The Chicago MaroonVol.87, No. 48 The Universiiy of Chicago © The Chicago Maroon 1978 Friday, April 14. 1978Campaign effort to cease June 30By Abbe FletmanPhase II of the Campaign forChicago, the University’s fun¬draising effort initiated overfour years ago and still $109million short of its $280 milliongoal, will be terminated June 30.The Campaign is $22 millionshort of a 15-month $50 milliongoal that was expected to bereached by June. Also, byAugust, $500,000 must be raisedif the University is to receive a$1 million grant for the secondphase of renovations on theField House.The Campaign has run shortof its Phase II goals since itsearly stages. NonethelessChauncy Harris, vice-presidentfor academic resources said thatPhase II has been a success.“We raised more money thanwe would have if we hadn’t hada campaign,” said Harris, whohas been de facto vice presidentfor development since theresignation last year of EugeneGerwe, former vice-presidentfor development.Phase II was ended, said Har¬ ris, because ‘‘the Board ofTrustees reached a consensusthat it was about time to end it.”When Phase II was formallybegun in October, 1974, thetrustees expected the $280million goal to be reached inthree to five years.Phase I of the Campaign wasinitiated in 1965 with a $160million goal, which was reachedin 1968. Phase II started underEdward Levi’s presidency, butLevi left the University tobecome U.S. Attorney Generalseven months after Phase IIbegan, and John Wilson was leftto continue his predecessor’scampaign.Campaign “Special”Harris said that a campaignshould be a “special” fundrais¬ing effort. After four years, acampaign can no longer be call¬ed “special.” In addition,development officials found itdifficult to sustain enthusiasmamong volunteers for an in¬definite amount of time. Asource in the development officesaid, “We hadn’t geared up to a great extent.”The same source disagreedthat Phase II was halted due to alack of momentum. “It’s notwise for Hanna Gray to takeover a Campaign that wasstarted by Levi ,” he said.“People knew Levi. Peopledon’t know her.”According to development of¬ficials, the personality andreputation of the president isoften crucial in bringing in newdonors. “It will take some timefor trustees and donors to get toknow Gray,” one source said.The Campaign has been leastsuccessful at raisingunrestricted gifts and endow¬ment funds. Of the $280 milliontotal goal, $121 million was to bechanneled into the endowment.But only $32.7 million for the en¬dowment was raised.In fiscal year 1976-1977, theUniversity endowment rose $9.7million, according to TheChronical of Higher Education.Of that, $5.6 million dollars werefrom gifts to the endowment.The rest resulted from increased return on investments.Fundraising under GrayFundraising policy is set bythe Board of Trustees in con¬junction with the president. It isexpected that Gray will concen¬trate fundraising efforts in the College and that she will initiateeight to 12 “mini-campaigns”for special projects such as thecompletion of the Field Houserenovation or construction of anew theater.Campaign top. 2Rally on QuadsU.N. rep Makatini speaksat protest for divestitureBy Richard BiernackiA crowd of about 200students and a sprinkling offaculty members assembled onthe steps of the Administra¬tion building Thursday to hearAfrican National Congressrepresentative JohnstonMakatini call on them to form“an army of soldiers of peace”to oppose U.S. economic andmilitary aid to South Africa’swhite government.Speaking at the first springdivestiture rally, Makatinisaid that a “national mobiliza¬tion” of students is required toget universities to cut their tieswith corporations that are pro¬longing white economicdomination over blacks.‘‘U.S. firms drawastronomical profits from mycountry thanks to the semi¬slave wages guaranteed to byapartheid,” said Makatini.“When the children of Sowetoare shot indiscriminately bythe bloody police we blame allgovernments and institutions,including this university, thatcontinue to invest in SouthAfrica.”Makatini’s party, theA.N.C., is the major nationalliberation group in SouthAfrica, which since 1973 hasbeen recognized by the UnitedNations General Assembly asthe legitimate representativeof the majority of people in Protest on the Quads. (Photo byJeanne Dufort)that country. Since its foun¬ding in 1912, the A.N.C. hasgradually moved frompeacefully petitioning thewhite government for liberalchanges toward openly ad¬vocating armed revolt.The A.N.C. was banned in1960 after it sponsored its firstmass movement to protest thepass book laws the govern¬ment uses to segregate races.Makatini escaped from SouthProtest to p. 2 Medical legal definition of deathquestioned after mishap at WylerBy Carl LavinThe recent death of a 14-year-old Gary boy in WylerChildren’s Hospital may resultin precedent-setting legal actionagainst the University tht wouldadd to the growing controversyin Illinois and other states overwhat constitutes a legal defini¬tion of death.Eighti -grader Danny Burtindied March 30th when hospitaldoctors “pulled the plug” of alife-support system, accordingto the boy's parents, who con¬tend that they refused to signpapers agreeing to such an ac¬tion.Hospital spokesman JohnMilkereit said that the boy'sdeath was due to an “apparentcardiac arrest.” Milkereit ad¬mitted that Burtin was on arespirator at the hospital butsaid that “the child was pro¬nounced dead” before therespirator was turned off.Burtin was transferred toWyler a week before his deathfrom La Rabida Children’rHospital where he fell into acoma shortly after being in¬jected with a still-unidentifieddrug.Cook County medical ex¬aminer Dr. Robert Stein per¬formed an autopsy on Burtin'sbody April 1. but an exact causeof death has not been determin¬ed. Stein is waiting for theresults of chemical analyseswhich may take another fourweeks. Burtin's death sparked legaland medical debates within theUniversity over a definition ofdeath similar to those firstpublicized by the Karen Quinlancase in New Jersey. Further therecent death at Chicago'sLoyola Hospital of 15-year-oldCraig Sieck and a still-pendingcase in Michigan City. Indianainvolving a comatose 15-vir-old girl have further fueled thediscussion. Burtin's case differs fromthese in that his parents wantedthe use of artificial life-supportsystems continued w'hereas theparents of the other childrenpleaded with the hospital in¬volved to stop artificial meansof life-support.Although Burtin's parentshave not yet filed a complaintagainst the University, somelegal authorities here fear thatDeath top. 2Hospital plagued by legal actionIf Danny Burtin's parentsdecide to file suit againstWyler Children’s Hospital, theaction w ill become one of over70 malpractice suits now pen¬ding against the University,its hospitals, and its doctors.Since 1976. the Universityhas paid out over $2 million inmalpractice settlements. Thatmoney came from a specialescrow account maintained bythe University in lieu ofAdministrators here believethat it is still to early to tell ifself-insurance wrill be less ex¬pensive than paying enormouspremiums to an insurancecompany that would pay offclaims against the hospital.An anesthesiologist’s errorthree days after the hospitalbecame self-insured resultedin a $2 million settlementagainst the University. Whenthat sum is eventually paid under a several-year paymentplan, it will be the largestdamage payment ever made bythe University, over twice theamount of any previous settle¬ment.At least 10 of the still-pending malpractice suits werefiled by women who claimdamages as a result of an ex¬periment performed by thedepartments of obstetrics andgynecology in the early 1950’s.At that time 840 pregnantwomen were given DES. a syn¬thetic estrogen thought to pre¬vent miscarriages.DES is now believed to beassociated with cancer in thereproductive tracts of both thewomen who took the drug andthe children of those pregnan¬cies. None of these suits,which collectively seek over$100 million, have yet gone totrial.NewsBriefsAid deadline setat April 18Student Government Secretary GerryMildner and College Aid Director FredBrooks reached an agreement this weekextending the College Financial Aiddeadline from April 5 to April 18.Students should turn in their financialaid material by this date. Financial Aidpackets are available in Harper 280.The extension was suggested afterseveral students complained about thelack of publicity for the deadline.“Students said that their only noticewas by word of mouth/’ said Mildner.“Even advisors didn’t mention thedeadline. Perhaps in future years, therecould be a mailing to all presentstudents on financial aid.”SG plans to initiate a letter campaignto House Presidents to inform personsabout the deadline and publish postersaround the campus. Press book getsNational Award“The Collected Poems of HowardNemerov,” published by the Universityof Chicago Press, this week received the1978 National Book Award for poetry.Nemerov has previously publishedfive volumes of poetry with the Press.This is the first time a University ofChicago Press book has won the Na¬tional Book Award in poetry.In 1973 William McNeill won the prizein history and biography for “The Riseof the West.” George B. Schaller won the1972 award in science for “The SeregentiLion: A study of predatory-prey rela¬tions.”Nemerov, who was awarded the $1,000cash prize on Wednesday in New York,is a Distinguished University Professorof English at Washington University inSt. Louis.Profs plan newconcentrationSociology professor Donald Levinehas announced a new undergraduateconcentration, social philosophy, to be introduced next fall quarter under theauspices of the social sciences and newcollegiate divisions.The social philosophy program ex¬amine the philosophic bases for thesocial sciences, as well as the relation ofsocial scientific knowledge to theassumptions of philosophy, accordingto Levine.The program will include a com¬parison of the different attitudes towardhuman nature with the divisions withinthe social sciences, and modern socialsciences possible dependence on thesocial ideologies from which they emerg¬ed.According to a proposal for the pro¬gram will be examined from threedistinct perspectives: Disciplines (a“systematic-disciplinary perspective);Roots (a “culture-historical perspec¬tive); and Topics (a “topical-analyticalperspective”). The program will beorganized around a core curriculum con¬sisting of a pair of courses in each of theperspectives.Course titles include: “ArchitectonicApproaches (Disciplines); ‘‘EarlyModern European Social Thought”(roots); and Normative and AnalyticThemes (Topics). In addition, a series ofsix guided electives in the socialsciences and philosophy, and an“integrative experience,” either a final exam or bachelor’s essay, will be re¬quired.Faculty for the program includeLevine, Keith Baker, James Redfield,Wendy Olmstead, Marshall Sahlins andHerman Sinaiko.Sociology professor Donald Levine.(Photo by Sharon Pollack)Protest from p. 1escaped from South Africa in 1964, afterspending four years underground.Since the South African government’sclamped down on black newspapers andthe arrest of many moderate politicianslast October, the A.N.C. has been usingits underground network to launch-sabotage attacks against rail and elec¬tricity lines and truck convoys.“The days of the Vorster regime arenumbered," said Makatini. “The libera¬tion of Angola and Mozambique fromcolonial rule means that the balance offorces has tipped in our favor. We are ab¬solutely assured of victory.”Among -the other speakers atThursdays rally were Arnita Boswell, aprofessor in the School of Social ServiceAdministration, and Nessi Stephensfrom the Organization of Black students.The crowd, composed mostly of campusradicals, sympathetic staff members,and curious bystanders, cheered andhooted as Stephens declared that t-heUniversity's “racist investment police”matches its recruitment programs,which she said led to the admission ofonly 15 blacks in the undergraduateclass of 1981.As the demonstrators cheers bouncedoff the walls of the administrationbuilding, a few administrators andsecretaries peered from the windowsabove, but the bulk of the university’sdecision makers were at the trusteesApril board meeting at the First Na¬tional Bank downtown. The primary order of business at themeeting was the approval of the Univer¬sity’s budget for fiscal year 1979.The student Action Committee onSouth Africa, which requested to sendspokesmen to that meeting to presenttheir arguments for divestiture, was in¬formed by trustee chairman RobertReneker that the trustees have alreadyconsidered fully the implications of theirSouth Africa stockholdings.In his written response to the commit¬tee, Reneker stressed that the trusteestraditionally reach decisions by holdingprivate committee sessions and thencommunicating policy judgementsthrough the president.“What you call ‘public’ hearings areclearly outside the spirit and manner inwhich the board operates,” he said.Campaign from p. 1Harris said that a seven-member Cam¬paign executive committee of the Boardof Trustees headed by Robert Ingersolreached the decision to end Phase II lastquarter. The committee reported to thefull board yesterday.In his last press conference on Feb. 7,before the trustees’ final decision, Presi¬dent John Wilson said, “I have presum¬ed closing down the Campaign forChicago effort.”The closing of the Campaign will meanthat a special contingency fund whichwas used to sponsor major events duringthe Campaign will cease to exist.Maroon Staff Meeting/ElectionT uesday, April 187 pm, INH 303Election for Editor.All staff members must attend.Refreshments will be served. The development office budget will in¬crease next year, but it will come to lessthan the total of the development officeand Campaign funds.Although the development officeroutinely solicits gifts and grants, manydevelopment employees have worked ex¬clusively on the Campaign in recentyears. Because of budget restraintscaused by the loss of the Campaign con¬tingency fund, the development officewill be forced either to cut back on staff,limit expenditures, or both. The officewill also lose the services of volunteersaround the country who worked on theCampaign.“Chicago set too high a goal,” saidHarris. “We were too ambitious to in¬crease the financial base of the universi¬ty.”Several administrators and facultymembers said that the University inten¬tionally set too high a goal to encouragemore gifts. But a University fundraisersaid, “Anyone in development who setan unrealistic goal wouldn’t continue tobe employed.” The fundraiser said thetrustees began the Campaign in 1974despite the dismal economic situationbecause, “They thought the economicsituation was at the bottom of thetrough, and they expected the situationto improve.”Harris said the development office willcontinue soliciting donations from cor¬porations, foundations, alumni, and in¬dividuals. “But we won’t try to raise$100 million in one year,” said Harris. Those days are over for Universityfundraisers.Death from p. 1the Burtin case may become the firstcourt test of an Illinois’s “brain death”statute that some say only applies toorgan transplant donors.Passed by the state legislature in 1975,the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act in¬cludes the definition of death as “the ir¬reversible cessation of total brain func¬tion.”Because this law was passed to clarifyproblems facing transplant surgeonswho must remove organs from a donor’sbody as close to the time of death aspossible, some legal experts believe thatonly the death of an organ donor can bedetermined by this definition.University medical-legal affairsspecialist Fredrick Entin said that,“Brain death is accepted as a definitionof death in some states but not in Il¬linois. There are no specific statementsin Illinois law books that define death inall cases.Entin added that many medicalauthorities, including the Cook CountyMedical Examiner, accept theAnatomical Gift Act definition as ageneral definition of death.Entin said this view has not beentested in court and expressed no desireto involve the University in such a test.“Fd rather not be setting precedents,”said Entin, “Let somebody else makethe breakthroughs.”Ipckesmer Bicycle §Bep•/> TI M Hyde Pad Dlvd.Selling Quality Imported BikesRaleigh, Peugeot, MotobecaneAnnouncing a full inventoryof MOPEDS on display.Open 10-7 pm M-F10-5 pm Sat.684-3737^io^qMarooiTv-Fridaw' Anriim •» i qyrAdministrators agree, retirement age risewill have impactBy Eric Von der PortenThe mandatory retirement bill signedby President Jimmy Carter last week isgoing to have “significant” impact onthe University’s ability to recruit youngfaculty and graduate students, ac¬cording to Provost D. Gale Johnson.The bill raises the legal mandatoryretirement age from 65 — which is theage at which most university facultymembers are forced to retire — to 70, ef¬fective Jan. 1, 1979, for most private in¬dustry employees. But tenured universi¬ty faculty members will not be affecteduntil July 1, 1982.Johnson said that the change isundesirable for universities, even withthe delayed implementation.“It’s going to be more difficult foryounger people to enter faculty posi¬tions,” Johnson said, “and that’s a lossto the University and to students.”Johnson is also afraid that the change“will have a long term effect in terms ofgraduate student enrollment, at least in the next decade.” He said that couldresult in particularly great “indirect” ef¬fects on the University “because we arerelatively more dependent on graduatestudents in the arts and sciences thanmost universities.”But, Johnson added, “We’re in muchbetter shape than if it had become effec¬tive when the other part of the legisla¬tion does.” The delay gives the Univer¬sity time to consider making changes tolessen the impact of the extended retire¬ment age, but Johnson said he doubtsattempts to encourage the early retire¬ment of faculty members can be suc¬cessful.Few professors take advantage of theexisting opportunity to retire at 62 withessentially full retirement benefits, andmost professors stay past 65 “if theyhave their ‘druthers,’” Johnson said.Approximately one third of the retir¬ing faculty members are offered extend¬ed appointments and almost all acceptthose offers. The tenure system itself also createsparticular problems, said Johnson,because it denies the University the op¬portunity to encourage or force people toretire, an alternative that exists to agreat extent in other private institu¬tions.Effects of the legislationThe New York Times recentlyreported that the immediate effect of thenew legislation will probably not begreat, but there is wide disagreementover the long-range impact of the bill.The bill’s proponents believe it offersolder employees an opportunity to con¬tinue working if they want to. They alsosay it helps relieve pressure on theSocial Security Administration bydelaying the date at which workers beginto collect retirement benefits.Opponents — particularly businessinterests and universities — believe thatthe new law will be harmful to the up¬ ward mobility of younger employees,will encourage unemployment, and willhurt efforts to hire more women andminorities.The original bill passed by the Houseof Representatives included no excep¬tions for tenured university facultymembers but Senate concern for educa¬tional interests forced the passage of thecompromise exemption.Johnson said he did what he could “toget the faculty, at least, an exception.”“I felt that this was a matter thatcould be left to reasonably intelligent in¬dividuals in the institutions involved,but obviously, Congress felt other¬wise,” he said.Some universities already have man¬datory retirement ages above 65 and willnot be affected by this legislation, butfor those who do not. some impact is in¬evitable.First in a seriesForeign students face financial woesBy Chris BrownBeing a foreign student at the Univer¬sity is hardly Junior Year Abroad inreverse.Most foreign students are here foracademic reasons only, not to travel orexperience a foreign culture. They facethe same problems American studentsdo. and more. The Indian student whoruns out of money 10,000 miles fromhome has a more acute problem than thekid from Downers Grove with financialtroubles.Each year the University enrolls about550 foreign students. The largest numbercome from China, India, Japan, andvarious South American countries.Relatively few are from Western Europe.Most are graduate students, with thesocial sciences division enrolling themost, especially in political science,economics, and education. The secondlargest number is enrolled in theBusiness School, followed by thephysical sciences division. Because ofthe problems of practicing in foreigncountries, the law and medical schoolshave few foreign students.Admission to the University for aforeign student is slightly different thanfor a student from the U. S. Manyforeign students become interested inthe University without knowing about it.“We get letters from students in¬terested in. for example, engineering,” said Kenneth Buries, advisor to foreignstudents. “We write them and say wedon’t offer such a field and suggest aschool that does.”Foreign students have a two-step ap¬plication process. They submit apreliminary application with atranscript which director of interna¬tional student services Mary Martinevaluates.If the student is considered preparedto do work at the University, they arethen invited to submit a final applica¬tion, which goes into the general appli¬cant pool, to be considered like any otherapplication.Once admitted, foreign students facefinancial difficulties rarely encounteredby American students. They are noteligible for Federal loans and grants orfor grants from a number of privatesources.Most must rely on University grants,stipends from their governments, andfunds from families. But many foreignstudents from middle class backgroundsstill find tuition costs astronomical.“Americans are fond of complainingabout the cost of a college education,”said one Indian student. But they haveno conception of what the relative cost oftuition is to some foreigh students. Im¬agine paying $15,000 a year tuition andyou get some idea what it’s like.” An additional problem is a poor ex¬change rate, which can cause problemsfor a student receiving a fixed sum inlocal currency.To complicate matters, earning moneyon campus is limited for foreignstudents. The Immigration andNaturalization Service laws prohibitforeign students from working more than20 hours a week.Some foreign students, especiallythose completing Ph.D’s, are dismayedby Immigration Service rulings that re¬quire foreign students to be enrolled fulltime. For a student finishing a disserta¬tion and not taking any courses it meanspaying tuition for three courses per year.“An American student working on adissertation always has the option of notenrolling. We don’t,” said one foreignstudent.Buries admitted foreign students werecaught “in the middle of two regula¬tions,” but added that as the situationstands now, hothing could be done. TheUniversity is currently considering aproposal to charge all graduate studentswho have finished their course work aflat dissertation fee.This fee, which could be about $300 aquarter, would give students all thebenefits and privileges of being a full¬time student, but not allow them to takecourses. The committee examining the matter, chaired by dean of students inthe humanities division Catherine Hamis currently studying the economic im¬pact of such a proposal on the Universi¬ty, but it is not known when a final deci¬sion will be made.Foreign student advisor Kenneth Buries(Photo by Carol Studenmund}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 Street Mima ioint Thaiiv uim/uny prcsviusOliver Go/dsmith'sStoops toAim/rd luj Nicholas 'Anda/llluny-duiniiy 1 /'K / i .V-.W-7-A1 .it $M)pinUiiiinr' Svihiiv Ai'Rll d'/SO.it dpmTiniiy -U'RIl Jl .u I pm1 l ctiih 'd.ii U'RIL at I pm.Mdinicl Hall 57th & University Ave-:>'v 5t» yncal .ninn>*ionto/'nnU'iii.' .nni older.idtdt<Cfonqucrr%The Chicago Maroon— Friday. April 14.1978—3EditorialClosing the CampaignThat the Campaign for Chicago is folding, $109million short of its original $280 million goal, ispart of a national admission that virtually nouniversity can successfully complete a major fun¬draising drive in the current economic climate. Infact, compared with the other university fundrais¬ing drives, except Stanford’s, the Chicago Cam¬paign has done reasonably well. The blame for theformal closure of the Campaign this summer, andits probable replacement with a series of mini¬campaigns, lies more with an inaccurate appraisalof the economic picture on the part of the fun¬draisers than with any blatant incompetence byUniversity fundraisers.But beyond the financial morass of the 1970’s,Chicago does suffer from a particular disad¬vantage when it comes to that crucial activity of allprivate universities. Successful fundraising ispartly dependent on generous and affluent alumni.Chicago’s alumni are loyal, but one third areacademics, a group whose financial limitationshardly needs elaboration here The Other two thirdswould rather court public recognition by sup¬porting construction of new buildings andfacilities that will bear their names than sponsorthe heating bills, maintenance costs, or officemachines necessary to keep the Universityoperating.But alumni gifts support less than a half of theCampaign, making corporate grants essential tothe University.Phase II of the Campaign, formally launchedunder President Levi in 1974, is by no means atotal failure. It was an admirably ambitious pro¬ject that did secure $171 million. But what was ad¬mirably ambitious in 1974 under the uncertaineconomic predictions has become an impossiblefantasy in 1978. Because the market has not im¬proved as predicted, the Campaign has fairly con¬sistently lagged behind even its short term goals.In order to reach the re-evaluated and reduced 15-month goal for June, 1978, the University mustraise $22 million by the end of this quarter. Shortof an act of God or Standard Oil, the funds are notanticipated.With the closing of the Campaign Hanna Grayand the new administration must soon recognizethe vulgar fact that the business of education isoften no longer education, but business. More ag¬gressive public relations to make the Universitymore attractive to contributors would help, as wellas a more realistically pessimistic understandingof the economic situation, but on any terms theforecast still remains bleak.The Chicago MaroonEditor: Jon MeyersohnNews Editor: Abbe FletmanFeatures Editor: Karen HellerSports Editor: R. W. RohdePhoto Editor : Jeanne DufortAssociate Editors: Nancy Crilly, Eric Von der Porten,Production: Judith Franklin, Michelle PleskowLiterary Editors: Peter Eng, George SpigotGraphics. Chris PersansBusiness Manager: Sara WrightOffice Manager: Lisa McKv an Letters to the EditorJohn prosecutionTo the Editor:The University of Illinois CircleCampus (UICC) administration per¬sists in its vindictive prosecution ofSpartacus Youth League activistSandor John. On April 21, John willappear in Misdemeanor Jury Courtonce again on the charge of criminaltrespass. The administration firstbanned John from campus, then hadhim arrested in November for the“crime" of being a non-student anddistributing socialist literature atCircle. The American Civil LibertiesUnion (ACLU) is preparing to fight thisoutrageous violation of John’s rights incivil court. *Throughout our campaign againstthis anti-communist attack ondemocratic rights, the SYL has pointedout that the arrest of John is simply themost provocative act in a concertedadministration campaign to stamp outdissent on campus. With the electionindex (a plan which will cut minorityadmissions at UICC by almost 50%),cuts in remedial programs and a tuitionhike all in the works, the ad¬ministration demands a free rein oncampus. Left-wing faculty such asJulia LeSage are axed, and the left isharassed.A number of UC campusorganizations and faculty membershave come out in defense of John, arecent graduate of UC. Universityadministrations around the countrywill be encouraged in their attempts tostifle protest if the Circle ad¬ministration succeeds in its attempt torailroad John.Support for John’s defense continuesto grow, both in Chicago andnationally. The SYL-initiated Ad HocCommittee to Stop AdministrationHarassment, which includes the UICCstudent government, the YoungSocialist Alliance and Circle Women’sLiberation Union as well as the SYL,currently has the endorsement oftwenty-three UICC faculty members,nine UC professors, and the Chicagochapter of the National Lawyers Guild,among many others. Such well-knownfigures as Noam Chomsky, columnistNat Hentoff, and Robert Meeropolhave endorsed the Committee.While preparing to use all legalchannels to defend John, the SYL,unlike the ACLU, does not have anyillusion^ as to the neutrality of thecapitalist government. Recentrevelations of extensive red-squadspying at Circle during the 1960’s andearly I970’s illustrate once again thatthe bourgeois state is just as eager asthe Circle administration to purge thecampus of social protest. TheRevolutionary Communist Youth(RCY) (the name of the SYL beforeSeptember, 1974) was one of the manytargets of this spy campaign. Docu¬ments obtained by the Alliance to EndRepression through its suit againstthe City of Chicago and released to theSpartacist League reveal an extensiveten-year campaign of spy activityagainst the SL/RCY from February,1965 to January, 1975, including in¬cidents both at Circle and at UC. Thesecret police agents (and the ROTC andmilitary recruiters which the Circleadministration hosts) are the real“outsiders" who should be driven offcampus through militant protest.The police and military are the armedfist of the bourgeois state. They exist todefend the rule of the capitalist class,whose servants include universityadministrations. The capitalist courtsare just as much a part of the repressiveapparatus of the state as the FBI andpolice. We demand that the bosses’secret police be abolished, but we sayopenly that that can come about onlythrough smashing the bourgeois courts,cops and army and establishing aworkers government.Only continued militant protest, tike the meetings and demonstrations whichgreeted the ban on John in Novemberand his court appearances in recentweeks, can force the administration toretreat from its dogged determinationto convict Sandor John. Letters ofprotest against the arrest should besent to Director of Chicago CircleCenter, Box 4348, Chicago 60680. Fundsto prepare for the trial and continue theprotest campaign are urgently needed.Please make checks payable to thePartisan Defense Committee (earmarkSandor John Defense Fund) and mailto: PDC, P.O. Box 6729, Main P.O.,Chicago, 60680.Spartacus Youth LeagueBlue jeans todayThe Maroon has received the follow¬ing letter to the University of ChicagoCommunity:The University of Chicago GayLiberation Front would like to bring tothe attention of the University com¬munity an event sponsored by the Na¬tional Gay Task Force. This event, Na¬tional Gay Blue Jeans Day, will occuron April 14, 1978. The task force is ask¬ing that all gay persons across the na¬tion wear blue jeans on this day. Assuch, this event fulfills a con¬sciousness raising and educationalpurpose. We hope that this will func¬tion on the University of Chicago’scampus as a particular way in whichour organization can contribute to anincreased awareness and understan¬ding of the gay and lesbian situation.In addition, this event offers an op¬portunity for symbolic expression ofsupport for the equality of all personsregardless of sexual preference ororientation. We thus wish to announceour support of this event in Chicagoand on campus, and urge the reader toview this matter as an opportunity forserious consideration of his/her viewupon this matter.UCGLFImpressive WindTo the Editor:I disagree with last week’s letter byAllan S. Breunder. After sitting in onmeetings of the Student GovernmentAssembly last year and autumnquarter of this year, I don’t think hisclaims have much basis in fact. AllanJ. Wind was one of several memberswho impressed me with their capabilityto work quietly in the background ofthe Student Government Assembly andpush for good resolutions and kill badones. It strikes me that this type ofbehavior is arrogant by the populardefinition, but it is also surelynecessary.I believe Mr. Wind has the seeds of apopulist in him, but not the type of evildemagogue the letter of Allan S.Breunder exemplifies. His politicalinstincts are strong, but they arehonest, a commodity sorely lacked inwhatever politics UC breeds. Blun¬der's biased accusations are obviouslyunfounded, and their author “deservesto be flushed from our SG for good,”Margie Anne McCartneyGood serviceTo the Editor:I am appalled at the level of whichthe politicking for the Spring Electionhas sunk to. Never in my life have Iwitnessed as disgusting an exchange asthat which has lately squirmed alongthe Maroon editorial page.I refer to the letter of “Allan S.Breunder" in The Maroon of last Fri¬day. Fellow students, 1 ask you to notethat no such person exists in thisUniversity according to the Registrar. That letter which attempted to dirty myname was a despicable political dirtytrick foisted upon The Maroon reader-ship by apologists for the corrupt SG.Motivation of the people behind lastweek's phony letter seems clear; thesepeople want to undermine the reform¬ing movement of SG which I have pro¬moted and led by half-truths and in¬nuendo. Moreover, Maroon readers,they want to undermine any chances ofreform that might make our StudentGovernment better able to serve us.I’ll make no bones over my originalcondemnation of the IRP party of EarlAndrews. I will not deny to you what Itruly believe, namely, IRP was formedas a machination of Andrews, JeffBrody, and Steve Kehoe. et. al., aimedto achieve political success by not ac¬cepting culpability in the BLISSdisaster. The failure of BLISS to liveup to what we al) hoped for should havebeen a matter of public admission, notfurtive denials.My frankness with you through TheMaroon letter and a WHPK inter¬view exposed their power play. As oflast week, both Andrews and Brodyhave been eased out of their frantic lit¬tle game, and have been replaced ascandidates. I am informed that IRPrecently selected an all first year stu¬dent slate for the Spring election, ledby Gerry Mildner as Presidential can¬didate replacement.A few words about Gerry would thenseem in order, so that the smog hispredecessors spread can be cleared.Gerry is a good person. He won by twovotes in the November election forSecretary after I had all but decided tothrow the election to him by refusing tocampaign on the election’s second day.I ran for Secretary under BLISSbecause of two reasons: 1) in NovemberI still felt BLISS could be reformedfrom within, and 2) There was no oneelse competent to run. During the elec¬tion l decided that Gerry, an earnest,hard working first year student,deserved a chance to prove his mettle.He contrasted sharply in politicalmorality from Jon Winkelreid, who ranas independent freshman candidateeven though his sympathies and sup¬port lay with the BLISS machine.At the ballot count I was furious atthe closeness of the vote between us(164-162), because I have always hatedsqueak-in victories or defeats. No mat¬ter, because I soon felt I and everyoneelse had won, for Gerry proved to be amost energetic worker, and he surpass¬ed my expectations.Finally, however, we can get to thematter of this Spring Election. A com¬petent Secretary does not normallymake a competent Vice President orPresident. I am a Presidential can¬didate, and I am on my own except forthe help of some friends. I defend myrecord to you, and denounce those whotry to abridge my right to my opinionsand my free speech. That is what theauthors of last week’s phony letterhoped to do. I have always done mybest for you, often behind-the-scenes,and my only ambition remains to pushinto prominence and power those whowill serve you and act in the. name of allstudents before the Administration andTrustees. I want to abolish therivalries, the clashing personalities,and the utter incompetence of the cor¬rupt Swanson-Wexler-Andrews-DeLisagovernment.On April 25th you will be asked tovote for a new government. For those ofyou who will choose to use your chanceto vote for an institution here to stay byselecting its members, I fervently hopeyou use it ably, by denouncing thephonies and the fraudulent, and selec¬ting those who will best serve you asyour voice against arbitrary and ill-advised Administration and Trusteepolicy.Alan Wind4-The Chicago Maroon—Friday. April 14.1978—University of Chicagocontinues its 1978Jewish United FundCampaignApril 2 - April 16Your contribution is neededContact Adam Gamoran667-2771We Are One Around the CountryAcross the WorldGreat rabbit movies you have known and loved:OThe story of the world’sfirst pregnant man...it’s inconceivably funny.OPENS FRIDAY, APRIL 21stat a theatre near you!AND NOW!JOAN RIVERS' 493-0666 Your personal brokerIMMEDIATE POSSESSION. CITY SKYLINE FROM 14 FLOORS HIGH! Now allready to go — newly decorated, parquet floors oiled and polished. Excellent condi¬tion. Y ou don’t have to go downtown for topnotch luxury living at lower Hyde Parkprices. $47,500.STRAIGHT EAST OF CAMPUS. SUNSHINE FOR SALE ... PARK FOR SALE ..THREE LARGE ROOMS FOR SALE ... all for $17,000. Co-op near 57th Stony.DON’T REMODEL IF YOU DON’T HAVE TO...This is all done - expertly, pro¬fessionally - less than one year old. Gorgeous location. 56th & Harper. Large char¬ming kitchen w/all appliances (inc. stack washer/dryer). Lovely back porch,separate dining room, mini-terrace off living rooms; 2 bedrooms, not a railroad.Monthly under $100. $53,000.EAST Vi F W PARK ... 6 BIG ROOMS on the Lake edge. Top notch. Sublease, sum¬mer season only. $500.00 monthly.DOLL HOUSE APARTMENT. Only two (count ’em) blocks from campus . .. airy,bright, all four rooms freshly decorated. Large bedrooms over 15’ long; super;modern kitchen. Extra room can be den. bedroom or dining room. Large livingroom has teak parquet floors. Monthly only $89. Immediate possession.CALLING ALL PLANT LOVERS! Near 57th Blackstone. Southern light pours intostudy and living room all day. Focal point walnut mantle and stone fireplace.Lovely natural floors. Formal dining room 15’ long has decorative molding.Bedroom-dressing room-bath suite generaous for two. Super kitchen and pantry.Well-run attractive condo bldg., 5 rooms and entrance gallery. $53,000.TREE TOP CO-OP ALONG EAST SIDE OF SS DRIVE. 10 min from campus. Viewof lake from study. Large lovely garden available to grow vegetables, woodbUrn-ing fireplace, modern bath and great kitchen. 6 rooms in all $16,500. Board ap¬proval.PICTURE YOURSELF . . 1 in sunshine-filled large living room, formal diningroom. 3 bedrooms. 3 full baths apartment-home. Handsome English Tudor cornerbuilding. Move-in cond. 4 blocks from SS Drive on 70th Place Gargae included$31,500. Conventional.HOUSE WITH BREATHING SPACE Block-long view of the greenery of the parkLots of room in 3-story brick home . . 6 bedrooms. 41- baths. Natural fireplace In¬terior remodeled only 12 years ago. In Historic Landmark Area nr 49th & Ken¬wood. Julv 1st Possession. ... „ ,,"WE Make House Calls,We Get Results"Call Charlotte Vikstrom493-0660EUROPEAN ENTERTAINERS, INC. PRESENTS/ <r THEODORAKIIN CONCERT% tComposer o!'ZORBA'./Z'.. 'SERPICO'./lPHIGENIA'rAUDITORIUM THEATRE (Chicago) MAY 12 & 13 8:00 P.M.TICKETS AVAILABLE NOW:Old Town School of Folk Music • 909 West Armitoge • 525-7793Old Town School of Folk Music • 927 Noyes Street Evanston • 864-6664Denis Den • 2941 North Clark Street • Dl 8-8888Acropolis Hellenic Imports Inc • 306 South Halstead Stee* • 332-1 1 82Ponellinion Imports • 2555 West Lawrence Avenue • 271 5867Bouboulinos Restaurant • 851 East Algonquin Street Schoumberg • 397-7020FOR OTHER TICKET OUTLETS CALL (31 21 262 8846Storting April Tickets will be available at all TICKETRON locations and at the Auditorium TheatreBOXOFFICE (312) 922 2110or 922 6634 Ticket Prices *12. *10, *8. *6.12 PIECE ENSEMBLE-SINGERS and MUSICIANS- * Ai>TP» ,tf ihqA . iT - noo itAt f>a£.>irt v. *>i! f—*Ho! Hum! Anothermilestone for Jimmy’s- 38 years - since 1940serving U. of C. stu¬dents and facultymembers and enjoyingevery minute of it.April 15.1940— ?Pierce Tower Lecture SeriesJulian LeviProfessor of Urban StudiesThe Social and Economic Future of Chicago”Pierce Tower Sunday April 16th at 7:30 pmPUBLIC LECTURE SERIES <9*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 evolution of low mass stars:The birth and gradual death ofstars like the sun.April 15,1978-11 A.M.Eckhart Hall • Room 133* 1118 E. 58th St.Fgr more information. phone 753-8611.6 The Chicago Maroon—Friday. April 14 1978I CvV £&*'* yyvf'v’r 1? , ' M'Tv' ' V . » ! ,r , , c / Vv-sv '< m -O i-v; /rtrro* ~c ztfd*!& \\U» w s r.ja»o V,’3 nr 2’ ji'jane'(06.! jdhueb ci ye* s.iT : ATTENTION: ALL STUDENTS: STUDENT GOVERNMENT NEEDS YOU• ELECTIONS FOR NEXT YEAR'S S.G. WILL RE HELD; ON TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY APRIL 2S & 26**-Jc* Candidates are needed. Please Pick up your nomi-J noting petitions in the Student Activities Office.* We urge you to hurry because the completed peti¬te tions are due in the Student Activities Office by 3 pm$ Wednesday, April! 9.** Electoral Group Registration Forms are also avail-Jt able. All positions are open, including all officersJ (Pres, VP, Sec, Treas, and CORSO Chair), represen-* tatives from all divisions and all court seats.*** This is your chance to do something constructive andtc help the Student Body. People with good ideas are Ji needed. ****♦*********♦*******if****ifif*ifif**ifjf**Persons interested in helping run the election, please contact MarcusWexler, E & R Chairman, by calling 684-7466 or leaving message at753-3273RUN FOR OFFICE YOUR FELLOW STUDENTS NEED YOUSTUDENT GOVERNMENT4-^ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★4-TH£GREEK AND AMERICAN FOOD— Catering for Private Parties— Carryout service1335 E. 57th947-8309J 4'U %*■?, 4:| b io J!rC'r-ri’ '‘r,r;ocrii oup:i f. ** ' * ■« » ■* «•» ** - — • -• • /* * *‘#4I*,1 V»’L a , ,>-;u v* ->yiH *»W Ve.i’fcs?? ? v. V- ,rne jlJifr.r.i yJj.r.. -p0,r,. v.T .ooilrron on* .s»nor ,*qr d* to ^ifllr.up fnw Iedr 3'iurA6 nui djid/ ot.r.te .roinifn pn’ttbb- rir,.;od|iA r vrfj to 9«k> Kdt iGlenn Miller p.9The Chieftains p.11Paul Taylor p.13By the RumprollerThe two exhibit rooms of the RenaissanceSociety seem a whole lot bigger than theiractual, physical size, or at least they havefor the past two weeks. During that timethey have served as the location for an ex¬cellent jazz concert, an exhibition of thephotographic talents of Steven Foster, andthe best place to get a sample of the recentmusical experiments of jazz expatriot,Steve Lacy.What's more, all three of these eventshave been joined together in an attempt tofuse the visual and the aural. The exhibit isconstantly redefining itself, as individualelements assert their own priority, and thensink back into the flux which has been entitl¬ed The Steve Lacy Series, 1977.To say the whole thing is complex is anunderstatement. Minimum viewing (or ex¬periencing) time for a firsf visit is an hour,and then a few more visits are not inap¬propriate to catch the full aesthetic value ofthe exhibit.Creatively, the proper order is Lacy . . .begat Foster . . . begat Threadgill/fewartduet concert. Or, the music of Steve Lacy,laden with conceptual outcroppings, in¬spired Steve Foster to take pictures, whichwhen arranged in an exhibit, become amusical composition of its own which in¬spires new musical interpretations, in thiscase, the music played at the opening by thetwoA.A.C.M. musicians.Foster explains in the notes accompany¬ing his exhibit, that what he is doing is veryclose to the exoeriments in musicalgraphics, which have been going on now forover 20 years. Quite simply, musicalgraphics dispense with the traditional formof musical notation in favor of a two-dimensional array of impressionistic im¬ages meant to convey an idea of the music inits entirety more than a note for notetranscription of it.Foster's photographs are meant to conveythe same qualities of shape, tone, and shadethat one of these graphics would. Althoughthey are comprised of mostly mundane objects, (trees, fences, houses, etc.) theoriginal qualities of the objects are almosttotally removed so that each photo offers avivid, intriguing slice of two dimensionalspace.One of the most popular photographs is ofa broken wooden fence with a brick walk inthe foregound. Translated onto developingpaper, it becomes a composition of the con From “The Steve Lacy Series, 1977“ by Steven Fosterlamming in 2-Dflict between chaos and order, with the grey,symmetrical bricks giving way to thehaphazard array of black tones at the bot¬tom of the broken fence. Shade and tonecombine in what seems a totally arbitraryjuxtaposition of geometric elements.Each photo stands as its own graphicstatement, but the artist has also arrangedthe exhibit so that, viewed in its entirety, itgives the impression of a larger musicalnotation. The images imply invisible andshifting musical staffs which run around thetwo rooms balancing the photos in propersequence. Foster has emphasized thisaspect by repeating some of the images indifferent sizes or different contextsthroughout the exhibit.The overall effect is tremendous. Theviewer is immediately drawn to the powerof the individual photographs and then isslowly made aware of the larger context inwhich they exist. While this is happening a tape of the music of Steve Lacy is playing inthe background.Steve Lacy has managed to become one ofthe leaders of contemporary jazz while remaining in relative obscurity. His newerrecords are almost impossible to obtain andhe rarely appears in this country. The tapebeing played at the Renaissance exhibit isthe best introduction to Lacy's music. Manyof the works on it are unreleased and theothers are only on small obscure labels.The best way to describe Lacy's music isto borrow the title from one of his composi¬tions: "Wool." He begins with a singlemusical field and then breaks it down intothe strands from which it sprung. He has therare talent to improvise two linessimultaneously on the saxophone and evenhis solo compositions spread out into adensely woven fabric.Over the course of his career, Lacy haslearned to tree himself from the linear restrictions ot improvisation to an incredi¬ble extent, and this is what ties his music inso closely with Foster's photographs. It isnot surprising that at one time Lacy led aquartet that confined itself to the music ofThelonius Monk.Monk, more than any other figure in jazzintroduced the concept ot a two dimensionalfield in music. He would create a themewhich imposed strong horizontal restraintson improvisation, and would then constructan equally imposing harmonic system as avertical counterpart When Monk played asingle note, it became the vertex of thehorizontal and vertical concepts, and thusimplied a whole two dimensional field. Lacydoes the same thing A single note doesn'thave a single reference but two or three, andhis music spreads out around him in alldirections.continued on page 8continued from page 7Lacy was unable to attend the opening (although hemay come to Chicago later this year if enough interest Isgenerated by the exhibit) so two A.A.C.M. musicians,Douglas Ewart and Henry Threadgill, both reed-men,were invited to play. They formed the completed cycle,from music to image and back to music.Ewart set up a station in the back room (by station Imean a stand for the saxophones and flute and a table forsmall percussion instruments) and Threadgill set up his inthe front room. A short hall separates the two roomsthrough which they could see each other and coordinatetheir efforts. During the recital they walked around therooms, pausing at especially intriguing photos, exchang¬ing stations, and In so doing drawing the spectators intothe intimate appreciation of the art.The music itself was nothing short of brilliant. Bothmusicians spent a lot of time with the photos and it showedin the care with which they presented their music. But,somehow, the music did not seem a very direct interpreta¬tion of the photos. It was too linear, too rhetoricallydelivered. Threadgill and Ewart chose to double on thesame instrument through most of the evening, thus em¬phasizing a single lyrical line, at the expense of a greatertonal, and therefore spatial separation. They are both im¬provisers nonpareil, but even the best of improvisers canrarely get over the hurdle of putting one note after thenext, of being linear.Perhaps the greatest lesson about The Lacy Series, 1977can be learned from the incongruity between the photosand the improvised music. For this exhibit, more thananything else, is about individual expression (cloaked inthe guise of improvisation). The examples of musicalnotation which Foster included in the show were takenfrom classical compositions yet he has little interest inclassical music, he loves jazz, And jazz, no matter howrefined it ever gets, will never be able to free itself fromthe individual voice, from the expression of personaltruth, in the final analysis The Lacy Series has very littleto do with conceptual art or music and a lot to do withcreativity. Foster was inspired by Lacy but he runs amean riff any jazz man would be proud to call his own.The Renaissance Society is open from il-4 pm, Mondaythrough Saturday. The Steve Lacy Series 1977 wifi be ondisplay there until next Friday, April 22. The Gallery islocated in Goodspeed 108, which is the building in theSouth-West comer of the quads between Gatesblake andclassics. The entrance is on the inside of the quads. From “The Steve Lacy Series, 1977“ by Steven FosterOPEN AGAIN!The management ofMcDonald’s® at1344 E. 53rd St. isproud to announce thatthe restaurant isNOW OPEN!Come on in and join usfor breakfast at 7:00 a.m.nnf McDonald'sI ■ IWe do it all for you© MtOani”Js Co'PO'a'tO"page 8 The Grey City JournalA touch of classRecently, when a New York disc jockey asked Count Basie whichof the current big bands he would like to hear on his night off,Basie answered, “The Miller Band”By George SpinkToday the destination marker on the tront ot the busreads "Kalamazoo." Tomorrow it might say "TuxedoJunction" or "A String ot Pearls." This is the bus that car¬ries Jimmy Henderson and the otticial Glenn Miller Or¬chestra, currently making a long stretch ot one-nightstands across the Midwest — a tour that will include theMiller band's tirst appearance at the University otChicago.When the bus parks in tront of Ida Noyes Hall on Friday,April 28, its destination marker will read "In the Mood,"the theme of the all-university dance that evening fromnine until one o'clock. Sponsored by the Student ActivitiesOffice, the Alumni Association, and the Festival of theArts, the dance will take place mainly in the Cloister Club,but the Frog and the Peach (turned into a nightclub), thefoyer, and the library will have music piped in by way ofan elaborate sound system, according to Director of Stu¬dent Activities Riley Davis. Bouquets of the first flowersof spring will be placed around the ballroom; and pate,cheese, wine, pastry, coffee, and plenty of champagne willbe available. Tickets can be purchased in advance at theReynolds Club Box Office ($5.00 per person for U. of C.studenfs; $10.00 per person for University staff, faculty,and alumni)."In the Mood," in other words, will not be a typicalUniversity function. The last campus affair of this typewas "A Touch of Class" several years ago; and the Millerband's appearance will mark the first time a big band hasplayed for an all-university dance since Woody Hermanand his Orchestra performed for a Washington Prom inthe early 1950's."Students really had a good time at 'A Touch of Class,' "recalls Vice President and Dean of Students Charles D.O'Connell, "and today they seem to like big band music,so I think this affair will be a fine way for the campus toshake off the winter doldrums and welcome in spring."The choice of Jimmy Henderson and the Glenn MillerOrchestra seems like a good one, at least to this biasedwriter. Miller's band was the most popular of all duringthe Swing Era. The current Henderson-led Miller band,which plays a mix of Miller standards and contemporarysongs arranged in the Miller style, works almost nightly,fifty-one weeks each year, traveling across the UnitedStates, Canada, Europe, and Japan on an endless stretchof one nighters."I think that the current version of the Miller band is thebest one since Glenn led it himself," Willard Alexandertold me last summer. Alexander, now approaching his70th birthday, has been booking the best of the big bandsfor four decades, ever since he began getting dates for anew orchestra led by Benny Goodman during the mid-1930's. "Jimmy and the current Miller organization are sopopular that we have them booked solid for almost a yearin advance," Alexander added. Glenn MillerRecently, when a New York disc jockey asked CountBasie which of the current big bands he would like to hearon his night off, Basie answered, "The Miller band."More than three decades have passea since GlennMiller disappeared over the English Channel, en routefrom England to Paris, where Miller and his Army AirForce Band were scheduled to present a Christmas Day(1944) concert for Allied troops; Miller was only 40 yearsold. His civilian band caught on in the summer of 1939, andby the time he enlisted in September 1942, one out of threenickels dropped into a juke box triggered a Miller recording. Today, RCA is in the midst of reissuing everything Miller ever recorded tor them. Annual sales of Miller'salbums are in the hundreds of thousands.Why has Miller's music survived so well despite somany changes in pop music over the decades? "His musicwas the sound of an era," George T. Simon told me recent¬ly. Simon was editor of Metronome during the late 1930'sand 1940's, the heyday of the big bands. He was a closefriend of Miller, and a few years ago he wrote Miller'sbiography. "When you think back to those days im¬mediately before World War Two, it was a pretty goodtime, and Miller's music captured the mood better thananyone else's, thanks to the distinctive, evocative soundhe created.""The answer is in the arrangements," says JimmyHenderson. "They were right in the first place. No bigbard ever has had a sound like ours."Miller was widely respected by his fellow musicians andknown as a perfectionist. The same can be said of Hender¬son. A musical prodigy, Henderson entered the CincinnatiConservatory of Music at the age of 14 — after decliningan invitation to join Tommy Dorsey's band. Aftergraduating with a bachelor of music degree in 1946,Henderson played trombone with the big bands of HalMcIntyre, Jimmy Dorsey, Tommy Dorsey, Ray Anthony,and later the Dorsey Brothers Orchestra. Henderson settl¬ed in Los Angeles in the mid-1950's, where he worked forthree years with Lawrence Welk's Orchestra ("a hideousexperience," he recalls) while becoming a successfulstudio musician. In 1960 Henderson formed his own bandand soon became well-known in entertainment circles forhis performances as musical director for Emmy Awardsand Television Academy functions, plus his work withsuch stars as the late Jack Benny, Lucille Ball, MiltonBerle, Johnny Carson, Carol Burnett, Bob Hope, andFrank Sinatra.Henderson became director of the Glenn Miller Or¬chestra three years ago at the request of David Mackay,the executor of Miller's estate. The current Miller banddoes not have any members of the original Miller orchestra (some of the vocalists — Ray Eberle, Paula Kellyand the Modernaires, and Tex Beneke — occasionally ap¬pear in concerts billed as "Glerih Mifler'^affairs, but theyhave no connection with the official Glenn Miller Or¬chestra). Most members of the current Miller band are intheir early twenties, highly trained musicians from someof the nation's top music schools. Henderson hasdeveloped a vocal group from within the band to backuphis regular male and female vocalists, Lee Langley andAnita DeAlberto (who is as much at ease singing Millerclassics like "I Know Why" and "Don't Sit Under the Ap¬ple Tree" as she is with "Evergreen" and "Come Rain orCome Shine").Henderson's impeccable musical credentials and theexcellent quality of the Glenn Miller Orchestra will be ap¬parent to everyone from the moment they begin playing"Moonlight Serenade" in the Cloister Club on Friday,April 28. It promises to be a memorable evening at theuniversity and a great way to celebrate the rites of spring.Cooley’s Quiche Festival<V -L * And Sale Saturday April 15- ^—r or*i T7 ~T~~ „ ___^ ^ ‘ ^ ^ H ^ .y. -V-V -r *• %zucchini, spinach, mushroom, lorraine, cheese, etc.T.4 sfl isi aa ^ \\——TC S-iLsS .v *^ SSI sLL iSLiH it* ^ * <599 out of 100 items: 20% Off! Come sample our quiche and lower prices and specialeveryday bargains. 12” quiche pan regularly $3.50, sale price $2.60Cooley’s Corner 5211 S. Harper Court Mon-Sat 10-6 Sun 12-5:30Friday, April 14, 1978* & \K$\ w \w* i? ,<> »> i *>\ y,,v VI page 97»Vv<VAV«V v'' -> tit* % * < ♦ 4 .4 ♦M « 'V* v <<<««•«««« vft,l « i i 4 4 i I 4 t ^ • § % ■'VtfvM W.V 4 S' I I .# V VJLC? V.. VATTENTION GRADUATE STUDENTSThe Morris Fishbein Center for the Study of theHistory of Science and MedicineThe University of ChicagoprtstntsStephen Jay GouldProfessor of GeologyMuseum of Comparative ZoologyHarvard UniversityCambridge, Massachusettson' The Cranial Capacity of 'low er races,’and the Finagling of Data as a ScientificNorm: Morton and Agassiz's defenseof polygeny and its relationship to thedebate on slavery in America"Friday, April 14, 1978 • 4:00 P.M.Albert Pick Hall • Room 0165828 University AvenueTHE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED READING FRENCH READING GERMANPreparatory Courses forThe Foreign Language Reading ExaminationGraduate students who wish to prepare lor the Foreign LanguageReading Exams scheduled in Summer 1978 can now register for a courseespecially designed to meet their need.The University Extension Division, in cooperation with the Departmentsof Romance Languages and Literatures and Germanic Languages andLiteratures, is offering on campus two NON-CREDIT courses, eachequivalent to a two-quarter sequence.FH 106 Reading French for Graduate Students M-F, 8:30-12 am, beginning June26, ending August 4*; place TBA inTime Schedule.GH 106 Reading German for Graduate Students M-F, 8:30-12 am, beginning June26. ending August 4*; place TBA inTime Schedule.The fee is $150 for the 6 week course.N.B. University of Chicago student aid funds cannot be used for non¬credit courses.Courses must have a minimum enrollment of 15 students. Preregistrationis, therefore, essential. Absolutely no auditors. If you wish to registerplease fill out the coupon and complete your registration as soon as possi¬ble at:CCE, 1307 E. 60th St., Room 121, between 9 am and 5 pm, M-F, 753-3137Deadline for registration: May 31,1978.*Reading examinations will be given by the Test Administration on Mon¬day, August 7. Courses have been scheduled to end immediately prior tothe reading exam for optimal results. For further information concerningreading exams, consult the Summer Quarter Time Schedule, or call TestAdministration, RC 201, 753-3283.Call this number538-4600to test drivea ’78 Chevette.Give us a ring and we ll We d like you to feel the Be sure to take this oppor-reserve for you a 73 Chevy power of the new standard tunity to test drive the ’78Chevette for a test drive. We re 1 6 Litre engine, to experience Chevette Give us a jingle andthat eager for you to expe- the agile maneuverability innencefirsthand Chevette s fun, city traffic,spunky ride, and relaxing And to stretch out in thecomforts. roomy interior of the newChevette 4-door Sedan.Now You Get a Lot More Chevette for a Lot Less MoneyDREXEL CHEVROLET CO.4615 SOUTH COTTAGE GROVEOPEN‘MON.-FRI. 9-7 SAT. 9-5 CLOSED SUN.we’ll reserve onefor you totake a testdrive.page 10 The Grey City JournalSweet Jesus, St. Patrick's Day... A once ayear excuse to wear your ethnicity on yoursleeve like a bloody badge ot honor. Atterall, how otten do you get a chance to drinkgreen beer and to sing “Danny Boy" with atear in your eye? It's not every day of theyear that it matters whether your peoplecame from Cork or Armaugh, not every daythat one can deck himself out in a greenplastic derby and join the mayor (Well he'san Irishman in his heart after all isn't he?)in driving the snakes from State St. . . 'Tis afine day lads — makes one proud to be fromthe Ould Sod even if you're really Croatian.And you can spout off to your heart's con¬tent about the British, their “armed thugs"and the Ulster Prods. For one day it's openseason on anyone dumb enough to be caughtwearing an orange shirt. You can pummelhim secure in the knowledge that if the Lordhimself were there to lend a hand he surelywould.And then there's the drinking — above allelse there's the drinking. Drink to long lifefor the Pope and the Republic, to bizzoner'smemory, to anything you bloody wellplease. And the best part is, of course, thatnobody cares whether or not you have anyidea of what you're talking about, least of allyourself.So set 'em up again boys — to hell withEngland, Erin Go Brauch. Get it all out to¬day, because tomorrow the river changesfrom green back to its usual off-brown color.Tomorrow it's once again only Chicago andit won't make a damn bit of difference ifyour grandmother was from Galway orfrom Minsk. Get it all out today, that's whatit's all about, right? Sorry...Now no doubt the parade's a great timefor one and all. The spectators love it, as dothe marchers, the politicians and thepapers. And thank God there's at least oneday a year when you can come home toodrunk to stand and no one will say a word.But it seems that there should be somethingmore to it. Something more than “DannyBoy" and pictures of Richard J. . . But alltoo often looking for that something moretends to turn a celebration into a serious,somber day of reflection. Christ, if you wanta “serious" St. Pat's Day then spend itsinging the praises of the Provisional IRA,or spend it reading “A Portrait of the Ar¬tist", but I'll have no part of it. It's“serious" alright, but it's also not much of aholiday.The “something more" arrived inChicago this year, if not on St. Patrick's Dayat least on the night before. The somethingmore was called the Chieftains and they putthe whole celebration in perspective.The Chieftains are the leading exponentsof what they call "traditional Irish music".Five minutes at a Chieftains concert shouldbe enough to convince anyone that thistraditional music is a far cry from "WhenIrish Eyes Are Smiling". The band consistsof seven musicians who play with so muchspirit and joy that it seems that theycouldn't have a bad night in front of an audience if they tried The Chieftains are ledby the incredible Paddy Maloney onuilleann pipes. Maloney also acts as thespokesman for the band onstage and hascomposed a good number of their pieces.The group includes Sean Keane and MartinFay on fiddles, Michael Turbridy on fluteand Sean Potts on tin whistle, Kevin Con-neeff on bodhran (a drum which is reallynothing more than a hardened skin stretch¬ed over a round wooden frame), and finallyDerek Bell (no doubt the most lovablelooking character this side of Dublin) onharp as well as oboe and a dulcimer-like instrument called the tiompan.By Stuart RyderA wee bit of thet RyderUp the long ladder and down the short ropeTo hell with King Billy and God bless thePopeIf that doesn't do it we'll tear 'em in twoAnd bury 'em under their Red, White andBlue■ananThe Chieftainscomes in response to Tom's tribute to Irishculture. The people are undeniable moved.Not moved in the way "Johnson's MotorCar" moves one to laugh at the Anglo-IrishProtestants, but moved because they havebeen touched by a small part of a heritagethat is suddenly very real and also verymuch their own.The Chieftains worked the same wonder.After the opening reels, Michael Turbridy'swooden flute introduced a piece thatfeatured Bell's playing on the tiompan. Bothmen's playing was exquisitely beautiful.The audience as absolutely still; even thewaiters seemed to respect the music thatwas coming from the stage. I for one wouldhave felt guilty if I'd made a sound; as if Iwould have interrupted something too im¬portant to dare interrupt. The piece slowlymoved into its final moments whichfeatured a duet between Maloney's pipesand the tiompan. It was suddenly very muchSt. Patrick's Day, and that day became veryimportant. The Mameson's and the rebelballads can make one wish he were inKilkenny rather than Chicago; Liam Clan¬cy's poetry or the Chieftains music takesone's mind there and back again.The following pieces revealed the group ina different role, that of composers ratherthan interpreters of other peoples' music. Ithas been as composers that the Chieftainshave made their greatest contribution totraditional music. In their early days theChieftains were concerned with revivingand performing the music that had been solong overlooked. With time they began tocreate their own music, transforming tradi¬tional music from an art form of the past tobe played and remembered to a currentmusic to be composed and enriched. Thispart of the performance began with MichaelTurbridy's arrangement of “Sullivan'sMarch" which led the group into a bit of fifeand drum of his own writing. Then SeanPotts and Bell played Potts' “Song for HisFather" while the audience soon again fellstill and the magic was once again clearlythere.The concert closed with each of the musicians stepping forward as a solo performer.The music ranged from Turbridy's flute soloplayed at breakneck speed to the quiet beauty of the melodies of Martin Fay's ballad. Tohear each man as a soloist one can listen tothe final pari of the Chieftains Live record.In the case of these pieces the music heardin concert and the recording are verysimilar, and both are beautiful.The Chieftains left an audience offeringthanks as much as applause. The band playsbeautiful music and performs brilliantly aswell. And best of all, they serve as areminder that there is indeed somethingmore.for a small Irish label. Three more recordswere made before Island Records signed theband in the early seventies and began torecord new music as well as re-issue theolder recordings. Whether the Chieftain'srecords work their way into the Hot 100 ornot matters little, if at all. Paddy Maloneyand his men have breathed life into theircountry's finest music and introduced manypeople to a tradition of which they had beenunaware. Not only is the music once againbeing heard, but it's being heard by un¬precedented numbers of listeners.The Chieftains concert at Park West onthe eve of St. Pat's Day was both a wonder¬ful musical experience and a perfectcelebration of the holiday. At first the even¬ing looked less than promising The concertwas held in an “elegant" chrome and glassnightclub which seemed perfectly suited forthe likes of a Don Ho or Frank Sinatra Jr.,but less than the ideal environment for theChieftains. My comrades for the eveningwere not thrilled when they were told ourfirst thought was that St. Patrick's Daywithout Jameson was like Anita Bryantwithout orange juice, or something like that.But alas, one makes due with what he canget and prays for the best. As it turned outthe prayers weren't really necessary afterall. When the band took the stage the surroundings and the booze became insignifi¬cant. Paddy Maloney reaffirmed my faith inthe power of leprechauns and the musicquickly made this a wonderful and un-foraetable niqht.The band began with a medley of shortreels that demonstrated both their virtuosi¬ty and their spirit. It was a beautiful sight;seven Irish faces smiling from ear to ear ateach other and at the audience while theyworked up a storm tearing through threedifficult fast-paced reels. They worked theirmagic without the slightest hint of effort.Maloney rocked back and forth in his chairhooting and urging the band on, Sean Keanesat totally still and occasionally let just thetrace of a smile crack his stoic face while hisarms moved like two piston rods out of control, and Derek Bell somehow managed toremain a calm, elegant figure while grinn¬ing like a schoolboy who knows somethinghe shouldn't.The audience, which had seemed readyfor the grave at first, came to their feet inresponse. The group had excited his audience, now it was time to impress them.When the Clancy brothers perform, thegroup will calm the festivities down for amoment to allow Tom Clancy to read Yeats'“O'Dr iscoll" or the like. The effect is to remind the audience that there's more to theevening's music that a lot of yelling aboutthe British and the “juice of the barley".Perhaps the greatest ovation of the eveningSt. Patrick’s DayTraditional Irish music has its roots in theharp playing of ancient Ireland. If there canbe said to be such a thing as Irish "classicalmusic" this is it. The style reached its peakin the 17th and 18th centuries with the com¬positions of the famous blind harper TurloghCarolan. Carolan's music flows out of DerekBell's harp with a beauty and grace that canbring an entire audience to the brink oftears. His compositions, and Bell's tribute tohis memory can be heard on the record TheChieftains Live. ("Carolan's Concerto" and“Carolan's Farewell to Music") Carolanwas perhaps the greatest of all the Irishharpers, but unfortunately he was also oneof the last in the tradition. Until very recent¬ly traditional music has taken a back seat tothe style of folksinging popularized of lateby the Clancy Brothers, the Dubliners andothers.A revival of traditional music began totake place in the early sixties. The music forthe film of Synge's “The Playboy of theWestern World" introduced its sound tomany a listener who, until that point, hadprobably heard little to call Irish music savefor popular folksongs and rebel ballads. Thesounds of the uilleann pipes, flute and harpbegan to become more familiar ones. TheChieftains first recording was made in 1964page 1155th & Lake ParkHvde Park Shopping Center752-8100Mail or phone ordersUse your: C & S Charge, Am. Express,Visa, Master ChargeAnnouncing Hyde Park’sNewest CondominiumDORCHESTERCOURT5414-25 S. DorchesterExceptional ApartmentsOne Bedroom from $32,500Two Bedrooms from $42,000Models OpenSaturday and Sunday 1-5( a Off 1 I M mn) rl jj aKennedy, Ryan, Monnigal & Assoc. 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Handsome dining room.Beautiful, very large new kitchen.Recently decorated and elegant.Urban Search337-2400I T X I. '■n * c H V. '•J'i ‘ V 1By Eden c,or,en The expressive world of Paul TaylorWatching the tusion of dance and music is one of themost satisfying experiences of the theater. Indeed, thebest choreography is often that which derives its impetusfrom the accompanying music. So it is no accident thatwhat many of the great dance companies in the history ofthe Western theater share is that each of their majorchoreographers have worked closely with a particularcomposer. Petipa, of 19th century Russian's ImperialTheatre, collaborated with Tchaikovsky, Fokine withStravinsky, Martha Graham with Louis Horst, Balan¬chine with Stravinsky, and Merce Cunningham with JohnCage. The products of these partnerships — Petipa's andTchaikovsky's "Sleeping Beauty," Fokine's and Stravin¬sky's "Petrouchka," and Balanchine's and Stravinksy's"Agon," to name a few — are monuments of the Westernstage. A "composer-in-residence" is not the absolutequalifier for a quality repertoire — it's just that thechances are good that a synthesis of sight and sound willresult when a choreographer and composer worktogether.The Paul Tavlor Dance Company, which performed fora sizable audience at the Auditorium a couple of weeksago, has never been linked with one particular composer.And Taylor, the company's sole choreographer, haschoreographed to an amazing variety of composers.Nevertheless, while Taylor possesses the mind and meansof a dancer, he has the soul of a musician. What waswonderfully loud and clear the first night of their stay inChicago is that his work is marked with that quality whichdistinguishes choreographers yo have collaborated withcomposers: a profound and riveting musicality.Taylor's choreography teYiot so much s£f to the musicbut shaped by it. It is linear, choreographed to the top —melodic — line of the score. Taylor's work does not provide a visual vade mecum to the music, as does the com¬plex, polytextured work of Balanchine, but a harmoniousadjunct — an exalted, highly personal transliteration.Taylor's choreography has always had a uniquely in¬dividual characteristic which might be termed dynamiclyricism. Its designs and shapes faintly echo those of ballet. Lines are rounded, arched, or rippling; the bodymaintains a smooth, fluid continuity from one dancephrase to another, and port de bras sequences havealways been an important part of his expressivevocabulary. Yet these flowing forms do not strike one aslilting or china-doll delicate. They're executed firmly andwith drive — you might say the dancers sculpt out themelody — and always in tandem to the music' pulse. Sorather than a precarious, restrained, drawing-roomgrace, we feel a bracing energy and intensity.Taylor's work has always had a clear, wholesome look.The movement has minimal ornament. When performingsuch choreography, the company dancers, like New YorkCity Ballet dancers in Balanchine's "practice-clothes"ballets, possess an unadorned, elegant presence.What is pleasing is that the variety is achievedwithout any degree of severity or confusion.Taylor explores the body’s potential forplasticity with subtlety and clarity.The kinetic vocabulary consists of a lexicon of signatureposes and gestures. The innumerable combinations andvariations of these gestures pretty much constitute his entire kinetic vocabulary. An example:The body faces sideways toward the wings, so that theaudience views the body's profile. The feet are parallel toone another. The legs bend, and the torso, from the waistup, turns 90° toward the audience. The hip closes to the au¬dience, is inclined slightly upward, and thus the entirepelvic area lays oblique to the audience. The head andeyes also look obliquely upward, along the same plane ofthe hips, and to complete the picture, the arms are curvedover the head, in fifth position.Here the body has ballet's curved lines and open, proudstance, but the traditional vertical posture is altered, andthe body, like a diamond, deploys various angles and con¬tours in one inertial pose. What is pleasing is that thevariety is achieved without any degree of severity and confusion. That is, Taylor explores the body's potential forplasticity with subtlety and clarity.Saturday's program consisted of dances allchoreographed within the last few years, the musicallymotivated "Images" (Debussy) and "Esplanade"(Bach), and a quite lascivious comedy of domestic strife."Aphrodisiamania" (to quote the progrem, "GoldenOldies of the Renaissance").The highlight of Saturday's program was Taylor'shomage and res> mse to the music of Bach, "Fsplanade,"set to the entire "E Major Violin Concerto" and Andanteand Alleqro of thp "D Minor Double Violin Concerto.""espianade" is a rare instance of choreography wherestructure, in this case, one clearly and carefully conceiv¬ed, and individual expression, coalesce.The dancers enact a series of what resemble drill sequences, alternatively calmly proceeding and runningthrough straight line columns and box patterns. Swinginglimbs and turning heads occasionally mark the beat, andthe patterns. Swinging limbs and turning heads occa¬sionally mark the beat, and the patters themselves areevolved in strict time.This dance ot patterns has its own impetus and focus,yet — and what is so wonderful — it also complements themusic. Taylor has provided a personal abstraction, whichboth reflects and comments on th order, clarity, and joy ofBach. The work gains in complexity and variety of moodsas the music progresses until the explosive finale, where iterupts into an absorbina kinetic celebration Taylor's ex¬uberance takes over his patterns, and while his ex¬uberance is uncontainable, the choreography remainsstructure Of course you don't monitor the structure's con¬tinuity — you just feel its inner control. Thrilling, ecstaticmovement replaces the patterns. Dancers bound acrossthe stage, women fly into the arms of their partners, whotwirl them around at frightening velocities. The pace isunrelenting; the images give rise to one another, each oneperpetually churning from its predecessor with the dazzleand continuity of a kaleidescope. You can feel Tayior'sferbor in creation. Dancing is rarely such a joy.Frans BrueggenVirtuoso recorderBy Peter T. DanielsIt is with some trepidation that one ap¬proaches a concert of solo recorder music,even if it is to be played by the "world'sgreatest." Fears proved groundless, forthanks in part to an extraordinarily attenfive audience, Frans Brueggen last Fridayupheld his reputation and the honor of themodern flute's predecessor. Nearlyeveryone must have tried blowing into arecorder, and knows how difficult it is just tomake a steady tone; it is part of Mr. Brueg-gen's virtuosity that he can create vibratowithout squawking and can swell withoutdistorting the pitch. Many players can dothat: but can they communicate the music?He does it with phrasing, intensity, andmaybe charisma, and he does it with his legs crossed!The program covered the sixteenth to thetwentieth centuries. Two Telemann Fan¬tasias sounded very much like his violinworks. An echo piece by Jacques Hot-teterre, whose family, Mr. Brueggen explained, developed the transverse flute,demonstrated the virtues of that instru¬ment Dutch and Spanish works representedthe earlier period, and Japan sent the twocontemporary works. Makoto Shinohara's"Fragmente" makes music of what we usedto think of as mistakes (squeals, doubletones, and so on). Most interesting was along composition by Maki Issho (it wasn'tlisted in the program) in three movements.It started with a hypnotically repeated pentatonic tune, played on an instrument heldFriday, April 14,1978 d£ndwntingBy Shirley Jean Fisher ^ Considered as CM sdrtCalligraphy: "funny writing with a blackpen," "the art of fine handwriting," "fancywriting," "different styles of handwriting,""wajasay?" (several anonymous defini¬tions).Recently, the Chicago Calligraphy Collec¬tive exhibited pieces of calligraphic art inthe Bergman Gallery ("the Pen Trium¬phant," April 3-28) and at the ChicagoPublic Library Cultural Center (April 1-10).It is a rare opportunity to experiencecalligraphy (from Gk, "beautiful writing")in its fullest sense. Those of us who picture acalligrapher as "a little old monk il¬luminating a manuscript" and calligraphyas a fancy diploma or invitation willdiscover there are many other applicationsof the art,The 43 examples at the Bergman Galleryand the 35 pieces at the Cultural Centeramply illustrate how the human hand cancombine paper, vellum, cloth, ink, paint,brush, pen, and subject matter to createpure art.My only complaint about these exhibits isthe fact that neither has labeled its pieceswith descriptive information about thematerials and techniques used. Not only thenovice calligrapher, but also the casual observer, would find such labeling instruc¬tive. Both ancient and modern materialsand techniques are used. There are gessoedand gilded illuminations in a Latin text donein a square Gothic script and one piece iscreated with a newly invented type of brassbrush pen in a seemingly casual, althoughactually controlled, Italic hand.The calligraphers make free use of im¬agination. If a correction is necessary, theartist works it into the design, as when aforgotten word is cleverly inserted abovethe line or when letters are adapted to thecorrected form of another letter. Thedesign, medium, and style of script chosenare all means o* individual expression.Many of the pieces are experimental and thecombination of choices is not always appropriate."The Pen Triumphant" is an especiallyvaried show. It contains pure art (e.g.. abeautiful pencil sketch with an accompany¬ing verse, several illuminated manuscripts,a design consisting of four words, a picturedrawn with words, and wonderful combinetions of color) and what could be consideredpractical applications (recipes, handwrittenbooks, invitations, and presents to friendsFrom the range of materials and methodspresented at these exhibits, one learns thatcalligraphy is, indeed, "disciplinedfreedom" (Donald Jackson).in the right hand only. Mr. Brueggen thenadded a second instrument, played with theleft, which served first as a drone and thenprovided parallel harmonies (it's not so difficultasitmay look,as long as the fingers ofthe two hands are moving in symmetry, buttwo independent parts might be too muchfor even Mr. Brueggen!). The movementended after getting taster and faster andmore and more hysterical — with a mightygong stroke, which served as a bass for thesecond movement, a gentle song for altorecorder with the gong occasionally strucksoftly The third movement was a stunningtreatment of fundamentals and harmonicsIt is greatly to be hoped that some localrecorderist will take up this work and pre sent it on a CCP programMr Brueggen's was the last concert in theChamber Music Series. Next year's serieshas already been announced and includesthe well known Vermeer, Cleveland andTokyo quartets. The schedule wisely avoidsthe ends of quarters that rightfully belong tostudent organizations and exam times onemay hope that University Extension considers these factors and this schedule whensetting up their own, lest we get againsomething like the Juilliard playing between tw-o Amelings or Brueggen betweentwo Hendrickses. The best thing of all aboutthe Chamber Music Series is the price: just9 dollars tor five probably top-notch performances.page 13It is a mistake to regard one disease as moreldivine than another, since all is human andall divine.—HippocratesI know everyone's overjoyed at the pro¬spect ot the true arrival of Spring and "allthat miserable shit" as Motorhead Sher¬wood used to say. Now I don't want to put adamper on anyone's rights to celebrate, butit does seem proper that at least one voicebe allowed to inject a tone of sobriety intothe proceedings. It is my duty to point outthat the National Center for Disease Controlin Atlanta has confirmed what my grand¬mother and legions of other practitioners of"folk medicine" have known for ages: alongwith the burgeoning of your folks' fanciesthere is an accompanying increase in thesize of the microbe population. So, just whenyou think you've weathered another winter— Wham!! — you've got a touch of that ol'"Spring Fever", literally.Getting sick is something that no one en¬joys. But why should it be that way? What Iwould like to recommend is that everyonetry to accept the fact of disease and that wemake the most of our diseases. Where wouldwe be today without Socrates' "daimon"(actually an undiagnosed case of epilepsy)or John von Neumann's Theory of Automata(formulated during a trancelike state induc¬ed by an allergic reaction to a mohairsweater)? The sooner we rid ourselves ofour puritanical attitude towards disease thebetter. Only then can we begin to experienceits liberating effects.As a preliminary step to attaining that ex¬alted goal, I would like to share with you arecent experience of my own. What followsis a personal account of the initial stages ofa disease I recently enjoyed.As I was saying, I started getting sick.The physical symptoms were uninteresting.I noticed a scratchy feeling or a scrat¬chiness in my throat. Working its way out ofthis scratchiness was an occasional cough.And, I noticed the first warning flashes of afever. That was about it, with regard to thepurely physical aspects of my new disease.At least in its early stages. This account willnot include any mention of the more in¬teresting, greenish pustules that appearedin my armpits and in my lumbar strip, norwill I elaborate on my wretched attempts atthe divestiture of the contents of my empty Grey Gapstomach. What interests me here is the men¬tal aspect of my disease and the intercon¬nectedness of the mental and the physical.Consider the condition of dizziness, for ex¬ample. Which is it, mental or physical? Is ita physical condition mentally experienced?The problem is, dizziness does not seem tobe experienced as immediately as, for in¬stance, the smash of hammer or thumb. Italmost seems as if dizziness is a mentalreaction to or interpretation of a physicalevent. I'm dizzy. I'm standing, a minute agoI was sitting; I don't recall the transition.That's dizziness. Or: I'm walking through adoorway, but I don't seem to have ex¬perienced opening or even touching thedoor.As far as I'm concerned, such considerations take us nowhere along a circuitousroute and leave us collapsed in a heap at ourstarting point. Dizziness is merely one of thelow level delights of disease. What, then, arethe "high level delights"? The purely men¬tal ones, of course. Come along.Why are the books on my shelf arrangingthemselves in patterns, now according tocolor, now according to height, now ac¬cording to width? The eternally presentsounds of industrial activity outside my win¬dow, normally not even noticed, suddenlyadvance from the aural background and fillmy ears with the soundtrack from an urbanguerilla war movie. The sheets on my bedfeel like I'm grasping at them with glov¬ed hands, my pajamas must be made ofasbestos. And that smell! Have I fouledthose same bedclothes, or can thatnauseating odor be my own breath?Perhaps I should have something to eat.Keep up my strength. But I don't feel likecooking. A search of the refrigerator yieldsa leftover cooked hamburger, a leftoverboiled potato, and some frozen spinach.Quickly the food items are heated andreduced to a crumbly pulp by my earnestmastications. Swallowing is elevated froman afterthought to an act of will. And then Irealize: that food had absolutely no taste. Itry another mouthful, it reminds me ofnothing so much as my year on the universi¬ ty meal contract at Pierce Dining Hall.After ingesting my miserable mockery ofa meal, I decide to engage in one of myfavorite sicktime activities the TV.Studiously I watch Leave It To Beaver.There is a mystery about that show. Didn'tone of the guys on it later become AliceCooper? Let's see:The Beaver — Jerry MathersWally— Tony DowClarence — ?Eddie Haskell — ?And what was Alice Cooper's name,anyway? I make a mental note to be sureand watch the credits at the end but the nextthing I know I'm being jostled into con¬sciousness by some goon named Burt Wein-mann shouting at me about 1000s of usedcars. Hey, isn't that the guy at Ribs 'n'Bibs? Click.Perhaps I should go back to bed, get somerest, build up my strength. I lie wide awakein bed, visually tracking the cracks in theplaster until they get lost in the cobwebswhere the two walls and one ceiling cometogether, at the point formed by the in¬tersection of one vertical and two horizontallines all of them at right angles to the othersthus forming one of the corners of a cube butis it an interior corner observed from the in¬side or an exterior corner observed fromthe outside must be interior since I'm insidebut where is the cube? and then as if somesecret panel had been bumped the greatideas come tumbling out remember thatpaper you were gonna write for CommonCore Humanities "Lolita: A Chronicle ofthe Decline and Fall of Tsarist Russia"might take a little research but it could bedone or do you remember the "2 Dollar BillConspiracy" and how the Government's try¬ing to con everybody into using 2 dollar billsso they become the unit of exchange andthen everything that used to cost $1 will cost$2 you know I was just thinking about howeasy it would be for my roommate to poisonme. He works in Billings Hospital wherethey use radioactive tracers it would be soeasy for him to pot some of that stuff in mytea no one would ever find out that's whyI'm so sick if he did I'll kill him I'll kill 'em.This is the first of a two-part series. Nextweek: "The Recovery"Dristan ZorroJoan Rivers to appear on campusComedianne Joan Rivers will present ascreening of the first reel of her new movie"Rabbit Test" on April 20, at 3:30 in Quan-trell Hall.Tickets for "An Afternoon with JoanRivers" will be distributed on Friday at theReynolds Club box office. The event is free,and open to all the University community.Two tickets will be given per I.D.Ms. Rivers will talk about her movie, ofwhich she is the director and the screen¬writer. "Rabbit Test" concerns the pro¬blems of a Mr. Lionel Carpenter, who sud¬denly discovers he is pregnant.For more'information, call the office ofStudent Activities. i I- mI The Gtey City fymudEditor: Mark NeustadtAssociate Editor: JeffMakosStaff: Karen Heller, Karen Hornick, GeorgeDrury, Anne Glusker, Stuart Ryder,Michael Starenko, Glenn Miller, Peter T.Daniels, the Rumproller, Eden Clorfene,John Lanahan.The Grey City Journal is the weekly artssupplement to the Maroon. 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.Allegro Non Troppo (1975), directed byBruno Bozzetto. (Doc) Hey man, it's daItalian Fantasia and you gotta see it high.Actually, the film contains some incredibleanimation sequences, perhaps the best donein decades. A few of the sequences, althoughsomewhat disconnected, are witty andbeautiful. The live-action sequences aresomewhat less successful. Supposedly aformer Doc-board chairman appears duringone of these sequences. Recommended. Fri¬day at 7:00, 8:30 and 10:00.The Last Tycoon (1977), directed by EliaKazan. (Doc) Elia Kazan and screenwriterHarold Pinter have attempted to finish whatF. Scott Fitzgerald never did or could have.Robert DeNiro portrays the legendarycharacter Monroe Stahr, based on the real-live legend of Irving Thalberg, consumedwith work and not the product, obsessedwith a female image and not the woman(wretchedly impersonated by IngridBoulting, a chipmunk-cheeked actress). Thefilm stops where the book does — lost, withno visable resolve for StaJir and his pro¬blems which are the crux of the novel.DeNiro, in his first 'romantic' role, is amaz¬ing. Jack Nicholson is quite good as a unionleader. Saturday 7:00 and 9:30.Celine and Julie Go Boating (1974),directed by Jacques Rivette. (Doc) "It is abeautiful jeu d'esprit, a delightful voyagereflecting the smiles of a spring afternoonwhile suggesting the mysteries of thehaunted house in the secret garden. At thesame time, the film describes a series offascinatingly intricate arabesques aroundthe quality of imagination necessary if film¬maker and spectator are to understand andget the best out of each other." With JulietBerto, Dominique Labourier, Marie-FrancePisier, Bulle Ogier, and Barbet Schroeder.Sunday at 7:30.Jackal of Nahueltoro (1969), directed byMiguel Littin. (NAM) An illiterate, madpeasant commits a brutal murder. He iscaught, tried and sentenced to death. Thekiller has no awareness. He is not a subjectand before he can die he must be given aself, taught to read, write and speak proper¬ly; the state cannot tolerate a non-subject.The film reveals that the real crime is not tohave violated the state's prohibition againstmurder but to have done so with no recogni¬tion of that prohibition or awareness of itsexistence. Littin handles the themes of statepower and the constitution of citizen-selveswith dexerity and suspense. Monday at 7:15and 9:30.Friday, April 28, 1978Ida Noyes Hall9:00 p.m.Glenn Miller Orchestra •lye Examinations•Contact Lenses (Soft 4 Hard)•Prescriptions Filled|DR MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Pork Shopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288 2900page 14//I\J)j -)tt\\i311i CalendarF ridayDepartment of Economics: “On the Efficien¬cy of Markets for Foreign Exchange,”Richard Levich, 9:20 am. Business East, 211;“Unemployment in the Great Depression: IsThere a Full Explanation?” Robert Lucas &Leonard Rapping and “Three-and-a-halfMillion US Employees Have Been Mislaid:Or, an Explanation of Unemployment 1934-1941; Michael Darby, 3:30 pm, Social Sciences106; Workshop on Public Finance and LatinAmerican Development, 3:30 pm, SocialSciences 402.South Asian Seminar: “The Meaninglessnessof Ritual,” Frits Staal, UC, Berkeley, 10:30am, Foster Lounge.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Sudent-Faculty Luncheon, 12:15 pm, Ida Noyes Hall;Arabic Circle. “The Middle East and theEnergy Crisis,” Khairi Turk, IIT, 3:30 pm.Pick 218; Bizden Size, “Urbanization andEconomic Development in Turkey,” Ziya Oz-can, 3:30 pm, Harper 155; Sherry Hour, 4:30pm, Kelly 413.Commuter Club: Get together, 12:30 pm, Hut¬chinson Commons; IM Soccer, 3:45 pm.South Asia Seminar: “Altar of Fire,” a filmby Frits Staal, 2:30, Cobb 209.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “Compen¬sation Mechanisms inferred from theIsostatic Transfer Function,” Robert ParkerUC San Diego, 3:30 pm. Hinds Auditorium.Calvert House: Friday Night at Calvert,volleyball at 4 pm; barbecue. 5:30; outing to“Godspell,” 7:30 pm.Hillel: Liberal-Reform Shabbat Service, 5:15pm; Lecture — “Human Language and DivineLanguage,” Michael Frank, 8:30 pm, Hillel. Women’s Softball Team vs. Lewis Universi¬ty, 4 pm. North Field.Gay Liberation Front: Coffeehouse, 8 pm, IdaNoyes.ArtsContemporary Chamber Players: RalphShapey, director, Elsa Charleston, soprano,8:15 pm, Mandel Hall.Law School Films: “Bringing up Baby,” 7:15,9:30 pm, Law School Auditorium.DOC Films: “Allegro Non Troppe,” 7, 8:30,and 10 pm, Cobb Hall.Midway Studios: Opening reception for BuzzSpector-Drawings. 6 pm, 6016 Ingleside.SaturdayResource Center; Recycle glass, cans andpaper, 54th Place and Greenwood, 10-4.Oriental Institute Museum: Opening of ex¬hibit of Coptic Art.Change Ringing: Handbells, 10 am; towerbells 11 am, Mitchell Tower.Christian Science Organization; “More Thana Superstar!' George Aghamalian, memberof Christian Science Board of Lectureship,2:30 pm. Center for Continuing Education.Crossroads: Saturday night dinners, 6 pm,5621 Blackstone.Chinese Student Association: ChineseCultural Night, 7:45 pm, Pick Concert Hall,Northwestern University.UC Men’s Baseball Team: vs Miles College,12 noon, Stagg Field.DOC Film: “The Last Tycoon”: 7, 9:30 pm,Cobb Hall. SundayRockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy Commu¬nion, 9 am; University Religious Service, 11am, Rockefeller Chapel.Calvert House: Sunday Morning Theology,“Sex and the Single Catholic,” TheresaSullivan, 10 am, Mass 11 am, Bond Chapel:Movie on the life of Dom Helder Camara,political and liberation figure of LatinAmerica, 7 pm; less formal Mass, 10 pm,Calvert House.Crossroads: bridge, 3 pm, 5621 Blackstone.International House: Recital by JosephLockett, pianist, 4 pm, 1414 E. 59th St.Hillel: Faculty-student wine and cheese par¬ty, 4 pm, 5458 S. Everett; “Holocaust,” (TVmovie! viewing, 7 pm, Hillel.Changes Community: Group discussions,topic — “Am I no Good if I’m not in a Rela¬tionship?” Dorothy Johnson, 7 pm, BlueGargoyle.UC Folkdancers: General level folkdancing. 8pm, Ida Noyes.DOC Film: “Celine and Julie go Bathing,”7:30 pm, Cobb.MondayDepartment of Education: “The WeekendCollege — A Center for Learning,” TinaStretch, 3 pm, Judd 313.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture —“Ibn Sina and the Dawn of the HumanistHeritage,” Criton Zoakos, US Labor Party.4:30 pm, Cobb 106.The Center for Health AdministrationStudies: “Commitment for CommitmentSoviet Medicine and Psychiatry as In¬struments of Social and Political Centrol,”Mark Field. Boston University, 3 pm. Swift106. Chemistry Seminar: Michel Lazdunski, Nice,France, 4 pm, Kent 103.Chess Club: Meeting, 7 pm, Ida Noyes.UC Folkdancers: Beginning folkdancing, 8pm, Ida Noyes.Calvert House: Gay/Lesbian ChristianGroup. 8:30 pm, Calvert House.Hillel: TV viewing of “Holocaust,” 8 pm,Hillel.First Chair Series: Chicago Symphony StringQuartet, 8 pm, Shoreland.NAM Field: “L'Amour Fou,” 7:30 pm, CobbHall.Don’tforgetyourincome taxSTUDENT OMBUDSMAN, 1978-1979The University is now seeking applicants for the post of Student Ombudsman. TheOmbudsman’s term of office will not begin until Autumn 1978. He or she will be ex¬pected to work with the 1977-1978 Student Ombudsman through the remainder ofthe academic year.Applications from individual students are welcome, as are recommendations fromindividual students or other student groups. They should be in letter form and mustbe submitted to the Office of the Dean of Students in the University by Friday, April28th. They should indicate the candidate’s academic area and level, number of yearsat the University, and relevant experience and other special qualifications for theposition of Ombudsman. Letters of recommendation from other students or membersof the faculty or staff will be helpful.Applicants will be interviewed by a student-faculty committee; the appointmentwill be made by the President.The Student Ombudsman is a part-time salaried official of the University who is alsoa registered degree candidate. He is appointed by the President to serve in additionto the regular organization of the University in cases of which there are allegationsof specific unfairness or inefficiency. The Ombudsman writes a quarterly report,published in the University Record, in which he gives a general account of his activ¬ities and makes such recommendations as he may deem appropriate.DEADLINE: APRIL 28,1978ft - * Chicago Maroon—Friday. April 14.1978—15ALL TOGETHERAt One LocationTO SAV^TOUMORE!SPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago youare entitled to special money sav¬ing Discounts on Volkswagen &Chevrolet Parts, Accessories andany new or used Volkswagen orChevrolet you buy from Volks¬wagen South Shore or MeritChevrolet Inc.SALES & SERVICEALL AT ONEGREAT LOCATIONCHEVROLETm VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE7234 Stony IslandPhone: 684-0400Open Daily 9-9 P.M./ Sat. 9-5 P.M.Parts Open Saturday tM 12 NoonUniversity of ChicagoSuper Summer-Spoils 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, IHinois 60637or call: 753-4682Open to University of Chicago &Hyde Park Residents Our rPREPARE FOR:MCAT • DAT - LSAT • GMATGRE • OCAT • VAT * SATNMB I. II. Ill ECFMG ■ FLEX * VQENAT’L DENTAL BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFlexible Programs & HoursThere IS a difference!!!-HNEDUCATIONAL centerTtST PREPARATIONSPECIALISTS SINCE 1918For Information Pin.ise Cali2050 W DevonChicago, III 606451312) 764 5151SPRING, 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 Major US Cities Toronto, Puerto Rico and Lugano, SwitzerlandROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSUNDAY* APRIL 169 A.M.A SERVICE OF HOLY COMMUNIONCelebrant: Donald JudsonCo-sponsored by the Episcopal Church Council11 A.M.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICEE. Spencer ParsonsDean of the Chapel“TOE-STUBBING IN THE KINGDOM”HUMAN LANGUAGE ANDDIVINE LANGUAGEPROF. MICHAEL FRANK,William Rainey Harper Fellowin HumanitiesAT THE HILLEL FOUNDATION,57115 Woodlawn AvenueFRIDAY, APRIL 14th, 8:30 P.M.This time,take aThe Sure-Thing Vacation.RUSSIA ON TOURAs low as *949Two and three week charter tours via Pan Am orAeroflot (Soviet Airlines)Visit Moscow and Leningrad plus choice of 9itineraries including Crimea, Baltic, Ukraine, Cen¬tral Asia and Mongolia$949 to $2499 for complete tour depending onlength of stay and departureMIDWAY TRAVEL SERVICEIN LOBBY OF "AD" BUILDINGTEL. 753-2301 W KELLY GIRLNEXT DOORWe're WaitingFor your Knock!That's right! We re now in Hyde Park, se™in9you and the employers in your neighborhood.In fact, we've got plenty of assignments avail¬able to suit your hours and your skills.Whether you re looking for full day s work ora few hours work, Kelly Girl has an assign¬ment for you!Kelly can offer all the advantages of a fulltime job with the flexibility your schedulerequires. Our benefits include:•Competitive salaries•Paid vacation•Bonuses•Regular salary increases955-4777Call or visit: Ke||y Gjr,1515 E. 52nd PlaceChicago, ILAn t,uol Opportunity imploy.r M/FTo Roscoe the Bar-Mitzvah Boy“Today You are a Fountain Pen”Mazal Tov !b. 4-12-76pi C i 3 N: mo (J t' • v e r v.f v ’*■* :nr*,0DeDCirtmpt » o’ MusicFromm Music Founoo’ioi' of HarvardCONTEMPORARYCHAMBER PLAYERSof The University of Chicagonth ELSA CHARLSTON Soprano and ABRAHAM STOKMAN P.ono"tor Wpbprrt - >,"tpr.on, Op ?>FRIDAY APRIL U, 1978 - 8 15 PMMANDEL HALL, 57th & University AvenueNBC - TV’S MAJOR DRAMATIC PROGRAM“HOLOCAUST”WA TCH THE ENTIRE SERIES A T HILLEL5715 Woodlawn AvenueSunday, April 16, 7:00 - 10 P.M.Monday, April 1 7, 8:00 - 10 P.M.Tuesday, April 18, 8:00 -10 P.M.Wednesday, April 19, 7:30 -10 P.M.Free copies of Anti-Defamation League - Chi¬cago Sun Times educational materials on theHolocaust will be available in advance at: Hillel,Reynolds Club, Ida Noyes Hall and the Book¬store. Pick up your copy prior to showings atHillel.JJor Maria Muldaur May 6Activities The David Bromberg Band 8:30 p.m.-Mandel HallBoard $3, $4 w/fee; $5.50, $6.50Off to slow startHardballersBy Mark WallachThe baseball team, off to a disappoin¬ting 1-4 start, aims for a .500 seasonafter last year’s 6-10 rebuilding effort.“We have an exciting team that willscore runs,’’ Coach Angelus said.The pitching staff, which had abloated ERA of 7.05 last year, has beenbolstered by the additions of startersJohn Bruns, Ralph Hruben, and JoeKinczel along with reliever Steve “Lef¬ty" Rogut. Returning from last year areRick Dagen, the Maroons’ top pitcher of'77, and long reliever John Ponidor.“The nucleus of last year is back,"Coach Angelus said, noting that theteam lost only two seniors to gradua¬tion. Angelus expects this stability tocontribute to an improved defense.“Last year we had to switch our outfieldaround but this year it should be set."Also, newcomers Byron Trott at 1st aim at .500near .400. Last year’s team battingaverage of .248 soared to .295 in thisyear’s first three games.In the first two games this year, thepitching and defense were shaky as theMaroon bowed to Purdue-Calumet 11-7and the Chicago State 7-6 in the firstgame of a double header. In thenightcap, however, Chicago came backto thrash State 13-3 behind a completegame performance by John Bruns whohad carried a no-hitter into the fourth in¬ning.Last Saturday against Concordia theMaroons lost 6-2 in the first game of adouble header. Thev committed four er¬rors in the first inning, allowing sixunearned runs to score. A one-hit pit¬ching performance by Ralph Hrubenwas wasted. The second game wasequally disastrous. The Maroons took a2-1 lead into the final inning before poordefensive play undid them and Con¬Sportsbase and Sekar “Shaker ’’ Bahadur at3rd base add much-needed defensivestrength to the infield.Mostly though, the Maroons are coun¬ting on a powerful attack. Returningshortstop Scott Jansen (.432 battingaverage last year), designated hitterMike Giglin (.333), left fielder Carl Her¬zog (.308), center fielder Paul Harris(.300), and 2nd basemen John Lekich(.296) are all proven hitters. Mort Fox(2nd base, right field) and freshman DonCiciora (catcher, dh) are oft to quickstarts, both sporting batting averages cordia scored twice for a 3-2 victory.“We didn’t hit in the clutch and we left18 men on base. That’s about all of it,"Angelus said. “We had the pitchers onthe ropes all day." Concordia relief pit¬chers constantly snuffed Maroonrallies, including two bases loadedthreats.But Angelus expects the Maroons tosettle down and to start deliveringclutch hits. “I thought it would take afew games to tune the line up." Heforesees few line up changes and remainsconfident. “Our goal is .500," he said.At home todayWomen edged by NUBy .n; i .' midorThe SoituaM team >. record tell to 0-3Wednesday, as the women dropped anextra-inning contest with Northwestern,4-3.The Wildcats scored first, getting tworuns in the third on two singles, a walk,and an error. The Maroons came back inthe fourth with three runs when BarbBrink, Anne Harville, and JeanneDufort singles after Paulita Sales washit by a pitch. The score remained at 3-2until the seventh inning, when Nor¬thwestern rallied with a single, walk, hitbatter, and wild pitch. Anne Harvillepitched out of the jam by getting the nexttwo batters on a strike out and a groundout.In the eighth, Northwestern put theirfirst two women on with singles. Thenext batter reached base on an error, butthe runners did not score. One runnercontinued to third, however, where thelead runner was still standing. CatcherBarb Brink forced the errant wildcat intoa rundown, while the other runnerscored. However, the play was protestedand after some research in the rulebook,the run was disallowed and one runnerwas called out while the other two weresent to third. The next hitter singledhome the eventual winning run, though,and the Wildcats were retired withoutCorrectionDue to printer’s error, last weeksbaseball article was omited in favor of adouble printing of a fencing story. In ad¬dition. part of last week’s softball articlewas also omited due to lack of space.The Sports editor would like to apologizeto both squads as well as staff writerMark Wallach for the errors. further ado.The Maroons threatened in their halfof the eighth, when Sales reached first onan error, but were put away with a dou¬ble play.The Maroons can be seen again todaygoing for their first win, as they hostLewis in a 4 p.m. contest at North Field.Table tennis teamtakes IITUC Table Tennis Club opened itsseason Tuesday with a 4-3 win over IIT.The victory was clinched by the doublesteam Duong Vu - Edward Lin who rolledover their IIT opponents Shah - Man-cissa 2:0 (7, 19). Other winners for theUniversity of Chicago include Lin,Zbigniew Banas and Bob Todd in thesingles competition.The university team plays on April 15at Purdue University, April 22 atWheaton College and returns for thehome opener against IIT on Thursday.April 27.Practices are on Thursdays 7:30 -11:00p.m. in Ida Noyes Theatre. 3rd floor. IM ReportSocim seasonBy Howard SulsSocim results were a little less muddyas the Midway finally dried outsomewhat and games were shifted to theupper fields. Lower Flint emerged as thefavorite to win the Aqua division with abig 2-1 overtime victory over Tufts, afterbeating Shoreland 8 & 9 3-1. Other Aquascores had Tufts over Hitchcock 3-0,Shoreland 8 & 9 over Hitchcock andChamberline by identical 3-1 scores.Thompson South took the SilverLeague by virtue of their victories lastweek, and join Dodd-Mead in theplayoffs. Dodd-Mead, the Orangechamp, earned their way in the playoffswith victories over Fishbein 4-0, PhiGamma Delta 1-0, Shorey 2-1, andDudley 1-0. The Fiji’s dropped all theirgames losing to Fishbein 1-0, Dudley 4-1, and Shorey 1-0. Other games hadShorey over Fishbein 1-0, and Dudleyover Fishbein 1-0.In the Lavender League (Dan Tepke'sfavorite color?) Henderson nipped Fil-Men open netByR.W. RohdeThe Maroon’s men’s tennis squad isscheduled to open their season todayagainst Chicago State at 3pm on the Var¬sity courts.Coach Chris Scott sees mixed pro¬spects for the spring due to a number offactors. The team lost their number oneplayer, Tom Reynolds, when he transfer¬red to Loyola, and will be hurting at thetop. The loss of strength at the topRuggers 4th atGary meetChicago's rugby-football club travell¬ed to Gary, Indiana last weekend for aseven team tournament and finished inthe middle of the pack, coming homewith fourth place.The meet was the team's first competi¬tion of the spring season.The rugby squad came away with a 4-3record last fall, and the team should beeven stronger this fall. Chicago has gain¬ed three strong members: Mark Ramirez.Maroon running back in football and ex¬perienced and talented rugby back, andLou Williams and Chris Decker, both6'5" and over 250 lbs., according to clubpresident Bill Patterson.Williams and Ramirez both showedtheir value in the team’s first gameSaturday, as each scored a pair of trys ina 19-0 win over Michigan City. FullbackDavy Murdu kicked a field goal to roundout the scoring.Chicago then came up against U. of In¬diana twice due to a quirk in the consola¬tion round set-up. Chicago was shut-outboth times, by scores of 10-0 and 4-0. “Itwas a tiring day" Patterson said. winds downbey by a corner kick, then dropped a 1-0game to Lower Rickert, who lost toAlpha Delta Phi in overtime by a cornerkick and demolished Filbey 6-2. ADphi,who beat Filbey by forfeit, must beatHenderson today for the league title.Undergraduate Independent hadfavorite Exile’s Return 4-0 over Chicago7, Porta Ursam over Commuters andChicago 7 1-0, Commuters over HungryBob 2-1, and Hungry Bob over AmazingSmilin Soccer Team 2-1.Cold Storage took two games in theGraduate League, edging Browbeat 2-1,and whipping Tvomas 4-3. PowerhouseBill Too smashed Phovos 7-0, who alsodropped a 1-0 game to Browbeat, Phlog-ger. and Harrass. Last, but not least, inwomen’s games, Alpha Delta Phi splittheir two games, triumphing over LowerWallace 2-0 thanks to two key defec¬tions, and lost to Shorey by 2-0. UpperWallace edged Upper Flint 2-0, and Snellpummeled Lower Wallace 6-2.Next week: Softball predictionsand rankings.season todayshould be picked up at the bottom due toa large turnout of freshman players.Scott thought the gains and loss wouldbalance out.Chicago has also had some problemspracticing, a constant complaint of ten¬nis coaches. While the team has beenaided by the gain of the Field House, thefacility has not been that great a bless¬ing. The small amount of time, thedaytime glare, the poor lighting and fastspeed of the courts have all combined tolimit the practice one can get. while thespring weather has not been conductiveto outdoor practice. On top of that, theteam is now operating under a con¬ference rule that prevents any coachinguntil February 15.Conference rules have also reducedthe size of the season. The team played14 matches (8-6) last year while this yearthey are limited to 10. The squad playsfive home meets in the next two weeks inpreparation for the Whitewater Invita¬tional at the end of the month, then playsthree more dual meets before hosting theconference meet May 19th.Junior Roger Lewis and SophomoreBruce Carman figure to nab the top twospots while the other four spots will beup for grabs. Jerry Mildner, Jim Hvizd.John Hallowed, and Ken Kohl have thenest shots at the remaining starting posi¬tions, all of whom are freshmen exceptfor Kohl, who is a junior.Scott made no predictions about theseason, except to say we should sur¬prise a few people*. However theMaroons fair. Scott can be content withthe knowledge that he does not have oneSenior on his large squad, and no matterhow strong the team is this year, nextyear should be even better.The Chicago Maroon—FTktav. April W. 1978—17THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO'THE COMMITTEE ON SOCIAL THOUGHT(THK lot IN UNKKFl'NO)THE DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICAL LANGUAGESAND LITERATURESandTHE DEPARTMENT OF LINGUISTICSannounce a series of lecturesDR. GREGORY NAGYProfessor of (.reck and LatinHarvard l 'Diversityweonesoav. *pril 1*7* THE BEST OF THE ACHAEANSfridav april 21 i»7i HERO OF ERjf, HERO Of CULTWEDNESDAY APRIL » .t7. PRAISE, Bt^ME, AND THE HEROFriday april 2* i*7i ACHILLES BEYOND THE ILIADAll lectures will take placeat400p.m.inWilliam Rainey Harper Memorial Library ■ Room 1301116 East SR1" StreetAdmission is withnut ticket and without charge PIZZA PLATTER1460 E. 53rd St.OUR SPECIALTYPizza Also Italian FoodsPick Up OnlyMl 3-2800ALLCIGARETTESThe best newsstand in the worldalso has 2000 magazines for you!51st and Lake Park Chicago II 60615 (312) 684 5100Documentary Film GroupALLEGRO NON TROPPO /Bruno BozzettoFriday, April 14th, -7:00, 8:30 and 10:00THE LAST TYCOON/ Elia Kazanwith Robert DeNiroSaturday, April 15th, 7:00 and 9:30CELINE AND JULIE GO BOATING/Jacques RivetteSunday, April 16th - 7:30 onlyCOBB HALL $1.50DOROTHY SMITHBEAUTY SALON584! S. BLACKST0NEHY3-1069Call for appts.7 A.M. - 7 P.M.Monday thru Friday,closed SaturdayHair Styling ■ PermanentsTinting-Facials-Skin CareNAM FILMS HYDE 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*>/%The Student Activities Office and the Office of Radio & TVpresentAn Afternoon WithJOHN RIVERSThursday, April 20, 3:30 p.m.Quantreil AuditoriumMs. Rivers will be here to meetstudents & to preview the 1streel of her new filmFree Tickets available at ReynoldsClub Box Office. Two per I.D.Monday April 17JACKAL OF NAHUEL TORO /7:15 & 9:30 Cobb $1.501H—The Chicago Maroon—Friday. April 14.1978CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEAPARTMENTS AVAILABLE Idealfor UC students, 5442 Harper CallD03 4255 3 7 p.m. Ask for DaleSoberano.Woman seeks room in apt Need immediately. Would like to keep cat ifpossible. Call 955 4176 Keep trying.HOUSE WANTED TO RENT Three4th yr. med students desire 3 4 bdrm.house in Hyde Pk. - Knwd area Oc¬cupy 15 July. Impeccable references.684 6528Sublet for summer '78 wanted: 1bedrm. or studio, near campus. Pleasecall Rachel, 753 2249 ext. 1203.Coachhouse on campus bus route inJackson Park Highlands availableMay t. 3 air cond. rooms, fully equipped kitchen, 600 sq. ft. recentlyremodeled, very quiet and secluded.$190 plus util phone 955 7960 after 6pm.Large prof home 10 rms. 3Vj baths,porch drway, AC, 5 min walk to campus for rent, furnished. Sept 78 July79. $750 per month. 324 4481.2 bedrm. turn, apart, or house in UCarea needed to sublet Oct 78 June 79by visiting Prof U of C. No children, nopets. Contact Arthur Parsons. PierceHall. Depf. of Sociology, Smith College Northhampton, MA 01063 (413)586 1243.Beverly Shores, IN 4 bedrooms, IV2baths plus liveable basement on 2 lotsnear Lake New vinyl siding, furnaceand water heater Includes appliances. National Park Leaseback expected. $45,000 Call Renard atCallahan Realty, 219—926 4298.Female Roommate Wanted - HarperAve. near Coop. Fully furnished,modern apt. AC, storage rooms. Kitchen w/dishwasher 8. disposal. Sundeck & game room. Available May 1stor slightly before. 955 7083 or 955-2724.Looking for an apt. or tenant? Come toStudent Government Housing ServiceMon 12:30 3, Tues 3-6 p.m. Or callanswer service 753 3273.Room in apt. available now til Sep*. 2blocks from Regenstein furnished. 241-5457.Wanted: Studio or one bedroom apart¬ment starting May, June, or next fall.Up to $160 mo., including utilities.Peter, 288 1082.2nd yr. law student from A Arborworking for UC this summer, wishingto house apt sit. sublet, become roommate, from mid May thru 9/1. Actualdates very flexible. 313/764 9015 COLLECT after 10 p.m.HYD PK nr. U of C, 12-3 bedrm. aptswell kept bldg nr 1C, bus, park, lake,reas. BU8 0718.Sublet furnished l bdrm May to midJune fall option 51 & Btackstone 3633457 or 947 6471,Wanted 3 bedroom apt. for summersublet, fall option desirable. Call Mary753 0017.Purdue Student wants to sublease 1bedrm apartment or efficiency fromMay 1 to Aug 31 Write Bryan Glover,Box 140; Shreve Hall; W Lafayette,IN 47906CHRISTIANSCIENCECome to a free lecture about ChristianScience “More Than A Superstar!”By George Aghamalian. Board of Lec¬tureship Saturday, 4/15/78 at 2 30 inthe Center for Continuing Education.RECORDS WANTEDWe pay cash for used Records, alltypes, 33 RPM only. Second HandTunes 1701 E 56th 684 3375 or 262 1593.LOSTGolden shepherd mix. Answers toFrank Lost from Stagg field 4/11.Reward Call 363 3182.LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera is on sale in most HydePark stores and Bob's Newsstand. Weneed women to join the editorial staff.Call 752 5655 if you can help out.EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd Street493-8372 RUMMAGE SALESat , April 15, 10-4. Clothing householdgoods, camping gear, bicycles, andfurniture. Auction of fine quality furniture at 12 noon, United Church ofHyde Park, 53rd and BtackstoneRUGBY PICNICSat in Wash. Pk. Bring food and beer.Watch UC RUGBY CLUB PLAY S.Side Irish. Party afterwards.FACULTY STUDENTWINEANDCHEESEPARTYSUNDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 16 4p m., sponsored by Hillel Foundation,to be held at the Bay it, 5458 Everett.Call: 752 2159 for reservations.FOLK DANCINGJoin us at Ida Noyes Hall for interna¬tional folkdancing each Sunday andMonday at 8, Mon., beginners; Sungeneral level, with teaching bothnights.TAI CHI CH'UANThe UC Tai Chi Club meets every Sunday a* 4945 S. Dorchester (enter on50th) Kung Fu at 6.30. Tai Chi at 7:30.Tai Chi is soft, flowing and balletic buta rational system of self defensePASSOVER MEALSINSEDARIMIf you have not as yet made yourSedarim and Passover meal reservations, please do so at Hillel IMMEDIATELY Mailing, unfortunatelydelayed by our mailing service.DUNGEONSANDDRAGONSAvailable now at the Student CoopReynolds Club basement, 9 30 6:00M F, 10 4 Sat. 3-3561.RECORDSLast chance to buy sale pricedOdyssey and Nonesuch budgetclassical records. Remainder will bereturned to distributors April 23. Stu¬dent Coop, Reynolds Club basement,9.30 6 00M F, 10-4 Sat. 3-3561.GAY PEOPLECOFFEEHOUSE, Fri 14 April; IdaNoyes, east lounge (NOT library,sorry) 8 12 p.m. And wear your jeans,'cause FRIDAY IS NATIONAL GAYBLUE JEANS DAY!PEOPLE WANTEDWORK SATURDAYS EARN S$ andhelp the fight against pollution. Highenergy outdoor work supporting thebattle for a healthy environment. CallDale after 2 00 p.m. Tues Fri., at939 1985.Interest in Law? See a trial. UC LawSchool Trial Practice needs jurorsnext 4 Sat. Call 947 9383 or 366-8166,6 10 p m.Bartender wanted part time, if no experience will train. Call 241-6821, 12-6p m Mon & Tues. Start at $2.50/hr.plus good tips.Help need general housekeeping doneduring spring Also want someone todo same during the summer Hoursand rates loose Call Mr. Zonis 3 4549or 548 4196WERE 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 work environment good fringe benefits. Come joinour people helping team. Call MissRzepka. United Charities of Chicago,939 5930 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYERInterested in serving as a subject forpsycholinguistic experiments, Dept ofBehavioral Sciences? Pay is 52/hr Toregister Call 753 4718.VERSAILLES325 t S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive I '/a and2lj Room StudiosFnrnitliefl or I iifnrni»hr<l$171 to $266lfii*e<l 011 \\aihihilif\Ml I tililio- inrliiilriI\l t iiili|ilh Du- *Ho|»324-0200 Mrs. Croak— OVERSEAS JOBS Summer/yearround. Europe, S. America, Australia,Asia, etc. all fields, S500 SI200 monthly, expenses paid, sightseeing. Freeinfo. Write BHP Co. Box 4490 Dept. 11Berkeley, CA 94704PEOPLE FOR SALEFor experienced piano teacher of alllevels call 947-9746ARTWORK Illustration of all kinds,lettering, handaddressing for invitations, etc. Noel Price 493 2399.RESEARCHERS Freelance artistspecializes in just the type of graphicwork you need. Noel Price, 493 2399PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Articles,resumes, term papers, theses Xeroxcopying. Brookfield, IL 312/485 7650and 387 0889Thesis, Dissertations, Term Papers,Inc. Foreign language gen corres.Latest IBM corrective SEL IItypewriter Reas, rates. Mrs. Ross 2394257, bet 11 am & 5 pm.BIBLIOGRAPHIC SEARCHINGLibrarian to do bibliographicresearch. Ann Foley 753 2426.Figures drawn for scientific, medicalor other professional publications ortheses. Reasonable rates 667 8053.SCENESCOOKING CLASSES: Chineses. International. Full participation, day &evening classes limited to 6 studentseach Wendy Gerick KE8 1324Quaker meeting, Thursdays noon, Vic¬tor Klausen's rm. CTS.Hyde Park Writing WorkshopMembership limited. Those who havea professional interest in writing andmanuscripts to read call 493 5428Department of Germanic Languagesand Literatures and the NorwegianCultural Fund present a lecture byJohn Weinstock, Visiting Professor,University of Texas, on "The Sage ofSkiing Some Early Sketches," at 4p.m in Classics 12 on Tuesday, April18Listen to WHPK talk call in showSaturday 4 p m. We discuss the issuesthat concern all students and you cancall in questions for the guests.FOR SALEDoctoral Gown, $50, hood, (hist ), $30,cap, $5 D Nodtvedt, 2236 EdgewoodDr . Boulder, CO. 80302.PASSPORT PHOTOSWhile-U WaitMODEL CAMERA1344 E 55th St. 493-6700Large, wooden desk, 34x72 8. chair $30call Peter 268 7186.Furniture, Antiques, and Collectables5455 S Btackstone, 12-5 daily.Got a BIKE to sell? Call Rekha684 6180 am/pm.VW Van '73 red, white S2300, call Billat 798 2800WE BUY USED EQUIPMENTWE TAKE TRADE INSMODELCAMERA1971 MGB, 4 spd., AM/FM, 2 new tires,60,000 mi. moving must sell $1500 orbest offer. After 6 p m.: 643-0341 or call721 5461 and leave message1974 Datsun 710 Mileage, 44,000Automatic transmission, Very goodcondition. Cassette deck. Price $1900Phone 288-0785.PERSONALSDATING SERVICE Low cos*. Over1400 members. 274 6940PREGNANCY TESTS SATURDAYS10 1 Augustana Church, 5500 SWoodlawn Bring 1st morning urinesample Si 50 donation. SouthsideWomen's Health. 324 6794Jewish United Fund Drive continuesto contribute contact Adam Gamoran6,67 2771.98 or 105: I think you're beautiful andI'm not just saying it. Your SundayTurkey LiarM HAPPY BIRTHDAY!!!Will my poet nitetime busrider, andfellow matriculant please revealhimself7 I'm going crazy. H of SBeautiful Calico Cat. she's free to agood home 752 3800 ext 1004 Rugby 4 p.m. everyday at StaggFieldPregnant? Troubled7 Call 233 0305 10a m. J p.m M F or Mon & Thurs 7 9p.m. Lifesaving help Test ref.FLAMINGO-ON-THE-LAKEStudio, 1 bdrm apts fur, unfur short,long term rentals parking, pool, rest,trans 5500 S. Shore Dr 752 3800LEGAL NOTICENotice is hereby given, pursuant to"An Ac1 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 CountyClerk of Cook County, file No K 59993on Mar 16, 1978 under the assumedname of Software Salvage Co withplace of business located at 5454 S.Shore Dr «612 The true name andresidenceof owner is Joel S. Jaffer, 2479 SW 13thSt., Miami, FL 33145LEARN FRENCHStudents (beg or adv ), children,travellers, learn French with an exprnative teacher Ph 324 8054.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 7525655PAN PIZZADELIVERYThe Medici Delivers from 5-10:30weekdays, 5-11:30 weekends, 667-7394Save 60‘ if 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 SO.RUMPROLLERHappy Birthday! Now you're an adultStay hyper mellowa / t t a V { }« 115 SALES withservice is our EV BUSINESSREPAIR specialists n4> op IBM, SCM.Olympia & others §r Free EstimateAsk about our >A RENTAL withoption to buyn New & RebuiltTypewriters A< CalculatorsDictators <UJ Adders ■4-UU. of C. Bookstore ❖V 5750 S. Ellis Ave.753-3303 fY MASTER CHARGE ooe BANKAMERICARD 70 £ 6 C * ” * t tHappy BirthdaySara and KievaUsed Desks, Chairs,Files, Drawing TablesEQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:00RE 4-2111 KENNEDY. RYMLMOMCM & J8SKMKS.NCDirectory 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/landscaped yard. $149,500. To see,call KRM at 667-6666.HOME + INCOMEIn this sturdy 3-flat brickbldg in excellent area ofSouth Shore 3-car garage,gas steam heat, new roof, 6rm apts. w/appliances. Fullbsmt. Asking $65,000. CallMrs. R idlon 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’ 2baths plus parking. Offeredat below apraised value. Tosee, call Mrs. Haines at 667-6666BEAUTIFUL INSIDERehabbed 8 room frameduplex. Nice small backyard Lots of potential.$61,000. For more information, call Richard E. Hild at667 6666.APARTMENTS FOR SALEMADISON PARKFirst time offered! Elegant10 rm. condo overlookingprivate park. 4 Irg 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 6666BEST 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 667-6666UNDER S30,000With its separate living room& dining room this onebedrm. plus sunporch is oneof Hyde Park's best buys Tosee call J. Edward LaVelleat 667 6666BIG SPACE, SMALL PRICE2 bedrms. plus study Extralarge & bright liv. rm., din.rm & sunporch Priced in thelow S30 s To see, call GeorgeBilger at 667 666675TH ON THE LAKEThis modern 3 bedrm., 2’2condo w sunken liv. rm. is inmove in condition. All appliances including washer &dryer are a part of thepackage Asking $48,900 CallNadine Hild about the extrasat 667 6666SOUTHOF55TH STREETLoads of sunlight, woodburn-rng fireplc., natl oak floors,modern kitchen in beautiful 3bedrm 2 bath condo Quiet,well maintained bldg. To seecall E leanor Coe at 667-6666 A VIEW FROM THE TOP2 bedrm. condo in CornellVillage w/2 full baths,modern kitchen, customtealwooc wall shelves,balcony, indoor parking,swimming pool, 24 hr. doorman. Great location at 52nd &Cornell $63,500 To see, callDon Tillery at 667 6666ELEGANT & SECURITY3 bedrms., 3 baths, modernkitchen (one yr. old), oakfloors refinished Iasi summer& parking in this outstandingeast Hyde Park coop To see,call J. Edward LaVelle at667 6666ENJOY THE SUMMEROn the balcony of thisspacious 1 bedrm condow modern kitchen & bath.Elevator bldg w/sundeck &laundry Parking providedVery low assmt. Priced at$32,500 Call Mrs. Dilon at667 6666PRICE ADJUSTEDShop & compare Ray School& campus. 3 bedrm. 2 bathcondo w/modern kitchen.Priced in upper $50's Ownerwants immediate sale Tosee, call Mrs. Haines at 667-6666NEW LISTING2 bedrms , 2 full baths & awealth of sunshine make thiscondo home perfect atS53 500. 56th & Blackstonelocation. Immed possession.To see, call Mrs Haines at667 6666SINGLE SSPECIALThis 2 rm coop apt. in attracfive well-kept bldgw/congenial neighbors &near transportation is asingle's dream come-truePriced for a pension budgetof S6.500 Low assmts. near49th & Drexel. To see. callAvery Williams at 667 6666(res 684 7347). HYDE PARK’SBEST LOCATION2 bedrms 2 baths plus studyplus modern kitchen plusfireplace plus parking plusplus plus! $62,500. CallRichard E Hild at 667 6666(res. 752 5384).1461 East 57th Street. Chicago Illinois 60637667-6666Daily 9 »o 5 Sat 9 to 1, Or call 667 6M6 AnytimeThe Chicago Maroon—Fridav. ADril 14.1978—19r- - lineh ii versifyChicagcPRESS w AnnouncesThe BooksEligiblefor theLaing Prize1977 / ; ~ *The Gordon J. Laing Prize is an annual award of$1,000 presented by the Board of University Publi¬cations to a faculty member whose book has beenpublished within the last two years. It is presentedto the author whose work adds the greatest distinc¬tion to the Press list. Any author who was a mem¬ber of the University of Chicago faculty on the datehis book was published by the University of Chi¬cago Press is eligible. The Laing Prize was named inhonor of Gordon J. Laing, who came to the Uni¬versity in 1899 and served as chairman of the LatinDepartment, dean of the Humanities, and as^general'editor of the Press for almost thirty years. ^NATIONAL MONETARY POLICIES AND THEINTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL SYSTEMEdited by Robert A. AliberTHE ECONOMIC APPROACH TOHUMAN BEHAVIORGary S. BeckerEARLY HYDRAULIC CIVILIZATIONIN EGYPTA Study in Cultural EcologyKarl W. ButzerCONFRONTATION IN CENTRAL EUROPEWeimar Germany and CzechoslovakiaF. Gregory CampbellADVENTURE, MYSTERY, AND ROMANCEFormula Stories as Art and Popular CultureJohn G. CaweltiEARLIEST MAN AND ENVIRONMENTS INTHE LAKE RUDOLF BASINStratigraphy Paleoecology. and EvolutionYves Coppens et al.SHEN PU-HAIA Chinese Political Philosopher of theFourth Century B tHerrlee G. CreelOIL RESOURCESWho Gets What How?Kenneth W. DamLEARNING ENVIRONMENTSEdited by Thomas G. David andBenjamin D. WrightTHE LITERATURES OF INDIAAn IntroductionEdward C. Dimock, Jr., et al.OCCULTISM, WITCHCRAFT, ANDCULTURAL FASHIONSEssays in Comparative ReligionsMircea EliadeENERGYThe Policy IssuesGary D. EppenRACIAL EQUALITY IN AMERICAJohn Hope FranklinMILTON FRIEDMAN'S MONETARYFRAMEWORKA Debate with His CriticsEdited by Robert J. GordonMENTALLY ILL MOTHERS ANDTHEIR CHILDRENHenry Grunebaum et al. . CAN ETHICS BE CHRISTIAN?James M. GustafsonCONTRIBUTIONS TO ANTHROPOLOGYSelected Papers of A. Irving HallowedEdited by Raymond D. FogelsonYOUTHThe Seventy-fourth Yearbook Part 1. of theNational Society for the Study of EducationEdited by Robert J. Havighurst andPhilip H. DreyerTHE CRADLE OF THE EASTAn Inquiry into the Indigenous Origins ofTechniques and Ideas of Neolithic and EarlyHistoric China. 5000-1000 B CPing-Ti HoON ECONOMICS AND SOCIETYSelected EssaysHarry G. JohnsonCHARLES E. MERRIAM AND THESTUDY OF POLITICSBarry D. KarlMENTAL HEALTH ANDGOING TO SCHOOLSheppard G. Kellam et al.AN ESSAY ON THE THEORY OFENLIGHTENED DESPOTISMLeonard KriegerTHE SUPREME COURT REVIEWEdited by Philip B. KurlandTRILOBITESA Photographic AtlasRiccardo Levi-SettiSCHOOLTEACHERA Sociological StudyDan C. LortieA RIVER RUNS THROUGH ITAnd Other Sti niesNorman MacleanA NATION OF BEHAVERSMartin E. MartyOLSON'S PENNY ARCADEElder OlsonON VALUE JUDGMENTS IN THE ARTSAnd Other EssaysElder OlsonUNIQUENESS AND DIVERSITY INHUMAN EVOLUTIONMorphometru Studies of AiistrahipithecinesCharles E. Oxnard SCHOOL POLITICS, CHICAGO STYLEPaul E. PetersonANTITRUST LAW'An Economic PerspectiveRichard A. PosnerNATURE AND CULTURE IN THE IUADThe Tragedy of HectorJames M. RedfieldPURSUING JUSTICE FOR THE CHILDMargaret K. RosenheimTEACHER EDUCATIONThe Seventy-fourth Yearbook, Part 2. of theNational Society for the Study of EducationEdited by Kevin RyanCULTURE AND PRACTICAL REASONMarshall SahlinsECONOMICS OF THE FAMILYMarriage. Children, and Human CapitalTheodore W. SchultzTHE CHANGING FACE OF THE SUBURBSBarry SchwartzQUEUING AND WAITINGStudies in the Social Organization ofAccess and DelayBarry SchwartzTHE LEGACY OF REINHOLD NIEBUHRNathan A. Scott, Jr.THE CITIZEN AND THE STATEEssays on RegulationGeorge J. StiglerHENRY JAMES-THE LESSONS OFTHE MASTERPopular Fiction and Personal Style in the19th CenturyWilliam VeederFIVE CENTURIES OF MAP PRINTINGDavid WoodwardTHE DEVELOPMENT OF ARUSSIAN LEGAL CONSCIOUSNESSRichard S. Wortman20—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April J 4.1978