Field House fete to focuson finished Phase OneBy Abbe FletmanThe University is throwing aparty and everyone is invited. Thecelebration, to be held thisThursday at 4 pm, will mark thecompletion of the first phase ofrenovation of the Field House.The renovations to date include anew floor, elevated 18 feet aboveoriginal ground level to be used forbasketball and indoor tennis, fourregulation handball/racquetballcourts, three regulation squashcourts, a new locker room, spec¬tator stands for 15,000, and a 200-meter track with a 90-meterstraightaway, perhaps the bestindoor track in the Midwest, ac¬cording to dean of students CharlesO’Connell. These facilities will beready for use by next quarter.Administrators, faculty mem¬bers, students and staff alike areexcited by the prospect of havingmore and better athletic facilities. O’Connell said that the celebrationshould be a gala occasion because,“This is the first major indoorathletic facility at the University tobe rededicated in 45 years. ”Director of development ClydeWatkins, in eager anticipation ofThursday’s event, said, “I thinkit’ll be a fun thing for the student-s.”Students, however, are not theonly ones invited to the opening,which will also serve as an ex¬cellent opportunity for thedevelopment office to show off thenew facility, and it is hoped, toconvince donors to contribute tothe funding of Phase Two.Guests at the Festival will enterthe Field House through the nor¬thwest door across from the SmartGallery and proceed upstairs to thecompleted second-floor bleachers.Master of .ceremonies O’ConnellField House to 2 Phase One of the Field House renovation has been completed and the building will be dedicated Thursday.(Photo Dy Benjamin Davis)Vol.87, No. 21 The University of Chicago Tuesday, November 8,1977Faculty search committeefor new med school deaneyes six final candidatesBy Peter CohnThe faculty committee sear¬ching for a new biological sciencesdivision dean has approved a finallist of six inside candidates fromwhich President Wilson will selectthe new dean, according to sourcesin the division.Acting dean Robert Uretz andthree members of the searchcommittee—pathology depart¬ment chairman Werner Kirsten,surgery department chairmanDavid Skinner, and pathologyprofessor Godfrey Getz- are onthe list, sources said.John E. Ultmann, director of theCancer Research Center, andpathology professor RobertWissler will also be recommended to Wilson, the sources reported.According to vice-president forpublic affairs D.J.R. Bruckner,Wilson has not formally receivedthe list from the six-membersearch panel. Wilson has not givenany indication about when he plansto make his decision, BruckneraddedHowever, the biological- sciencesdivision sources said that there is astrong likelihood that Wilson willmake the appointment before theMedical Center’s 50th anniversarycelebration next week.The dean of the biologicalsciences division also serves asdean of the Pritzker School ofMedicine and vice-president forDean search to 2 Teamsters strike decision nearson hospital, cafeteria employeesBy Eric Von der PortenA strike of 900 University serviceworkers is impending asnegotiations between theUniversity and the InternationalBrotherhood of Teamsters Local743 enter the third month.An issue is a contract for the non¬professional service workers atBillings Hospital and for theUniversity’s food service workers,who have been working without acontract since April. It appears thesituation will come to a head soon.In March, the Teamstersreplaced the American Federationof State, County, and MunicipalEmployees as the bargainingagent for the service workers. ButStrike to 2 ——tiLf rt SjafwyEiffi mm w iprjl’A strike could cripple South Side medical services if the Universityand Teamsters local 743 can’t reach contract agreements for 900non-professional service workers (Photo by Philip Grew)Focus on developjnentSumming up UC fundraisingUniversity fundraising is directed from Robie House, 58th andWoodlawn Ave. (Photo by Jeanne Dufort)By Abbe FletmanAs reluctant as administratorsare to admit it, running theUniversity is big business. Andbecause tuition only covers asmall part of the cost, fundraising is an integral part of keeping the University solvent.Most of the University’s fundaising efforts are centered in thelevelopment office, now locatedn the Robie House. From there,lirector of development ClydeVatkins and his staff, 75 percentf whom are alumni, coordinate volunteer activities throughoutthe country and solicit gifts andgrants from foundations, thegovernment, associations, cor¬porations, and individuals, aswell as from other alumni.Several divisions, such as thebusiness school, law school, SSA,and the medical school handletheir own fundraising.Foundation, government andassociation grants, are usuallyawarded to specific programssuch as cancer research or SouthAsian studies. Part of thedevelopment staff concentrateson drafting proposals for thesegrants.Another portion of thedevelopment staff worksprimarily to secure corporategifts The staff members ap¬proach all Chicago-based cor¬porations, the 500 largest in theFundraising to 2 Hill Conference to considerrepeal of med school quotasBy Andrea HollidayIn a voice vote Saturday night,the Senate decided to repeal ameasure denying federal funds tomedical schools unless they accepta quota of American students whobegan their medical studiesabroad. The University haddecided to forfeit the funds ratherthan comply with the quotaregulation.The House has voted to amendthe current law only slightly,which would not make the terms ofthe subsidy acceptable to theUniversity. The matter will beresolved in a joint House-SenateConference.Under the current law, whichwas enacted as part of the HealthManpower Act of 1976, all medicalschools receiving federal fundsmust accept a quota of Americanstudents who have completed twoyears at a foreign medical schooland have passed the first section ofthe National Board of MedicalExaminers Test Participating schools will bepresented with a list from HEW ofstudents to be admitted withoutregard to the school’s admissionscriteria. This year HEW placed 839such students in 180 medicalschools.The House amendment,proposed by Rep. Paul Rogers (D-Fla ), stipulates that transfersfrom foreign schools must onlyincrease an American medicalschool’s enrollment by five per¬cent This would reduce thenumber of foreign transferseligible for placement this year to639.‘Medical schools have beenasked to relinquish one of the mostcherished aspects of academicfreedom: the right to decide theirown admission standards,’’ saidSen Charles Mathias, Jr (R-Md ),sponsor of the repeal measure.Senate vote to 2Strike from 1negotiations for a new contract weredelayed because the National LaborRelations Board did not certify the Team¬sters until July.Since that time, the University and theTeamsters have been working to reach anagreement on numberous issues involvingwages, benefits, and working conditions.The University gave the service workers a25-cent per-hour raise when the old contractexpired, but the Teamsters claim that thewages paid by the University are still farbelow those paid at other hospitals anduniversities in the Chicago area.Negotiations appear to be reaching acritical stage. Billings is rife with rumors ofa strike and many workers are ready towalk out. In October, the union membersvoted to strike but the union has not yetannounced its intent to strike. Such noticemust be given 10 days, before the walkoutbegins.They also argue, for example that thebenefits offerred to the University’s em¬ployees are inferior to those offerred byother institutions and that imprecise jobdescriptions have led to ^unfair laborpractices in Billings.A strike would cripple the University byforcing Billings to drastically curtaii itsoperations and making it difficult for theUniversity’s cafeterias to remain open. Thesituation will be further complicated by theinability of the hospital and cafeterias tosecure supplies during a strike due to thelikelihood of many trucking iirmsrecognizing the Teamsters picket lines TheHospital departments are alreadypreparing for this eventuality by stockpilingsupplies.Another negotiating session is being heldtoday at the Center for ContinuingEducation and a major announcement isexpected to come from this meetingA strike at Billings would be particularlyembarrassing to the University at this timebecause the hospital is now preparing tocelebrate its 50th anniversary, starting theweek of Nov. 13. Numberous festivities havebeen planned, including the dedication ofthe new $22 million Surgery-Brain ResearchPavilion. Senate vote from 1But Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass)pushed for a year’s extension of the law,saying that to repeal it immediately wouldbe to break a promise to those students whoare relying on the law.Acting dean of the medical school RobertUretz described the law as a “fluke in theprocess,” and said that it was only passed“as a result of an intense lobbying effort ofparents and friends of a relatively limitedpool of individuals.”The University is one of 18 schools whorefuse to accept the quotas. The faculty ofthe medical school passed a resolution onOct. 14 opposing the acceptance of anysubsidy that would require changes ad¬missions policy. Harvard. Yale, and JohnsHopkins have prepared a legal challenge tothe constitutionality of the law.The HEW subsidy, awarded to medicalschools in the form of “capitation funds”last year gave the University $1000 perstudent.Northwestern’s medical school raisedtheir tuition by 56 percent last year in an¬ticipation of the loss of the federal subsidy.The University may hold down facultysalaries, enact a large tuition increase, orinitiate a special fund-raising effort in orderto replace the federal money.A poll of the sophomore class showed 73percent in favor of the University’s rejec¬tion of the quotas and only 12 percent op¬posed, despite the possibility of a heavytuition increase. The medical school alsoexpects support from the central Univer¬sity.“I expect that the consequences of adecision made on principle will be shared bythe central University and will be taken intoaccount in the annual budget,” said Uretz.Field House from 1will speak briefly and introduce PresidentJohn Wilson and chairman of the Board ofTrustees Robert Reneker. A tour andrefreshments will follow short statementsbv Wilson and Reneker.The renovation of the Field House is partof a large-scale development effort to im¬prove athletic facilities on campus. Parts ofthe project, such as the building of ad¬ditional outdoor tennis courts and the5750 Ellis Avenue, General BooksJERZYosimkl o wifi autograornew book, Bfincfur day, NovemfH o$p.mc l2 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 8, construction of a small building on StaggField to house rest rooms, team rooms andstorage space, have already been com¬pleted.A 50-meter swimming pool is planned forthe area between Bartlett Gym and theField House The three buildings will thenbe connected with corridors to form a three-building complex. Although this plan isofficial, funds have not yet been collectedfor its implementation.Dean search from 1the Medical center, making mm the chiefadministrator of the University’s biologicaland medical activities, by far the largestsingle division here.Kirsten, the chairman of the searchcommittee, refused to discuss the searchwith The Maroon, “because of the distor¬tions that appeared” in an Oct. 4 Maroonarticle on the search. Other committeemembers were either out of town orunavailable for comment.The search group was appointed byWilson last February, one month afterDaniel C. Tosteson resigned the deanship tobecome dean of Harvard Medical School.Uretz has served as acting dean sinceTosteson’s surprise resignation.Last month The Maroon quoted sources inthe division who said that the committeehad “floundered and exhausted itself.” Themembers of the group, the sources said,were polarized and therefore unable toreach a consensus on a single candidate. Asa result of its internal problems, the com¬mittee decided to involve President Wilsonwho has final responsibility for making theappointment, more directly in the decisionmaking process.The final list the committee is now ex¬pected to give to Wilson, which does notcontain any candidates who are notassociated with the University, confirmsearlier reports that the committee heavilyfavored insiders.Recruitment of an outside candidate wascomplicated by President Wilson’s an¬nounced intention to resign in June, 1978.According to several informed observers,outside candidates would be reluctant to accept the post without knowing who thenext president will be.The difficulties created by this un¬certainty could prompt Wilson to appoint anew acting dean to serve in the post until thenew president takes office.Fundraising from 1In fact, Harris said, “I’m working 100percent on development this year.” ButHarris wouldn’t tell The Maroon what hisduties with the development office entailed.“It’s too complicated to explain,” he said,and then added modestly, “but I’m only anamateur.”Harris is concentrating his energies onfund raising this year because last April theUniversity articulated a $50 million goal tobe raised by June, 1978. During the last 12-month period, fiscal year 1976-1977, over $28million was raised (see box) but it is evidentthat $50 million in 15 months is an ambitiousgoal indeed.The holiday season, according to Watkins“is a prime time for gifts,” and coulddetermine whether or not the goal will bereached. Not only is there a spirit of givingtoward the end of the year, but individualsand businesses have already paid taxes andknow how much money they can spare.Until the end of the year, the developmentstaff will be working even harder than usualto raio i money.Fund raising presents particular dif¬ficulties. While the University is most in¬terested in securing unrestricted gifts thatcan be spent at the discretion of thepresident fpr essentials such as heating andbuilding maintenance, individual donorstend to earmark gifts for specific programsor buildings and ignore maintenance costs.“Donors are not interested in financingwiring,” said Harris. According to dean ofstudents Charles O’Connell. “If you reallywant to kill a University, give them moneyfor buildings and no money to maintainthem.” The board of trustees, however, hasprotected the University from this by in¬stituting a flat rule against constructingbuildings without first having maintenancefunds.Another concern of the development officeFundraising to 3r r>;Fresh Baby -Spare Ribs 99* ibRocki 1 QCornish Hens 1 e^ozFamily Pack FreshGround Beef Qj Ib (three lbs or more)Fresh CaliforniaLemons 29* n>Cucumbers 25* ibStouffersMacaroni & Cheese, Spinach Soufflet, —Noodle Romanoff or Potato au Gratin 12 oz.Country Delight rSour Cream 59* pintButtermilk Bisquits 3 tor 51 io<,zNewly WedMatins 39 a pak, 15 ozSALE OATES TU. 11/9- SAT. 11/121226 E. 53rd(KIMBARK PLAZA)HOURS: MON. - SAT. 8:30 A.M. •7x50 PM.SUN. 9-4:50 k.-rHyde Park historyKenwood High construction divided communityBy Andrew PatenerThis is the second of a three-part series onthe history of secondary education in theUniversity community.In the fall of 1965, at the height of theKenwood High School controversy, JulianLevi told the annual meeting of the SouthEast Chicago Commission (SECC) that theUniversity had a proposal for a federally-funded experimental school that could helpto alleviate the high school problem in theHyde Park-Kenwood area. He announcedthe possibility of expanding the proposal to.accomodate more area students. Many sawthis move as an offer to allow white studentsfrom the University area to receive private-style education tuition-free. Whenrepresentatives of all segments of thecommunity rejected this offer, citing theneed for quality public education or thealternative of the middle class leaving thecommunity, Levi responded, “Move, then.You can be replaced.”In the following weeks, then-UniversityPresident George Beadle revealed thedetails of this proposal: the University wasseeking a $20 million grant to set up anexperimental high school to test neweducational theories on 600 pupils, 150 ofthem coming from Woodlawn, the rest fromall over the city. As the University con¬tinued to push for this grant, their in¬volvement with the 4500 area studentsfaded.In the spring and summer of 1965, thebattle lines were drawn in the community.Supporting a new school in the Hyde Park-Kenwood area was the Hyde Park-KenwoodCommittee for an Integrated High School.Chaired by Robert Solomon, the groupavowed that all parties were interested inquality education for their children, but that‘it is one thing to theorize about what isbest; it is quite another to seek a solutionthat has a reasonable expectation of at¬tracting more middle-class students.”—in- June of that year, the UnityOrganization for Hyde Park High Schoolwas formal .Chaired by George Benston,the group stated their goals as “placingcurriculum planning and services over theconcern for building sites; and that qualityeducation can only be achieved throughunited action of Hyde Park-Kenwood andWoodlawn.”The group supported the SecondaryEducation Park which had eclipsed the so-called “campus plan” that includedvocational, specialty, and honors schools aswell as normal academic programs. The“education park” would have establishedfour “sub-schools” of 1500 in a campus of6000 students, not unlike many suburbanschools, to be located on what is now theUniversitys South Campus.The Integrated Schools Committeemaintained that the future of integrationdepended upon the strengthening of alreadyFundraising from 2is the University endowment that has beendecreasing relative to other comparableinstitutions. According to figures from theJuly 18, 1977 issue of “The Chronical ofHigher Education,” Chicago ranked ninth inthe country behind Harvard, Yale,Columbia, Stanford, Princeton, TheUniversity of California, and M.I.T.“Others have been increasing faster thanwe have,” said Harris, “but we are an over-achiever. The faculty and staff here havelearned to live with a very strict budget. ”The Campaign for Chicago, said Harris,has many goals. “To increase endowment,to increase program support, to help buildor renovate, to increase funds for facultyand students, and to raise funds for thelibrary,” are among them.The Brain Research Center, the largestsingle project of the Campaign, will bededicated on November 15. The center willcost $22 million. And according to Harris,“There is still some money to raise, but wehad to go ahead or we’d lose matchingfunds.”The next large scale project is the FieldHouse which will be rededicated Thursday.On that project, development still has$700,000 to raise.While these projects are being completed. magmas*Kenwood High School was the final product of years of argument. (Photo by Sharon Pollack)Julian Levi: “Move. You can bereplaced.”development is looking ahead for donors tocontribute to a new theater which is still inthe planning stage. After that, there will befuture projects, and then, there are alwaysthe ongoing costs of running a University.Funds raised in fiscalyear 1976-1977FoundationsCorporationsAss ns and groups 6,968,6513,999,7585,070,151$16,038,560IndividualsAlumniNon-alumni 4,341,0454,520,775$8,861,820Bequests and life insuranceAlumniNon-alumni 2,083,4161,667,477$3,750,893'Total $28,651,273Statistics from the development office integrated communities. They charged thatthe South Campus school would be too largefor personal education, and objected to thetwo years it would require for landacquisition. They pointed out that thisacquisition would result in displacing manyWoodlawn residents who would have at¬tended the new school. They felt that HydePark-Kenwood residents would remainreluctant to send their children intoWoodlawn regardless of a new physical-plant.The Unity Organization argued that theywanted more than just a new plant. Theypresented a comprehensive plan that in¬cluded curriculum developments on alllevels or “tracks” and a full recreationaland extra-curricular program A 2500student school in Hyde Park would be“luxurious”, and would result in“segregation by class”, the organizationsaid. Abandonment of Hyde Park HighSchool would offer little to Woodlawnstudents who had “an equal right to qualityeducation.”Both sides very probably could havecontinued for some time. Petition driveslaunched counter-petition drives.Telegrams were sent to the Board ofEducation, city officials and even toWashington. If one group could hold a rallyin the pouring rain, so could the other. Aslong-time Hyde Park activist Sam Acker¬man put it, it was “a classic Hyde Parkconfrontation. The same kind of people onboth sides screaming at each other, while noone else was listening, over what was thebest way to integrate.Both groups became more and morecommitted to their plans. When it wasdiscovered that the population of the twocommunities would not be able to support a6000-student high school by the year 1970,the “education park” supporters did notrelent. The Integrated Schools Committeeat one time settled on the Murray GrammarSchool site, which would have disrupted themost successfully integrated school in thecity at that time.In October, district superintendent CurtisMelnick released figures that were to be thedownfall of the Unity plan. From 1964through 1965, the number of white studentsat Hyde Park High had fallen from 9.1percent to 6.9 percent. While 220 whitestudents had left Hyde Park, leaving 260, theHyde Park High population had increasedanother 150 to an overcrowded 4300.In the Hyde Park-Kenwood CommunityConference elections, held the followingmonth, members of this major communityorganization rejected the four Unity-fieldedcandidates. They finished last out of the 18nominees Conference Director Edward H.Palmer, viewing this as the spirit of thecommunity, stepped up the fight for a newhigh school.After Levi’s statements on the ex¬perimental school, the Hyde Park Heraldlaunched an editorial onslaught on theUniversity and charged the administration with “deliberately and callously double-crossing both groups” so that the Universitymight obtain the federal grant. Referring toLevi and then-vice-president for publicaffairs Charles U. Daly as “hatchet men,”the editorials seemed to effectively cripplethe University’s efforts to obtain com¬munity support for the grant. The editorialshang framed on Julian Levi’s office wall.In the end the grant proposal failed. TheUniversity did participate in what Levicalled “an experiment in school governancerather than education” in the WoodlawnExperimental School District in the lateSixties.The situation was further clouded whenSchool Board member James Clementcirculated a letter to his fellow BoardMembers that stated that “Hyde Park”community groups would accept anyreasonable compromise... even if they willnot say so publicly.” Within a day, three ofthe organizations Gement had referred to,the Integrated Schools Committee, theConference, and the Hyde Park-KenwoodCouncil of Churches and Synagogues, hadrenounced the letter.On January’ 26, 1966. the Board ofEducation voted seven to two for the con¬struction of a new high school on the Ken¬wood site. Gement and Warren Bacon,another Hyde Park resident, voted againstthe proposal. The Unity Organization madea last ditch effort to reverse the decision bysponsoring a “town meeting” featuring DrMartin Luther King. However, neither Dr.King’s talk, nor the threat of a lawsuit underthe Armstrong (anti-segregation) Lawcould alter the Board’s rulingOne year later, ground was broken for thenew Kenwood High School. Today it standsas Kenwood Academy, 75 percent black, 25percent white. Hyde Park High School isnow Hyde Park Career Academy andMagnet School, all minority students in anunaerenrolled expanded physical plant.The late Rabbi Jacob J Weinstein, notedcommunity and civil rights leader, wrote inFebruary of 1966:“Frankly, I had hoped that thegrand Unity plan could have beenadopted But the more we submittedit to the realities of the situation, themore flaws appeared in it ...“It would be tragic indeed if afterenduring the worst of these difficulttransition years, the communitywould sink into a sullen war over amatter of percentages, which willprobably appear as irrelevant in theperspective of time.In a sampling of Kenwood and Hyde ParkHigh students last week, none was aware ofthe controversies of 10 years ago.Next week: A look at the area high schoolstodayThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 8,1977 — 3fTlflB PresentsJohn Faheyandffiegan fDcDonoughin aHutch CommonsCoffeehouseNov 188 & lO pmtickets on sale soonat reijnolds club$2 mflB, 93 general4 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 8,1977'l.r\ JJ/;,'- f THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOThe William Vaughn Moody Lecture CommitteepresentsA ReadinghYEHUDA AMICHAIWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 19778:00 p.m.HARPER MEMORIAL 130i i 16 E. 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 606371 dm ission is without ticket and without chargeVTuesdayWho is Ross Lathrop is presently the only full-time alderman in thecity. He holds no other fob, and, aside from some minorinvestments, lives on the pay he gets as alderman.Marty Oberman said, “Lathrop’s votingrecord is almost identical to Simpson’s andmine.” A look at newspaper articles sinceLathrop took office supports this view.When there was opposition to the regularDemocrats, Lathrop was almost alwayslisted among the dissenters. He is on recordas favoring Judge Prentice Marshall’spolice desegregation order, reduction of thehead tax, cutting off all funds for policeespionage activities, and making possessionof an ounce of marijuana a misdemeanor.Alan Dobry, the 5th Ward’s DemocraticCommitteeman, who supported Lathrop’sopponent in the 1975 alderman race, saidthat, while at first Lathrop ‘‘tried to goalong” with the regulars in hope of beingmore effective, “he has taken an adversaryposition to the machine more frequently... Ithink Lathrop has indeed been independentfrom the machine.”As an independent alderman. Lathrop ismost often criticized for his low-key style.Former 5th Ward alderman Leon Despressays that Lathrop is ‘‘a great deal lessenergetic than his predecessors (Merriam,Moss, the late Paul Douglas, and Despres)”and that his "passive and quiet style” doesnot fit Hyde Park’s expectations of a verbaland energetic partisan Dobry’s only seriouscirticism of Lathrop is that "in the CityCouncil he has not been as forceful as LeonDespres. . . I with Ross were more for¬ceful.” Even Marty Oberman said that hewould prefer that Lathrop initiated morenew issues in the Council.On the other hand. Simpson prefers not tocompare Lathrop with Despres Despres. heresponded, was one of the five or six all-timegreat councilmen. functioning as the leaderof what was in his time a larger bloc of in¬dependents. Marshall Korshak. the formerward committeeman of Hyde Park and apowerful figure in the regular Democraticorganization for 40 years, echoed Simpson'ssentiments. Despres and Lathrop, he said,are two “completely different per¬sonalities.” Lathrop being a placid, quietguy while Despres was always very ex¬plosive — as if he looked for things tocriticize. Despres also had years of ex¬perience and a perfect target for his barbsin the person of Richard Daley.Roman Pucinski. a man LathroD callsLathrop to 6Lathropfurther example of the impotence of theCouncil is the committee system: Lathropcurrently sits on six committees, two ofwhich have never even met.Lathrop has tried to use his "managementexperience” to improve the procedures ofthe City Council. Fellow alderman DickSimpson praised Lathrop for his leadershipin the “logjam effort” of May, 1976, a moveby the Council’s independents to end theregular Democrats’ strategy of killing in¬dependent legislation. Under Council mles,the alderman sponsoring a bill has the rightto specify the committee which it will bereferred too. However, if another aldermanobjects, the bill is automatically forwardedto the Rules Committee. Theoretically, theCommittee must decide what committee thebill belongs. In the past as the independentshad discovered through years of frustration,referral to the Rules Committee meantkilling the motion, as a decision on thestatus of an independent’s bill was rarelymade. In the spring of 1976. Lathrop and hisallies fillibustered, clogged the City Councilmeeting with new legislation, and exercisedtheir option to refer administration bills tothe Rules Committee. After a meeting filledwith these tactics, the regulars entered intoa "new understanding” with the in¬dependents. Now substantive legislation isinfrequently referred to Rules, and althoughtheir bills are hardly ever approved, theindependents now at least are dealt withmore fairly.Lathrop also favors other reforms, suchas reducing the number of committees andgranting aldermen pay raises with therequirement that the position be a full-timejob. Lathrop said he is presently the onlyfull-time alderman in the city He holds noother job and. aside from some minor in¬vestments, lives on the pay he gets asaldermanAs for his voting record. Simpson said."Ross has been a diligent member of theminority block. he has voted with theminority block on every major issue I canrecall.”’ The other independent alderman.(and what is he doing as alderman) ?By Steven D. BrownPhotographs by David MillerHyde Park has a tradition of politicalindependence from Chicago's Democraticmachine dating back to the 1920's and 1930’s.The focal point of Hyde Park's challenge tothe city’s powers has historically been in theperson of the alderman of the 5th Ward —the elected representative of Hyde Park(and sections of South Shore and Woodlaun)on the City Council. Our currentrepresentative is Ross W Lathrop. He, likethe line of 5th Ward aldermen who precededhim. is working for Hyde Park's interests inChicago's legislative branch. The questionis, in what ways and how well is he doing it.•Lathrop became alderman in 1975, asurprise winner in the race to succeed thealreadv-legendary Leon Despres, leader ofthe independent movement on the CityCouncil floor for 20 years. Lathrop was anadmitted "neophyte” in politics, and waselected without the support of the leadingindependent citizens and organizations inthe ward. A management specialist with theIndustrial Relations Center at theUniversity of Chicago, he was criticizedduring the campaign for being too closelytied to the Umverstiy, for running as the“white hope in a field of black candidates,and for being too willing to go along with theregular Democratic organization. Lathroprejected these claims and countered that hewas an ‘‘independent independent” —beholden to no special interests in HydePark or elsewhere His argument was convincing enough tor dz percent ot thevoters.After two and a half years on the job,Lathrop enjoys being alderman. He talkedabout his life as alderman in two interviewswith The Maroon last month.There is no job description for the positionof alderman. Lathrop told The Maroon. It isup to the alderman and his constituents tomake of his job what they will. Lathropprefers to look at his office as encompassingthree parts: legislation in city government;ward management; and, communitydevelopment.An independent legislator?The alderman’s primary function in citygovernment is to represent the citizens ofhis ward. But the fact is. according toLathrop. that a workable legislative branchhas not existed in Chicago tor a number ofyears. The Mayor is not only executive, butchief legislator He introduces most of thelegislation; the council by and large ap¬proves it Lathrop said that he and two otheraldermen (Dick Simpson and MartyOberman, both from North Side wards)have introduced more legislation on theCouncil floor than all the other aldermencombined While it is true that MayorBilandic does not exercise as firm a grip asMayor Daley did over the Council; thenumber of independent aldermen has fur¬ther declined since he has been in power(from five to three out of a total of 50).Meanwhile, Bilandic has cut the number ofCouncil meetings down to one a month. AThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 8,1977 — 5Lathrop?from 5“the most stalwart of Machine aldermen,”thinks that Lathrop’s low-key style maymake him more effective on the Councilfloor: “By legislative standards, Despreswas a bomb-thrower. . . Lathrop is muchsmoother. . . he never resorts to per¬sonalities. . . Leon would strike and strikehard; Lathrop disagrees often, but he’s notdisagreeable.” Pucinski said that most ofthe aldermen treat Lathrop with respectand view him as a man with dignity. But, acritic of Lathrop might argue that a com¬pliment from Pucinski only, further damnsLathrop.Criticism of Lathrop may, in his opinion,stem fromthe fact that he is an incumbentindependent who came to power without thesupport of the traditional radical in¬dependents. Lathrop believes that the“independent movement” in Chicago suf¬fers from some problems of attitude. Thedie-hard independent is just as narrow¬minded and uninformed as the Partyregular, according to Lathrop. He cited anexample of when Mayor Daley’s personnelbill came up for debate in the Council. TheMayor asked to open up some new positionsin the executive branch. The doctrinaireindependent position was to immediatelyattack the request — if the Mayor wantedmore jobs, they were against it. Lathropstudied the Mayor’s request and decided itwas valid. After the session, he asked one ofthe die-hard independents if he had read theproposed ordinance. It turned out that hehadn’t even looked at it. Lathrop said thathe refused to take the route of “easy in¬dependence” where every position is seenas either pro-Daley/anti-Daley or pro-Bilandic/anti-Bilandic. “Above all,” hesaid, “the 5th Ward deserves a thoughtfulalderman — and that’s why it has to be afull-time job.”“Mayor of the ward”Lathrop thinks that being aldermanrequires him to assume responsibility forthe day-to-day functioning of the ward. Thisis necessary because traditionallyChicago’s executive branch behavesreactively — sewer holes get fixed onlywhen a complaint is filed; people in citygovernment do not initiate services.Lathrop’s “new approach to the aldermanicrole” has him serving both as an om-busdsman, i.e. processing the complaints ofresidents of the ward, and as a trouble¬shooter, pushing for services he feels areneeded, based on his own analysis of theward. Committee has retained quite the sameamount of support under Lathrop as theydid under Despres.)Lathrop doesn’t think that Hyde Park andthe rest of the ward has suffered in services-/due to its political independence. He per¬sonally checked the snowplowing of anumber of different wards in the city, in¬cluding the 11th (home of Mayors Daley andBilandic) and found “no discemable dif¬ference.” Lois Dobry, a board member ofthe Near South chapter of the IndependentVoters of Illinois (IVI) verified Lathrop’sanswer: “We’ve always been organized sowe get services.” Lathrop believes the mythof Hyde Park suffering for its independenceoriginated as a means to band the people ofthe ward together.Lathrop is proud that his office maintainsa “third generation system” — an ongoingfile on ward services. He anticipates that hewill begin to make monthly reports to hisconstituents on pot-hole repairs and the like— in his words, a “box score with battingaverages.”The most important variable in receivingadequate ward services in Chicago, saidLathrop, is how high this concern is on thealderman’s priority list. Some in Hyde Parkmight say that in Lathrop’s case it is toohigh, and that some of that energy7 should bedirected back to the City Council floor.Either way, Lathrop said that “this officehas spent a majority of its time on thoseissues (individual problems like sewer holesand tree removals), while having arelatively quiet and productive period.”Community developmentThe third major component of thealdermanic position is defined by Lathropas the “community development function.”His role here is in working on long termissues that affect many people, for example,the problem of parking in East Hyde Park.The South Shore Country Club is thebiggest community development issue thatLathrop has worked on, and it raised hisname to recognition. Since closing its doorsin 1974, the South Shore Country Club hasbeen managed by the Chicago Park District.Lathrop’s involvement began in 1975 whenhe received a phone call late one Sundaynight from a South Shore resident informinghim that there were bulldozers on the Clubsite. Although the demolition of one buildingwas allowed, the action of Lathrop and anumber of concerned citizens resulted in aruling bv the Chicago Plan Commission thatany other Park District demolition at SouthShore Country Club had to be preceded by ahearing before the Plan Commission. ThePark District was also obligated to plan withthe surrounding community any programsit had for the Club and its site.Because of his assumed “managementrole,” Lathrop sees himself working as the“mayor of the ward.” He stressed, however,that he is responsible, though but notdirectly, for community services. AlthoughLathrop has no direct line of authority to theadministrative arm of city government, hestill is capable of applying pressure.Most of his initial requests for servicesare almost always granted. If they aren’tfulfilled Lathrop can always make a publiccomplaint and embarrasses the city intoaction.A third pressure that Lathrop can apply isthrough the highly organized citizenry ofHyde Park. As Alan Dobry put it: peoplehere complain more because they are“professional talkers.” (Dobry added thathe doesn’t think the 5th Ward Citizens The following two years, said Lathrop,were marked by no joint planning and byincreased community use of the facility,especially during the summer months.Then, this June, a new “elitist” plan wasdeveloped by the Park District which calledfor the demolition of the existing buildingsand the construction of a new culturalcenter. No community members or localofficeholders were informed; the only of¬ficial announcement of the Park District’splans was a notice from Joe Powers of thePark District which was delivered to a fewhundred homes in South Shore on June 29th.South Side citizens and elected officialsworked all summer to block the ParkDistrict.On September 26, Lathrop introducedlegislation to the Citv Council that wouldALOZART’SKeouienuUniversity of Chicago ^Chorus and OrchestraJantes Mack, conductor Janice Hutson sopranoAnne Bom alroAlonzo Crook U'norWynn Ooeritv^ bassSunday, l3 November 1977 3:30PMMandei Hall - 571h 6- UniversityFree and Open to the Public6 — The Chicaoo Maroon - Tuesday, November 8,1977 halt any consideration of the demolitionrequest until after the Chicago LandmarksCommission decided whether or not theClub was a historic site. In what Lathropcalled a “wonder of wonders,” the Councilsuspended its regular rules so that theresolution could be passed by a unanimousvote on that same day. That, Lathrop said,had never before happened to a bill spon¬sored by an independent.Members of the community mobilized fora Planning Commission hearing held at theCountry Club on October 21st. Lathrop wasthere, along with other area officials, in¬cluding State Representative Robert Mannand State Senator Richard Newhouse, and1,000 area residents. Patrick O’Malley of thePark District withdrew the application fordemolition.Although Lathrop believes that the ParkDistrict still has demolition plans up itssleeve, he views what happened early thisfall as a victory. He feels that the com¬munity purchased additional time; got avoice, though far too small, in a new 15-member committee that will examine theissue; and, demonstrated “sustainedstrength for better than three years” whichwill continue to challenge the Park District.Alan Dobry, who overall gives Lathrop“mixed marks,” said that Lathrop “hasdone very well with the South Shore Country condominiums in Hyde Park is cut inmaintenance sendees. The janitors strike ofthe apartment building on WoodlawnAvenue and 55th concerned this issue. Tohelp end the strike, Lathrop contributed byworking out a compromise between themanagement and the union. The ownerscontracted with the union for the main¬tenance of the common areas of thebuilding. The union has less responsibility,its workers get less pay, but they still havetheir foot in the door. Lathrop thinks that theagreement might set a pattern for futureconversions — leaving room for the union towork in buildings that go condominium. Thenegative side of the agreement is that,somewhere along the line, some non-unionjanitors are going to lose their jobs.Another concern of Lathrop’s is thetremendous rise in property values thatthreatens Hyde Park’s diversity. While hefeels that Hyde Park has and will continueto be ethnically diverse, “the biggest dangerof Hyde Park has been its trend towardeconomic homogeneity.” He gets calls atleast once a week from residents worriedabout the exorbitant cost of a condominiumor paying high rent. As for the high rentproblem, Lathrop and his fellow in¬dependents on the Citv Council havp beenpushing for a strong rent control com¬mission. The present commission is areview board with little capability save topromote reasoned conversation betweenopposing parties. With regard to con¬dominium conversion, Lathrop said thatthere is little he can do, though he willsometimes intervene by making sure anapartment building owner knows the fullramifications of conversion (e g. althoughthe units in his building will be privatelyowned he is still responsible for basicupkeep and services). At the same time,Lathrop cautions that the condominiumthreat must be kept in perspective. Rentalunits still compose 60 percent of thedwellings in Hyde Park, and as for futurecondominium expansion, “there’s not roomto move.”The housing situation in Hyde Park, notedLathrop, has another double edge. Therehas been a significant appreciation of allproperty value in the ward, but futurereappraisal for tax purposes is going to givelocal residents a much higher tax bill.Lathrop was also asked about the raceissue in Hyde Park, an interesting questionbecause the contest between A1 Raby andLathrop for alderman _in 1975 was in-Lathrop to 7UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO LAW SCHOOLADMISSIONS MEETINGAll students considering applying to the Law School are invitedto a discussion of the application procedure and the admissionsprocess. The Professional Option Program for third yearstudents in the College will be described. The meeting will be at4:00 on Wednesday, November 16, in Seminar Room D at theLaw School.State Senator Newhouse, one of theleading black figures in city politics, and aperson who himself worked on the SouthShore Country Club issue, said that Lathrop“is in a situation where he’s learning his joband learning it well.” As for his workingrelationship with Lathrop, Newhouse saidthat he attempts “to keep Ross informed”particularly about opinions from those partsof his ward that lie outside of Hyde Park(like Woodlawn and South Shore). “Weattempt to be the eyes and ears of RossLathrop,” he added.Another community development issue inwhich Lathrop has been active is tran¬sportation, particularly the status of LakeShore Drive. He campaigned successfullyagainst a proposed new turnpike in the I.C.embankment, and for the resurfacing ofLake Shore Drive. Lathrop was alsoresponsible for the installation of a stoplightat the intersection of Lake Shore and SouthShore Drives.Housing and race issuesThe housing issue, said Lathrop, “is ex¬tremely complex,” and like “most of thethings I think of, has a balance.”One byproduct of the growing number ofLathrop from 6terpreted by some as a contest between theward’s black and white voters. Lathrop saidthat, as far as he is concerned, peoplecouldn’t care less whether they have a whiteor black alderman, they just want “acompetent independent alderman; someonewho can look out for their interests.” Headded, ‘‘I spend a lot of time in the ward, inevery part of the ward...(and there havebeen) no complaints, even if I stretch it, of awhite man sitting in the alderman’s chair.”Despres said that Hyde Park’s racialproblems are those of the whole city ofChicago, and that there is no particularlyaggravated problem here ‘‘racially, we’rethe best integrated in Chicago. We’re notperfect, but the best there is,” said Despres.Senator Newhouse on the other hand, saidthat “we haven’t closed the gap betweenraces in Hyde Park, no matter what anyonesays.”Lathrop and the UniversitiyThe most influential institution in the 5thWard is, of course, the University ofChicago. It is the largest single employerand landowner, and helps to create theatmosphere that draws independents to theward. The concerns of the Universitycommunity also can carry great clout, asexhibited in the clearing of the 55th Streettaverns and bars in the urban renewal of thelate 1950’s and early 1960’s.Lathrop, who was charged with being theUniversity’s candidate for alderman,retains no affiliation with the University.For the most part, said Lathrop, theUniversity as an institution and he leaveeach other alone. “The University as acorporate individual has from time to timeasked me to do stuff like an alderman doesfor constituents,” added Lathrop, such asblocking off the street for a special occasion.Lathrop frequently interacts withUniversity staff and faculty as residents ofthe ward who have individual concerns likeother constituents.With regard to the student body, relationsare practically non-existent — somethingthat concerns Lathrop very much. Becauseof the nature of the school, the students tendto form “an isolated sub-culture.” Lathropsaid that if any student wants to get in¬volved, or is just interested in a specificproblem, he or she should call or visit hisward office (5238 S. Blackstone, 643-2900).The political scene in Hyde Park is boundto liven up in the coming weeks aspreliminary jockeying continues for theState Representative seat being vacated byRobert Mann. An ad hoc citizens searchcommittee hoping to tab the strongest in¬dependent candidate narrowed con¬sideration down to three candidates lastweek, but failed to make an endorsementdue to the general consensus that none of thethree could unite all groups in the 24thdistrict.When he was asked about his future,Lathrop anticipated the question and saidno, he doesn’t want to be state senator. Thealderman’s job is complex, intrinsicallyinteresting, close to people, and close toproblems, and “being part of government inChicago is terribly exciting.” “No,” hesmiled as he rested his stocking feet on hisdesk and twiddled a cigarette in his fingers,“I look forward to being alderman for a BooksW eighingrocksandstarsBy George SpigotWhite Holes by John Gribbin (Delta, $4.95paper)Space, Time, and Gravity, The Theory ofthe Big Bang and Black Holes by RobertWald (University of Chicago Press, $10.95)After reading White Holes by JohnGribbin and Space, Time and Gravity byRobert Wald, two recently published bookson astrophysics, nothing comes to mind somuch as the way Texans used to w'eigh hogs.First they’d tie up the hog Then they’d finda rock they thought weighed about the sameas the animal, and, after consuming a few'jugs of corn juice, they’d stand around andtry to guess how’ much the rock weighed.Astrophysics finds itself in much the samesituation While astronomers can makeremarkably accurate observations of ob¬jects within the solar system, once theybegin to look outside it all sorts of problemsarise. There are a few reliable exotic of these. A black hole is a region inwhich matter is so densely packed andgravity so strong that even light rays arebent back, and cannot escape. Obviously,such areas would be hard to find and, thoughthere are some strong candidates currentlyunder observation, none has yet Beendefinitely identified.For a long time it was believed that blackholes could only get larger and larger, asthey sucked in more and more matter. Inthe last few years, through the work of suchastrophysicists as Stephen Hawking, it hasbeen shown that rotating black holes couldbe manipulated so that energy could beextracted from them, and that small blackholes may actually “radiate” particles and“evaporate” away.It has also been suggested that black holescould be doorways into other universes, andeven that they may hold the key to timetravel.White holes, the time-reversed coun¬terparts of black holes, are regions thatspew forth matter. It is quite possible thatthe entire universe is simply an enormouswhite hole.Together, White Holes and Space, Time,and Gravity provide a well-balanceddiscussion of these and other topics. Grib¬bin, a highly respected science writer whoholds a doctorate in astrophysics fromCambridge, takes the gossipy approach.Because he is far more concerned withgiving the reader a glimpse of all ofcosmology’s wondrous ideas than he is withlaying a rigorous scientific foundation, hisdiscussion ranges far and wide, coveringeverything from quasars and quarks togalaxies and Genesis.On the other hand, Wald, an assistantprofessor at the University, takes a moremethodical and somewhat more demandingapproach. The payoff is that his book givesthe reader a chance to learn, in a well-organized fashion, the fundamental ideas ofspace, time, and gravity before beingpresented with more exotic subjects such asblack holes.Even with the help of these two books, thestudy of the strange creatures inhabiting theinterstellar zoo remains far more difficultthan weighing even the omeriest Texas hog.Shakespeare as usual, knew wherof hespoke when he said: “There are more thingsin Heaven and earth. Horatio, than aredreamt of in your philosophv. ”measurements that can be made of thingswithin our galaxy, but, when you starttalking about the heavens outside the MiiKyWay, all hell breaks loose.For example, the technique most com¬monly used to measure the distances ofextra-galactic objects — the famous red-shift effect — rests on an estimate ofsomething that is believed to be a constant,and on the belief that there is only onereason for the observed shift in thefrequency of light In fact, it is possible tomake a strong case that our laws of physicsmay not even apply in other galaxies.Fortunately, in astrophysics just as in hogweighing, uncertainty has a way of makingthings interesting. A large Dart of the greatimagination shown by astrophysicists hasprobably come about because of the lack ofthe hindrance of data. This has enabled thestrange observations that have been madeto give birth to a number of highlyimaginative and exotic theoriesBlack holes art unquestionably the most Science fiction pales next to all this meatyscience-fact, but this has not deterred thepaperback houses from putting out yetanother batch of pre-Xmas Star Trek booksLast year Ballatine Books issued the StarTrek Technical Manual, the Star TrekBlueprints, and the Star Trek Concordance.This year, not only is there Ballatine’s StarTrek/Star Fleet Medical Reference Manual($6.95), but Bantam Books has released abook of Star Trek Intergalactic Puzzles($5.95) and two Star Trek “Totonovels”, Cityon the Edge of Forever > $1.95), and WhereNo Man Has Gone Before ($1 95), The lasttwo are book versions of two popularepisodes and include 300 full-color scenesfrom each show.If reading the science-fact books is likeenjoying a hearty meal, then reading theseStar Trek books is like eating candy — alittle is all right, but take too much and itcan make you sick.c 1977 all rights reserved“Intellectuality vs Creativity”a lecture presented by Please Watch This Space in Friday's IssueGEORGE COLBY of the Marcon for an Announcementplaywright/teacher Regarding Commencement of Daily Useat Eastern Ill. Univ.Thursday, Nov. 107:00 Ida Noyes Library•Sponsored by SG Activities Committee Of the Field House.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 8,1977 — 7University of ChicagoBookstore-Photo Department5750 S. Ellis 753-3317Mottercharge & Visa AcceptedOrder your KODAKPhoto Greetings... Now...andSAVEtnerry chrvslhw*Get five extra photo-greeting cardsor prints for every twenty-five youorder before November 18. Justbring us your favorite KODACOLORNegative, color print or color slide.Choose Christmas,Navidad or Chanukahdesigns. Each oneyou send is a gift initself. Act now andbe sure to ask usfor ColorProcessing byKODAKCOLORPROCESSINGb. KodakALL TOGETHERAt One LocationTO SAVE YOU MORE!SPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicogo 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 LOCATIONCHEVROLET*6 j VOLKSWAGEN\Ay SOUTH SHORE7234 Stony Island:Phone: 884-0400 *Open DaOy M 9 MU Sat »-5 P.M.Parts Open tMyrOay T 121 TAIL'S AM-WNCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANT'Specializing InCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M.TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Orders to take Out1318 East 63rd MU 4-1062•(ye iumNMtiMis•Contact Lenses (Soft l Herd)•Prescriptions Ffflod)R MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363 Students in the College are Invited ToThe School of Social Service AdministrationProfessional Option ReceptionWEDNESDAY, NOV. 16 4-6 P.M. HARPER 284The professional option program provides opportunityfor qualified students to begin professional study at SSAduring their final year in the College. The work completedduring this common year counts toward the master’sdegree and the bachelor's degree as well. During theSocial Hour on November 16, SSA faculty will discuss pro¬grams of study at the School.The Nuclear500.Are you good enoughto be one of them?This year the Navy will seek about 500 of thecountry’s top college graduates for its nuclear energy program.It’s the most comprehensive training available in today's mostexciting energy' field.It’s got to be. More than 70% of the country’s nuclearreactors are operated by Navy' men.So our standards are extremely high. To qualify, youmust have a solid background in engineering, math or physics.And have what it takes to become an officer in the U.S. Navy'.If you're selected, you'll be paid a starting salarycomparable to most salaries given junior executives in privatecompanies. And be placed in a position of responsibilityquickly.If you re still in college, there are several specialprograms for you, including a lull scholarship available foryour junior and senior years.For more information about our programs, pay scales,or applications, see the Navy Officer Representative when hevisits your Career Placement Office onNovember 9th, 1977or call: LT Steve Boa/(312) 657-2169 (collect).NAVY. IT’S NOT JUST A JOB,IT’S AN ADVENTURE.o The Chicago Maroon - Tuooday, Nm/Pmh*r « 1077CalendarTuesdayBaptist Student Union: 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Southside Creative Writer* Workshop: 8pm,5744 S. Harper.Science Fiction Club: 8pm, Ida Noyes.International House Folkdancing: 7:30pm, I-House.Episcopal Church Council at Chicago:Evensong, 4:30pm, Bond Chapel.LECTURES Kollodner, Harvard Medical School, 4pm,Cummings 101.ArtsDoc Filina: “Whirlpool," 7:15pm, & “Crimeof Passion," 9pm, Cobb hall.Rockefeller Concert: Robert Lodine,University Crillonneur, will give a Carillonrecital at 12:15pm, Rockefeller Chapel.ThursdaySki Club and Team: 7:30pm, Ida Noyea.Woodward Court Lecture Series: “Self &Circumstance,” Karl J. Weintraub, 8:30pm,5825 Woodlawn, Woodward Court.Department of Economics: Labor EconomicsWorkshop, “Conflict & Contract: Atheory ofStrikes, Lawsuits, Security Prices andRelated Phenomena," Melvin Reder andGeorge Neumann, 1:30pm, Ro 405; Money andBanking Workshop, “A General Macro-Equilibium Approach to Deposit Creation,"Jeremy Siegel, 3:30pm, SS 402; Law andEconomics Workshop, “Liquidated Damagesin Contracts: An Economic Analysis,”Kenneth Clarkson, 4pm, Law C; StatisticsSeminar, “Markov Processes with RandomTime Parameters,” Erhan Cinlar, 4pm, E.203.ArtsArts on the Midway Masters of Song Series:Peter Pears, tenor, Osian Ellis, harp, 8:30pm,Mandel Hall.Rockefeller Chapel: Edward Mondello,University Organist, will give an organrecital-lecture, 12:15pm, Rockefeller Chapel.DOC Films: “Air Force," 8pm, Cobb.WednesdayCountry Dancers: 8pm, Ida Noyes Hall.Overeaten Anomynous: 7:30pm, CalvertHouse, 5735 S. University.Tai Chi Club: 7:30pm, Blue Gargoyle.Christian Fellowship: “Lord, Teach Us Howto Pray,” 7:30pm, Ida Noyes.University Duplicate Bridge Club: 7pm, IdaNoyes Hall.Crossroads: English class for foreign women,2pm, 5621 S. Blackstone.LECTURESThe Committees on Philosophy & History ofScience: “Problems of Complementarity inPhysics, Philosophy and Psychology,” Dr.Howard Pattee, 12:30pm, Classics 21.Committee on Genetics: “The Replication ofBateriophage T7 DNA in vitro,” RichardKollodner, 4pm, CLSC 101.Department of Economics: Applied PriceTheory Seminar, 1:30 SS 402, Econometricsand Statistics Colloquium, “Models ofSwitching, Disequilibrium, and EndogenousStructural Change,” 3:30pm, Ro 11.Biochemistry Seminar: Dr. Richard Change Ringing: 12-lpm, location announcedat Saturday and Monday meetings.Table Tennis: 7:30pm, Ida Noyes, 3rd floor.Episcopal Church Council at Chicago:Eucharist, 12 noon, Bond Chapel.Judo Club: 6pm, Bartlett gym.Ki-Aikido: 6-7:30pm, Bartlett gym.Calvert House: “Basic Catholicism," 7:30pm.Debate Society: 8pm, Ida Noyes, EastLounge.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: “Ha-Sadnah (discussions In Hebrew): Israel’sEconomic Policy in the late ‘70’s," 2:30pm,Pick 218; “Ataturk: Turkish Circle,” 4pm,Pick 218.LECTURESDepartment of Economics: IndustrialOrganization Workshop, “Efficiency andInformation in Medical Insurance,” YoramBarzel, l:30-3pm. Law C; AgriculturalEconomics Workshop and Public Lecture,“The Economic Contribution of Children andIts Effects on Fertility and Schooling: RuralIndia,” Indra Makhija, 3:30-5pm, SS 106.Chicago Cluster of Theological Schools:“Ministers and Social Workers: Alliies orAntagonists?” 7-8:30pm, McCormickTheological Seminary, 56th and Woodlawn.University Feminist Organization: Vera BuckWeisbord, author of A Radical Life, willdiscuss her experiences as a woman in thelabor movement, 12 noon, Blue Gargoyle, 5655S. University.UC Libertarian Alternative: Economist YalBrozen discusses Carter’s first nine monthsin office, 7:30pm, Ida Noyes, 2nd floor.Committee on Latin American Studies:“Texas Farm Workers: The Problems ofUnionization,” Antonia Orendian, President,Texas Farm Workers Union, 3:30-5pm, PickLounge.U of C Committee on Southern Africa: SouthAfrican Night, with a film, “The Last GraveHARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOLMBA PROGRAMAn Admissions Representative fromHarvard Graduate School of Business Administrationwill be on campusTuesday, November 15, 1977to meet with students interested inthe two-year MBA ProgramContact theCareer Planning and Placement Centerfor more details and to sign up foran information session.Harvard Business School is committed tothe principle of equal educational opportunand evaluates candidates without regard trace, sex, creed or national origin. at Dimbaza,”and lecture, by Wandile Kusa,visiting lecturer at U of I-Circle Campus,* 7:30pm, International House, home room.Admission is free.Art&Masters of the Song: Yenor Osian Ellis singsworks by Dowland, Rossiter, Hume, Croft,Handel, Afure, Grieg and Britten. Singletickets $4. for students, $7.50 for all others,8:30 pm, Mandel Hall.Doc Filina: “L’Atalante,” 7:15 and 9:30, CobbHall.LSF Filins: “Strangers on a Train," 8:30, LawSchool Auditorium.Court Theatre: “Butley,” 8:30 pm, NewTheatre.FridayBaha'i Club: Informal discussion of theBaha’i faith, 8pm, Ida Noyes, East Lounge.Macrame: Lessons will be given by RitaGuetens-Alaerts, 10:00am, Crossroads In¬ternational Student Center, 5621 S.Blackstone.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Sherryhour, 4:30pm, Kelly 413.LECTURESDepartment of Economics: ““Dark Con¬tinent, Black Box: Vent for Surplus andAfrican Growth, 1800-1914,” Marion Johnson,3:30pm, SS 106. Campus filmBy Karen HeUerAir Force (1943), directed by HowardHawks. (Doc) The adventures of the MaryAnn, an army bomber, and the relationshipsof her crew members. The co-pilot love thebombardier’s sister. The cynic becomes afighter when engaged in battle. There is noone star in the crew—all join together as ateam in battle over the South Pacific. With ascreenplay by Dudley Nichols and a castincluding Gig Young, Arthur Kennedy andHarry Carey. John Garfield gives astupendous but all too brief performance.TiipcHdv of P • onWhirlpool (1949), directed by OttoPreminger. (Doc) Gene Tierney stars as akleptomaniac insomniac. (Now those arereal problems.) She is framed for murderby Jose Ferrar, a mad astrologer, who hashypnotized himself into believing he doesn’thave a gall bladder. Richard Conte, a"wealthy psycholanalyst becomessuspicious. Preminger says: “I cannotremember anything about this film."This movie must be a doozy. Wednesday at,7:15.Crime of Passion (1957), directed by GerdOswald. (Doc) Barbara Stanwyck, a suc¬cessful columnist, quits her job to marry adetective and will do anything to forward hiscareer. She even provides him with amurder to solve. With Sterling Hayden, FayWray and Raymond Burr. Wednesday at9:00.Strangers on a Train (1951), directed byDepartment of Mathematics: “ContemporaryMathematics from a Historical Viewpoint,”S.T. Yau, 4:30pm, Eckhart 133.Hillel House: “Child Rearing in Isreal: Ex¬periences of a Child Psychiatrist," Dr.Joseph Marcus, 8:30pm, 5715 S. Woodlawn.NAM Teach-ins: “Nuclear Arms and NuclearPower,” Sam Day, l-4pm, New Theatre.ArtsNAM Films: Modern Times,” 7:00 and9:30pm, Cobb Hall.Court Theatre: ““Butley,” 8:30pm, NewTheatre.Weintraublectures (really)Correction: Karl Weintraub, Thomas E.Donnelly Professor, Department of Historyand the College, will give the WoodwardCourt Lecture this Tuesday at 8:30 insteadof last Thursday as mistakenly reported inThe Maroon.The lecture is entitled “Self and Cir¬cumstance.” The reception is free and opento the University community. There will bea reception following the lecture in theresident master’s apartment. Alfred Hitchcock. (Daw) Two men meet ona train enroute from Washington to NewYork. One a psychotic homosexual, wants tokill his father, a hot-shot D.C. lawyer. Theother man, a married tennis player, wouldlike to get rid of his wife so he may livehappily with his sweetheart The psychoticproposes he murder the jock’s wife and thetennis player kill his father. The tennisplayer doesn’t take it very seriously until hiswife is strangled With Robert Walker.Farley Granger and Leo G. Carroll.Thursday at 8:30.L’Atalante (1934), directed by Jean Vigo.(Doc) The Seine is the backdrop for Vigo’spoetic romance of a river barge captain andhis provincial wife. Michel Simon as theCaliban-like mate represents the crudeworld in which the young couple try tosustain their idyllic love through hardshipand temptation. Vigo mingles the natural,gray reality of river life with dream-likeimages of fantasy. He show's the potentialfor subjectivity in films of everyday andordinary things. Thursday at 7:15 and 9:30.Modem Times (1936), directed Dv cnanesChaplin. (NAM) One of Chaplin’s greatestfilms He successfully combines humor andstinging commentary of rapid in¬dustrialization of every facet of daily life.Chaplin is caught in the middle of a hugearray of monolithic machines, struggling tocope with and later escape from theirpower. Highly Recommended. Fridav at7:00,9:00 and 11:00._■BBBBSMBHHBMMBMfeHaHBMMHBPiaaaaBHnNikon DemoFri. & Sat. Nov. Uth & l?thJames Piacini, District Rep esen-tative for Nikon, will be he^e toshow you the latestcameras and lenses. in iiKonFT3 w/50m 2.0 223.95F2A w/50m 2.0 510.00FM w/50m 2.0 324.001342 E. 55th 493-6700The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, No Tiber 8,1977 — o1hjj K| "TpF\ ■ Experienced typist to type transcrip of Wilson Press Conference, Wed. afternoon & evening.Vw /AIM I m^wJn Excellent pay. Call Jon Meyersohn, 753-3263If you can’t fly Continental,you may have to stay after school."> OO <T-\ r-—\ /■-p^C^ri—kP^Altlr Wf1 ^ f ;_ 1 f 'i / _i_r __!/ 3 : ~^li(L~_li_jL t——wLet 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 we're 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 Continental’sWe really move our tail for you.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 Continental is famous for.For more information about our money¬saving discount fares, call your campus rep,travel agent, or Continental at 686-6500, else¬where in Illinois Toll Free at (800) 972-7896.And remember, if you can't fly Continental,try to have a nice trip anyway.•NightCoachFaresgoodonlyon flights designated by Continentalleaving between 9:00 PM and 7:00 AM.CONTINENTAL AIRLINESThe Proud Bird with the Golden Tail.m10 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 8,1977A.CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEResponsible post-graduate couple -former faculty members - are lookingfor a place for next 2 - possible 3 •quarters. Will sublet, Housesit, aptsit, plant and pet sit. Will pay rent.Call 493-8127.House in Beverly Shores IN on twofenced lots, 3 blocks from Lake. 3bdrms., l’/j baths, part basement,attached garage ALL furnishingsIncluded. Immediate possession.Future National Park leasebackpossible. Call Renard at CallahanRealty. 219-926-4296Wanted 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.HYDE PK nr UC 1 rm apts. well keptbldg., adults, near 1C, bus Park, lake.Reasonable. BU8-0718.Temporary room avail. Winter Qtr. ingraduate cooperate for male or femalegrad student 1 blk from campus 752-9708.PEOPLE WANTEDSubjects wanted for PsycholinguisticsExperiments. Will be paid. To registercall 753-4718.Experienced typist for real estateoffice. Must have good general officeskills. Excellent salary and benefits.Call Mrs. Goldsborough, 493-3754.Child care person wanted Tues orThurs 12-5:30 p.m. for 2children $3/hr.References req. Ph. 955 6588.Sales stockroom position, part time.Model Camera is looking for one ortwo alert people w/a basic knowledgeof photography and 'he ability to dealw/numbers and pjople in an in¬telligent, accurate and timely fashion.No phone calls Please stop in, fill outan application if you fulfill these basicrequirements. 1342 E. 55th.Healthy blood donors needed forresearch. Will be paid., Contact Dr.David Richman at 947-6095 from 2 to 5p.m. on November 9 and 10.PEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK - Illustration of all kinds,lettering, hand-addressing for invita¬tions, 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 5:00 p.m.FRENCH native coll tchr offers tutoring - all levels - exp with lang req -class for kids being organized. Ph.324-8054Nursing student desires babysittingjobs in the evenings. Phone 324-7858and leave message for Judith.SKILLED SEAMSTRESS needs extramoney, what do YOU needO I doalmost anything: hemming, mending,alterations, and production of camp¬ing gear clothes and toys. Janet642-9158.Certified English teacher will tutor inmy home. 288-5172.Spanish Tutoring Beg thru Adv. Call327 3648 eves after 9 p.m.SCENESWargamers' Club moves meeting to8:00 Saturday in Ida Noyes."Men's Lives" the widely acclaimedfilm of the men's movement will beshown at the Chgo Men's GatheringCoffeehouse, Sun 11/13, 7:30 p.m..First Unitarian Church, 5650 S.Woodlawn. Free, everyone welcome.FREE ENGLISH CONVERSATIONCLASS Thursday 1-3 at InternationalHouse.PAN PIZZADELIVEREDThe Medici Delivers from 5-10:30weekdays, 5-11 weekends, 667-7394.Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourself.FOR SALECollegiate Research Papers.Thousands on file. All academicsubjects. Send $1.00 for mail ordercatalog Box 25918Z, Los Angeles. CA90025, 213-477-8474.QUALITY XEROX COPIES, 8 centsea 1st Unit Ch 5650 Woodlawn, hours 95, 7-10 daily.FOTA Dreams in Stone prints nowonly $1.50, set of 5, $5 on sale atBergman Gallery, 4th floor of Cobb, &at Bookstore.Passport Photos - While U-WaitModel Camera 1342 E. 55th St.493 6700Ask for our catalogueMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th493-6700Piano almost new, call 241-6779. 71 TOYOTA COROLLA 1600 cc Newbaft, clutch, brakes, exhaust, FMradio. Tom 288-6304.Antiques & decorative items for sale.12-6 Wednes.-Sun., 5455 S. Biackstone,first floor.PERSONALSDATING SERVICE. Over 1200members. Ladies join free. Inexpenslve. 274-6940."EXECUTIVE 8. PROFESSIONAL"LOANS BY MAIL. $5000 to 35,000signature only. No advance fees ac¬cepted M.D.'s, Dentists, Residents,Senior Medical Students, College &University Educators, Federal, State& Municipal Employees, GS-12 orhigher, Corporate Employees making$20,000 or higher. Send brief resume toChatham Financial ConsultantsDepartment UCM PO Box 21406Chicago IL 60621.Writers' workshop PL2-8377.James (007), Nobody does it 8, better!Lets's celebrate your birthday in abubble! Love, XXXPa, Happy Birthday Old Man! Love,Ma.STRANGERS ON A TRAIN is PaulineKael's favorite Hitchcock and rightlyso. THU., 8:30, Law Aud.Don't miss the surreal BETTY BOOPIN BLUNDERLAND Thursday, 8 30,Law Auditorium, LSF.AT THE BAYITMr. Nahum Shamik, Consul General ofIsrael, will be at the Bayit Tues 11/8 at7:30 to lead an informal discussionconcerning key Zionist issues. Westrongly urge all you closet Zionistsand all you vocal oees to attendNaturally delicious Kosher refreshments will be served.ART PRINTSPut the Quads on your wall! Dreams inStone prints on sale for $1.50.Available at Bergman Gallery &Bookstore.DREAMS IN STONEDreams in Stone Prints now 40% offoriginal price at the Bergman Galleryand Bookstore.SPERM DONORWanted Sperm Donor from NorthernIndia for Artificial Insemination. Forinformation call 947-1813.Hfiar Sao+ln AfpCA.nWANDILEIKUSA-visiting lecturer <k\ IMI-Circle C*mfuiThurs. Nov. 10“7;3DJW ADMISSIONiwTfe sw fkee-Sponsored kj l) °f C ComMittee on Soo+keni Africa. - DECSYSTEM20Back by popular demand. Introductionto the Computation Center's new timesharing computer. Learn how to usethe DtC-20 to run programs from anyterminal cluster on campus. Thurs.,Nov. 10, 3:30 • 5 p.m Research In¬stitute C 1.13 (right above ComputationCenter). All are welcome, no charge.WOMEN'S GROUPVera Buck Weisbord 82 year oldFeminist Labor organizor, author of ARADICAL LIFE Thurs., Nov. 10Women's Center Info 752-4678.Everyone Welcome.ACCOUNTING ANDFINANCE MAJORSLET US HELP YOU TOBECOME A CPAREVIEWCHICAGO Loop312-263-4952Des Plaines 312-299-5523Blue Island 312-299-5523COURSES BEGIN MAY 22 8, NOV 21.' "Our Successful Student Represent"1/3 or USACourses Begin May 22 h Nov. 21 FURNITURECouch, 2 chairs, coffee 8, end table,lamp 8, painting, exc. cond. Call 371 -8217.RIDE WANTEDRide wanted M-F from Clark 8,Diversey. Will pay, Linda 348-6327evenings. PAN PIZZADELIVEREDThe Medici Delivers from 5-10 30weekdays. 5-11:30 weekends. 667-7394Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourself.Antic\(desl \ues & Collectablescs, bookcases, chairs, tables)12-6 p.m. daily5455 S. BiackstoneFirst FloorMe GEORGE SCHOOL OF LAWUNIVERSITY OF THE PACIFICAccredited: American Bar AssociationMember — Association ofAmerican Law SchoolsSACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIAMay 1, 1978 is application deadlinetor first vear students seekingJuris Doctor degree in 3-vear Dayand 4-vear Evening Program beginningin September 1978Pre-Lmv DiscussionFOR PROSPECTIVE STUDENTSDATE: TIME: PLACE:FOR APPOINTMENTOR FURTHER INFORMATIONIt’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 Employer M/F Reynolds Club, rm. 200Let’s explore your careerin computer science.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 8,1977 — 11■I•■•■•■•■•■•■•■•I:s THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOMEDICAL CENTERANNIVERSARY BENEFIT CONCERT444444 Tuesday, November 15 at 8:15 p.m.FeaturingTHE CHICAGOSYMPHONYORCHESTRAOrchestra Hall • 220 S. Michigan Ave.Guest ConductorCarlo Maria GiuliniProgramMoussorgsky “Pictures at an Exhibition”(Orchestrated By Ravel)BeethovenSymphony No. 7, A Major, Opus 921Ticket PricesMain Floor: $100 (Patron), $50, $25, $20First Balcony: $20For Information,Proceeds Benefit Medical Research Programs • Tax Deductible as Provided by Law12 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 8,1977