UC “good faith” required in hiringProvost D. Gale Johnson compiled much of the data for the University's Af¬firmative Action Program. (Photo by Jeanne Dufort) By Eric Von der PortenOn March 6, the Office of Civil Rights(OCR} of the Department of Health,Education, and Welfare concluded a pre¬award review of the University’semployment practices, thereby enablingthe University to receive a $1.7 millionNASA contract.The completion of two documentsenabled that action to be taken. Theyare:• an agreement between the Universi-News analysisty and OCR setting forth procedures tobe followed by the University to ensurethat it follows policies of nondiscrimina¬tion and affirmative action in employ¬ment, and,• a comprehensive University Af¬firmative Action Program (AAP} analyz¬ing the current University workforceand past employment practices and set¬ting forth projections for the future hir¬ing of women and minorities.These documents may stand as land¬marks in the history of the University.Two basic issues were at stake duringthe two months of negotiations betweenthe University and OCR. OCR’s objec¬tive was to establish whether theUniversity has been in compliance withExecutive Order 11246, as amended, and to ensure that the University will be incompliance in the future.Executive Order 11246 applies to in¬stitutions having 50 or more employeesreceiving a federal contract in excess of$50,000. It stipulates that such institu¬tions may not discriminate in employ¬ment according to race or sex and mustpractice affirmative action in hiring. Allfederal contracts may be withdrawnfrom an institution that refuses to comp¬ly with these requirements.From the start, the University claimedthat its tradition of equal opportunityprovides the guarantees demanded bythe Executive Order and saw the reviewby OCR as an attack on another Univer¬sity tradition — academic freedom. TheUniversity believes that it must be freefrom government intervention in its af¬fairs if it is to retain its academicstature.President John Wilson said in aMarch 10 letter to the faculty, “Thegreatest difficulty (in the negotiations)was walking the fine line between the re¬quirements of the law and the traditionsof this University.” And later in thesame letter: “I do not consider suchdocuments defining the relationshipsbetween the federal government anduniversities as good for either theUniversity or the country. Neverthelessthe law, the Executive Order, and theregulations exist, and we must make thenecessary effort to coo Derate in the dif-HEWtop.2Dunham: S. Africa is “none of your business ”By Richard BiernackiBoard of trustees spokesman AllisonDunham announced that the trusteeswould tell students protesting theUniversity’s South Africa stockholdingsthat “investment is really none of yourbusiness.”During a spirited half-hour interviewlast month in the administrationbuilding, Dunham, a law professor andrepresentative for the board, stressedthat the trustees have the legal right todetermine policy on South Africawithout the advice of faculty members orThe Maroon will publish a transcriptof the Dunham interview Tuesday.students.“By law and otherwise, divestiture isour decision and we do not have to listento anybody else,” Dunham said. “Apublic debate serves no reasonable pur¬pose on this type of decision.”He continued: “The arguments proand con are standardized by this point.There is no new argument that comes outof any presentation.”Although the trustees votedunanimously against divestiture at theirmost recent board meeting, Dunhamsaid that the only evidence they con¬sidered regarding labor practices inSouth Africa was “anecdotal-typestories” told by trustees who had touredU.S. firms in that country.Emphasizing that the Universityshould not use its endowment holdingsto reflect social or political values, Dunham also said it is “unlikely” theUniversity will “weigh the merit” ofstockholder resolutions calling forchanges in U.S. corporate policy inSouth Africa. Instead, he contended thatthe University should vote in favor ofmanagement so long as it offers a con¬structive answer to its stockowningcritics.Dunham warned it would be “terriblydangerous” for the University towithdraw its holdings from ContinentalIllinois, which lends to South Africangovernment agencies, because it mightstart a run on the bank that could“break” it.Asked whether the University’s in¬fluence over Continental might pose aconflict of interest on divestiture for thesix University trustees who are directorsat the bank, Dunham answered yes, butadded that trustees discuss overall in¬vestment strategy, not whether fundsshould be withdrawn from particularfirms.“Constructive and responsible”In response to Dunham’s interpreta¬tion of shareholder resolution policy,treasurer Mary Petrie said that “ingeneral” she "would tend to agree” thatthe burden of proof lies with those whowant the University to vote againstmanagement. She agreed that theUniversity should consider whethermanagement has a reasonable response,rather than weighing equally the mass ofevidence for and against proposals forchange.The new proxy policy statement issued by the trustees at their Feb. 9meeting states that the treasurer shouldvote with management if management’sposition is “constructive and responsi¬ble.” Petrie said the February statementdoes not represent a change from pastpolicy. “It is meant to clarify what weare already doing,” she explained.A trustee who attended the Februaryboard meeting. James Rhind, said his“personal interpretation” of the newproxy statement is that the treasurershould vote with management “as longas management is not completely duck¬ing the issue and gives legitimatebusiness reasons why it cannot changeits policy.”The treasurer should “give the benefitof the doubt” to management, Rhindsaid, because “no one can really weighall the details.”To date, the University has votedagainst every shareholder proposal deal¬ing with social issues such as en¬vironmental protection, discrimination,corporate disclosure of information, andU.S. investment in South Africa.According to Dunham, one majorreason the trustees voted againstdivestiture was that they believe U.S.firms offer South African blacks pro¬gressive employment policies comparedto South African and other companies.But Dunham declined to give examplesof the "anecdotal-type stories” trusteesoffered as evidence. He also disclosedthat the trustees did not consider thesurvey of the U.S. labor practices releas¬ed in January by the Senate Subcom- Allison Dunahm: “We do not have to listento anybody else.” (Photo by JeanneDufort)mittee on Africa, chaired by SenatorDick Clark of Iowa.Another trustee contacted by TheMaroon, Arthur Schultz, said he votedagainst divestiture because he believes,“the American business community isthe most enlightened in the world.Within the allowances of local laws, theywork for the welfare and benefit of socie-. .. Dunham top.2HEW from 1ficult process of their implementation.”OCR wanted stringent requirementsUndoubtably, neither OCR nor theUniversity is completely satisfied withthe outcome of the review.OCR believed that there were seriousdeficiencies in the University’s record ofhiring and promoting women andminorities in both faculty and non¬faculty positions. The law school —which was investigated separately asthe result of a complaint by the LawWomen’s Caucus — in particular wasshown to have followed recruiting prac¬tices that were inadequate to ensure pro¬per consideration of women andminorities for faculty positions.But the stipulations of the agreementstop short of imposing hiring policychanges or quotas on the University.The agreement provides that the Univer¬sity:• keep detailed records of job ap¬plicants and hiring decisions,• publicly advertise open positionsand consult professional organizationsto reach potential female and minorityapplicants,• make “good faith” efforts to hirewomen and minorities in “underutiliz¬ed” areas, i.e., areas in which thenumber of female and minorityemployees is below their apparentavailability; the University is supposedto make a special attempt to hire twofemale law professors within the nextthree years,• review employee salaries and pro¬motion decisions in the past two yearsand make adjustments, includingretroactive pay, if any instances ofracial or sex discrimination are found,and,• conduct continuing reviews of hiringpractices in underutilized areas andmake annual reports to OCR.While OCR would have liked more str¬ingent requirements imposed on theUniversity, the lipiYfifsity believes thatthe requirements of the agreement areunnecessary, will create a great deal ofcostly and useless work, and representan unjustified intrusion of governmentin its affairs.Watchdog organizationThe University and OCR were able tomeet on a kind of middle ground onlvbecause OCR does not have thejurisdiction to use the threat ofwithdrawal of federal funds to imposerequirements on the University thatwould be totally unacceptable to theUniversity administration.An OCR letter of February 24 statesthat “HEW's Higher EducationGuidelines recognize that the ExecutiveOrder does not require that ‘a Universi¬ty contractor eliminate or dilute stan¬dards which are necessary to the suc¬cessful performance of the institution’seducational and research function.’ ”Thus the agreement specifically statesthat it, “is not intended to nor shall ithave the effect of interfering with theright of the University to select, pro¬mote, and grant tenure only to those per¬sons fully and best qualified.”Because of these limitations, OCR canserve primarily only as a watchdogorganizatic" to ensure both that theUniversity is aware of deficiencies in itsworkforce and that it makes “goodfaith” efforts to hire women andminorities at a level commensurate withtheir availability.The major vehicle for achieving theseaims is not so much the recent agree¬ment as it is the AAP, which was writtenentirely within the University but had tobe approved by OCR. The AAP servesseveral purposes: it functions as a state¬ment of University policy concerningequal opportunity employment; itreports detailed comparisons of theavailability of women and minorities2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 7, 1978 Dunham fromp.lty and people.”It would be useless to withdraw U.S.firms from South Africa, Schultz said,because other foreign investors will stepin to profit from providing the same ser¬vices to South Africa.In contrast to the University trustees’reticence on questions of South Africaninvestments, trustees at Columbia, Yaleand the University of Oregon have heldforums to solicit information on theissue. At Harvard, the Advisory Com¬mittee on Shareholder Responsibility, afaculty, student and administrationgroup that reports to Harvard’s trustees,will sponsor an open forum Monday.“An abysmal performance”The Investor Responsibility ResearchCenter, a non-profit investigation groupbased in Washington, found that “thebulk of American companies doingbusiness in South Africa are probably nomore innovative than South African orBritish or other foreign business.” -After conducting hundreds of inter¬views with company officials in SouthAfrica in 1976 and late 1977 and ac¬cumulating a massive file of laborstatistics, the center concluded thatmost American firms’ labor practices aresimilar to South African companies ofcomparable size, industry, andgeographic location.The center was established in 1972 byfoundations and several universities, in¬cluding Yale and Harvard, to provideimpartial information on social ques¬tions raised by shareholder proposals.The Senate Subcommittee report, com¬piled from answers to a detailed ques¬tionnaire sent to over 250 U.S. com¬ panies in South Africa, described U.S.corporations’ efforts to offer fairemployment as “an abysmal per¬formance.”“With very few exceptions,” thereport concluded “there was littleevidence that U.S. firms deliberatelyadopted a socially conscious policy ofavoiding support of South Africangovernment or its apartheid policies.“U.S. firms are not conducting theirbusiness operations in a manner whichwould indicate clear or active disap¬proval of the apartheid system, nor arethey exerting any obvious leverage onthe system for change.Four corporations in which theUniversity invests, Ingersoll-Rand,Baxter Travenol, Engleboard Minerals,and U.S. Steel, declined to provide theSenate with any information about theemployment policies in South Africa.Four others in which the Universityholds stocks or bonds pay blacks wagesthat “may not adequately support ahousehold,” according to the Senatereport. They are American Express,Ford, Deere, and Kellogg.In an attempt to discuss the SouthAfrica issue with the full board, the Ac¬tion Committee on South Africa sent aletter to the trustees last week re¬questing student representatives at thenext board meeting, April 13.“As the trustees of an institution com¬mitted to the serious discussion ofideas,” the committee letter states, “wecall on you to take steps to ensure a freeand open exchange of viewpoints on in¬vestment policy.”Students on the committee said theyplan to hold a demonstration on campusnext week if the trustees do not agreed toa debate.with the actual number of women andminorities employed in each area of theUniversity; and it projects the numberof women and minorities who will behired in each area by 1980. The latterfigures are based on the calculatedavailability of women and minorities.Numerous problemsThere are numerous problems with thenegotiated settlement of the pre-awardreview. Perhaps the primary difficultyis the failure of the University tonegotiate in good faith with OCR and theserious questions this raises concerningthe University’s future willingness toact in good faith with regard to the agree¬ment and the AAP.The University’s AAP is largely an at¬tempt to rationalize the University’spast employment practices and makeagreeable promises for 1980 while offer¬ing no guarantees that those promiseswill be fulfilled.The AAP can often be deceptive. Forexample, the Introduction glowinglyreviews the University’s policies onnondiscrimination and affirmative ac¬tion and notes that, “The Universitydescribed its equal opportunity policyand its Affirmative Action Program inJune 1969. Each year since then the pro¬gram has been carried forward and ad-justed to meet changing cir¬cumstances.” But an OCR letter ofFebruary 3 states that the University,“has not had an operative AACP (Af¬firmative Action Compliance Program)since 1976, in violation of 41 CFR 60-1.40.”The same OCR letter also makes thespecific point that though 8.8 percent ofthe faculty members are minorities, 5.2percent (53) are “Orientals” (mostlyChinese and Indians) while only 3.6 per¬cent (36) are black, hispanic, or nativeAmerican.But the AAP ignores that distinction,reporting that “the representation ofminorities on the University facultysignificantly exceeds the number thatwould be expected from achieving the‘ultimate goals.’ There are 88 minorityfaculty members, and full utilizatior(based on availability statistics) wouldindicate 57.”While the concept of nondiscrimina¬tion means equal access to employment,affirmative action implies that in¬dividuals who may be equally or evenmore talented than others but who mayappear less qualified because of disad¬vantaged backgrounds should be givenspecial consideration in employment.By grouping Orientals with otherminorities, the University fails torecognize that most foreign-born Orien¬tals on the faculty do not come from dis¬advantaged backgrounds and thus arenot the intended beneficiaries of af¬firmative action programs.Record called “remarkably goodThe University’s attitude is crucial tothe success of the federal action. Giventhe watchdog character of OCR, realchanges in University employment prac¬tices will only occur if the University iswilling to consider its position openly,recognize problems, and effect correc¬tive policies.The University’s position is that nosuch changes are necessary because ofwhat Wilson calls the University’s“remarkably good” record on af¬firmative action. But statisticspresented by OCR and by the Universitysuggest that there may be serious pro¬blems with the University’s employ¬ment practices.Data in the AAP, the University’sFeb. 24 letter to OCR, and OCR’s Feb. 3letter to the University suggest, for ex¬ample, that:• women and minorities in non¬faculty positions tend to be grouped inlower pay categories and, in both faculty and non-faculty positions, to be paidless, on the average, than whites andmen within the same categories,• a much smaller percentage ofminority job applicants are acceptedthan is true for white job applicants,• the number of his panics employedis far below their availability, and,• women and minorities tend to besignificantly overutilized in many non-academic areas, particularly in some ofthe less-skilled job categories.In analyzing these figures, it shouldbe noted that it is discriminatory tospecifically employ women andminorities in less skilled positions, justas it is discriminatory to exclude womenand minorities from prestigious posi¬tions.The above observations should not,however, be used as the basis forcharges of racism or sexism against theUniversity.As the AAP notes, there are very fewwomen and minorities qualified forfaculty and high-level administrativepositions and many of those who arehave not been in the job market for verylong. In addition, it is extremely dif¬ficult to determine the availability ofwomen and minorities for highlyspecialized positions.“Availability pools,” which are usual¬ly based on regional employmentstatistics and on “earned degree” datafrom U.S. universities, are the basis fordetermining current utilization ofwomen and minorities in specificemployment areas. Such availabilityfigures are, at best, general and im¬precise. But because of the problemswith using availability pools, even thestatistics provided by OCR and by theUniversity do not give a clear picture ofthe effects of the University’s hiringpractices. Thus the University’s com¬pliance or noncompliance with federalregulations is often difficult to deter¬mine, even when the data seem to showthat problems exist. Complaints continueGovernment intervention and thepotential for decreased standards ofquality is one of the University’sgreatest fears. But refusing to admitthat problems could exist and refusingto act in good faith to investigate andcorrect those problems may be detrimen¬tal to the interests of the University aswell as those of its students andemployees.The University Feminist Organization(UFO), in cooperation with the Women’sUnion and the New American Move¬ment, is currently preparing a formalcomplaint against the University.Susan Starr, speaking for UFO, saidthat “the AAP does not bring theUniversity into compliance in any senseof the word.” Starr said that the agree¬ment and the AAP are not sufficient tofulfill the requirements of the ExecutiveOrder and that more stringent re¬quirements — modelled after thoserecently agreed to by other Midwesternuniversities — should be imposed on theUniversity.Starr hopes that the complaint filed byUFO will encourage a re-analysis of theagreement and the AAP. The settlement“hasn’t been approved yet,” said Starr,referring to the fact that the LaborDepartment’s Office of Federal ContractCompliance Programs still must ap¬prove the settlement.Several individuals are also reported¬ly filing specific complaints against theUniversity. Such complaints are likelyto continue as long as the Universityrefuses to recognize an affirmative ac¬tion problem and. as long as such com¬plaints continue, it is likely thatpressure to restrict the University’sfreedom will increase.Anyone interested in further informa¬tion on this subject can find alldocuments mentioned in this articleunder “HEW” in the author file of thereserve section of Regenstein Library.NewsBriefsTWO sues Resource CenterBy Carl LavinA controversial plot of land used forthe past two years as a rubbish dump bythe Resource Center will be ready forplanting as a community garden in 30days, according to the Center’s director,Ken Dunn.Neighbors of the Resource Center, oneof Chicago’s leading recyclers, havecomplained about the condition of thevacant property and have filed a suitcharging that the Resource Center is apublic nusiance and in violation of thecity’s zoning laws.Dunn, a University graduate student,hopes that his neighbors will drop theircomplaints and their s.uit once thegarden is planted this spring. He ex¬plained that the rubbish that has ac¬cumulated on the property over the pasttwo years was placed there purposefully to build up the soil.“It takes a lot of effort to turn rockand sand into usable soil,” said Dunn.“My idea was to bring in loads oforganic matter to build up the soil sothat it would be capable of supporting agarden. What looks like trash is reallygood compost material.”Public interest lawyer MarshallPatner is handling Dunn’s legal defense.He has until April 14 to present a replyto the suit filed last month by residentsof the 6100 block of Dorchester Ave.Dunn said that cleaning up the lotshould be enough to satisfy the com¬plaint that the lot is a public nusiance.But it may be more difficult to convincethe judge that the resource center is notin violation of zoning regulations. Zon¬ing law as it applies to recycling centersis still poorly defined and Dunn is collec¬ting data from across the country to helphim in his defense.Fellow Schwehn Nevins winnerHarper Fellow Mark Schwehn hasreceived the Allan Nevins Prize from theSociety of American Historians for hisdissertation, “The Making of ModernConsciousness in America: The Worksand Careers of Henry Adams andWilliam James.”The prestigious $1,000 Prize, whichvirtually guarantees publication, isawarded to the best dissertation eachyear. The selection committee places a high premium on literary merit and theprize is given to promote distinction inthe writing of history and biography.Schwehn, now in his last year as aHarper Fellow, received his PhD fromStanford University. He now teaches ahumanities Common Core sequence.The Society, an honorary group withabout 200 members, will presentSchwehn the award at a dinner in NewYork April 14.Baker Memorial Prize announcedA prize honoring the memory ofPatricia Lynn Baker, a graduate studentin the social sciences divisional master’sprogram who was killed in automobileaccident last September, has beenestablished .The Patricia Lynn Baker MemorialPrize is intended to encourage the use ofsocial science knowledge to improvehuman welfare, indentify and analyze in¬stitutionalized forms of inequality, andpromotes social reform. Graduate students in political scienceand sociology, and in the divisionalmaster’s program are eligible for the$100 cash award.Applicants must submit an essay notto exceed 50 typewritten pages and threefaculty members from political science,sociology, and the master’s program willchoose the winner.The prize fund was established bygifts to the University from Baker’sparents, family, and friends. Nazi march may be illegal,Kurland tells Hillel groupBy Susan MalaskiewiczLaw school professor Philip Kurlandargued that the proposed Nazi marchand demonstration in Skokie is illegal,despite rulings by two Illinois courtsthat prevent the village of Skokie frominterfering with the march.“I base my position on the certainty ofviolence and the right of government toinhibit certain actions which causeviolence,” said Kurland Tuesday.In a speech last month to the HillelFoundation, the constitutional expertsaid that the “symbolic speech” of wear¬ing the Nazi uniform and the swastikaarmband is not protected by law becauseit “conduces to violence.”“In Tinker v. Des Moines, a case onwhich the trial court relies heavily, itwas held that public authorities had nopower to prevent high school studentsfrom wearing black armbands protestingthe Vietnam war,” said Kurland, poin¬ting out a difference between wearingblack armbands in peaceful protest, andwearing swastikas, which stand “inHitler’s words, as a symbol of the mis¬sion of the struggle for the victory of theAryan man.”“It confounds common sense to saythat the proposed Nazi demonstrationwill jiot be conducive to violence,” saidKurland. “We have a federal law thatmakes it a crime to threaten the life ofthe President. . . so, too, I submit, doesthe village of Skokie have an interest inprotecting the safety of its citizens, allowing them to live their lives withoutinterference from threats of physicalviolence.”Kurland said that the threat ofviolence is not the only reason to inhibitspeech. . •. “If a state commission mayban advertisements for discrimination inemployment, may a municipality notban advocacy of discrimination based onrace or religion, as the village of Skokiesought to do here?”According to Kurland, speech hasbeen banned because, for example, themaker of a mouthwash suggests that itsproduct "may help reduce the ravages ofthe common cold,” or because statesprohibited use of billboards “in thename of aesthetics.”“Is the advocacy banned by theSkokie ordinances less lethal, lessviolent, less illegal, than that which theCourt allowed to be limited in these con¬texts?” asked Kurland.“If there is anything to the judicial no¬tion of a free marketplace for ideas, thevillage of Skokie cannot reasonably beconsidered such a marketplace. Thevillage does not provide a forum for theurging of rational arguments; it affordsonly a potential battlefield for physicalviolence,” said Kurland.“Finally, I would ask, how manytimes does the Constitution commandthat this bloody, depraved credo ofAryan supremacy have to be brought tothe marketplace of ideas before it isdeemed bested by ‘Truth’?” he conclud¬ed.Law school professor Philip Kurland. (Photo by Jeanne Dufort >NOTICEProfessor Arnaldo Momigliano’s Public Lecture:"THE AGE OF COLONIZATION”in the series: Questions of Archaic? Greek History will begiven on Thursday, April 13 at 3:00 P.M. in Social Sciences,Room 122.The last two lectures in the series will be given at 4.00P.M. in Social Sciences, Room 122 as scheduled. All are invited toA free Christian Science lectureabout the nature of ChristMORE THAN A SUPERSTARby George Aghamalian, C.S.B., member ofthe Christian Science Board of LectureshipSAT., APR. 15, 2:30 PMon the Midway at the Center for ContinuingEducation, 1307 East 60th StreetThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 7, 1978 3EditorialGood faith and OCRThere has been an adversary relationship bet¬ween the University and the Office of Civil Rights(OCR) over affirmative action ever since the startof negotiations. On the most fundamental level,the administration had to convince OCR that thebasic premise of elite private education is soundand constructive and that conventionalmeasurements of hiring and promotion used by thefederal government cannot be applied to a privateuniversity that is by nature “discriminatory” inthe purest sense of the word.The University discriminates in everythingbecause its basic goal is excellence, not equality.Unfortunately, this lack of concern for equalrepresentation has led to the propagation ofrecruitment and hiring procedures that have atleast unintentionally resulted in under andoverutilization of women and minorities in dif¬ferent areas of the University.The University seems to have convinced OCRthat elite education has a place amid the oftendepersonalized confusion of increased sociallegislation. OCR has accepted the University’s Af¬firmative Action program and has created a wat¬chdog position for itself. To assuage those who aredisappointed by OCR’s seeming quiescence, it isimperative that OCR now be diligent in theirreviews of University hiring and promotionpolicies. Because OCR has allowed the Universityto handle their own affirmative action, they muststay on the administration’s back to ensure thatnecessary revisions be made. In short, judging bythe University’s past performance and current at¬titudes, no significant changes will be made inwhat is obviously an abysmal affirmative actioneffort without continued pressure from OCR.The question of the future of affirmative actionprograms raises another question, that of whetherthere will be more qualified women and minoritiesavailable in the future. Only if elite private institu¬tions make greater efforts to encourage disad¬vantaged students to obtain the educations theseschools can offer will the “availability pools” everbe increased. Here, the University can help its owncause and, as a great believer in academic in¬dependence, start to solve its own problems. Ifthere are more minorities and women trained byschools like Chicago, there will be more minorityand women faculty members from which to choose.The vicious circle of the “limited availabilitypool” is propogated by many universities; in¬cluding Chicago’s failure to recruit a substantialnumber of minority students.For now, OCR has accepted the University’sfigures. But the University must, in good faith,respond by investigating possible problems in itshiring and promotion procedures and make correc¬tions where they are necessary. It is all too ob¬vious that there are too few minority ad¬ministrators and faculty members at the Universi¬ty, and now that OCR has backed off and acceptedthe premise of independently run elite education,the school seems safe from academic intervention.But unless the University accepts its responsibili¬ty to amend past inconsistencies and blatant in¬adequacies in hiring and recruitment, instead ofarrogantly praising their inept affirmative actionprogram, OCR will be back, and next time may beempowered to take stronger action against theUniversity’s elitist stand.Editor: Jon MeyersohnNews Editor: Abbe FletmanFeatures Editor: Karen HellerSports Editor: R. W. RohdePhoto Editor: Jeanne DufortAssociate Editors: Nancy Crilly, Eric Von der Porten.Claudia MagatProduction: Judith Franklin. Michelle PleskowLiterary Editors: Peter Eng. George SpigotGraphics: ChrisPersansBusiness Manager: Sara WrightOffice Manager: Lisa McKeon4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 7, 1978/ InoA ytrbi1 "*oort»M• iOr-ji'Or» 1 Letters to the EditorFlying Ad buildingTo the Editor:President Wilson has stressed that“the university is not an agent ofsocial, evolutionary, revolutionary, oreconomic change.” Perhaps it is theflying house in the Wizard of Oz.SILVIA PEDRAZASelling the U of CTo the Editor:I note in reading all the letters andeditorials on the South African ques¬tion in your paper that none has men¬tioned one of the basic tenets for in¬vesting funds, especially trust funds,pension funds and the like. Thereseems to be an unwritten law that youinvest in the “standard companies”such as Sears, I.B.M., Ford, StandardOil and the like. There is probably anapproved list for the investmentmanagers to follow at the Universityand a certain percentage makeup bet¬ween stocks, bonds and U.S. Treasuryobligations which is acceptable to thetrustees. This list may change slightlyfrom time to time. For the abovereason, it is not approved policy to in¬vest in say, “American Widgets” at 25cper share which may have a greatspeculative future and make moremoney for the University thananything else they could conceive ofbecause if they did, there would be ahuge outcry from trustees and studentsalike of how irresponsible the managershad become.Just to give a specific and personalexample of this mentality: I was givenan opportunity to advise on the disposi¬tion of certain stocks held in trust forthe estate of a deceased family member.One of the stocks was Sears, Roebuck. Iadvised selling the stock at $110 andwas stoutly criticized and lectured bythe bright members of the ContinentalBank trust department. The stockwhich they saw as one of the leadersand on their approved investment listsubsequently declined to less than $26 ashare which bore out my assesment ofits true worth. The stock was sold at asubstantial benefit to the estate.The investment community has itshead in the sand most of the time andwon’t move without consulting a com¬mittee which is bound by certain rulesand regulations. I submit it is thisreason that the University has in¬vestments connected with South Africaand that it has nothing at all to do withpolitics, morals or anything else.STUART TALBORPoli sci:ups and downsTo the Editor:The secret of obtaining a congres¬sional staff position was revealed lastmonth to an assembly of eager Ph.D.candidates in the social sciences: Moveto Washington, become an elevatoroperator or doorman in The House orSenate, “patrol the hallways,” andstrike up friendships with innumerablesecretaries and receptionists (who arepart of the “gossip network.”) I am notabove such tasks. Yet it does seem atleast moderately bizarre that after 5years of advanced academic study ingovernment, I am only prepared formoving politicians from one floor toanother. There is evidently a gap bet¬ween training in political science andthe practical application thereof. And Iam afraid I have fallen into it.A poli sci grad Cost vs. benefitTo the Editor:I have followed with interest andmisgiving the University’s involve¬ment with HEW over allegations ofdiscrimination. In the past, someacademic units of the University mayhave discriminated against minorities.(This charge, unfortunately, would ap¬ply equally to virtually all of our socialinstitutions.) The important problemnow is to determine the most produc¬tive course for the future.In my view, the essential require¬ment is to preseve the freedom and in¬dependence of the faculty and of theUniversity. This goal will not beachieved if the responsibility for selec¬ting faculty and staff is relinquished toHEW.The review of potential facultymembers is a complex process that can¬not be reduced simply to quantitativecriteria. The prediction of whether anindividual will be a productive scholar,a stimulating teacher, and a pro¬vocative colleague is a highly subjec¬tive process. In a community seekingexcellence, this subjective process isnot necessarily discriminating,although it would be easy to make it so.The present faculty chooses new facul¬ty. I believe that we must rely on thefaculty’s sense of fairness and on itsresponse to society’s concern thatchanges be made in some of thepreviously accepted practices.I would oppose the imposition of anyform of a quota system because Ibelieve that, in the long run, such asystem acts to the detriment of thosewhom it seeks to assist. At this time,there are not a sufficient number of pro¬spective eminent minority faculty tofill the available tenured positions atmajor universities that are recruitingthem. If the University is obliged by aquota to hire a fixed number of blacksor women, it will have to accept somefaculty and staff who do not meet thehighest standards. These individualswill be at a disadvantage vis a vis theircolleagues and students, and the oldstereotype regarding their inferioritywill be reinforced.Recent minority graduates shouldcertainly be encouraged to consider acareer in academia. These individualscan become junior faculty and canmature to become tenured members ofacademic departments. But this pro¬cess takes time; there is no way to pro¬duce an Instant Eminent Scholar.I hope that those who are currentlyurging punitive action against theUniversity will consider whether the“gain” is commensurate with the pricethat all of us will have to pay. Our ma¬jor concern must be to achieve genuineequality of opportunity in the contextof an enlightened and independentfaculty.JANET D. ROWLEY, M.D.ProfessorDepartment of MedicineLong windedTo the Editor:As one who has followed our StudentGovernment with some interest, I mustexpress my feelings about a certainmember of the SG, namely Allan J.Wind.During the past several weeks, AllanJ. Wind has proven to be a most loathsome character. After being theonly BLISS candidate ever to lose a bidfor a major office when he was defeatedby Gerry Mildner for secretary, he hasresorted to back-stabbing and name¬calling. The formation of the Indepen¬dent Reform Party brought about tworeactions from Mr. Wind, and neitherof them was very appealing.First, he wrote the letter to TheMaroon which appears in the March 3issue, in which he calls the party“unholy,” claims Steve Kehoe is “apious victim of logorhea," states EarlAndrews “lusted” after the presiden¬cy, etc., etc. His other response was towrite up and distribute a handoutwhich told us of the founders’“ignorance,” and told us to “beware ofthis patent facade,” and on and on. (Tomake matters worse, I have heard thathe denied making the handout—aridiculous claim to any of us who haveseen and can easily recognize his“handwriting” and obnoxious at¬titude.)This type of juvenile behavior isdisgusting. This is an university, not akindergarten. This arrogant, obnoxiousbehavior of Allan J. Wind cannot betolerated. He claims he is working foran SG that we “want and need.” Well,we need an SG in which Allan J. Windis no part. I sincerely hope that thestudents and our representatives grantus this need, and flush Allan J. Windout of Student Government for good.ALLAN S. BREUNDEREast not to blameTo the Editor:I would like to thank The Maroon forit’s editorial in the March 3 edition onthe question of the University’s “lackof reputation.” This is a questionwhich plagues those affiliated with theUniversity every day and has not beendiscussed and debated with theseriousness that it deserves.A more disappointing part of theeditorial, however, was the conclusionwith which The Maroon came up. Theeditorial correctly criticised the NewYork Times for it’s recent articledescribing the “new, innovative”educational program Harvard is plann¬ing to institute. It then went on to arather silly and childish conclusion,blaming the New York Times by nameand the rest of the “Eastern media” byassociation for the University’s reputa¬tion problem.It is, of course, true that the Timesand some other Eastern media seem tobe ignoring the University of Chicagoin favor of Harvard and other Easternschools. But to blame these groups forthe problem is totally unrealistic. Thelack of applicant pool and generalrecognition, the University’s majorproblems, are nationwide, and not con¬fined to the East Coast. To blame theNew York Times, with a circulation ofapproximately 800,000, as the cause ofthe University’s problem, is simplylaughable.The root of the problem lies in thefact that the University’s attempts atpublicising itself have been failingmiserably. Whether that is due to a lackof energetic publicity by the Universityor to an unrealistic approach to thequestion of public relations remains tobe seen. Yet it is the job of the Universi¬ty to insure it’s own publicity andvisibility. Neither the New York Timesnor any other Eastern media is respon¬sible for the problems of the Universityin this area, and the fact that TheMaroon feels the necessity to blameothers outside of the University itself issad.CHARLES SEIGELSave for a rainy day at Hyde Park Bankfree Tbtes Umbrella or Bam Scarf(with a $250 savings deposit)It’s a wise idea to save for a rainy day atHyde Park Bank and Trust Company.Because right now, you can get a freeTotes umbrella or rain scarf simply for de¬positing $250 into a new or existing savingsaccount.Of course, your money earns at the high¬est bank interest rates allowed by law. Andeach depositor is fully insured to $40,000.And then there’s Totes. It’s the qualityname in rainy day protection.Totes Umbrellas. Easy to open. Easy toclose. They’re 100% nylon and the framescarry a lifetime guarantee. The man’smodel comes in jet black. The woman’s model comes in black, red, navy, cocoa,light blue. bone, rust or yellowTotes Rain Scarves. With the look andfeel of silk. Made of water-repellent, stainresistant Polyester Twill. And in a rainbowof designs and colors. In all, dozens ofdifferent scarves to choose from.This offer begins March 21, 1978. and ex¬pires on April 22, 1978. Selection is limitedto supply. So we urge you to hurry.As Noah might have said: "You wouldn’twant to be left out in the rain.’’1525 East 53rd St.. Chicago, III. 60615 • Phone 752-4600$250 must remain on deposit for a period of six months or a $5 00service charqe will be assessed One gift per depositorF 0 I CThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 7, 1978—5MORTON DAUWEN ZABEL LECTURE SERIESIhc Bntocrsitji of ChicagoTHE DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISHpresentsEDWARD DORNAuthor of Gunslingerin a reading of his own poetryMonday, April 10, 19784:00 p.m.HARPER 1301116 East 59th StreetThe Public is Invited493-0666 Your personal brokerIMMEDIATE POSSESSION. CITY SKYLINE FROM 14 FLOORS HIGH! Now allready to go — newly decorated, parquet floors oiled and polished. Excellent condi¬tion. You don’t have to go downtown for topnotch luxury living at lower Hyde Parkprices. $47,500.IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. Owner has just left for Texas. You are invited Saturday April 8,10am-2pm, 1332 E. 56th St. Ideal for single, four lovely rooms New carpeting, super-modemkitchen, teakwood parquet floors Low monthly $89.00, near 56th Kenwood. $36,000.TREE TOP CO-OP ALONG EAST SIDE OF S.S. DRIVE. 10 min. from campus.View of lake from study. Large loavely garden available to grow vegetables, wood-burning fireplace, modem bath and great kitchen. 6 room in all $16,500. Board ap¬proval .CALLING ALL PLANT LOVERS! Near 57th Blackstone. Southern light pours intostudy and living room all day. Focal point walnut mantle and stone fireplace. Lovelynatural floors. Formal dining room 15’ long has decorative molding. Bedroom¬dressing room-bath suite generous for two. Super kitchen and a pantry. Well-run at¬tractive condominium building, 5 rooms and entrance gallery. $53,000.LUCKY YOU! Planning to rent a place in the dunes for the summer? Here’s a dreamyhouse, approx. 2,400 sq. ft. fully equipped, fully furnished. Natural fireplace, largescreened patio. Perched high on a hill, one block from Lake in Beverly Shores, stillonly 50 minutes from campus. Available June. July, August. $2,500 entire season."WE Make House Calls,We Get Results"Call Charlotte Vikstrom493 066011 '»£' i < V ; >'ii V1G v Pure rock’n’roll energy, youthful lyrics andmemorable musical hooksSPIN-IT PRESENTSSOMEONE WE FEELYOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUTTHE JAMTHE MODERN WORLDpolvaor ON POLYDOR RECORDSAcknowledged the best of the New Wave groups, Jamis a smash in England and their sound is now availablein the U.S.See the Jam, one of England’s finestnew wave groups at the Riviera April7th. After the concert, pick up on theJam AT SPIN-IT. Both of their Polydoralbums are specially priced at s4.79through April 14.SPIN-IT1447 E. 57th St.684-1505Open Mon.-Sat. 10:30-8 Sun. 12-66—The Chicago Maroon—Friday April 7, 1978Sea Horse p.9Classical music P.11Jackson Browne p.13Journal“Two or Three Stones” by Kanani Bell, 1978Those who teach, canBy Becky O'Connor ChandlerThere are only a couple of blocks betweenCochrane Woods Art Center and MidwayStudios, but until recently few have madethe trek. While it would probably bepremature to call for a new mini-bus service, a spirit of cooperation and an interestin communication has been growing recent¬ly between these two branches of the ArtDepartment. Practicing artists joinclassroom discussions north of the Midwayand art history students sometimes wanderthrough the studios at 60th and Ingleside.This revitalization of interest in blendinghumanistic inquiry with the practice of artis the work of the Committee on Art andDesign.The CAD, begun in 1975, is composed ofartists, art historians, literary critics, andphilosophers. The artists of CAD have ventured out across the combat zone, where artistic issues are debated, to exhibit theirworks at the Smart Gallery. We can thankCAD and Smart for reminding us that thereare people in our holy midst who do makeart. The exhibit, which closes on April 9, iscalled simply "Artists of the Committee onArt and Design." This title establishes boththe theme and setting for the show, callingour attention to experiences common to theartists involved. That artists training otherartists share their teaching responsibilitieswith humanists teaching criticism, history,and aesthetics suggests the extent to whichtheoretical concerns figure in the making ofthe art on display. What stands behind thiswork, in other words, is not just a set of attitudes or approaches to art, but actual conversations about its procedures, its nature,its goals. To describe these artists in termsof their conceptual concerns is not to saythat they are "conceptual artists." Still,part of what makes these works compellingis the interaction between idea and act,theory and practice.Epistemology is the foundation of KananiBell's constructions. In his photoconstructions he explores the semioticnature of visual vocabulary in two orders ofsigns - the photographic image and thegeometric symbols which he invents. While intriguing (it is, at least for me, finallyunrewarding) the viewer's struggles torelate these systems detracts from the im¬mediate visual experience of the works. Butperhaps if one were to see more of this workthe artist's intentions would becomeclearer. One work, Two or Three Stones, ismore successful. The perceptual problemintroduced is enlivened by the viewer'sjourney in and around the space constructedby the stones and sculpture stands. Theplayfulness of the work lightens the tone ofthe whole exhibit.Bob Peters is also interested in the relation between different orders of visualvocabulary. Words, geometric symbols,and mimetic imagery are juxtaposed in dif¬ferent sequences, poking fun at each otherand at themselves, creating contraditions,puns, and absurdities. But the jokes are notstrictly intellectual. Confusion reigns on thelevel of spatial logic. Familiar rectanglesare strewn with symbolic debris of varioussorts which rustle up against one another inconfusing and fascinating array. It would bedifficult not to enjoy the humor of The Anatomy Lesson.Each of Richard Shift's bi partite can¬vases yokes together two traditions ofpainterly language and plays them offagainst each other. The multiple reverbera¬tions of one in the other unmasks the preten¬sions of the alternate tradition. This formatallows Shift, an art historian, to expressreservations toward excessive claims ofvarying styles among academic schools ofthought. Expecially exciting are the smallercanvasses, (and in particular Triangle 15).These highlight best his skill at color ar¬rangement.It is hard to mention color at the Smart ex¬hibition without calling to mind Vera Kle-ment's shimmering pastel drawings. Thesehuge undulating forms pay homage to theforms of ancient pottery. On a purely opticallevel they are quite powerful, but on anemotional one they remain cool and aloofalthough reference is made to spontaneousgesture on the edges of the colored areas.Perhaps there could be more exploration tomaximize thecontinued on page 8•. v v •* * » • kcontinued from page 7expressive power of Klement's colors. It will be in¬teresting to see where she takes this work. But already asthey are, they created a minor stir at the opening.Tom Mapp works by carving out an area of relativefreedom on the traditional rectangular format in order tostudy imaginative possibilities of drawing. The marsphoto (reproduced in the Sun Times in 1976) serves as thetightly constrained field upon which his pencil works in aseries of increasingly complex and intriguing drawings.The layering is especially compelling in the most densedrawings, because the subtly 'worked levels of orderseem to be maintained at the constant threat jf totaldisintegration. One intermittently loses and rediscoversthe order of the work.It is reassuring to find someone trained in philosophywho is moved by people and trees. And that seems to bethe order of Joel Snyder's creative process; that is, thingsmotivate a particular treatment and interest rather thanWe can thank CAD and Smapt forreminding us that there are people inour holy midst who do make art.the reverse. This openness is reflected in the variety ofsubjects and conventions with which he works. The abun¬dance of interests, while refreshingly ambitious, doesmake Snyder's exhibit more difficult for the viewer. Ifound Frank Checking to See if He's Still Here the mostsuccessful of the asylum series. The tentativeness of hispresence in the space of the photographic image reflectsFrank's own misgivings spoken of in the title. The weepmg willows were also very nice.Laura Volkerding creates spatial distortions with awide angle lens, making the center of the images bend,curve, and swell out toward us. Sometimes she achieves alyrical effect, as in the Ferry to Mackinac where the lineof the train track is enhanced by the distortion. Butsometimes the distortion seems mere labored or the inten¬tion unclear. Of the V-shaped studies of space, the Chicagoseries is most striking.Save yourself the walk and enjoy this multi-faceted ex¬hibit at Smart before it disappears into the studios of HydePark.The Smart gallery is open Tuesday to Saturday 10 a m.until 4 p.m. The last day the CAD exhibit will be on displayis Sunday, hours are 12-4 p.m. “Less and More” by Robert Peters, 1977The'Yif-eyCffy'JournalTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE DIVISION OF THE HUMANITIES’presents a series of lecturesTHE ANALYSIS OFIMAGE MAKINGhSIR ERNST GOMBRICH(The Warburg Institute, The University of London)Alexander White Visiting Professor, University of Chicago* FRIDAY, APRIL 14TUESDAY, APRIL 18TUESDAY, MAY 2TUESDAY, MAY 16 Purpose and FormStandards of TruthThe Share of ConventionPsychological ConstantsThe Lectures will be held at 4:00 in the afternoonin QUANTRELL AUDITORIUM, COBB HALL5811 South Ellis Avenue‘Friday, April 14, the lecture (repeating that one read Tuesday,>riL4j will begin at 4:30 in the afternoon.L/C ft CORDIALLY INVITED . .ADMISSION FREE > Chicago Calligraphy Collectivepreseti tsTice Pen Ttimtplimt%April 3-28,1978Bergman Gallery4th floor, Cobb HallReception: Sunday. April 0. I()7B...3:()0 - i>:00 l\M.By Jeanne NowaczewskiEdward J. Moore's The Sea Horse, whichwon the 1974 Elmer Rice Drama DeskAward, is playing at Court Studio Theatrefor its second and final weekend April 7, 8,and 9. It is a bit of recent American realistictheater that should not be missed. Court'sproduction, directed by Shirley Nelson, atheater instructor at Thornton CommunityCollege, represents Court's efforts to in¬volve community members and guest direc¬tors as an integral part of Chicago's theaterprogram; judging from this production,such an objective is to be applauded.Set in a dockside California tavern, theplay is about the love between Harry, asailor, and Gert, the owner of thedelapidated seaman's bar. It opens asHarry pounds on the Sea Horse's door, beg¬ging to be let in out of the rain; Gert's onlyreaction is to continue wearily swabbing thefloorboards. This pitting of the blunt, stolidGert against the insistent, likeable Harry(she does, after all, let him in) establishesthe play's rhythm and energy. Within thetight confines of the little barroom and inless than 12 dramatical hours, Harryreveals his ingenuous poetic sensibilitiesand his dreams for the future. Thesedreams, which center around Gert, are con¬trasted with the pained, strictured tale sheultimately reveals as her past — a past sodominant, it seems to negate any hope of adifferent future. Both characters revealthemselves in long monologues, reminiscentof Tennesse Williams, and indeed the wholeplay has the air of American '40s drama,with its picture of the struggling workingclass side of life where strong sexual under¬tones are imbedded in nonchalant humor.The play's success lies in its conjuring ofimages and concepts particular to theAmerican working class. Gert's revealedlittle girl-like wanting of her daddy in themidst of her present seedy independence isa reference to the universal desire forchildhood, and particularity for Gert, to theprotection and love that seems so unat¬tainable in adulthood, and so painlessly easyas a child.Harry, the good joe, the jack of all trades,currently employed as a swab, is un-combortable with his sensitivity. He longsfor what he knows are the good things, thenormal images and feelings. There is nomore poignant visual image in the play thanHarry, in his workman's pants, zipped navywindbreaker, and khaki cap, staring sadlyat the bundle of lace and ruffles he holds inhis hands as his rejected love-gift to Gert.Caught in that image is the impossibility ofhappiness for such people as Harry and Gertas well as their unstoppable desire for thathappiness.Nolan S. Baer and Deborah Ann Woods asHarry and Gert share a steady,reverberating energy on stage, an essential,obviously, in a two-person show. Ms. Woodsas Gert is a strong sturdy lady with a mobilequicksilver face, equally able to break intolight tinkling laughter or contortions ofscorn. Ms. Woods aims towards her finalrevelations carefully; her gradual build andthen final rush into intensity locks the au¬dience into empathv with her. Although the * 1 *// * JH| .k 1• * lu%v:.m % *MPSB ’ **Harry (Nolan Baer) and Gert (Debbie Woods) in Court’s production of“The Sea Horse”Love on the docksscript does not call for a black woman, thisdoes not seem to raise problems in the pro¬duction. Perhaps the audience wonders whyHarry and Gert never mention this aspect oftheir situation, but this is minor, for theissues the play does address remainunobstructed.Mr. Baer is especially good at winning theaudience through humor; his excellent tim¬ing and confiding air make him enjoyable towatch. He plays Harry as a generous, in¬telligent, perceptive, previouslyhappy go lucky swab. The tonal qualities of his voice seem to betray more educationthan that of the sea, but his stance and bodypostures throughout are those of a man usedto manual labor, and thus, convincing.The tenderness of Harry's character that:s so well portrayed by Mr. Baer is also im¬phasized by a single element in the set,the mirror behind the bar. Harry and Gert,while sitting at the bar, are, frequently turn¬ed completely awa/ from the audience; wewitness their intimate scenes of touching orthe simple smiles on their faces through the blurred glass behind the bar. It is an ele¬ment which distances us, and yet makes usmore aware of the intimacy and tendernessthat are hidden essentials between Harryand Gert. The set of the Sea Horse is welldesigned; the dark, faintly neon-lit working-class barroom welcomes the audience asthey arrive. The fish nets strung behind thebar announce its affiliation, as does itsgeneral well-scrubbed appearance; fromthe descriptions given of the bar in thedialogue -- rotting floorboards, huge rats,and a leaking roof that forms a riverupstairs — one is tempted to think that theless pleasant aspects of the Sea Horse havebeen exorcised from the audience'sawareness. Perhaps it is more simply thatGert, like the swabs she entertains, runs aclean ship.There may be too much of a scrubbedquality in the interpretations of thecharacters as well. Though Mr. Baer andMs. Woods achieve firm, cohesive notions oftheir characters, they have chosen the saferside of those characterizations. The sexual¬ity of the relationship is reduced tosomething that arouses humor in the au¬dience; some of the early sexual puns wereeven missed by the audience, as if they,along with the characters, were afraid torecognize the blatant base of the relation¬ship. Harry's sexual machismo is what therelationship has run on for a year; if Harrysometimes appears to the audience to be thevery weak, indecisive man Gert accuseshim of be!ng, it is because Mr. Baer lets theelement of strutting machismo be overridden by the sensitive part of his character.It must be the combination of these twocharacteristics that places Harry in thedilemma of loving Gert but not being trustedby her.Ms. Woods, too, chooses a stronger saferinterpretation of her character than may becalled for. She appears too strong, evenwhen she is touched in the wounded placesof her past, and her jumps away from thesethoughts are always too healthy, too quick;she is one moment grimacing in the pain ofrememberance, the next a l.ght-hearted lit¬tle girl or a wise motherly woman. Gert isthese things, of course, but her guises aremore wracked by neurosis than she reveals;we should feel her indecision about Harry inevery line, and it should be real indecision.Instead, we feel the strong "ending”, (theplay seems to have several endings) whereGert is alone, to be in line with hercharacter; the other "ending", where sheseems to reveal a real need for Harry, hasnot been as successfully prepared for as thefirst.The performance, despite these mattersof interpretation, is an intimate and suc¬cessful one; both Mr. Baer and Ms. Woodsgive sympathetic, energetic porgrayals thatenvelop the audience and demand aresponse. The Sea Horse's vision of theprivate worlds of two individuals strugglingup from themselves to reach each other,ends by touching the audience as wel I; it is aplay worth seeing and feeling.Performance time is 8:30 on all nights;general admission is S3, $2 for students.Tickets are still available; for phone reservationscall 753-3581.The University of Chicago TaiChi Chu’an Club invites you toparticipate in an introductoryclass of Tai Chi Ch'uan or Kung-Fu.TAI CHI CH’UANWednesdays 7,30pmBlue Gargoyle5655 S. University or Sundays 7,30pm4945 Dorchester(enter on 50th)■— » • * « « «• «•,».. , v V % s4 off any flair leg denimsmae's ilace507 East 53rd Streetgood through Saturday April 15.T.V. 4 V Page*,I. k 4FOTAMonday, April 10thTHEEdward Druzinsky, HarpCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAFIRSTIn a lecture-demonstrationCHAIRGreenwood Hall8 pmAdmission free!PRE-PRE SCHOOL CAMPfor children 18 monthsto 3 years of ageSPORTS CAMPfor children entering3rd through 8th gradeJUNIOR EXPLORERSfor children enteringkindergarten or 1 stgrade PRE-SCHOOL CAMPfor children 3 & 4years of ageDAY CAMPfor children entering1 st through 6th gradeTWEEN CAMPfor youth entering7th through 9th gradeWELCOME TO SUMMERAT THE “J”1978 STYLEYou are invited to anOPEN HOUSESUNDAY, APRIL 16, 2-4:30 p.m.at the J - 5307 S. Hyde Park Blvd.Meet camp staff ... complete registrationforms, have your questions answered.FOR A FREE DESCRIPTIVE BROCHURE,CALL 363-2770 OR STOP IN AT THEHYDE PARK JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER,5307 S. HYDE PARK BLVD. -MEZZANINE . Tut Poster2-Limited Edition children’s booksT-Shirt CollectionBookbinding by Sid Huttner/ Champagne brunch at the EfendiChinese Owl KiteApril 10,11:45 -1 p.m.REYNOLDS CLUB/AUCTIONEER: WALT LYONS, WLS-TV WEATHERMAN,UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PhD PHYSICS, 1970If you’re consideringa Mercedes280E,drive a Peugeot604.Like the Mercedes 280 E. the Peugeot 604 SL has four-wheelindependent suspension, a resonsive six-cylinder engine (ours is aV-6), power steering (ours is rack and pinion), a unitized bodyheld together with thousands of welds, power windows, fullyreclining front bucket seats, tinted glass, and meticulous atten¬tion to detail.The Peugeuot 604 has alsobeen engineered for asuperior level ofcomfort. Withoversized shockabsorbers, large coilsprings, a floating differential, andseats that are actually tuned to the suspension system.But comfort isn’t the only thing that sets the 604 apart from theMercedes. There’s also the price. Which starts at about$11,000.* And which may be its most comforting feature of all.Sale*/Leasing/Parte/Service2347 So. Michigan Ave. Chicago 326-25501*Manufacturer’s suggested retail price. Delivery, optional equip¬ment. license, title, taxes, dealer preparation not included.A music survey of the recent pastThe University OrchestraThe on campus sceneBy Peter T. DanielsThe quarter was ending, and it was time for the Univer¬sity's musical organizations to let us know what they'vebeen up to recently. First, let me apologize to a couple ofgroups. The University Chamber Orchestra scheduled alovely program opposite Elly Ameling's last recital, so Ididn't hear them; and modesty, professional ethics, andmainly a bad location on the stage keep me from describ¬ing the University Chorus's concert.However, also during that program (February 26), oneof Hyde Park's most important musical treasures — in ad¬dition to being a fine performer, she also is a teacherresponsible for training many fine singers — made hertriumphal return to the Chicago stage after a year'sabsence due to vocal injury: Elsa Charlston sang Bach'sCantata 51, "Jauchzet Gott in alien Landen." This is oneof the two or three most difficult (and most beautiful)items a soprano can perform, and I am happy to reportthat Ms. Charlston is in fine form. The voice may be a lit¬tle smaller than 1 remember it, but it is light and agile andpure and perfectly controlled. The Hyde Park Pickup Or¬chestra, unfortunately, was less than fully responsive toJames Mack's direction, with the string soloists in par¬ticular not matching the example of singer and trumpet.Ms. Charlston returned less than a week later (March 3)with a group she is closely associated with, the Contem¬porary Chamber Players. She sang "Waking,” a cantataby Eleanor Cory on a poem by Muriel Rukeyser. This 1974work offers a way of setting a text that does not appeal tome: the composer allows the words to suggest musicalideas, and then weaves the vocal line into the chamber or¬chestra texture without regard for the syntax of the poem.The result is a not unpleasant work, with the variouschoirs of instruments (strings, winds, percussion) used incontrast — though the saxophone tended to dominate theensemble. A far more effective work is Robert Stern's cy¬cle "Blood and Milk Songs" (1974), poems by Ruth Whit¬man. For this, Ms. Charlston was joined by mezzosoprano Diane McCullough. Especially memorable are a du¬et about out of sync clocks and another sung by a birthgiving mother and the birthing baby. Also on the program were two of the "Three Synchronisms" by MarioDavidovsky, great granddaddy of R2 D2. He is creditedwith sending electronic music in the direction it went, andthese compositions are important ones in the history ofmusic. But one is led to wonder why a group should botherto give a performance that leaves four instrumentalistssitting on a stage waiting for the bleeps and squawks tofinish so they can play some more. One finds oneselfwondering also whether the tape operator will take a bow(after all, he does no more than the pianist's page turner— respond to cues). He did in No. 2, which includes aquartet, but he didn't in No. 3, for tape and solo cello. Thecellist, Barbara Haffner, played beautifully, and made itsound as though this piece might be at home in the samerecital as a Bach Suite.The finest work on the program, and the best played,though, was a classic: Anton Webern's Variations, opus27, for piano. Andrea Swan's performance proved thatWebern's music is beautiful, and she brought a lilt to thebrief movements that clearly brought out the link with theVienna of Mozart, Schubert, and Mahler. It was a joy alsoto watch, in all but these two solo works, the spare andprecise conducting of Ralph Shapey, the CCP's director.Footnote: their next concert is April 14th. It's free, but youneed a ticket (from the Music Department). The programincludes Webern's Symphony, a Shapey premiere, and awork by Richard Wernick commissioned for ElsaCharlston.• Speaking of conducting, the University Symphony Orchestra under Barbara Schubert played (March 4) one ofFriday, April 7, 1978 my favorite symphonies, Mozart's 35th, badly, and one ofmy least favorite, Tchaikovsky's 6th, brilliantly. TheMozart suffered from its huge orchestra, its elephantinepace, and general sloppiness. All the care obviously hadgone into the Tchaikovsky. Ms. Schubert has a way withbombast: last year she made me like Shostakovich's 5th;last quarter she made Rachmaninoff's 2nd tolerable. Thespecial touches in this performance included a bassoongiving a pitch for the basses to tune to before their subtle,expressive opening. To be singled out for excellence is thesolo clarinetist; to be blamed for breaking the mood werethe low brasses just before and just after the gong strokethat is the expressive climax of the last movement. Giventhe quality of playing in this symphony, would it be toomuch to hope for Mahler from this group? The 5th? Oreven, with the cooperation of the Chorus, +he 2nd? As forthe Dvorak Slavonic Dances under a guest conductor, ifyou can't say something nice, don't say anything at all.Another of Hyde Park's musical treasures is Howard M.Brown. Besides being a renowned musicologist (hisRenaissance Music is a standard text), he directs the Col¬legium Musicum and performs on a wide array of outmcded instruments. Early music is an acquired taste, and itprobably takes performing a variety of it to discoversuch things as: Guillaume Dufay and Josquin Des Prezare the finest composers before Monteverdi. Fortunately,opportunity is not lacking to hear such music, and theCollegium's concert (March 5) offered a chance to maxesuch a judgment. Their three Josquin pieces were betterthan any of the other things they did. The vocal parts(choral and solo) were fine, but the ensembles of viols andcrummhorns and other such instruments that producesquare waves (cf. Nonesuch Guide to Electronic Music)seemed preoccupied with playing out of tune. Happily, theviol consort returned (April 1) for an evening of well-played (with flute and recorder as well), well sung (byJoyce Russe and Roger Weiss — you might know him better as Social Science professor in the College) English andSpanish music. Don't let them tell you Handel wasEngland's only great composer, and besides he was German!The University of Chicago is known as a bastion of in-tellectualism, and while one might not expect such avariety of classical music to be so well performed here,the range from oldest to newest is available to anyone whoshows up to listen.Ralph Shapey of The Contemporary ChamberPlayers Two mistressesof songBy Peter T. DanielsThere is a fine line between High Camp and Low CampHigh Camp might consist of digging out the sheet music ofold popular songs, and singing them with respect for thestyle and the sentiment of their age. Low Camp might involve dressing up in funny costumes to sing them, surrounding the songs with distracting patter, and tamperingwith the accompaniments for the sake of laughs. That thetwo were mixed in Joan Morris and William Bolcom's concert (March 11) in the "Masters of the Song" series helpsexplain why it was a less than totally successful eveningTo get non musical matters out of the way, all four of MsMorris's gowns made her look fat (which she isn't), andthe second in particular, an ecru number ca. 1910 withspreading vest over bloomers that came to points at theankles, looked like something she might have picked up atAMVETS after the last drag ball.It is the old songs — the ones found on her Nonesuchalbums "After the Ball" and "Vaudeville" — That JoanMorris sings best. These are the numbers we know fromBetty Grable and Judy Garland costume pictures, theones that tell a sad story, often contorting the last stanzato lead back to the refrain Ms. Morris takes them seriously and lets them express themselves, resorting sometimesto a character voice or to speaking over the accompaniment But Mr. Bolcom is apparently quite free with hispart, and does not adhere to the arrangements he published in the "After the Ball" songbook His interludes, thatcovered her costume changes, were poorly played - toofast, wrong or missing notes — ragtime and blues, the accompaniment of "Fascination' Rhythm" was completelybeyond him. That song led off the second half of the proqram, which went from Gershwin to rock For this periodwe are fortunate in having recordings by the singers whocreated the styles, and the modern performer must learnfrom them. Ms. Morris's travesty of "Love for Sale"people laughed! — was all the more painful in view oflsola Jones's brilliant presentation in Grant Park thissummer: and Mrs. Jones was seen in the MetropolitanOpera's broadcast this week of Cavelleria RusticanaTo get non-musical matters out of the way,all four of Ms. Morris's gowns made her lookfat. and the second in particular, an ecrunumber, ca. 1910, looked like somethingshe might have picked up at AMVETS afterthe last drag ball.If you were not at Barbara Hendricks sparsely attended recital Tuesday night, you missed some fine moments(Saturday she will sing Mozart, Schubert, Rachmaninoff,and Messiaen, having just studied with the last composer ) Debussy's "Five. Poems of Baudelaire" werequite lovely, and several of the Brahms and Strauss sonqswere too. But Ms. Hendricks is quite young — herbioqraphy in the back of the program lists any number offamous places where she is about to debut - and she hasnot yet the control nor the subtlety for the varied programshe offered Her opening work was a Havdn cantata' Ananna a Naxos," which may rank with Monteverdi sand Strauss's essays on the same subiect It provided anopportunity for Ms. Hendricks to display the enormouspower of her voice, and lovely strong high notes but italso revealed that her expressive techniques are limitedto qestures and a certain breathy quality for moments ofpassion Other shortcomings are occasional uncertaintyof pitch on attacks, ana a tendency for the voice to simplystop on soft high notes — that is, on the last lines ofdelicate passages it was brave of Ms Hendricks to offertwo sonqs by Liszt, "Kennst du das Land" (Schubertsversion is not challenged) and "O quand ie dors thouahshe sanq them well, it is not difficult to hear why they arenot old favoritesIt was in her second encore that everything Ms Hendricks does fell into place and that explained the way shesang everything else She dosed the evening with "He sGot the Whole World in His Hands where everythingfrom the breathy tone to the ringing high notes belongs lwas reminded of a "Messiah" I heard at the AbyssinianBaptist Church (Adam C'ayton Powell s in Hariemi thatbrought exactly those Gospel qualities to a classic scoreand made it the most moving I have ever heardJoan Morris and Barbara Hendricks,Master/Mistresses of Song, to stan with Peter Pears, Elly Ameling, and Hermann Prey? ».ardly But thev are atleast handmaidensof music.Page 11short|stop IIco-opA Convenience Store1514 E. 53rd St.Wed, April 5 Thru April 11Oscar MayerBologna or CottoSALAMI8 oz. 79*Red Label1 % MILKGallon25Gal.1 Rath Black HawkBACONi491 lb.16 oz.Vine RipenedTOMATOES29* lb.Open 7 AM to 11 PMMonday through Saturday8 AM to 9 PM Sunday and Holidaysm Documentary Film GroupWoody Allen’s ANNIE HALLWinner of four Academy Awards!Friday, April 7th - 6:15, 8:45 and 1:00THE BAD NEWS BEARS/Michael Ritchiewith Walter Matthau and Tatum O’NealSaturday, April 8th - 6:30, 8:30 and 10:30HIROSHIMA MON AMOUR/Alain ResnaisSunday, April 9th - 7:15 and 9:30COBB HALL $1.50— >Applications now being accepted forthe 1978-79MAJOR ACTIVITIES BOARDall 7 positions openapplications are now at StudentActivities Office and must be turnedin there by April 14.positions open to any studentin the University. THE U.S.BRASSSOCIETYCONCERT - 8:30 PMWorks by sPABLO CASALS AL.J. KAUFFMANN T.ALEXANDER TCHEREPNINMICHAEL TIPPETT AALEC WILDER Pand nthprq RIHarper Memorial Library L1116 East 59th StreetC0-ADMISSION FREEVThe meeting of road and skyJackson Browne: prophet of the highwaysBy Michael S. StarenkoSometime this weekend Jackson Browne's big Continen¬tal Silver Eagle will arrive in Chicago. He may check in atthe Palmer House. And then again, he may check insomewhere else. Yet, as countless on-the-road ballads at¬test, we must assume that ail hotel rooms, after a time,look alike. Of course all hotel rooms are not alike, but inJackson Browne's latest and fifth album, Running onEmpty (Asylum Records), the listener is persuaded tobelieve that they are. In some uncanny fashion, Brownehas acquired in Running on Empty a believability not tobe found in his previous work. Whether or not this qualitywill or can be repeated is uncertain — that remains to bedetermined.Along with Joni Mitchell, Jackson Browne is probablyrock music's most self-conscious romantic. Their appealis generated less by their "artistic style" than by theirpersonal journeys through life, albeit a life which is large¬ly an extention of their all-pervasive egos. Still, it is thejourney itself, after all, which rightly holds our interest,and, at times, our admiration. For Browne, the journeyoccurs in time — through the temporal landscape — but ismotivated by some ideal "timelessness." This L.A. cow¬boy dressed in Fryes and a western shirt, with a face likea Philips Exeter sophomore, aspires to be a metaphysi¬cian. Previous songs such as "For Everyman," "Beforethe Deluge," and "The Fuse" create an image of heroicself-sufficiency which borders on absurdity. However, theThe Chamber Music SeriespresentsFRANS BRUEGGENrecorderperforming recorder music of 5 nationsFRIDAY, APRIL 7,8:30 pmin MANDEL HALLadm: $6; UC student, $3ticketswillb^or^al^nMandeMHal^aitJ7^3^ijTi. never despondant, always determined voice of Browne,along with his fine musical style, authenticate whateveruncertainty the listener might feel towards the "reality"of his lyrics. This is superbly demonstrated — and enlarged — in his approach to, and actualization of, Running onEmpty.By nearly anyone's standard, Browne's The Pretender,the album which preceded Running on Empty, was not agood one. It just doesn't 'feel right,' mainly because itslyrics are forced, laden with pretext, and the musicsounds too commercial to compliment Browne's serioustone. The irony of the album's title is only too apparent:Browne has become the pretender. This leaves us with aquestion: why the difference between the two albums?In a recent Rolling Stone interview Browne offers an in¬sight into the difference. Paul Nelson, the interviewer,asks Jackson to sum up Running on Empty: "Yeah, I'venever had a very good time before this record. I don'tmean that it hasn't been fun making records, but theyhaven't reflected that. I've always sung other people'ssongs, before this, I've never felt entitled to do it on analbum. I do now." I surmise that Browne, the perfec-tionistic singer songwriter, became so entangled with thenaive heroism of a "total" artistic creation — as evidenced by The Pretender — that the intrinsic joy ofsinging was lost. He has recovered that joy in Running onEmpty, and the listener is cordially invited to celebratethe occasion.DOROTHY SMITH EYE EXAMINATIONSBEAUTY SALON FASHION EYEWEAR5841 S. BLACKSTONE CONTACT LENSESHYJ-1069 UK. KURTCall for appts. ROSENBAUM7 HM. • 7 P.M. OptometristMonday thru Friday,closed Saturday (53 Kimbark. Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHair Styling - PermanentsTinting-Facials-Skin Care 493-8372 Within the last three or four years the record industryhas produced a number of so called "live" albums. A fewof them, notably Peter Frampton's Frampton ComesAlive, have been extraordinarily successful. Nevertheless, by and large, they have not done all that well onthe market. The record buying public seems hesitant topurchase records which everyone suspects, and rightlyso, to contain mere filler. Still, the "live" album need notdie a quick death. Like good documentary photography,the notion of the "live" album can include a mode of ex¬perience which we cannot, for both artistic and practicalreasons, experience ourselves. Running on Empty is quiteproperly a "live" album; yet considering its novel syn¬thesis of form and content — its joining of the Road andthe Sky — it finally transcends even this distinction. Thealbum's content is ostensibly a documentation ofBrowne's recent cross-country tour. The music, however,is not merely about that content, but in aphenomenological sense, it is the content. To myknowledge, this has never been attempted on a recordalbum, and with such success.For reasons which are beyond the scope of this review,life 'on the road' has come to be seen as a necessary evil —an unending, undifferentiated stream of tacky motelrooms, monotonous travel, and thrill-seeking groupies.Running on Empty does not ignore this. But the 'road' isnot viewed with cynicism; it has its unique rewards whichare part and parcel of its purpose: to play for a respondingaudience. And like all endured pains, there is an am-bivilence towards the meaning of that pain — a kind ofemotional quandry. The title song, "Running on Empty,"pounded out with frenzic energy, bespeaks the quandry ofthe 'road:' "Running on — running on empty/Running on— running blind/Running on — running into the sun/ButI'm running behind-"Of course all hotel rooms are not alike, butin Jackson Browne’s latest album. RunningOn Empty, the listener is persuaded tobelieve that they are. In some uncannyfashion. Browne has acquired a believa¬bility not to be found in his previous work.Temporality — that which separates the mortal fromthe divine — has always obsessed Browne. Appropriatelyhe has adopted the myth of the 'road' as the all-encompassing life metaphor. The road, like the past,begins somewhere out of sight; and the road, like thefuture, ends somewhere over the next rise. And love, thatis, the-one true-Love, is perpetually just around the bend.Nevertheless, in Running on Empty Browne has found, orsimply rediscovered, a Zen-like fulfillment in the 'road.'He might be running on empty, but he's running all thesame. In "Shaky Town" he sings: "And I've followedthose highway signs/And I've run down those thin whitelines/Like those drivers this old road is all I call myown"©But even more significant than the lyrics are theoccasions for the songs themselves. "Cocaine" wasrecorded in room 124 at the Holiday Inn, Edwardsville, Il¬linois (what could be more appropriate at such a time?);"Rosie" was recorded backstage in the big rehearsalroom at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (where elsedo you sing about groupies?); and "Nothing but Time"was recorded on a bus somewhere in New Jersey com¬plete with engine rumble. I ndeed, the form is the content!And finally, Running on Empty ends and is completedby "The Load-Out" and the Zodiak's old song, "Stay."The uncertainty, the transiency, the loneliness of the roadis affirmed then fulfilled on the stage — this is its raisond'etre. In my mind there is in contemporary rock no moretriumphant music than these songs. When Browne callsout "People stay," we know in our hearts that he hasfound, in the pure joy of singing for others, his timelessnow.ANTI-SEMITISM IN ARGENTINA ANDSOUTH AMERICASPEAKER MR. JACOBO KOVADLOFF, FormerDirector of The American JewishCommittee Office in South America.He will give an appraisal of HumanRights in South America and Argen¬tina.WHEN: TUESDAY, APRIL 11th. 3:30 P MWHERE: HILLEL FOUNDATION,5715 Woodiawn AvenueFriday, April 7, 1978 Page 13South Indian concert next weekBy Milton EderThe Indian Music Circle of the Universityof Chicago invites you to attend a concert ofSouth Indian music featuring T.Vishwanathan, T. Ranganathan, and K. S.Subramaniam. The concert will be held inIda Noyes Hall on Tuesday April 11th at7:30 p.m. Karnatic, or South Indianclassical music, is quite different fromwestern classical music and is actually farmore closely related to jazz than westernsymphonic music. The basic elements ofKarnatic music are raga or melody, andtala or rhythm. The combination of thesetwo distinct elements is in no way akin tothat which occurs in the West. The traditionis passed on from teacher to student orallyso the training of a musician depends solelyon the ear of the student.Formally, a rag a is a scale, a combinationof notes in ascending or descending order.In some ragas the notes are not necessarilyidentical in the ascending and descendingsequences.The tala is a rhythmic cycle which givesstructure to the musical composition of theraga. It is due to the independent existenceof the tala which makes Karnatic musicsimilar to jazz. In each piece there is at leastone section of improvisation. In these sec¬tions the artist may elaborate thematic linesof the piece or create new themes from theraga's scale. The artist's only restriction isthat he must conform to the cycle of the tala.There are, in the usual manner of reckon¬ing, thirty-five talas, some of which arequite complex. For example, if a tala has acycle of ten beats it may be divided into aunit of seven beats, a unit of one beat, and athird unit of two beats. Another tala of tenbeats can consist of a unit of three beats, asecond unit of three beats, a unit of twobeats and a second unit of two beats. It iswithin such a framework that the artistsplay the composed and improvised sections of a particular piece.In the combination of the elements of ragaand tala the musicians strive to make theirmusic a manifestation of the divine. Musicaltraining in India, due to its oral nature, hasfor centuries been considered a religiousform of yogic training. The numerous yearsof practice and training required to masterthe art form are itself considered a type ofyogic discipline. The training of a musicianusually begins at an early age and may lastas long as twenty or more years with the stu¬dent practising as long as ten to fifteenhours a day. The necessity of a proper en¬vironment for the student is one reason whythe musical tradition in India has tended tobe a family tradition. Because of the greatamount of physical preparation and mentaltraining involved in becoming a musician itis considered a path to enlightenment.Through devotion to his teacher and com¬plete absorption in the musical training theaspiring musician is believed to becomeripened for enlightenment. The individual isable to realize his unity with all things. Theperformance of music becomes an expression of the realized unity of the artist and hismusic with the existential world.Originally the music was patronized bythe temples and the musicians were hired toperform during temple festivals. Due to itsbelieved expression of divinity the musicwas an integral part of the religious ritual.Such a tradition continues to this day but toa much lesser degree. The patronage whichactually supports the majority of the musi¬cians passed into the courts of the kings ofIndia. Finally, in modern times the musichas been transposed to the concert hallwhere it currently resides.It is in the concert hall that we shall havethe opportunity to hear some of the finestmusicians of the South Indian musical tradi¬tion. T. Vishwanathan plays the eight-holedT. Ranganathan, T. Vishwanathan, and K.S. Subramaniam horizontal bamboo flute. He has held themusic chair at the University of Madras inIndia. He has played concerts the worldover with his brother T. Ranganathan whoplays the mrdangam which is the traditionalSouth Indian drum. The mrdangam has twoheads which are held to opposite ends of ahollowed out piece of circular wood byleather straps. The drum is capable of pro¬ducing many tones which the artist can playin order to augment the melodic lines of thepiece as played by the other artists. Bothbrothers have taught extensively in theUnited States. The melodic accompaniment shall beprovided by the vina. The instrument issimilar to the sitar of north India but hasless strings. It is often used as the featuredinstrument in a concert. Playing the vinawill be K. S. Subramaniam, a doctoral stu¬dent at Weslyn University in Connecticutwhere both Vishwanathan and his brotherare presently teaching.Tickets are available for the concert in ad¬vance at the Reynolds Club box office or atthe door before the concert. The charge foradmission is two dollars for students andtwo-fifty for general admission.FilmBy Karen HellerAdmission to NAM and Law School filmsis $1.50. Admission to Doc films is $1.00 onTuesday and Wednesday; $1.50 on all othernights. Doc and NAM films will be shown inQuantrell Auditorium, Cobb Hall, LawSchool films will be presented in the LawSchool Auditorium, 1111 E. 60th Street.Annie Hall (1977), directed by WoodyAllen. (Doc) You saw the Oscars (four of thetop five awards), now see the movie. WoodyAllen portrays a successful comic whowears his neuroses very well. Diane Keatonis a would-be sir.ger-actress-photographer-non-giddy-person. They fall in love, traipseall over New York, visit their childhoodhomes, pursue their careers, and still havetime to keep weekly appointments with theirhis-and-her psychiatrists. With TonyRoberts, Shelley Duvall and Paul Simon.Friday at 6:15, 8:45and 11:00.The Bad News Bears (1976), directed byMichael Ritchie. (Doc) Pity poor MorrisButtermaker (Walter Matthau); he has toclean swimming pools all year to support hisLittle League team that boasts the most ob¬noxious brats of all time, featuring theschlag of the scheis, Tatum O'NeaL.Ihg Kidswant to play ball, the Coach wants to win,and the parents, as always, are just plainawful human beings. Matthau is pretty fun¬ny. Tatum has never been naughtier. Satur¬day at6:30, 8:30and 10:30.Twentieth Century (1934), directed byHoward Hawks. (Law) A very good film bya great director. This is the film versionwritten by Ben Hecht and Charles MacAr-thur of the Millhollan play that is currentlybeing revived on Broadway (the New Yorkone) to much critical acclaim and commer¬cial success. John Barrymore is ap¬propriately cast as an egomaniacialtheatrical star and impresario. Hediscovers Mildred Plotka (the tremendousCarole Lombard), renames her LilyGarland, and makes her a star. After havinga tempestuous and stormy affair, they gotheir separate ways, only to be reunited onthe train "The 20th Century" bound fromChicago to New York. Recommended. Sun¬day at 8:30. Hiroshima Mon Amour (1960), directed byAlain Resnais. (Doc) The French novelistMarguerite Duras wrote the screenplay tothis intricately fascinating film thatfocuses on the brief relationship of twoisolated people. A French actress (Em-manuelle Riva) comes to Hiroshima tomake a film and has a two-day affair with aJapanese architect (Eiji Okada). Theyspeak at length about the bombing of the ci¬ty, intercut with actual newsreel footage,and their lovers and loves. Even in this ear¬ly film, Resnais, the master of using ^mind-time," had already developed hisfascinating technique of presenting imagesand sound as they are remembered and felt,not as they are literally experienced, Sun¬day at 7:15 and 9:30.Antonio Das Mortes (1969), directed byGaluber Rocha. (NAM) Colonel Horatio, anold, tyrannical, blind landowner in thebacklands of northeastern Brazil rules overa poverty-striken village. His power isdisturbed by the appearance of a starvingband of beatos (mystical believers from thepoorest classes) led Jay, the conngaceiro(bandit-rebel). Cor iona, who proclaimshimself a holy warrior battling the dragonof evil and demands food for his people.Horatio brings in Antonio das Mortes to killCoriona. The hit-man is carrying out a personal mission to exterminate all the con-gaceiroes. The riveting story is complemented by the film's brilliant colorphotography and hypnotic rhythms — all ofwhich leads to a climax of violence andliberation. Monday at 7:15 and 9:30.Way of a Gaucho (1952), directed by Jac-que Tourneur (Doc) In 19th century Argen¬tina, a gaucho runs afoul of the law when hekills a fellow cowhand for belittling his life¬long patron and friend. The man becomes afugitive and begins running for his life butnot so fast that he doesn't have time to getromantically involved with a highborndamsel whom he saves from abduction bythe Indians. With Rory Calhoun and GeneTuerney. Tuesday at 7:15.ALLCIGARETTESThe best newsstand in the worldalso has 2000 magazines for you!51st and Lake Park Chicago IL 60615 (312) 684-5100 55,A PACK PASSOVERWORKSHOPS: Monday - April 10 HISTORY AND8-10 p.m. TRADITIONSTuesday - April 11 MAKING A SEDER -8 - 10 p.m. HAGGADAH, RITUALS, FOODMEALS AND SEDARIM RESERVATIONS: Reserva¬tion deadline for Dorm Board Refund in full must be re¬quested from Housing Office before April 14. If youhave not as yet made your meals and Sedarim reser-vations, please make them at HILLEL IMMEDIATELY.VHA.'.'-V'-t NAM FILMS Monday April 10ANTONIO DAS MORTES7:15 & 9:30 COBB Thursday April 13DADA NIGHTGlauber RochaBrazil 1969Page 14 / f/jf f * r * • • J • r vvr YY'aY’.Vv * '* < i f t 7:30 Only KENTHan* Richter, Marcel Duchamp, Lul* Bunueland Salvador Dali, Man Ray. Maya peren,Germaine Dulac, Pene Clair, and Fernand LegerThe Grey •City JournalCalendarF riday Lower Rickert Production: “King Kong,” 8pm, Ida Noyes Theatre.DOC film: “Annie Hall,” 6:15, 8:45 and 11 pm,Cobb Hall.The Poetry Center: A Reading by HarryMark Petrakis, 9 pm, 109 E. Ontario.NOMAR: Meeting of committee for a nuclearoverkill moratorium, information and discus¬sion, 12 noon, Blue Gargoyle.Center for Middle Eastern Studies:Student-faculty luncheon, 12:15, IdaNoyes; Arabic Circle, “The Palestinian Pro¬blem and the Future of the Arab World,”Hisham Sharabi, Georgetown, 3:30 pm, Pick218 (discussions in Arabic); Persian Society,3:30 pm, Harper 175; Sherry Hour, 4:30 pm,Kelly 413.Commuter Club: Get-together, 12:30 pm,Hutch Commons.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “TheOrigin of Ice-Ages and the C02 Problem,”Peter Fong Emroy University, 1:30 pm. HindsAuditorium.Department of Economics: Workshop-PublicFinance and Latin American EconomicDevelopment, 3:30 pm, Social Sciences 402;Workshop-Economic History, 3:30 pm, SocialSciences 106.Committee on Virology: “A Unique Strategyfor Replication of a DNA Virus,” Dr. AllanGranoff, 4 pm, Cummings 11th floor.Calvert House: “Friday Night at Calvert” -volleyball and supper, 4pm, Calvert.Hillel: Reform-Liberal Service, 5:15 pm,Hillel; Shabbat Dinner, 6 pm, The Bayit 5458S Everett; Lecture - “The Perception ofScience According to Both the Mystical andRational Tradition in Torah, 9 pm, 5458Everett.Christian Forum: “God and HumanKnowledge in the Thought of BernardLonergan,” 8 pm, Brent House. SaturdayResource Center: Recycle glass, cans andpaper at 54th Place and Greenwood, 10-4.Change Ringing: Handbells, 10-11 am, towerbells 11-1 pm, Mitchell Tower Ringing Room.Center for Far Eastern Studies: AikidoDemonstration by Master Michio Hikitschi,3:30 pm, Field House.Crossroads: Spring Carnival - games, inter¬national foods, an auction and dance, 5 pm,5621 S Blackstone.Calvert House: Medical-Legal Ethics Pro¬gram, speakers: Michael Schudson, JosephKieman, Steven Ring, Susan Kobasa andDouglas Laycock, 5:45-8:15 pm, Calvert.ArtsExtension Leider Series: B. Hendricks,soprano performing works of Handel,Schubert, Rachmaninoff, 8:30 pm, MandelHall.Court Studio Theatre: “The Sea Horse, ” 8:30pm, Reynolds Club New Theatre.UC Brass Society: Free concert, HarperLibrary, 8:30 pm.Lower Rickert Production: “King Kong,”8:30 pm, Ida Noyes Theatre.DOC Film: “The Bad News Bears,” 6:30, 8:30and 10:30 pm, Cobb Hall.The pub: Bill Jaster, guitarist, 9-1 am, IdaNoyes Hall.Primavera: Poetry Reading, 7-9 pm,Artemisia Gallery, 9 W Hubbard. Bergman Gallery: Opening Reception - TheTriumph of the Pen, an exhibit of calligraphyby the Chicago Calligraphy Collective, 3-5pm, Fourth floor Cobb Hall.Crossroads: Bridge, 3 pm, 5621 S Blackstone.Brent House: Supper, Episcopal, Lutheran,and Methodist ministry, 6 pm, Brent house.Changes Community: Training in listeningand focusing and other growth orientated ap¬proaches, Darrell Greenwood, “Accommo¬dation and Psychomotor Psychotherapy,” 7-10 pm, Blue Gargoyle.UC Folkdancers: International Folkdancing,general level, 8:30 pm, Ida Noyes.ArtsLaw School Film: “20th Century,” 8:30 pm,Law School Auditorium.Court Studio Theatre: “The Sea Horse,” 8:30pm, Reynolds Club New Theatre.UC Jazz Band: Concert at InternationalHouse, 8:30 pm.DOC Film: “Hiroshima, Mon Amour,” 7:15and 9:30 pm, Cobb Hall. Hillel: Passover Workshop on history andtraditions, 8 pm, Hillel.UC Folkdancers: International Folkdancing,beginners, 8:30 pm, Ida Noyes.SportsUC Women’s Softball Team vs. GeorgeWilliams College, Home opener, 3 pm, NorthField.ArtsMondaySundayArtsChamber Music Series: Frans Brueggen,recorder - recorder music of five nations,played on instruments of the period, 8:30 pm,Mandel Hall.Court Studio Theatre: “The Sea Horse,” 8:30pm, Reynolds Club New Theatre. Rockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy Commu¬nion, 9 am; University Religious Service,“Hearing is Believing, E. Spencer Parsons,11 am, Rockefeller Chapel.Calvert House: Sunday Morning Theology,“Sex as Relational,” Bond Chapel, 10 am;Divinity students discussion group led byPeter Dembowski, 5:45 pm, Calvert Seminar on Higher Education: “The Presentand Future Rule of Foundations,” CyrilHoule, 3-4:50 pm, Judd Hall rm 313.The Child Development Colloquia:“Greeting Behavior in the First ThreeMonths of Life,” Alan Fogel, Purdue, 3pm, Judd 105.The Morris Kharasch MemorialLectures: “Structure of MacrobicyclicMolecules,” Dr. Howard Simmons, 4 pm,Kent 103.Department of Microbiology and the TrainingProgram in Infectious Diseases with the Com¬mittee on Immunology: “Do we Need an Im¬munological Network?” Dr. Heinz Kohler,4:30 pm, Cummings 101.Ki-Aikido Club: meeting, 6 pm, Field House.Chess Club: meeting, 7 pm, Ida Noyes.The UC Outing Club: Film - John Muir’sHigh Sierra, and planning meeting for springtrips, 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes.Calvert House: Lessons in preparation forConfirmation, 7:30 pm, Calvert House; Inter¬faith discussion group, 9:30 pm, WoodwardCourt First Chair Series: Edward Druzinsky, harp,lecture-demonstration, 8 pm. GreenwoodHall.N.A.M. Films: “Antonio Das Mortes,” 7:15and 9:30 pm, Cobb Hall.ACLU files suitThe ACLU filed suit this week onbehalf of Sandor John, a member of theSpartacus Youth League (SYL), attack¬ing as unconstitutional University of Il¬linois rules barring non-students fromdistributing political literature. Johngoes to court Monday to face charges ofcriminal trespass against the U. of I.Last Oct. 27, John was barred and for¬cibly removed from the Circle Campusas an outsider and non-student. He wasthen arrested for trespassing Nov. 22while distributing socialist literature onthe campus and was released sevenhours later on $1,000 bond.Motions assigned to Judge Marshallquestioning the constitutionality ofJohn’s arrest have been filed and will beargued soon by the ACLU. The ACLU isoffering its services free of charge.The Ad Hoc Committee to Stop Ad¬ministration Harassment will sponsor ademonstration outside the CriminalJury Court Monday to demand chargesbe dropped against John and that Circlecease its harassment of “left and campusgroups.”ALL TOGETHERAt One LocationTO SAVE YOU MORE!sPEciSTDISCOUNT 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 LOCATIONCHEVROLETm VOLKSWAGENt&y SOUTH SHORE7234 Stony Islandv C# 684-0400 LVfcjf.TT? *• » ■: P«1* Open Safurd*•Ml I * I I l ' I —I t P.M./ Sat. 9-5 P.M.'y T9 12 Noon Where else can you study poetryand be in the undergraduate prelawprogram or fulfill a premedrequirement and take a course intransfer lithography withinteresting and exciting peoplein a setting of hills, lakes,gorges, and waterfalls?Fulfill requirements, completecourses in order to accelerate, orsimply take the time to study thoseextraordinary things for whichyou’ve never before had the time.Request an Announcement and seefor yourself all the reasons whywe’re where you should be thissummer.Cornell University Summer Session,111 Day Hall, Ithaca, New York 14853 hyde park’s# 1 jazz spotweekly entertainmentFriday’sTHE HERB WHITE QUARTETSaturday’sHyde Park’s OwnEMANNONJAZZ QUARTETSunday’sALIEN GANGSounds from near and afarEvery TuesdayIs LADIES NIGHT50% OFF ALL REGULARDRINKS FOR LADIES.CONGENIAL ATMOSPHEREGOOD JAZZPITCHERS OF BEERHOT BUTTERED POPCORNSTUDENT DISCOUNTSIN THE HEART OF COSMOPOLITAN HYDE PARKit rserved on tap1.50 music charge1515 east 53rd street, hyde park, ChicagoCarole Lombard inHoward Hawks’s screwball eomedvTWENTIETH CENTURY (1934) 'Sun.. April 9 8:30 Law Aud. LSF EUROPEkc^s I tywncnllv*'«72 furc(800) 325-4867of spp /our travel agent@ Un;Travel Charters "§pckesmer Bicycle Slicp3331 Me Carfe BKd.Selling Quality Imported BikesRaleigh, Peugeot, MotobecaneAnnouncing a full inventoryof MOPEDS on display.Open 10-7 pm M-F10-5 pm Sat.684-3737S Written by a Tibetanlama this revolutionary vision opensX^ a' new horizons on both traditional and non-\ •. ,traditional methods ot thinkingTIME. SPACE. AND KNOWLEDGESA NEW VISION OF REALITY (/)by Tarthang TulkuThis comprehensive new Knowledge will benefitHumanity throughout all ot Time and SpaceAvailable from many bookstores or fromthe publisherDnarrnd PuD'ishing 6856 Doyle Street^^^^Emeryville CA 94608 > I<¥? PUBLIC LECTURE SERIES JP<$*Sponsored by the ENRICO FERMI INSTITUTEof theUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE ARTHUR H. COMPTON LECTURESSeventh Series bySydney W. Falk, Jr.The Enrico Fermi InstituteSaturdays April 1 through June 3,1978“NUCLEAR ASTROPHYSICS,ALCHEMY IN THE UNIVERSE"The structure of ordinary stars;gravity, energy transport,and nuclear processes.April 8,1978Eckhart Hall - Room 133 - 1118 E. 58th St.For more information, phone 753-6611. ContactLenses9900 hard lenses*17900 soft lenses *Package Price Includes'• necessary care kits• 6 months follow-up care• insertion & removalinstructionSpecializing in fittingthe ''difficult",contact lens wearer* Professional exam, ifneeded, additionalPETERSONOPTICAL CO .CONTACT LENS DIVISIONFitting contact lenses since 1957Three Locations• Water Tower Plaoe-Pth ‘lour845 N. Michigan* Mon Ira! Blog3333 W. Peterson» Sfcone Meaicai 0J,.cePhones 463 5355-SPECIAL PRICE-LIMITED OFFERTO 4-30-78Regular price for hard lenses$200, for soft lenses $300 COURT STUDIO THEATREAUDITIONSfor three one act playsLANDSCAPE, THE LEADER,THE WORLD TIPPED OVER & LAYINGON ITS SIDESat., April 8 2-5 pmSun., April 9 12-3 pmMon., April lO 7-9 pmReynolds Club, North LoungePerformances will be May 19-21,26-28No preparation necessary. Actors willnot be paid[TAl-SAM-MMCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing 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 4-1062Serving 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 informationCaih BU 8-9241 or PL 2-3800The Public is Cordially Invited16 The Chicago AAaroon—Friday, April 7,1978Men try for .500 plus year Women defend state titleBy Mark WallachDave Murdoch and Bob Grady bothhad bad days at the NCAA fencing na¬tionals three weeks ago, losing in thepreliminaries and bringing a disappoin¬ting end to a fine season.The team as a whole had little to com¬plain about. Their .500 record (7-7) is thebest in recent history. The young squadalso finished sixth at the Great LakesChampionships last month, fighting instiff competition. Other participants in¬cluded Notre Dame, Wayne State, andCleveland, all who finished in the topfive in the national championships,which were won by the Irish.Seniors Murdoch and Grady alsomade better showings at the Great Lakestourney. Murdoch, who bad an .875record in sabes competition on the year,finished fourth at Great Lakes whileGrady, a .675 foil man, took seventh.Other Chicago participants included Ed¬win Levi, who lost in the quarter-finals,and Brian Holmgren, Nathan Funk, andPaul Shea, all who were eliminated in theprelims.Needless to say, coach RobertOstrowski was pleased with the year.Ostrowski also noted that this was thefirst time the team has had a women’ssquad. The women will not be eligible forGFiJLL-Jan Rossel takes a hurdle in stride. Thewomen’s track team made a good showingplacing third in last weekend’s meet,(photo by Jeanne Dufort)Women open wellTrackersBy John PomidorThe women’s track team hosted itsfirst invitational meet Saturday at Staggfield, finishing third in a field of five.Concordia Teachers’ College, led by astrong showing in the field events, tookthe tourney with 74 points. Loyoladominated the track events, winningeight of the 13 races, and finished a pointahead of the Maroons, 66-65. IllinoisBerfedictine and Wheaton College couldonly score in seven of the events,finishing with 31 and 27 points, respec¬tively.On the basis of their performanceSaturday, the Maroons qualified for the varsity status for another couple yearsdue to University rules, but are gettingin some practice now. Overall, saidOstrowski, “We had a really goodseason.” ByR. W. RohdeIt is tough to repeat as state cham¬pions two years in a row. When you loseeight players, then it really becomes a(photo by Jeanne Dufort)SportsIM reportWoodward teams lead IMBy Howard SulsWinter quarter intramurals sawheated action and mass participation.Men’s standings have Upper Rickert farahead of the field with 1283, Psi U next at946, and Fishbein at 885, with Dodd-Mead close behind with 860. Women’sstandings show Upper Wallace aheadwith 1055, with Lower Wallace at 910 andShorey a distant third with 805. Co-edresults have Lower Rickert-UpperWallace, Shorey, and Upper Rickert-Lower Wallace bunched up with 585,580,and 575 respectively.Wrapping up last quarter’s actionMen’s Racquetball saw Tim Lorello beatJeff Green by forfeit, Doug Dobson dropa close match to Dean Carpenter, andRobert Gelber over Terry Joyce. In theUndergraduate finals Lorello triumphedover Carpenter to advance to the All- Utitle match, only to lose to Graduatechampion Hedvegi.The Graduate champion Bruins heldoff the Bad News Bulls 47-40 in basket-take thirdstate small college meet at Urbana in thehigh jump, javelin, the 220 dash, and theone, two, and three mile runs. The meetwill be held May 12 and 13.Coach Del Larkin admits the team is“weak on field events,” and needs workon their relays. The milers could havedone better, she said, but were sick dur¬ing the week. The Maroons only manag¬ed to take one race, the 400 hurdles, butscored well by placing in the middle inmost events. Scoring was on a 6-4-3-2-1basis. Larkin sees her team doing betterat Urbana, where they will be competingagainst schools of the same size.In the meantime, the women hope to‘polish things off,’ beginning with a coedmeet April 15 at Wisconsin-Parkside. ball to win the University title. The gamewas never more than a four point spreaduntil late in the 4th quarter when theBruins got ahead and then went into astall.Socim started this week and action onthe Mudway was slow. In the aqualeague Tufts nipped Chamberlin in over¬time after a scoreless game, by virtue ofa corner kick, and Lower Flint beatHitchcock 1-0. In the Silver LeagueThompson South emerged as the power,beating Psi U by a score of 2-1, despite aPsi U ringer, and overpowering UpperRickert 3-1. Other action saw UpperFlint triumph by a corner kick of Psi U,and Upper Flint over Upper Rickert 3-0.In the orange league, Dudley demolishedShorey 4-1. In the Independent Leagueaction was heavier, with Kick bestingHungry Bob 2-0 and Chicago 7 2-1. Ex¬ile’s Return was also a double winner,beating Porta Ursum 3-0 and HungryBob 2-0. Other scores had Amazing Smil¬ing S.T. split, beating Cummuter inovertime by a corner kick, and Losing toPorta Ursum 3-1. Tvomas nippedBrowbeat 1-0, and Bill Too smashedCold Storage 8-1.Women's scores had Alpha Delta Phiover Upper Flint 2-1, Shorey over LowerWallace 3-1, Shorey over Snell 1-0, Up¬per Wallace over Lower Wallace 2-0, Up¬per Wallace over Alpha Delta Phi 2-1 andSnell over Upper Flint by a corner kick.Good news for all those tired of poorofficiating in intramurals. The new Of¬ficials Club will regulate officiating byrating the officials. These ratings, com¬piled by the three man Executive Boardof Marty Howard, Mark Pennington,and Dave Glazer, the IM office, andteam captains will determine which of¬ficials get to work which games. Thegames will be divided into classifica¬tions, undergrad games, graduategames, and playoff games.A reminder to all softball teams andrefs that a mandatory umpires meetingis scheduled for next Thursday at 7 p.m.at !ht Gym challenge. That is the situation Pat Kir¬by and her women’s softball team facethis spring.The Maroons swept the small collegetournament last spring, but were unableto advance to the nationals since nonewere held. This year nationals arescheduled, but Chicago is going to haveto advance without performances fromLaura Silveus — sure-handed shortstopand .500 hitter at state; Janet Torrey —strong relief pitcher and good second-baseman, also a .500 hitter at state; Cin¬dy Boydston, good catcher and .350 hit¬ter at state; Claire Orner, finefirstbaseman and also a .350 hitter atstate, not to mention four other regulars.All graduated except centerfielder RaeHartshorn, who did not return to schoolthis fall, and Torrey who did not turn outfor the squad this year.To fill in at the vacant positions, Kir¬by made the following changes; SeniorBarb Brink, a back-up at third andbehind the plate last year, is in at cat¬cher. Ann Speckman, last year’s third-baseman and a .350 hitter at state, hasmoved to short. Rookies Maria ElenaMalo, Christie Nordhielm, and MaryKlemundt at third, second, and firstrespectively.Except for Torrey and Hartshorn,Chicago was unscathed on the moundand in the outfield. Fireballers Kim Cur¬ran and Ann Harvilla hope to improveon their fine pitching performances oflast spring, while Paulita Sales, JeanneDufort, and Tereasa Friend should besteady gloves in the outfield.Fencers end fineyear at nationalsBy R. W. RohdeDave Murdoch and Bob Grady bothhad bad days at the NCAA fencing na¬tionals three weeks ago, losing in thepreliminaries and bringing a disap¬pointing end to a fine season.The team as a whole had little to com¬plain about. Their .500 record (7-7) is thebest in recent history. The young squadalso finished sixth at the Great LakesChampionships last month, fighting instiff competition. Other participants in¬cluded Notre Dame, Wayne State, andCleveland, all who finished in the topfive in the national championships,which were won by the Irish.Seniors Murdoch and Grady alsomade better showings at the GreatLakes tourney. Murdoch, who had an.875 record in sabes competition on theyear, finished fourth at Great Lakeswhile Grady, a .675 foil man, tookseventh. Other Chicago participants in¬cluded Edwin Levi, who lost in thequarter-finals, and Brian Holmgren.Nathan Funk, and Paul Shea, all whowere eliminated in the prelims.Needless to say, coach RobertOstrowski was pleased with the year.Ostrowski also noted that this was thefirst time the team has had a women’ssquad. The women will not be eligible forvarsity status for another couple yearsdue to University rules, but are gettingin some practice now. Overall, saidOstrowski, “We had a really goodseason.”Women’s crewThe women's crew team is having arecruitment day next Saturday. April15th. at Madison, Wisconsin. The crewvan will depart at 10:30 a m. and willreturn about 9 p.m. Anyone interestedin joining the team should call Sue Ur-bas at 955-0932; those wishing to attendthe recruitment day should make reser¬vations with Urbas by next Wednes¬day. who can also provide additionalinformation for interested individualsT**Ct*K?ago^anoon*-*Pr,idav, 'fitctniT. 1^78—S n-cA vt>b‘1 1 • look* ' * - * * 'THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOm COMMITTEE ON AFRICAN AND BLACK AMERICAN HUMANITIESpresentsLECTURE-RECITALby theGambian Griot(Oral Historian-Musician)JALI FODAY MUSAWednesday, April 12,1978 - 4:00 p.m.Breasted Lecture Hall, Oriental Institute(1155 East 58th Street)A new and startling chapterin one of the great journeys ofenlightenment of our timeTIK SECOND RINGOfPOUKR;The Second Ring of Power goes far beyond anythingCastaneda has yet written. In his great journey towardsknowledge and power, he finds himself in a deadly psychicbattle with dona Soleda. a female apprentice of don Juan,who turns her power—power she learnt from don Juanhimself—against himLiterary Guild Alternate SelectionPsychology Today Book Club Mam Selection$9 95 A SIMON AND SCHUSTERGOLD CITY INN9 kLi kl« «JL»given * * * *by the MAROONOpen DailyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9:00 p.m.A Gold Mine Of Good FoodStudent Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559(near Harper Court)Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.) LAST WEEKEND!Firewood SaleIn Spring? Yes. It is !4 priceand it will be seasoned for nextyear.Oak $ 150/ton Price includesMaple $40/ton local deliveryMixed woods $30/tonResource Center6100 Blackstone 493-1466University of ChicagoSuper Summer-Sports CoreGYMNASTICS, TENNIS, SOFTBALLBASKETBALL, VOLLEYBALL,RACQUETBALL, SWIMMINGFOR 8 THRU 15 YEAR-OLDStwo three-week sessions:June 19- July 6 — *120.00July 10-July 27 —*120.00Sessions four times a week:Mon. thru Thurs.9 a.m. to 1 p.m.For reservation form:write: Bartlett Gymnasium,Room 1015640 S. University AvenueChicago, Illinois 60637or call: 753-4682Open to University of Chicago &Hyde Park ResidentsROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSUNDAY • APRIL 99 A.M.A SERVICE OF HOLY COMMUNIONCelebrant: Donald JudsonCo-sponsored by the Episcopal Church Council11 A. M.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICESpencer ParsonsDean of the Chapel“HEARING IS BELIEVING” After a long cold winter, don’t youthink you owe yourself a treat? Goto some place special, go to theHOUSE OF ENG. The one placewhere you can enjoy deliciousCantonese cuisine in an enchantingatmosphere overlooking Lake Mich¬igan and the park. It costs a littlemore but you deserve it.wotrse of hugServing Hyde park for 20 years.1701 E. 53rd St. Tel: 324 6200On Top of the Del Prado HotelPREPARE FOR:IMCATGRE DAT • LSAT - GMATOCAT - VAT - SATNNIB I. II. Ill • ECFMG * FLEX * VQENATL DENTAL BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFltxibl* Programs & HoursThere IS a difference!!!For Information Plnase Call “fi2050 W Devon WM KAPDtNChicago, III 60645 ^B^couc*tk)n*lcenter(312) 764^1^1 QflHK TIST P«€PAHATIONlO 11 /DM DID I Sp{C,*l($,s SINC| 1931SPRING, SUMMER, WINTER COMPACTSMOST CLASSES START EIGHT WEEKSPRIOR TO THE EXAM. STARTING SOON:MCAT-4 WEEK MCAT-DAT-GRE-LSAT-SATOTHER CATERS CALL TOLL FREE 800 223 1782Centers in Maior US Cities Toronto, Puerto Rico and Lugano, SwitzerlandTHE HISTORY OF INTERDISCIPLINARYSTUDIES IN THE SOCIAL SCIENCESAT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGODiscussion by ProfessorsNorman Bradburn, Dept, of Behavioral SciencesBarry Karl, Dept, of HistoryGeorge Stocking, Dept, of AnthropologySHERRY HOUR sponsored by theDivisional Master’s Programin the Social SciencesFriday, April 74:00 Pick Lounge18—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 7,1978CLASSIFIED ADSPEOPLE WANTEDPart time or full time sales helpwanted. Good salary and good workingconditions. The Pinocchio Toy Store.241 5512. 1517 E. 53rd St., Hyde Pk.Bank Bldg.WORK SATURDAYS EARN $$ andhelp the fight against pollution. High-energy outdoor work supporting thebattle for a healthy environment. CallDale after 2:00 p.m. Tues - Fri., at939 1985.Children wanted for psychologicaltesting age 18 years and under. $2.50per hour. Please call Sheila even¬ings/weekends, 363-9141.WORK IN Japan! Teach English conversation. No experience, degree, orJapanese required, send long,stamped, self-addressed envelope fordetails. Japan-302, 411 W. Center, Cen-tralia, WA 98531. SCENESCOOKING CLASSES: Chinese & International. Full participation, day 8.evening classes limited to 6 studentseach. Wendy Gerick KE8 1324,Modern Dance Classes. Grahambackground, body alignment, ex¬pressive movement Phone WendyHoffman, 924-4523.THE SUN is the source of all theenergy on our planet. Why do we depend on the energy that is stored andignore that which comes daily.Quaker meeting, Thursday noon, Vic¬tor Klausen's rm. CTS.Saturday, April 8th, Calvert 5:45-8:15pm-Joint Medical Legal Ethics Pro¬gram. (5735 S. University).Sunday, April 9th Bond Chapel, 10 am,Sunday Morning Theology, "Sexualityas Relational." Mass 11 am.Dental Receptionist. General officeexperience necessary. Hyde Parkarea. 5 days a week. Call 324-2600.Female models wanted to pose nudefor established published free-lancephotographer. $30-50 hr. guaranteed(more if work published). No ex¬perience necessary., If concerned thisisn't legit feel free to bring a friend toinitial interview. Send photo andresume to William Hoff, 2470 N. Clark,Chicago 60614.Half-time secretary wanted fordevelopment division at South ShoreNational bank. Must have good skills.Up to $5.50/hr. Call Susan Davis,288 1000 ext 209.WERE PROUD OF OUR WORKWant to work for an agency you cantake pride in? United Charities ofChicago presently has a legal typistposition open in our office in the U of CLaw School. Friendly workenvironment-good fringe benefits.Come join our people helping team.Call Miss Rzepka, United Charities ofChicago. 939 5930. AN EQUAL OP-PORTUNITY EMPLOYER.Wanted: Normal males for hormonalstudy-with pay. Call Dr. HarveySchneir 947-5534.Roomate needed have one room insunny quiet apt close to campus.Available now until June 9. $93 amonth. 353-5582.Interested in serving as a subject forpsycholinguistic experiments. Dept, ofBehavioral Sciences: Pay is $2 hr. Toregister, call 753-4718.Interest in Law? See a trail. UC LawSchool Trial Practice needs jurorsnext 4 Sat. Call 947-5383 or 366 8166,6-10 p.m.PEOPLEJQR SALESpanish lessons by native speaker (UCgraducated student). Experienced andgood references Call 753-4435 MissLois and leave message. Or write 7256S. Coles, Chicago 60649.YOGA at your home by graduated UCforeign student. Call Jaqueline 7534435 and leave message. Or write 7256S. Coles Chicago 60649For experienced piano teacher of alllevels call 947-9746.ARTWORK - Illustration of all kinds,lettering, handaddressing for invita¬tions, etc. Noel Price 493 2399.RESEARCHERS Free-lance artistspecializes in just the type of graphicwork you need. Noel Price, 493-2399.Piano Lessons for beginners throughadvanced. $4 00. 288-8747. The University of Chicago Committeeon African & Black AmericanHumanities preents a lecture-recitalby the Gambian Griot, (oral historian-musician): JALI FODAY MUSASUSC. Wed, April 12, 4 p.m. BreastedLecture Hall, Oriental Institute.SOLAR WEEK is the first week inMay. The sun lifts all the moisture thatfalls and powers the wind. That is a lotof energy and we don't have to move itin supertankers.Women and their bodies, 3 sessionseries includes self help. 4/17, 4/24,and 5/1. Emma Goldman HealthCenter, 1628A W. Belmont. $5-15 donation requested. To register call 493-5364.Photo Workshop, Miami Beach, 1 wk.July, pro teachers, complete courseand fun. Phototours, 7745 S.W. 33Terr., Dept, c, Miami, Fla, 33155.FOR SALEDoctoral Gown, $50, hood, (hist.), $30,cap, $5. D. Nodtvedt, 2236 EdgewoodDr., Boulder, CO.PASSPORT PHOTOSWhile-U-WaitMODELCAMERA1344 E . 55th St. 493-6700VIDEORECORDERSPanasonic, VTR units in stock. Checkour prices.MODELCAMERA1344 E . 55th St. 493 6700Dinner plates copeland, spodeEngland circa 1931, 12 different U of Cbldgs depicted all new mint unused.Goodman 752-1000 ext 516.Large, wooden desk, 34x72 8> chair $30.call Peter 268-7186.Furniture, Antiques, and Collectables.5455 S. Blackstone, 12-5 daily.Yamaha, 200 CC like new mustsacrifice 684-5491 after 5 p.m.1972 FIAT 128, engine great, needsclutch. $100 call 493-2433 leave nameand number.Advent loudspeakers. Perfect condi¬tion. $70. Call Ed 288-7797.PERSONALSDATING SERVICE Low cost. Over1400 members. 274-6940.Join the newly formed LET THEDEAD REST IN PEACE COMMIT¬TEE. Stop the Glen Miller concert.Don't let them raze the dead!Tordy, Happy Birthday Sweetie!Love, Little LiliPROFESSIONAL TYPIST. Articles,resumes, term papers, theses. Xeroxcopying. Brookfield, IL 312/485-7650and 387 0889.Childcare in loving and creative atmosphere. Young children especiallywelcome. Rates negotiable. Near cam¬pus. Call 288-0576.Thesis, Dissertations, Term Papers,Inc. Foreign language gen-corres.Latest IBM corrective SEL IItypewriter. Reas, rates. Mrs. Ross 239-4257, bet 11 am 8, 5 pm.PIZZA PLATTER1460 E. 53rd St.OUR SPECIALTYPizza Also Italian FoodsPick Up OnlyMl 3-2800VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1 x/i and'IVi Hoorn StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$171 to $266tfa*r<l on AvailalHliuAll ( lililir* im-lmledAt (lampii* Has StopFA 1-0200 Vlrs. (iroak The University of Chicago Committeeon African 8, Black AmericanHumanities presents a lecture recitalby the Gambian Briot (oral historian-musician): JALI FODAY MUSASUSO, Wed, April 12, 4 pm. BreastedLecture Hall, Oriental InstituteWRITERS AND ACTORS needed forRADIO COMEDY show. Call JackPI2 1000 leave name and phone. GLORIOUS SOUNDHear the rich sonorities of brassplayed by one of the best campusmusic groups, the UC Brass Society, atour concert in Harper Library, 8:30pm, Saturday, April 8th.DAILY MINYONMinyon Mon 8< Thurs mornings atHillel, 5715 S. Woodlawn 7:15 YavnehOrthodoz Minyon.AIKIDODemonstration by Master MichioHiktsuchi, Aikido 10th Dan, visitingfrom Japan, Saturday, April 8, 3:30p.m. Field House. Sponsored by theCenter for Far Eastern Studies. LOST AND FOUNDLots of Winter Gloves, Hats, glasses,etc. looking for original owners. Administration 104 , 8:30-noon and 1-5Mon Fri.FOTA PHOTOFestival of the Arts Photography Ex¬hibit May 1-21, reservation deadlineApril 14. Call 753-3598 or come by Stu¬dent Activities Office, Ida Noyes toreserve a space. Open to UC students,faculty and staff.PARKINGWANTEDGarage or locked parking spot desirednear 58th and Dorchester. Call David947-0190.CHRISTIANSCIENCECome to a free lecture about ChristianScience: "More Than A Superstar!"by George Aghamalian, member ofthe Christian Science Board of Lec¬tureship. Saturday, 4/15/78, at 2:30 inthe Center for Continuing Education.FLAMINGO-ON-THE-LAKEStudio, 1 bdrm apts fur, unfur short,long term rentals parking, pool, rest,trans. 5500 S. Shore Dr. 752-3800.APLISHEREAPL language now on ComputationCenter DEC 20 computer for 3 motrail. Try it out let us know how youlike it. Seminar Mon Apr. 10, 3:30 Pick022 to introduce APL languageLOST: KEYSVolvo keys, whistle with "NatureTrek" fob, $10 reward 667-1460.HELPLINEWanted: People willing to committheir time to the operation of a UC in¬formation and counseling hotline.Please leave name and number at 753-4206.RECORDS WANTEDWe pay cash for used records, alltypes, 33 rpm only. Second HandTunes. 1701 E. 55th. 684 3375 or 2621593.BUDDHISMAppreciating Life is understandingthat we are not separate from theworld around us. Public talk at Dharmadhatu Buddhist Meditation andStudy Center. 640 N. State St., Tuesday, April 11, 8:00 p.m. Adm $2.Speaker: Newcolm Greenleaf, PhDfrom Maropa Institute. For further in¬formation, call 649 9892LEGAL NOTICE ,Notice is hereby given, pursuant to"An Act in relation to the use of anassumed name in the conduct or tran¬saction of business in this state," asamended, that a certificate was filedby the undersigned with the place ofbusiness located at 5454 S. Shore Dr.4612. The true name and residenceof owner is Joel S. Jaffer, 2479 SW 13thSt„ Miami, FL 33145.LEARN FRENCHStudents (beg or adv.), children,travellers, learn French with an exprnative teacher. Ph 324-8054.POETRY READINGPrimavera Poetry Reading on Sat.,April 8 at 7 p.m. at Artemisia Gallery,9 W Hubbard. Refreshments.•Eye Examinations•Contact Lenses (Soft l Hard)•Prescriptions Filled)R MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTS FOUNDMale, black, lab°Shepherd mix (?).About 1 yr. old, affec and obedient, ifyours or want to adopt call 493-1218 aft.and eves.RAP GROUPA Women's Rap Group will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. on the 3rd floor of theBlue Gargoyle. For more info call 7525655.WAITRESSES*WAITERSWaitresses 8. waiters, full time andpart-time openings. Breakfast-lunch-dinner, IV* yrs. of dining room ex¬perience necessary. Clean cut ap¬pearance 324 6000. The WindermereRestaurant.PAN PIZZADELIVERYThe Medici Delivers from 5-10:30weexdays, 5-11:30 weekends, 667 7394Save 60Df you pick it up yourself.MEDICICONTINENTALBREAKFASTCome to the Medici Sunday morningfrom 9:30 -1 and enjoy Sunday papers,fresh orange juice, homemadesweetrolls, fresh fruit, homemadeyogurt and coffee. All you can eat for$2.50.BOOK SALEChicago Review is selling reviewcopies of new books at 50% discount,Monday 10-5 p.m., Reynolds Club.a / t 4 s V { }3 SALES with LV service is ourBUSINESS nREPAIR specialistson IBM. SCM. §f Olympia & othersFree Estimate >X Ask about ourRENTAL with un option to buyNew & Rebuilt AK TypewritersCalculators <10 DictatorsAddersU ♦V U. of C. Bookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave. ¥Y 753-3303MASTER CHARGE OD6 BANKAMERICARD 7O U c* •• t t tHyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363HYDE PRRK PIPE RND TOBRCCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim”Mon. - Sat. 9 - 8; Sun. 12 - 5PipesPipe Tobaccos Imported Cigarettes Cigars KENNEDY, RYHN.MMKM & «9KMES,aC.(H R Mfflff II RRfft)Directory of ValuesWe Know Hyde ParkReal Estate Inside OutHOUSES FOR SALECUSTOM TOWNHOUSE2400 sq. ft. of super modernliving. Bubble dome skylight,glass walls, exposed brickwalls, circular staircase,sunken roman bath, rec. rm.& in-house garage for this 3bedrm. corner home w/land-scaped yard. $149,500. To see,call KRM at 667-6666.SEE THISExcellent 3 apt. brick bldg.w/6 rms. each, 3 car garage,tile baths, gas heat, ap¬pliances, built-in extras.Price in mid $60's. Call Mrs.Coe at 667-6666. MODERNIZEDGREYSTONEA modern approach whichemphasizes the best featuresof old and new. Spacious liv.rm. w/woodburning fireplc.,formal din. rm., super kit¬chen, 4 bedrms. & study, 3’/jbaths plus parking. Offeredat below appraised value. Tosee, call Mrs. Haines at 667-6666.KENWOODThis gracious Kenwood homecombines the elegance of the'20's w/the liveability of the70's. A truly distinctivehome; beautiful woodwork,many fireplaces, well-proportioned rooms, large at¬tractive yard. To see, call667 6666.APARTMENTS FOR SALECLOSE IN TO U. OF C.w/PARKINGLrg. liv. rm., woodburningfireplc., formal din. rm. &modern kitchen make this 2bedrm. 2 bath condo ideal forentertaining. There is astudy/guest rm. too pluswoodworking shop, bike rm.,garden & common patio forsummer parties. Only$62,500. Call now! Richard EHild at 667 6666.MADISON PARKFirst time offered! Elegant10 rm. condo overlookingprivate park. 4 lrg. bedrms.,3 baths, 2 huge sunporches.Woodburning fireplc.,elevator. Many, many extrasin this 3400 sq. ft. condohome. For informationplease call Margaret Ken¬nedy at 667-6666.BEST CO-OP IN TOWNNear 57th & Stony Islandoverlooking the museum.This 2 bedrm., 1 bath apt.w/garage is ready to buy at$28,500. To see, call FrankGoldschmidt at 667-6666. BIG SPACE, SMALL PRICE2 bedrms. plus study. Extralarge & bright liv. rm., din.rm. 8, sunporch. Priced in thelow $30's. To see, call GeorgeBilger at 667-6666.75TH ON THE LAKEThis modern 3 bedrm., 2'/icondo w/sunken liv. rm. is inmove-in condition. All ap¬pliances including washer &dryer are a part of thepackage. Asking $48,900 CallNadine Hild about the extrasat 667-6666.SOUTH OF 55TH STREETLoads of sunlight, woodburn¬ing fireplc., natl. oak floors,modern kitchen in beautiful 3bedrm., 2 bath condo Quiet,well-maintained bldg. To seecall Eleanor Coe at 667-6666CAMPUS/RAY SCHOOL3 Bedrms., 2 baths, condohome w/woodburningfireplc., Modern kitchen &baths. Rear yard. Anespecially well-run bldg. Tosee, call Mrs. Haines at 667-6666.AMENITIES GALOREIn this attractive 1 bedrm.condo w/balcony, sundeck,laundry & game rms.perfect for busy couplew/modern taste. Appliancesincl. Low price, low assmt.Call Mrs. Ridlon of 667-6666UNDER $30,000With its separate living room& dining room this onebedrm. plus sunporch is oneof Hyde Park's best buys. Tosee: call J. Edward LaVelleat 667 6666.HYDE PARK SPECIALCozy & bright 2 bedrm. apt.Competitively priced at$45,000 for immed sale Thisunit has formal din. rm.,modern kitchen & bath & isavailable for spring possession. To see call Mrs Hainesat 667 6666. SINGLE'S SPECIALThis 2 rm. coop apt. in attrac-tive well-kept bldg,w/congenial neighbors &near transportation is asingle's dream come-truePriced for a pension budgetof $6,500. Low assmts. near49th & Drexel. To see callAvery Williams at 667-6666(res. 684-7347).A VIEW FROM THE TOP2 bedrm. condo in CornellVillage w/2 full baths,modern kitchen, customtealwood wall shelves,balcony, indoor parking,swimming pool, 24 hr. door¬man. Great location at 52nd &Cornell. $63,500. To see, callDon Tillery at 667-66661461 East 57th Street,' Chicago. Illinois 60637667-6666Daily 9 to 5 Sat 9 to I, Or call 667 6666 AnytimeColl us for a free no obliqa*ion es*ima*e of value ofyour home condominium or co odCUSTOM BLACK AND WHITE PROCESSINGIf you have ever developed a B & W film yourselfyou know the high quality achievable with handprocessing methods. Even today, with all the sci¬ence and machinery available in large photo labs,B & W hand processing will produce superior re¬sults. We offer the finest B & W film processingavailable. Even the large “Pro” labs do not pro¬cess B & W film by hand anymore. So for the best B& W processing for your film—see us.PUSH and PULL processing to your specificationsat a small additional charge!35mm developing and contact sheet...only $4.50 WE SPECIALIZE IN REPAIRS!Repairs are one of the specialities of Model Cam¬era. We can have a Nikon, Pentax, Olympus,Leica, or Canon overhauled, cleaned, adjusted orcalibrated, etc. and usually back within a week ortwo. If it is repairable, we can do it. And we will getyou an estimate first.MODEL CAMERA CUSTOM COLORColor films processed and printed in one day! Ournew Custom Color Lab also offers color contactsheets—process and print for $7.50! KodacolorASA 400 film can be processed at ASA 2400! Seeyou soon.inolfnXG7 Minolta XG-7with 50mm f 1.7with 50mm f1.4EG WinderAuto 200X Flash $257.00$297.00$ 86.95$ 59.95 PUJICAThe compact, automatic Minolta XG-7. Easy to use. Easy to own.The Minolta XG-7 35mm SLR gives you much more than point-focus-shoot simplicity. Theoptional Auto Winder G and Auto Electroflash 200X synchronize to give you automaticflash sequences. Many other exclusive features Come see how easy it is to use. FUJICAST705Exceptionally compactFull aperture meteringBright ViewfinderFaster responding cell meter1 /500 sec. shutter speed$170.95Minolta XD-11with f 1.7with f1.4Auto WinderAuto 200X FlashSwitch from aperture toshutter-priority to metered-manual operation. $365.00$395.00$ 86.95$ 59.95Override automatic exposure system plus or minus two full stops. Smallest, lightest, quiet¬est auto-winder you can own! Optional Auto Winder D advances film for single shots, se¬quences as fast as two frames a second. Unprecedented creative freedom!CanonCanonjsig-n The electronic system camerathat’s changing thecourse ofphotography.Shutter-priorty automatic exposure SLREasy to useInstant response, sensitivesilicon exposure meteringCompact power winder A formotorized sequential Shooting availableSpeedlite 155A auto electronic flashsets shutter and aperture availableAccepts all Canon FDlenses for AE operationCaseSpeedlite 155A FlashPower Winder ABlack bodyAE-1 bodywith f 1.8with f 1.4 $ 19.00$ 54.95$ 79.95$ 20.00$209.00$269.00$309.00PASSPORTPHOTOS WHILEYOU WAIT /»z» FUJICA/4Z-1Full aperture meteringAutomatic exposure with LEDshutter speed indication andmanual overrideAutomatic Winder availableA f 1.8 55mm Fuji$229.95AFUcFlashOCKETFUvIlGA$69.95 Built-in pop-up flashUses ASA 400 filmUltra compact4-element f/4 Fujinon 20mmwide angle lensSpecial close-up featureIncludes flash, film and caseCanonCanonetCanon The Professional’s Fun CameraFully automatic exposureCompletely automatic flashoperation with Canonlite DBuilt-in self timerManual override of auto exposure$ 129.00 special with this adincludes case and $40.00 flash1342 E. 55th Street 9=30-6:00 /MorvSat. 493-6700