaid Columbia may divest its stock incompanies active in South Africa, but added“We really want to study this one to the hiltbefore we do anything precipitous.”• The University of Illinois’ Board ofTrustees declared last month that it willsupport all shareholder resolutions seeking“termination of further investment inSouth Africa” or “prudent withdrawal ofall current investment.” The Chancellorat Circle campus. Donald Riddle, told TheMaroon that the new policy was partlymotivated by “the deep extent of studentfeeling” voiced last spring at financecommittee open hearings.University of Illinois President JohnCorbally concluded this summer that votingin favor of South Africa withdrawalproposals is the only way the university canmeet its investment responsibilities. He toldthe Trustees that “Corporations doingbusiness in South Africa are of necessitysubject to various laws which supportapartheid and thus are involved in thatDractice.” Corballv advised againstdiverstiture because “it would remove anyinfluence we may have on the corporationsconcerned.” He advised against abstainingon South Africa resolutions because that“avoids the issue.”• The Regents of the University ofWisconsin voted this month to sell theirstock in U.S. corporations that cannotdemonstrate they have “equal and fairemployment practices for all employees” inSouth Africa. The Regents are requiring thecompanies in which they invest to integrateraces “in all eating, "comfort, and workfacilities” in South Africa and to “increase the number of blacks and other non-whitesin management and supervisory positions.”• After several hundred studentsprotested Stanford’s votes on South Africaresolutions by taking over an ad¬ministration building last spring, theTrustees ordered the finance office to studythe costs of divestiture. The office concludedtwo weeks ago that divesting Stanford’s $125million in stocks in 59 companies with SouthAfrica investments would be too costlybecause transaction costs alone wouldamount to $1 4 million.Stanford’s Trustees said in theirStatement of Investment Responsibility thatStanford stock should be used to correctsocial ills when “substantial concensusexists” that “the economic costs to theuniversity of taking action are com¬mensurate with the probable effects of thataction.”• Northwestern’s director of investment,John Borsch, said that if a company cannotprove it has fair employment practices inSouth Africa Northwestern favorsstockholder resolutions directing it to haltnew investment in that country.• Lt. Governor Mervyn Dymally, as amember of the University of Californiaboard of regents, called for divestiture ofthe university’s $500 million worth of stockin companies active in South Africa. InSeptember the regents defeated the motionby a vote of 11 to six.• In a departure from its general policy ofsupporting management, the Universitv ofMinnesota began to abstain on South Africastockholder proposals last spring in order“to call attention to the seriousness of theissue.”• In September, the University ofMassachusetts Board of Trustees votedunanimously to sell all stock in companiesactive in South Africa. At the board meetingTrustees argued that “the only ultimateobjective any of the Trustees should havefor South Africa is the toppling of thepresent government and full and equalrepresentation of the majority population.”PREPARE FOR.MCAT • OAT • LSAT • GMATGRE • OCAT • VAT • SATNMB I, II. Ill ECFMG* FLEX - VQENAT’L DENTAL BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFlexible Program* & Hours f Our139th fiThere IS a difference!!!KAPLAN£fOuc*rioN*L centerTEST PRf P»R« TIONPfClRUSTS SINCE iR.ieFor Information Please Call2050 W DevonChicago, III 60645(312) 764 5151SPRING, SUMMER, WINTER COMPACTSMOST CLASSES START EIGHT WEEKSPRIOR TC THE EXAMSTARTING SOON:LSAT-SAT-GREOTHER CENTERS CALL TOLL FREE 800 223 1782Centers in Va;or US Cities Toronto. Puerto Pico ana luganc Smt/er'anMcGEORGE SCHOOL OF LAWl DIVERSITY OF THE PACIFICAccredited: American Bar AssociationMember — Association orAmerican Law SchoolsSACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIAMay 1, 1978 is application deadlinetor first year studegis seekingJuris Doctor degree in 3-vear Davand 4-vear Evening Program beginningin September 1978.Pre-Law DiscussionFOR PROSPECTIVE STUDENTSDATE: TIME: PLACE:FOR APPOINTMENTOR FURTHER INFORMATION6—The Chicago Maroon-Friday, November 4,1977The Chrcago Maroon's Weekly Magazine of Criticism and the ArtsUrsula Schneider:Important imagesBy Al FrescoUrsula Schneider is known to a limitedcircle of art historians as one of the best,and certainly one of the most dedicated,photographers of Greek and Egyptiansculpture and buildings. Most people do notknow that before she came to the UnitedStates to begin her thirty-five year career asphotographer for the University ofChicago's Oriental institute, Ursula Wolffwas a highly accomplished featurephotographer for two of Germany's largestnewspapers. A collection of some of thephotographs she made in Europe andMexico in the late twenties and early thirties is now on display in the BergmanGallery.Images of the Thirties; Photographs byUrsula Schneider is an exhibit which givesus a chance to see the work of a previouslyunknown photographer. The twenties werean extremely productive time forphotographers in Germany. MaYiy peoplewere working and developing new styles ofphotography, and the German magazinesand newspapers were experimenting withusing photography as illustration in newways. Ursula Wolff Schneider quicklyadopted many of the conventions of theearly Bauhaus photography, and was able touse them within the limits set by her editors.Some of the images in the exhibit areclearly meant to be documentary. Theydepict some aspect of life in some particulartime and place. The photographs of theinterior of a primitive peasant hut, and theimage of boys sailing model boats give us anidea of what some people were doing inEurope. Some of the other images, whilestill being documentary photographs, domore than just document; they succeed ininvoking a sense of time and place for us.We can almost feel what kind of day it was in the garden, and how the woman laughedwhen she stood on a step to show off herdress. Still other "documentary” imagesare strangely surreal. The image of amiddle aged couple breakfasting on a beachin front of their car which has been carefullycovered by a blanket tent is like somethingout of a silent movie. The image can standalone, but there is clearly some story behindit.Other photographs in the exhibit aremenacing because of what we read into theimages in light of later German history. Inthe late twenties, there was a convention ofshowing an indistinct man and his beingdefined by his soul, or shadow. Ursula Wolffused this technique to make the first imagein the exhibit, a small photograph of threefigures in uniform and their large shadows.Seen with the knowledge of Weimar Germany in 1933, this photograph is frightening.So, for the same reason, is the image of theboy seated on three blocks of salt, whoselegs are so thin that they do not seemnatural.Most of the images are much calmer.They show us that Ursula Wolff had a senseof humor, and a sense of the beauty of boththe old buildings in Europe and of the newmodern style of architecture. Herphotograph of Italy, with the tiny men inblack robes walking near a huge dome, is aphotograph which is not a classic image inthe history of photography only because ithas not been seen by the people who publishthe histories.The exhibit will continue only untilNovember 12 in Bergman Gallery, which ison the fourth floor of Cobb Hall. Galleryhours are 10 5, Monday through Friday, andnoon 5, Saturday and Sunday. ‘honhar berwakay chickinaychickinay paat’ (p.12)THEFOOTRUNNERPeace has a sense of its own history,the ability to perceive a shadowcreeping across alternatives and imagesof thought.One watching stone or washing stonecan also hear a river foam across interior rocks.The shadow swallows itself and retires.A footrunner from kingdom to kingdom, journeycompleted.Resting below a regal moon which hangs in nightskylike an aged monarch in a court of stars.Quietly, darkness waits for a champagne coloreddawncarried by Arabian horses from the other side of theworld.by George DruryCopyright 1977. All rights reserved by the authorThe Chicago Maroon-Friday, November 4,1977—7KEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSUNDAY. NOVEMBER 6.1977SERVICE OF HOLY COMMUNIONCelebrant: Donald Judson. Episcopal ChaplainCo sponsor Episcopal Church CouncilANNUAL UNIVERSITY MEMORIAL SERVICEE. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the Chapel- “THE TIME BETWEEN”A non-denominational service honoring Trustees,Faculty. Students and Staff people who died duringthe past year. The President of the University,various members of the University ReligiousCounselors, and representatives of the academicand non-academic units of the University willparticipate mwNEEDLEPOINT5210 Harper Ave.Hours: Tue., Thurs.Fri., Sat. 10-4Wed. 12:n-6 p.m.Closed: Sun.-Mon.324-2266 Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900 Folk Dance ConcertSat., Nov. 5, 8-10pm in Mandel Hall.Performances by local ethnic groupsas part of 15th International FolkFestival. Tickets from UC Folk-dancers: $2.75/$2,25 students inadvance, $3.00/$2.50 at the door.Join us afterwards for a folk danceparty in Ida Noyes. Live music, re¬freshments.And we can offer outstandingcareer opportunities in Marketing,Engineering or Computer Science.We will be interviewing atThe University of Chicagoon November 18, 1977.To find out about IBM and let usfind out about you, sign up for aninterview at the Placement Office orwrite to: I.C. Pfeiffer,College Relations Manager,IBM Corporation,One IBM Plaza,Chicago, Illinois 60611.An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action EmployerIn thetraditionBy John LanahanBrendan Behan's personal life has created the legacy ofhis being the Drinking Man's Dylan Thomas. Once one cutsthrough the fatalistic humor of "Brendan" stories,however, the power and skill of his work is impressive. Iremember my amazement when I discovered there was farmore to Behan's compatriot, Oscar Wilde, than just afindesiecle Paul Linde; similarly, the current production by theOld Town Players of Behan's The Hostage has given meinsight into the strength of his own artistry. The Hostage isboth epilogue and culmination of perhaps the richesttradition in modern theater, the Irish Literary Revival.Starting with W. B. Yeats (no offense to Boucicault fans),embodied by J. M. Synge, and satirized and expanded bySean O'Casey, the Irish theater created its own complexcorpus of theatrical conventions in the short space of sixtyyears, and has paralleled and reflected its nation's politics,from the polite and constitutional romanticism of Parnell tothe grim continuance of Northern Ireland. The Hostagesums up all these elements, the seductive and lyrical visionof Yeats and Synge, the sardonic realism of O'Casey, andadds to them a Brechtian self consciousness and theatricalwit that avoids the dank mysticism of the former and theembarrassing blarney of the latter. The Hostage is a circus,a ioyous and musical extravaganza, the Threepenny Operaof Irish theatre and politics.The play requires a firm grip on its theatrical conventions and an intelligent and sensitive understanding ofthe unique relationship of these conventions with differentphases of modern Irish history. The director, PatrickO'Gara, demonstrated this. Mr. O'Gara had difficulty,however, in focusing and interweaving the variousdfaer-ggnt elements of lyricism, expressionism, satire andsocial reaTfsm into a cohesive piece of work. The show was"bften jerky, disconnected, and self consciously arty when itshould have been structurally witty. Stop action was used inthe beginning to identify certain themes, rather thanrelying on the play's own brilliant use of the alienationeffect. The "Irish Dancer", played by the character of aPolish sailor, was a perfect intellectual conception of the elements, the seductive and lyricalvision of Yeats and Synge, the sardonicrealism of O'Casey, and adds to them aBrechtian self-consciousness andtheatrical wit that avoids the dankmysticism of the former and the em¬barrassing blarney of the latter. play's ominous and deadly romanticism; but it more oftenthan not obstructed me play's own ability to discuss thenumerous fatalistic and eventually fatal elements of Irishlife. The pace at the end of the show unfortunately was toofast, unbridled, blurring the necessary and cruel presenceof violence in Ireland — the grim reality of bombings,planned killings, and dank bleedings to death in ditches.The cast was generally good — astonishingly good forwhat is considered "community theater". The Old TownPlayers have the annoying habit of referring to all theircasts as "ensemble of actors"; but this time the title wasnot a pompous exaggeration. The group was a wellcoordinated, well-choreographed unit that was usually ableto handle and focus the numerous scene shifts. Certain castmembers were outstanding. Lorraine Clark as MissGilchrist, "a sociable worker", was pretty amazing as aCrazy-Jane whore ana freaked out Major Barbara, it wasas if Synge had scripted a Warhol movie. James Baicocciwas fine as the affable but gradually despairing titlecharacter, a British soldier held hostage in a Dublin brothelby the I.R.A. Anne Bernadette Coyle as Meg Dillon,madame of the brothel by common law marriage, had aneerie Celtic urbanity that was both a vision and satire ofYeats.The set, by Jane F. Natal, was flexible and an excellentrealization of the underlying expressionism of the play,especially considering the spatial limitations of the OldTown Players' stage. The lighting, by Cherie ShermanRubel, effectively defined the many, shifting playing areasthat kept moving with the circus production. The music,directed by David Richards, was fun; and the sound design,by Kevin Rober, was often lyrical without becomingmaudlin. The choreography, by Danny Frohman, was ef¬fective when Mr. Frohman was not doing his rather self-conscious "Irish Dancer" at appropriately arty moments.The more I think about this show, the more I like it. It isnot without problems, most notably a very ambitious butoccasionally uncontrolled conception that sometimesovertaxes the ability of the cast and director. Despite that, Ileft the theater last weekend with new insight into thegreatness of Behan as a playwright, and had one hell of agood time besides. I don't think I'm alone in that, since theproduction has been selling out since it opened So, if youcare to see a play on the basis of a mixed, but generally(and ultimately) favorable review, The Hostage playsFridays-Sundays at 1718 N. North Park, a block west ofWells. Ticket prices and show times vary, so call 645 0145for further information.Ifyou’re consideringa Mercedes280E,Like the Mercedes 280 E. the Peugeot 604 SL has four-;independent suspension, a resonsive six-cylinder engine (ouiV-6). power steering {ours is rack and pinion), a unitizedheld together with thousands of welds, power windows,reclining front bucket seats, tinted glass, and meticulous ;tion to detail.The Peugeuot 604 has alsobeen engineered for asuperior level ofcomfort. Withoversized shockabsorbers, large coilsprings, a floating differenseats that are actually tuned to the suspension system.But comfort isn’t the only thing that sets the 604 apart froMercedes. There’s also the price. \A/hich starts at$11.000.* And which may be its most comforting feature of alLeslyMotorsSales / Leasing / Parts / li2347 So. Michigan Ave. Chicago 326* Manufacturer's suggested retail price. Delivery, optionalment. license, title, taxes, dealer preparation not included. Serving Hyde Park since 1941; 19 years on LakePark, 9 years in Piccadily Hotel (on Hyde Park Boule¬vard) and now located in THE FLAMINGO HOTEL onthe Lake at 5500 So. Shore Drive.Lunches and Dinners served daily(except Mondays)Lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.Dinner from 5:00 p.m. to 12:00 p.m.Complete Lunch and Dinner MenusOur bar is open from 11:30 a.m. until2:00 a.m.Dine in easy eleganceFor reservations or informationcaii: BU 8-9241 or PL 2-3800The Chicago Maroon Friday November is;?- -9ITHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOMEDICAL CENTERANNIVERSARY BENEFIT CONCERTTuesday, November 15 at 8:15 p.m.FeaturingTHE CHICAGOSYMPHONYORCHESTRAOrchestra Hall • 220 S. Michigan Ave.Guest Conductor -Carlo Maria GiuliniProgramMoussorgskv “Pictures at an Exhibition*'(Orchestrated By Ravel)BeethovenSymphony No. 7, A Major, Opus 92Ticket PricesMain Floor: $100 (Patron), $50, $25, $20First Balcony: $20For Information, Call 947-5777H 4/jry * ^^(7 .ss fT. finiProceeds Benefit Medical Research Programs • lax Deductible as Provided by Law0—The Chicago Maroon-Friday, November 4,1977I- W vebi3-(KCT>Mog3>irOfldT_A taste ofSwedishhome cookingBy Tom Flannigan ^Many visitors to Sweden have come away with an unsavory impression of the country's cuisine. The mostcommon complaints are the blandness of the meals and thereliance on unimaginative fish dishes. Although Swedishfood hasn't received the notoriety of French food, many ofthe native dishes are both nutritious and tasty. As is thecase with many foreign methods of cooking, enjoying ameal demands getting used to the unique methods ofpreparation.Chicago has a huge Scandinavian population This isverfied by the existence of Swedish, Danish and Norwegiannewspapers, ethnic holidays and numerous restaurants.Most of the Scandinavian restaurants in the metropolitanarea are located in the suburbs and the North Side, butthere is one relatively close to the Hyde Park area andeasily accessible by car or CTA. Svea's is located on thenorthwest corner of 112th and Western and is open fromtwo to eight.It is easy to pass Svea's without noticing it. The only thingto alert visitors to the presence of a restaurant is a wornsign proclaiming “Swedish Home Cooking." As is the casewith other Swedish restaurants in the Chicago area, Svea'sis spotlessly clean and sparsely decorated. The establish-mertt-closes very early; diners are expected to arrive by7:00 to conform with the discipline of the place. Guests whoplace great importance on ambience and decoration will bedisappointed but those who place a great emphasis on foodvalue and authenticity will be delighted.Almost all of the entrees are clustered in the $4.00 pricerange and include salad, appetizer or soup, vegetable,coffee and dessert. The most Scandinavian dishes areprofferred at the beginning of the meal. Fruit soup, adelicious cold broth with raisins, plums and apple slices,and pickled herring are two of the most ethnic dishes to befound on the menu. Most of the entrees are in¬distinguishable from those at an American restaurant. BeefStroganoff, various steak dishes, flounder stuffed with craband stuffed cabbage are consistently excellent. The poorquality and outrageous price of beef in Scandinavia hasproduced a tremendous reliance on fish dishes, and in¬dividuals who have a fondness for seafood will find Svea'sparticularly rewarding.The patrons of Svea's are a subdued lot, consisting ofsecond and third generation Swedish families as well ascrher non ethnics from Ihe surrounding neighborhood. Therestaurant is extremely family oriented; many of the tablesaccommodate six or more people and are usually tilled tocapacity on Sundays Unlike some of the Swedishrestaurants in Andersonviile, the Nordic enclave at Fosterand Clark on the North Side, the Swedish language is notcommonly used by the customers.The portions are so large you may give up on dessert butthis is a grave mistake. If there is one aspect of cooking thatSwedish restaurants in Chicago excel at, it is pie andpastry. The cherry pie at Svea's tastes like it just came outof the oven. It probably did. Just watch the owner of theplace eyeing you to see if you finished the last bite.Alcoholic beverages are not served at Svea's nor is theiruse encouraged Most Swedish restaurants are familydining spots and aren't conducive to leisurely meals withwine. Devotees of Greek and Italian restaurants may bedisappointed with this aspect of Chicago's Scandinavianeating spots. Still, each culture is unique and each hassomething to offer. The food at Svea's tastes so homemadeand downright healthy that a dose of alcohol seemssuperfluous.Svea's is easily reached on the CTA. Take the 55th Streetbus to the Dan Ryan El, then the train southbound to itsterminus point at 95th. Street. The 111th Street bus departsfrom the terminal and takes about twenty minutes to get toWestern Avenue (2400 West). Svea's is located one blocksouth of the busy intersection at 111th and Western.Two of Chicago's most interesting neighborhoods can bevisited when driving to the Southwest Side. The first routeinvolves taking 55th Street to the Dan Ryan Expressway,then south to 194 destined for lndiana.,Get off the 111thStreet exit and head west. You will pass through Pullman,an early attempt at a socialist neighborhood and still f liedwith beautiful row houses and a market square. It is theclosest thing to an old European village on the South Side.The second route involves taking the Dan Ryan to 95thStreet, then heading west as far as Longwood Drive (approximately 1800 West). Svea's can be reached by meandering through the Beverly neighborhood in a southwesterly direction. The area is replete with unusual villas,gigantic trees and wildlife from the neighboring forestpreserve. The neighborhood has several Frank LloydWright creations and a remarkable concentration ofgreenhouses. A drive through this peaceful neighborhoodmay destroy your notions of South Side as being a collectionof factories, decrepit houses and garbage dumps. 1515 E. 53rdPresentsJazz for a Sunday AfternoonSunday November 12 6-12 pm)n Triofeaturing Karl W ri«jlital'iiGuillermo Knightflamingo militaristMii'lcr of (hr flamingo, our of (lie mo-t lriil>flamingo •'uilarixl \ou could ever hiiiiI lo hear. . .(on^cnial \tmosphcrc. . .(rood Jazzritelfers of BeerAlwavs free hot blitter popcornStudent discountsIn ill/- lli-nrl nf f iisnuifHilhnii llvil/- Park xfrd-SfrTHAT’S NO ILLUSION!That’s 600mm of long distancephoto power in 3-5/16 inchesof lens. Vivitars Series 1 600mm |f8 Solid CatadioptricTelephoto Lens|See it Fri. & Sat. Nov. 4 & 5thVivitar DemoMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th St.493-6700WE SPECIALIZE IN REPAIRSNOV.4THTHE WORLDG0MEST0CHCAGOGreat films from 38 countries.November 4 24. In cooperation withSchweppes and SABROSO Coffee LiqueurBiograph,Granada and LamarTheatres.The 13thChicago InternationalFilm FestivalFOR INFORMATION CALL644-3400The Chicago Maroon Friday, November 4,1977Jafree:IWorld's most creative lawyer?By Douglas MillerIn 1961 an extraordinarily young andtalented artist from Pakistan astounded themodern art establishment of Europe withthe opening of his first London exhibit. IqbalGeoffrey, then 22, was the first artist fromthe East to become a major figure in theworld of modern art. His water colors andoil paintings, though abstract and deeplypersonal, elicited raves from critics whoperceived in them themes expanding onancient Hindu and Buddhist symbols. Theexoticisim of the East fascinated Westernartists of the time, some like JacksonPollack had incorporated Eastern symbolsand attitudes into their art Geoffrey stoodalone as an Eastern artist incorporatingWestern techniques.In searching for the vital center of themodern art world, Geoffrey (r#t London in1962 and flew to New York, on a fellowshipfrom the Huntington Hartford Foundation.His passionate career as an artist spiraledupward. He painted an homage to Wols, hisfavorite artist, in his own blood. He feudedwith *rt critics as they battled among floors above the corner of Washington andClark Streets in Chicago's loop. Although sixassociates are listed on his door, Jafreeoccupies the office alone — he does notemploy a secretary. On his wail hang two ofhis paintings and a flock of sheepskins,including his LL.B. from the University ofthe Punjab and an LL.M from Harvard lawschooi. His bookshelf is brimming wifh lawbooks, all. but six volumes entitled CourtRules are still wrapped in their originalcellophane packaging.He dresses daperly in informal clofhes,looking energetic and youthful with a warm,open smile and well-trimmed mustache. Hiseyes are dark and deeply set, his voicesonorous with an accent that easily iden¬tifies his Pakistani origins. In the course ofone conversation Jafree ripped his toupeeoff the top of his head and threw it into achair besides him saying, "my toupee, it isthe only false thing about me ”Jafree is a public defender who representsthe poor and indigent. He specializes in civilliberty and human rights cases. In 1975 he* So what follows is poetry, written in surrealAutomatic style by Jafree. Errors made in typingare generally left in tact. Jafree, as a lawyer has aheart, he is no Hertz lawyer or a hack that wouldwrite to serve H.M.V. That is the fundamental un-‘derlying rhythm of this Brief. "The Great U.S. Landscape, Phase 2, aspect 4", 1965. By Iqbal Geof¬frey. Watercolor, 28 X 22. (Courtesy of the Chase Manhattan Bank, (photoby Raymond Juschkus)themselves to determine who haddiscovered Geoffrey. Aflred Barr thedirector of the Museum of Modern Artbecame Geoffrey's favorite target in hisattack on the pettiness of contemporarycritics. Through the 60's Geoffrey painted,created happenings, and all in all lived thecreative life of an artist working inAmerica, soup cans and all. His majorworks painted in America were four seriesof paintings entitled. "Great AmericanLandscapes", "In Search of an Ideal land¬scape", "Syracuse Coming" and "SyracuseGoing". "In Search of an Ideal Landscape"was designated the finest work in modernart during 1965 by the Paris Museum ofModern Art. Both "Syracuse Coming" and"Syracuse Going" he called "pain things"and were painted in 1974. Unfortunatelythey were stolen that year from their firstshowing at the Everson Museum of ModernArt in Syracuse, New York.This tumultous artistic life came to a quietclose in 1974 when Iqbal Geoffry stoppedpainting, "if my paintings are a protest,then my not painting is also a protest."Today Iqbal Geoffrey exists only in backcopies of "Art World". The former artist hasbecome Syed Jafree, a 38 year old lawyerpracticing law in the state of Illinois. Afterhis arrival in the U.S. Geoffrey changed hisname to "Jafree" a second phonetic ren¬dering of his Pakistani name which is thecombination of an Urdu word "ja" whichmeans go and the English word "free".His law office is a snug two room suite, 15 distinguished himself among his fellowHarvard Law School alumnus by posting agross annual income of only $1,000, in 1976he reported earning $30. He estimates thathe donates up to $150,000 a year in free legalaid to his indigent clients.Since settling in America, Jafree hasexperienced a series of stormy professionalcareers outside that of being a creativeartist. He has been a professor of art atCentral Washington State College,Cleveland State University and St. Mary'sCollege in Hammond Indiana.He has also served as a human rightsofficer at the United Nations and asassistant attorney general for Illinois. Histenure at each of these positions has beenbrief, one year a piece. His ease at movinginto, if not out of, these varied positions is aresult of his spectacular education and theinternational renown he earned as an artist.Without conflict of interest, Jafree has alsobeen the senior partner in the law firm ofGeoffery and Kitrahn since 1959 the year hegraduated from law school in Lahore.Jafree's resume is an interestingabridgment of his life. A man with such wideranging interests and talents is very dif¬ficult to synopsize without soundingsomewhat absurd. In fact how Jafree hasrepresented his life experience, on formalresumes in particular, has been at thecenter of a number of controversies. Thesecontroversies have occurred whenever hehas applied for a job in his various fields ofinterest, and in turn have developed into law suits and complaints to civil rights agencies.His claims revolve around what he per¬ceives as discrimination against non-whiteAsians in hiring by U.S. firms, all firms thathe himself has applied for jobs with. Heconsiders himself as excellent test casematerial in forwarding the interests of othernon-white Asians in the U.S., often citingFirst Amendment violations in his cases. Infact Chicago is the busiest port of entry forimmigrants from Asia, these Asians con¬stitute one of the fastest growing minoritygroups in the Chicago area. There are nospecific affirmative action programs set upto help these recent immigrants. Jafreethinks that his litigation will focus attentionon their problems.A fascinating example of his litigation andthe controversies his personality causes arethe suits he is bringing against WilliamScott and the Attorney General for the stateof Illinois. Jafree worked as an AssistantAttorney General from Aug. 1972 to Aug.1973, in the opinion division even though henever received an American job. His oneyear stay in this office has been described as"stormy" by Herbert Kaplan also an at¬torney in the opinion division.Jafree first got the job after petitioningthe Illinois State Supreme Court to allowhim to become a member of the Illinois Bar,he carefully prepared his petition and in¬cluded letters of reference from a number ofinfluential friends. This is standardprocedure for a man trained in the stuffy artof bureaucratic communication in a postBritish-colonial university. In Cook County this is also standard procedure, but insteadof being perceived as a show of prestige it isseen as the effective use of "clout".Three days as an Assistant AttorneyGeneral with all the back scratching andpolitical in fighting that can be expected inIllinois caused Jafree to begin looking for anew job. Since it was assumed by hiscolleagues that he got the job through hisclout, he was allowed to use his office inwhatever manner pleased him, an oldtradition among those thought to be friendswith powerful machine politicoes.While in office Jafree caused commotionafter commotion. He felt that he wasdiscriminated against because he was theonly attorney in the office who was notassigned a personal secretary. Hedemanded a credentials check on a powerfulcolleague named Thomas Price who hassince disappeared because it wasdiscovered that he had assumed the life andreputation of an attorney who died in 1939.He protested the publication in the Nor¬thwestern Bar Review of an essay he hadwritten but that was published under thebyline of his boss, Attorney General WilliamScott. One year after he accepted theposition, his employment was terminated.Jafree has protested in the courts as lawsuits against the office of fhe States At¬torney General, his dismissal, defamitorystatements made about him in his letter ofdismissal, the assumption of his essay onthe grounds that he was an employee byWilliam Scott and the fact that WilliamScott advertises himself as the attorney forThe Grey City Journal is in need of writers to cover classical music - both on and offcampus.If you are interested please contact Mark Neustadt at the GCJ office (753-3265) orcome by for a visit.12—-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, November 4,1977*Jafree is more than a lawyer. He is a poet, artistphilosopher, management consultant qualifiedaccountant (from England), forward thinker, an¬thropologist linguist and comes from an ancientfamily traceable for 15 centuries. Jafree offers a newcultural perspective. Jafree is a minority that won'twag its tail. Let them try it; they might not like it.The LS cannot like a broken record or a baby whodropped its popsicle, keep on repeating I y repeating:"I want my LSAT" - this is a Pound of blood, theysimply will not get. psychological disorder.The court briefs that Jafree files, heconsiders original works of art and is gleefulat the thought that clerks in the states at¬torney's orfice collect and file them with thecare and thoroughness of an art museumcurator. Jafree, earlier in his artisticcareer, had lampooned just that attitudeheld by curators and art critics like AlfredBarr of the Museum of Modern Art in NewYork.Jafree's paintings and litigation share anumber of themes, his own blood is perhapsthe most notable and provocative of suchthemes. In his suits against the attorneygeneral of Illinois, Jafree submitted a ragsoaked in his own blood as evidence in thecase. He e> iained that William Scott hadtainted hir olood by defaming him in hisdismissal letter. This blood motif is rooted neglect of self-interest. This tendency andthe recognition given you by the art worldproduces some grandiosity in yourpresentation of self to others."This grandiosity can be expected from asuccessful artist, Jafree's aristocratic rootsgo deeper however. He was born into one ofthe oldest families in Pakistan. His familylinage is traced back to Muhammed theProphet. As a child he was terriblyprecocious, graduating from college at theage of 17, entering Who's Who a+ the age of21 due to his artistic reknown. In Pakistanthere is a proverb that can b< renderedphonetically as "honhar b.-wakaychickinay chickinay paat" and is translatedas great things are expected of those whoshow early talent.Jafree has demanded super human thingsfrom himself, because of this background.all residents of Illinois.In Kaplan's office on the ninth floor of theState of Illinois Building, is one four drawerfiling cabinet, two of the drawers containcourt records and other information aboutJafree. "I don't even know the man, but hemust think that the only thing'we do in theStates Attorney's office is moniter hislitigation", says Kaplan. About Jafree'sdismissal Kaplan said, "He was in¬competent as an attorney, he had neverbeen trained in the use of the laws of theUnited States or the State of Illinois, ofcourse we knew that when we hired him. Weexpected to train him, after all he did lookgood on paper. Some things just don't panout11Of course this litigation against the StateAttorney General's office is not the only setof complaints Jafree has pending. He statesthat at the moment he is pressing over 60law suits and complaints. Peter Goldberg aprivate investigator from Wisconsin whowas hired by the Kohler Co., another targetof Jafree's litigation, has hunted up 40 ormore such actions. Kaplan who becomeswide eyed when the subject is mentioned,says that Jafree must have "thousands" ofcomplaints outstanding or in the works. Ahighly placed administrator at theUniversity of Chicago Law School, yetanother litigant that Jafree has locked horns with, commented curtly about both Jafreeand his case. "Bonkers" he said.What are these insinuations and inuen-does? Who is Peter Goldberg fromWisconsin? And why is Herbert Kaplan thefirst assistant Attorney General for the stateof Illinois, keeping a dossier on a formeremployee?One answer to all of these questions issimply that Jafree is a rabid litigator, whosestyle and personality has rankled the legalprofession. One official in the State At¬torney's office has labled him "a kook."Many of Jafree's court briefs are writtenin free verse, and his much publicizedformal complaint against the University ofChicago Law School was written in Urdu.Both are excellent symptoms of his legaleccentricities.Jafree is proud of his legal ouvre. He seeshis litigation as a different way to expresshimself as an artist, "I have not painted inthree years, my litigation is my art, it is truepopular art." In fact his series of complaintsand law suits, all based on similar grounds,but with subtle variations due to the venueand particulars of each cash can be seen asthe logical way that Jafree the artist wouldgo about setting legal precedence. To someone like Herbert Kaplan such a pattern issimply a symptom of a seriousmrnMlMM, CCGUeliVajLIlUlilr MEtfBBEe * Only such people who would call out Nigger wereAAoses to walk past Civic Plaza even dare to denyJaffree's merit. Here not a Bloody Pakistan, here ishelluva American who wants his share of theAmerican Pie, not because he is hungry but becausethe pie deserves to be eaten by Jafree.in the "pain things" he painted in 1974 and ofcourse the homage to Wols that he painted inthe early 1960's in his own blood.His law suits are instigated by verypersonal problems, such as his dismissalfrom a job or a refusal to hire him. His earlypaintings, painted when he was 16 years old,are small and deeply personal. In both hislitigation and his paintings specificproblems are resolved when viewed as afacet of a more universal problem.Charles Bahn, Dean of the John JayCollege of Criminal Justice and apsycologist, discussed Jafree's personalityin a letter to him after an interview, "Themost outstanding trait that tends toseparate you from those around you relatesto your adherence to principle, even to the Such an heroic individual cannot fit into thestaid corporate world of the West. Perhapssuch individuals can only incubate in thepost colonial world. When they becomesuccessful they undoubtably come intoconflict with their society.Jafree has claimed that either he willsuccessfully defeat William Scott for theDemocratic nomination for States AttorneyGeneral or he will be killed by the pressuresof McCarthyism.These passages appeared in a court briefauthored by Jafree for the case of SyedJafree vs. The University of Chicago LawSchool.NOVEMBER 4 & 5The Fatal Glass off BeerAnimal CrackersCasino Royale 7:3<8:0<9:41The Chicago Maroon Friday, November 4,1977—13 PhotobyBenjaminNi)avis2«»1 SALE v<^°vr with this aduntil 7 7-75-77Hundreds of Men’s & Ladies ShirtsPay list price for 1, get 2nd for only $2.At least 25% off all other clothes (warm-ups, too!)HARPER COURT TENNIS SHOP5225 S. HARPER 363-3748Pro Shop Service - Discount PricesTENNIS • RACQUETBALL • SQUASH • BADMINTON Our heart felt thanks to NBC, CBS,and ABC on their new programmingThe Book CenterHarper CourtIt’s going to be a great year for reading!* vA 'M v , u &\ 'H ' ‘M \ * 4', - > V "MMWhI wm&mmsswmgasnmmMi ;;::S8 *S:>: ; x '"Illlll;::X-X1N:v' (M' iiimniibggkX> ^ ;^f§V's•v:f-Ixl: - '1 a 'W9rv££ * ,' - :e <iL?'Lv< /V' ^ ^W? Via; 4V '* IK3*__ 1y *■ - *\Ty%.t.$r Check boxes, clip out, mail to parents.Dear Mom and Dad,Things are swell here at college except, of course, 11ufood, which is so bad that I’m □ down to 91 lbs. □ living onsalted water □ sending samples to the biology lab □ hopingyou’ll buy me a prepaid Trailways ticket home to get a decentmeal.I sure could go for some of Mom’s good ol’ □ apple pie□ Riz de Veau a la Financiere □ blood transfusions □ Trail-ways tickets paid for at your local station and picked up atmine.Dad, next time we get together, I want to tell you□ about my part-time job □ how I suddenly realized what atruly wise and magnanimous fellow you are □ where I leftyour car last New Year’s Eve □ thanks for making this trippossible with a prepaid Trailways ticket.I also need some advice on □ a personal matter □ mybackhand □ where one can hire decent servants these days□ how to separate you from a few bucks for a prepaid Trail-ways ticket.Got to sign off now and go □ to class □ to pieces□ drop three or four courses □ to the Trailways station tosee if anyone sent me a prepaid ticket to get out of here forthe weekend.Love, •• •. m| *P.S..Just go to the Trailways station and pay for my ticket, tellthem who it’s for and where I am. I pick the ticket up herewhen I go to catch the bus.There i» a JS ,rrwr charge for prepaid nekei* The u«er an# be notified b. the neareii Trailwav* terminal *ht-n the nrkri in rradi Pm padround tnp nckf'% are good Ux one year from the dale of purchase Prepaid one »av tirkeia are good fi* An d*\s from the dale ol purihave ’■■.Wm *MM y'<\ vmmmi<W-".'ft.#,'.,ks 'v%' 'yr'/V;' -i'y "f- n <- Wm&Mm■ - -, jr-4 >||k ''*wsS&*W<ei■4 % L i 1 i i %': *'> ■.: ' • "*V* ' /;%% J ' & Pmm;,., i v,?k''%? . v - ■ yh&''fWz'Pv/y?, rMi;: £ / !# -/ , X ; mFor more* in formal ion rail Trail* a % - (312)782*6372 St *&14—The Chicago Maroon-Friday, November 4,1977, * \ + j j * «. * - ' fPaetoijTHE SPIRIT OF MOONLIGHTTangible moonlight, as if it could form a handto open a window and once inside the roomturn into a silver dancer.Dancing to a song made from an owl's hoot,wind over a brook,distant traffic.Frost drops from starsabove rural fields.Free animals move inside the illuminated night,their movements make natural pathsand twigs snap in time with the steady soundof streams as they curl forward.And the moonlight through the treesmakes for spaces in this music.Naked silver, a lustre .in the pine tinged atmosphere.Counting time as it goes and returns,the tempo of the breeze as it liftsand rustles the old leaves.Moonlight; moonlight,finding thin layers of glistening sapon the trunks of the great trees.The locusts' drone seems to carrya harmony which shifts ever so slightly.There in the combined scent and soundof the fall woodsthe dancing figure formed of moonlightgazes for a few moments at its glowing reflectionin a black pool.And moves across the paths of midnight creatures,the deer and the rabbits,watched by the yellow lamp like eyes of the owl.The very spirit of moonlight.By George DruryCopyright 1977. All rights reserved by the author.THE GREEN BOTTLEThe bottle, deep and dear — a rich greenmoves with the motion of the underwater currentsslowly drifting and twistingnear the bottom of the oceanmiles and milesfrom any shoreit lifts and spinsinches and then feetabove the sand baseand settles againcausing tiny grains of fine white sandto spiral silently _URGENT!URGENT!URGENT!URGENT!URGENT!URGENi *zFans for Ornette Coleman send *^telegrams to MAB at Ida Noyes Hall, |1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. |* (or stop those wrong thinking $*** members on the street).*tmGENT!URGENT!URGENT!URGENT!URGENT!URGEtfLEADERS***0Why wait yean? A f«wgood men and women canenter a world ofrttpontfbtitly and authorityolmctt immediately aftergraduation . . . through theMarine Corp« OfficerCandidate* Clan, fromOCC, men and women movequickly into a wide variety .of mteretting, rewording,and challenging fieldt,including aviationLearn how to lead. Learnhow to leod the be»t—UnitedState! Morinei. See yourMarine repreientotiveThe Morinet are looking fora few good menMarinesOfficer Selection536 S. Clark St.Chicago. II 60605AC 3T2 353-6692/3MrMsAddtessCityStateSchoolClass ofPhone rivaseItnne inlw nt<jhOnMu utdiyauoII OlcumstZipBirth Date 1IIIIIIIIIIIIt.J ALL TOGETHERAt One LocationTO SAVE YOU MORE!SPECIALDISCOUNT 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 LOCATION7234 Stony Island?Phone: 684-0400 *Open DeOy 9-9 P.M./ Set 9-5 P.M.Per* Open Saturday « 12 Moonupward as the bottle sitsmomentarily in a positionanother current liftsthe emerald bottleonce againonly slightly turningit one way then anotheras it glides pasta smooth miniature mountainrock formationand stringy growthsunlight filters thrumiles of waterreaches the bottleand gives a certain geometricsection of one of its curvesa mysterious yet natural glowBy George Druryw thout any soundCopyright 1975. All rights reserved by the author WithGINNICLEMMENSA Benefit Concert forCHICAGOCOUNSELING &IPSYCHOTHERAPYCENTER Friday November 4The Blue Gargoyle5.655 S. University8?30 p.m.Tickets:$3.00 advanceat SPIN IT RECORDS1444 E. 57th St.S3.50 door$2.50 students &senior citizens.The Chicago Maroon Friday, November 4, 1977—15Guide to film Masters o/ songPeter Pears andOsian Ellis appreciate the beauty of nuance in song thatBy Karen HellerAdmission to CE F and NAM films is $1.50.Admission to Doc films is $1.00 on Tuesdayand Wednesday and $1.50 on all other days.CEF, NAM and Doc films will be shown inQuantrell auditorium in Cobb hall.Dr. No (1963), directed by Terence Young.(Doc) An outrageously nonsensical and funfirst James Bond movie devoid of meaning,message or plot. As “naughty, natty andnifty" 007, Sean Connery must fight off evil,protect bombshells and spit out the mostwonderfully absurd dialogue (oozing withsexual puns). With a bikini-clad UrsulaAndress. Friday at 7:15 and 9:30.Marathon Man (1976), directed by JohnSchlesinger. (CEF). Admittedly a verybloody and often unnecessarily violent film,Schlesinger's most recent work is still agood thriller, always exciting and in¬teresting. Dustin Hoffman stars as agraduate history student at Columbia who iswriting on the Communist witch hunts of theFifties that drove his leftist father tosuicide. His older brother (Roy Scheider) isinvolved in Nazi witch hunts. LaurenceOlivier play evil incarnate; a Nazi dentistrich in diamonds from war bribes.Everyone gets a bit too involved in thissmall epic of persecution and intrigue.Martha Keller plays Hoffman's niftygirlfriend.Paisan (1946), directed by RobertoRossellini. (CEF) A stunning classic of Italian neo-Realist film. A series of sixdramatic incidents during the Allied warcampaign in Italy construct a terrifyingpicture of the disillusionment, the irony andsheer horror of strife. Rossellini bluntlyexposes the tragic chasms which openbetween good people during war. Hisdocumentary-style cinematography, con¬struction and a cast of mostly unknownItalian and American actors present aneffectively realistic vision of disillusion¬ment and oppression. Recommended.Sunday at 7:00 and 9:30.Man With a Movie Camera (1929),directed by Dziga Vertov. (NAM) One of themasterpieces of the Russian cinema, ManWith a Movie Camera gives a vivid pictureof Russian life and society in the late 1920's,while being at the same time an innovativeexamination of the possibilities of the filmmedium itself. By capturing the rhythms ofeveryday life in his editing, Vertov createda new form of documentary. Monday at 7:15and 9:30.Air Force (1943), directed by HowardHawks. (Doc) The adventures of the MaryAnn, an Army bomber, and the relation¬ships of her crew members. The co-pilotloves the bombardier's sister. The cynicbecomes a fighter when engaged in battle.There is no one star in the crew — all jointogether as a team in battle over the SouthPacific. With a screenplay by DudleyNichols and a cast including Gig Young,Arthur Kennedy and Harry Carey. JohnGarfield gives a stupendous but all to briefperformance. Tuesday at 8:00. The "Arts on the Midway" series sponsored by the University Extension hasalways taken the prize for inventive andwith it programming of concerts for thecampus audience. This year's seriesdirector Joan Cowan has outdone herself byoffering us some of the best and most ex¬citing programming in Chicago, and it allstarts next week when tenor Peter Pearsand harpist Osain Ellis walk onto theMandel Hall stage to open a very specialseries of song recitals called Masters ofSong.A song recital is an all too seldom happening in Chicago. A series of ten recitals byfive superb artists at prices students canafford is unbelievable and should make ushappy, joyful, and full of expectation. SoTuesday night will mark a milestone ofprogramming, and it will bring to campusthe Chicagoans who search for outstandingmusical events.The artists in the series—Peter Pears,Elly Ameling, Barbara Hendricks, JoanMorris, and Hermann Prey~are all aseager for this very unique musical encounter as the audience. Here is an opportunity for those who have earned areputation as the world's best to perform fora discerning audience, an audience that will is so unique.Another measure of this excellence is theinsterest of radio station WFMT. It will tapeall the concerts with the consent of theperformers and the university.What programs can we look forward to?Hermann Prey (April 24, 25) offering two ofthe greatest song cycles ever composed,Schubert's "Die Schoene Muellerin" and"Der Winterreise"; the return of EllyAmeling (February 21,23,25) who will singMozart concert arias with a 16 piecechamber ensemble as well as songs withpiano accompaniments by Dalton Baldwin.Special programs by Joan Morris (March11) and Barbara Hendricks (April 4, 8), andthe return of Peter Pears (Novembers, 10).All are renowned for outstanding artistryand dedication to perfection; the artists andprograms add up to one of the few musicalofferings in Chicago that looks really super,and this campus is fortunate to have them soaccessible.This arts series is so well known thatmany tickets have been sold for the series,however, both series and single tickets arestill available for all concerts at MandelHall and the Extension office. (Series $25,students $15; single concerts $7.50, students$4). Don't miss it./jJj S-V © @ © Q^ ^ (Ifr-SOG 0@©GOOOQjJ yV(byfcj -in;— , ! , ' . . . ^Chicago Maroon T-Shirts \on Sale, 3d fl Ida ^ oyes$4.00 Special ScreeningofMax Ophul’sMEMORY OF JUSTICEwith panel discussion followingSTANLEY KAPLAN, Prof., Law SchoolBERNARD MELTZER, James Parker HallProf., Law SchoolMAX PALEVSKY, Producer of “ Memoryof Justice”SAT., NOV. 12,12:00 NOONMANDELHALLFREE TICKETS AVAILABLE NOWAT REYNOLDS CLUB BOX OFFICEMon-Fri 9:30am-10:30pmSat 10:30am-4:30pmSun Noon-4:30pmOnly 2 per I.D. please.1A—The Chicago Maroon-Friday. November 4,1977’r CalendarF ridayBlack friars: Bake sale, 9-5pm, Reynoldsclub.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Faculty-student luncheon, 12:15, Ida Noyes Hall;Arabic Circle, “Studies in ArabicMusicology; Traditional Ballads and PopularSongs,” Galal El-Nahal, 3:30 pm Kelly 411;Persian Society, 3:30 pm, Harper 135,discussions in Persian.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “ShockWave Equation of State of Calcium Oxide to1.5 Mbar,” Raymond Jeanloz, 1:30 pm, HindsLaboratory Auditorium.Saouth Asia Seminar: “The Rebirth ofFreedom in India,” The Honorable NaniPalkhivla, The Ambassador of India to theU.S., 4 pm, Foster Lounge.Hillel: Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner, 5:45,Hillel; lecture - “Children of HolocaustSurvivors: A Unique Perspective,” 8:30 pm,Hille.Spartacus Youth League: “Anti-ApartheidRevolts and Imperialist Moralism,” JosephSeymour, 7:30 pm, Reynolds Club Lounge.Lectures in Armenian CulturalHistory: “The Historical Development of theArmenian Question,” Richard Hovanissian,8:00 pm, Regenstein A-ll.Contemporary Mathematics from a HistoricalViewpoint: “The Levy problem,” J.E.Fornaess, 4 30 pm, Eckhart 133.Christian Forum: “Those Radical Christiansat Antioch,” 8 pm, Brent House.Baha’i Club: Informal talk, Prof Peter Olver,8 pm, East Lounge, Ida Noyes Hall.ARTSPoetry Reading: Robert Bly, 8 pm, Museumof Contemporary Art, 237 E. Ontario.DOC Films: “Dr. No,” 7:15 and 9:30 pm,Cobb Hall. Winter Court Theatre: “Butley,” 8:30 pm,Reynolds Club New Theatre.SaturdayChange Ringing: Handbells, 10-11 am; towerbells, 11 - pm, Mitchell Tower Ringing Room.Compton Lecture Series: “Electrical EnergyFrom the Sun,” Joseph O’Gallagher, 11 am,Eckhart 133.Hillel: Orthodox Services, 9:15 am; Movie -“The Dreamer,” 8 pm, Hillel.Macho All-breed Cat Fanciers: Cat Show -Benefit for Feline Research, 10 - 5 pm, Win¬dermere Hotel.UC Sailing Club: Party, 4 - 6 pm, EastLounge, Ida Noyes Hall.Wargamers’ Club: Meeting & games, 7 pm -12 am, Ida Noyes Hall.Crossroads: Saturday Night Dinners, 6 pm,5621 S. Blackstone.SPORTSUC Men*s Soccer Team vs Purdue University- Calumet, 10 am, Stagg Field.UC Men’s Football Team vs Milton College,1:30 pm, Stagg Field.ARTSCEF Films: “Marathon Man,” 7 and 9:30 pm,Cobb Hall.Court Theatre: “Butley,” 8:30 pm, ReynoldsClub New Theatre.SundayRockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy Com¬munion, 9 am; Annual University MemorialService, “The Time Between,” E. SpencerParsone, 11 am, Rockefeller Chapel.Hillel: Lox and Bagels brunch, 11 am, Hillel.Crossroads: Bridge, 3 pm; SpecialCelebration of newly completed facilities,open house after 4 pm, 5621 S. Blackstone.Free Vegetarian Festival: Hare KrishnaTemple, 1014 Emerson, Evanston, 5:30 pm.SATURDAYNOV. 5th10:30 p.m.EFENDI Restaurant*atop the Hyde Park Bank1525 East 53rd St.ADMISSION $1.00per personVz price with this ad. Tai Chi Chu'an: classes, 6:30 pm, 4945 S.Dorchester.FOTA: Meeting to plan poetry events for thefestival, 8 pm, Reynolds Club LoungeARTSCEF Films: “Paisan,” 7 and 9:30 pm, CobbHall.Winter Court Theatre: “Butley,” 8:30 pm,Reynolds Club New Theatre.MondayCommittee on Social and OrganizationalPsychology Colloquium: “Stress, Per-Photo by Ursula Schneider now on displayat the Bergman Gallery through Nov. 12 sonality, and Health,” Susan Kabasa, 1:30,Green 117.Microbiology Seminar: Dr. John Goldman,3:30 pm, Cummings 11th floor seminar room.Department of Chemistry: “AmorphousSolid Water,” Prof S.A. Rice, 4 pm, Kent 103.Ki-Aikido: 6:00 pm, Bartlett Gym WrestlingMats.Chess Club: meeting, 7 pm, Ida Noyes.Women’s Rap Group: meeting. 7:30 pm, 3rdfloor Blue Gargoyle.Folkdancers: dancing, 8 pm, Ida Noyes HallARTSHumanities Collegiate Division: “Waitingfor Godot,” 4 pm, Quantrell Auditorium -Cobb Hall, free.NAM Films: “Man With a Movie Camera,”7:15 and 9:30 pm, Cobb Hall.TuesdayEpiscopal Church Council at Chicago.Evensong, 4:30 pm, Bond Chapel.Danforth Fellows: Sack Lunch, 12 noon,Swift 209.Hillel: Students for Israel, bring bag lunch12 noon, Hillel.The South Asian Student Association:“Social Trauma & Religious Response TheSmallpox Goddess & Her Texts, E.C.Dimock, Jr, 7:30 pm, Foster LoungeWoodward Court Lecture-DiscussionSeries: “Self and Circumstance,” KarlWeintraub, 8:30 pm, 5825 S. Woodlawn.International House Folkdancing: teaching &refreshments, 7:30 pm, I-House.UC Science Fiction Club, meeting, 8 pm, IdaNoyes.Southside Creative Writers’ Workshop:Meeting, 8 pm, 5744 S. Harper, P. Long.ARTSDOC Films: “Air Force,” 8 pm, Cobb Hall.University Extension Division: “Arts on theMidway” Master: of Song Series: PeterPears, tenor, and Osian Ellis, harp, 8:30 pm.Mandel Hall.It’s our 10th anniversary andwe would like you to help uscelebrate! We are interviewingNovember 10th at the Office ofCareer Counseling & PlacementUniversity of ChicagoConsumer Systems2107 Swift DriveOak Brook. Illinois 60521An Equal Opportunity Employ*' M/F Reynolds Club, rm. 200Let’s explore your careerin computer science.The Chicago Maroon Friday, November 4,1977—17Could you bea nuclear expert?(If so,you could earn more than$600 a month your Senior year.)Even if you're a Junior engineering or physicalscience major, it's not too early to start thinking aboutyour career. And if you think you've got what it takes tobecome an expert in nuclear power, the Navy has aspecial program you should look into right away.Why right away? Because if you're selected, we'llpay you more than $600 a month during your Senioryear. (If you are presently a Senior, you can still join theprogram.)What then? After graduation, you'll get nucleartraining from the men who run more than 70% of thenuclear reactors in the country — Navy men. And anopportunity to apply that training in the Navy'snuclear-powered fleet.Apply now for membership in the Navy's most elitebranch, the Nuclear Power trained community. There isno obligation incurred by application.The Navy also has officer positions available onconventionally powered surface ships, in aviation, civilengineering, and business administration.For more information about our programs, payscales, or applications, see the Navy OfficerRepresentative when he visits your Career PlacementOffice onNovember 9th, 1977or call: LT Steve Boaz (312) 657-2169 (collect).NAVY. IT'S NOT JUST A JOB,IT'S AN ADVENTURE.The Chicago ('luster of Theological SchoolsInvites Your ParticipationIn The First Of Four Symposia OnETHICS IN INTERPROFESSIONAL PERSPECTIVES“MINISTERS & SOCIAL WORKERS:ALLIES or ANTAGONISTS?”(Ethical Decisions in People-Centered Professions)FeaturingCARL S. DUDLEYProfessor of Church and CommunityMcCormick Theological SeminaryEARL L. DURHAMAsst. Prof. & Chmn. of Social Development CurriculumSchool of Social Service AdministrationUniversity of ChicagoTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 107:00 - 8:30 P.M.First Floor Loungethe chlCOQO McCormick Theological Seminarycluster Of 56th and WoodlawntheologicalSchools No Admission Charge Kung-Fu Every SundaySt. Paul s 6:30;4945 S. DorchesterEnter on 50th Streeta / t ( « v { )3 SALES with lservice is ourBUSINESS n<P REPAIR specialistson IBM.SCM, §€ Olympia & othersFree Estimate >A Ask about ourRENTAL withn option to buyNew & Rebuilt A<oj TypewritersCalculatorsDictatorsAdders <4-V 4V U. of C. Bookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave. YY 753-3303MASTER CHARGE <30e BANKAMERICARD Vo £ 6 C - " * t t HYDE PfflK PIPE RND TOBRCCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim’’Mon. - Sat. 9-8; Sun. 12-5PipesPine imnnrteH Hinarettes CiaarsBrent House University Ministry5540 WoodlawnDAVID BEVINGTONDepartment of English“Shakespeare on Love and Marriage”Sunday Nov. 65:30 pm Social Hour6:00 pm Supper (SI.25)7:00 pm LectureWhen in Southern California visit u MIVEPSAL STUDIOS TOURAN MCA COMPANYHENRY SALLYWINKLER FIELDA TURMAN-FOSTER COMPANY PRODUCTION"HEROES"Co-starring HARRISON FORD Written by JAMES CARABATSOSMusic by IACK NITZSCHE and RICHARD HAZARDDirected by IEREMY PAUL KAGAN Produced bv DAVID FOSTERand LAWRENCE TURMANA UNIVERSAL nc TL'RF. PGPMWTAlGUHMNCtSUOKTU-e®.>0* «• *o> w ./nan >0i r*i nuuiwir!TEC HNICOLOR* t*• OP'.Av c*»? *ruO»OiOriginal sound »tac* amiable e»ciu>ivety or mCA Records 8~Tapes! * *SLdltTS TOOkYMATER TOWER 4 FORD CITY 3 GOLF/MIU2CHICAGO South wait 58? 1838 Nilot 296 4500CHICAGO Naer North 649 5790/MERCURY ORL4NDSQUKRE 3 YORKTOWN3Elmwood Park 435 4515 Orland Park 349*000 Lombard 496*01018—The Chicago Maroon-Friday, November A, 1977Yes.You an be good at passing tests that are meaningless to you.You can be good at selling encyclopedias that you know are interior.Ultimately, you can even be good at a profession that youdon’t rally believe in.You can be good. But for some people, being good just isn’tgood enough.For the people who brew Busch beer, it isn'tgood enough. That’s why, at Anheuser-Busch, we persistin brewing Busch beer just one way—the natural way.We franklv believe that’s the best way to brew beer.And when you believe in what you’re doing,you just naturally do it better.Try a Busch.We believe you’ll agree.BUSCH\V hen you believe in what you’re doing,you just naturally do it better.The Chicago Maroon-Friday, November 4,1977—19 Busch Inc St Lchji* MoIM’s begin playoffsBy Howard SulsV-ballers win last 4 gamesBy JohnPomidorWalloo’s Wacks defeated Chicago 7 6-0in overtime to win the independent un¬dergraduate division in intramural football.After Kurt Jansen’s diving interception inthe end zone sent the game into overtime,Mike Leblanc caught a Joe Cullen pass toend the game. The game was dominated bythe strong Wack defense which had sevensacks. The Wacks face the Undergraduatedivisional champion for the Undergraduatetitle.Phi Gamma Delta clinched the red leagueby virtue of Hitchcock’s forfeit, while in theblue league Psi Upsilon is prepping for theirplayoff game with games against Dudley(30-0) and Upper Rickert. Over in the whiteleague Henderson edged a tough ThompsonNorth team 19-9 to clinch.Action in the green league featured theShorey-Fishbein rematch, won by Fishbein,but Thompson South was declared cham¬pion due to their earlier defeat of Fishbein.The customary tie-breaker playoffs are notbeing played this year because of budgetcuts.In the graduate red league the WabunoBay Bucs rolled over Mathews 32-0, leavingtheir final game with Nonsense Suppressorsas a mere formality to the division cham¬pionship. Over in the blue league, the LegalEagles lost to the Snorkelers 6-0 and SugarBears 15-6, while Elan edged Black Sheep13-12 to set up their confrontation with theSugar Bears, who had a tough time withLaughlin 213-7. The Elan-Sugar Bears game was played yesterday but scores wereunavailable at press time.In Women’s Table Tennis, Cathv Phillipscame back to defeat Janet Torrey 15-21, 21-15, 21-19. Sylvia Kuzmak, the graduatechampion, forfeited to Miss Phillips, givingher the University title.In Men’s Tennis Dean Kravis defeated R.Stockton by forfeit to win the IndependentDivision, and the right to face the divisionalchampion for the Undergraduate title.Co-ed Recreational Volleyball action sawDeGowin defeat Dodd-Mead for the title.Swimming intramurals were held thisweek. Upper Wallace won the women’s titlewith Shorey and Upper Flint finishing aclose second and third respectively.Breckinridge’s Ellen Moratti set newrecords in the 100 yard freestyle and the 40yard freestyle, finishing in a dead heat withJudy Banks in the later event. In the 40 yardbutterfly Betty Evans of Bradbery edgedEllen Moratti in record time of 25.1 seconds.Upper Wallace took the sweatshirt relay inrecord time of 1:35.5.The men’s swimming was won by Shorey,with Lower Rickeet and Fishbein a distantsecond and third. New records were set byJenkins in the 40 yard breaststroke and PhyPsi in the 160 yard free relay. Phy Sci alsogot a good performance form Mark Jaegerin the 40 yard backstroke. ThompsonNorth’s Steve Fredericks took the 100 yardfreestyle, and Shorey won both the 80 yardsweatshirt and 80 yard inner tube relay, thelatter in record time of 1:12.2. Co-ed resultswere uncompiled at press time. The women’s volleyball team continuedits preparation for the possible statetournament play last week, beating Rosaryana Concordia colleges last Thursday, andOlivet Nararene and Illinois BenedictineSaturday.The Maroons had little trouble againstRosary, winning 15-13, 15-5. The matchagainst Concordia was the most importantpart of the evening, as the teachers were 6-0in their conference. After trading off 15-11scores, the Maroons came back to prevail,15-10. Coach Rosalie Resch cited steadyteam play, with few errors, as the season forthe victory.The spikers had another dual meetTuesday against Olivet Nazarene andIllinois Benedictine. They got themomentum started against Nazarene, 15-5,15-7, and 15-11, and finished by crushingIBC, 15-6,15-1. Resch was especially pleasedby the team’s performance againstBenedictine, who had just come back intheir contest with Olivet, and had themomentum in their favor.“We didn’t let it bother us, we just keptplaying well. We were hitting, spiking, andsetting well, and our services were strong,’’aid the coach.Resch is optimistic about the team’schances for tournament seeding this year The victories last week left the Maroonswith a 13-5 record, 4-2 in conference. Theconference losses came against St. Xavier,who finished without a conference loss, andNorth Park, who also was 4-2.“I think we belong in the playoffs, saidResch “The question is bewteen NorthPark and us, and I think we can beat them.The victory against Concordia was asignificant one.”If the women do go to tournament play,they will travel to Elsa, Ill., November 11.Three pools of four teams will face eachother on Friday night, the top two teamsfrom each pool advancing. The top two ofthese six games will have byes, while theother four will play in the semifinals onSaturday, when the finals and consolationgames will also take place.All this means a lot of games, and CoachResch is relying on a strong performancefrom her bencn to tinish at or near the topShe pointed to freshmen Melody Frazier andNadya Shmavonian as both capable ofgetting the job doneLooking back, Coach Resch was pleasedby the team’s performance this season. “Wegraduated two top seniors, Laura Silveusand Claire Omer, but kept playing well. Wehad a good schedule, 19 games in all. This isabout as much as the team members canplay without suffering academically,” shesaid.SportsUndefeated Redman take Chicago, 35-15By Mark Penningtonwith Jacob RachlinPeople who believe in signs could havepredicted that Saturday’s game between theChicago Maroons and the Ripon Redmenwould, like the stockmarket crash of 1929, bea disaster. The Maroons had lost their lasttwo games by a combined score of 104-6 Thegreat Chicago crash of 1977 didn’t develop,even though the Maroon lost 35-15.No team can feel joy in losing, but theMaroons can at least feel some dignity.Ripon is the odds on favorite to win theMidwest Athletic Conference’s Easterndivision, so it was an encouraging sign thatthe Maroons took the lead in a game for thefirst time in three weeks on their firstpossession.After Dale Friar returned the openingkickoff to the Chicago 33. the triple optionoffense turned loose all its versatility to ripout a 67 yard scoring drive. Following two running plays that left theMaroons slightly worse off in field positionthan they had been on the first snap,quarterback Mark Meier tossed a 14 yardpass to wide receiver Chip Pfaller for theinitial first down.Three plays later, facing third and fourafter runs by fullback Mark Ramirez andhalfback Friar, Meier hit Pfaller foranother first down on a 10 yard pass.Runs by Ramirez and the other backfieldmember, Nick Filippo, meant another firstdown. The Maroons threatened to score afirst quarter touchdown for the first time intheir last three gamesFilippo hustled for five, Meier for noneOn third down Meier got five more, and,with the help of a fumble and a recovery, afirst down on the Ripon 18.On the next play Ramirez took the ballinside and scooted for the corner of theendzone Touchdown Chicago. Scott Jansenhit his first extra point in the last three games, breaking another Chicago trend.After the kick, Ripon showed why they arethe best. Ignoring a penalty that set themback to their own 17, the Redmen marchedstraight for the endzone. The Ripon scoredin 11 plays, the kick was good, and the gamewas knotted at 7.The Ripon drive was basic football. Thestar of the show' was Jeff Johnson, the seniorquarterback. Ripon’s regular running backswere injured and didn’t make the trip, butthe substitutes in the “I” backfield made upthe slackDeep back Bill Eddy blew between thetackles, setting up excursions to the outsidein the form of Johnson engineered optionplays. Johnson also passed twice to flashy6’4” split end Art Peters, the second time for20 yards and the touchdown.Chicago couldn’t pick up a first down forthe rest of the half, missed their one at¬tempted pass, and was only barely inpositive yardage for plays run after theinitial possession.A fumbled punt return aborted oneprospective Ripon drive. A classic Maroongoal line stand stymied another.A minute and a half into the secondquarter, the Redmen took a Chicago punt ontheir own 33 yardline and drove to theMaroon 12 yard line Eddy carried the ballfor the third straight time, to the 10, thenagain down to the three.With third and one on the Maroon three,Chicago faced the prospects of at least firstand goal on the two, and maybe a touch¬down. Eddy carried again; nothing. ThenJohnson kept; nothing. Chicago’s valiantdefenders allowed not an inch.The next Ripon drive led to a score.Johnson threaded the Maroon pass defensefor 53 yards in the air, completing four out offour to ends Peters and Dick Boya. Thecircus sei up a run oy uienn Wright tromone yard away for the second touchdown.Chicago trailed 14-7 at the halfRipon took the opening kickoff for thethird quarter. Jeff Johnson and companyput on an exhibition of power football, facingonly one third down during the drive - onMike Lingner and Joel Olchefske put a heavy rush on the Ripon quarterback(football pictures by John Wright and David Jaffe)20-:-The Chicago Maroon- Friday* Wovehnber 4,1977 Janet Sullivan goes in the air to return theball while Janet Torrey and Teresa Friendwatch. (Photo by Jeanne Dufort)which Eddy rambled 15 yards for the touch¬down.Chicago immediately returned the ball toRipon. A Meie: pass was picked off bylinebacker Bill Schnese Johnson trotted outto connect with receiver Gary Pavlovich forinsurance points on the next play.Then it was “who wants to play” time forRipon as they showed off three more of theirseven quarterbacks and a host of substitutesfor the rest of the game The second stringsiqual caller, Pete Nesius, threw a touch¬down pass to fellow reserver A1 Bednerekfor the final Ripon touchdown at thebeginning of the fourth quarter.Chicago, going with the first stringers,and not really having enough people tosubstitute much no matter what the score,finally got Dale Friar untracked Friardashed 53 yards on four carries after thefinal Ripon touchdown, setting up MarkMeier's 1 yard run for the Maroon’s lastscore. Friar bulled for a two point con¬version, making the final score 35-15.Chicago’s next opponent is non-conference Milton, next Saturday at 1:30 onStagg Field. The game can be heard on WH-PK-FM, 88.3.Booters win 1, lose 2, tieBy David WilkinsonWithin one week the Maroons played oneof their best games of the season, a 2-1victory7 over Northwestern, held an un¬defeated Carlton college team to two goalsin a 2-0 loss, finished a delayed overtimeperiod from an earlier game against LakeForest that ended in a 0-0 tie, and finally lost5-1 to a group of highly skilled soccerplayers from Illinois Institute ofTechnology'.During most of this period the Maroonswere without their starting goalkeeper,Matt Rebole, who has a broken thumb Butmore than Rebole, the team missed rest;Chicago played the Carlton game withoutsubstitutions. The lack of rest showed in themost recent games against IITIn the first five minutes IIT’s ScarletHawks showed both amazingly adep'passing and patience in working to s ‘t u,the best possible shot on Maroon .jalie,Steve Cha. During this period Ma-ocndefenders had to use almost every t oitheir bodies except their hands and arms tokeep the ball from going into the net Theball was constantly in the Maroon goal areaBrief reprieves came when the ball wentover the end line, but these gave I IT-dangerous corner kicks and kept theMaroon defense and midfield in almost atotal defensive stateAfter IIT's first goal, the Maroons couldonly control the ball for brief periods Thestrong IIT offense finally scored theMaroons to drop one of their midfieldersback to a defensive position midwaythrough the first half While providing astronger defense, this formation cut off theoffense and defenseIncessant comer kicks from the Hawks, one of which bounced off a Maroon player’shead and onto the goal, kept Chicago fromever taking control of their part of the gamein the first halfThe second half Maroons fought IIT forcontrol of the game’s tempo sometimesresembling the way they played againstNorthwestern At times the Hawks wereforced to bring five players back into a loosedefensive wall It was not until the last tenminutes, when IIT scored two of their threesecond half goals, that the Hawks regaineddominance and could rely on their in¬dividually skilled but strategicallyprimitive offense to produce a formidableattack.Chicago is scheduled to play PurdueUniversity (Calumet) this Saturday at 10a m. and again next Wednesday againstDePaul for their final two games of theseason Both games are at home and will beplayed at Stagg Field.Pete Wendel tries to avoid touching the ball with his hands as Tomas Baumillerwatches. (Photo by Carol Studenmund) with Nick FilippoMark Meier executes the option against Ripon while Dan Cermak (24) sets toblock. The Redman beat Chicago 35-15.Sport ShortsrHoliday B-Ball; re fsW’ith the anticipated November 13thopening of the Field House, the Intramuraldepartment is going ahead with theHoliday basketball season, which wasearlier under consideration to be droppeddue to lack of facilities.Holiday basketball, for those new to theschool, is kind of like the NBA; teams areput in small leagues where they play eachother and then everybody makes theplayoffs. The leagues only determinewhich of four play-off brackets a team isput in, A through D according to ability.Entry blanks are due next Thursday,October 10th, along with a $10 forfeit feeand a reliable official.Due to problems with officials, the IMdepartment has made even tighterrequirements. All basketball officialsmust attend a clinic next Friday night,November 11th, at 7pm in Bartlett Gym.Refs must show up for all games they arescheduled to ref. Failure to comply withthese regulations will result in a loss offorfeit fee for that ref’s designated team,and/or his team being thrown out of theleague.Entries for co-ed volleyball along with a$10 forfeit fee are also due next Thursday.O'Brien, ruggerswreck WisconsinThe Chicago Rugby-Football team A-side downed a team from U. of W isconsin21-0 last Saturday in Washington ParkBack Dick O'Brien led the wav for theruggers scoring two trys. an extra point,and a penalty kick for 13 of the A-sides 21points. Forward Steve Stwora and TomBogenschild rounded out the Chicagoscoring, as each scored a trv.Club President Bill Patterson called itan “extremely well played match ”Patterson specifically mentioned the playof Marty Simon Simon usually playshooker on the B-side, but the regular A-side hooker was sick Saturday, so Simonstepped in and did what Patterson called“a fine job. ”The Ruggers play their last home gameof the autumn season tomorrow at 2:00 inWashington Park against the NationalCollege of Chiropractors. Football notesMWAC East Division StandingsLawrence W L3 u Pts.159 Opp.12Ripon 3 0 117 15Lake Forest 1 2 48 79CHICAGO 1 3 48 153Beloit 0 3 14 127Last weeks scores:Ripon 35, at Chicago 15Beloit 0. at Lawrence 56Tomorrow’s games:Lawrence vs. RiponLake Forest vs. BeloitMilton at Chicago (Non-Con.) .Dale Friar was the sixth leading rusherin the conference as of last Friday,..AnABC news story about small collegefootball which includes Chicago,' isscheduled to be aired at 5:30 tomorrow onChannel 7.IM Top Ten1 Wabuno Bay Buccaneers: (5) 502. Sugar Bears 423. Elan 404. Phi Gamma Delta ; .345. PsiU ' 326. Black Sheep : 307. Henderson 288 Wal loo's Wacks 99 Thompson South - 410. Mathews ! 2Votes: Chicago 7. Filbey. Hitchcock. Fish-bein. Nonsense SuppressorsFirst place votes in parentheses.IHass receivesA.I), awardWalter L Hass, former Director ofAthletics and Men’s football coach, wasnamed to the College Athletic DirectorsHall of Fame. Hass was one of ten retiringathletics directors to receive such anaward at a recent NACDA convention inLas VegasHass retired after the 75-76 school year. X-coun trymen fifthChicago’s cross country team placedfifth in their seven-team invitational meetlast Saturday in Washington Park with ateam score of 128. Wabash College won themeet with a low of 40 team points, whileMark Olson of second-place Spring ArborCollege won the race, covering the four-mile distance in 19:52.8 minutes, andleading his team to a 52 point totalNorth Central’s ‘B' squad and a teamfrom Wheaton college also finished aheadof the Maroons with scores of 65 and 94respectively, while U. of Missouri (StLouis) and North Park college brought upthe rear with 152 and 184 scores.Pete Smith led the Maroons, all six ofwhom finished within 51 seconds of eachother. Smith was 17th overall with a timeof 21:06. followed by Dave Taylor at 18thwith a time of 21: 11. Jim Thvedt, MarshallSchmitt. Jim Pearson, and Tim Bastianrounded out the Chicago field placing 26,34, 35, and 37 respectively.Coach Haydon was pleased with histeams running, though he did mention thatSchmitt ran a little slow, probably due toillness coupled with living with the plasterdust in the Shoreland HotelHaydon will take all six of last week'srunners plus Lester Savit to the conferencemeet tomorrow. Stickwomento tourneyIt was another rough week for thewomen's field hockey team as theydropped their last two regular seasonmatches: a 4-0 loss against Wheaton athome, and a 5-0 drubbing from the “B”team at Northern Illinois.While coach Delores Larkin didn't havemuch to say about the Wheaton game, shew as pleased with some of the play againstNIU, Chicago’s toughest opponent of theseason Larkin mentioned Monica Jonesand Cathy Moore as offensive standouts,while Donna Cioffi and Anna Molinaroplayed a strong game on defenseThe team is traveling to DeKalb todayfor the North Central College Associationselection tournament. The Maroons willface teams from U. of WisconsiniWhitewater). Valpraiso. and Rockfordover the weekend During the tournament,the best players from all the teamsrepresented will be selected to play on anall-star team Maroon players ColeenCacic and Cathy Phillips made all the all-star B squad last yearThe NCCA tourney will be the lastcompetition of the year for the team, andfinal games for seniors Marilyn Redman.Mary Logan, and Coleen CacicCathy Phillips and Carol Moore try to control the ball. Chicago goes to the NCCAselection tournament this weekend. (Photo by Jeanne Dufort)♦ J.. Jpe Chicago Maroon, -JFritia^ ppv^mper, 4,497ft 21If you can’t fly Continental,you may have to stay after school.Let us take you away with our economical discount fares.It doesn’t take a course in economicsto know that Continental is the way to gofor the holidays. Because were pioneers inthe area of discount fares.Like our Night Coach prices? Fly atnight and save a full 20% off the cost ofa regular Day Coach ticket.Or. if you’re off to Los Angeles, you’llsave a bundle with our Super Coach fare—just $99 one way—and no restrictions!And only Continental has EconomyFares everywhere we fly—save 10% just byskipping a meal.No matter where you fly in ContinentalsWe really move our USA —north, south, east or west—we’ve gota great schedule and a discount fare to fityour budget. And you’ll still get the kind ofservice Cont inental is famous for.For more information about our money¬saving discount fares, call your campus rep.travel agent, or Continental at 686-6300. else¬where in Illinois Toll Free at (800) 072-7896.And remember, if you can't fly Continental,try to have a nice trip anyway.•Nijihl Coach Faresi«oodonl\on flights designated by Continentalleaving between 9:00 PM and 7:00 AM.CONTINENTAL AIRLINESThe Proud Bird with the Golden Tail.22 The Chicago Maroon - Frida/, November 4,1977CLASSIFIED ADSSPACE Moving sale, bookcases, books, pic-tureframes, paintings, prints, pottery,Responsible post graduate coupleformer faculty members are lookingfor a place for next 2 possible 3quarters. Will sublet, Housesit, apt.sit, plant and pet sit Will pay rent. sleeping bag, air kmattress, colemanstve, -elec fans, work table, desk byworkbench 66x24 also 4 drawer chest,small tables, clothes, jeans. All cheapSat., Nov. 5,5428 Blackstone 10-1.Call 493 8127. 71 TOYOTA COROLLA 1600 cc Newbatt, clutch, brakes, exhaust, FMradio. Tom 288 6304.APARTMENT available 11/15. Onebedroom. English basement Near UCand public trans. Across from park.Newly decorated $235. Call eves.684 8556. Linda. 70 Capri 4 spd. 65,000 mi. Needs somerepairs. $200/offer. 947-9079.Female roommate wanted for 3bedroom furnished apt., 56th & Univ.Available Dec. 1, call 643-2454. PEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK Illustration of all kinds,lettering, hand addressing for invitations, etc. Noel Price. 493-2399.RESEARCHERS Free lance artistspecializes in just the type of graphicwork you need. Noel Price. 493-2399.TYPING SERVICE/HYDEPARK/538 6066 after 5:00p.m.For Experienced Piano Teacher of allLevels Call 947 9746.FRENCH native coll tchr offers tutoring - all levels - exp with lang req -class for kids being organized. Ph.324 8054.Lg 1 bedroom apt. avail. Nov. 15th. 4rooms. 56th 8. Everett. Rent $211/Mo.Call 955-5839 or 753 8191, ask for Susan.House in Beverly Shores IN on *wofenced lots, 3 blocks from Lake. 3bdrms., lVi baths, part basement,attached garage ALL furnishingsincluded. Immediate possession.Future National Park leasebackpossible. Call Renard at CallahanRealty. 219 926 4298Roommate wanted in Hyde Park apt.Rent 92.50/mo. Call Melinda 4934)632.Wanted for winter qtr. or can occupyimmed.: apt., attic, room, orCoachhouse with kit priv in Hyde Park- Kenwood for teacher writger, willrent, exchange or combination of, call493-4833. David Garlovsky 8 a.m. 9a.m. only. Nursing student desires babysittingjobs in the evenings. Phone 324 7858and leave message for Judith.SKILLED SEAMSTRESS needs extramoney, what do YOU needO 1 doalmost anything, hemming, mending,alterations, and production of camping gear clothes and toys. Janet642-91S8.Great 1 bedroom unfurnikshedapartment ON CAMPUS (Marriedstudent housing). $l69/mo. Immediateor delayed occupancy available 6673699 evenings.PEOPLE WANTED SCENESFlea markef and Rummage sale BrynMawr Community Church 7000 S. Jef¬fry Blvd. 324 2403. Sat,. Nov. 5. 9 a m4p.m.WELCOME TO BAZAAR! FeaturingChinese food: egg rolls, won ton andmany others, bakery goods and giftitems Sat., Nov. 12, 11 a.m. 6 p.m.,S144 S. Cornell, Hyde Park, ChristianReformed Church.Wargamers' Club moves meeting to7:00 Saturday in Ida Noyes.MEDICI .CONTINENTALBREAKFASTCome to the Medici Sunday morningth 9:30 1 and enjoy Sunday papers,fresh orange juice, homemadesweetrolls, fresh fruit, homemadeyogurt and coffee. All you can eat for$1.95.PAN PIZZADELIVEREDThe Medici Delivers from 5-10:30weekdays, 5-11 weekends, 667 7394Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourself.Get It Done... i PIZZAPLATTER1440I.SMMl *>2000J FAST DELIVERYAND PICKUP• •Test Preparation ForLow School Admission TostGrod. Management Adm. TestGraduate Record ExaminationMedicai College Adm. TestDental Aptitude TestW! MAKE THE DIFFERENCE782-21857 S. DEAR BORN-CHICAGO*560 N. SHERIDAN RD,Use Maroon ClassifiedsSubjects wanted forPsycholinguisticsExperiments. Will be paid. Toregistercall 753-4718HOUSECLEANER. Lite work. 4h r s awk. Student preferred. $3.25/hr.Opposite Pierce. Faculty cpi.241-5164 nt/ 753-8624 days.Someone to drive ChevroletImpala to Palm Beach, Fla.between Dec. 10 and Dec. 15. Willpay for gas and oil. Call 642-0621.Experienced typist for realestate office. Must have goodgeneral office skills. Excellentsalary and benefits. Call Mrs.Goldsborough, 493-3754.Part time dental assistant hrs. 2to 6 p.m., experience preferred,life typ - will train qualifiedperson. Loc - Hyde Park BankBldg. Phone MI3-9607.Were you a collegiate rowerbefore coming to UC? Women'sCrew is looking for assistantcoaches. Salary negotiable. Call493-5260. between 5-7, 10-11 p.m.Part-time babysitter wanted inmy home days - lues., Wed. antfthurs. Phone 955-9141 or 288-5281.Child care person wanted Tuesor Thurs 12-5:30 p.m. for 2children $3/hr. References req.Ph. 955 6588. ,Sales stockroom position, parttime. Model Camera is lookingfor one or two alert people w/abasic knowledge of photographyand the ability to deal w/num-bers and people in an intelligent,accurate and timeiy fashion. Nophone calls. Please stop in, fillout an application if you fulfillthese basic requirements. 1342E. 55th. ; . •Harper Square Child Care Ctrfull day child developmentprogram for children 7Vi - xdgtn.Cali538-4041.FOR SALECollegiate Research PapersThousands on file All academic subjects. Send $1.00 for mail ordercatalog. Box 25918Z, Los Angeles, CA90025, 213-477-8474QUALITY XEROX COPIES, 8 centsea. 1st Unit Ch 5650 Woodlawn, hours9 5, 7 IQdally.APT. SALE: Tables, chairs, kitchenstuff 8. misc. All cheap Sat, Nov 5,10-4, 5423 East View Park (54th St. &Lake) 363 2783.BIG RUMMAGE SALE Good clothes,toys, housewares, books, misc. Sat.,Nov. 5, 9 a m. 5 p.m., United Churchof Hyde Park. 53rd & Blackstone.FOTA Dreams in Stone prints now only $1.50, set of 5, $5 on sale at BergmanGallery, 4th floor of Cobb, & atBookstore,Apt. sale Sunday Nov 6. 11 2 5343 Kimbark top floor Desk, tables, mattresses, coffee tables, plants, vacumncleaner, chests, bookcasesVW bus 1968 new paint, rebuilt carb,good cond $900 Call 493 2441 eves966 5319 daysPassport Photos While U WaitModel Camera 1342 E 55th St493 6700Ask for our catalogueMODEL CAMERA 1342 E 55th493 6700Piano almost new, call 241 6779 NOW SHOWINGAt These Selected Theatres»nfooi( ntitoMtoouciK* [LOOKING FOR MR GOODBAR DIANE KEATONTUESDAY WELD WILLIAM ATHERTONRICHARD KILEY RICHARD GERE FREDDIE FIELDS8j*«ormrW!JUDITH ROSSNER RICHARD BROOKSR IISTMCTEB '' '**■ t'qrr Pquri n vr . Nwk Altx,'r t«**D*' » UAufflOU 'Mr ....fSESQUIRE, OLD ORCHARD, GOLF MILL,Chicago Skokie NilesNORRIDGE WOODFIELD, YORKTOWN.Norridge Schaumburq LombardORLAND SQUARE. EVERGREEN.Orland Park Evergreen Park• RIVER OAKS, RIDGE PLAZA,Calumet City Griffith. Ind★ ★ ★"Get a bet down on Diane Keaton towin the 1977 best actress Oscar.’’-(ii in Sisk* I, (7/«■««/«» Ti ibiiiii★ ★ ★"’Looking for Mr. Goodbar’ is very muchworth seeing, particularly for the DianeKeaton performance.”Eh< >1. Chirili/n Silii-Tinn s KENNEDY, RVMLMONGM. & 0SSKWES.INCDirectory of ValuesWe Know Hyde ParkReal Estate Inside OutHOUSES FOR SALESUBURB IN CITY PREVIEWOFFERINGGracious, spacious home in set¬ting rivaling any suburb.Mahogany woodwork, 3fireplaces, library on first floor,solarium, patio, breakfast roomUpstairs also solarium, 5bedrooms, 3 baths. Excellentsystems electrical and heating.Beautifully maintained grounds.Side drive, new 2 car brickgarage $198,500 Near 50th 8.Greenwood. For appointment, callCharlotte Vikstrom, 667 6666.FRIENDLY FAMILY HOMEIn Jackson Park Highlands 4 plusBRs, 3’/? baths and room to expand Screened porch, large eat-inkitchen Side drive to 2-cargarage. Large family room andLR w/woodburning fireplace.$77,500 To see, call Eleanor Coe667 6666ERA OF ELEGANCEThree story brick! Evidence ofbeautiful living abounds ingracious large Hyde ParkBoulevard residence. Butternut-panelled living room with curvedbay windows, high fireplace.Study adjacent, large modern kit¬chen for gourmet cook, spaciousbedrooms on 2 floors above. Allsystems excellent back yard andprivate parking. $165,0130 CallCharlotte VikstromWITHIN WALKINGDISTANCETo U of C, shopping, trans andlake this lovely Townhouse has 6rooms, 1 Vi baths, plus finished.roc^room yard with parking inrear appliances Reasonablypriced at $73,900 Call Mrs Ridlonat 667 6666 or 734-6011. Fourteen town homes will be bullthis winter at 49th and Dorchesterdesigned by Y.C. WongPreliminary plans are avaiiabl-for your inspection at our officeCall 667 6666RAY SCHOOL DISTRICTWalk to campus, Ray, LatNatural oak floors & trim. LIw/wood burning fireplace ispacious and great for enlertairing. Combines the classic look w/<sense of modern. $135,000 askingTo see call Mrs Haines 667-6666.IN TOWN LIVINGL-shaped living room w/wood burning fireplace. A skylift dinin»room. Large family kitcher.Powder room, 4 bedrooms, 2 bathand room to expand Askir$40 000 or ???. To see call Mr*Haines, 667 6666A FAMILY HOMERaise your kids in coziness lwarmth. 5 BRs, 3V» baths, ba-windows, fireplaces, solarium, rgreat front porch Lots of land &real live resident bunny A cithome w/country feeling Move-icondition Asking $157,500. To seecall Mrs. Haines, 667 6666SETTLE IN BEFORETHE HOLIDAYSSpend your Thanksgiving in thibright, Weessdesignertownhome. Cook your turkey in tspacious well-equipped eat in kitchen. Watch the football games ii.a super recroom To see this 3 bedroon2Vj bath townhome call Richard EWild, 667-6666 (res 752-5384), "As1about the extras."APARTMENTS FOR SALECONVENIENCE PLUS1 bedroom co-op in well located,I well-managed Hyde ParkJ building Off-street parking.Board approval required. To seecall George Bilger, 667 666655TH & UNIVERSITY2 BR co-op home w/wood burningfireplace Oak floors. Hoox-up forwasher & dryer in modernized kit-j chen Assmt. $126 inch taxes| Owner can otter immed. posses| sion to qualified buyer. Bd apj proval required $21,500 To see,! call Mrs. Haines. 667 6666THE GREAT ESCAPETO PRIVACYI Quiet modem secluded elevator| condominium bldg on HarperI Ave. near Co-op, private parking,i Two apartments each one' bedroom are ottered for quicksale. Electric heat, low assessment. Call 667-6666LUXURYON A BUDGETThis fine apartment building con¬tains four rental units plus adeluxe owner's apartment. Pro¬bably the most elegant 8 room apt.in Hyde Park Rents pay alloperating costs. $195,000. CallFrank Goldschmidt, 667 6666.OVERLOOKINGLARGE GARDENNear University of ChicagoWoodlawn Ave. condo south of55th. Super ideal for single personor professional couple Four sunnyrooms in modern beautifully-keptbuilding Low monthly cost$32,500 Call Charlotte Vikstrom,667-6666CONDOMINIUMELEGANCEBeautiful duplex unit withcathedral ceiling in living room, 5bedrooms 3 full & 2 half baths,wall to wall carpeting, plush wallcovering, 24 hr. doorman, built-inbookcases in library, new modern! kitchen, gas hearth fireplace,, $116,600 firm To see please callj Frank Goldschmidt, 667 6666 MOVE NORTH(JUST A LITTLE;Sample the privacy of EatoPlace. Discover the natural beauty and spacious rooms of a full',restored 4 bedroom, 2 ba*h turn-ofthe-century condominium homeAvailable for immediate cossetsion On 48th St. near Kenwooc$49,500. Call 667-66668 BRIGHT ROOMSOVERLOOKINGTHE CITYEnjoy the view of the loop and lakbeach facilities, game rooms, of:street oarking. Gracious living iithis weli established old COOIapt at S Shore Dr & 73rd St$25,000, to see, call Richard EHildat667-6666 Ires 752 5384!.EAST HYDE PARKThis one bedroom condo with itsown balcony is just right for thesingle person or couple looking ftmake their first purchase A goo<buy at $25,000 To see, call NadiroAlver at 667-6666 (res. 752-538*)WIDE SWEEPof space with lake and views to thewest in this lovely condo aptGreat security w/doorman in thiselegant elevator bldg. 6 rooms, 2baths, ail new wiring, parkingAsking $47,500. Call Mrs Ridlon667-6666HIS 8. HER KITCHENThe couple that cooks togetherstays together — if they haveseparate working areas! Modernkitchen w/2 stoves, dishwasher &good, good space 4 BRs, 21 j bathswasher dryer Off-street parking$59,500. To see call Mrs Haines667-6666NEAR 59TH AND HARPERAiry, light 4 rm Co op Beautifulkitchen and bath French windows. open to the Midway viewFull Dr, king size bedroom stormwindows, air conditioners Asking$25,000 Includes inside parkingCall Charlotte Vikstrom, 667-6666ELEGANT CONDORAY SCHOOL DISTRICTThis light bright 3 BR 2 bath condohas modem kitchen, woodbvrningfireplace beautiful floors & moreTo see, call Richard E Hild667 6666 (res. 752 53841.1461 East 5?th Street, Chicago Illinois 60637667-6666Daily 9 to 5 Sat 9 to 1, Or cal) 66? 6666 AnytimeThe Chicago Maroon Friday, November 4, 1977 2Students, Faculty, StaffYou Are Cordially Invitedto aCelebrationMarking the Completion of the First Phaseof the Renovation ofTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO FIELD HOUSE56th Street and Greenwood Ave.Thursday, the tenth of Novemberat four p. m.Ceremonies followed by Refreshments andTours of. the Ruilding24 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, November 4,1977