(Photo by Tim Baker) After a year of apathy and iner¬tia in Student Government (SG).next Tuesday’s election has triggered a flood of presidential candidates promising reform.The first of three recently formed, groups, Independent Reform(IR), has chosen Gerry Mildner torun for president.Mildner, current SG secretaryis a first year student generallyconsidered to have done a good jobin his brief term. He entered SG asa freshman representative in aspecial election last year.Mildner claims that “eachmember of IR will make a truly ef¬fective officer.” He said he will require each officer in his administration to spend at least threehours weekly in the SG office.Steve Kehoe. housing servicemanager, who formed the StudentServices Party (SSP) plans “togive SG more credibility by pro¬viding more student services.”A second-year student. Kehoehas been criticized for his work asUniversity services committeechairman. He resigned that postlast quarter and has since puttogether the SG rideboard andwritten a draft of a financial aidbooklet explaining what isavailable to students.SSP, said Kehoe. “has onlydedicated people on its slate”. Hetoo will require his officers tospend at least three hours weeklyin the office.First-year student JonWinkelried, the current UniversityServices Committee chairman isthe Creative Action Party (CAP)candidate for president. He stress¬ed the diversity of his slate, which SG presidential candidates (1. to r.) Steve Block. Jon Winkelried,Steve Kehoe. Allan Wind, and Gerry Mildner. The elections areTuesday and Wednesday. (Photo by Jeanne Dufort)includes women and candidates onthe graduate level.Defending the lack of action inthe services committee since hetook over from Kehoe last quarter.Winkelried said “I took over at areally bad time" and noted that thecommittee had only two memberswhen he became chairman.“I have a depth of commitmentthe other candidates lack and Iquestion if they can enact whatthey want.” said independentpresidential candidate Allan Wind.He stressed that in a campaign “without substantial issues.” hispersonality would help him pro¬vide strong leadership for SG.Wind has edited the SG newsletter,which was only a partial success.A relatively’new entrant into thepresidential race is Steve BlockHaving no prior experience in SG.he said “They’ve had their shotand they’ve fallen flat on theirface".Block doesn't like the idea of par¬ties because “you get a clique withno input from outside sources ”SG elections to p. 2By Eric Von der PortenStudents seeking off-campushousing for next year are not en¬countering an improved rentalhousing market, according to realestate experts in Hyde Park-Kenwood. But Steve Kehoe,secretary for the Student Govern¬ment housing service, said that“people are finding places.”Kehoe said that there are cur¬rently about 60 people per weekreceiving the housing service listof available apartments. But hesaid that “they’re not repeaters,”indicating either that people arefinding apartments or that“they’re giving up in disgust.”For the past several years,students have faced a severelyrestricted housing market. High rents, low vacancy rates, highlease renewal rates, and a recentboom in condominium conversionshave limited the number of apart¬ments available to students wan¬ting to escape the University hous¬ing system and mandatory mealcontracts.Students are managing to findhousing in Hyde Park this yearthough Kehoe said that “many peo1pie are probably taking worseapartments than they normallywould because they’ve heard howbad the situation is.” He said mostpeople have difficulty findingapartments unless they landsomething through the housingservice or know someone who ismoving and will transfer the lease.Housing to p. 2Vol. 87, No. 50 The University of Chicago © The Chicago Maroon 1978 Friday, April 21, 1978High rents, condominiumsoffer students diminishedHyde Park housing market SG presidential hopefuls stressneed for reform, new leadershipBy David BurtonFriends and foodForeigners adjust to U of C lifeBy Chris BrownAmerican and foreign studentsat the University face similarproblems, but foreign studentsoften have a harder time solvingthem. Such seemingly simpleconcerns as diet and makingSecond in a seriesfriends pose difficulties to foreignstudents that are seldom en¬countered by Americans.For some students fromcultures that differ radicallyfrom the West’s, finding nativefoods in Hyde Park is difficult.Many Indian students, who arevegetarian, say they have a hardtime finding ingredients for aproperly balanced vegetarianmeal.Some are vegetarian simplybecause meat was never part oftheir diet at home. Once here,they eat meat for the first time.One Indian business student, inthe U S. since July, only last week had his first hamburger. Hehad decided eating meat waseasier than trying to get a goodmeal without it.But some students are luckier.They sometimes find they can getnative food in an “ethnic”restaurant or in stores in one ofChicago’s many ethnicneighborhoods.Many foreign students saidmaking friends in America also ismore difficult than at home.About 75 percent of the unmar¬ried students are male and theysaid they find it particularly dif¬ficult to meet American women.Denyse Snyers, director of theCrossroads Student Center, feltthat at first some males have thewrong notions regardingAmerican women. “It takes someof them a while to get used to thefact that American women aremuch more open and outgoingthan women in their own coun¬try.” she said, adding, “somemistakenly think that when anAmerican girl is friendly tothem.she’s making a pass.”Friendships with Americans are often unrewarding, someforeign students complained. OneThai student evaluating his ex¬perience in America forCrossroads said he had formedfew lasting friendships withAmericans. It was difficult to getto know them very well.”“I expect more from myfriends than most Americans arewilling to give,” said oneJapanese student “Americanstake their friends for granted.They're too casual in their friend¬ships. To them anyone theyvaguely know is a good friend.”Snyers said she hears foreignstudents complain that they meetAmericans and then run intothem the next day and have theAmerican not say anything.“Sometimes they feel insulted.”Snyers said.As a result of the difficultiesestablishing friendships withAmericans, foreign students tendto cluster tojfther with otherforeign studeB. Some feel com¬fortable w ith Biers foreign to theU. S. becausBhey have similarexperiences it the University. Princeton students occupybuilding; protest S. AfricaBy Richard BiernackiMore than 200 Princeton Univer¬sity students opposed investmentin companies doing business inSouth Africa by occupying theirschool’s administration buildingfor 27 hours last weekendThe takeover launched a week ofdemonstrations and sit-ins at adozen East coast campuses.The Princeton protestors movedinto Nassau Hall Friday morningand voted to evacuate early Satur¬day to avoid arrest.They demanded that the univer¬sity sell its holdings in corpora¬tions doing business in SouthAfrica, that trustees resign frompositions on those firms or fromthe university board, and that“academic and disciplinary-amnesty” be granted to sit-in par¬ticipants. The three demands weremet with a chilly response fromPrinceton administrators.A leader of the student group.Marsha Bonner, told The' Maroonthat most of the occupiers decidedto leave because they feared theircampaign would be weakened if members were prosecuted“We already showed them ourdetermination.” said Bonner “Wedid not want to turn our wholegroup into a legal defense fund.”But another leader of the Peo¬ple’s Front. Adhimu Changa.declared that those opposing cur¬rent university investment policy"will be back, as many times as isnecessary ”The dramatic confrontation atPrinceton occurred after studentsattempted for more than a year todiscuss divestment from SouthAfrica with the board of trustees orits finance committee.The People's Front originally-pursued the goal of divestiturethrough the Resources Committeeof the University Community, abody of faculty, administrators,and students that advise thetrustees on investment policy.Last spring, the committee votedto support resolutions before threecorporations requesting them tow ithdraw from South Africa or tostop expanding their operationsPrinceton to p. 2& Ski*ibt® Housing from p. 1Condominiums increaseCondominium conversions are once again0 • ; ;V . c-'v; ' 7, ' • ■ ■ ' .■ T : . •’v is Stevens of Draper and Kramer Inc.Chris Treese ot the South Side Con■'. 'estimated that 25 apartment buildings —primarily six to 12 unit structures — havemums in thepast year. But that estimate is probably toolow, according to Ron Heilbrunn of Parker-HolsmanCo.These estimates suggest that the numberof rental housing units in Hyde Park-Kenwood is continuing to shrink, as it hassince 1970 when the “condominium boom”began But no concrete information isavailable either on the number of units con-verted or on the number of students whohave had to find other housing because theyhave been displaced by conversions.Treese said that condominium conver¬sions are likely to continue even in the faceof strict new laws governing condominiumsbecause conversion “is simply the best wayto maintain these old buildings.”Rents are higherStudents will also be paying much higherrents next year. Heilbrunn estimated thatParker-Holsman is raising rents seven to 10percent and Stevens estimated that Draperand Kramer is raising rents eight to 15 per¬cent.Inflation and exorbitant heating costswere the major reasons for the increases,said Stevens. This winter was “even worsethan last year because we had more colddays this year than last.” he added.Kehoe said that students should expect topay “at least” $150 per month, plus utilities,to live alone next year and approximately$100 per month to share an apartment.Stevens^, also noted that Draper andKramer- currently has no vacant apart¬ ments m Hyde Park and that apartmentspie transfer their leases directly to newtenants.HUD offers reliefBut there is some good news for prospec¬tive apartment dwellers. Many apartmentunits may be saved for rental housingbecause Hyde Park building owners arebeginning to take advantage of a newfederal program providing funds for rentalhousing renovation.The Department of Housing and UrbanDevelopment (HUD) established an apart¬ment rehabilitation program last year but.Heilbrunn said, little money was initiallyavailable. This year, he noted, funds areavailable and a number ot buildings are be¬ing rehabilitated by Parker-Holsman. by Kand G Building Management, and by otherHyde Park Realtors.The HUD program provides half the fun¬ding for renovation of old apartmentbuildings if the owner agrees to maintainthe building as rental housing stock for atleast five years.If the building is converted into con¬dominiums during those five years, apercentage of the funds must be repaid. Theamount to be repaid decreases proportional¬ly to the length of time the building remainsrental stock.This program encourages themaintenance of old apartment buildings.Without the subsidies, many apartmentowners have found that they cannot makenecessary repairs on their property withoutraising rents exorbitantly or converting tocondominiums.Heilbrunn said that the program will en¬courage people to buy and maintain apart¬ment buildings as investments but that con¬dominium conversions are likely to con¬tinue. He said speculators will continue tocapitalize on the bullish housing market inHyde Park-Kenwood which is the result ofboth the increased popularity of the eighborhood and the demand for housingor University affiliates.Student housing availableIn addition, student housing director Ed¬ward Turkington said that the Universityshould have no problem next year“providing housing for everyone who asksfor it.”Turkington said there are too manyunknown variables to be able to determinehow well the University housing system willbe utilized next year but several changesare being made to maximize utilization andattempt to eliminate last year's $300,000deficit.Additional space will be available in theShoreland next year, said Turkington. Heexpects approximately 575 Shorelandresidents next year though 28 units are stilloccupied by permanent residents and someunits will remain vacant to facilitate furtherrehabilitation.More single graduate students will bemoved into married student housing nextyear, according to Turkington. There was adecline of 690 married students between 1972and 1977, he said. This decrease createdvacancies in married student housing andhas contributed to the housing systemdeficit. 'Single graduate students have been mov¬ed into married student housing In increas¬ing numbers in the past several years andTurkington predicted that some marriedstudent apartment buildings may eventual¬ly be used exclusively for single graduatestudents.University owned buildingsThe University’s long-standing agree¬ment with the Regents Park apartmentcomplex will be terminated next year. Turk¬ington said that the 100 spaces currentlyunder University control are no longer need¬ed“We’d rather use our own facilities if wecan,” he said. The status of the University-owned apart¬ment buildings at 5518 S. Ellis Ave. has notyet been resolved. The building was closedlast June because, according to Turkington,“I didn’t want to operate it in the condition itis in.”Turkington said that it will cost between$900,000 and $1 million to renovate thebuilding for student housing. Discussionsare continuing to determine whether it willbe demolished.The number of people in the housingsystem is expected to remain fairly constantnext year, even with all the changes, saidTurkington. Approximately 675 to 700 first-year students are expected to enter thehousing system and the number of studentsrenewing their current contracts is ex¬pected to be roughly the same as this year,he said.If these assumptions are correct. Turk¬ington believes that the housing systemshould be almost fully utilized next year.Full utilization, combined with an 11 percentaverage rent increase, should help reduceor eliminate the operating deficit next year,he said.But Turkington was not aware of thenumber of condominium conversions in thepast year and he admitted that conversionscould create unexpected problems. He said,“if there are substantive numbers of peopleaffected by this then we're going to getpressure as we have had in the last fewyears.”Turkington noted that “the way we dothings really does leave a lot to the lastminute.” Predictions about housing needsmay be inaccurate, he admitted, noting thatseveral years ago the University found itselfin need of 400 spaces in the housing system.The University’s solution that year was tomove students into the Shoreland for thefirst time.The Windermere Hotel currently servesas “a kind of insurance.” said Turkington.and will be used if an unexpected demandfor housing ever arises again.H i University, protesters hungs ■ • . • - . ■ ■h iPrinceton from p. 1Trustees rejected that recommendation,deciding to abstain on the votes but sent let¬ters opposing aparthied to the firms. Sincethen, students have refused to meet with theResource Committee, claiming it has nomeaningful influence over the university’sstockholdingpolicies. . . . n „Until Friday the People’s Front were un¬successful in attempts to meet directly withtrustees. Princeton’s board of trustees metFriday to discuss how to vote on SouthAfrica shareholder resolutions. After hear¬ing of the student sit-in. a contingent from*he finance committee agreed to meet withFront representatives. But. when a half hourof discussions produced no progress studentleader Changa walked out. saying, “we renot one flea hop closer to coming to anagreement with the trustees.”The protestors face disciplinary action bythe university, although a Princeton deanand the provost said that they probably willbe treated leniently because they left thebuilding willingly.The harshest penalty faced by thestudents is having their academic recordpermanently marked with a disciplinaryconviction. Many deans in the student af¬fairs office refused to help identify illegaloccupiers, citing their support for the stu¬dent causeIn contrast to Chicago’s trusteesunanimous support for further investmentin South Africa, President William Bowen atPrinceton said trustee opinion was “quitemixed” on whether U S. firms are capableof improving conditions for blacks in thatcountry.Elaborate decoy schemeThe occupation came afUa a month of in¬ tensive planning and organization. Studentswho were to sit-in at Nassau Hall were per¬sonally invited by Front leaders, sourcestold The Maroon. To maintain secrecy, noone was chosen who did not have someoneelse vouch for his dependability.During the week preceding the sit-in, theymet in “cell groups” of four or five todiscuss the non-violent character of the sit-in and how to respond to threats of removalor arrest. Cell members assembled inguarded rooms the night before the sit-in toprevent anyone from leaking plans.An elaborate decoy scheme was used tooutwit the university’s security force, whichhad assigned a heavy guard to Nassau Hall.Princeton's trustees usually convene inNassau, but they moved to another campusbuilding. Corwin Hall, because it wasrumored that the Front might lead a chargeto break into the board meeting. Observedone Princeton reporter: “Corwin is moredefensible against a mass assault.”A half hour before the front moved intoNassau, diversionary contingent of 40demonstrators marched to the steps of Cor¬win chanting “Let the people in!” Thesecurity police, fearful for the safety oftrustees inside, moved most of their guardsto the front.Then a “shock squad” of hefty malestudents dressed in conservative suits ap¬proached Nassau’s locked doors, trying toconvince the guards still inside that theyhad an official appointment in the building.Once the guards opened the front door tolet the student “businessmen" inside, thesquad jammed open the entrance to allowothers to stream in. About 200 studentshiding in the building next door, rushed in tooccupy all three floors of Nassau within fiveSG elections from p. 1! tbe SpartacusYouth League and Roger Horowitz of theYoung Socialist Alliance have entered therace.SG problemsand7’7 - 777. 7,7: u Xk . :7,. -0l ;7\ '7'7 'V 7y*77' 777; ':;k7; ••• . ■'''• -.._ '' ' ; , ' ;’ ';:v .■77 7;7:. 77"* 77:77 777 .7■ • 7 ■' ,t7. \ : ■ ■' ■72 rh< jo Marc in reaching quorums,BLISS members who remained in SGrealized that the party could not continue, Itbecame popular to attack BLISS and mostpeople began to separate themselves fromthe party.The candidates for next week’s electionacknowledge the “BLISS tragedy” and hopeto reform SG. The candidates insist thatthey will accept only qualified anddedic.v .«*ir tickets, but each'■ '■ • • ■ ' ' '7either have never worked before with SG or■ • .■ • . • . .7 * k■ ■ - '.-77:' ' ' '' • ' ' 7. ' . ' :..K- . ' ' . minutes.When the students peacefully evacuatedNassau 27 hours later, they were greeted bya crowd of 500 supporters.Protest on other campusesAt Cornell last week, trustees wereprevented from leaving their board meetingwhen a crowd of about 200 students callingfor divestiture surrounded the conferencehall. Trapped inside for about an hour, thetrustees twice failed to break through thecrowd with a police escort.In a similar confrontation. 25 protestorsfrom Amherst College drove to Washingtonto block the annual trustee meeting lastweekend at the Amherst Club ofWashington, forcing university officials tomove to another building.At Connecticut Wesleyan University., agroup of between 20 and 75 students oc-in rwu » cupiea the president s office for nearly fourdays last week. They left only after the ad¬ministration agreed to accept two studentson a committee to advise trustees on SouthAfrica investment policy.Among the other Eastern schools recentlyrocked by demonstrations were Rutgers,Yale. Brown, and Vassar. Protests are alsoplanned for today and tomorrow at trusteemeetings at Dartmouth. Williams, Swar-thmore and Harvard.The demonstrations mark “a week ofcoordinated action,” from April 14 to 22, an¬nounced by the Northeast Committee for theLiberation of Southern Africa. The commit¬tee was established at a Yale Universityconference earlier this month at which more*’than 500 representatives from 40 collegesdiscussed protest strategy for the springpoliceman attempted to take it downUliolo courtesy of David Bea< h The Harvard Crimson )'Fletman named Maroon editor for 1978-79Second-year College student Abbe Flet¬man was elected unanimously Tuesdayevening to be editor next year of TheMaroon. For the second year in a row. TheMaroon editor has run unopposed.In remarks made prior to the election,Fletman. currently news editor, said thatnext year promises to be an exciting timebecause The Maroon will be covering thefirst year of Hanna Gray’s presidency.“We will be in a unique position to makethe new administration conscious of whatwe consider important issues,” the 18-year-old Fletman said.Fletman will work to recruit new staff andcalled for more staff participation in policydecisions. The Maroon will move towardmore analytical news articles, wider newscoverage and shorter feature stories, theeditor-elect told the more than 30 staffmembers gathered at the Maroon office.“I've seen the Maroon continually im¬prove in the last two years,” said Fletman.Current editor Jon Meyersohn nominatedFletman, saying, “When I was elected lastyear I had never written a news story andmany of the editors and reporters weregraduating. In contrast, next year a solidcore of reporters and editors will return,and Abbe will have had two years of repor¬ting and editing.”Although traditionally the future editorialboard is not announced at the election, Flet¬man made an exception because. “Ive beenthinking about these posts for a long time.”Jeff Makos, a third-year College Englishstudent, was named Grey City Journaleditor. A new post, managing editor, went toNancy Crilly, who is currently an associateeditor.Crilly, a third-year student in the college,will work primarily with new writers. Shewill also develop story ideas, assign ar¬ticles, copy edit and occasionally writeeditorials, freeing news editor-elect EricVon der Porten to broaden news coverageEditor-elect Abbe Fletman: doing lesswith More. (Photo by Jeanne Dufort) and write in aeptn news articles.The features editor, Claudia Magat, is asecond-year student in the New CollegiateDivision. Carol Studenmend, a third-yearart student, was named photo editorContinuing as sports editor is R.W. Rohde,a third-year economics student in the Col¬lege, and Peter Eng will stay on as literaryeditor.In addition, Carl Lavin, a fourth-year stu¬dent and former Chicago Journal newseditor, will be a contributing editor. ChrisBrown, a second-year chemistry student,w as appointed associate editor.Three generations of Maroon editors at¬tended the election. Former editor PeterCohn, current editor Meyersohn and editor-elect Fletman were present, as well asformer senior editor David Blum. After theelection, the four shared the traditional bot¬tle of champagne before the meeting ad¬journed to Jimmy’s.Fletman was born in Philadelphia, and at¬tended George school, a coeducationalQuaker school in Newtown, Pennsylvania,where she was a reporter for the schoolpaper.Fletman. a political science student, is thefirst woman editor-in-chief of The Maroonsince 1972. She will train this spring withMeyersohn and assume office in July. Three terms of Maroon editors: Jon Meyersohn (1), editor-elect Abbe Fletman,and Peter Cohn. (Photo by Jeanne Dufort)SSC to holdactivities nightNearly 30 student organizations will pro¬mote their activities tonight in Ida NoyesHall from 7:30 to 9 p.m. for visiting pro¬spective students and parents.The mini-Student Activities Night issponsored by the Student Schools Commit¬tee.Spokesman Barry Friedman said thatmore than 200 prospective students are ex¬pected to attend, and encouraged allUniversity students to come.I.U. offerspracticumsFor the third consecutive year, the In¬diana University School of Education is of-fer.ng summer practicums on the NavajoIndian Reservation in Arizona and NewMexico for in-service teachers, graduatestudents, and interested lay people.Volunteers will be placed for six to eightweeks between June 15 and August 15 atvarious boarding school sites on the Reser¬vation where they will work in educationalor recreational programs under localdirection.Persons interested in participatingshould contact Dr. James M Mahan.Education 218, Indiana University, Bloom¬ington. Indiana 47401—telephone 812-337-8570—as soon as possible. NewsBriefsScholarshipnominations dueApplications are now being accepted forthe Hedwig Loeb Scholarships forUndergraduate Research.The Loeb Fund, established in 1977. willprovide $900 this year for undergraduatesummer research projects.College dean Jonathan Z. Smith said all$900 would probably be distributed in asingle award, but did not rule out thepossibility of making a number of smallerawards. Smith hoped that by next year thefund will expand enough to permit foursuch grants.The scholarship, the only undergraduateresearch money distributed entirely atthe discretion of the College, includes areception held in the recipient's honor anda formal presentation of the results at theconclusion of the project.Last year, third-year student KathyLofgren became the Loeb scholarship'sfirst winner. Lofgren studied migrationpatterns in the Chicago metropolitan area.Interested undergraduates should sub¬mit a proposal to the master of their divi¬sion as soon as possible. All proposalsshould contain a description of the project,a budget and the recommendation of afaculty member.Upon approval the master will send theproposal, along with his recommendation,to the dean of the College, who plans tomake a final decision by May 1. Hitchcock Hallblood winnerHitchcock Hall has won in The Order ofthe C’s winter quarter Blood Drive.With the help of Snell Hall and Psi Up-silon fraternity Hitchcock donated 46 pintsof blood, beating the Burton-Judson con¬solidated houses by seven pints.The prizes donated by The Order of TheC going to Hitchcock include a keg of beer,a night in the Field House and $100.SG, Journalplan city guideSecretary of Student Government GerryMildner and Chicago Journal PublisherChip Forrester have announced plans for arevised Grey City Guide to be called TheChicago Journal's Guide to PracticallyEverything.The Journal will publish the Guide nextfall and SG will handle campus distribu¬tion.The publication, modeled on a 1976guide for the Hyde Park area, will offer in¬formation on restaurants, movies,transportation, and entertainment aroundChicago.Mildner said. “SG appreciates the op¬portunity to bring information forstudents, particularly incoming ones whohave less experience with Chicago. Weplan to sell the books during OrientationWeek in the SG Office “WHPK invites you to awith the candidates forSTUDENT GOVERNMENT PRESIDENTMONDAY, 6 p.m.During the interview listeners will be ableto phone in questions to the candidates.And be sure to vote. Election is Tues. & Wed.WHPK 88.3 FM STEREO ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELTUESDAY • APRIL 25 • 8:00 P.M.A RECITAL OF ORGAN AND BRASSTRUMPETSBARBARA BUTLERCHARLES GEYERHISAO WATANABE ORGANEDWARD MONDELLO TROMBONESFRANK CRISAFULUJAY FRIEDMANJAMES GILBERTSONEDWARD KLEINHAMMERWorks by di Lasso; Speer; Franceschini; Vierdanck; Gabrieli; Pezel;Buonamente; Bach; Handel, and Messiane. Admission is without ticketand without charge.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 2 1978—3EditorialA new year for SGAlthough it seems like' a well kept secret, theStudent Government elections will be held nextTuesday and Wednesday. Consistent with an in¬grained tradition, none of this year’s candidatesseem inspired enough to take SG out of its state ofpathological despondency. The task of transform¬ing SG into a credible political organ of the studentbody is immense, but realizing that the SecondComing may not be imminent, some choices haveto be made.The hallmark of this campaign is an emphasis onpersonalities because needs strong leadership— someone to take charge and begin a new era forSG. To call the issues crucial would be ox-ymoronic, but they are clearly delineated and in¬volve student services and are agreed on by mostof the candidates: student canteen service inRegenstein; housing, a ride board; and studenthealth and financial aid booklets.The three major parties are Creative Action(CAP); Independent Reform (IR) and the StudentServices Party (SSP). No one party deservesblanket endorsement, but CAP has a fair crosssection of students, and seems to break away fromthe petty politics of last year’s BLISS party.Two of the presidential candidates - SteveKehoe, (SSP) and Gerry Mildner (IR) would makecompetent SG leaders, but because each has hisparticular failing, The Maroon cannot endorse onewholeheartedly. Of the two, Kehoe is the most ex¬perienced. He would make a good president, hav¬ing proven himself on the housing service, but helacks the inspiration and leadership neeessary torevive SG. Conversely, Mildner’s dedication andenthusiasm would do much to improve SGcredibility and attract the illusive quorum, but, asa freshman, he lacks the experience. JohnWinkelried (CAP), perhaps one notch below Kehoeand Mildner, would hardly destroy SG, but suffersa lack of experience and seems unmotivated.Of the other presidential candidates, Allan J.Wind is known best for his disturbing combinationof convoluted verbosity and an inordinate interestin discipline, while Steve Block, who entered therace late as an independent candidate, has no ex¬perience in SG. In this instance, that cannot beconsidered a serious drawback, but it Is doubtfulBlock could provide SG inspired leadership.For other positions, The Maroon endorses:• Vice-presidential candidate Chris Scott (IR),an enthusiastic first-year student,• Jeff Leavell (SSP), who has a good understan¬ding of student activities, for finance committeechairman,• Alan Hasso (CAP), for treasurer,• Donna King (CAP), for secretary.Editor: Jon MeyersohnNews Editor: AbbeFletmanFeatures Editor: Karen HellerSports Editor: R.W. RohdePhoto Editor: Jeanne DufortAssociate Editors: Nancy Crilly, Claudia MagatEric Von der PortenProduction: Judith Franklin, Michelle FLeskowLiterary Editors: Peter Eng, George SpigotGraphics: ChrisPersansBusiness Manager: Sara WrightAd Manager: Micki BresnahanOffice Manager: Lise McKeanStaff:Tim Baker, Richard Biernacki, Peter Blanton, Chris Brown,David Burton, Gwen Cates, Peter Cohn, Ellen Clements,Lucy Conniff, Benjamin N. Davis, Philip Grew. Andrea Holli¬day, David Jaffe, Carl Lavin, Dan Loube, Andrew Magidson,Susan Malaskiewicz, Jim Muckle, Gene Paquette, AndrewPatner, Craig Phillips. Sharon Pollack. John Pomidor.rosemary Safranek, Lynn Saltzman, Davis Skelding, SteveStrandberg, Carol Studenmund. Howard Suls, Clark Thomp¬son, Peter Thomson, John Wright.4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 2J 1978?- MiqA V ooe*>lf " Letters to the EditorShimer onTo the Editor:The Maroon’s article of April 18 onShimer College contains several inac¬curacies:1) Shimer College was not originallyfounded as a University of Chicago af¬filiate. It was established in 1853, 39years prior to the University’s foun¬ding date of 1892.2) Shimer has eliminated comprehen¬sive examinations, contrary to yourassertion. While it is true that the Hut¬chins‘philosophy informs the Shimercurriculum’, . k does not rigorously.determine’ the curriculum's specificstructure.31.Don Shiner, whom you quote, isnot a student. He is an alumnus, anddirector of development at Shimer.The rhetorical slant of this article isworth remarking on. This piece reflectsthe characteristic UC-centric view thatpervades not only Maroon articlesfchiefly editorials), but also anynumber of statements made by theUniversity describing its activities,achievements, etc., as, e.g., in its alum¬ni publication. This inferred self-imagewhich the University entertains andpromotes is — in short — clozingly self-congratulatory. The picture of Shimerpresented in this article is affected bytjiis outlook. Shimer is represented asan .institution which has “refused tochange” (as opposed to “adhered to,what it believes to be a sound educa¬tional philosophy’’) and which hasperhaps foolishly cut itself adrift fromthe benevolent parent. In fact, Shimeris an institution, albeit not as an expo¬nent of Hutchins’ educational ideas, ishistorically antecedent to the Universi¬ty. The article’s rhetoric by implicationdoes great injustice to Shimer’s in¬dependence, which is an essential ele¬ment of.its identity.Furthermore, it is unfortunate thatreaders must derive their picture ofShimer from someone whom you quoteextensively who did not complete theentire curriculum and could nottherefore speak authoritatively on mat¬ters of curriculum coherence and itseducational benefits. There are manyShimer alumni and alumnae enrolled ingraduate programs here, and I thinkthat they should not have been too dif¬ficult to find. Since Shimer students in¬evitably develop strong ideas on educa¬tion as they go through the entireShimer program, alumni or alumnaecomments might have suggested moresubstantial comparisons of the two in¬stitutions.The picture of the Karyn KupcinetPlayhouse is most flattering, andperhaps thte article’s main value.Marcia ZdunAB Shimer College 1975So, leaveTo the Editor:Thie debate over divestiture seems tohave begun in the middle of the pro¬blem and not at the beginning. Thetranscript of Mr. Biernacki's discus¬sion with Mr. Dunham suggests thatthe Board of Trustees believes thatsocial and moral considerations shouldnot be used as grounds for divestiture.But the first question should be, Arethere any grounds other than economicfor divestiture? If the answer is yes,thentwe ought to understand what theyare, and if the answer is no, then weought to Understand what it entails.One consequence of a “no” would bethat the Board would have voted tokeep its investments in I.G. Farben, InKrupp, and so on in Nazi Germany in1939, if. indeed, it had any investmentsth^re.Since I cannot conceive that anyoneon the Board would claim that, know¬ing what they know now, they wouldhave voted to retain their investments in Germany in 1939, we would have toassume they would change their no toyes, there .are reasons other thaneconomic for divestiture.The next question would then be, Ithink, what were the characteristics ofNazi Germany in 1939 that would haverequired the Board to divest itself of itsinvestments there. And the questionafter that would be, Do thosecharacteristics also characterize SouthAfrica in 1978?I do not know the answer to this lastquestion. But let us assume that wedecide they are essentially the same,and that therefore, if the Board decidesjuft to divest in South Africa but wouldhave in Nazi Germany, then somecrucial difference exists between themthat we have not discovered. (The argu¬ment that if the University haddivested itself of stocks in Nazi Ger¬many in 1939, it would have worsenedthe condition of Jews there seems, inretrospect, not entirely convincing.)Mr. Dunham is entirely correct instating that investments are theresponsibility of 'the Board. He iswrong to say that it is no one else’sbusiness, if by business he means noone ought to consider those in¬vestments in making personal deci¬sions about the relationship betweenone's own moral obligations and the in¬stitution he is associated with.The problem is that given theBoard’s sole responsibility for in¬vestments, what action should be takenby students or faculty who are morallytroubled by the Board’s position. Thisnext sentence is going to sound morecrudely callous and indifferent than itis intended. Do not read into itanything more than what it says:The appropriate action is to leave.A university is like every otherbusiness..It sells a product. If the pro¬duct doesn’t sell, for whatever reason,then the business changes or it folds.The most powerful weapon available toanyone who does not want the Univer¬sity to continue its investments inSouth Africa is to withdraw, resign,leave, go away. If enough people dothat, then the University ceases to ex¬ist. If it does not wish to cease to exist,it changes its policies.Joe WilliamsProfessorDepartment of EnglishNaked nukesTo the Editor:On December 2, 1942, University ofChicago physicists achieved the firstself-sustaining nuclear reaction nearwhat is now the Regenstein Library.Nuclear energy was born. Quietly. Insecrecy.Nuclear power and nuclear weaponswere both products of the sametechnology, and were both developed ina way which bred classified studies andclosed door decisions. The government,ignoring Albert Einstein’s, “To thevillage square must go the facts ofatomic power, from there comesAmerica’s voice,’’ had already made upits mind that nuclear power was safeand desirable. Many of the governmentstudies were intended not so much torationally assess the risks as to assurethe general public, and reports whichwere not assuring to the public wereoften redone, altered, or simply notreleased. In 1964, an update on theBrookhaven reactor safety repbrt wascommissioned. The Brookhaven reporthad concluded in 1957 that a nuclearreactor accident could kill 3,400 people,injure 43,000 others, and cause $7billion in property damage. By 1965, itwas clear that an accident could cause45,000 deaths, 100,000 injuries, and $17billion property damage. None of theupdated figures were made public, andby 1969, the government was claimingthat the update did not even exist. It was not until 1973 that a Freedom of In¬formation request forced the release of2,000 pages of supposedly non-existentdocuments, revealing the large scale in¬creases.With the passage of the Price-Anderson Act in 1957, which limitedliability for a nuclear accident to asmall fraction of the possible cost,private industry entered the nucleargenerating field. The electric utilitiesreleased a barrage of pro-nuclear pro¬paganda which made the government’spromotion look quite modest. Usingtheir vast financial resources (thoseelectric bills add up) the utilities at¬tempted to sell the idea of nuclearpower to the public. Full page ads inthe newspapers, elaborate displays andmodels, public “tours” of existingplants, and television advertising ofthe type which has made MadisonAvenue a household word, were all us¬ed to hark the coming of the atomic age.Cracked pipes, faulty welds,skyrocketing uranium prices, in¬operative emergency systems, andguards who out of boredom open valvesat random, were downplayed or ig¬nored.Students to Unmask the Nukes, anewly formed campus organization,has as its goal the elimination ofnuclear power through knowledge. Wefeel that people who know how( anuclear plant works, are that muchmore able to appreciate the dangers;that people who are aware of the ac¬cidents and near-disasters that have oc¬curred, are that much more able torefute the nuclear industry’s safety,claims; that people who understand the,production and use of energy in oursociety, and are conscious of alter¬native energy sources such as the sunand the wind, are that much less likely"to be taken in by arguments thatnuclear power is “necessary.”We will hold a meeting on Monday,April 24, in the Ida Noyes Sun Parlor,at 7:30 pm. Everyone interested is in¬vited to attend.Student’s to Unmask the NukesConspicuousTo the Editor:As a student who participated in theApril 13th rally protesting the Board ofTrustees’ refusal to divest the Univer¬sity of stocks in companies with majorholdings and investments in SouthAfrica, I must admit disappointment inthe attendance at that assembly. I hadexpected a growth in visible oppositionto the trustees, in view of their arrogantresponse to student opinion, and of theenthusiasm exhibited at the Februaryrally.Admittedly, such assemblies mayseem nothing more than pep rallies.They serve a more important role,however. Here one may express in aconspicuous manner one’s opinion. Thecommitment evidenced by an hour’stime spent in active support of thiscause has far more impact on an au¬dience of trustees, administrators, andgeneral public than the few secondsspent in signing one’s name.The trustees hope that the studentbody shall prove itself once again un¬concerned with the University’s role inthe world community, enabling them todo as they please with the power in¬herent in the wealth they direct. In fact.Mr. Dunham, chief investmentcounsellor for the Board, is so confi¬dent of this that he scoffs at the studentefforts, dismissing their Action Com¬mittee’s position paper as the work ofoutside agitators, and brazenly declar¬ing the entire matter to be “none ofyour (the students’) business.”Petitions have proven not to beenough. We must take the nextstep —demonstration of broad supportfor divestiture through mass assemblyMatt PerrenodALL TOGETHERAt One LocationTO SAVE YOU MORE!SPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago youare entitled to special money sav¬ing Discounts on Volkswagen &Chevrolet Parts, Accessories andany new or used Volkswagen orChevrolet you buy from Volks¬wagen South Shore or MeritChevrolet Inc.SALES & SERVICEALL AT ONEGREAT LOCATIONvi vv/ CHEVROLETVOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE7234 Stony IslandPhone: 684-0400Open Dally 9-9 P.M./ Sat. 9-5 P.M.Parts Open Saturday 'til 12 Noon •Eye l«—iiiRtiof•Contact Lenses (Soft A Hard)•Prescriptions Filled>R MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Pork Shopping Center1510 E. 55th363 6363FUTURE CPA’SLET US HELP YOUBECOME A CPAOUR SUCCESSFUL STUDENTSREPRESENT1/3 OF USACHICAGO 312 263-4952DES PLAINES 312 299-5523BLUE ISLAND 312 299-5523CLASSES BEGIN MAY 22CPAREVIEWhyde park’s# 1 jazz spotFri. April 21,8:00 p.m.2 INCREDIBLE SOUND of Newtown's ownAL TRIP QUINTETJAZZ ROCKSat. April 22,9:00 p.m. - 3 a.m. Sensuous Sound of Hyde Park's ownEMMANNON JAZZOUARTETSun. April 23, 8:00 A Phenomenal TalentALIEN GANGSounds from near and afar[COMING Wed. April 26,8:00 pmJOSEPH JARMANJAM SESSION of Old... New Standard,All jazz. Musical Welcome, Come down...singEvery TuesdayIs LADIES NIGHT50% OFF ALL REGULARDRINKS FOR LADIES.CONGENIAL ATMOSPHERE GOOD JAZZPITCHERS OF BEERHOT BUTTERED POPCORNSTUDENT DISCOUNTSYalfwlla IN THE HEART OFCOSMOPOLITANHYDE PARKTake University Bus Cright to the doorserved on tap1.50 music charge1515 east 53rd street, hyde park, Chicago The University Feminist Organization PresentsA Luncheon Discussion Series:IMAGE VS. IDENTITYWednesday, April 26 - “Victorian Heroines: The Angeland the Strong-Minded Woman’’Elizabeth Helsinger,Asst. Prof., Dept, of English andthe CollegeWednesday, May 3 - “Moral Principles of the Thera¬peutic Relationship’’Marge Witty, Staff Therapist,Coordinator Women’s Servicesat Northeastern II. UniversityWednesday, May 10 - “Achieving Change in DifferentTypes of Psychotherapy”Judith Nelsen, Asst. Prof., SSAWednesday, May 17 - “From Antigone to Nora: Imagesof Woman in Drama”Eileen Buchanan, Faculty,Shimer CollegeWednesday, May 24 - (TO BE ANNOUNCED)12:00 Noon, Bring Your LunchBlue Gargoyle, 3rd Floor, 5655 S. University Ave.' rJ 11r» o ( vf (> •' u • 0Announcing Hyde Park’sNewest CondominiumDORCHESTERCOURT5414-25 S. DorchesterExceptional ApartmentsOne Bedroom from $32,500Two Bedrooms from $42,000Models OpenSaturday and Sunday 1-5Kennedy, Ryan, Monnigal & Assoc. Inc.1416 E. 57th St. 667-6666The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 21, 197- —5ALLCIGARETTESThe best newsstand in the worldalso has 2000 magazines for you!51st and Lake Park Chicago IL 60615 (312) 684-5100 55<A PACKProduced by EDGAR ROSENBERGWritten by JOAN RIVERS and-JAY REPACK • Directed by JOAN RIVERSgeNaaaaaaasgi jts avco embassy picturesGreat rabbit movies you have known and loved:PAWSnpjaiAND NOW!JOAN RIVERSThe story of the world’sfirst pregnant man...it’s inconceivably funny.STARTS TODAY!ARLINGTONBRI-MLNBRIGHTONCORALDIMSLVANSTON IKENNEDYMONTI LARL Arlington Ik-iglitNTinlcy ParkChicago-SouthOak LawnEast Gary. I ml.EvanstonHammond. Ind.Chicago-NW MORTON GROVIOGDEN 6*3PORTAGLl)R IVISHERIDANSKY HITWINY& W Morton GroveNapervilleChicago-NWINSArgoAddisonWheelingMerrillville. Ind. MORTON DAUWEN ZABEL LECTURE SERIESlEhc UniDtrsitg of ChicagoTHE DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISHlpresentsCarl RakosiAuthor of Amulet & Ere-Vo icein a reading of his own poetryMonday, April 24, 19784:00 p.m.HARPER 1301116 East 59th StreetThe Public is Invited************¥*********.***Attention: ALL STUDENTSDON'T FORGET TO VOTEIn theSTUDENT ASSOCIATION ELECTIONSLet next year's Student Government reflect your opinion.ELECTIONS WILL BE HELD ONTUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY,APRIL 25 & 26Polling Places (for both days):Quads near Cobb 10 -12:30Quad Circle 12:30 • 2:30Reynold's Club 12:30 • 2:30 & 4 • 8Law School School 12:30 • 2:30Woodward 5 • 7Pierce 5 • 7Travel 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 $41 8.00Plus 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 I house 5 - 7Shoreland 5 - 7We will be electing representatives from the various constituencies, six mem¬bers of the court, and the five officers.Every student is eligible to vote in this election.If you have any questions, please call Marcus at 684-7466.Student GovernmentVOTE! VOTE! VOTE!6—The Chicaao Maroon—Friday. April 21, 1978Reggae p.9Last Waltz p.11CCP p.13Your ears wait in full expecta¬tion of a Nashville drawl,because before you stands theunmistakable spectre of acountry singer.By Jeanne DufortCasse Culver Photo by Jeanne DufortThe Marlboro personPointed toe boots are the first thing younotice. Then the silver studded buckle. Andthe hat. And the suede jacket. You know thatlurking somewhere in a closet must be arhinestone shirt and string tie. The darkhair falls straight, framing steely blue eyes.Your ears wait in full expectation of aNashville drawl, because before you standsthe unmistakeable spectre of a countrysinger.But the sound that emerges from this fiveand a half foot western-stamped package isnot a high pitched twang at all, but simply asoft, husky "Hi".The lady is an east coast bred cow dyke.And this cowdyke, is seems, does not get theblues.Growing up in the 'burbs, according toCasse Culver, gives a person's imaginationample time to run wild. Hers ran from Ear-tha Kitt to Carol Channing. And then it ransmack dab into Bob Dylan, while she stillwas stranded in the badlands of Bethesda,Maryland. The obsession was instant andcomplete, prompting the buddingsongwriter to drop her Joan Baez imitationsin favor of fhe gravely Dylan sound.Culver did fhe folk scene for awhile,secluded in Woodstock to write new tunesand jam with Dylan, Paul Butterfield, andothers. She cut one album, with John Hall,Maria Muldaur, and Jams' Full Tilt BoogieBand providing backup. But the worldwasn't quite ready for Culver's womanidentified songs.dack in '72, or at least that'swhat the powers that be at BearsvilleRecords decided. The tapes presumably arestill secreted away somewhere in the company's vaults. Tne transition from Dylan to countrycame naturally. The lyrics of Nashville dealwith mundane reality, neither exaggeratingthe ugly nor consecrating the beautiful.Rock and pop were just too surrealistic for arefugee from the D C. 'burbsAnd women don't get such a bad deal inthe country music world Rock/pop charts,saturated with male artists, leave room foronly a handful of women at the top, and thechances of a young unknown carving a liv¬ing in rock/pop are slim. Especially whenthat young unknown persists in churning outsongs about strong women. Rockers liketheir women soft and submissive. But women have to be strong on the farmsand in fhe counfry, and Nashville singershave been falking about that for years. Andwomen have been doing about half thesinging down there, women like the Cartersand Loretta Lynn. Stated simply, Culverwasn't such an oddity in the land of countrysingers. Musically, at least.Appearance is another matter While Dolly Parton flounces onfo stage with bouffanthair do's and ruffled dresses and drawls"Hey there" in her syrupy southern style,Culver strides forward in her boots andwestern shirt to announce "We re gonnahave a good time." A little fantasy is a healthy thing forchildren and other people. Maria Muldaurtransported herself to the land of Arabia in"Midnight at the Oasis". Beefysteelworkers belt grapefruit sized balls outof parks on Sundays, secure in fhe beliefthat they could have made it in the bigleagues with a couple of breaks. Andchildren everywhere play at that venerablemasquerade, cowboys and indians.So it is that Casse Culver has taken uponherself the role of cowdyke More fhan a bifof fhe child pops fhrough as she props acontinued on page 8continued from page 7black cowboy hat upon her head, the hat tiltedever so slightly over one eye. A grin spreads slowly acrossher face and vanishes in an instant. Singers, she guesses,ought properly to retain a certain mysterious air. And sofor a time she becomes what rightly could be called the'Marlboro woman". Aloof, confident, the slightest hint ofa knowing smile curling her lips, she disarmingly gazesinto the camera lens. A game, the eyes say, this is such awonderful qame.’But the game is also a business, and make no mistake:Casse Culver, cowdyke, is an astute businesswoman. Herappearance at Hutch Friday night is part of a three cityMidwestern tour; she and her band are playing four datesin Chicaqo alone.Six or seven years ago, Culver was a solo artist pickingup backup groups here, there, and all over. Though sheworked with top musicians, the dynamics of solo worklimited her music severely. Some months ago, the BelleStarr Band was formed with Diane Zimmerman on leadFor a time she becomes what rightlycould be called the “Marlboro woman”.. . a game, the eyes say, this is such awonderful game.guitar and Ellen Horton on bass. Sound engineer BodenSandstorm completes the quartet. Bookings are handledby Cantobria Productions, a Washington, D.C. companyfounded in 1977 to promote women's cultural events.With growth comes responsibility, and the task of sup¬porting this growing family of women weighs heavilyupon Culver's shoulders. It would be nice, she surmises, totake a break from performing and writing. A fleetingrespite last fall was her first in more than three years. Butshe pushes on, negotiating with record companies foranother album, playing the clubs and the campuses. Alsoplaying at times in women's centers for a fraction of herusual fee, wishing the finances of survival allowed thismore often.Creating music is Casse Culver's life, and no regrets.Culver fully intends to take her woman-identified soundinto the mainstream of American music. She is bookedCaSSe Culver Photo by Jeanne Dufort with increasing frequency into straight clubs and collegecampuses. Eventually, she hopes, woman-identifiedmusic will not be confined to a small circuit of women'scenters and gay bars.Mainstreaming lesbian music may take a long time.For Culver, the outreach effort is costly emotionallybecause skeptical audiences don't give back the energyperforming expends. She perserveres because she is,above all, a professional. Always the show is tight andwell done, a show she is proud of and has put a lot ofherself into.Most of the material is her own, and includes a lot of foottapping, sing along on the chorus bluegrass. All of it, ofcourse, comes from a feminist perspective, even her ren¬dition of Jackson Browne's "Take It Easy". But her act ismusical first and political second (though the two are in¬evitably entwined) and sitting through Casse Culver'sshow gives you one of the sweetest doses of feministpolitics imaginable.It's not difficult to imagine the lady retiring to herdream cabin in the woods, replete with recording studio,of course. She won't always perform, she says, smilingwistfully at the notion of aging into a bluegrass MalvinaReynolds. The city makes her uneasy. The 'burbs offeredno ready made identity, and the one Casse Culver has•fashioned for herself belongs far away from CTA busses,concrete play lots, and distrustful bank tellers.But her purpose is not yet achieved, and so she will putup with the headaches of touring and singing for skepticalaudiences. She may well be the first of a new breed ofminstrels, roaming far and wide with a message to spreadand a song to sing.A single gaze from those steely blue eyes is promise thather voice will be heard.Casse Culver and the Belle Starr Band will appeartonight in Hutch Commons at 9 p.m. Her album, ThreeGypsies, was released in January, 1977, on the Uranalabel.The Gordon J. Laing Prize, 1977has been awarded toMARSHALL SAHLINSforCulture and Practical ReasonThe Laing Prize is presented each year by the Boardof University Publications to the faculty authorwhose book, published within the last two years,has added the greatest distinction to the list ofThe University of Chicago Press 19761975197419731972197119701969196819671966196519641963The Grey City JournalPREVIOUS WINNERSKeith M. BakerCONDORCETEric CochraneFLORENCE IN THE FORGOTTEN CENTURIES,1527-1800Stuart M. TaveSOME WORDS OF JANE AUSTENEdward ShilsTHE INTELLECTUALS AND THE POWERSEdward WasiolekTHE NOTEBOOKS OFFYODOR DOSTOEVSKY, 5 VOLS.Herrlee G. CreelTHE ORIGINS OF STATECRAFT IN CHINAGerald D. SuttlesTHE SOCIAL ORDER OF THE SLUMLeonard B. MeyerMUSIC, THE ARTS, AND IDEASPhilip FosterEDUCATION AND SOCIAL CHANGEIN GHANADonald F. LachASIA IN THE MAKING OF EUROPE, VOL. 1A. Leo OppenheimANCIENT MESOPOTAMIATang TsouAMERICA'S FAILURE IN CHINA, 1941-50William H. McNeillTHE RISE OF THE WESTBernard WeinbergA HISTORY OF LITERARY CRITICISMIN THE ITALIAN RENAISSANCEpage'8And they shall beattheir swords intolucrative contractsBy Stuart RyderBob Marley's a star now, and it looks likehe's going to act like one. There seems to bean unwritten law ot stardom that readssomething like, "Being a big name meansnever having to say you're sorry"... MaybeI'm a pessimist, but I start to get worriedwhen a band catches on and hits the bigtime. Look at the last tew records by theStones (face it "Goats Head Soup" and"Black and Blue" have their moments, butoverall they're mediocre at best. . .), RodStewart and the Grateful Dead. What youhear are big Rock stars putting out albumswith one or two good songs and a lot of filler.With the release of his seventh album,Kaya, Marley has fallen into the pattern.Don't get me wrong; Kaya isn't a terriblerecord. My first reaction wasn't to run outand burn it and to proclaim the death of theWailers. It is a disappointment though.After listening to it once I took "NattyDread" off the shelf and said to myself"Maybe the next one. . ." If you loveMarley's music this record will make youhead for the earlier records the same way"Black and Blue" made a lot of people headfor "Exileon Main Street".Kaya picks up where the second side ofExodus left off, which is fo say that it picksup on nice happy boring music. With ExodusMarley proved that he could writesimpleminded lyrics as well as anyone, butwhat was worse was that other than "SoMuch Things to Say" there wasn't amemorable melody on the record. Kaya suf¬fers from the same problem, only theweaknesses are more obvious. These tennew songs, if they have any sort of melodyat all (don't laugh, a couple of them don't. ..) are usually ruined by the most banallyrics this side of John Denver. "Is ThisLove", a pretty strong tune with a couple ofgood changes, would have worked if thelyrics didn't make you wonder if Bob hasbeen listening to Barry Manilow in his sparetime. ("I'm willing and able/ so I throw mycards on your table/ See I wanna love you,love and treat you right/ I wanna love you,every day and every night.. .).If writing mindless lyrics were a capitalcrime, Bob Marley would be a dead man."Satisfy My Soul" begins with the"brilliant" lines "Oh! please don't you rockmy boat/ Cause I don't want my boat to berocking/' Don't rock my boat". Well Bob, Idon't want you to get upset and have Jahcurse me, but somebody had better rockyour boat pretty soon or you're in trouble. Itprobably won't be financial trouble. Nodoubt this record will sell a lot more copies than "Natty Dread" or "Burnin'," youmight even get a gold record for it, maybeeven a Grammy award. . . (after all, Johnand Barry already have theirs). But if thiskeeps up you may be the man credited withcreating reggae muzak.The first tune on this record ends with thelines "I'll take it easy/ skanking it slow".Thanks Bob, you put it as well as I couldhave. Maybe taking it easy is what being astar is really all about. This record may bepraised as the most "laid back" record ofthe "mellow seventies". But reggae is a lit¬tle like Woody Allen; neither one mellowswell, they just ripen and rot. The last songon the album is titled "Time will Tell", as itno doubt will. Come out of it Bob, you're notdead yet.There have been two other reggae albumsrecently released that are considerably bet¬ter than Marley's Kaya. Burning Spear Liveis reggae at its roughest and most basic,Bunny Wailer's Protest is reggae with theslickest production I've yet heard: horn sec¬tions, four-part overdubbed harmonies, andfancy synthesizer backgrounds. Thdy'reboth great records in their own ways.For the record, Burning Spear is a nineman band. But Burning Spear in reality isWinston Rodney; vocalist, songwriter andcountry Rasta par excellence. In fact, on thejacket for this record Rodney has taken on anew title; he's now "Winston Rodney(Spear)". Spear's music has always beenstraightforward simple reggae. The beatnever changes from start to finish, and theband does little more than chug out thesame short phrases over and over again.Sounds boring?, don't worry it's not. Whatmakes the music is Rodney's vocals. Theyfall somewhere in between a primal screamand a religious chant. On stage he looks likea man who has just let go of a live wire thathe'd been holding for about three years. Healmost never moves, and screams out hiswords half in pain and half in joy. BurningSpear Live captures Rodney at his best."Marcus Garvey" is a cry of anguish forboth the miserable state of the world and thememory of his forgotten prophet. So what ifhe doesn't always hit his notes (sometimeshe doesn't even come close). Hitting notesisn't the point, this band isn't trying to makepretty, mellow music. If Rodney wants toscream, he screams; if he wants to cry, hecrys. It's that simple. On this record hisvoice spits out every emotion in the book. Itshrieks, shouts for joy, screams in pain andwails (hear that Bob?, remember when youused to put out records like that?. . .).. Burning Spear Live is by far the best thingthe band has recorded to date. It capturesthe power of the band onstage like no recor¬ding engineer ever could in the studio. It's agood record to have around in case there's afuel shortage — there's enough energy onthese two sides to heat the house for amonth.Bunny Wailer's Protest should be entitled"The Ex-Wailers Show up Marley". Bun¬ny, Peter Tosh and Touter (all former Wail¬ers) together with some of the best studioplayers in reggae have put together what isprobably the best reggae album since TheWailers Live came out almost three yearsago.Wailer has written six new songs for thisrecord, without coming up with a singlestiff. Among his successes, "MosesChildren" is the best. To his credit he's pret¬ty much knocked off the falsetto voice thatmade his first record ("Blackheart Man")hard to listen to for too long. He now sings ina tenor with that sweet edge that would havemade him a soul star if he'd been born inNewark instead of Trenchtown. His voicereally comes through on the song "WhoFeels It", where he plays his voice off the rhythms as well as anyone. His timing isperfect.The real high points of Protest are thecovers of Marley and Tosh's "Get Up, StandUp" and of "Johnny Too Bad", amarvellous tune torm the soundtrack of"The Harder They Come". He's taken"Johnny Too Bad" (Jimmy Cliff's "themesong" in the movie as his baddass characterran from the cops) from the story of a ghettoloser and turned it into a tale of mythicalghetto Robin Hood The original came off asa warning to our hero to stop his "robbingand stabbing,-' and looting and shooting".Wailer's new version tells a different story."Big bad Johnny had a good inside/ Hewould give to the weak what he robbing andstabbing/ Big bad Jonny had a good inside/He was a strong one . ." So what if I'm asucker for a happier ending; even if you likethe old story better the music on this tune'sgreat — it's the best reggae cut in a longwhileSo reggae merrily marches on — with lit¬tle help from its "superstar" but with a finerecord of roots music from Spear and the ar¬rival of a first rate new star in BunnyWailer. At last report Toots Hibbert was stillmissing in action.inia ionrr 7hc.urc iomp.my prcsair>Oliver Goldsmith'sStoops to Conquer‘2)i?vctcd by Nicholas Riulallllmrs-Siiiniiy A PR 11 70-22/27-20 At $-70 pmMntimrs:Mindly APRIL 25/50 At 5pmPmiiy APRIL 21 Jt lpmWediusiUv APRIL 26 At lpmMAndel H«»ll 57th & UnivroityAve4f+SOgcncal Admission.v for students And older Adults, Friday, April 21,1978 page 9The QniDersitu of ChicagoTHE SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SERVICE ADMINISTRATIONPRESENTSThe Second SOCIAL SERVICE REVIEW LectureSentencing and the PrisonBYNORVAL MORRISJulius Kreeger Professor and Dean of Law SchoolTHURSDAY, APRIL 27, 19784:30 P.M.SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SERVICE ADMINISTRATION969 East Sixtieth Street, Room E-lTAKE IT TO THE STREETS!VISTA OPENINGS!Fed up with the rip-offs in the inner city?Want to do something about redlining,slum housing, crime and neighborhooddeterioration? If you’d rather ACT thangripe, consider community organizing, putyour skills and energies to use as a Vistaworker.IF...you want more than just a paycheck outof life,you’re not afraid of working long hours,you’re not afraid of the street,you’re not afraid to mobilize people tosolve their own problems ...THEN...you may be eligible to become a Vista.Interested? Apply in person, Wednesday,April 26,10:00 a.m. or 2:00 p.m. only at:Metropolitan Area Housing Alliance1123 West Washington Blvd.Chicago, Illinois EUROPEAN ENTERTAINERS* INC- PRESENTSComposer of'ZORBA'.. 'Z'.. 'SERPICO'..'IPHIGENIA'AUDITORIUM THEATRE (Chicago) MAY 12 & 13 8:00 P.M.TICKETS AVAILABLE NOW:Old Town School of Folk Music • 909 West Armitage • 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 Steet • 332-11 82Panellinion Imports • 2555 West Lawrence Avenue • 271-5867Bouboulinas Restaurant • 851 East Algonquin Street, Schaumberg • 397-7020FOR OTHER TICKET OUTLETS CALL (312) 262-8846Starting April Tickets will be available at all TICKETRON locations and at the Auditorium TheotreBOX OFFICE (312) 922-2110 or 922-6634 Ticket Prices $12, $10, $B, $6.GET A LOTMORE CHEVETTEFOR A LOT LESSMONEY.18 New Standard Features for 78AM radioReclining bucket seats''White stripe tires1.6 Litre engineConsoleSport steering wheelBody side moldingsBumper rub stripsSwing-out rear windows Wheel trim ringsDeluxe grilleColor-keyed instrumentpanelGlove compartment lockCigarette lighter Chrome headlight trimBright hood edgemoldingBright instrument panelmoldingAutomatic dome lightswitch (both doors)Chevy Chevette,priced to drive you happy.All these features are standard (or the first time on the 78 Chevette CoupeAnd yet the 78 Chevette is priced* lower than last year s car with the sameequipment So come on in soon to see and test drive this very impressivesmall car with the attractive price tag And while you re at it be sure to as* tosee Chevette s new 4-door Hatchback It s roomier than the Coupe and stillpriced to drive you happynow standard on a Chevette Coupebucket seats* pr0<luC"0n Chevel,,‘s ,n our inventory will not be equipped with these rectm.noDREXEL CHEVROLET CO4615 SOUTH COTTAGE GROVEOPEN MON.-FRI. 9-7 SAT. 9-5 CLOSED SUN/ V. V-’By Jeff Makos— What is this shit?— It's The Band's new album, "The LastWaltz."— Sure sound like Neil Young to me.— Well, it is Neil Young. . . but it's TheBand backing him up. It's a live recording ottheir last concert, and Neil's one of the gueststars.— Neil Young with The Band? Looks likesomething's rotten in L.A.— That's just the point.— What, putting out a shitty last album?— Just wait 'til you hear the Joni Mitchelltrack...— What have you written so far?— Take a look.Up on my bookshelf is a copy of "MysteryTrain" by Greil Marcus, probably the bestbook written on rock. One of its essaysdeals with The Band, and their importanceas American artists."This is when we find out if there are stillopen spaces out there. . . Their music gaveus a sure sense that the country was richerthen we had guessed. . . The songs capturedthe yearning for home and the fact ofdisplacement that ruled our lives. . . TheBand's music made us feel part of theiradventure; we knew that we would win ifthey succeeded and lose if they failed."Nathanael West once saidthat, “People go west to die,”and all of the guest stars on“The Last Waltz” sound like alist of every major rock starthat has burnt out in L.A. dur¬ing the last five years.Marcus was talking about The Band'sfirst tour, and their first albums -"MusicFrom Big Pink" and ^The Band" - whichhad at the beginning of the decade turnedrock away from the psychedelic/ I want tokill you father/ 20-minute drum solo/ It'sSan Francisco let's be groovy syndrome,towards a real music, something with depthand emotion and life and guts. A music withthe echoes of the past and an awareness ofthe possibilities of the future. It made sense."The Last Waltz" is the new Band record,a three record set recorded at their finalperformance on Thanksgiving Day, 1976.Kinda symbolic, huh? Too bad the album isprobably the worst thing The Band has putout. Ever.The concept behind the album is the six¬teen years that The Band has spent wearingitself out on the concert circuit. With helpfrom some of their friends, like Dylan VanMorrison, etc etc ad infinitum, the groupsays farewell to their road life in song, asone track plays off the next in some sort ofsaga/ tribute to rock survival, with, as theliner notes say, the "greatest influences onmusic and a whole generation" help out.Neil Young? (That's him with The Bandon "Helpless" — Crosby Stills and Robert¬son.) The Band’s last waltzNeil Diamond? (On "Dry Your Eyes" hetries to sound like Dylan, which isn't too badexcept that Dylan later shows up and on"Forever Young" he tries to sound like NeilDiamond).Dr. John? Joni Mitchell? The Staples?Ronnie Hawkins?What is this shit?— Well, I can't say that I cared for thatpart too much, although you did talk at leasta little about the album.— Yeah.— But who cares about Greil Marcus? Noone cares much about rock criticismanymore much less reads about it. I thinkyou're just floundering around...— Yes, yes...—... groping for words...— Absolutely.—. . . but you did have something to say,after all. It sure sounds like a shitty album.— It isn't.— But. . . Jesus, you brought up all thisabout possibilities and echoes and then youdump on it.— That's just disappointment. It's not abad album, as albums go these days. It'sjust that it's a bad Band album, and that's what all the anger is about.— Anger?— Hadn't you noticed?The point is that there is nothing on thisalbum that would change anybody's life.Nathanael West once said that "People gowest to die," and all of the guest stars cn thisalbum sound like a list of every major rockstar that has burnt out in L.A. during thelast five years. The record isn't even worthstealing.Every song that the Band does on thisrecord they have done better elsewhere. Notonly do many of the songs appear on theirearlier live "Rock of Ages," but also onDylan's live "Before The Flood.'' There isone side of new material, but even this in¬cludes a remake of "The Weight" withMavis Staples having an orgasm as shesings the second verse.The problem is that it's been about eightyears since the greatest Band songs werefirst done, and it's not just that they haven'tdone anything of real worth since their se¬cond album, although this is sad enough, butthat newer fans are going to have to settlefor this tenth rate Woodstock as a finaltribute to a band which once proved that rock could mean something. The albumsounds good enough, and is carefully pro¬duced. But as someone once said, if it onlysounded better, it would sound real good If Isound bitter it's because I am. The Banddeserved more, much more, and now it's toolate"This is when we find out if there are stillopen spaces out thereMove over for the parking lot.— Aren't you. . . overreacting a bit? It'sjust a rock and roll album.— Yeah, I suppose . . but no, it's morethan that It's not just rock and roll, it's gotto do with music, and creativity, ^ndeverything that rock isn't these days. EvenDylan's burnt out - of course he over¬shadows anyone else on the aiDum, butthat's just because he's sloppier thaneverybody else, and sloppiness is supposedto equal funky and good when in fact it's justboring. And one thing was for sure, TheBand were once never boring— It's a shame. . . the people and theBand We could have had such a damnedgood time together— Yes. Isn't it pretty to think sor.MANAGEMENT POSITIONSAre you looking for a position that allows you totake advantage of your abilities? As a Navy Of¬ficer you receive an excellent salary with plan¬ned raises and advancement. p.m.PASSOVER SERVICESATHILLELFRIDAY. APRIL 21YAVNEH (ORTHODOX) 6:15SATURDAY, APRIL 22YAVNAH (ORTHODOX) 8:45 a.m.6.00 p.m.UPSTAIRS MINYHNA (CONSERVATIVE)10:00 a.m.SUNDAY, APRIL 23YAVNEH (ORTHODOX) 8:45 a.m.UPSTAIRS MINYAN (CONSERVATIVE) -10:00 a.m.Ticketsnow onsa\e-Friday, April 21, 1978 LOOKING FOR SOMETHING BETTER?We will have several apartments available forLease in the very near future.Studios to 3l/2 room 1 bedroom apts. at veryreasonable rates.Security and one year Lease required.We have a lot to offer. Come see us.MAYFAIR APARTMENTS. 5496 So. Hyde Park Blvd.lli i May 6Mandel Hall8:30 p.m.$3, $4 w/fee$5.30, $6.50a % »—irpage 11You are cordially invitedto anautographing party forPhilip B. Kurlandauthor ofWATERGATE AND THE CONSTITUTIONonFriday afternoon, April 21stfrom 2 to 4at the University of Chicago Bookstore5750 S. Ellis Avenue493-0666 Your personal brokerOPEN HOUSE - asat. april 22 — Noon to2 p.m. 1332 E. 56th Street.DOLL HOUSE APARTMENT. Only two (count ’em > blocks from campus . . . airy,bright, all four rooms freshly decorated. Large bedroom 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. $36,000.STRAIGHT EAST OF CAMPUS SUNSHINE FOR SALE ... PARK FOR SALE . ..THREE LARGE ROOMS FOR SALE ... all for $17,000. Co-op near 57th Stoney.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 tine, stack washer/drver). Lovely back porch,separate dining room, mini terrace off living room; 2 bedrooms, not a railroad.Monthly under $100. $53,000.EAST VIEW PARK .6 RIG ROOMS >n the Lake edge. Top notch. Sublease, sum¬mer season only. $500.00 monthlyCALLING 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 gen< ;ous 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.View of lake from study. Large lovely garden available to grow' vegetables, wood-burning fireplace, modern bath and great kitchen. 6 rooms in all. $16,500 Boardapproval.PICTURE YOURSELF ... IN SUNSH1NE + FILLED LARGE LIVING ROOM,FORMAL, DINING ROOM,' ’> BEDROOMS, •« FULL BATHS APARTMENT+HOME. Handsome English Tudor corner building. Move-in cond. 4 blocks from SSDrive on 70th Place. Garage included. $31,500. Conventional.A BRIGHT ONE...because it’s a two-bedroom condo on 2nd floor. BRIGHTbecause...back Dorch overlooks ayiet garden BRIGHT because lots included...like stack unit washer-dryer, appliances and specials. Dishwasher, stove,refrigerator in super new kitchen — nothing over 2 years old. Has a touch of oldecharm, pretty paper, large blade antique overhead fan. Excellent move-in condi¬tion throughout. A BRIGHT MOVE for you to be near 56th and Blackstone. $55,000.HOUSE WITH BREATHING SPACE. Block-long view of the greenery of the park.Lots 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. July 1st Possession."WE Make House Calls,We Get Results"Call Charlotte Vikstrom493-0660\ Yen ’ The University of ChicagoThe Committee on Public Policy StudiespresentsThe Reuben A. Gustavson Memorial Lecture, 1977-78# - .Professor John P. HoldrenEnergy and Resources ProgramThe University of California, BerkeleyEnergy in the Long Run: The Predicament and the PossibilitiesMonday, April 24 "Energy from Fusion: How Much Difference Will it Make?”The Reuben A. Gustavson Memorial Lecture1:30 P.M. -Kent 103Tuesday, April 25 "Renewable Energy Sources: The Environmental Dimension"Urban Economics Workshop1:30 P.M. - Social Sciences 402Wednesday, April 26 "Fusion-Fisson Hybrid Reactors; The Worst of Both Parents."Resource Analysis Group Seminar1:30 P.M. - Wiebolt Hall, Room 301Thursday, April 27 "The National Academy of Sciences Study of Nuclear andAlternative Energy System: A Post Mortem."A Colloquium sponsored jointly with the Physics Department.4:30 P.M. - Eckhart 133The Public is InvitedAdmission is without ticket and without charge.IMPORTANT NOTICE CONCERNINGSTUDENT HOSPITALIZATION INSURANCESUMMER, 1978This announcement is directed to those students who now participatein The University of Chicago Student Insurance Plan through BlueCross/Blue Shield Group #40556 and to those with dependents insuredunder Group #40557.Spring Quarter coverage will expire on June 30, 1978. If you aregraduating in the Spring Quarter and do not plan to return to theUniversity in the Autumn Quarter of 1978, you are not entitled tocoverage under the student plan. If you are returning to the Universityin the Autumn Quarter of 1978 you must make arrangements before Ju¬ly 1st to continue coverage for the period July 1, 1978 throughSeptember 30, 1978.Applications for “off-quarter” coverage may be obtained from theRegistrar’s Office or from your area Dean of Students. Arrangementsfor the dependent coverage may be made with the Student Health Ser¬vice, Billings Hospital, Room S119.The rate or “off-quarter” coverage for students who will be remain¬ing in the Chicago area will be $36.00 plus $30.00 for Student HealthService fee. The rate for “off-quarter” coverage for students whowill bejeavine the Chicago area will be $36.00.THE ABSOLUTE DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS FOR OFF-QUARTER COVERAGE IS JULY 1, 1978.Registered students will be required to file applications for coverageand pay the $36.00 premium at the time of tuition payment or to waiveparticipation by filing the waiver with proof of equivalent coverage.By Peter T. Daniels Harmonic thirdsFew indeed must be the universities that can boastthree respected composers on their faculties. Chicago isone, with Easley Blackwood, Shulamit Ran, and RalphShapey; Pennsylvania is another, with George Rochberg,George Crumb, and Richard Wernick. New compositionsby each of the last-named composers, and one by amember of another famous tiumvirate, Anton Webern,were presented at the Contemporary Chamber Playersconcert April 14th. I was not able to attend the per¬formance, so these notes are based on the group's rehear¬sals.Until his murder by an American serviceman after theclose of World War 11 -(he had stepped onto his porch tolight a cigarette and did not understand the soldier'sEnglish challenge), Webern, along with Schoenberg andBerg, was a chief participant in the Neue Wiener Schule,the new Vienna school of composition. Schoenberg haddevised, first intuitively and later systematically, a modeof composing that avoided the familiar language whichseemed to have been used to its limit by Wagner, Mahler,Strauss, and even the young Schoenberg himself. Bergadapted the twelve-tone system to accommodate itsomewhat to the European tradition — which all three, itis now clear, never really broke with —and Webern refin¬ed it and created miniatures that distill the essence oftraditional forms and sonorities. Any of his music, such asthe Symphony played last week, requires intense concen¬tration by the listener so as not to miss any of what is go¬ing on. A sparse sprinkling of players — string quartet, afew woodwinds, and so on — concentrate all that "sym¬ phony" means into a few minutes. In retrospect, this is theconcluding summary of the form: Mahler's Eleventhcould be nothing else.The song cycle, though, can go on forever. As long asthere are human voices there will be singing, and as longas there is singing, artists will be creating new things tosing. One of the newest is Richard Wernick'sContemplations of the Tenth Muse. This work came intobeing when the Fromm Foundation, which has done morefor contemporary American music than anyone, askedElsa Charlston if she'd like someone to write somethingfor her. The result was first performed in New York lastNovember, and has now been brought to Chicago. The textis four stanzas from Anne Bradstreet's "Contemplations." She was the first American poet, and in her daywas so highly regarded as to be called the "Tenth Muse."Happily, she is being rediscovered; Leonard Bernstein'sBicentennial "American Song Fest" includes one of herpoems. The four verses support a symphony-like struc¬ture that calls for great virtuosity from both pianistAbraham Stokman and soprano Ms. Charlston. Thepiano's inside is sometimes played; glissandos anddamped strings help the listener hear the returns of themotives the work seems to be built on (the style is eclec¬tic). Except in the third movement, the voice presentshymns of priase fairly straightforwardly. The third movement is about the grasshopper and the cricket, and Wernick sends both pianist and singer skittering about in atwelve-tone fugue; at one point she sings a duet withherself. It is contemporary coloratura; the stanza is ascherzo. This work demands repeated hearing so that its quality can be savorea.Ralph Shapey's The Covenant received its first per¬formance of this concert. Dedicated to the thirtieth an¬niversary of the state of Israel, its four sections en¬capsulate the most significant moments of Jewishhistory: Covenant, Holocaust, reaffirmation, andApocalypse. Fragments of modern poetry are interspers¬ed with texts from Exodus and Isaiah. The soprano andsixteen instrumentalists are scattered over the stage;they are joined by prerecorded tapes in the third section.The first section alternates statements of the Lord's pro¬mise with instrumental cadenzas. The second is more ter¬rifying vision than even Schoenberg's Survivor fromWarsaw, in which a male chorus emerges from the or¬chestra declaiming the Shema to the tone row. InShapey's version, the poet's "landscape of screams" isthe key, and the soprano is set against her taped self, nowscreaming, now singing high avove the staff, now sinkingbelow it. Synthesizer chords add to the fury, while risingand falling over all a disembodied voice recites Kaddish,the prayer for the dead. The work goes on to chordalepiphanies, and ends with a moving setting of the famouswords carved opposite the United Nations, and a finalpsalm of praise. This work, too, demands to be heardagain and again.Both these pieces were composed with E Isa Charlston inmind, and also for the enormous talents of his CCPmembers. Since it is not likely that anyone else will soonbe courageous enough to undertake their difficulties, itwould be nice if they could be recorded and sold. Perhapsthe Fromm Foundation, which presented the concert,might underwrite an "Art of E Isa Charlston” album?THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE COMMITTEE ON SOCIAL THOUGHT(THE JOHN U. NEF FUND)AND THE DEP ARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCEannounce a public lecture byMR. LEOPOLD LABEDZEditor of Survey: A Journal of East and West StudiesLondon School of EconomicsAuthor of Revisionism: Essays in the Historv of MarxistIdeasSOCIALISM, COMMUNISM AND THE MARXISTTHEORY OF THE STATETuesday, 25 April, 19782:30 P.M.Social Science Building. Room 1221126 East 59th Street WmBaBmmSmmmHYDE PRRK PIPE RND TOBRCCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - Under !C tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim”Mon. - Sat. 9 - 8; Sun. 12 - 5PipesPipe Tobaccos Imported Cigarettes Cigars' 1 i Hi in $i MiiiiiiiPREPARE FOR:MCAT * DAT • LSAT •ORE * OCAT • VATNMB I. II. Ill * ECFMG * FLEX * VQENATL DENTAL BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFlciiblo Program* 4 Hour*There IS a difference!!!For Information Please Call: l -cj2050 W. Devon O KAPLANChicago, III. 60645 ^^^eoucatiowalcenter(3121 764 5161 Q^HI test rriraiutionSPRING, SUMMER, WINTER COMPACTSMOST CLASSES START EIGHT WEEKSPRIOR TO THE EXAM. STARTING SOON:GRE-4 WEEK MCAT-SAT-LSATOTHER CENTERS CALL TOLL FREE 800 223 1782Center* In Major US Cities Toronto, Puerto Rico and Lugano, Switzerland The University of ChicagoBrass Society’sTrombone Quartetin a concert of trombone andhorn-and-trombone music, with hornistsJohn Ralyea ,nd Dan Dick.0:00 p.m.Bond Chapel - Friday, April 2158th A Greenwood Ave.O-.-.-Vg; NAM FILMSFriday, April 21, 1978 SHAME WAYS OF SEEINGIngmar Bergman John BergerSunday April 23 Monday, April 247:15/9:30 Cobb $1.50 7:15/9:30Apage 13Cornelia Pointing To Her Children As Her Treasures by Angelica Kauffman Courtesy of the Virginia Museum18th century exhibit at SmartAn exhibition of German and Austrianpainting of the E ighteenth Century will be atthe David and Alfred Smart Gallery of theUniversity of Chicago until June 11. This isthe first exhibition of Central Europeanpainting to be shown in Chicago.The gallery has assembled 41 paintingsfrom major museums and private collec¬tions in the United States and a sizeablenumber of the works in this exhibit have never been displayed before.The exhibition is co-sponsored by thedepartment of Germanic Languages andLiterature; the Goethe Institute Ger¬man Cultural Center in Chicago, an agencyof the Federal Republic of Germany; andthe Austrian Institute, New York, an agencyof the Federal Republic of Austria.The show will provide outstanding ex¬amples of works by major artists who dominated German and Austrian paintingduring this period. Paintings by JohannMichael Rottmayr, Franz Anton Maulbert-sch, and Anton Raphael.The David and Alfred Smart Gallery islocated at 5550 South Greenwood Avenue.The gallery is open to the public, free ofcharge, Tuesday through Saturday from 10a m. to 4 p.m., and Sunday from noon to 4p.m.Ewart offersjazz fortarge ensemblePhoto by Abbe ChacxCourt stoops to conquer"She Stoops To Conquer," OliverGoldsmith's classic 18th century comedy,will be presented by the Winter CourtTheater Company for two weekends openingThursday, April 20 and continuing throughSunday, April 30. This will be the final playof this Winter Court season.The production, directed by NicholasRudall, and featuring a fledgling CourtTheater Company composed of RichardHill, Maureen Gallagher, and Bradley Mott,has been in rehearsal since January. "SheStoops" revolves around the confusion thatjolly Tony Lumpkin creates as he convinceshis shy comrade Marlow that he has onlymet a barmaid, when he has actually methis unseen fiancee."She Sfoops," Goldsmith's second com¬edy, opened March 15, 1773 and met withunexpected success. Goldsmith was an in¬timate with Dr. SamueMohnson, and was amember of Johnson's famous Club alongwith Edmund Burke and Sir Joshuapage 14 Reynolds.The play will be in Mandel Hall Thursdaythrough Sunday, April 20-23 and 27-30, 8:30pm; Friday, April 21 and Wednesday, April26,1 pm, and Sunday, April 23 and 30 3 pm.General admission prices are $4.50 and$2.50 for students and older adults. CAPAvouchers are accepted for all performancesexcept Saturday. Tickets are availablethrough Mandel Hall box office, or by call¬ing Court Theater at 753-3581.There will be an informal discussion of theperformance on Saturday, April 29, at 11p.m. at the Reynolds Club North Lounge,57th and University. There is no admissioncharge and refreshments will be served.Leading the talk will be David Bevington,UC English professor, Nicholas Rudall,director of the play, and Frank Kinihan,Assistant professor of English. All in¬terested play goers of that evening are in¬vited to attend. Saturday night Douglas Ewart will pre¬sent an evening of jazz for large ensembleentitled "Focus On Clarity." Ewart is one ofthe most talented of the "younger"members of fhe A.A.C M., and fhis eveningshould offer a good quantity of musicalideas for the rather steep ($5) admissionfee.The last time Ewart presented a concertof this magnitude was last summer at theN.A.M.E. gallery and it was in every way abrilliant success. He is one of the mostcapable composers in the organization, hismusic is demanding of the soloists he workswith, while being accessible to the audience.Large ensemble works are few and far bet¬ween in jazz (mainly because of theeconomic restraints) so this is one not to bemissed."Focus on Clarity" will be presented at 8pm at International House, 1414 E. 59th St.on Saturday, April 22. Donation is $5.Note: For those with a way out of HydePark. Air is performing at the Birdhouse,4512 N. Lincoln on Friday at 7:30 pm, and atRobert's, 301 E. 63rd, Sunday at 8 pm.Air, comprised of Steve McCall, FredHopkins, and Henry Threadgill is one of thefinest groups to come out of the A.A.C M.Check out their new album on Nessa, now inthe record stores. p-Film—By 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. NAM and Doc films will be shown inQuantrell Auditorium, Cobb Hall. LawSchool films will be presented in the LawSchool Auditorium, 1111 E. 60th.Black and White in Color (1976), directedt/ Jean-Jacques Annaud. (Doc) A very finefirst film by the former director of Frenchcommercials. (His Peugeot spots are un¬forgettable.) In West Africa in 1914 theFrench gentlemen of a trading post arequite sociable with the German bourgeois atthe neighboring post. Their nice little socie¬ty is disrupted when they discover thatEurope is at war and their mother andfather countries are not exactly having lawnparties together. In a true spirit ofpatriotism and foolishness, they have a littlebattle of fheir own. The emissaries little waris analagous to a Maroon football game.Recommended. Friday at 7:15 and 9:30.Bringing up Baby (1938), directed byHoward Hawks. (Law) What could be nicerthan watching Katharine Hepburn drivestraight-as-an arrow Cary Grant batty,bewildered and right into her arms. Hep¬burn stars as a madcap heiress who hasn'tgot anything better to do with her time thanhunt baby leopards and a bone from theEeocene era. Grant, a bespectacled paleon¬tologist, would like to get back into his lab-coat but, as this is a Hawks film, ends up in awoman's nightrobe instead. A fine andpolished comedy as all of Hawks's are.Recommended. Friday at 7:15 and 9:30.Three Women (1977), directed by RobertAltman. (Doc) The film is incorrectly titled:although three women appear in the film itis really only about two of them. ShelleyDuvall is a lonely and sad woman whodoesn't see herself that way. Instead sheconsiders Sissy Spaceck truly miserable buttreats her with disdain and condescensioninstead of pity or sincere kindness. Much ofthe film is based on one of the director'sdrescn^ The film has a rafher sfrange quali¬ty of being airy and timeless at the sametime as being extraordinarily suffocatingand precise. Duvall and Spaceck are verygood but much of the film's meat gets lost inthe sauce. With Janice Rule. Saturday at7:00 and 9:00.Shame (1967), directed by IngmarBergman. (NAM) The film is about twomusicians and their struggle or lack ofstruggle in the war in what is often con¬sidered Bergman's most political film.About this film the director said: "TheShame originates in a panicky question:How would I have behaved during the Naziperiod if Sweden had been occupied and ifI'd held some posifion of responsibilify orbeen connected with some institution? Moreand more I've a feeling that people, underthe tremendous pressure they're being ex¬posed to, are acting out of panic. Acting outof only one motive: self-interest. And that'swhat the film's about." With Max vonSydow and Liv Ullmann. Sunday at 7:15 and9:30.Berger. (NAM) British screenwriter (Jonahwho will be 25 in the year 2000), novelist("G."), and art critic ("The Look ofThings") John Berger's film essay on howwe see art, the world and the ways in whichour culture attempts to manipulate that see¬ing. The questions considered range fromcontradictory aspects of the tradition of oilpainting to different views of women. Mon¬day at 7 15 and 9 30Tke 6tey Cily fauiuialEditor: Mar '•‘ustadtAssociate Ednor: JetfMakosStaff: 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 JournalCalendarF ridayDepartment of Economics: “The FactorComposition of Australian InternationalTrade," R. Stephen Hale, and “The PoliticalEconomy of Protection,” William Dougan,9:20 am, Rosenwald 301; Economic HistoryWorkshop, 3:30 pm, Social Sciences 106;Public Finance and Latin AmericanEconomic Development Workshop, 3:30 pm,Social Sciences 402.Center for Middle Eastern Studies:Student-faculty luncheon, 12:15 pm, IdaNoyes; Arabic Circle. “Difficult Choicestor the Middle East, Farouk Mustafa, 3:30pm, Pick 218; Bizden Size, 3:30 pm. Harper155; Persian Society, “The Image of Womenand Men in the Iranian Popular Press,”Behnaz Pakizegi, 3:30 pm, Harper 175; SherryHour, 4:30 pm, Kelly 413.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium:“Precipitation and Airflow Char¬acteristics of a Hailstorm,” F. Ian Har¬ris, 1:30 pm. Hinds Auditorium.Humanities Collegiate Division: Meeting ofthe Student Advisory Committee, 3:30 pm,Gates-Blake 117.Calvert House: “Friday night at Calvert,”volleyball, 4:30; barbecue, 5:30.Crossroads: Tour of Ethnic Restaurants,meet at 5621 Blackstone, 6:15 pm, sign up inadvance.Hillel: Yavneh, (Orthodox) Passover Ser¬vices, 6:15 pm. Hillel.Christian Forum: “The Religious Challengein Tolstoy,” 8 pm, Brent House.International House: Travelogue to SouthAmerica, 8 pm, I-House.Jesuit House: Party for alumni of JesuitHigh Schools, Colleges and Universities. 8:30pm, 5554 S. Woodlawn.ArtsBrass Society: Trombone Quartet, music ofRomantic, Baroque, Medieval and Moderneras. 9 pm. Bond Chapel. AACM: Concert by “Air,” Steve McCall,Fred Hopkins and Henry Threadgill, 7:30 pm,The Birdhouse, 4512 N. Lincoln,.Court Theatre: “She Stoops to Conquer,”8:30 pm, Mandel Hall.DOC Film: “Black & White in Color,” 7:15,9:30 pm, Cobb Hall.Law School Films: “Bringing Up Baby,” 7:15and 9:30 pm, Law School Auditorium.S.G.; Casse Culver and the Belle Star Band,9 pm, Hutchinson Commons.SaturdayHillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Passover Ser-.vices, 8:45 am; Upstairs Minyan (Conser¬vative) Passover Services, 10 am; YavnehPassover Services, 6 pm. Hillel.Resource Center: recycle glass and paper, 10-4, 54th PI and Greenwood.Change Ringing: Handbells, 10 am, towerbells, 11 am, Mitchell Tower Ringing Room.Crossroads: Saturday Night Dinners, 6 pm,5621 S. Blackstone; free showing of comicfilms, 7:15 pm.UC Men’s Baseball Team vs Milwaukee Tech,12 pm, Staff Field.Gay Liberation Front: Coffee house, 8 pm,Ida Noyes.ArtsStudent Activities: “Dry Run,” swing musicfor dancing, 9 pm, Ida Noyes.DOC Film: “Three Women,” 7 and 9:30 pm,Cobb Hall.Court Theatre: “She Stoops to Conquer,”8:30 pm, Mandel Hall.Orphans: “Jo Belle and Orpheus JazzBand,” 9:15 pm, 2462 N. Lincoln.SundayArts for Amnesty: Exhibit of posterreproductions of artwork specially commis¬sioned for Amnesty International, 8:30-3 pm.First Unitarian Church, 57th & Woodlawn.Hillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Passover Ser¬vices, 8:30 am, Hillel; Upstairs Minyan(Conservative) Passover Services, 10 am,Hillel.Rockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy Commu¬nion, 9 am; University Religious Service, 11am, Rockefeller Chapel. Calvert House: Sunday Morning Theology,“Homosexuals as a Sexual Minority: SomeTheological Reflections,” Michael Gorman,10 am; Mass 11 am. Bond Chapel.Crossroads: Bridge, 3 pm, 5621 S.Blackstone.Changes to Community: “Body Energy,”Marjorie Foster, 7 pm, Blue Gargoyle.UC Action Committee on SouthAfrica: Speaker - Barney Mokgatle,secretary of Soweto Students RepresentativeCouncil, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes library.UC Folkdancers: general level folkdancing, 8pm, Ida Noyes.ArtsNAM Film: “Shame,’-’ 7:15 and 9:30 pm,Cobb Hall.Court Theatre: “She Stoops to Conquer,”8:30 pm, Mandel Hall.AACM: Concert by Air. Steve McCall, FredHopkins and Henry Threadgill, 8 pm,Robert’s, 301 E. 63rd.MondayCommittee on Public Policy Studies/Gustav- son Memorial Lecture: “Energy from Fu¬sion: How Much Difference Will it Make?"John Holdren, Berkeley, 1:30 pm, Kent 103.Seminar on Higher Education: “The Processof Planning within a University,” HowardSulkin, DePaul, 3 pm, Judd 313.Committee on Latin AmericanStudies: “Migration and the Labor Market:Argentia and Italy, 1880-1914,” Roberto Cor¬tes Conde, Centro de InvestigationesEconomicas, Buenos Aires, 3:30 pm, Pick 105.Department of Chemistry: “A New Point ofView on Potodissociation and MolecularSpectroscopy," Eric Heller, UCLA, 4 pm,Kent 103.Chess Club: meeting, 7 pm, Ida Noyes.Students to Unmask the Nukes: meeting, 7:30pm, Sun Parlor Ida Noyes. All interested per¬sons are invited.UC Folkdancers: beginning level folkdanc¬ing, 8 pm, Ida noyes.ArtsUC Extension: Herman Prey, baritone, 8:30pm, Mandel Hall.NAM Film: “The Jackel of Nahualtoru,”7:15 and 9:30 pm, Cobb Hall.POWELL’S BOOKSTORES - POWELL’!® POWELL’S BOOKSTOREYearly buying books,cash for your libraryNew collections, literature,American history and psychology.1501 E. 57th9am - 11pm daily 1020 S. Wabash9-5 Mon.-Sat.POWELL’S BOOKSTORES - POWELL’SUsed Desks, Chairs,Files, Drawing TablesEQUIPMENTBRAND J co8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:00RE 4-2111ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSunday • April 239 A.M.A service of Holy CommunionCo-Sponsored by the Episcopal Church CouncilCelebrant: Donald Judson11 A.M.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICEDAVID O.WOODYARDDean of the ChapelDenison University, Granville, Ohio“THE VIEW FROM THE DITCH” University of ChicagoSuper Summer-Sports CoreGYMNASTICS, TENNIS, SOFTBALLBASKETBALL, VOLLEYBALL,RACQUETBALL, SWIMMINGFOR 8 THRU 15 YEAR-OLDStwo three-week sessions:June 19 - July 6 — *120.00July 10-July 27 —*120.00Sessions four times a week:Mon. thru Thurs.9 a.m. to 1 p.m.For reservation form:write: Bartlett Gymnasium,Room 1015640 S. University AvenueChicago, Illinois 60637or call: 753-4682Open to University of Chicago &Hyde Park Residents✓ Katharine Hepburn & Cary Grantin Howard Hawks’sBRINGING UP BABY (1938)Fri., April 21,7:15 & 9:30 Law Aud. LSFCOMPAREandCONTRASTTHE BOTTOM-LINEORIENTED SOCIETY OFTHE 70s. . .WITHTHE HUMAN SURVIVALSOCIETY OF THETHIRD WORLD.DISCUSS WITH FORMER PEACE CORPSAND VISTA VOLUNTEERS ANDSIGN-UP TODAY AT THE PLACEMENTOFFICE FOR A TALK WITH FORMER PEACECORPS AND VISTA VOLUNTEERS ONCAMPUS: APRIL 5 & 6 ■■&S?pseviSTA:Old Time Music Convention and Grand Spring PicnicSunday, April 30 on the Quads, Noon til DarkFree - Soda, B-B-Q grills, charcoal, ice POWELL’SBOOKSTORHardballers win 1, lose 2Records fall in 20-16 loss7mmSteve “Lefty” Rogut struckout six bat¬ters in 2M$ innings last Saturday to closeout the Maroons second win of the seasonagainst Niles college. (Photo by JeanneDufort) By Mark WallachThe baseball team continued its losingways last week, dropping 2 of 3 gamesand running its season record to 2-6. Butdespite the shortcomings of a defensethat has made 37 errors, the team has abatting average of .307 and is playingexciting, at times memorable baseball.Against George Williams College, in agame that had a ferocious 25-30 mile perhour wind blowing out and more offensethan many football games, the Maroonsbowed 20-16. Records fell almost asquickly as base hits:* Most home runs hit at Stagg Field (5)* Most Home runs over fence at StaggField (2>* Most runs scored at Stagg Field (36)* Most runs scored at Stagg Field by asingle team (20)Other memorable happenings:IM ReportSoftball season startsBy Howard SulsLower Flint captured the un¬dergraduate residence socim cham¬pionship by virtue of a corner kick, todecide the game between Upper Flint,the team that was incorrectly countedout in this column last week. Upper Flinthad defeated Thompson South to win theSilver division, and then edged Dodd-Mead 1-0 to advance to the finals. LowerFlint, the Aqua League champion, edgedAlpha Delta Phi in sudden death 2-1, forthe right to play in the title game.In the Independent League, AmazingSmiling Soccer Team upset Exile’sReturn 1-0, giving Porta Ursam a clearshot at the division tile. Porta Ursamromped over Hungry Bob 6-0, and nip¬ped Kick 1-0, while Exile's Return didmanage to come back with a 4-0 victoryover the Commuters. Porta Ursom nip¬ped Lower Flint for the undergraduatetitle yesterday by a 2-1 score. GraduateLeague Action saw Bill Too wallopBrowbeat 5-0, and edge Tvomas 3-2 toadvance to the All-U title game againstLower Flint. Women's results hadShorey over Upper Wallace 1-0 to win thedivision, while other scores had AlphaDelta Phi over Snell 1-0, and LowerWallace over Upper Flint 2-1.Joe Blazy captured the All-U archerytitle by hitting 28 out of 30 bullseyes for atotal of 266 points. The undergraduatechampion was Greg Ricardi of LowerFlint who had 232, while Jane Redfern,recovering from an ankle injury, had 190for Upper Wallace. Men’s Badmintonresults had Sam Banker, the graduatechampion, defeat Jeff Kirtner of UpperFlint in three games, 15-11, 11-15, and 15-10. Team results from both sports wereunavailable.With the advent of softball season thisweek comes the most innovative andlongest hoped for action out of the IM of¬fice — the supervision of officials. Of¬ficiating. by far the biggest complaintover the years about intramurals, willhopefully be improved through the com¬bined activity of the IM office and thethreeman student Executive Board, whowill choose all playoff officials.Overall, there seems to be no greatfavorite as in years past. Too Too isgone, at least in name, the Shorey teamhas gone its various ways, and lastyear’s upstart Thompson South andHenderson teams have been hurt bylosses. In the Undergraduate Leagues,Breckinridge and Lower Flint lookstrong in the Red League. Psi U is the favorite in tl Green la-ague, whileDodd-Mead m mid take the OrangeLeague. In (a.. White League thingsshould bj up (or grabs between the Fi-Shorey and Thomp-for the Phi Gam’s to- the preseason pick>ut Henderson couldji s, Upper Rickson South, but 1prevail. Hitchcoiin the Blue Leagibe tough.In the Independent League theQuadranglers. composed mostly of lastyear’s Shorey tear, should have a toughbattle against the Pumphouse Gang, andWalloo’s Wacks. the Undergrad footballchampions and nucleus of last year'sHenderson and Thompson South soft-ball teams. The Green Dictators, defen¬ding independent champs under anothername, will be strong also.Graduate action is always tough, andthis year should be no exception. LegalEagles should take the Red division, butthe influx of new teams make predictionsvery difficult. Divinity Dogmatics couldbe tough in the Blue League based onlast year’s playoff performance. TheWhite League should be the most in¬teresting with the Penguins, ColdStorage and Laughlin I battling it out,but barring any major upset, look for thePenguins to repeat as division champs.Other favorites include the Wallaces inwomen's softball, Hitchcock-Snell andUpper Wallace-Lower Rickert in Co-eciBlue, and Lower Wallace-Upper Rickertin Co-ed Red. In the Independent league * Mort Fox had a single, two doubles, atriole, and a home run. “Fox is hittingthe ball unbelievably,’’ Angelus said.* Byron Trott started a streak, com¬pleted against niles College, of sevenconsecutive hits.* Trott hit a 450-foot double against theleft center field fence. “It would havebeen the first ball ever hit out of leftcenter field (at Stagg Field),’’ Angelussaid. A George Williams player also hada blast of 450 feet, his for a home run.The Maroons productive offense con¬tinued in the first game of a doubleheader last 'Saturday as the Maroonspummelled Niles 16-4. John Bruns gotthe win and Steve Rogut, with a bewit¬ching array of off-speed deliveries,finished up by striking out six Nilesmenin 2-1/3 innings.In the second game the Maroons raninto a familiar problem: close games.“Wejet up,’’ Angelus said, trying to ex¬plain how an 8-7 loss can follow a 16-3victory. To the Maroons' credit,however, they staged a furious last inn¬ing rally that came within one hit of sen¬ding Niles home a double loser. “Weshowed a lot of courage," Coach Schachtsaid. Trailing 8-2 with two out and no oneon. the Maroons tallied five times behindrun-producing singles by Trott, Fox,Don Ciciora, Paul Harris and a basesloaded walk to John Winklereied. Therally expired with the bases full,however, when Jim Chapman hit a softline drive which the Niles shortstop cor- Byron Trott Photo by Jeanne Dutortrailed.An analysis of the team’s performanceso far shows that defensive shortcom¬ings have been critical. The Maroonshave allowed 20 unearned runs to scorewhile being the recipients of only five. Intwo or three losses, defensive lapseshave been critical. •Coach Angelus said that the weatherhas been particularly detrimental to hispitching staff. “Except for (Ralph)Hruban our pitchers rely on ‘junk.’ ’’ hesaid. “You can’t throw a (good) curveball when it’s cold and windy.’’Also, with the return to health ofSekur “shaker" Bahudur (3b, dh) andJoe Kinscel Ipitcher. dh), Angelus ex¬pects his starting lineup to be set andhis pitching staff bolstered. “Threegames could have been turned around,"he observed. “They'll balance out."Women lose to rain, LewisThe By John Pomidorsoftball team lost one game toSoftball Top TenTop Ten Points1. Penguins (3) 482. Legal Eagles (2) 463. Divinity Dogmatics 384. Hitchcock 345. Cold Storage 306. Phi Gamma Delta 287. Quadranglers 218. Psi U 169. Laughlin I 710. Walloo’s Wacks 3Votes: Pumphouse Gang. Lower Flint,Upper Rickert, Dodd-Mead, Great Dic¬tators. Bradbery.it should be the Quadranglers versus theWalloo’s Wacks and Wackettes, winnerof the wet-T-shirt competition, while thePink Penguins are Graduate Favorites.Ann Speckman tags an enemy runner as Christie Nordhielm looks on. TheMaroons are still looking for their first win but were not allowed any chance to gainit this week as they were rained out of two home games. (Photo by Robin Drain) Lewis and two to the weather last week,coming^up on the short end of a 10-6score Friday, and getting washed outagainst Illinois Benedictine Tuesday.Coach Pat Kirby’s squad has hadmore than the opposing teams goingagainst them.“Our biggest problem so far has been alack of experience." she said. TheMaroons are starting a new infield thisyear. To complement the new infielders,there is a new infield. The women havebeen forced to play at the west end ofNorth Field, instead of the usual eastcorner. It takes a while for fielders to getfamiliar with the rugged terrain, which ismarked by stones, bumps, divots, andglass.The reason for the shift is another “op¬ponent" the Maroons have faced thisyear, the weather. In addition to keepingthe east infield soaked and postponingfive games out of nine, bad conditionshave also kept the squad inside for alarge proportion of practices.The women did manage to face LewisFriday, but never really were in whatmore than one spectator called a sadgame. In the fourth inning, behind 2-1,Maroon starter Kim Curran got the firsttwo batters to ground out. Lewis put thenext five women across with two singles,a double, triple and error.The Maroons rallied in the seventh,but it was too little too late. Maria ElenaMalo had the key hit in that effort, a tri¬ple with Jeanne Dufort and Ann Har-villa in front on a walk and a single.Mary Klemundt sacrificed Malo homefor the last Maroon run.Harvilla led the team with three hits,while Paulita Sales, Ann Speckman, andMalo had two.Weather permitting, the Maroons willget their chance for revenge againstLewis in the Chicago State Tournamenttomorrow. They can be seen on NorthField against St. Xavier next Thursdayat 4:15.Things are loose at UCTC’s first openBy Mark DeFrancisInternationally ranked quarter-milerStan Vinson grinned at the starter whileU. of C. varsity sophomore Jim Readcrouched grimly in the next lane; their440 intermediate hurdle race wasthoroughly enjoyed by the little girlriding her bike in the pole vault runway.Last Saturday afternoon at Stagg Fieldthis careful pandemonium, the season’sfirst University of Chicago Track ClubOpen Meet, satisfied the appetites ofseveral dozen well-chilled participants.Attended mainly by the UCTC and theChicago varsity it became a trial run forthe club’s major upcoming meets.Although Vinson’s winning 52.9 in theintermediates stole the show (his secondattempt at the event with sights onMoscow), the freezing wind couldn’tdeter a number of other fine per¬formances throughout the meet. Theclub’s Kurt Schallenberger won the 5000meters, finishing a minute ahead of themob in 15:15.4. In the 1500, UCTC’s ownmedical student Jeff Baerman crossedfirst in 3:59.1, embarrassing third placeKen Popejoy who hasn’t competed sincethe '76 Olympic trials. Varsity seniorTim Bastian powered to a fine 4:09.5 insixth, with teammate John Pearsonfollowing in 4:15.5. The heavilypopulated 800 meters also brought outseveral quality efforts. Birdlike LarryGnapp strode through in 1:58.3 to edgeout a win, while U.C.’s promisingfreshman Dave Green, who never lostcontact, took third in 1:59.0. Kathy Halldelivered an outstanding female per-On April 8th the men’s track squadtravelled to Crawfordsville, Indiana tocompete in the annual Wabash CollegeRelays. While they did not place againstthe strong field that day, there wereseveral fine individual performances.The mile relay team pulled out a 3:26.6through the efforts of Jim Verhulst, TimBastian, Marshall Schmitt and freshmanDave Green. Green dipped under 50seconds in his own circuit, helping theteam to its fastest time in several years.On April 10th the Junior VarsityRelays were held at Stagg Field in adownpour of rain. The Chicago frosh-soph team smashed the Junior Collegecompetition, taking first by a margin ofover 50 points. Three teams dropped outof the meet due to the elements.The Chicago-Valparaiso dual meet onApril 12th at Stagg Field proved to be atight battle. It was the 1600 meter relayteam which turned the balance at themeet’s end, bringing the final victory toChicago, 73‘/2 to 71'/2. Under cool condi¬tions, the relay team of Verhulst, Derse,Bastian and Green dusted the fading op¬position and turned in a season’s best of3:29.3. Chicago was represented by a for¬midable army of fifty-one participants,many of them new to the college. .Coach Ted Haydon is very pleasedwith the team’s progress and potential.He noted that one area of weakness layin the distance events, since almost all formance, placing third in the secondheat with 2:12.5.In the sprints, the club’s recent sign¬up Jerry Kranik dominated, winningboth the 100 and 200 meter events withtimes of 10.8 and 21.6. The crowded 400meter dash showed some excellent varsi¬ty running: senior Bill Butigan handilytook third in 52.5, while SteveJanachowski drew attention in the nextheat licking the field with a 53.8. In spiteof wind and unpolished hand-offs, theUCTC’s “A” team of Nutall, Kranik,Michelin and Lewis pumped out a fast43.6 effort in the 440 yard relay.The varsity had firsts in both the highhurdles and shotput, Jim Jacobsensqueaking past the tape in 15.6, whileThe men’s tennis team got off to an in¬auspicious start April 8 when they spentthree hours travelling to Beloit Collegeonly to be rained out and forced to makethe return trip without their first taste ofcompetition.But the wait proved to be worthwhileas the Maroons scored a devastating 9-0victory over Chicago State last Fridayon the Maroons’ home courts. OnlyGerry Mildner, playing fourth singles,had trouble with his opponent, droppingnine games in two sets. The top threeplayers — Bruce Carman, Roger Lewis,the cross-country men have gone into themiddle distances leaving a hole in the5,000 and 10,000. However the team looksespecially strong in relays, and shouldfare well in the upcoming Ohio StateRelay meet in Columbus this weekend.The following weekend brings a squaddown to Des Moines, Iowa for the DrakeCollege Relays, the only meet where top¬flight national competition, a marchingband, and a beauty queen converge inthe same stadium. Kim Johnson won on his first put of10.88 meters.Typical of the mood of the meet wasJeremiah Hynes’ effort in the 3000 metersteeplechase. Bravely leaping the nearlydry water pit, he smiled and waved at thethin audience for the next elevenminutes and nine seconds. He was theonly participant. The meet closed withthe mandatory mile relay, consisting of asingle team that materialized on thespot. The members were a quarter-miler,a miler, a veteran marathoner, and amysterious young man known only as'Reuben”. After the meet, speculationsover beer and popcorn at Jimmy’s by themeet organizers, (who traditionally holdplanning conferences there,) led to nonew leads on Reuben’s identity.and Ken Kohl — scored easy victorieswhile the bottom of the lineup dem¬onstrated the Maroons’ depth by scor¬ing the most impressive victoriesNumber five player Eric Von der Portenwon 6-0, 6-1 and number six JohnHollowed won 6-1, 6-1.The doubles teams of Carman-Lewis,Jim Hvizd-Hollowed, and Steve Hallin-Kohl completed the sweep with easywins.Coach Chris Scott said he hoped thatthe first match would build the team’sconfidence and be the basis for a strongseason. Scott must have felt some disap¬pointment then when his Maroons lostthe next day to the University of Wiscon-sir-Milwaukee by a fairly decisive scoreof 6-3.Milwaukee swept five of the sixsingles matches, thus securing the vic¬tory before the doubles competition evenbegan. The only standouts in the singlesmatches were Gerry Mildner who kepthis undefeated season intact with a 6-2,3-6, 6-4 victory and John Hollowed whotook his opponent to three sets beforelosing 6-1, 1-6, 7-5.The Maroons came back for a moralvictory in the doubles matches, winningtwo out of three and losing the third in aclose tie-breaker. Milwaukee had (Photo by Jeanne Dufort)another match to play that afternoon sothe doubles matches were limited toeight game pro sets. First doublesCarman-Lewis lost 7-8 in a tie-breakerafter being ahead 6-3, Von der Porten-Hvizd scored a dramatic victory 8-6 in atie-breaker after being behind 6-2, andthe Kohl-Hollowed team scored theeasiest victory of the day 8-5.Coach Scott said that he was “not sur¬prised” by the loss to Milwaukee anddoes not believe that it indicates aweakness in the team. He said, “Ifigured Milwaukee would be tough,especially since they’ve been playing ongood indoor courts all winter and haveplayed 13 matches this season while thiswas only our second.”Scott said he was happy with the waysome members of the team fought, par¬ticularly Kohl and Carman. He said theteam will improve as the players become“match tough" and as they develop thestrategy and techniques which cannotbe taught within the constraints imposedby the lighting and quickness of theField House courts.“We’re going to get better and have awinning season,” said Scott.The Maroons will have a chance to testthat prediction today when they playHarper College at 1:00 on the 58th St.and Stagg Field courts./Irish bomb ruggersThe Southside Irish blasted theChicago ruggers and then both teamsgot blasted at the ensuing party lastSaturday.Chicago’s rugby-football club wasmissing a couple key backs as well assome enthusiasm up front in their 18-0loss. The Irish also had a superior kick¬ing game which was a great advantageon the windy Washington Park field.Chicago also dropped the B’ sidegame by a 4-8 score. Steve Churchscored Chicago’s only try, whilenewcomer Dale Friar showed alot ofpromise in the backfield.The rugby club travels to South Bendtomorrow for a match with a club fromNotre Dame.V Sports ShortsWomen outclassedat ParksideThe women’s track team travelled toParkside, Wisconsin for an invitationalmeet against nine big schools on a coldSaturday morning last week, wherethey found themselves outclassed bytheir competition.The meet was not a total loss by anymeans, as some of the members playedup to their competition’ with personalbests in various events, and Chicagogot a chance to compare itself with thebig time schools.Individual standouts for theMaroons included Jan Rossel with herbest time in the 400 hurdles, PattyHansen (2:38.8) and Karen Luh in the800, Vicki Powers with a 28.1 in the 200, Aand Debbie Lucas (24:37), Susan Cor¬nelius, and Susan Ikazaki in the 5000meters.Women’s soccer teamhosts invitationalFour Big Ten teams will join Chi¬cago’s women's soccer club on theMidway this weekend in a round r^bininvitational tourney. Ohio State, Min¬nesota. Illinois, Purdue, and Chicagowill vie for tourney honors, with gamesbeginning Saturday morning at 11:30and Sunday morning at 9, and continu¬ing till nightfall, on the Midway Plai-sance at Dorchester- Avenue.Chicago plays Minnesota at 2:30 p.m.Saturday, then faces Illinois at 5:30p.m.Varsity off to a good startBy Mark DeFrancis Men’s tennis team splits openersBy Hack WilsonBlack & White in Color / Three Women'Jean-Jacques Annaud / Robert Altman>• * April 21 7:15 & 9:30 Cobb / April 22 7:00 & 9:30 Cobb-....... •. ' ». , u;*.v • - - ; . . 'V ..." \ sA iEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kunbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd Street493-8372 VERSAILLES5254 S. 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ED., or RECREATION can helpsolve social, human and environ¬mental problems of low-incomecommunities. Sign up at PlacementOffice for a talk with formerVISTA volunteer on campus:APRIL 5 & 6CongradulationsAbbe Do you want to rentsublet, buy, or sell?Get It Done...Use Maroon ClassifiedsDATES TO HUNNAME. ADDRESS, PHONE ...SUC PEOPLE50c per line^ 40c per Hne to repeatI There are 30 spaces perI spaces and punctuationto be capitalizedI ALL ADS PAID IN ADV.—iLr~1 ]i— . >———|1)ji ^-1iriL |'i KENNEDY. RYAN, M0M6AL i ASSUOWES.WCfMM mftrm hot)Directory of ValuesWe Know Hyde ParkReal Estate Inside OutHOUSES FOR SALEDESIGN ELEGANCEBooth & Nagle-designedcustom-built townhouse.Built in 1974. Lovely land¬scaped corner lotw/driveway & garage. Cen¬tral Hyde Park. 3-4 bedrms.,3 full baths. Exposed brick,spiral stairs, atrium-an ex¬traordinary architecturalstatement. $149,500. Shownby appointment only. For in¬formation call 667-6666. H0AAE + INCOMEIn this sturdy 3-flat brickbldg, in excellent area ofSouth Shore. 3-car garage,gas-steam heat, new roof, 6-rm. apts. w/appliances. Fullbsmt. Asking $65,000. CallMrs. Ridlon at 667-6666.BEAUTIFUL INSIDERehabbed 8 room frameduplex. Nice small backyard.Lots of potential. $61,000. Formore information callRichard E. Hild at 667-6666.APARTMENTS FOR SALEBEST CO-OP IN TOWNNear 57th & Stony Islandoverlooking the museum.This 2 bedrm., 1 bath apt.w/garage is ready to buy at$28,500. To see, call FrankGoldschmidt at 667-6666.SINGLE'S SPECIALThis 2 rm. coop apt. in attrac¬tive well-kept bldg,w/congenial neighbors &near transportation is asingle's dream come-true.Priced for a pension budgetof $6,500. Low assmts. near49th & Drexel. To see, callAvery Williams at 667-6666(res. 684 7347).ELEGANCE & SECURITY3 bedrms., 3 baths, modernkitchen (one yr. old), oakfloors refinished last summer& parking in this outstandingeast Hyde Park coop. To see,call J. Edward LaVelle at667-6666.ENJOY THE SUMMEROn the baicony of thisspacious 1 bedrm. condow/modern kitchen & bathElevator bldg, w/sundeck &laundry. Parking provided.Very low assmt. Priced at$32,500. Call Mrs. Dilon at667 6666.PRICE ADJUSTEDShop & compare. Ray School& campus. 3 bedrm. 2 bathcondo w/modern kitchen.Priced in upper S50's. Ownerwants immediate sale. Tosee, call Mrs. Haines at 667-6666.NEW LISTING2 bedrms , 2 full baths & awealth of sunshine make thiscondo home perfect at$53,500. 56th & Blackstonelocation. Immed. possession.To see, cali Mrs. Haines at66 7 6666. 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).SUNNY SOUTHERNCONDO3 bedrms., 2 baths, modernkitchen w/parquet floors andbreakfast area Dishwasher,stove, refrig., washer & dryerincluded. Call now — this willsell quickly! Call J. EdwardLaVelle at 667 6666.MADISON PARKFirst time offered! Elegant10 rm. condo overlookingprivate park. 4 Irg. bedrms.,3 baths 2 huge sunporches.Wocdburning fireplc.,elevator. Many, many extrasin this 3400 sq. ft. condohome. For informationplease call Margaret Ken¬nedy at 667 6666HYDE PARK'SSPECIALCoiy & bright 2 bedrm. apt.competitively priced at$45,000 for immed. sate. Thisunit has formal din. rm.,modern kitchen & bath & isavailable for spring posses¬sion. Tc see, call Mrs. Hainesat 667 o666HOUSINGAT58TH& HARPER6 rm. 1' 2 bath condo w/indiv.HAVAC, new kitchens &baths, 100% new writing, etc.The definitive Hyde ParkRehab" for years to come. Tosee, call 667 6666*W61 East 57th Street,' Chicago, Illinois 60637667-6666Daily 9 to 5 Sat 9 to 1, Or call 667 6666 Anytime-Co" 'JS tv T ,1-, OV-JT -,r, y18—The Chicago Maroon—-Friday April 21, 1978CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEWoman seeks room in apt Need im-mediately. Would like to keep cat ifpossible. Call 955-4175. Keey trying.Sublet for summer 78 wanted: 1bedrm. or studio, near campus. Pleasecall Rachel, 753-2249 ext. 1203.Large prof, home 10 rms., 3'/s bathsporch drway. AC 5 min. walk to cam¬pus for rent furnished Sept. 78 July 79.$750 per mo. 324-4481.Wanted: Studio or one Bedroom apart¬ment starting May, June or next fall.Up to $l60/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 lOp.mRoom in apt available now til Sept. 2blocks from Regenstein furnished241 5457.l'/2 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, nopets. Contact Arthur Parsons, PierceHall, Dept of Sociology, Smith College,Northampton, Mass. 01603 (413)586 1243.Sublet furnished l bedrm. May to midJune fall option 51 8. Blackstone363 3457 or 947-6471.2 rooms in large house shared by otherstudents/employees. 1 bl. from co-op,washer/dryer & other extras. Prefernon-smoker at least 25 who wants tolive in coop (indv. food) 947-0331.Kathy.May 1 sublet with fall option. Largeone bedroom in quiet safeneighborhood. Call 363-5181.4 bedrms., 3 baths $400/mo., by qtr.,quiet grads. Leave name Torres-Wilson. 5508 Cornell. Avail. May 1.Female (grad or working) wanted toshare apt. with female grad55th/Cornell. $117.50/mo. NOW & sum¬mer. Call Maggie 324 4858 or 241-5457.HYD PK nr. U of C 12 3 bedrm. apts.,well kept bldg., nr. 1C, bus park, lake,reas. BU 8 0718Tired of hassling with UC housing 8.Hyde Park condos? Summer or longterm opening for grad students incooperative house. Low rent. Goodpeople. 5621 Univ. Call 955 2653, Teri orJim. *TAI CHI CH'UANThe UC Tai Chi Club meets every Sun¬day at 4945 S. Dorchester (enter on50th). Kung-fuat 6:30. Tai Chi at 7:30.,Tai Chi is soft, flowing and balletic buta rational system of self-defence. Allare welcome for a free introductorylesson.FOUND1965 High School Class Ring, vicinityof 6lst & Cottage Grove. Call 787-6630,6-IOpm.GAY PEOPLEGAY COFFEEHOUSE Sat. 22 April8 12. Ida Noyes Library (1st floor).PROSPECTIVES :$UC GAY LIBERATION FRONT invites you to call or drop in UCGLF rm.301 Ida Noyes Hall, 753-3274 Fri. andSat afternoons & early eve. ANDCOME TO OUR COFFEEHOUSE!see under GAY PEOPLE, this page.PARTY DOWN!PSI U PARTY Sat., April 22 5639 S.University 9:30? Dancin' drinkin'disco. UCID req. Don't study, party! PEOPLE WANTEDWant to get involved in the RepublicanParty? Full & 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, sightseeing. 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.Earn $180 a week addressingenvelopes in the comfort of your home.50 cents for information. Write to EarlDyson Jr. 7152 Lawrence Chicago, IL60619. ,! lHelp wanted, graduate student preferred, part timfeiTV attendent, hospitalin area, no TV knowledge necessary.Must be here through summer. CallMrs. Eastmen, 676-2226.PEOPLE FOR SALEPROFESSIONAL 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 op-theses. Reasonable rates. 667-8053Thesis, Dissertations, Term Papers,Inc. Foreign language gen corresLatest IBM corrective SEL IItypewriter Reas rates. Mrs. Ross239-4257, bet 11 am & 5 pm.Piano Lessons for beginners thru advanced. $4. 288 8747.PROGRAMMER - Full time summer;pt. time later. Exp. w/IBM 370,DCE20, PKP10, INTERDATA M74,BASIC, ALGOL. 955-5587 eves.;753 8084 afternoons.BIBLIOGRAPHIC SEARCHING.Librarian to do bibliographicresearch. Anne Foley 753-2426.For experienced piano teacher of alllevels call 947-9746.Quaker meeting Thursdays noon Vic¬tor Klausen's rm. CTS.MEDICICONTINENTALBREAKFASTCome to the Medici Sunday morningfrom 9:30 1 and enjoy Sunday papers,fresh orange juice, homemade sweetrolls, fresh fruit, homemade yogurtand coffee. All you can eat for $2.50.MODERN WORLDNail shut those 69's . . abuse healthfood "There's no product made ..."MEDICALCODERSResponsible persons for job deman¬ding high accuracy, concentration, attention to complex details. Coding ofmedical symptoms and diagnoses fornational survey Prior experience withmedical terminology useful. HighSchool eduation; some college preferred Full time for 6 to 9 months Beginmid May $3.75/hr. Call for appoint¬ment 753 1572 or 1577 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER I*FREE PARTY beer and chipsall alumni/ae of Jesuit high schools,colleges, university Friday, April 21,8:30 at Jesuit House, 5554 S3Woodlawn, meet some old friends.Department of Germanic Languages8, Literatures presents a lecture byAndre Lorant (Univversite de HauteBretagne) on "Oedipus, Hamlet, andDon Carlos," at 3:30 on Friday, April21 in Classics 21.FOR SALE1971 MGB 4 spd AM/FM, 2 new tires60,000 mi, moving — must sell $1500 orbest offer. After 6 pm: 643 0341 or call721 5461 and leave message. VW FOR SALE1973 VW Super Beetle 24,000 miles,AM/FM, rear defogger, MUST SELL.11600 366,9277 ask for JanTRAVELOGUEI House Ass'n program April 12 willfeature new SOUTH AMERICANfilms plus experts from Chile,Equador A ballerina from Rio willdemonstrate dances of Brazil. Friday,8 p.m., 1414 E. 59th. Students 50 centsothers $1.HOUSINGSERVICEVW Van 73 red white $2300 call Bill at798 2800Got a BIKE to sell’ Call Rekha 6846180 am/pm.2 BR Condo in E Hyde Pk 493 3822 Looking for apt. or tenant? StudentGov. Housing Service has list of apts.Open Mon. 12 30 3, Tues 3-6, Wed.12 30 3:30 Or call answer service753 3273Upright piano $150 call evenings241-7107Used piano $150. Also rugs, lamps. 6845691.4846 S Kimbark Ave Sun April 23, 9-1pm, 3 families - Yard and basementsale: maple bedroom set, oak furniture, cherrywood record cabinet,clothes, toys, lots of goodies KE6 4288 WALK WITH ISRAELSunday, May 7, Support Israel andJoin the Hyde Park Jewish Communi¬ty. Volunteers needed to people HillelHouse checkpoint and neighborhoodintersections. Call or stop in at Hillel,5715 S. Woodlawn, 752 1127.RECORDSWANT TO SELLYOUR CAR? Last 2 days to buy sale priced Odyssey8. Nonesuch records. Student Coop,Reynolds Club basement, 9:30 6:00M F, 10 4 Sat. RAP GROUPA Women's Rap Group will meet Monday at 7 30 p.m. on the 3rd floor of theBlue Gargoyle. For more info 752 5665LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera is on sale in most HydePark stores 8. Bob's Newstand Weneed women to join the editorial staff.Call 752-5655 if you can help out.BOOKS BOUGHTDon't hoard! Values drop daily — sellnow. Student Coop, Reynolds clubbasement, 9 30 6 00, M F, 10-4 Sat.,753 3561.BRASSMUSICHear the Brass Society's TromboneQuartet tonight in Bond Chapel at 9:00p.m., Trombone and hornand-trombone music of all eras Roman¬tic, Baroque, Medieval and Modern.PIED PIPERS?Bunday Student Flute for sale Excellent for beginners. Good condition,recently checked and adjusted;752 1000 ext. 410. PERSONALSRugby 4pm everyday at Stagg Field.DATING SERVICELow cost over 1200 members 274-6940Pregnant’ Troubled' Call 233-0305 10a m. - 1 p.m. M-F or Mon 8, Thurs. 7-9p.m.. Lifesaving help, test refAlan W I don't make myself lookSTUPID for NOTHING. Where's the 5dollars you promised me? Your friend,Margie M.P P Boucher . I sit and stare at you inFrench class hoping praying thatyou will gimme a smileHappy Birthday Bochnovic! Lovefrom the gang.If you want student services: Dial-ARideboard, Refrigerator rental service, comprehensive financial aidbooklet, student discount card, VOTEStudent Services Steve Kehoe, Presi¬dent, Jeff Leuvell, Fianance Chair,Debbie Lucas, VP, Gene Klimczak,other College, Natasha Matkin Woodward - Court, Sean Jordan, Woodward,Court.Howard -1 want to go to the dance withyou!! Please ask me! anonymous butcutePREGNANCY TESTS - SATURDAYS 10-1 Augustana Church, 5500 S.Woodlawn Bring 1st mornings urinesample $1.50 donation. SourtsideWomen's Health. 324-6794We will pay top dollar for your presentcar. Come in or call Drexel Chevrolet,4615 S Cottage Grove, 538-4600 ask forSam Greenberg.PAN PIZZADELIVEREDThe Medici Delivers from 5 10:30weekdays, 5-11.30 weekends, 667-7394Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourself.RECORPSWANTEDWe pay cash for used Records, ailtypes, 33 RPM only. Second HandTunes 1701 E 55th 684 3375 or 262-1593.FLAMINGOON THE LAKEStudio, 1 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.■1 /ft C£ V { )15 SALES withservice is our IV BUSINESSREPAIR specialists n<p on IBM, SCM.Olympia & others §F Free EstimateAsk about our >>. RENTAL withoption to buy nn New & RebuiltTypewriters AK CalculatorsDictators <ijj Adders •4-uU. of C. Bookstore ♦V 5750 S. Ellis Ave.753-3303 YY MASTER CHARGE one BANKAMERICARD V0 £ 6 C * ** * * + Trip the Light Fantasticat theDRY RUN DANCEwith theUC Jazz BandSaturday, April 22, 9:00Ida Noyes HallInstructors available for ballroom and swing dancing,Get set for the Glenn Miller Dance next week!FREE U.C. I.D. requiredFLAMINGO APTS5500 S Shore DriveStudio and One BedrmApts. Furn & InfurnShort & bine Term RentalsParking, pool, restaurant,drycleaning, valet. deli.24 hr. switchboard. U of Cshuttle bus Vz hlk. away.Full carpeting & drapes incl.Special University RatesAvail.752-WOOPIZZA PLATTER1460 E. 53rd St.. OUR SPECIALTYPizza Also Italian FoodsPick Up OnlyMl 3-2800 Lc> Friday, April 28,Ida Noyes9:00Glenn Miller Orchestra 1978Hallp.m./ The Chicago Maroon—Friday, A 21, 1978—19i£Mountaineering #1.FUNDAMENTALS OFMOUNTAINEERINGWhat is mountaineering ah about? Funny you should ask.Because we just happen to have an answer. (Ah-h, life’s littlecoincidences.) Mountaineering is a skill, a science and an art.Yet anyone fj^with a thirst for excellence and normally,anotor skills can master it. Simply studyLdamentals and follow them faithfully/developed.these,; iIStep one,• appropri-fcr-ately enough,'starts by select¬ing the correct site.To do so, pick upa bottle of Busch’.This is commonlycalled heading'for themountains. I, here’s•where the fun be¬gins. Hold the mountain/irmly in your left hand,grasp the mountaintop with your right, ‘ hand and twist3 Now for the• tricky partTNeophytes, listenup: the proper pouris straight down othe center of theglass. Only inthis way willthe cold, invigo¬rating taste ofthe mountaincome to a head Once poured pacing becomes paramount. As any seasoned’• mountaineer will tell you, the only way to down a mountainis slowly, smoothly and steadily - savoring every swallow of thebrew that is Busch. If you’re a bit awkward at first, don’t be ^discouraged Perfection takes practice. Soon enough, havingemptied your glags arid filled your soul^you too will be amountaineer.Gcit Before „ AfterMountaineering. i JElg*0 MountaineeringDon’t just reach for a beer.20—The Chicago Maroon—Friday April 21, 1978 for the mountains.