Shimer CollegeU of C core in the countryBy Lynn SaltzmanHidden away 150 miles fromChicago, with an enrollment of 100students and a history of financialtroubles, Shimer College hasmanaged to maintain the Hut¬chins’ Plan of common core cur¬riculum more strictly than theUniversity of Chicago.Shimer College, in Mount Car-roll. Ill., was originally founded asthe Frances Shimer Junior Collegeof the University of Chicago andmaintains a close association withthe university through the ex¬change of students. Its legal affilia¬tion to the University, though, wasterminated in the 1950's due to theUniversity’s shift away from Hut-chin’s ideals.Robert Maynard Hutchins,University president from 1929 to1951, reorganized the College pro¬gram into divisions. Com¬ prehensive examinations and com¬mon year programs became man¬datory for all students.But under the administrationsfollowing Hutchins’ term, the Col¬lege started the shift away fromsuch strict common requirements.While the University haseliminated requirements such ascomprehensive exams over theyears, Shimer has refused tochange.When the University began toundergo anti-Hutchins’ trends,Shimer legally terminated its af¬filiation according to Larry Calbe,public relations director atShimer.“Bv 1958 a break-away faculty ofthe University of Chicago hadbegun to migrate to Shimer,because of their belief in Hutchins’doctrines,” said Cable.Shimer to p.2 The Karyn Kupcinet Playhouse at Shimer College The structure is a memorial toColumnist Irv Kupcinet’s daughter.Vol.87, No. 49 The University of Chicago © The Chicago Maroon 1978 Tuesday, April 18, 1978Bray seeks efficiency, improved patient careBy Jon MeyersohnThe appointment of financial ex¬pert David Bray as executivedirector of the University hospitalsmarks the most important stepthus far in a three-year effort tostreamline hospital management.News AnalysisFormer medical school deanDaniel Tosteson initiated an effortto recruit administrators, in¬cluding Bray, who could helpachieve a goal of improved patientcare coupled with efficientmanagement.In an interview Friday, Bray stressed this dual aim. He said itwill be his job to re-analvzemedical center spending andmanagement to improve theutilization of hospital resources.This, he said, wouldsimultaneously save money and“create more time for the care ofpatients.”Concern for the hospitalsmanagement has become moreacute since it suffered a deficitseveral years ago. Administratorsare worried that the hospitals —which currently have a budgetclose to $90 million a year — couldbecome a burden to the Universityif it is not carefully managed.A major studv of reorganizationand development aims begun lastD^vid Bray: “Quality patient care is our first priority.”(Photo by Sharon Pollack > year has just been completed.Bray believes that this study willresult in “an enormous benefit” in¬itially for the physical plant and inthe long run for all aspects of thehospitals.Physically, the 720-bed hospitalgroup is aging and inefficientlyorganized. Hospital officials beganthe study to determine the most ef¬fective means of modernizing thefacility and improving medicalcenter services in the next 10years.In addition plans for construc¬tion of a new hospital are currentlybeing considered by Universityand medical center ad¬ministrators. The new facilitywould improve patient care whileexpanding the research facilities.Besides the physical concerns.Bray believes the recently com¬pleted study will also give the $145million a year medical center direction because “now we have aset of objectives.''Bray admitted that the hospitalfacilities have been poorly manag¬ed. and that morale among the3500-person staff seems low. but hehoped that through some of the ob¬jectives of the study the medicalcenter could boost morale andcreate a sense of “perceived quaii-ty.”Prepared by six University ad¬ministrators and trustees and fourmedical school departmentchairmen — including Bray, vice-president for business and financeWilliam Cannon, and trusteeRobert Ingersoll — the study wasundertaken after the Universityrealized the hospitals were “alarge, potentially volatile area thatcould create enormous problems ifnot managed properly." said BrayWorried also by increasedgovernment intervention, the group began in May 1977 bycreating task forces on:•Possible changes in thephysical and financial areas of themedical center.•the size and goals of the hospitalin the next 10 years.•the problems of ambulatorycare.•improvements in emergencycare. and.•problems in obstetrics andgynecology, connected to ChicagoLying In.Lack of patient careAlthough the study describesseveral directions for the hospitalthat "establish a new phase for ouroperations." Bray said, severalfaculty members expressed doubtsthat the medical center had theleadership necessary to make any.substantial changes.Hospital to p.2Title IX complaintCollege student files HEW suitBy Jeanne DufortA complaint has been filed withthe department of Health. Educa¬tion and Welfare (HEW) chargingthe University with violating a Ti¬tle IX provision prohibiting sexdiscrimination in programs ad¬ministered by educational institu¬tions.The complaint stems from theUniversity’s refusal to allow third-year College student Ed Meade toplay varsity field hockey.Title IX has previously been us¬ed to allow women more access toand better funding tor athletic pro¬grams. but Meade’s complaint isone of a growing number of actionsinvolving men denied access to all-women’s teams, said HEWspokesman Tom Esbrook *Margaret Fallers. University-af¬firmative action officer, deniedthat the action involved- sex discrimination and said theUniversity will-respond to HEWwithin five weeks.Meade, who has practiced withthe varsity field hockey team torthree seasons, filed his originalcomplaint in July. 1976 "Incredi¬ble bureaucratic screwups"delayed action until recently, hesaid."My complaint is not specifical¬ly against the University.” saidMeade, "but l want to play tieidhockey and it's the only bodyagainst which 1 can bring action "If Meade's action is successful,women field hockey players will bedeprived of a chance to play, saidphysical education chairman MaryJean Mulvanev. She contends thatother coaches will refuse toschedule games against a coedChicago team"Title IX was initiated to takecare of people who have had limited opportunities to compete."says Mulvanev. "It doesn't makesense to let Ed play if that meansthe end of the program."Women's athletics will be "inworse shape than when Title IXcame into effect" if men can com¬pete with women for spots on varsi¬ty rosters, predicts MulvanevMulvanev said the Universitywill attempt to show that Meadehas not been deprived of a chanceto compete in other fali sports, thatthere are no local men's fieldhockey teams against which tocompete, and that field hockeyshould be granted a Title IX ex¬emption under the contact sport"provisions which already prohibitcoed teams in basketball, football,wrestling, and hockeyEsbrook expects to hear tromthe University within a few weeks,and predicts that the case will besettled by June 30.Hospital from p.l“The problem is that the physicians simp¬ly don’t care,” said one doctor. “No matterhow many feasible changes you consider,because many doctors here see patients asdiseases to be studied, not cared for, the re¬cent administrative changes will have nonoticable effect.”The physician complained that manyyoung faculty members were leaving theHospital “from frustration over the lack ofinterest in clinical care.”Bray also identified a similar problem ofpatient care, but was optimistic that thehospital could begin to implementnoticeable improvements changes now thatthe medical center’s central administrationhad been assembled.Under Bray and Dean Uretz, the medicalcenter is ready to begin a new phase ofoperations. In this new administration, costcontainment and the planned elimination ofwhat Bray called “inefficient aspects of theoperation, both because of outdated equip¬ment and the present administrative at¬titude,” are the primary goals.Characteristic of the new breed ofShimer from p.lShimer currently has core requirementsin humanities, social science, naturalscience, history, and philosophy, said Cable.The only sign of any deviation from Hut¬chins’ purity in the curriculum is in thelanguage requirement, which “is in suspen¬sion” said Cable. “The students and facultyare reviewing it for possible revision.”Like the University. Shimer was original¬ly founded as a coed institution, an innova¬tion at the time. But, said Cable, “All 12males who were originally enrolled atShimer joined the militia and wereslaughtered during the Civil War.” Shimerthen became an all-female institution anddid not again become co-ed until 1945.John Montes, a student at Shimer in 1971.said that “It was common throughout theschool's history for students to take coursesatU.ofC.”At one point Shimer even owned a frater¬nity house in Hyde Park. Students couldstay at the house, which was called Shimer medical center administrator, Bray stress¬ed “functional planning’’ and the“synergistic” impact of hospital operations.But in a more humanistic vein, he describedone of the aims of the feasibility study“gauging the hospital environment over thenext 10 years.”Bray called for a more “pleasant am¬bience” that would “inspire a more in¬dividualized approach” particularly tohospital admitting. He described thegeneral feeling in the medical center as “op¬timistic,” but admitted that officials werestill “identifyingproblems.”“The Hospital was obviously not deliver¬ing services or processing patients in a veryeffective way,” said the 37-year old formerdeputy associate director of the U.S. Officeof Management and Budget.Bray also admitted | split between theclinical and interests among the faculty,and hoped the hospital could attract a widemix of patients to satisfy faculty researchneeds.But some medical center administratorsand faculty members were skeptical aboutthe possibility of satisfying research needswhile improving Datient care.at UC, for a semester at a time and enroll incourses at the University,” said Montes.“Financial difficulties led to the closing of‘Shimer at UC’,” Montes added.Financial difficulties in recent years havealmost led to the closing of the entire school.“Previous administrations had runShimer $600,000 in the hole and caused thetrustees to vote several times to closeShimer,” said Cable.“Enrollment had dropped from over 200students to barely 100. All but twodomoritories have been closed and the foodservice has been terminated,” he added.“Shimer has refused to fold, though, andin recent semesters has begun to again showa profit and a slight increase in enroll¬ment,” said student Dan Shiner.“The remaining students would do well ina lifeboat,” said Cable. “They’re survivortypes.” According to Cable, the students arenow running the food service themselves,“preparing much better food than the over¬priced army rations our previous food ser- One senior administrator in the hospitalquestioned the impact Bray could have onthe medical center because, “although he isknown as an excellent fiscal manager, thereis little real way to implement realisticplans for improved patient care.”“We are in a vacuum right now,” said onefaculty member. “I don’t think anything isgoing to change.”“There is a continuity”Faculty members said that the overallmood in the hospital hinges on whether theinstitution becomes a “separate corpora¬tion” in the next 10 years.“Hospital independence is the fundamen¬tal issue right now, and we have to decidewhich way we will go.” said one ad¬ministrator.Bray shared concern for the issue, sayingthe health facilities had reached a “criticalmass' and that it was now necessary todetermine in which direction to proceed.But he said administrators were not yetclose to a decision on an independenthospital.“We have identified our priorities, andthat is one of them,” said Bray. “But wehave made no decision vet.”vice company had served.”Montes believes that Shimer’s financialtroubles may be a result of poor studentmorale. “Shimer is very isolated and somestudents miss the excitement of a big city,”he said.“Shimer is also not very well known out¬side of the hinterland of Mount Carroll, soit’s difficult to attract a lot of new students,”Montes added.Montes also indicated that the rigid com¬mon core requirements may be causingShimer’s financial problems and reducingits graduating classes to a meager 20 to 25students.“The first courses I took at Shimer wereart courses,” he said. “The professor wasan eccentric artist who lived like a hermitand painted off somewhere in the woodswhen he wasn’t teaching art courses. Then Irealized that I had taken all the art coursesthat I could and had to fulfill my commoncore requirements in the next two years inorder to graduate. I left.” The issue of hospital independence maybe a sensitive one to University ad¬ministrators, who have dealt “suspiciously”with medical center officials sinceTosteson’s sudden departure for Harvard inlate 1976, one hospital administrator said.Now that the medical center has formedits central administration under Uretz andseveral assistant deans, including Bray, ap¬prehensive faculty members and ad¬ministrators will soon be shown a “complex,systematic approach” said Bray.Bray concluded, “There is no vacuum.There is a continuity. Now we can provideadministrative direction as it functions inthe Hospital.”He seemed sure the “phase two” ofmedical center efforts to reorganize wouldbring real changes to the hospitals, anddespite their pessimism about improve pa¬tient care and administrative leadership,medical school faculty members seemready for a new direction.“To have an independently financed, effi¬cient, modern and personalized hospital onthe South Side of Chicago,” one prominentmedical school faculty member said, “is theessential goal for all of us.”Maroon Staff Meeting/ElectionT uesday, April 187 p.m., INH 303Election for Editor.All staff members must attend.Refreshments will be served2 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 18, 1978iNewsBriefsPoetry readingEight finalists for the Florence JamesAdams Poetry Reading Contest will readThursday, April 20, at 4 pm in the library ofIda Noyes Hall.The finalists are College students TimothyCarty, Michael Dabertin, Anne Nordhaus,Maile Pa’alami, Barry Rugo, PaulSchaefer, Ted Strom, and Divinity Schoolstudent Susan Turk. Contestants will readselections of their own choice.First prize is $125; $100 is the secondprize; third prize is $75, and fourth pirze is$50.NFS fellowshipsNational Science Foundation PortableFellowships were awarded to four fourth-year students and one first-year graduatestudent.The students receiving the awards areMakota Arai (physics), William Cwirla(chemistry), Peter Dordal (mathematics),Barbara Shaeffer (psychology/sociology),and John Zerolis (physics).Called “portable” because they can be us¬ed at a school of the student’s choice, thefellowships pay full tuition for three yearsplus an annual stipend of $3,900.Joan Guard, assistant to the dean ofstudents for graduate admissions andfellowships, described the fellowship as“one of the most prestigious.” GraduatingCollege students and first-year graduatestudents in the physical, biological, andsocial sciences (excluding history), as wellas those in linguistics and the conceptualfoundations of science, are eligible for theaward. Quantrell awardNominations for the Quantrell Awards arenow being accepted by the College.The $1,000 awards, given yearly since 1938at Spring Convocation, are for excellence inundergraduate teaching. Students are in¬vited to submit recommendations to anominating committee consisting of thedean of the College, the dean of students inthe University, and the dean of students inthe College.The deadlines for nominations is May 1.Nominations may be sent to the Office of theDean, Harper 209.Committee plansERA rallyThe Planning Committee for the Universi¬ty contingent of the Equal Rights Amend¬ment (ERA) Rally which will take place onSaturday, April 29, will show the film “HowWe Won the Vote” and sponsor guestspeaker Mary Savalas of the Committee forthe ERA on Thursday, April 20. at 8 pm onthe third floor of Ida Noyes Hall.Three states must ratify the ERA beforeMarch, 1979, if it is to become an amend¬ment to the Constitution. Illinois is con¬sidered a pivotal state in the fight for theERA since the amendment has beendefeated twice in the state legislature, butby small margins. Rally planners hope togenerate enough momentum in Springfieldas a result of the rally to gain ratification ofthe ERA in this legislative session.Mario Thomas appears at benefit for the ERA at The Pump Room/ Ml'"'Kraft CAtBar-B-Que Sauce o8o>) 59Libby's Deep BrBwnBeans (14 oz. cans) 4 cans 1e 149Detergent (giant Size - 49 oz.) XCountry Delight A ACCottage Cheese 24.m 99PePSi Cola (IZoi can,) 6 pack/ 1Golden Ripe OOCBananas 23 *Delicious OACApples Golden or Red . . . 39rUSDA Choice ^ 20Lamb Shoulder Chops 1 »>■Country Delight OACRainbow Sherbet o9 m*.To all our Jewish patrons a joyous Passover celebrationSale Dates: April 20 221226 E. 53rd(KIMBARK PLAZA)HOURS: MON. - SAT. 8:30 A.M. -7:50 P.M.SUN. 9-4:50 «ll*AN INVITATIONThe University of Chicago Bookstorecordially invites the faculty t>e^ber ofUniversity of Chicagofo visitThe College Marketing GroupMobile Book ExhibitThursday - April 20. 19789 00-4:00Parked in Front of the BookstoreOver 3000 new titles from 2 75 publishersFreshman through Graduate - texts and supplementsMost are complimentaryWhen the book fits the coursealsoManuscript reporting to the publishersandYou'll want to be sure you're on theCollege Marketing Group Mailing ListsOver 500 publishers use themA college traveler provideson-the-spot assistanceRonald Harris. MgrTextbook Department•TiftThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesdav, April 18 1978 — 3Friday April 21Dlil HUTCHINSON COMMONS r\y rIYI REYNOLDS CLUB57th & S. UniversityTickets Available at theReynolds Club Box OfficeChild Care Provided Sign Language InterpretationCASSECULVER&theBell StarBandThe University of ChicagoFlorence James AdamsPOETRY READINGCONTEST1st Prize $1252nd Prize $1003rd Prize $754th Prize $50Final Competition:April 20,1978 Library, Ida Noyes Hall 4:00 P.M. Student Government Activities CommitteeWALLACE DAVIS(A victim of a controversial shooting by Chicago Police)Speaking onPolice Brutality & RacismThursday, April 20 3:30East Lounge, Ida Noyes HailFree. All are welcomeThe David Bromberg BandandMaria MuldaurMay 6 8:30 pmMandel Hall$3, $4 w/fee; $5.50, $6.50Tickets now on sale at Reynolds Club Box Officeinobodyasked!He was in his twenties.So was she.Both were Catholic, unmarried,prayerful, creative.Both cared about peopleand cared for them.How come he never thoughtof the priesthood?How come she never thoughtof being a nun?"No one ever asked me','they said.Is this your story?No one ever asked you?Well, we're asking.— Mail Coupon Today!Please send information on: THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE COMMITTEE ON SOCIAL THOUGHT(THK IOHN U. NW H'W)|THE DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICAL LANGUAGESAND LITERATURESand' Ti ’f department of linguisticsannounce o series of lecturesbrDR.GREGORY NAGYProffsxor of Greek and LatinHarvard I diversityWednesday APPiL is i97» THE BEST OF THE ACHAEANSFRIDAY APRIL *i. is?* HERO OF EPIC, HERO OF CULTweonesoay April 2% 1979 PRAISE, BLAME, AND THE HEROFRIDAY APRIL it 197« ACHILLES BEYOND THE ILIADAll lectures will take placeat400 pm.inWilliam Rainey Harper Memorial Library • Room 13ft1116 East 591* streetAdmnsion <> without ticket and without charge1-13Diocesan PriestsBrothers □ NunsName - ' Religious PriestsLay Ministries'AddressCity State ZIPVOCATIONS COMMITTEE/SUPREME COUNCILKniGHTS OF coiumsus fNew Haven, CT 06507 “An invaluable aid to young Americanswho want to study and travel in other lands.”—SENATOR EDWARD M KENNEDYTHE NEW GUIDETO STUDY ABROAD1978-1979 Edffionby John A. Garraty, Lily von Klemperer, and Cyril J.H. TaylorA practical, authoritative, and up-to-datehandbook of year and summer programsfor high school students, college and uni-__ t^(M^^versity students, and teachers.$15.95 cloth; $5 95 paper-d-Harper Row ALL 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 Oatty 9-9 P.M./ Sat. 9-5 P.M.Parts Open Saturday H 12 NoonGET Y OURSELF *7#i The. flood" AT THEdry runDANCEApril 22 900 p.m.FEATURINGTtlf DC JAZZ MIDA ‘■‘practice’* dance for the GLENN MILLER DANCEInstruetors available for those ith two left feet.Ida Noyes The Student Activities Office and the Office of Radio & TVpresentAn Afternoon WithJOAN 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.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 18, 1978 — 5•I I J * Ml' ' »lU‘...j /! o i!y .if- i;> Xi.y.' • i ' - T- 1 iDoing it in Chicago ... the gamesBy R. W. RohdeMen’s athletics at the University ofChicago is undergoing rebirth.While the modern era of Maroon athleticsbegan almost a decade ago with the returnof varsity football, it has been only in thelast year that the program has flourished.In 1976, Chicago was an unaffiliated minorindependent school with a football team thathad just won their first game in three years.Other sport teams didn’t fare much betteron the whole, though you might not know it,due to a lack of coverage by campus media.The Field House was then a shell covering adirt area and one wooden basketball floor.Now, only two years later, Chicago hascome a long way, reaching a level ofrelative respectability. The football teamhas improved steadily and may have a win¬ning season this fall, while the basketballsquad stayed on the floor with this year’sNCAA Division I runner-up. The Universityis also attempting to join a division III athletic conference. The completion of theHenry Crown Field House renovations thiswinter immeasurably improved the athleticfacilities situation, besides the addition ofthe gate house and press box to Stagg Fieldlast fall and the anticipated completion ofeight tennis courts this spring.The direct cause of the renaissance can betraced to increased support. This supporthas come in both material and moral formfrom the administration, campus organiza¬tions, the media, and the student body.President John Wilson can take a lot of thecredit. As a regular at Bartlett pool and thus(by default) the most athletically inclinedpresident the University has had, Wilsonhas a natural interest in the prosperity ofChicago athletics. He has lobbyied for newfacilities and funds as well as attendingvarious athletic events. This has not goneunnoticed by the “Order of the C,”Chicago’s letter club, which made Wilson anhonorary member last fall.Campus organizations have also provided6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 18, 1978 large support. The Order of the C and theWAA provide constant services at majorathletic events. The Student Activities Of¬fice did a great deal to make both homecom¬ing and the Field House rededicationceremony a success. The last two yearshave also seen increased interest bystudents, enough so to warrant the broad¬casting of football and basketball games byWHPK and a doubling of space allocated tosports coverage by The Maroon.Men’s athletics encompasses 10 varsitysports: football, soccer, cross country,basketball, swimming, wrestling, fencing,(non-conference), track (indoor and out¬door), baseball, and tennis. The teams havebeen finishing in the middle of the con¬ference in most sports, though the trackteams tend to do better than average whilethe wrestling and soccer programs are hav¬ing their troubles. The wrestling squad wasoutclassed last season except for one or twoindividuals, while the growing soccer pro¬gram last fall won their first game in fouryears.There are also several sport clubs invarious stages of existence. Sport clubs areformed when enough people are interestedin a form of athletic competition that theUniversity doesn’t provide, such as therugby, ski, sailing, and crew teams. If a clubexists for a certain amount of time and pro¬ves it can provide a sustained interest, itmay apply to be accepted as a varsity sport.If the athletic department feels it canfinance another sport and that the sportdeserves the funds, it will then give it varsi¬ty statusVarsity athletics are funded directly fromthe top. Coaches submit their budgets to thedepartment, which then forms a compositebudget which goes to the board of trusteesthrough Den of students O’Connell.Money is also allocated to support sportclubs. A major chunk comes out of that forinsurance, and the rest is sent to the sportclub council to allocate as they see fit.The intramural department also receivesa large amoung of money. If there has beenone area of athletics that has been obliviousto the so called renaissance, it is the IMdepartment, for it is hard to improve onsomething so good. The change of leader¬ship in the office this year disrupted theusual efficiency with which the IM programis run, and further problems have resultedfrom some policy changes enacted by direc¬tor Dan Tepke, but things should be back tobetter-than-normal next year.The “renaissance” should be greatly af-m / fected this weekend when the Midwest Col¬legiate Athletic Conference meets to decideif it will accept Chicago as a member.The University was first accepted into theMCAC conference on a temporary basis latein 1976, 30 years after the Maroons droppedout of the Big Ten. Chicago was not acceptedas a member immediately due to objectionscentering around the Stagg scholarship pro¬gram, a four-year full-tuition no obligationgift awarded to three high school seniorsevery year on the basis of academic andathletic performance. Some conferencemembers saw this as a violation of MCACrules against athletic scholarships, whileChicago took the position that it was not anathletic scholarship due to the no obligationclause. The conference met last Novemberfor the decision, but postponed the verdictuntil the annual spring meeting, on April 22and 23 at Ripon College.Men to p.8(Photo by Jeanne Dufort)fS.v 4ak'.t*that jocks (and other people) playBy Jeanne DufortTitle IX may have spurred spendingsprees for women’s athletic departments atNorthwestern and UCLA, where bought andpaid for teams are now the norm for men’sand women’s programs alike, but don’t gosearching for big bucks around the Chicagowomen’s athletic offices in Ida Noyes Hall.Women make up less than a third of theenrollment here, and the sports dollarsreflect that numerical discrepency. So whilegreat strides have been made m the dozen orso years since Mary Jean Mulvaney and PatKirby joined the women’s program, the soft-ball team plays on one of the worst varsityfields in the state and the track teams com¬petes in cotton shorts and T-shirts.And don’t let the highly touted intramuralparticipation figures fool you, either. Totalparticipation runs as high as 80 percentamong undergraduates only because almostevery male in the College enters at least oneevent. Less than half the women at Chicago participate.The Field House renovation did go a longway toward narrowing the facilities gap atChicago. Both basketball teams were hous¬ed there this winter, and the women’s trackteam was able to get a head start on thespring season with winter indoor workouts.But next fall, the women’s volleyball teammay not be so enthralled with its new head-,quarters, because recreationalvolleyballers have found the overhead lightsdifficult to deal with. ,Heavy spring rains forced softball coachPat Kirby to shift her field from thenortheast to the northwest corner of NorthField. Drainage on the field is slightly betterwith the shift, but now fielders must battlewith both the setting sun and bumpy turf.Plans are in the works for a major overhaulof the facility, but financial constraintsshould delay the project for some time.But the picture for women’s athletes onthis campus is not completely bleak.Chicago has not lagged behind the nation wide upbeat trend in women’s sports and, infact, has done its share to encourage itChicago established one of the firstathletic scholarship programs for women in1973, with the start of the Gertrude DudleyScholar program. When Parade Magazinepublicized the awards, the response wasoverwhelming. Over 1000 letters from aspir¬ing women athletes flooded the women’sphysical education offices within a week ofthe article, prompting the University to of¬fer two scholarships rather than the oneoriginally planned.The awards are modeled after the Staggscholarships, granting full tuition for fouryears to promising scholar-athletes. Theaward does not require the recipient to com¬pete intercollegiately, but the presence ofDudley Scholars has upgraded the caliber ofwomen’s play significantly. One of the firstScholars competed twice in the swimmingnationals, and others led Chicago to thestate softball championship last spring.Chicago has seven varsity teams forwomen: basketball, field hockey, softball,swim, tennis, track and field, andvolleyball. The most successful small col¬lege in the Illinois Association for Inter¬collegiate Athletics for Women last year,Chicago won state titles in tennis and soft-ball, finished second in basketball, andfourth in track and volleyball. A fieldhockey player and a swimmer competed innational meets.But chances for women to compete don’tbegin and end with the varsity teams.Several years ago, some enterprisingChicago women brought competitive rowingback to the Midw-est. Rising early to greetthe sun as they labored up and down the Lin¬coln Park Lagoon, the crew members rankamong the most self-sufficient of Chicagoathletes. A massive fundraising appeal(Hyde Park is blanketed with ‘stroke’ T-shirts) netted the crew club enough moneyto purchase a racing shell and van to travelannually as far as Boston for regattas.Somewhat newer, but hardly lacking in¬itiative, is the fledgling women’s soccerclub, which won the national indoor cham¬pionship in Boston last month. The club,formed last summer and affiliated with theIllinois Women’s Soccer League, hosts fourBig Ten schools (Purdue, Minnesota, Il¬linois, and Ohio State) this weekend.Intramural entrants make up in en¬thusiasm what they lack in numbers and ex¬perience. In the graduate and open recleagues, weekly practices and hotly con¬tested games are fast becoming the norm. One all-woman team competed in the men’ssoftball league last summer, perseveringwhile suffering one loss after another. Afteryears of cheering on the sidelines, mere par¬ticipation by women is news.Strides are also being made off the play¬ing field. Almost two years ago, Mary JeanMulvaney was appointed chairman of themerged departments of physical educationand athletics for men and women, makingher one of a handful of women in the countryresponsible for men’s varsity programs.The Women’s Athletic Associationpredates even Stagg s venerable Order ofthe C, said to be the oldest lettermen’sorganization in the country, but until veryrecently WAA graduates vanished whentheir playing days were over. WAA alumnihave created the Women’s Advisory Boardfor Athletics, which raises money forwomen’s varsity teams. With so-called big-time men’s varsities nationwide derivingWomen to p.8Life in the fast trackBy Abbe FletmanFive or six times a week, I pull on a Na¬tional Lampoon T-shirt, gray sweats, ahooded University of Chicago sweatshirtand wool socks. I tie radiant blue shoes, withloud yellow stripes down the sides, in a dou¬ble knot Then I take a deep breath, pin mykeys to my sweats, and put myself through a30 to 60 minute ordeal that some calltherapy, others torture. I confess, I'm a jog¬ging addict.During tne past tew years millions havebeen bitten by the pervasive jogging bug.Slow endurance jogging, as practiced bywould-be athletes, and long-distance run¬ning, reserved for the swifter circles, aretwo of the fastest growing sports in the coun¬try. The reasons behind this phenomenonare easy to understand. In our sedentarysociety, jogging or running offers a chanceto get in shape and a way to stay in shape toeveryone from pot-bellied middle-agers tosensitive yet shapeless students. Its timeand money costs are ulmost nil, and itsbenefits almost infinite.Enthusiasts claim jogging or runningfirms them up, helps them lose weight,relieves tension, makes them virtually im¬mune to heart disease and improves theirsex lives. Many joggers and runners agreethat running has changed their lives.Some experts say that running is popularbecause it gives the runner a sense of con trol and of well-being. In an age when peopleoften feel dwarfed by bureaucracy andmachines, runners experience a feeling offreedom because they can go almostanywhere on their own two feet.jogging and running addicts are as visibleon the University campus as anywhere else.Many professors, staff members, andstudents run or jog, for a variety of reasons.One student confessed that she startedrunning because she loves ice cream andwanted to be able to indulge her sweet toothwithout gaining weight. Now she Itoves run¬ning as much as she loves Mint ChocolateChip.Another student said he comes from afamily with a long history of heart disease.Basically, he runs for his lifeIt s easy to give jogging a try. no equip¬ment is necessary. All beginners need aretwo legs, sturdy lungs, and a good pair ofshoes. (Sneakers will do. but never confusethese with "running shoes” — in the eyes ofrunners, mistaking Nikes or New Balancefor P.F Flyers is like asking someone in aBrooks Brothers suit if he bought it inGimbel’s bargain basement.Beginners should start out slowly. Twomiles a day, three times a week, should takeabout three hours, including stretching anda shower. This distance and frequency is theminimum for getting in good shape andmaintaining itThe metamorphosis from beginner to ad¬dict is a slow, often painful process. TheRunning to p.8Men from p.6Chicago is committed to the idea of join¬ing a conference, because it provides steady• play and security in scheduling, amongother things, but has a stronger commit¬ment to the Stagg program.The situation changed with a recentNCAA division III ruling preventing anyathletic scholarships except for need.Chicago is planning to comply, and will notgrant any more aid to athletes except forneed after Aug. 1, 1979. “That should put usin the conference,” said athletic directorJeff Metcalf. If it does, a major part of therebirth will be complete.Women from p.6large support from doting alumni, the for¬mation of the WABA may be a sign thatChicago will support quality women’s pro¬grams in the years to come.The future of women athletes at Chicagoseems promising. As high school girls’sports continue to grow, the influx of trainedathletes will improve the quality of varsityteams. And as funds increase, the facilitiesgap should disappear. Even better, theUniversity now appears ready to support atop-notch program for women athletes.It almost has one now. Running from p.7development from jogger to runner is evenmore elusive. Some never quit the ranks ofjoggers, doomed to forever plod along in¬stead of whizzing by swiftly and gracefully.After a few months, many beginners findthemselves taking longer, more frequentwork-outs, religiously reading Runner’sWorld, a magazine devoted to all aspects ofthe sport, and fantasizing about entering theBoston Marathon. They’ve got the bug.And it only gets worse. Once joggers areconverted, they begin to proselytize. Tothem, running is a religion.There are some diehard Chicago runnerswho never go indoors. There they are, circl¬ing the Midway when the thermometershows 10 below. But as they pass bundled uppedestrians and heated cars, their lungs arebarely straining and they always look warmand serene.There comes a time in every runner’straining life when he pushes himself for 40or 50 minutes. All of a sudden, his feetbecome light as air. the sky and path fuse,and (apologies to Fat Boone) everything isbeautiful. This mystical experience is themuch publicized “runner’s high”. It hap¬pens infrequently, but once experienced,keeps many people running.Running is not without its critics. Somedenounce it as boring and repetitive. Otherscharge that it can be harmful, since runnersoften endure minor injuries such as shinsplints, torn ligaments and pulled muscles.Running addicts, however, shrug off thesecriticisms immediately. A sure cure for anyailment, they'll say. is in running longer andharder." I am continually fascinated at the difficultyintelligent people have in distinguishingwhat is controversial from whatis merely offensive."-Nora EphronYou arc cordially invitedto anautographing partx forPhilip B. Kurlandauthor ofWATERGATE AND THE CONSTITUTIONonFriday afternoon, April 21stfrom 2 to 4at the University of Chicago Bookstore5750 S. Ellis Avenue The Maroon needsan Ad ManagerGood payCall 753-3263GetThe Great Ratesof Budget!50 Free miles perday on all cars12.95 a dayminimum priceTwo locations to serve you:5508 Lake Park493-7900 We feature Lincoln-Mercury cars8642 So. Chicago374-0700All our cars areclean, well maintainedlate mode! cars.Now ... for Sears customers: Budget Rent a Car operates authorizedSears Rent a Car Distribution Centers at most Budget locations.Locally call 374-1121 or 493-1 774A Budget System Licensee.Sears,1 Al* HOf H II f AND O •8 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesdav. AdmI 18, 1978CalendarTuesdayDepartment of Mathematics: "Lie Groups,”Jon Alperin, 11:30 am, Eckhart 133.Rockefeller Chapel: Lecture-demonstrationby University organist, Edward Mondello,12:15 pm, Rockefeller Chapel.Department of Economics: Seminar on Ap¬plied Price Theory, 1:30 pm, Social Sciences106; “Unemployment Insurance and theEmployment Decisions of Married Women,”Daniel Hamermesh, MSU, 1:30 pm, Rosen-w-ald 405; “Network Design and Rail TransitPlanning,” Bruce Mainzer, Howard Permustand Inwon Lee, RTA, 1:30 pm, SocialSciences 402; “The Optimum Quantity ofMoney in a Perfect Foresight MonetaryModel,” Luis Locay and Oded Palmon, 3:30pm, Social Sciences 402.Department of Germanic Languages &Literatures and the Norwegian CulturalFund: “The Sage of Skiing: Some Early Sket¬ches,” John Weinstock, Univ. of Texas, 4 pm,Classics 21.Episcopal Council: Evensong, 4:30 pm, BondChapel.Kundalini Yoga: Organizational meeting ofthe UC Kundalini Yoga organization, 5 pm,Ida Noyes east lounge.Calvert House: Bible study prayer group, 7pm, Calvert House.Ki-Aidido Society: Meeting, 6 pm, FieldHouse.Undergraduate Math Club: “The Ham Sand¬wich Problem,” A Liulavicius, 7:30 pmEckhart 206.International House Folkdancing: Teachingand refreshments, 7:30 pm, I-House.Hillel: TV viewing of “Holocaust,” 8 pm,Hillel. Science Fiction Club: Meeting, 8 pm, IdaNoyes Hall.DOC Film: “The Berlin Express,” 7:15 pm,and “The Fearmakers,” 9 pm, Cobb Hall.WednesdayUniversity Feminist Organization: “The In¬tellectual Corrective Function of FeministScholarship,” Harriet Gross, GovernorsState Univ, luncheon discussion, 12 noon.Women’s Center, Blue Gargoyle.Department of Political Science-The Commit¬tee on Western European Studies: “The Sum¬mits of the State: Public and Private Elites inFrance,” Pierre Birnbaum, 12 noon. PickLounge.Committee on Genetics Colloquium:“Hydrocarbon Metabolism in Pseudomonasputida: A biochemical and Genetic Approachto an Oily Problem,” Spencer Benson, 12noon, Zoology 29.Department of Economics: Faculty luncheon,12 noon, International House; ResourceEconomics Workshop - “Growing Oil in aVineyard: Economics of Synthetic Fuels,”Reuel Shinnar, CC of NY, 1:30 pm, Wieboldt301; “Full-Information Maximum LikelihoodEstimation of the Direct Implicit Addilog De¬mand Model,” William Barnett, FederalReserve System, 3:30, Rosenwald 11.Christian Science Organization: Discussionof Saturday’s lecture, 12 noon, Harper East586.Hillel: Students for Israel, “Why IsraelRefuses to Negotiate with the PLO”Yeshayahu Har-El, 12 noon, Hillel; TV view¬ing of “Holocaust,” 7:30 pm, Hillel.Rockefeller Chapel: Recital by RobertLodine, University Carillonneur, 12:15 pm,Rockefeller Chapel.Crossroads: English class for foreign women,2 pm, 5621 S. Blackstone.Committee on Cognition and CommunicationColloquium: “Doctoring the Visual Image:Operations on Mental Representations,” Patricia Carpenter, Carnegie-Mellon, 4 pm,Pick 016. %The John U. Nef Fund, Classics andLinguistics Departments: “The Best of theAchaeans,” Dr. Gregory Nagy, Harvard, 4pm, Harper 130. (the first in a series of fourlectures)Department of Chemistry - The MorrisKharasch Memorial Lectures: “In¬tramolecular Diels-Alder Reactions,” Dr.Howard Sommins, Research & Development,E.I. Dupont de Nemours Co., 4 pm, Kent 103.University Duplicate Bridge: Meeting, newplayers welcome, 7 pm, Ida Noyes.Racquetball Club: Meeting, 5:30 pm, FieldHouse, near courts.Badminton Club: Meeting, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes Gym.Tai Chi Club: Meeting, 7:30 pm. BlueGargoyle.UC Christian Fellowship: “Building anEvangelistic Lifestyle,” 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Women's Union: Film showing - “How WeGot the Vote,” and speaker from the Commit¬tee for the ERA, 8 pm, Ida Noyes Sun Parlor.Country Dancers: Meeting, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.DOC Film: “On Dangerous Ground,” 7:15 pmand “Bigger Than Life,” 9 pm, Cobb Hall.ThursdayCenter for Middle Eastern Studies: Ha-Sadnah, “Israeli-Iranian Relations: APreliminary Overview,” Jerrold Green, 12noon, Pick 218; “The Legal and Social Statusof Women in Iran,” 4 pm. Classics 18.Episcopal Council: Eucharist, 12 noon, BondChapel.Genetics 395 Advanced Genetics: “Transloca¬tion & Illegitimate Recombination by theTetracycline Resistant Element TnlO," Dr.Nancy Kelckner, Harvard, 2:30 pm, Cumm¬ings 101. Department of Economics: “Effects of Com¬modity Price Stabilization on ExchangeRates,” John Nash, 3:30 pm, Social Sciences106.Committee on Cognition and Communication:"‘The Storage and Retrieval of SocialKnowledge,” John Gumperz, Berkeley, 4 pm,Pick 022.Department of Germanic Languages &Literatures: “Oedipus, Hamlet, and DonCarlos," Adre Lorant (Universite de HauteBretagne), 3:30 pm, Classics 21.Department of Microbiology: “Killing ofHyphal Forms of Fungi by HumanLeucocytes,” Richard Diamond, MichaelReese, 4:30 pm, Cummings 11th floor.Judo Club: Workout, 6 pm, Bartlett gym,beginners welcome.Ki Aikido: Meeting, 6 pm, Field House.Christian Club: “Christianity: Credible or In¬credible?” discussion, 7 pm, Pierce Tower,9th floor.Table Tennis Club: Meeting, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes Hall.Women’s Softball Team vs. Trinity College, 4pm, North FieldARTSRegenstein Library Special Collections Ex¬hibit Program: Exhibit Opening - “The Eigh¬teenth Century Views its Past,” ExhibitionGallery, first floor. Regenstein.Smart Gallery: Exhibit Opening - Germanand Austrian Painting of the 18th Century,5550 Greenwood.Law School Film: “The Letter,” 8:30 pm, Law-School Auditorium.Court Theatre: Opening - “She Stoops to Con¬quer.” 8:30 pm, Mandel Hall.DOC Film: “Les Biches,” 7:15 pm and 9:30pm, Cobb Hall.The efforts of Amnesty InternationalBv Jim LeopardIn the spring of 1975, when the Universityof Chicago/Hyde Park Chapter of AmnestyInternational (AI) was just being formed,the group heard remarkable testimony fromMr. Edison Zvogbo, a native ofRhodesia/Zimbabwe and a former Amnesty“prisoner of conscience.”According to Zvogbo, were it not for theconcern expressed on his behalf by groupssuch as our own, he would have early givenup all hope of survival and eventualfreedom. What sustained him throughouthis ordeal, he stressed, was the knowledgethat someone was aware of his plight andcared enough to protest his imprisonment.Since that time the local AI chapter hasworked to secure the release of aParaguayan anthropologist, A Brazilianstudent, a Peruvian union leader, and Ke¬nyan legislator, and has helped to publicizeand protest the incarceration, torture andmurder of thousands of persons in Chile.Currently, Amnesty/Hyde Park is involv¬ed in two cases. The first concerns threepersons now in prison in the GermanDemocratic Republic: Evelin Helmstedt,arrested by East German authorities duringher attempt to flee across the border into theFederal Republic of Germany, andEckhardt Goldack and Jurgen Winkler, whowere arrested for their efforts to aidHelmstedt’s escape.The actions taken by the GDR govern¬ment are in clear violation of the UniversalDeclaration of Human Rights (Article 13)and the United Nations International Cove¬nant on Civil and Political Rights (Article12), both of which guarantee freedom ofmovement and the right to leave any coun¬try. including one’s own. A second and more urgent case is that ofCharm Ndabe Mukuwane. A citizen ofRhodesia/Zimbabwe, Mukuwane was ar¬rested in 1975. Since then he has been held inpreventive detention under the EmergencyPowers (Maintenance of Law and Order)Regulations. According to this law, whichhas been in effect since Rhodesia’s declaredindependence from Britain in 1965.Mukuwane may be detained indefinitely atthe discretion of the Minister for Law andOrder. The Emergency Powers Regulationis one of several laws under which a prisonpopulation of more than 1200 detainees isnow being held.The Rhodesian prison structure, likeRhodesian society, is organized accordingto strictly racial-economic considerations.Consequently, prisoners of European originreceive the most favorable treatment, whileAsians and people of mixed races, existunder fortunate conditions. The blackAfrican sector is subjected to the leasthumane environment. Allegations of tortureand deaths in detention are numerous andindependently verified. Included among themethods of torture are beatings, electricshocks, head-first immersions into barrelsof water until unconsciousness, and threatsof castration.Since the government of Ian Smith hasrecently expressed its commitment toqualified black majority rule. Amnesty In¬ternational is determined to taking full ad¬vantage of this crucial period to press itsdemands for the release of all prisoners ofconsciousness. As a participant in this cam¬paign. Amnesty’Hyde Park is calling uponboth the student body and the Hyde Parkcommunity to provide moral and financialsupport for the large group of Rhodesianprisoners who are unlikely to be freed On Sunday, April 23rd. the First UnitarianChurch of Chicago, located at the corner of57th Street and Woodlawn Avenue will hostthe Amnesty/Hyde Park Poster Campaign.From 10:00 am until 3:00 pm. the local AImembership will be exhibiting a series oflimited-edition art posters. The posters havebeen reproduced from the original worksand donated to Amnesty International by 15major contemporary artists from 11 dif¬ferent countries and 4 continents. In addi¬tion to taking orders for posters. AImembers will provide literature and help toanswer any questions concerning the situa¬tion of Mukuwane. the Rhodesian campaignin general, or other matters relating to Amnesty’s work around the world. All pro¬ceeds from this campaign will be used toprovide prisoner relief for Mukuwane andhis family, and to help finance the costs ofsending parcels of clothing to the generalprison population in Rhodesia/Zimbabwe.Donations of used clothing are also welcomeSunday.James Leopard is chairman of the Universi¬ty of Chicago/Hyde Park Chapter of Amnes¬ty International.(Photo by Carol Studenmund)10 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 18, 1978CLASSIFIED ADSSPACE2 rooms in Ige house shared by otherstudents/employees. 1 bl. from co-op.washer/dryer & other extras. Prefernon-smoker at least 25 who wants tolive in coop (indiv. food). 947-0331,Kathy.Large 1 br apt carpeted $215/mo493 3822.Wanted 3 bedroom apt for summersublet, fall option desirable. Call Mary753-0017.Sublet furnished 1 bdrm May fo midJune, fall option. 51 8. blackstone.363 3457 or 947-6471.HYD PK nr UC, 1-2-3 bedrm apts wellkept bldg nr 1C, bus park, lake. Reas.HU8 0718.2nd yr law student from A Arbor work¬ing for UC this summer, wishes tohouse/apt sit, sublet, become room¬mate, from mid May thru 9/1. Actualdates very flexible 313/764 9015 COL¬LECT after 10 pm.Wanted: Studio or one-bedroom apart¬ment starting May, June, or next fall.Up to $160 month, including utilities.Peter, 288 1082.Room in apt available now til Sept. 2blocks from Regenstein furnished241-5457.Beverly Shores, IN 4 bedrooms IV2baths plus liveable basement on 2 lotsnear Lake. New vinyl siding furnaceand water heater. Includes ap¬pliances. National Park leaseback ex¬pected. $45,000 call Renard atCallahan Realty 219-926-4298.Apt to sublet from end of June to beg ofSept. 4 rooms. Good loc. cool. Fall option poss $155 Call Sam 955-2541 Keeptrying.Large prof home 10 rms 3'/2 bathsporch drway AC 5 min walk to campusfor rent furnished Sept 78-July 79 $750per mo 324 4481.Sublet for summer 78 wanted: 1 bedrmor studio, near campus Please callRachel, 753-2249 ext 1203.Woman seeks room in apt Need immediately. WOuld like to keep cat ifpossible. Call 955 4176 Keep trying.APARTMENTS AVAILABLE Idealfor UC students, 5442 Harper. Call D)3-4255, 3-7 pm, ask for Dale Soberano.Purdue Student wants to sublease 1bdrm apartment or efficiency fromMay 1 to Aug 31. Write Bryan GloveBox 140; Shreve Hall; W. Lafayette,INIV2 rm turn apt avail now $125/mo. OnUC bus routes and lake. Renewal optfor summer. Gary 363-8318, 7-11 pm.2 bdrm, turn apart, or house in UCarea needed to sublet Oct 78-June 79 byvisiting Prof U of C. No children, nopits. Contact Arthur Parsons. PierceHall, Dept of Sociology, Smith College,Northampton, Mass. 01603 (413) 5861243.RECORDSWANTED PEOPLE WANTEDInterest in Law? See a trial. UC LawSchool Trial Practice needs jurorsnext 4 Sat. Call 947 9383 or 366 8166 6-10pm.FOTA Noontime Outdoor Dramaevent offers you a stage and audience(the Hutch Crt masses). Prepare &perform skit, monologue, excerptfrom play, a song, a dramatization ofThucydides, whatever - May 9. CallJphn 753-3493, leave your name andnumberWant to get involved in the RepublicanParty? Full 8, Part-time telephonesolicitation positions available. $3 perhour; flexible hours. Call Fred Bush,641-6410.Overseas Jobs.-Summer/year round.Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia,'etc. All fields, $500 1200 monthly, ex¬penses paid, sightseeinh. Free info-Write: BHP Co, Box 4490 Dept 11Berkeley CA 94704.Interested in serving as a subject for apsycholinguistic experiments, Dept ofBehavioral Sciences? Pay is $2/hr. Toregister call 753 4718.Help need general housekeeping doneduring spring. Also want someone todo same during the summer. Hoursand rates loose. Call r. Zonia 34549 or548-4196.Part time secretary for rest of quarterand summer. 9 hrs/wk. $3.38/hr. Morehours during summer. At StudentGovernment Office Call 753-3273.Want to spend summer sailing theCaribbean? The pacific? Europe?Cruising other parts of the worldaboard sailing or power yachts? Boatowners need crews! For free info, senda 13 cent stamp to SKOKO, box 20855,Houston, TX 77025.PEOPLE FOR SALETYPING Call Marilyn Dorn 848 4753or.?53-4141.SPANISH Lessons and tutoring- Alllevels. Call Marilyn Dorn, 848 4753 or753-4141.PROFESSIONAL TYPING Articlesresumes, term papers, theses. Xeroxcopying. Brookfield, IL 312/485-7650and 387 0889.RESUMES. Stand out of the crowd, leta professional do it. Student rates. CallChris Kelly 787-6574.Artwork Illustration of all kinds, let¬tering, hand-addressing for invitations, etc Noel Price. 493-2399.Researchers- Free-lance artistspecializes in just the type of graphicwork you need. Noel Price, 493-2399.Figures drawn for scientific, medicalor other professional publications ortheses. Reasonable rates. 667-8053thesis, Dissertations, Term Papers,Inc. 'Foreign language gen-corres.Latest. IBM corrective SEL IItypewriter Reas rates. Mrs. Ross 239-4257, bet 11 am 8, 5 pm SCENESAll Day Summer Program for 6,7,8 yrolds and pre-schoolers: swim, fieidtrips, sports, art, dancing, lunch incl.Sojourner Truth 4945 Dorchester 7am 6 pm, 538 8325.Department of, Germanic Languages& Literatures presents a lecture byAndre Lorant (Universite de HauteBretagne) on "Oedipus, Hamlet, andDon Carlos,” at 3.'30pm, on Friday,April 21, in Classics 21.FREE PARTY beer and chips for allalumni/ae pf Jesuit high schools, col¬leges. or university. Friday, April 21,8:30 pm at Jesuit House 5554 S.Woodlawn, meet some old friends.COOKING CLASSES: Chinese and International. Full participation. Dayand evening classes limited to sixstudents each. Wendy Gerick.KE8 1324.Quaker meeting Thursdays noon Vic¬tor Klausen'srm, CTS.The Department of GermanicLanguages and Literatures presents alecture by Richard Exner (Univ ofCalifornia) on "Androgyny inLiterature," at 4:15 pm, in Classics 21on Thursday, April 20.FOR SALEDoctoral Gown, $50; hood (hist), $30;cap, $5, D. Nodtvedt, 2236 EdgewoodDrive Boulder, CO.1971 MGB 4 spd AM/FM, 2 new tires60,000 mi, moving — must sell. $1500orbest offer After 6 pm: 643-0341 or call721 5461 and leave messageVW Van 73 red white $2300 call Bill at798 2800.Got a BIKE to sell? Call Rekha 6846180 am/pm.2 BR Condo in E Hyde Pk 493 3822.Norwegian Elkhound- med size veryfriendly, some show pts. beautiful col¬oring. IV2 yrs, quiet 8, housebroken. allshots. Great pet and watchdog. $125947-0331.Upright piano $150 tall evenings 241 -71071971 DATSUN 510 Wagon $600 or bestoffer. Call 752-7669 eves.4846 S Kimbark Ave Sun April 23, 9 1pm, 3 families Yard and basementsale: maple bedroom set, oak fur¬niture, cherrywood record cabinet,clothes, toys, lots of goodies. KE6 4288.PASSPORT PHOTOSWhile-U WaitMODELCAMERS1344 E 55th St 493-6700.TAI CHI CH'UANThe UC Tai Chi Club meets everyWednesday at the Blue Gargoyle, 5655S University at 7:30. Tai Chi is soft,flowing and balletic. Therapeutic anda rational system of self-defense.PERSONALSWho is Stephan Leacock?Rugby 4pm everyday at Stagg Field.DATING SERVICE T'~Low cost, over 1200 members. 274-6940 To she who knows the Lord's properbirthplace and identity: Good luck andcongrats.J You may not be a sexist, but you'rea space caseSpeakersFINAL CALLSeder Placements and Meal Reservetions should be made immediately atHillel, SOrry mailing service delayedyour Spring mailing.STUDENTSFOR ISRAEL12 noon, Wednesday, April 19 at Hillel,speaker Yeshayahu Har El "WhyIsrael Refuses to Negotiate with thePLO."WANTTOSELLYOUR CAR?We will pay top dollar for your presentcar. Come in or call Drexel Chevrolet,4615 S Cottage Grove, 538-4600 ask forSam Greenberg.APL SEMINARIntroduction to APL language seminarrescheduled to Wednesday, April 19,3:30, Rl 180 APL now available fortrial on Dec 20 computer.POETS-ESTHETESOut of closet and onto Quad! TwoFOTA Noontime events. Read yourown work and run poetic relay race,May 5. Help push Modern Poetry May8 John 3-3444.PAN PIZZADELIVEREDThe Medici Delivers from 5-10:30weekdays, 5-11:30 weekends, 667 7394Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourself.UNIV FEMINISTORGANIZATIONWednesday April 19 noon luncheondiscussion! "The Intellectual Correcfive Function of Feminist Scholarship," Harrient Gross, Women'sCenter, Blue Gargoyle.LEARN FRENCHStudents (beg or adv) children,travellers, learn French with an exprnative teacher ph 324 8054FLAMINGOON THE LAKEStudio, l bdrm apts fur, unfur, short,long term rentals Parking, pool, rest,trans. 5500 Shore Dr. 752 3800FOLK DANCINGJoin us at Ida Noyes Hall for international folkdancing each Sunday andMonday at 8 pm Mon beginners, sungeneral level, with teaching bothnights.We pay cash for used Records, alltypes, 33 RPM only. Second HandTunes 1701 E 55th 684-3375 or 262-1593•Eye EunMWtiofls•Confect Lenses (Soft & Herd)•Prescriptions FilledDR MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Pork Shopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363FLAMINGO APTS.5500 S. Shore DriveStudio and One BedrmApts. Furn. & Unfurn.Short & Long Term RentalsParking, pool, restaurant,drycleaning, valet, deli.24 hr. switchboard. U of Cshuttle bus Vj blk. away.Full carpeting & drapes incl.Special University RatesAvail.7S2-3800VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1 Vi andIVl Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$171 to $266on AvailahiliixAll I lililie* includedAt ( ampas ll„s Slop324-0200 Mrs. (iroak Travel CheaplyCAMPING THROUGH EUROPEGreat Britain 21 days: England, Wales, Scotland, $298.00 plus air fareArtie Circle 22 days: Germany, Denmark, Norway, Finland, Sweden$405.00Western Europe 22 days: France, Italy. Austria, Switzerland, Germany,Holland, Belgium, $406.00Greece 28 days: Germany, Austria, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria,Turkey, Greece, Italy, Belgium $418.00Plus many more Russia, North Africa, South AmericaAll departures are from London. Air fare from Chicago. Budget British Airways - Peak$349.00, Off Season $299.00 or any charter from $349.00CALL PROMENADE TRAVEL799-2606 There are 30 spaces per Hne, including all letters,spaces and punctuation marks. Circle all lettersto be capitalized.ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE■ Cutm out this^ form andbring it toThe ChicagoMaroonIda NoyesHall 3042 o.i5“5 ^ gO _0j-Cc 5 c.£(/) §OI 5 oju. 3t 3 >“ 1—1—iL 1i —i .i—_| iii— ii —ii1• —1—1—ti —iiLThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, Aril 18, 1978 — 11&mmwmGood times are great times for the easy taste ofKING Of BEEWS* • ANmEuSFR BUSCH iNC • St‘liXl? — The Chicaao Maroon — Tuesdav, April 18, 1978