The Chicago MaroonVol.87, No. 56 The University of Chicago © The Chicago Maroon 1978 Triday, May 12, 1978Public Affairs Programreceives funds to presentlectures on urban questionBy Eric Von der PortenExperts on urban America, itsproblems and current stabilizationand rehabilitation strategies willbe on campus this fall as part of arecently funded Public AffairsProgram lecture series. “Conserv¬ing Our Urban Resources.”The S and H Foundation haspledged $2000 to bring several lec¬turers to the University to speak tostudents, faculty members, andChicago residents interested in andaffected by the changing condi¬tions in American cities, includingthe middle class flight to thesuburbs, crime, poor housing con¬ ditions. and the destruction of localneighborhoods.Possible speakers include JaneJacobs, author of “Life and Deathof the Great American Cities” and“The Economy of Cities;” GaleCincotta, a Chicago housewife whohas become perhaps the nation’smost influential advocate of grass¬roots community organization;Sam Brown, director of Action;and Roger Starr, author of “TheCity and Its Critics” and formerexecutive director of New York'sCitizens’ Housing and PlanningCouncil.According to chairman of thePublic Affairs Program RichardTaub, the series is intended tostimulate discussion and study ofthe different solutions being pro¬posed to benefit the old. decayingcities in this country.Current conditions require newsolutions that “rely less on federalresources than in the past, and lesson large infusions of funds fromany source,” said Taub in the pro¬posal for the series.New solutions to be investigatedinclude “creating a new kind of in¬vestment climate which will en¬courage urban investments, new'forms of bringing people togetherso that they may creatively workto protect that which they have,and attempts to return both peopleand their jobs to the city throughskillful reinvestment and publicLectures to p 3 College applicants up 22 percent;largest number since late 1940’sBy Abbe FletmanThe College has received over2700 applications for next year, thelargest number of applicationssince the late 1940’s, according toLorna Straus, dean of students inthe College. As of the end of April,1648 students were admitted, saidan admissions office employee.The increase represents a 22 per¬cent rise over last year’s ap¬plicants and a 16 percent rise over1976 applications, said Straus.“Deposits have already been putdown by more minority studentsthan accepted admission lastyear," said Straus, but themale/female ratio probably willremain near 65/35, with possiblyfewer women. “This is a figurethat troubles me,” said Straus.Straus expects- at least 700students in the class of 1982 as com¬pared to 640 in the class of 1981 and704 in the class of 1980.While she attributed the rise to“a lot of hard work,” Straus was ata loss to explain the 64 studentdrops in the incoming class lastyear.“I’d love to think last year was afluke," she said.Straus cited the work of the Stu¬dent Schools and the Alun.mSchools Committees as beingticularly helpful to the admissionsoffice. “It’s not only the admis¬sions staff that does the hardwork,” said Straus.College recruiters' have concen¬trated on bringing prospective Director of College admissionsFred Brooksstudents to campus to visit, believ¬ing that once a student has seen thecampus his possible preconcep¬tions will be disproven and he willwant to enrollStraus estimated that about 70percent of the prospective studentswho visit the campus accept theUniversity’s offer of admission,while only about 50 percent of allapplicants offered admissiondecide to matriculate.Fewer women apply and enroll,said Straus, because familiestraditionally are not prepared to Dean of students in the CollegeLorna Strausspend as much money on adaughter's education as on a son.The reputation the South Side hasof being unsafe also deters parentsfrom allowing their daughters toenroll or even to visit the campus,said Straus.Dean of the College Jonathan ZSmith recently attributed the pro¬blem of low female enrollment tothe high number of coeducationalcolleges in the East and the Col¬lege's Midwestern location, cou¬pled with the perceived disad¬vantages ot the College's urbansurroundings.Divestiture convention parodies ’60’s protestsBy Richard Biernacki“I don’t want to give the Left a badname, ” the clean-cut Harvard student said.“but let's face it — some of the people hereare acting without regard for reality, truth,or common sense. ’ ’The remark came from one of the morethan 600 anti-apartheid activists who recent¬ly gathered at Yale University for a three-day surreal parody of 1960’s radical chic.The self-styled revolutionaries, exhaustedin the end by ideological quibbling, ventedfrustration by stealing cameras fromreporters and students they suspected to beF B I. agents.The convention’s collapse posed a toughquestion for the divestiture movement ; Can1970 s students focus on South Africawithout getting snared in the left-wingrhetoric that characterized late 1960’smovements? The Yale conferees split even¬ly on whether divestiture should be used as arallying point to press other, more radical,demands.The delegates comprised a diverse cast ofcharacters: dialectical world-historicalmaterialists, clean-cut student governmentleaders; briefcase-toting scholars; ruffiansagitating for violent street revolution; andgraduate students reminiscing about S.D.S.In her notes, a sociologically-inclined Yalereporter described the assemblage ofdelegates from more than 40 colleges as“the best, the brightest, and the Maoist.”Nearly half the delegates, dressed mainlyin crewneck sweaters and pressed shirts,were vaguely liberal, energetic Ivy Leaguestudents — an indication, perhaps, of thedivestiture issue's potential for igniting a broad-based movement. The others wereOld New Leftists from a dozen or more em¬bittered sects who came to quarrel overfiine points of Marxist theory.The staid, wood-paneled corridors of the had been erected with funds from ancientNew Haven patricians. Now the halls wereplastered with Maoist posters proclaimingThird World revolt. One sign pictured whitecapitalist pigs, eyes gouged out. lying dead death was revealed in an autopsy scene:“They failed to see that majority rules."The prevalent brand of parlorBolshevikism was expressed in its mostpenetrating form by Sally Oldenbach. asuburban radical (Brookline. Mass, varie¬ty). On her silk blouse was printed anoutline of dark Africa, from which a blackhand emerged w ielding a rifle bayonet drip¬ping blood. A tank rumbled across hermidriff, spraying machine gun fire at skin¬ny, fleeing white soldiers.At the executive planning session. Sally,in her chic outfit advertising South Africanliberation in bloody red letters, took thegroup on a grueling tour of Robert's Rules ofOrder.“Can subsidiary motions, except to lay onthe table. I mean not the previous question,be amended'.’" she asked. “Or can they beapplied to any main motion, like when theysupercede the main one and have to bedecided before you can look at the mainone?”Convention to p. 2InsideLetters p. 4GCJ p. 7Calender p. 19Sports p. 20convention building. Yale’s Harkness Hall. in a U.S. ghetto alleyway. The cause ofYale University campusr r -§ w ■" s *. M. W& ’ H*..11 -/4 4 'Old Campus4.New Haven GreenConvention from p. 1She continued, “I don’t think it’s very fairto restrict new motions within topic areaswith my second revised subproposal, but Ithink we ought to look at them under theoverall agenda of prioritized goals.”Delegates like Sally, interested in WorldRevolution as a fashionable hobby, neversensed they could turn a debate procedureinto art while extinguishing its substance.By 2 am, bludgeoned without interruptionby her parliamentary muscle, the delegatesvoted Sally dictator to singlehandedly draw-up at the next day’s plenary meeting rulesfor entering motions, checking credentials,and the like.“Some people here may have hang-upsabout democracy,” said the man who calledfor adjournment, “but I think we’d ratherget some sleep.”During the conference’s first day,representatives met in small workgroups todiscuss such nitty-gritty specifics as thekinds of computers I B M. has sold to SouthAfrican prisons, how to take advantage ofstate laws that force public school trusteesto hold open divestiture meetings, or how toship medical aid to black liberation soldiers.But some meetings disintegrated inheated ideological struggles. At one, the"facilitator” called on a woman to reviewthe successes of Columbia University’sdivestiture campaign. Dressed in raggedy-cuffed trousers and a man’s fadedworkshirt, she turned the meeting into abrawl with her perversely cliched diatribe.‘‘Oh my God, GOD. I think she’s a Spart!”someone shrieked as the woman rose tospeak."That’s right honey, I’m a Spartacist andI’m mighty mean and proud.” she replied ina husky voice.In a surprise move to disrupt the meeting,the Spartacus Youth Leaguer opposeddivestiture, telling the delegates they shoulddisband to let capitalism’s laws "run theirawful, inevitable, life-destroying course.”Mounting her chair to scream Marxistneologic more loudly, she said U.S. invest¬ment in South Africa actually should be ac-clerated to speed capitalism’s maturation inthat country into a deadlier, more op¬pressive force. As blacks are thoroughlybrutalized, she explained, they will com¬prehend their oppression, revolt, thenestablish "paradise on earth, on the tip ofAfrica.”Like many delegates, the Spart was in¬terested more in acting-out her pubescentfantasies than effecting real politicalchange."In the meantime, the important thing,”she continued, puffing her corncob pipe, ‘‘isthat we have to make blacks feel wrenchingagony and excruciating pain...”At once, five scholarly Dartmouthstudents, realizing free speech can promotedrivel began chanting "Shut up! Shut up!”“Awright. Awright” — the workshop"facilitator,” a gushy co-ed, tried to stop thecommotion by leaping onto a desktop andwaving her arms."Come on, I’m trying to deal with thevibes in here, like, come together now-, youguys,” she said. "Like, this could besomething beautiful.”The leader had done it. Vibes? Theworkshop had been steered into a 1960'scelebration of Love, Peace, and To¬getherness. After all. how could a housedivided prevail against capitalism, racism,imperialism, male chauvinism, and badvibrations? The bewildered Spart descend¬ed from her chair, but in a final gesture of revolutionary defiance, she gave a foulsignal with the middle finger of her righthand."Wow, her hand is calloused,” said a well-dressed youth from Stanford, who, likeothers, knew the working class only as atheological abstraction. As if sighting a rarespecimen, he asked "Do you think she reallymight be a member of the proletariat?”I asked the Spart and her congeriewhether they were actually from Columbia.More disruptions planned?"What are you, C.I.A.?” they shot back.A sickening wave of paranoia sweptthrough the room. I had been taking notesand photos. All heads spun round to mybackrow seat. While 1 blushed suspiciously,the "facilitator” approached."You don’t mind if I take a look at yourpress card, do you?” she asked.By next morning, two campus reporterssuspected to be a counter revolutionarieshad cameras stolen from under their noses.A Harvard photographer’s film vanishedmysteriously from within her camera.The Marxist feuding continued, climaxingat the plenary session to ratify a politicalplatform.First to speak was Edgar J. PenningtonIII, a radicalized defector from the rulingclass. He came from Hampshire College(Camp Hamp) where rich kids occupy ad¬ministration buildings for recreation. A sit-in there last spring forced the school not on¬ly to stop holding stocks tied to South Africa,but to halt investment in corporationsaltogether.With radical banality, Pennington de¬nounced the "vicious, evil, imperialist cor¬porations that suck the lifeblood from theoppressed.” Though sociologists theorizethat only children of the rich have time anddiscipline enough to labor on behalf of themasses, Pennington may have been plainnuts. He scratched his Bolshevik goatee andspoke with an accent that imitated bothChurchill and Lenin, proclaiming "we shallfight the bourgeoisie on the beaches, in thehills, and on the streets.”The showdown came when a New Yorkcommune, the Foxboro Committee for Arm¬ed Liberation of South Africa, introduced aproposal recommending that colleges chan¬ nel funds divested from South Africa intocommunity development programs andsocial welfare projects. Old New Leftistsand New New Leftists clashed over it in anall-out floor fight.The New New Leftists tended to befreshmen of sophomores, members of thepost-baby boom generation whose politicalconsciousness was molded after the Viet¬nam era — they had been only 12 or 13 whenantiwar sentiment crested with McGovern’scandidacy.They also tended to be black, Jewish, orIvy Leaguers, wanted big political changes,but were cynical about Marxism and suspi¬cion of all entrenched doctrines.White upperclassmen or graduatestudents were more numerous among theOld New Left caucus, which was fixated onthe slogans of Mark Rudd and H. RapBrown.The veterans considered South Africa tobe not only a battleground between blackand white, but between bourgeosie and pro¬letariat.With support from various church-initiated groups such as the AmericanFriends Service Committee, the New NewLeftists tried to carry the commune’s pro¬posal by arguing it would prevent "reac¬tionary reinvestment” in countries likeChile or South Korea. But a Rutgers greaserfrom the Revolutionary Student Brigade,wearing army fatigues, a red beret, andheavy boots jumped up to challenge theresolution, claiming, "any time you investin a capitalist society, you exploit workers.”"The proposal will foster the illusion thatchanges can be accomplished within thesystem,” said the Old New Leftie."Instead, we have to look the bourgeoisiestraight in the eyes” — he used the properOld New Left pronunciation,Booooooshwaseee — "and say, F. you. Thissociety is too currupt for us to condone anyform of investment whatsoever.”The maneuvering that followed was likethat at a tight national political conventionon a key test-of-strength vote. Floorleaders button-holed, armtwisted, and pro¬mised. Both sides introduced trivial amend¬ments not for ideological reasons, but to tryto stampede delegates into a unified caucus based on a shallow, albeit catchy addition tothe main resolution.Finally, an hour later, the reinvestmentproposal was narrowly rejected, turning theconvention toward the extreme view that allinvestment is ultimately unethical.Divestiture would be pushed as a means oflending support to liberation movements inSouth Africa, not to purify portfolios in ahopelessly exploitative capitalist system.Many of the routed moderate and NewNew Leftists who saw the convention runn¬ing to a violent dead end based on the keyvote, and half the Harvard students,streamed from the conference hall to headhome. With temperate delegates out of theway, the Old New Lefties competed to in¬vent more excessive revolutionarystatements. A resolution condemning"racism, national oppression, and im-perialsim,” was passed, and another pro¬posal was revised from "aiding struggles”in South Africa to read "aiding armedrevolt.”Rank and file divestiture activists are notfar-out communists, judging from theirposition papers and tactics. Why were somany disruptive fanatics at the nationalconference? One Princeton student saidstudents who devote time to politics "tend tocongregate in a separate subculture remov¬ed from realities of everyday life.” It maybe that activists who had the energy totravel to Yale were also more dedicated topolitical change and therefore more inclinedto espouse extreme positions.But the conference did establish aframework for coordinating a nationaldivestiture campaign by initiating anewsletter and permanent council with bi¬weekly meetings ot delegates irom acrossthe country. The biggest gain from the con¬vention, however, may have been exposingmany freshmen and sophomores whose firstpolitical involvement was the divestituremovement to the avaricious and mindlesstendencies of the old student Left.Said one disgruntled freshman from Har¬vard: "Capitalism is, for me — and, I hope,the campus generation in the 1980’s — ahollow, dead word tied to the 1930’s and late1960’s. It’s time we came up with some ideasto rouse up something new.”ISRAELI AND AMERICAN JEWS IN DIALOGUEA DISCUSSION, IN SMALL GROUPSBETWEEN ISRAELI AND AMERICANJEWISH PROFESSORS, GRADUATESAND UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS ATUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO.KICKOFF SPEAKERS: PROF. ISAAC D. ABELLA.PhysicsPROF. DON PATINKINVisiting Israeli Prof.FRIDAY, MAY 12 9:00 P.M.HILLEL FOUNDATION-5715 WOODLAWN AVE. SUMMER JOBSInteresting, challenging jobs for collegestudents and teachers with any office ex¬perience are available this summer. Youcan work the days of your choice in theloop or your neighborhood. Top wages.Write, call or go in to register as soon aspossible at the office most convenientto you.ELAINE REVELL, INC.ChicagoLoopNorthsideHyde ParkOAK PARKDES PLAINESLOMBARD 230 N. Michigan Avenue ST 2-232523126 W Lawrence Avenue LO 1 -45081525 E 53rd Street 684-7000944 Lake Street AU 7-68882510 Dempster Street 296-5515477 E Butterfield Rd 960-2511The Prestige TemporaryOffice Service ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSunday, May 14, 19789 A.M.A Service of Holy CommunionCo-sponsored by the Episcopal Church Council;Celebrant: Donald Judson11 AM.University Religious ServiceDAVID T. SHANNON,Dean of the ChapelPittsburgh Theological SeminaryPittsburgh, Pennsylvania2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 12,1978Columbia Senate recommends sellingsome stocks, rejects blanket divestitureBy Richard BierncakiColumbia University’s Senate narrowlyrejected a proposal last week calling forblanket divestiture of South Africa stocks,but recommended selectively selling stockin companies that show “indifference” toapartheid policies.While 300 students demonstrated outsidethe meeting hall, the Senate voted 24 to 22against a minority report that called on thetrustees to divest from firms that do notheed a deadline for withdrawal of all assetsfrom South Africa.The governing body instead adopted themajority opinion of a committee of faculty,student, alumni, and administrators thatwas established in November to advise thetrustees on Columbia’s $80 million in SouthAfrica stocks. The six-member committeeconcluded this month that the board shouldexpress the university’s concern aboutapartheid to corporate managers atstockholder meetings and divest only fromBy Karen HellerThey think they have pacified Ireland;think they have foreseen everything; thinkthey have provided against everything; butthe fools, the fools, the fools! — they haveleft us our Finian dead, and, while Irelandholds these graves. Ireland, unfree, shallnever be at peaceSean O’CaseyThe Plough and the StarsMany theatergoers are unfamiliar withworks of Sean O’Casey. The paperback edi¬tion of three of his most noted plays, “Junoand the Paycock,” “The Shadow of a Gun¬man,” and “The Plough and the Stars,” hasbeen out of print for several years and theseplays have rarely been professionally stag¬ed outside of Ireland. O’Casey, who hadworked closely with the Abbey Theatre,Dublin, moved to Devonshire, England in1927, but never stopped writing plays aboutIreland. He became a “playwright without atheatre” in his later career — he wroteeight more plats — but they were poorlystaged and incorrectly interpreted andcriticized.Thomas Mac Anna, the current ArtisticDirector of the Abbey Theatre, is trying tomake known the unknown Sean O’Casey. In1976, the Abbey Theatre company made afour-city tour of the U.S. but did not get toChicago. Fortunately, last Monday. MacAnna did make it to Chicago and spoke atlength to a University audience about thehistory of the Abbey, O’Casey, and Mac An¬na’s recent successful stagings of thefamous and less-than-famous O’Caseyplays.Mac Anna compared O’Casey to Dickensin his great interest in his characters at thesake of plot. “It was as if he was saying thisis not much of a plot but look what I hang onit.” More than a realist playwright. O’Casey banks lending to South Africa’s govern¬ment.The Senate was persuaded to vote againstunloading all $80 million worth of stocks,nearly a third of the total endowmentholdings, after many speakers argued itmight worsen the school’s financial plightand discourage future corporate donations.But dissenters, including professor Alex¬ander Erlich, an economist and author ofthe minority report, said that spreading outtransaction costs of divestiture based on alengthy timetable would not result in largefinancial losses.Erlich told The Maroon that even if allSouth Africa holdings were immediatelytraded for other stocks, the costs wouldamount to less than one third of one percentof Columbia’s annual budget.“I wouldn’t rule out at least some corpora¬tions responding positively to our ultimatumfor withdraw from South Africa, saidwrote “total theatre. In his later plays hebroke out of nationalism and realism Heintentionally mixed farce with drama orwith melodrama. He was ahead of histime.”Staging the late O’Casey plays has notbeen easy, Mac Anna said. The directoroften spent days trying to conceive certainimages in the plays. For one particularlydifficult work, he played a recording ofO’Casey reading to understand a particularimage. Although not as deep as JoseQuintero’s relationship with Eugene O’Neill(the director claims to be haunted byO’Neill's spirit and has heard his “master'svoice” on several occasions), Mac Anna’spersonal affection for O’Casey is great.Mac Anna’s feelings tor William ButlerYeats, the first Director of the AbbeyTheatre, are not equally heartfelt. Duringthe course of his storytelling (“a great Irishart”) Mac Anna made frequent pokes at thepoet. “O’Casey was in love with words,”said Mac Anna. “He would describe in threelines what Joyce would write in one andYeats wouldn’t write at all.”Mac Anna never met Yeats but believes,based on his stagings of the early plays, thathe never properly understood O’Casev. D.Nicholas Rudall, Artistic Director of theCourt Theatre, asked Mac Anna if he likedany of Yeats’ plays. “Yes and no,” the Irishdirector said. “He couldn’t write comedy atall and envisioned the theatre as somesecret society. His artistic attitude was.This is good for you. You'll go away fromthe theatre much better than when youcame in.’ I'm sure if we had workedtogether we would have fought like cats.”Mac Anna’s stagings of O’Casey’s playshave been well received in Ireland. Londonand in the U.S. The director has taken thetime to thorouehlv understand the Erlich, “especially if joined by otherschools. If you want to behave in a moralway, you have to pay the price.”Erlich reasoned that U.S. corporationsshould pull out of South Africa altogetherbecause the technological support they lendto the military and police outweighs theirpotential contribution to change, even ifthey improve black employment policies.According to Erlich, an economichistorian, U.S. subsidiaries employ only onepercent of South Africa’s workers, but theirshare of the total capital stock is severaltimes greater.“U.S. firms are strategically located inthe economy, though their employment issmall.” he said. “They are purveyors ofmodern technology and high quality pro¬ducts crucial for the army, trade, andeconomy.”Theatreplaywright and his works. After a per¬formance of “The Star Turns Red,” MacAnna’s latest production at the Abbey,O’Casey’s widow came backstage to con¬gratulate the director. “You’ve done Seanproud,” she told him. “That’s what I hope.”Mac Anna told the full-house audience onMonday, “that I’ve done him proud.” Lectures from p. 1relations,” according to Taub, and the lec¬turers will be people who are “workingcreatively” to define and implement viablesolutions.Students in the Public Affairs programwill be the direct beneficiaries of the series.The Public Affairs Program is a recentlycreated undergraduate major combiningsociology, political science, economics, andgeography with independent studentresearch on problems of public policy.The series will also be advertised inChicago newspapers and is expected todraw a substantial non-University audiencebecause of its interest to the problems ofChicago, particularly Hyde Park and thesurrounding area.Culver to speakfor NOMORNOMOR. the committee for a nuclearoverkill moratorium, and the ExecutiveCommittee of the Hyde Park-KenwoodCouncil of Churches and Synagoges. hasinvited Senator John Culver (D.,Iowa) tospeak on the dangers of the nuclear armsrace.Representative Ralph Metcalfe of the24th Congressional district, which includesHyde Park, will join Culver, a member ofthe Senate Armed Services Committee, todiscuss the opportunities for disarmamentbeyond SALT II.Appearing with the legislators will bethe Reverend E. Spencer Parsons, dean ofRockefeller Chapel. Arnita Bosw'ell. pro¬fessor in the School of Social Service Ad¬ministration. will introduce the speakers.The meeting will be held at 3:30 pm inthe Hyde Park Union Church at 5600 S.Woodlawn Ave.Mac Anna: tales from the AbbeyPREPARE FOR: /39th fjMCAT • DAT • LSAT • GMAT "GRE • QCAT • VAT * SATNMBUI.IIIECFMGFLEXVQENATL DENTAL BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFUnbl* Programs & HoursThere IS a difference!!!For Information Please Call2050 W DevonChicago. III. 60645(312) 764 5151SPRING, SUMMER, WINTER COMPACTSMOST CLASSES 9EGIN EIGHT WEEKSPRIOR TO THE EXAM. STARTING SOON:GMAT-LSAT-SUMMER MCATSUMMER SATOTHER CENTERS CALL toll free BOO 223 1782Center* In Vaior US Cities Toronto, Puerto Rico and Lugano. Switrerland HYDE PARK PIPE RNO TOBRCCO 5H0P1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim”Mon. - Sat. 9-8; Sun. 12-5PipesPipe Tobaccos Imported Cigarettes CigarsISRAEL INDEPENDENCE DAY PARTYSaturday, May 13, 9:30 P.M.AT THE BAYIT5458 South EverettISRAELI FOOD, MUSIC, and DANCING The Center for Management of Public and Nonprofit EnterpriseandThe Center for Policy Studypresent a lecture byCharles J. ZwickPresident of Southeast Banking CorporationChairman. President’s Commission onMilitary CompensationFormer Director, U.S Bureau of the Budget“Military Compensation inthe Contemporary Army”Wednesday, May 171:00 p.m.Business East 101Reception following in Cox Student LoungeTheChicago Maroon1— FFrday 12,*191^—Editorial Letters to the EditorSpringtime at UCThe weather in this past week, the appearanceof the giant pine-cone at the center of Quads, andthe increased social activity around campus, allattest to the fact that, no matter how hard evilspirits tried to prevent it, spring has finally ar¬rived at the University. Unfortunately, the bi¬annual Lascivious Costume Ball has also arrivedto remind us that, no matter how hard we mighthave wished for it, campus social life hasundergone little change over the Dast two vears.Everyone knows that spring is a time whenjuices flow up from the root and fill all livingbodies with a new appreciation of life, but flow isdifferent from rupture, and the Lascivious Ballresembles a nervous, hurried ejaculation morethan a celebration of the rites of spring.The sheer intensity of the Lascivious party-ers is the most disturbing quality of the ball.Modern historians are only beginning to com¬prehend the connection between moderndecadence and repression, but it doesn’t take ascholar to realize that the conspicuous display oflibido at the ball reflects ahigh levelof repressionthe rest of the time.Recently, University style humor has beenused as a label for group primal screams in frontof the library and similarly exposed displays ofemotion. We don’t mean to say there is anythingwrong with such displays, as a matter of fact, thewhole point of this editorial is that they areessential to the sanity of the students here.But we can’t help wishing that things were dif¬ferent, that the repression and the outlandishdisplays were both less extreme. The disap¬pearance of one would necessarily mean the endof the other.Much of the repression is self-imposed (or im¬posed by the illusion of a society that cares onlyabout letters on a transcript) but not all of it.Over the course of this year, the Student Ac¬tivities Office has proven that they are only con¬cerned with providing momentary release fromthe pressures of academia.But is that an appropriate function for enter¬tainment, to placate the masses so that they canmore contentedly go back to their narrowcubicles? Spring is as good a time as any for areevaluation of goals, and we think it is a verygood time for student activities to start rethink¬ing theirs.Artistic events, and even campus parties,should be used to widen and enliven the students’world. Glenn Miller and lascivious display arefun, but no one can argue that they offer studentsa valuable, stimulating experience. Student Ac¬tivities should try to provide experiences thatcan be remembered meaningfully years into thefuture, not amyl-like momentary rushes thatdisperse with the first Monday morning class.Editor: JonMeyersohnNews Editor: AbbeFletmanFeatures Editor: Karen HellerSports Editor: R. W. RohdePhoto Editor: Jeanne DufortAssociate Editors: Nancy Crilly, Claudia MagatEric Von der PortenProduction: Judith Franklin. Michelle PleskowLiterary Editors: Peter Eng, George SpigotGraphics: Chris PersansBusiness 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, Michael Gorman, Carl Lavin. Dan Loube. SusanMalaskiewicz. Jim Muckle. Gene Paquette. Andrew Patner,Craig Phillips, Sharon Pollack, John Pomidor, LynnSaltzman, Steve Strandberg. Carol Studenmund, HowardSuls, Clark Thompson, Peter Thomson, John Wright. Trustee respondsTo the Editor:Since I am the Trustee referred to inyour Friday, May 5, editorial, itseems that clarification is in order onthree points: (1) who I am, (2) how Ifeel in principle about the events oflast Monday, and (3) correction ofsome of the more obviousmisstatements which appeared inyour reporter’s article.I have signed this letter, so thattakes care of no. 1.I was asked to appear before aseminar sponsored by the Depart¬ment of Education for the purpose ofinforming degree candidates in thatdepartment on how our Boardoperates — in particular, its commit¬tees. It never occurred to me, nor Ibelieve to anyone else in attendancesave one, that such a class was for anyother purpose than instruction ofstudents interested in entering or ad¬vancing a career in professionaleducation. It most certainly was not apress conference. Furthermore, yourreporter never identified himselfbefore, during or after the meetingand I regard this as something lessthan honest behavior on his part. Itried to handle each subject withfrankness and candor because Iassumed that privacy was understoodand accepted.Finally on this point, in addition toresponding to questions, I covered ac¬tivities of the Board and eight com¬mittees on which I have served or amnow serving — Executive, Budget,Search, Investment, EncyclopediaBritannica, Nominating, Campaign,and Visiting Committee to the Divini¬ty School. The article hardly,therefore, reflects what took place,only what Mr. Biernacki chose to see.Now, as to the contents of the article— please know I have gone over eachof these points with one or more at¬tendees so as to be sure of my ground.In no way did I say or imply that Iwas in favor of reopening the subjectof divestiture.I have not been pressured to remainsilent — I have “kept my trap shut”because University policy indicatesvery clearly the individuals whospeak for the Trustees and for theUniversity as a whole. That is as itshould be and I abide by the rules. I dobelieve in dialog and although I didn’tmention it at the seminar because ithad slipped my mind, I did sit in on ameeting with representatives of theStudent Action Committee whereindialog was offered to and rejected bythem.The statement that at the FebruaryBoard Meeting “a number of Trusteesprivately agreed that a joint commit¬tee should be formed to studydivestiture” is pure fabrication byMr. Biernacki, at least with respect toanything I may have said.Your reporter’s comments that Isaid that Trustees have supportedSouth African investment “primarilybecause they profit from owning ordirecting firms active in that coun¬try” is even more puzzling — I said nosuch thing, nor did I say that theyhave a “narrower outlook.” I believe Imay have suggested the opposite.The comment about Trustees look¬ing alike refers to remarks made inconnection with the Nominating Com¬mittee, wherein I stated that in ourdeliberations we attempted to choosenew and younger Trustees fromdiverse backgrounds and parts of thecountry, so they wouldn’t look alike.The statement attributed to me that“we are affirming trade worldwide”is correct”, but the addendum“regardless of the status of humanrights in any particular country” areMr. Biernacki’s words, no^ mine. I didtry to explain that interdependencebetween nations in business andfinance is far ahead of political in-terdependence and I wasn’t sure that this was truly understood by those ad¬vocating divestiture from SouthAfrica or from any other nation.I most certainly made no statementwhich could in any way be interpretedas criticism of the President of theUniversity. I have never, nor will Iever, say anything about John Wilsonthat doesn’t reflect my affection andrespect for him.Finally, if you had considered veri¬fying the accuracy of your reporter’saccount, you might have taken asomewhat different stand in youreditorial.Kingman Douglass Jr.Mr. Biernacki replies :Mr. Douglass is entitled to his opi¬nions and prejudices, but not to his er¬rors. He misquotes the article in ques¬tion, incorrectly assumes I was theonly student reporting, and apparent¬ly forgets his own words.The article was based on my ownnotes and those of another student. Wewere the only attendees who took any,at least on South Africa. The two setsof notes, eight long pages that werechecked against each other for ac¬curacy, certainly seem more reliablethan week-old recollections.On forming a jointcommitteeBoth sets of notes recorded this ex¬change:Question: “In February, did thetrustees consider setting up a commit¬tee with faculty and students to in¬vestigate divestiture ?Answer: “A number of trusteeswere in favor of that approach. ”Question: “Did you personally sup¬port a committee like that?”Answer: “I believe in dialogue, asyou can see.”I phoned Mr. Douglass May 10 tofind out if he thought his answers hadbeen misinterpreted. He denied mak¬ing any remarks whatsoever about ajoint committee or even having beenasked about such a group. He alsorefused to (jiscuss the other alleged in¬accuracies.On affirming worldtradeBoth sets of notes quote Mr.Douglass identically: “We are affirm¬ing trade world-wide, regardless ofthe status of human rights in a par¬ticular country.” That two indepen¬dent reporters would fantasize thesame statement is hardly likely. HowMr. Douglass is certain he did not inthe course of two hours say the wholesentence can only be guessed.On trustee conflictof InterestThe article does not, as Mr.Douglass claims, state that he said,“trustees support investment in SouthAfrica primarily because they profitfrom owning or directing firms activein that country. ” It says he “seriouslyconsidered’’ the charge. Mr. Douglassdiscussed his family ties to Continen¬tal Illinois, elaborated on the com¬pany, Dun & Bradstreet, whichoperates in South Africa and which hedirects, and reviewed some othertrustees’ ties, all in response to a sim¬ple question about whether thetrustees might be biased aboutdivestiture. Besides the quotes in thearticle, Mr. Douglass said that,“Because of the world they live in, thetrustees start off with a different ap¬proach to this. They start from a dif¬ferent base. ”On remaining silentThe trustee not only has kept hismouth shut, as his letter says, but saidMay 1 that “I’ve been told to keep mymouth shut.” In the letter Mr.Douglass says he must remain silentbecause of University rules. But inOctober he spoke to The Maroon fornearly an hour about South Africa in¬vestments. Since January, he hasrefused to discuss his personal viewsor votes on the issue, claiming Dr.Dunham should speak for the board The University by-laws to which herefers define official spokesmen forthe board and do not stifle all expres¬sion of opinions. Why was Mr.Douglass able to speak in Octoberwithout violating by-laws, but notnow?Obviously, the ban on talking wasordered by administrators, not re¬quired by rules. At the forum Mr.Douglass stated that “the chairmanand president feel stronger about thisthan I do,” referring to the silenceorder, then added immediately, “thechairman could change this. ”These are only a few of Mr.Douglass’ more obvious errors. Hisothers could be argued as well, butthese seem the most germane. Over10,000 people received notice of Mr.Douglass’ lecture from the Office ofPublic Information and it was adver¬tised as “open to all faculty andstudents. ” It is therefore a shame thatMr. Douglass did not consider hisremarks suitable for everyone in theUniversity community.Wilson vagueTo the Editor:In President Wilson’s “last pressconference,” his defense of institu¬tional privacy seems to have becomestrangely intertwined with a defenseof personal privacy, and even of ig¬norance. Wilson appears to believethat in the course of daily affairs,private foundations have a “right tosilence” similar to an individual’srights in a court of law. This impliesthat as a matter of routine, the in¬terests of the foundation are asthreatened as the interests of awitness under interrogation. Are weso alienated,so opposed in our in¬terests, that a doctrine of privaterights must be invoked to preventbasic communication? His stance im¬plies that the University shares nomutual goals with the students, oreven, in some cases, with the faculty.This I am willing to believe, althoughI doubt that he would agree with myconclusion. •Privacy for the institution of courseimplies that there is a public element,a group of outsiders, if you will, whohave no place ir. the University, andtherefore no part in determining itspolicies. At first blush one mightjudge that the “insiders” are thosewho have financial control of the in¬stitution. But that is not the distinctionWilson draws in his interview. In hisperspective, the “public” seems to in¬clude students, the Maroon, WHPK,and some faculty members (all ofwhom have financial leverage) who“leak” information about possibleplans for a new hospital. Wilson’spublic, in other words, includesanyone who talks or communicates inan uncontrolled manner about thedealings of the University. The“private” people are those who exer¬cise power by maintaining a mystify¬ing silence buttressed with snideremarks.In connection with this urge forsilence, a second confusion arises,when Wilson implies that privacy andlack of precise information are inex¬tricable concepts. Anyone with themost humble intellectual ambitionsmust be aware that “vagueness” isthe starting point and not the goal ofeducation. If Galileo had told thecourt that the sky was too overcast tosee the stars, the privacy of theuniverse would have been well-served, and more to the point, thesanctity of a corrupt church wouldhave been well-protected.The world certainly is a “veryvague place sometimes,” and Mr.Wilson’s attitude helps to keen it thatway.Sar.ih Gordon4.—The Chicaao Maroon—Frirtav. Mav 19. 197ROpinionSouth Africa:what next?This Opinion piece was submitted by the U of C ActionCommittee on South Africa.The Maroon’s May 5 article on trustee dissent marks asignificant breakthrough for the campus effort to bringabout divestment of South African investments. The arti¬cle shows that the Action Committee has had a concrete, iflimited, impact on trustees’ attitudes and actions. Severaltrustees have broken the wall of unanimity to say theirminds are not made up on divestiture. In addition, the in¬vestment committee now reviews stockholder resolutions,instead of assigning that task to a high level accountant,an assistant treasurer. Pickets, rallies and petitions dohave some affect, and must continue.Of immediate importance is the revelation that an un¬disclosed number of trustees are sympathetic to forminga joint faculty, student and trustee committee to in¬vestigate and advise on stockholdings in companies in¬vesting in South Africa. There is no obstacle to such acommittee in the University statutes, and a member ofthe investment committee has stated his group “couldokay the idea.”Columbia, Yale, the Universities of Illinois, Oregon andMassachusetts and dozens of other schools have heldhearings on South Africa to solicit the full range of factsanck arguments. The University has many students andfaculty who are knowledgeable about the economy,Students, faculty and staff have a rightand a responsibility to publicly discussthe desirability of the University's ex¬isting investment policy.history and culture of South Africa, and on investmentethics and social responsibility. Why have other schoolsdrawn on their pool of scholars to try to reach areasonable decision on divestiture, but not ours? If theUniversity will not use the available intellectual resourcesin dealing with such question it is indeed guilty of being an“Ivory Tower” institution.We have wondered for months why discussion of suchimportance has been closed off, and why trustees refuse toexplain their votes at meetings or on stockholder resolu¬tions. Now we know why. On the one hand PresidentWilson and Board Chairman Reneker impose a gag orderto hush the trustees. On the other hand. Wilson claims atpress conferences that the board must speak for itself. Ina mysterious transformation, academic freedom ofdiscussion comes to mean academic freedom from discus¬sion.We realize that there have been many arguments aboutthe most effective means of change in South Africa, andthe proper course for the University. Nonetheless, webelieve there is clear evidence that continued investmentin South Africa strengthens the power of the white minori¬ty regime and thereby contributes materially to the con¬tinuation of apartheid. In addition, that other Universitieshave divested or have seriously considered suchmeasures, as at Columbia last week, shows that such astep is indeed possible.We believe that students, faculty and staff have a rightand a responsibility to publicly discuss the desirability ofthe University’s existing investment policy. Along withnumerous faculty and students not yet committed todivestment as a solution, we call for full and fair openhearings, or at the very least some form of public dialogueof the issues. Such a step would be an excellent means ofpublicizing the relevant data and arguments. We believethat any fairminded review of the issue will vindicate ourposition in favor of University divestment and corporatewithdrawal. Until the University commits itself to areasonable policy on South African investments, the Ac¬tion Committee encourages members of the Universitycommunity should join us in public protests. iTUNESLOOKING FOR SOMETHING BETTER?We will have several apartments available forLease in the very near future.2 to 372 room 1 bedroom apts.Starting at $225.Security and one year Lease required.We have a lot to offer. Come see us.MAYFAIR APARTMENTS, 5496 So. Hyde Park Blvd.}1 yr^.r1;a-'""■"SPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSTog*1***<\on*v- Just present your University ofChicago Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago you areentitled to special money—savingon Volkswagen &Chevrolet Parts, Accessories,and anynew or used Volkswagen orChevrolet you buy from VolkswagenSouth Shore or Merit Chevrolet Inc.SALES & SERVICEALL AT ONE GREAT LOCATIONCHEVROLETm VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE72nd & Stony IslandPhone: 684-0400 F'Ac ‘.-V■ Open Doily 9-9 Sat 9-5Part* open Sat. 'til Noon— Swivel Arm DeskChairs $20( BRAND ) EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:00RE 4-2111“THE MOSTIMAGINATIVE,MOSTINTELLIGENTAND MOSTORIGINALFILM OFTHE YEAR!”— VINCENT CANBY, New York Times“A BEAUTIFULA\I) DISTURBINGFILM... ELEGANT.IRONIC A AT)POIGNANT?”—JACK K ROLL. News weekPAKAMorNT IK TIKES PKKSENTS PRETTY BABVsum** KEITH CARRADIXE. SUSAN SARANDONend BROOKE SHIELDS VsMK'tat* FVnduccr POLLY PLATTSrmmp4a\ tn POLLY PLATT Stno hs POLLY PLATTLOlIS MALLE JERRY WEXLERlYnriuced an<1 l hret ted tn LOUIS MALLERNOWSIIOWINIim 'IA I.IXCOt..V MAIJ.Chicago Near North MattesonYOKKTOW.YLombardThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 12, 1978—5hv^de park's# 1 jazz spotFriday, May 12 8:00 pm CHICAGOCARL LUEAOFF & jazz quartetSaturday, May 13 8:00 pmW 1 -Xl.% 1 1 M Sensuous Sound of New Town's OwntT* ALTRIRJAZZ QUINTETSensuous Sound of New Town's Own8:00 pm"A Phenomenal Talent"ALIEN GANGSounds of Love from near & afarWednesday, May 17 8:00 pmThe Joseph Jarman Jam Session with Jon Taylor &Altrir Quintetand many othersEvery TuesdayIs LADIES NIGHT50°c OFF ALL REGULARDRINKS FOR LADIESCONGENIAL ATMOSPHEREYhltwU.1 IN THE HEART OFCOSMOPOLITANHYDE PARK GOOD JAZZPITCHERS OF BEERHOT BUTTERED POPCORNSTUDENT DISCOUNTSTake University Bus Bright to the doorm served on tap <1.50 music charge1515 east 53rd street, hyde park. ChicagoHyde Park’s Home for Creative MusicATTENTIONALL JUNE GRADUATESThe E.R. Moore Companywill be in the Bookstoreto accept orders for capsand gowns for the Junegraduation on thefollowing dates:Wed. 8 am - 4 pm May 17Thurs. 8 am - 4 pm May 18 SKY AND AIR . . . yours in this super location — a 58th Street Condo near Dor¬chester. Five “just right size’’ rooms, private wing of small seven unit building.Your top floor haven has even a natural fireplace. Do you want to see? Move in Ju¬ly. Upper $50’s.YOU'RE THE WINNER! This one bedroom co-op was being held for a purchaser,but now back on the market at an affordable $17,000. Opposite the museum at 57thStreet. Radiant heat with own thermostat. Big picture windwos. Light in all direc¬tions. All spacious rooms. Free parking.ASSUME A LOW RATE MORTGAGE. Can you believe still 8*4% on a onebedroom, den, modern kitchen and 19- living room. Near 56th Kenwood. Im¬mediate possession. $36,000.HANDSOME IS AS HANDSOME DOES. The garden, the building, the vestibule,the halls and YOUR APARTMENT, all in tip top shape Beautiful oak floors andlots of natural woodwork, five spacious rooms. Low monthly $80.82, Price in low$50’s. Near 56th Blackstone.CO-OP with the country-in-the city look. French windows garden level, huge livingroom, two bedrooms. Near 59th & Stony. Low, low monthly. $45.00 - price $28,000.THINKING OF SUMMER? Planning to rent a place in the dunes? Here's a dreamy housefor rent. Approx. 2400 sq. ft. fully equipped, fully furnished. Natural fireplace, largescreened patio. Perched high on a hill, one block from Lake in Beverly Shores, still only 50minutes from campus. Available June, July, August, and Labor Day.“We Make House Calls"Call Charlotte Vikstrom493 0666The Morris Fishbein Centerfor the Study of theHistory of Science and MedicineThe University of ChicagopresentsROBERT M. YOUNGAuthor of MIND, BRAIN, AND ADAPTATIONIN THE 19th CENTURY: CeberalLocalization and its Biological Contextfrom Gall to Ferrier.on“HISTORIOGRAPHY AND THE LABOR PROCESS:FROM SUBSTANCE TO CONTEXT TO MEDIATION TOCONSTITUTION OF SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE”MONDAY, MAY 15, 1978 4:00 P.M.Albert Pick Hall g Room 0015828 University AvenueTHE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 12,1978Texas Art p.10New Music p.15Rock it Roll P-17Bromberg and Muldaur sing a duet Photo by Tim BakerGoingto therockshowAn experimentin participatoryjournalismMAB concerts cannot be reviewed in thesame manner as other shows in the city.This is true because of the nature of theevent itself: MAB shows are aimedspecifically at the student body, and it isunfair, if not impossible, to discuss obiectively the truth of a Mandel Hall event.Therefore in the interest of an openforum, and in the serious belief thatmembers of a Mandel audience can bemuch more appreciative of MAB eventsthan music critics can be, we offer threeversions of what by all accounts was a finenight of music: the Maria Muldaur/ DavidBromberg concert last Saturday night.Jeff MakosMaybe I was expecting too much, butMaria Muldaur just didn't move me. Sheand her band gave a competent performance especially “Brickyard Blues" and a soulful Billie Holiday number butall in all there was nothing reallymemorable. In fact, Maria seemedsomewhat uncomfortable on the stage andher manner lacked the sensuousness forwhich she has become loved. Her voiceseemed tired; perhaps this being the lastnight of the tour she couldn't get up enough'umphf' to pull off this one last gig.Contrast this with the thunderously orchestrated symphony put on by The DavidBromberg Band: while Muldaur seemed tobe treating the show as one that didn'thave to be handled with enthusiasm,Bromberg's animated stance kept the audience alive and involved from beginningto end. The guitarist's sly smile pervadedthe concert: he insured the audience's enjoyment by showing us that he was gettinga kick out of the concert too. His stagepresence was electric and his expertise osmaestro was doubly evident it seemed that he was always in complete control,both over his very talented band and overthe fiery emotions of the sell out crowd.Sometimes he would whip us up in a frenzyand then qhiet us down to a low roar.His band showcased excellent virtuosiperformances by woodwind player JohnFirmin and trombonist Curt Linberg.Some high points of the second half of theshow included a duet with Maria Muldaur,Bromberg's dancing with the audienceduring the first encore, and his second encore rendition of the Dr. John hit, “Such ANight" — a fitting close to a fine night inMandel Hall. I have never been to a concert where audience, performer, and bandwere more united as one.Mike PerlinThe key word for the Muldaur/Bromberg show was professionaism. Sometimes it was exciting profes sionalism; other times it was tepid andperfunctory. It was never anything less,but except for moments in Bromberg's set,it never was really anything more.Actually I'll admit upfront: I was unableto stay for all of Bromberg's set. What Iheard I liked, although it was more for theenthusiasm that the guitarist displayed onwhat seemed to be a very loose last nightof a long tour, than for anything special inhis music which seemed to me to be whiteblues and folk geared to a white collegemarket. This may not be bad, but it's hardly original.Muldaur is another story. Her set waswell received, and her band played theacugs in a good second level LA studioro^\ style: that is, all the right licks werein place, the drummer was tasteful if a bityoung and enthusiastic, and the leadcontinued on page 8continued from page 7guitarist played in a hot Jeff Baxter style.But whereas Bromberg played so well thatyou didn't care about the derivative natureof the music, Muldaur and crew nevertrancended their stylistic influences, sothe music ended up reminding one of allthe groups they sounded like rather thanshowcasing any sort of definite "Muldaur"style.John Genet.. I mean, when you can't even throw yourhat into the audience, you're a clutz.Right? Welcome to the David Brombergshow. All arms, legs and nose, giving aguilty grin when he says 'god dammit' likea little boy getting away with a curse,knowing that you really aren't supposed tosay such things. Maybe I am wrong, butthat little boy-having-a-good-time grin issure there: What, me having fun? Hotdamn! Let's whoop it up a little more...Yeah, so I am identifying, so what? I -was there, clapping, dancing, stomping,and whooping it up with a full house. It wasgood, but was it that good? Does it matter?I and everyone else were having a hell of atime.Most of us, that is. One time I got up withthe person next to me and we were sway¬ing to the music, when the person behindme poked me and asked if I would pleasesit down. I guess they wanted to seeBromberg, but he's not that handsome. Orwere we just having too good a time?(Welcome to the University of Chicago.)The next day it was back to mundanereality: Regenstein. If I'd known the per¬son behind me, I'd probably have seen herthere, studying away, just like me. But fora few hours, the magic of David Bromberghad 900 people swaying, dancing, and hav¬ing a good time. Real relaxed. Bromberg'sgrin said it all.Jared GellertPhoto by Steve StrandbergPhotos by Steve StrandbergPhoto by Tim BakerPhoto by Tim Baker§f)oke§ner) Elcycle Stop5331 Hyde Pari? Clvd.Selling Quality Imported BikesRaleigh, Peugeot, MotobecaneAnnouncing a full inventoryof MOPEDS on display.Open 10-7 pm M-F10-5 pm Sat.684-37378 'The Grey City Jovrnal-Friday, May 12,1978iVi , (%\> i-vroVi'i'iv '»*. »‘f J 1 ALLCIGARETTESThe best newsstand in the worldalso has 2000 magazines for you!51st and Lake Park Chicago II. 60615 (312) 684-5100 55cA PACKLAKE PARK RENTALS6633 Cottage Grove 667-8700 667-6633. We sell MOVING BOXES!!We rent local trailers and trucksWe rent one-way Ryder trucksCALLUS!!■cDancing Strippers Nude BathingTriple X Movies Contests & Prizesand more at theLASCIVIOUSOSTUME BALLSATURDAY. MAY 13 * 9:111 P.M.IDA NOYES HALLIn street clothes s3°°, In Lascivious Costume M75, Birthday Suit FreeThe Lascivious Costume Ball is a private party restricted to students, Faculty andStaff with valid UCID and their spouses. Staff need a picture ID.PE, alumni andlibrary or cluster cards will not be accepted as ID. Spouses to prove their associ¬ation should have two of the following: a) driver’s license with the same last nameand address b) marriage license c) draft card d) ID with picture and name.Cameras will not be allowed in the building nor will there be facilities to checkthem. Liquor and other drugs will not be allowed in the building.$3680®BIGSELECTIONTO CHOOSEFROM.IMMEDIATE DELIVERY (BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE"SERVICE FIT FOR A KING"1639 South Chicago Ave. Phone: 374TRICK VANS, TRUCKS & USED CARS TOO! COMMEMORATION OF THEMAY 4TH MOVEMENTDATE: MAY 13 • SATURDAY *12:30 P.M. - 5 P.M,PLACE: KENT HALL • 1020-24 E. 58TH ST.FREE FILM & LECTUREMOVIE: “CHINA: THE CENTURY OF REVOLUTION.'’— WOLPER PRODUCTION • (STARTS AT 12:30 P.M.)LECTURE: “CONTEMPORARY SIGNIFICANCE OFTHE MAY 4TH MOVEMENT.”— BY PROF. MAURICE MEISNER,UNIV. OF WISC., MADISON (STARTS AT 2 P M )PLUS RECEPTION & TWO OTHER FILMSORGANIZED BY THE CHINESE STUDENTASSOCIATION OF THE U. OF CHICAGO,WITH THE SUPPORT OF THE CENTERFOR FAR EASTERN STUDY, UNIV.OF CHICAGO.1978 REUNION:^fct^[gH& changeInterfraternity SingHutchinson CourtMay 20/9:30 p.m.Fireworks FinaleRockefeller ChapelMay 20/10:30 p.m.For further information on theevents of May 19 & 20 eall753-2175The Grey City Journal-Friday. May 12.1978- 9By Holly DaySusanne Ghez has placed a selection of artfrom Texas, as opposed to Texas Art, at theRennaissancesociety for the final spring ex¬hibition. Although many of the artists drawon either imagery or materials that areassociated with Texas — Ed Blackburn'scowboys, John Alexander's and VernonFisher's flat open scenery and James Surl'ssweet-gum wood sculpture — the style ofpainting is that of good 1970's painting doneanywhere in the United States. Like mostwork done outside New York City, the pieceshave not been reproduced repeatedly in artmagazines and consequently the only ac¬quaintance with these artists for theChicagoan is likely to come through exhibi¬tions such as this one.If there is any thread common to art fromTexas, it might be that a good deal of thework has taken a traditional modern style,medium, or technique and redirected andtransformed it in an unexpected way. Forexample, Earl Staley's purple mermaidresting on the flat fields like a goddess ofthe grain recalls Surrealism, but the style is"American Dream" by Luis Jimenez, 1969-73 Photos by Rolf AchillesT for Texasnot dry and meticulously academic butbrash energetic painting often withoutmodelling. His style calls attention to itscrudity in a humorous way which makes themermaid all the more fantastic.Dick Wray's abstract-expressionist stylepaintings of free gloppy brush work havebeen overlaid by a crude geometric grid orstructure so that his.work conveys a freshnondecorative feel from this improbablemarriage of two styles. The paint looks stillwet and colors have a naive joyful quality.Again the borrowed style has been used forand converted to an entirely different purpose. James Surl's Spikey bristled woodsculptures with their indulgent use of nativewood rough cut from big trees exude in¬credible energy. The material, the strongforms, the male and female imagery, andthe physical marks of the axes and othertools used for construction combine to suggest a raw and primitive power in his work.Not only the rough woody look of Surls butalso the slick artificial surfaces andmaterials, such as George Green's tileboard and Luis Jimenez's polyester resin,can make disturbing and powerful images.Jimenez's works are concerned withprimitive myths and fetishes which havebeen commercialized and modernized intorodeo queens and rock superstars.American Dream, where woman mateswith machine, relates to old myths ofwomen mating with wild fierce animals inprehistoric cultures to produce a super race.Despite the flash plastic material andunusual imagery there are subtle color andcareful arrangement of forms in Jimenez'swork. It is a very strong formal work thatavoids relying solely on its material for effeet.Green's green tile board urinal satirizespublic low brow taste by turning the urinalinto a "beautiful tasteful fountain." Greendraws cockroaches engaged in human ac¬tivities like watching TV or using the publictoilets. His drawings resemble the medicaland scientific drawings of old ScientificAmerican covers. The technique appears tolegitimize the satire. Both drawings andsculpture make use of crisp linear forms.Two artists, Vernon Fisher and Ed Blackburn, work with a photo realism im¬agery but with different methods andresults. Fisher's soft focus photoimages,done by spraying paint on a smooth surface,are overlaid with a story or travelogue thatappears to be typed over the image with agiant ancient typewriter. The combinationof diary and 'slides from the trip' make awitty poetic work that combines fantasywith reality, freedom with order, pictorialillusion with the nonillusionistic surface.Both Fisher and Blackburn engage theviewer at several distances from the workwhich are mutually exclusive. One cannotsee the image if one stands too close to thework nor can one see the painting or readthe printing if one is far enough away to seethe image.Ed Blackburn uses larger than life commercial images from magazines and ironicimages such as the cowboy of Fidel Castro,which are so stereotyped that they become existing with these mundane images, thevery free brush strokes and the emphasis onthe texture of the canvas under the thinpaint generate a separate painting withinthe image.Another realist, John Alexander, makeslandscape drawings in which the low level ofthe light source and the stark landscapecombine with unidentified intruding shapesin an unsettling way. David McManawayuses the mixture of realism and fantasy toproduce new objects in a much more literalway. He juxtaposes bits and pieces of doll'sclothing, bird feathers, and found objects inRikker mounts to form new images whichdraw their potency from past use as well aspresent combination. *Jesse Trevino, a Chicano like Jimenez,depicts Chicano interests and social commentary in his paintings. His realisticallypainted Camaradas del Barrio pictures his'Cactus Flower" by James Surls, 1978nam films Sunday May 14HARLAN COUNTY, USABarbara KoppleCobb 7:15 & 9:30 Monday May 15L'AMOUR FOUJacques RivetteKent 7:30 only10'The Grey City Joaraal-Friday, May 12,1978f t ♦ # . * 4 V * «♦9formal group portrait. The sun bleaches outthe faces as if they were memories of youthand good times.James Hill's work is perhaps the mostenigmatic of all the pieces in the exhibition.A crudely painted gun, a photo of Hill danc¬ing while wearing a gorilla mask, and ablack canvas hint as some private and hid¬den incidents in Hill's life which he shareswith the viewer as he reveals himself onlyas a masked fearsome beast unwilling to expose his true self to the world.Accompanying this varied and interestingexhibition are drawings by these artists andother Texans in Bergman Gallery in CobbHall. In addition James Surls has a largeoutdoor sculpture in the quadrangle. Thegallery is located on the first floor ofGoodspeed Hall. Exhibitions continuethrough June 10. Hours are from 11:00 to4:00 Monday through Saturday."Tornado" by James Surls, 1978 Made for televisionBy Al FrescoA collection of nearly eighty videotapes ofall descriptions is now on display at theBergman Gallery in the exhibjt Videotape:the Meaning is the Use. The videotapes,which can be seen on request, cover a broadrange of videotape application and expres¬sion. The tapes include made-for television,slowmotion footage of the Montreal Olym¬pics, the eight off-camera minutes beforeMr. Nixon's resignation speech, artisticuses of video equipment, examples of educa¬tional uses of video for teacher training,scientific uses of video to record experimental results, tapes made by high schoolstudents as part of their school curriculum,and experimental footage.The video tapes on display were con¬tributed by people from all over the countryin a cooperative attempt to put together asurvey of the medium. Tom Mapp, directorof the Bergman Gallery, feels that whilemany different things are being done withvideo, it is often difficult for people who areusing the medium to find out what other peo¬ple are doing with it. The exhibit is intendedto disseminate and exchange informationabout the capabilities of video in two ways.First, by actual viewing of tlie exhibit, andsecond by an exchange of tapes among thewinners.Surprisingly, the collection of tapes worksas an exhibit. Upon entering the Gallery onthe fourth floor of Cobb Hall, you are con¬fronted with a list of seventy-six titles anddescriptions of tapes. While the descriptionsare little better than the blurbs on the dustcovers of new books, they do give some ideaof which tapes might be intersting to see. Inaddition, the jury has put red and blue starsnext to the tapes which in their opinion aregood or interesting uses of video techniques.Good uses or techniques do not necessarily make interesting or aesthetically goodtapes, but the jury's recommendationsseem reasonable. However, there areseveral inteeesting tapes which do not havestars, because while they may beaesthetically good, they do not reallydemonstrate any special use of video as amedium. For example, Roger Riger'sTribute to the Olympics is a wonderful tapefor anyone interested in athletes, and GrassRoots Television's A Town that ThoughtSnow is a fascinating documentary aboutthe history of skiing in Aspen, but neitherreceived stars from the jury because theyare video copies of work origiginally done onfilm. Poets of the Village is also a good documentary, but it is a conventional kind oftape and is therefore not starred in thecatalog.The tapes which the jury did select covera wide range. Bob Snyder's ICRON and Annette Barbier's Four Dance Pieces are bothbeautiful examples of how images can bemanipulated with video equipment and synthesised with souns. NASA's ScienceDemonstrations by Skylab #3 is not abeautiful piece, but it is impressive to see video being used to record zero gravity testresults. The Pre-School Years, from theUniversity of Chicago's School of Social Ser¬vice Administration, is an example of howvideo cameras can be used within day carecenters to provide material for class discus¬sion.The documentary tapes selected by thejury are all fascinating. Elizabeth Weiner'sGraffiti People is a lovely portrait of theblack and Puerto Rican teenagers whodecorate New York City subway trains withenormous graffiti. It is an aesthetically goodpiece, as well as being a good piece of repor¬ting. The Alternative Schools Network lenttwo tapes to the exhibit, both made by highschool students. Latin Queens, whichiscusses a girls gang in Chicago, andExposing Sexual Myths are both charmingtapesVideotape for Students with LearningDifficulties (English as a second language)was selected by the jury because of its suc¬cessful use of video, not for its aestheticmerit. The tape was made in Rough RockDemonstration School, a bilingual,bicultural, bicognitive school on a NavajoReservation in Arizona. For many reasons,by the time they reach high school, many ofthe students there are still having difficultylearning English. This tape demonstratesbeginning efforts to use videotape as a"hands-on" tool for such students, whose in¬terest in working with the equipment helpsbreak down some of the language barriers.The tape itself is rather slow, but as ameasure of how video can be used as aneducational tool, it is is impressive.The most humorous tape in the exhibit isthe starrred Greetings from Lainesville,which is excerpts from past years of broadcasting from the world's smallest televisionstation, located in Lainesville, New York.The station confronts the popular model ofbroadcast television as it wheels its videomini-cam in a baby buggy christenedNewsBuggy through the rural communitythat it serves.There are three monitors in the Gallery,equipped with headphones, so three dif¬ferent tapes can be played in the Gallerysimultaneously. The exhibit will runthrough May 28. Gallery hours are 10 to 5,Monday through Friday, noon to five Saturday and Sunday. There will be an openingreception tonight, Friday, May 12, fromseven to ten.Cjcpdr'mdnl^ Po£pou»rr>Six One Act Plays by Court Studio Theatre May 1978 May 12, 13,14Reynolds Club Theatre 8 p.m.‘‘Home Free”, “Without Godand the Afterlife”, “Disreality”Tickets are $2 general admission, $1.50 for students. Speciardiscounts for 2 evening theatre ticket. Phone Court Theatre for Reservations A information.9 The Grey City Joarnal*Friday, May 12.1978*11FESTIVAL OF THE ARTSUPCOMINGEVENTSMAY 15 • 19NOONTIME SERIESi Spelling Bee - can you lastwith the best of them• Hurch Court Concert• Nabokov-CarrollMemorial Croquet Gamecome watch famous folksknock 'em out -•Acrobatics• Illustrating theLife of the Mind -chalk your favorite textbook illustrations inHutch CourtMay 20Fireworks over RockefellerChapel after 10:30 p.m.May 26Baroque Duet Recital.Kathleen Terbeek; sopranoDale Terbeek,counter-tenorBond Chapel OSCAR WILDE:IN PERSONGreg Flood8 pm New TheatreMay 24$1 UC students,faculty,staff; $2othersA one-man show of Oscar Wilde"A tremendous, roaring success.”The Daily News“A remarkable tour-de-force ... mes¬merizing...” The Tribune‘A Pleasure” The ReaderJEANNE LEEJAZZ VOCALISTMay 288 pm, Reynolds ClubTheatreComposer of the Earth-forms jazz rituals, vocalistwith Gunter Hampel since1966 will be appearingJune 1, 2, 3 with theChicago SymphonyII Tfc« Gr«v a tv JmmMHrkUv. Mm v II. 1971UNIVERSITYCHAMBER ORCHESTRAJeanne Schaefer, DirectorMichael Jinbo, Guest ConductorMay 13, 8 pmHutchinson CommonsFree LIEDERRECITALKathleen Terbeek, SopranoMark Zolezzi TenorElaine Smith, PianoMay 14 8pmCloister Club,Ida Noyes HallA Celebrationof ChicagoChoreographersBallet and Modern DanceBALLET MIDWEST - Youna, new troupe of Midwest chor¬eographers ana dancers. SHIPLEY MOPDINE AND COMP,ANY - Soon to undertakeSummer European tourAPVE CONNECTION - Dynamic modem interpretivedanceJOSEPH HOLMES COMPANY - Formerly of Avan AieyPASCUAL OLIVEPA AND ANGELA DEL MOPAL - TraditionalSpanish danceMay 16,8 p.m.MandelHallIn cooperation with the Ballet Guild of ChicagoReynolds Club Box Office$2 UC students, $3 others.FESTIVAL OF THE ARTSI I I t t IfM I * I tt < • M V M . « * f )JLehnhoff Schoolof Music & DanceAmmanSUMMER ENRICHMENT PROGRAMFor Young Children 4-7 yrs.Music FundamentalsSuzuki Violin - Cello - PianoCreative DanceOlder ChildrenInstrumental Music - private & grouppiano, violin, cello, clarinet, flute, trumpet,guitar, voice, recorderHigh School Students & AdultsBrush up in orchestral musicCorrective Note ReadingConcentrated Instrumental InstructionDance Classes for Children & AdultsCreative Dance - Ballet - Modern - JazzAfternoons & Evenings1438 E. 57th St. 288-3500Center for Middle Eastern StudiesTHE LATEST CRISIS IN LEBANONA lecture byHis Excellency Ghassan TuwainiAmbassador of the Republic of Lebanon at the UNMONDAY, MAY 15,19784 PM SOCIAL SCIENCES 122&igma Xi(Umbersitp of Chicago ChapterNG QUARTER MEETINGAND CELEBRATION OF ITS75t/rTHURSDAY, MAY 18, 1978Public LecturesAfternoon Session Science, Drugs and Politics4:00 p.m. DR. RICHARD LANDAUProfessor, Department of Medicine and The CollegeKENT HALL 107 • 1020-24 EAST 58TH STREET[rening Session The Scientific Revolution of8.-I5 p.m. the Seventeenth CenturyHARRY WOOLFDirettor, The Institute for Advanced Studie■ECKHART HALL 133 • 1118-32 EAST 58TH STREET **4<**4<****4t******************4c********4c4c********4c*4c LOOKING FOR MR.GOODGUYWhile I realize this ad is aimed at a kind of person that may no longerexist, I have to at least try.WANTED: (NEEDED)Lone industrious, punctual, honest, creative, organized gregarious,mature person to ultimately manage Bob’s Newsstand (and) GulliversPeriodicals, LTD. Reason for hiring is to enable Bob Katzman & newpregnant wife to enjoy some time together before and after future owneris born.Hours are negotiable. Money is negotiable. Satisfaction of working inone of America’s few really top-notch periodical stores is inherent.While a male is not absolutely insisted upon, as that is illegal, job is quitephysical as well as mental and could be tiring to someone not in goodphysical condition. While Bob may look scrawny, he is definitely wiry.Remember, this is not like working for GMC or US STEEL. It is oldfashioned with much responsibility and much personal contact withthousands of different, very particular customers. No computers here.If you exist, and have really good references,come to 5100 S. Lake Park and fill out anapplication. Athletic professors under 65may apply. *********************************************************4c ★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★*■roflee will be termed following the Evening Session in the Commons Room, ftkho'1 Hnlf an EVENiNq of chicAqo JAZZMAY 19 8 P.M.KENWOOD ACADEMY AUDITORIUM5015 S. Blackttoneja*z institute #/ Chicagoandhyde park neighborhood cluba benefittickets: $5Iteniort, ttudentt: $4lmail ordert5480 S. KENWOOD CHICAGO 60615TICKETS MAY BE PURCHASED FROM FOLLOWING MERCHANTS:Dora-Lee Fret ShopThe Cove Mae’* Place Toy* etceteraFredding’* Pot* and Pan* Spin-ItFour drummers drummingthree pipers pipingBy Peter T. DanielsPercussion and flute dominated the New Music Ensemble's concert last Friday night, and two works each byStravinsky and Cage anchored it. It's concerts like thisthat enable you to hear why certain composers arerenowned at the expense of others: of the works by fiveother composers presented, only Tibor Pusztai'sInteractions held my interest. There were two duets forflutes, by established composers Takemitsu andSollberger, which sounded very much the same, and a soloplayed by its creator, Janice Misurell Mitchell, which alsosounded like the others. Maybe Mozart was right not tolike the flute (his concertos were written to commission) ;maybe it really is limited as to what it can do, for Ms. Mitchell and David Johnson certainly play their instrumentswell — but must all modern flute pieces end with a slow,sustained passage and then a little flurry of notes thatmake the audience smile and clap? The only piece,though, that really bored me (again, in spite of fine play1ng) was Diemente's duet for horn (John Ralyea) andtrombone (Marc Hrecz). It went on and on, with the onlyinterest provided by the trombonist's collection of mutes.Expressivity and versatality are characteristic of theclarinet. (I may be a little prejudiced here, for manyyears ago I started to learn to play it.) Stravinsky knewthat, and his Three Pieces take the instrument to its limit.Oddly, Francine Fuhrer played all three on one instrument, while all previous performances I have seen involv¬ed two, both Bb and A clarinets. This means that at leastone of the pieces was either not in the oriainal kev, ormuch more difficult to finger than it should have been,and in either case was not in the timbre the composer hadin mind. A further difficulty is one inherent in any solomusic: one never knows how close the player is to the cor¬rect rhythm, and Ms. Fuhrer didn't really project much assurance that she was right. The other Stravinsky composition, Septet one of his first in a dodecaphonic idiom,suffered from a different problem: lack of ensemble. Thisis a very difficult work, and requires an enormous amountof preparation; it came across sounding unrehearsed. It ispraiseworthy, though, that the ensemble attempted boththese compositions; if we're lucky, they'll keep at themIt is praiseworthy that the ensemble at¬tempted both these compositions; if werelucky, they’ll keep at them until they get themright, and performers who can do them wellare probably capable of anything in thetraditional twentieth-century chamberrepertoire.til they get them right, and performers who can do themwell are probably capable of anything in the traditionaltwentieth-century chamber repertoire.The.stars of the evening were the percussionists. ErikCharlston was listed as pianist in Cage's Two Songs, buthis accompaniment of Julie Burrall's purposely unschooled singing was at the closed keyboard — tapping with hishands on several surfaces, making very small sounds thatturn out to be surprisingly varied and expressive. The songs come from early in Cage's career, and show himsuccessfully working toward the minimal music that laterbrought him notoriety. The other Cage work was AmoresOne might wonder why he put together two movementsfor prepared piano, one for drums and rattle, and one forwoodblocks, but careful listening reveals thematic relationships among the movements. The thrilling percussionists were Mr. Charlston, Michael Adams, and a second David Johnson; the pianist, David Cates, played thetwenty five pitches allotted to him — all and only the noteswhich were in some way altered by sticking stuff amongthe strings — sensitively, at times producing veiledsounds as of a distant piano, and again outlining motivesrepeated from the woodblock movement. He was insensitive, though, to his fellow performers, and both timesbegan his solos before they had assumed their stationsand settled into concert decorum. Messrs. Adams andJohnson were joined by Karen Baehr for the Pusztai,which also involved Mr. Ralyea. In this remarkable work,the outer movements involve horn and the pitched percussion, while the middle is for unpitched percussion in¬struments only. All I can say without closely studying it isthat it sure would be nice to have a whole concert of per¬cussion music — there's a lot, and in the nature of the battery, it couldn't get dull.Many thanks for this concert on a smaller and more in¬timate scale (but longer duration) than the CCP's. Let'shave more!Wanna haveSOME FBN?Look atMat BO!At 2 p.m. —The Paul Winter Consort, one of the country’s mostimaginative musical groups, will lead a workshop in musicand dancing. Free! At Ida Noyes Hall. Next...At 7 p.m. —The Paul Winter Consort in concert at Mandel Hall.Tickets (at Reynolds Club): $1, $3 w/fee; $4, S5 gener¬al. Great music at terrific prices from the Major ActivitiesBoard. And after that...At 9:30 p.m. —Have we got an anachronism for you! The InterfraternitySing. Hundreds of alumni and frat rats will compete for thegold cups in Quality and Quantity while they sing of theAlpha Kappa Girl With Hair of Gold. Another event not tobe missed. Free at Hutch Court. And Finally ...At about 10:30 p.m. —Take an outdoor seat near Rockefeller Chapel to seethe annual Festival of the Arts Fireworks Show.The Gray City Joaraat-Friday. May 12,1978* isAn Epic Fantasy by TERRY BROOKSEvery spelfbindmg word, every magical illustration,in a new edition every fantasy-lover can affordDELREY OVER 5 MONTHS ON THE NEWYORK TIMES BESTSELLER LISTONLY $2.50 wherever paperbacks are soldPublished by BallantineTurSWORD OFSHANNARA ISNOW WITHINYOUR GRASP.The FantasyBestseller of theDecade - Now ata New Low Price!MANAGEMENTPOSITIONSWe re looking for recent college grads. Juniorsand Seniors, to assume leadership roles asNavy Officers31 2-657-2234COLLECT GOLD CITY INNajLlgiven * * * *by the MAROONOpen DailyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9:00 p.m*5228 Harper 493-2559(near Harper Court)Eat more for less,fTry our convenient fake-out orders.)A Gold Mine Of Good Food'Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese FoodYoung Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288 2900•Contort lenses (Soft & Hard)•Prescriptions FilledDR. MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Park Shopping Center15101. 55th363-6363 / t \ fir V { 1£ SALES withservice is our 1V BUSINESSREP AIR specialists n4 on IBM.SCM,Olympia & others §F Free EstimateAsk about our >RENTAL withoption to buy fn New & RebuiltTypewriters A< CalculatorsDictators <UJ Adders ■VU. of C. Bookstore 4V 5750 S. Ellis Ave.753-3303 YY MASTER CHARGE Obe BANKAMERICARD 70 £ « c - ~ * ± tLike the Mercedes 280 E. the Peugeot 604 SL has four-wheelindependent suspension, a responsive six-cylinder engine (oursis a V-6), power steering fours in .rack and pinion), a unitizedbody held together with thousands of welds, power windows,fully reclining front bucket seats, tinted glass, and meticulousattention to detail.The Peugeot 604 has alsobeen engineered for a_superior level ofcomfort. Withoversized shockabsorbers, large coil_springs, a floating differential, andseats that are actually tuned to the suspension system.But comfort isn’t the only thing that sets the 604 apart from theMercedes. There’s also the price. Which starts at about$11.000.* And which may be its most comforting feature of all.LeslyMotors Inc./ /Part*/Service2347 So. Michigan Ave. Chicago .* Manufacturer’s suggested retail price. Delivery, optional equip¬ment. license, title, taxes, dealer preparation not included.16 -The Grey City Journal-Friday, May 12,1978 PIZZA PLATTER1460? 53-4 S*OUR SD?OA*.TYPizza Also Italian FoodsPick Up OnlyMl 3-2800Jewish College Students —if you are interested instudying basic Torah Judaismone or two nights a weekcontactRabbi Don WellJewish Studies ProgramHebrew TheologicalCollege267-9800immediately.Classes are now beginning inChum ash, Mishna, Gemaraand Ramban on Tuesday andWednesday evenings forstudents with a basic Hebrewbackground. UNNBN.inMl.MMSM. ft JB9KWB.RK.fw»a twm rwMlwffi)Directory of ValuesWe Know Hyde ParkReal Estate Inside OutDESIGN EXCELLENCEBooth & Nagle-designedcustom-built tewnbouse.Built in 1974. Lovely landscaped corner lotw/driveway & garage. Cen¬tral Hyde Park. 3-4bedrms., 3 full baths. Exposed brick, spiral stairs,atrium-an extraordinary ar¬chitectural statement.$149,500. Shown by appoint¬ment only. For informa¬tion call 667-6666.HOME + INCOMEIn this sturdy 3-flat brickbldg. in excellent area ofSouth Shore. 3-car garage,gas-steam heat, newroof, 6-rm. apts. w/appliances. Full bsmf. Asking559,500,Call Mrs, Ridlon at667-6666.BEAUTIFUL INSIDERehabbed 8 room frameduplex, Nice smallbackyard. Lots of potential.$61,000. For more in¬formation call Richard E.Hild at 667-6666.SINGLE'S SPECIALEfficiency coop in choicebldg, w/congeniaf neighbors& near transportation. 56,500.To see, call Avery Williamsat 667-6666 (res. 684-7374).MADISON PARKElegant 10 rm. condooverlooking private park. 4Irg. bedrms., 3 baths, 2 hugesun porches. Woodburningfireplace, elevator. Many,many extras in this 3400 sq.ft. condo home. For more in¬formation please call667-6666.HOUSING AT58TH & HARPER6 rm. I1.2 bath condo w/tndiv.HAVAC, new kitchens &baths, 100% new writing, etc.The "definitive Hyde ParkRehab” for years to come. Tosee, call 667 6666.CONVENIENTLYLOCATEDIdeal 5 rm. plus sunporch 3rdfloor condo apt. near55th St. Bus, easy walk toUniversity & shops.$32,000. Call Al Dale at667 6666 (res. 955-7522).SOME THINGS IN LIFE.,,are worth waiting for.Southwold Condominium isone of them. Large, 3 & 4bedrm. apts. near 48th &Kenwood, We're not readyfor our forma* openingyef. But if you are looking foran outstanding condominium—we'd tike you tohave an opportunity tosee something special thatwill be available in 60days. Call 667 6666,JACKSON PARKHIGHLANDSFirst time offered. Unusualcustom-built artist'shome designed for completeprivacy in a city (ocation, 2 Irg bedrms. plus fullrec. rm. — a real studio& attached garage. This ex¬citing house has dozensof extra features. Priced at$135,000. For moreinto please call 667 6666GOOD LOCATION57th St. near the museum. 2bedrm. coop, 1 bath, 1car garage, appliances. Priced at $28,500. To see,call Frank Goldschmidt at LOCATION + PR ICE-GOOD BUY!You can't equal thisanywhere! 3 bedrm. condohome w/modern kitchen, 2full baths. Ray SchoolDistrict. Natural oak floors,woodburning fireplc.Possession at closing. Reduc¬ed to $54,500. To see, callMrs. Haines at 667-6666.8 BRIGHT ROOMSOVERLOOKING CITYEnjoy the view of the loop &lake. Beach facilities,game rooms, off street park¬ing. Gracious living inthis well established old coopapt. at S. Shore Dr. &73rd St, Only $25,000. To see,call Richard E Hild667-6666 (res, 752-5384).COUNTRY CHARMIn the City is part of fhis love-, ly 8 rm. home in SouthShore. 2 baths, fruit trees &berry patch in largeyard. Woodburning fireplc.Appliances, storms,garage. Price $43,900. To see,call Mrs. Ridlon at667-6666.OPEN HOUSEThere are only a few condosleft. 1 & 2 bedrms. Com¬pletely new kitchen & b ath.Come to DORCHESTERCOURT, 5415-25 S. Dor¬chester from 1:00to 5:00 Sat. & Sun. For furtherinformation, callKRAA 667 6666 Model fur¬niture by SCAN.2 BEDROOM COOPIn a great location at 48th &Drexel Blvd Courtwaybldg, w/fountain in front.Well maintained lawnsecurity gates. One of thebest bldgs, in Kenwood.S1LOOO.OO, Low Assmt. CalfDon Tillery at 667-6666.U. OF C. LAW SCHOOLThis bright cheerful coop apt.is right on the Midwaya short walk to the entirecampus. 2 bdrms. Irg. liv.& din. rms. & private balconymake this a beautifulcampus home for living &study. Low assmt. $29,000.Call Richard E. Hild at667-6666 (res. 752-5384),OWN A HOME INKENWOODConstruction has begun on in-novafive Y.C. Wongdesigned townhouses. 3bedrms., 2 baths, privategarden, parking. Ready forfall occupancy. Model &floor plans for your inspection. From $75,000. Call667 666656TH & BLACKSTONEDelightfully spacious &bright bedrm, & study, 2bath condo w/sun rm. 2ndfloor location. Side byside liv, rm, w/formal din,rm. hardwood floors,vaulted ceilings, leadedglass, Priced for immed.sale at $53,500, To see, ealtMrs. Haines at 667-6666.BRIGHT ARTSTUDIO APT.5 Room, 2 bedrm. coop apt. V2btock to campus, on bus line,$12,000. Call Al Dale at667 6666 (res.955-7522)5000 EAST ENDWith its view of the lake & ci¬ty this beautifully interiordecorated 3 bedrm, 3 modernbath condo w/new kitchen isa must see. Also has off-street parking. Call CarolGittler at 667 6666667 66661461 last 57th Street.'Chicago. Illinois 60637667-6666Daily 9 to 5 Sat 9 to 7, Or cal! 667 6666 Anytime. V* 1 I *? q-i -w w ^ ., i ,,, ■ , >/'I'l'Hw - in-f-xn v rn > i >Soul SurvivorDavid Johansen is back with a record that shows that if you fight,you can make it. Not only that, but you don’t ever forget how torock ’n roll on the way back up if you’re smart.By Stuart RyderRock n' roll's a loser's gameIt mesmerizes and I can't explainthe reasons for the sightsand for the sounds...Well, it made a great song lyric, but itain't necessarily so: Just maybe there arereasons for the sights and the sounds. We'llsee. . . Writing anything worthwhile about arock album is a hard thing to do. The point ofall this is not to add anything to the universeof musical criticism or to do some bullshitattempt at analysis. The point is to say onething: that David Johansen has made arecord that should be listened to ("DavidJohansen", Blue Sky JZ 34926). I'll refrainfrom calling it a "landmark" or a"classic"; using words like that just getsyou into trouble. . . (Besides, the other day aChicago DJ announced that he was about toplay Jethro Tull's "classic tune" WarChild". . . fuck this "classic" nonsense ifJethro Tull ever did a "classic" anythingthen I'm the King of Spain...) Rock n' roll'snot supposed to be classic, it's just rock n'roll. Or maybe it's only rock n' roll. Butwhatever it is it's not a real lofty proposition, OK? Fine, now that we've gotten thatover with we can slowly plod along.Remember Johansen, we'll get back to himin the by & by...Hypothetical situation/paranoid nightmare:Weird creatures from somewhere outthere past Neptune land on my roof at threein the morning, knock on the door and invitethemselves in. They notice a picture of JohnLennon on the wall and start asking those"We're new around here, what's this allabout" - type questions. The conversationgoes something like this...THEM: Who's this guy with the beard andthe round glasses?. . . Anyway, the dude inthe funny glasses looks interesting: so whois he?ME: (obviously confused and scaredshitless inside) Name's John Lennon, heplays rock n' roll...THEM: Rock n' roll, huh? What's that,some kind of game?ME: Sometimes it seems that way. . . butit's not really. It's music, you got musicwherever it is you come from?THEM: Oh sure, we got music. . . but notthis, what'd ya call it? rock n' roll stuff. Thisguy Lennon, he cornered the market on it?ME : No, there's a few others. . . come onin and listen to some if you want. I hope Mrs.Goldstein downstairs doesn't complainabout the noise...THEM: Everybody doesn't like it then?ME: Wish they did, but no. . . as a matterof fact the stuff really pisses a lot of folksoff. . . What's more nobody really agrees onwhat it is. I've got my own ideas, but if youguys want a second opinion then go wake upsome Emerson, Lake and Palmer fan, scarethe shit out of him and see what he's got tosay...THEM: No... We'll take your word for it.ME: (honored in a weird sort of wayreaching for "Exile on Main Street", "Bornto Run", "Rock n' Roll Animal", "MyGeneration", "Meet the Beatles", etc. . . .still half out of my head and not believingany of this ... hoping to explain rock n' roll... glad somebody's asked me to, even if theyare 4 feet tall and green. . .) This is called"Happy". Guy who's singing is named KeithRichard. . . plays for the Rolling Stones.Always seemed to me that this was whatrock n' roll was all about...(to myself, "Shit,they'll never understand")THEM: OK. . . so rock n' roll's John Len¬non and Keith Richard, and all these othersyou've showed us. . . So why'd you say thatnobody agrees on what it is? . . . Seems sim¬ple enough to us. . . and what the hell's an"Emerson, Lake and Palmer"?ME: Well you see...It had all gotten confusing so I took it slow.. . . The diatribe began, and like your basicguillotine there was no way to stop it untilit'd run its course. ME: again: Well boys, when it's working,rock n' roll's music played for 16 yr. olds bypeople at least ten years older than them.Most of the time these guys write songsabout being pissed off at anything andeverything, about trying to figure out wherethey're going and why, and usually notfiguring anything out really. At best it allcomes down to words like "We gotta get outof this place", or "If you can't rock me,somebody will", or "Frustration and heartache is all you've got" or just somethingsimple and nice to hear like "She said sheloves you, and you know that can't be bad".But these guys aren't trying to bephilosophers. It's real simple... if you couldjust tell the boss to shove it and drive down aquiet dirt road and put it to Susie Jane in theback of your car then it'd be all right. Like Isaid, it's simple, don't you see?. . . It's just Ihate you, I love you, I need somebody, I'mfucked up and nobody understands me, let'sforget it all and dance, won't you please helpme...but don't get complicated while you'reat it...just keep it simple. I guess when it aflgets too complicated you lose the kids — andwhen you lose the kids then you've forgottenhow to rock n' roll...or maybe the kids loveyou for your pretty, mindless music, butyou'll never teach 'em a damn thing,a damn thing.And shit, if you're 25 or 30, then you shouldbe able to tell 'em how to rock and how to dowhat you did (if you did) ... which is to growup and not go crazy in the process. Tell 'emto take a look around and to see what sucks,tell 'em how to shake their asses and how torock out when the whole deal goes rancid,but tell 'em that "despite all your complications/ you can dance to the rock n' roll stations and it'll be alright". . . And to answeryour second question, an "Emerson, Lakeand Palmer" doesn't do any of that... THEM: So rock n' roll means "Maybe itdoesn't look that way now, but everything'llbe alright... so hang on".ME : That's all. . . Hey, while I've got yourears, this guy David Johansen just put out agreat record, wanna hear it?. . . The mancan really rock n' roll...THEM: NO, no time for that now, butthanks. . . be seein' you around. . . (and outthe door they went. . . on the way out I hearone of them mumbling something to his buddy about his g g generation...)So they split and left me to listen toJohansen alone and to think abouteverything that'd been said. . . all of a sud¬den it hit me like a baseball bat between theeyes. . . this record was something special. .. one of those few great rock n' roll albums..So you're 21 and rock n' roll seems likekid's music to you now. AND SO WHAT IFIT IS?!?. . . Listen to David Johansen's newrecord. . . the man's at least 25 and it stillmakes sense to him to rock ... so lend anear for a second or two...Remember Johansen?...he sang lead forthe New York Dolls...and now he's backand back with a vengence. OK, so the Dolls'glitter routine was stupid, but it's hard todeny that they kicked the shit out of theirguitars and played some great rock n' roll.Well, now that I've mentioned the Dolls, I'lltell you to forget the Dolls, cause this recorddoesn't really sound anything like them.Johansen's got a new image, a new band(who understand very well the meaning ofthe term "power chord"), and hopefully anew lease on his rock n' roll life...The Dolls broke up in '75. . . Johansen losthis hand, and shortly thereafter he lost hiswife and probably his pride. But he's come back smiling, punching and screaming, andthat's what this record's really all about.It's about having life shit on your head andcoming out of it in one piece. . . It's a greatrock n' roll record he's made. But it's also arecord that says all those things I just finished telling my late night guests rock n' roll isall about.I know that this next comment's going toget me in trouble, but this sounds to me likethe record I was waiting for from the Stonesabout six years ago after "Exile on MainStreet", but which never showed up. There'snothing on here as good as "Happy", butthen there probably never will be. . . TheDolls tried real hard to rip off Mick andKeith's act but never came close to pulling itoff. Now Johansen's got his own act, and it'sgood enough to make me wonder if it isn'ttime to look for some new frontrunners. ..The music here's pretty straightforward,nothing fancy. . . But the two guitars soundmore like ten. It hits hard. (Thank-youDavid, almost nobody hits hard anymore.. .except the Punk rockers of course, butthat's really all they know how to do...)The record starts off with four of those"turn it up all the way because your parentswon't like it but what do you care 'cause youthink it's great and it makes you feel good"songs. ("Funky But Chic", "Girls", "PainIn My Heart", and "Not That Much")There's nothing here more profound thanlyrics like "Girls, I get my pleasure fromyou", or "I got a pain in my heart/ and ithurts", but that's the beauty of it. It's justJohansen, the 25-h rocker playing at beingthe punk in the leather jacket who thinkshe's too cool for words.If the rest of this record had been more ofthe same I would have asked, "Yea, that'sgreat David, but didn't you ever grow up?"Sooner or later you have to start singing tothe kids and not just sing as one of the kids.Talk about singing to the kids: It goessomething like this. ..In a lonely union hall/ he's waitingfor some work to callThey're waiting for his price to fallThey've got his ass against the wallHe's given them his all inall/andthey're expecting for him to crawlThere were times when his work cameeasilyWhen he could stand up and feel freeHe even dreamed of raising a familySomething that now will never be.. .Let's Rock.— "Lonely Tenement,"Translation: life ain't easy, plans go sour,rock your way out of it if you can. DavidJohansen's grown up and he's made it backwith a record that shows that if you fight,you can make it. Not only that, but you don'tever forget how to rock n' roll on the wayback up if you're smart.The record ends with a line that makes apretty convincing case for rock n' roll being"a loser's game", but one that's probablyworth playing anyway: I can't get the kindof love that I want or that I need/ So let'sjust dance (and I'll forget).— "Frenchette".Buy the record.Especially if rock n' roll is beginning tosound like "kid's music" to you. . .remember that the guys playing it aren't inhigh school anymore and just maybethey've got something to say. . . probablynothing too eloquent, but still a lot to be saidfor words like...I remember when you sang a cruel andsimple song/You filled the room with bedlam and weall sang along— "Donna".So let's hear it for bedlam ...Let's Rock...he Grey City Journal*Friday. May 12,1978 17t f I P • . • / t • » * * • * • r y lft % I i i V ? 1Chamberorchestraplus liederThis weekend the Festival of the Arts willbe offering two programs of classical music.On Saturday night at 8:00 pm the UniversityChamber Orchestra will play works byMozart (Divertimento No. 15 in B Flat Ma¬jor), Arensky (Variations on a Theme byTchaikovsky), and Tchaikovsky (Serenadefor Strings in C Major). They will be led bythe Orchestra's founder and music director,Jeanne Schaefer. Ms. Schaefer has studiedconducting with two of Chicago's morebrilliant conductors, U. of C.'s own RalphShapey and Henry Mazer (Associate Director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra).Ms. Schaefer is also well known for her virtuoso flute playing, having played with theChicago Civic Orchestra, the Music of theBaroque and most recently in the KathyHeifitz Memorial Concert. She will be joinedby the multi talented Michael Jinbo (whowill conduct the Tchaikovsky). Mr. Jinbo, afourth year music major in the College, isconcertmaster for both the University Symphony and the University Chamber Orchestra. He has also distinguished himselfas the first violinist of the Lexington StringQuartet and as a member of the New MusicEnsemble. He is the conductor of the HydePark Youth Chamber Orchestra and thiswill mark his second appearance as guestconductor of the University Chamber Orchestra. The concert will be held in Hutchin¬son Commons and is free.Also this coming weekend is a Liederrecital by Kathleen Terbeek, soprano; MarkZolezzi, Tenor; and Elaine Smi*h, piano. Itwill be held on Sunday, May 14th at 8:00 pmat the Cloister Club in Ida Noyes Hall; it isalso free. Mrs. Terbeek, wife of LinguisticsProfessor and Counter-tenor Dale Terbeek,is currently soloist for the Bryn Mawr Community Church and Niles Township JewishCongregation. She has soloed with manyensembles, including the Fiori Musicali,Chicago Baroque Ensemble and the U of CCollegium Musicum. Mark Zolezzi has appeared as soloist with the RockefellerChapel Choir and the U of C Collegium andis also a soloist at Bryn Mawr CommunityChurch. He and Mrs. Terbeek are foundingmembers of Musicke and Sweet Poetrie, avocal quintet whose performances ofRenaissance music at the U of C and the ArtInstitute have been very enthusiasticallyreceived. Elaine Smith, wife of DeanJonathan Smith, received her BA from theEastman School of Music and did graduatework in music at Yale. She has been_teaching piano in Hyde Park and activelyparticipating as a soloist, accompanist andperformer in chamber ensembles for thepast ten years.They will perform a quite varied program, ranging from two of the earliest songcycles, Adelaide and An die feme Geliebte,both by Beethoven, to the Sieben FrueheLieder by Alban Berg. They will also perform duet cycles by Schubert andSchumann: Nur wer die Sehnsucht kenntand Licht und Liebe by Schubert andUnterm Fenster, In der Nacht and Tanzliedby Schumann.Tke Gtey City fyuvwdEditor: Mark NeustadtAssociate Editor: JeffMakosStaff: Karen Heller, George Drury, AnneGlusker, Stuart Ryder, Glenn Miller,Jeanne Nowaczewski, Peter T. Daniels, theRumproller, Eden Clorfene, John Lanahan,Faz Prestopnik.The Grey City Journal is the weekly artssupplement to the Maroon. What good is sittingalone in your room...Once again, U of C students will have achance to prove that they are not repressedas this year's edition of The LasciviousCostume Ball comes to Ida Noyes Hall onMay 13. The gala event is limited to Faculty,Students and Staff with a UC/ID.The point of the Ball, for all those unfamiliar with this UC tradition, is to come incostumes as weird as can be — andpreferably naked. In '68 the winner of thebest costume award came dressed as a Viet Cong, although in recent years the emphasishas been less on politics than on T and A. Soit goes.The admission is $3.00 without costume,$1.75 with costume, free for those of youunashamed of your bodies and wish to comewithout clothes. It should be an interestingevening.Some of us, however, will spend the nightwith our lovers. So it goes.Experiment in theaterCourt Studio will be presenting an "Experimental Potpourri" at the Reynolds ClubTheater for the next three weekends. Lan-ford Wilson's "Home Free Mead Talidof-sky's "Without God and the Afterlife" andAlan Gold's "Disreality" will be performedthis weekend, Friday, Saturday and Sundayat 8:30."Home Free" and "Without God" areboth two character works, the formerdirected by Cindy Clubok and the latter byRon Falzone. "Disreality" was both writtenand directed by Alan Gold.Tickets are $2.00, $1.50 for students. Thereis a special discount for a two eveningtheater ticket. Three different experimentalplays will be presented on the weekends ofMay 20th and 26th. Phone Court Theater at753 3581 for reservations and information. Lawrence Arancio and Caron Atlas inCourt's "Home Free" By Karen HellerAdmission to NAM films is $1.50. Admis¬sion to Doc films is $1.00 on Tuesday andWednesday; $1.50 on all other nights. NAMand Doc films will be presented in QuantrellAuditorium, Cobb Hall except for NAM'sMonday showing of L'Amour Fou which willbe in Kent 107. Bergman's The Seventh Sealwill be shown Friday in InternationalHouse, 1414 East 59th Street. Admission is$1.00.From Russia With Love (1963), directedby Terrence Young. (Doc) In this second 007movies, James Bond makes love to a Russian file clerk who, naturally and passionately, falls in love with him. She offershim Russian secrets and a few of her own.SPECTRE agent Robert Shaw wants someof each: he kills for the former and makeshome movies of the latter. James is compromised, but he remains cool and comesout on top (in more ways than one). LotteLenya appears as a sadistic army officerwho wears poison shoes. With plenty of sexual puns. Friday at 7:15 and 9:30.The Seventh Seal (1956), directed by Ingmar Bergman. (International House)Believe it or not, this film was shot in onlythirty five days. A mid-fourteenth centurySwedish knight returns home from acrusade, disillusioned and doubting theworth of life. Nevertheless when he and hissquire encounter Death (who now owns aVolvo dealership in Solna), he is unwilling todie. He proposes that Death play him agame of chess and that he be allowed to liveuntil the game is finished. With Max VonSydow. Friday at6:30 and 8:30.Harlan County, U.S.A. (1976), directed byBarbara Kopple. (NAM) The story of the intense struggle of Harlan County's coalminers to win a UMW contract from DukePower Company, which recalls the bloodyunion organizing battles of the 1930's. Thefilm brings out the special and crucial roleof the women, who take an active and militant part in the strike. Harlan County pointsto the continuous struggle of the miners andall working people to protect their unionsand rights. The film won last year'sAcademy Award for Best Documentary.Recommended at 7:15 and 9:30.L'Amour Fou (1968), directed by JacquesRivette. (NAM) A stage director and hisactress wife break up maritally and mentally — while producing Racine's "Andromaque," culminating in a days-longorgy. Rivette combines improvisation witha powerful multi layered structure, settingup an intricate dialectic between life,theater, -art, cinema, fantasy andpsychodrama. Monday at 7:30 in Kent Hall.Gunn (1967), directed by Blake Edwards.(Doc) Edwards and Blatty's script is afeature length pop art post mortem on thePeter Gunn series full of perversions television wouldn't (and still won't) allow. Gunn(Craig Stevens) is determined to solve themurder of a gangster who once saved hislife. The unraveling of the mystery takesplace in a mermetic and exotically corruptSan Francisco where eccentricity anddecadence are the norm. Gunn's investigation is hampered by half the city trying tokill him, and a girlfriend who wonders whyhe isn't devoting more time to her. Mondayat 7:00.Experiment in Terror (1962), directed byBlake Edwards. (Doc) A psychopathickiller threatens Lee Remick and heryounger sister (Stephanie Powers) unlessthey aid him in robbing the bank whereRemick works. The FBI soon steps.in andGlenn Ford, a taut and stubborn G Man,decides to use the reluctant Remick as baitto catch the maniac. Edwards delights inthe excitement of bizarre places and gaudyatmosphere, and the chase of the villain coneludes in a splurge of melodramatics at anight baseball game in San Francisco'sCandlestick Park (Go, Giants). Monday at9:30.18 -The Grey City Journal-Friday, May 12,1978fCourt Theatre: “Experimental Potpourri,” "j^A[€18:30 pm, Reynolds Club Theatre. J.YJI. vJi-IYXC4 JfCalendarF ridayAlpha Delta Phi: Senior Breakfast, startingat 8:30 am, 5747 S. University.Department of Economics: “The Effects ofExchange Rate Changes on the Prices of In¬ternationally Traded Goods,” Eliot Kalter,Fed. Reserve System, 9:20 am, Rosenwald301; “Monetarist Interpretation of the GreatDepression: An Evaluation and Critique,”Robert Gordon, James Wilcox, 3:30 pm,Social Sciences 106.Commuter Club: Meeting, Hutch commons,5th table on left, 12:30 pm.%Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “IsostaticCompensation in the Pacific Ocean” AnthonyWatts, Columbia, 1:30 pm, HindsAuditorium. reception for Bill Soltis — Paintings, 6-8 pm,6016 Ingleside.DOC Film: “From Russia With Love,” 7:15and 9:30 pm, Cobb Hall.Blackfriars: “Me and Juliet,” 8:30 pm,Mandel Hall.Germanic Language Dept,: “The SeventhSeal,” 6:30 and 8:30 pm, International House.Bergman Gallery: Opening Reception: “Video— The Meaning is the Use,” 7 to 10 pm, 4thfloor Cobb Hall.Court Theatre: “Experimental Potpourri,”8:30 pm, Reynolds Club Theatre.SaturdayResource Center: Recycle glass, cans andpaper, 54th PI. and Greenwood, 10-4.Crossroads: Outing to Indiana Sand Dunes,10 am, sign up Friday; Saturday night dinner,6 pm, Slideshow of Austria, following dinner,5621 S. Blackstone. SundayCricket Club: Cricket Practice, 11-1 pm,Stagg Field.Hillel: Lox and bagel brunch, 11 am, Hillel.Calvert House: Mass, 11 am, Bond Chapel;Mass, 12 noon, Calvert; Farewell party forTim Kaufman and Jim Casciotti, 12 noon,Calvert.Crossroads: Bridge, 3 pm; Slideshow, com¬paring two visits to People’s Republic ofChina, ('75 and ’78) by Mark James, 7:30 pm,5621 S. Blackstone.NOMAR: Speaker — Senator Culver of Iowaand U.S. Rep. Ralph Metcalfe, discussion ofopportunities for disarmament beyond SaltII, 3:30 pm, Hyde Park Union Church, 5500 S.Woodlawn. Department of Education: “Goals of the Col¬lege and the Future of Undergraduate Educa¬tion at the University of Chicago,” JonathanZ. Smith, 2 pm, Judd 313.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: “TheLatest Crisis in Lebanon,” The Hon.Ghassan Tuwaini, Ambassador of theRepublic of Lebanon at the United Nations, 4pm, Social Sciences 122.Department of Chemistry: “EnvironmentalEffects on Photochemical Reactions,” DavidWhitten, Univ. of N.C., Chapel Hill, 4 pm,Kent 103.Yoga: Meeting, 5:15; Touch for Health, 6:45;Art of Massage, 8:15 pm, Blue Gargoyle.University Feminist Organization: Women'srap group, 7:30 pm, Blue Gargoyle.Calvert House: Lesbian/Gay ChristianGroup, 8:30 pm, Calvert House.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: ArabicCircle — “The Evolution of Islamic Law,”Fazlur Rahman, 3:30 pm, Pick 218; PersianSociety — “Policy-making Session, 3:30 pm,Harper 175; Bizend Size — “Turkey, Detneteand the Helsinki Conference,” MehmetIrtemcelik, Vice-Counsul of the Republic ofTurkey in Chicago, 3:30 pm, Harper 155;Sherry Hour, 4:30 pm, Kelly 413.Hillel: Reform Liberal Shabbat Services, 5:15pm, Hillel; “Israeli and American Jews inDialogue,” speakers Isaac Abella and DonPatinkin, 9 pm, Hillel.Crossroads: Film — “I Heard the Owl CallMy Name,” 8 pm, 5621 S. Blackstone.South Asia Language and Area Center:Preview of Dharti Dhoron Ri (land of movingsands) 7:30 pm, Foster Hall.ArtsDepartment of Art/Midway Studios: Opening Change Ringing: Handbells, 10-11 am. Towerbells 11-1 pm, Mitchell tower ringing room.UC Sailing Club: Open House, demonstra¬tions, refreshments, 12-6 pm, NW corner ofBurnham Harbor, car pools leave Regensteinat 12, 2 and 4.The Pub: Entertainment by Nick Filiap andMark Ramirez, 9 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.Hillel: Israel Independence Day Party at theBayit, 5458 S. Everett, 9:30 pm.Student Activities/FOTA: L asciviousCostume Ball, 8 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.ArtsUniversity Chamber Orchestra: JeanneSchaeffer, director; Michael Jinbo, con¬ductor, 8 pm, Hutchinson Commons.Blackfriars: “Me and Juliet," 8:30 pm,Mandel Hall. Lutheran School of Theology: Festival of theArts — The Theocentric World: Church andSociety,” 7 pm, Augusatna Church, 5500 S.Woodlawn.Brent House: Supper, 6 pm, 5540 S.Woodlawn.UC Folkdancers: General level internationalfolkdancing, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Arts Chess Club: Meeting, 7 pm, Ida Noyes.UC Folkdancers: International Folkdancing,beginners, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.ArtsFOTA: “Blake Edwards Film Festival —Gunn, 7 pm, Experiment in Terror, 9:30 pm,Cobb; Second City — The Resident Com¬pany, 8 pm, Mandel Hall.NAM Films: “L'Amour Fou,” 7:30 pm. KentHall.FOTA: Performing arts workshop — clown¬ing, 3 pm, Ida Noyes.Blackfriars: “Me and Juliet," 8:30 pm,Mandel Hall.Court Theatre: “Experimental Potpourri,"8:30 pm, Reynolds Club Theatre.NAM Films: “Harlan Country USA,” 7:15 &9:30 pm, Cobb Hall.Starting Monday we’llmention your name on the airand then you call us to winfive free records!Send in this entry blank ora postcard to us at 5706 S.University Ave., Chicago, 60637Clip and mailWHPK 88.3 FMStereo To: WHPK Give-away Contest5706 S. University Ave.Chicago, Illinois 60637Please enter me in the WHPK Record Give-AwayContest.(be sure to PRINT)NameAddressPhone NumberFavorite MusicianYou can enter as many times as you want, but you can win only onceThe Chicago Maroon—Friday. May 12,1978—19The Maroon coaches steamed onto thefield, arguing that Fox had been interferedwith by the base runner and that, as the in¬terference rule states, the batter should bedeclared out also. “You can’t leave the basepath to attack the fielder. . . It was a goodbody check,” said Angelus, alluding to thefact that the runner is also an All-Americanhockey player for Lake Froest.Although insisting that the runner had il¬legally “extended his arms” in interferingwith Fox, Angelus conceded that the umpirehad made “an interpretation call,” becauseof the difficulty in judging whether the run¬ner was out of the base path.After Bruns retired the side without fur¬ther damage, the Maroons’ play-off questexpired in the bottom of the inning. After alead-off walk to Herzog, the Maroons wereset down without further ado. Byron Trott, ahero, but not yet ready to become a legend,came up again with two outs, but this timeflied routinely to center field.Angelus. in the spirit of the Chicagobaseball tradition, was philosophical aboutthe play-off loss. “We’ve matured a greatdeal this year,” he said, and added that hehadn’t expected the Maroons to beat LakeForest, a team which may be the best in theMidwest Conference. Looking to next year’saddition of Maroon baseball, he said, “Thisteam has their better days ahead of them.”For the record, or rather, for the detona¬tion of the Maroons’ record, which plungedto 6-11, Rockford dumped Chicago 10-7 lastWednesday. An assortment of Chicago pit¬chers, playing Santa Claus, issued twelvewalks, and then, just to rub it in, hit threeRockford batsmen. The Chicago batters,lead by Bvr'on Trott’s three hits and ScottJansen’s four runs batted in. clawed backall day, but were unable to keep pace withthe generosity of Chicago’s moundsmen.The Maroons close out their season thisSaturday with a home double headeragainst Judson College. Ever the optimist,Coach Angelus said he would consider theseason a success if the Maroons win bothgames.MCAC Playoffs—————— ■—— * v **Maroons downed in “suddendeath” by Lake Forest nineSportsBy Mark WallachWith the Cubs and White Sox struggling, itwas left to the Maroons to play the most ex¬citing baseball in town, and at last Satur¬day’s Stagg Field showdown with LakeForest that ended the Maroons’ MidwestConference play-off hopes, there wereenough fireworks to make Bill Veeckjealous on a Friday night.Essentially, the first thirteen innings ofplay were a warm-up to the tumultous en¬ding. with all the explosions coming off LakeForest bats. The Vikings took the firstgame, 8-0, behind what Coach Angelus call¬ed “a super pitcher,” John Drolet. TheMaroons w ere not amused.The second game started off well as theMaroons grabbed an early 1-0 lead, off thebats of Don Ciciora and “Shaker” Bahadur,who produced a triple-single combination.On the mound for the Maroons, was theirace, John Bruns, the winning pitcher in fiveof the six Maroon victories this year.In the fifth, however. Lake Forest not onlybroke up Bruns’ no-hitter, but cashed in onfour Maroon errors to score four unearnedruns.The Maroons coaxed across a run in thesixth, and so as the Maroons came to bat fortheir final licks, they were down 4-2, andtheir play-off hopes flickering.With one out. a John Lekich single to rightfield, a Carl Herzog walk, and a groundsingle by Paul Harris loaded the bases. ButMort Fox, who has been playing with an in¬jured left thumb, popped out and ByronTrott, representing the Maroons’ last hope,stepped up. After taking several pitches,Trott finally swung — and sent a screamingline drive over the center fielder’s head.Four Maroons trotted, or rather gallopedjoyfully, around the bases to give Chicago a6-4 victory. As Trott crossed home plateafter his grand slam, a conquering hero, hewas engulfed by a mob of ecstatic team¬mates. For one breathtaking moment, it ap¬peared the Maroons were going to overcometheir own mistakes, as well as the staggeredLake Forest team.Having split a double header the previousweek at Lake Forest, and the Maroons hav¬ing earned the split at Stagg Field, theteams then began a “sudden death,” and anabrupt and excruciating one it was for theMaroons. The first team to score whileholding the other team scoreless (or to fewer runs), would be declared the winnerof the play-off series.As the “sudden death” began. John Brunstook his commanding presence to themound, but before the half inning was over,he and the umpire would be the unhappybestowers of presents. With one out and aman on second, Bruns whirled and attemp¬ted to pick the Lake Forest runner off. Ac¬cording to second baseman Mort Fox, Foxhad tried to signal Bruns to cancel the at¬tempt but the signal had been missed andBruns’ toss sailed over the glove of Fox. TheLake Forest runner sped to third, fromwhere he ultimately scored the winning run,unearned. The play perhaps, was a fittingepitaph to the Maroons season, the finaldefensive lapse in a season of defensivelapses. Coach Angelus called the play“doubly significant,” because it not only ad¬vanced the Lake Forest base runner but alsoforced the Maroons to bring their infield in,thus making a double play difficult to ex¬ecute, a fact which proved to be significant.Bruns walked the next batter, giving LakeForest men on first and third with one out,and then the critical play of the game oc¬ Photos by Jeanne Dufortcurred, which was, as Angelus observed, “ahorsecrap way to lose.”The Lake Forest batsman hit a sharpgrounder to second baseman Mort Fox, whofielded it on the edge of the infield grass,took a step or two backwards, and taggedthe Lake Forest runner. As Fox applied thetag, he was knocked down by the runner,thus preventing him from making any at¬tempt at an inning-ending double play, andallowing the runner from third base toscore.How do you spell relief ?By John Pomidor“Let me know when you pitch. I’ll comeand watch,” she said.He never called her. He was a relief pit¬cher.In no other sport is there a position quitelike baseball’s reliever. There arestarters, and there are bench-warmers,and save for baseball, never do the twainquite meet. Football’s specialty squads ap¬pear at least once per game. A basketballteam cannot win without going to itsbench In all sports, one can be reasonablycertain whether he will play or not.Save for the relief pitcher.They even have to hope for this obscurestatistic. It’s not a win. but it’s almost asgood - it’s a “save.” Since the starting pit¬cher was lucky enough to have a seven runlead when he gave up that grand slam, hegets the win. Never mind his making cosmos of chaos. A good major leaguerelief pitcher could have 20 saves, but hisrecord still shows no wins against twolosses.Other situations aren’t quite so good.The starting pitcher just gave up back-to-back home runs, the score is 6-0 in thethird, and in strolls the relief pitcher. Justbefore you shut off the tube to do calculus.Name a good major league pitcher of thepast. Chances are, you will name a starter.Only recently, due to a little-known sectionof the Supreme Court ruling on the reserveclause, are teams hiring relief pitchers.True, they’re still usually seen cleaning upafter starters leave man all over the bases.But they’re making their presence known.Some have even gone to the all-star game.What can you say about a player who hasto wait for his teammate to mess up inorder to play? Still, things could be worse.If the reliever follows his starter to theshowers, she’ll never know.20—The Chiraao M^rnnn — Fririaw AAaw n i07»Takes Washington U. postSchael to leave MaroonsJeff Me’calfRoger Lewis- Bruce CarmanChicago rallies for 2 winsBy Hack GibsonIt was a “memorable” tennis match, ac¬cording to men’s varsity coach Chris Scott.Chicago took on Lawrence University in Ap¬pleton, Wisconsin last Saturday andhumiliated the hometowners in the singlesmatches while girlfriends, mothers, andfrat brothers assembled at courtside lookedon.The top and bottom of the Maroons’singles lineup won, #1 Bruce Carman by ascore of 6-1, 6-2; 02 Roger Lewis started offand finished well, 6-2, 6-7, 6-2; /(Jim Hvizdcame back strong, 3-6, 6-3, 6-3; and #G GerryMildner had to drop a few games in the se¬cond set to keep himself awake during aneasy 6-0, 6-3 victory. #3 Ken Kohl made hisopponent work for a 4-6, 6-4, 7-5 Lawrencevictory and 04 John Hollowed just couldn’tget his game together and went down 6-4, 6-2.But despite the good showing in thesingles matches, the match was onlymemorable because the team came back inthe doubles and executed what is known inthe game as a “choke.”Courtside observers said it had beenmany moons since they had seen six doublesteams playing such poor tennis but theMaroons were out to prove that theycouldn’t be bested, even at playing poorly,and dropped all three matches in straightsets. Lawrence limped home with a 5-4 vic¬tory.Saturday “was one of those days,” ac¬cording to coach Scott. Fortunately, theteam shook off their midseason blues andcame up with two big wins to run its recordto 4-3. The team traveled to Beloit College Mon¬day and the gusting winds, scatteredshowers, and threats of tornado touchdownsseemed to suggest that if the Maroons blewthis one, the gods would be very angry.Ironically, the doubles teams went on firstbut shook off an haunting memories of theweekend and gave Chicago a 3-0 lead beforethe coaches decided to pack up and move toan indoor club for the singles matches.Again the opposite ends of the singleslineup carried the day, but this time thosevictories were enough to add up to a decisive7-2 Chicago victory.The final tally showed Carman, i^ewis,Hvizd, Mildner, the 02 doubles team of Kohl-Hollowed, and 02 doubles Eric Von derPorten-Hvizd coming home with relativelyeasy victories while the 01 team of Carman-Mildner pulled out a close win 3-6, 6-3, 6-2and Kohl and Hollowed learned some hardlessons losing by respective scores of 6-0, 6-4and 3-6, 6-3, 6-2.Finally, the entire team got its collectiveact together Wednesday against ChicagoState, winning 9-0.Most of the team members thrived underthe warm sun and won easily. But the matchwas not wasted. As one player said, “it wasa good chance for us to work on our games ina competitive situation but without so muchpressure.”Since the team’s last two events of theyear are a rematch with the University of Il¬linois, Circle Campus (who defeated theMaroons 8-1 in their first meeting this year)and the Midwest Conference ChampionshipsMay 19-20, the players need all the condi¬tioning they can get. will get new dutiesTepke, ReschBy Mark WallachIn the athletic department’s version ofmusical chairs, current Assistant In¬tramural Director Rosalie Resch willbecome I-M Director, current I-M DirectorDan Tepke will become Director ofFacilities, and Director of Facilities JohnSchael is leaving to become athletic directorat Washington University at St. Louis. Allthe changes are slated to go into effectbeginning with the 1978-79 academic year.Rosalie Resch, also the women’svolleyball coach, is looking forward to herhew job. “Intramurals has a really strongtradition here,” she said, “It’s such a bigpart of student life.”She said her major new project will be toupgrade the level of I-M officiating. SheGolf team rejuvenatedThe golf team, after a one year absence,swung back into existence this spring,when several people discovered theirmutual interest in golf, and apprisedAthletic Director Jeff Metcalf of the fact.The five-man team plays in a 36-hole tour¬nament on May 17 and 18, which will beplayed at Shoreacres Country Club in LakeBluff and Ouwentsia Country Club in LakeForest, the latter course being the only oneever to host both the U.S. Amateur and theU S. Open Championships. Next fall, Met¬calf said, it is “very likely” the sport willregain varsity status and will play in theChicagoland Collegiate Golf Conference.UCTC UpdateStan Vinson has been very busy lately.Last weekend found him in Martinique at aninternational invitational track meet, wherehe won the 400 meters in a brief 45.6 seconds.Running for an American AAU team he alsoparticipated in gold medal performances inthe 400 and 1600 relays. The UCTCshowpiece, who in between flights can befound coaching neighborhood kids at StaggField, will compete in Kingston, Jamaica to¬day against the best quarter-milers around plans to help form an officials’ club whichwould have a core of officials who would of¬ficiate year-round. She also hopes to in¬crease staff and faculty participation aswell as continuing the recent upsurge inwomen’s participation. In addition, she ex¬pects to cut the pre-Christmas basketballtournament and instead have one con¬tinuous league schedule before and afterChristmas. Basically, however, she expectsthe successful program of the last few yearsto remain essentially the same.Resch is the first woman I-M Directorsince the men’s and women’s program'smerged two years ago. Aware that the big¬gest I-M sports are men’s football, basket¬ball, and softball she said she didn’t “thinkthe gender of the director has anything todo” with the success of the I-M program.In discussing his future post as Director ofFacilities, I-M Director Dan Tepke,although not brimming with enthusiasm,said the job would be “a new learning ex¬perience” as well as “a lot of work.” AmongHis responsibilities are co-ordinating thefinal details of the Fieldhouse constructionas well as maintaining all Universityathletic facilities. He also scotched a rumorthat he was going to become the next wrestl¬ing coach.John Schael, also Associate Chairman ofthe Department of Athletics, Supervisor ofMen’s Athletics, and Wrestling coach in ad¬dition to being Facilities Director, is leavingto become Wash U’s athletic director with“mixed emotions.” “I have a great love forthe University,” he stressed, but added thatbecoming athletic director at Wash L"represents an advancement in my profes¬sion.”His departure leaves the fate of thewrestling team, which had only three ex¬perienced wrestlers this year, uncertain.“You can’t have a team if the interest isn’tthere.” Schael said. Athletic director JeffMetcalf termed it “ludicrous” to have ateam that won’t be competitive in the ma¬jority of its weight classes. At present. Met¬calf said, no dual meets have been schedul¬ed for next year, and Maroon wrestlers willcompete only in tournamentsUniversity’s MCAC entry stalledBy Mark WallachThe anticipated smooth admission of theUniversity into the Midwest CollegiateAthletic Conference (MCAC) met with unex¬pected resistance at the annual AssociatedColleges of the Midwest meeting held latelast month at Ripon College. A motion to ad¬mit the Maroons into the Conference on apermanent basis was defeated 6-5.Early this year, the NCAA apprised theUniversity, that as a Division III school, itwould no longer be allowed to offer theStagg Scholarship on a non-need basis. TheUniversity has complied with the ruling,and after this year, will offer the StaggScholarship on a need basis only. This ad¬justment in the scholarship was alsounderstood to be the University’s ticket ofadmission into the Midwest Conference.At the ACM meeting, however, Chicago representatives found many Midwest Con¬ference schools still unwilling to acceptChicago into the Conference. Several col¬leges claimed that for the University to offerany type of athletically-related scholarshipwould be a violation of the Midwest Con¬ference constitution which prohibits athleticscholarships of any kind. Athletic DirectorJeff Metcalf was dismayed at this claim inview of the fact that just before the meeting,an ad hoc committee to investigate athleticpolicies in the Midwest Conference, disclos¬ed that several colleges, among them Coeand Lawrence, have been granting non-needathletic scholarships, and since the sum¬mer, had been concealing that they grantathletic scholarships from investigators.Lawrence was one of the schools objectingto the University’s admission into the Con¬ference.“We were assured that if we would only goto a need basis, the objection to our joining the Conference (would be gone,” AthleticDirector Jeff Metcalf said. “Some peoplehad forgotten that they had said that.”Metcalf attributed part of the problem injoining the Conference to the wariness someConference schools have toward Chicagobecause it would be the only University inthe Conference. “They see us as havingunlimited resources and that anytime wewant to we can buy a team and go out anddemolish them,” Metcalf said.As the matter stands now, Chicago willcontinue as a probationary member of theConference next year. In November, atanother meeting of the schools, Metcalfhopes that a special waiver will be grantedto Chicago to allow the Stagg Scholarship tobe issued based on need. Also on the agendais a discussion to amend the Midwest Con¬ference so that it will allow athletic scholar¬ships based on need.If the special waiver to accept Chicago in¬to the Conference is passed, the University’sFaculty Governing Board of Athletics andRecreational Sports will have 60 days tovote on whether to accept admittance intothe Conference.DOC FILMSSean Connery as James Bond in FROM RUSSIA, WITH LOVEdirected by Terrence Young .50 7:15 &The Chicago Maroon Friday, May 12, 1978 — 21Sweep dual meetsHarriers 12th at relaysSummer sportsSummer softball leagues are now form¬ing. Anyone interested in entering a teamcan get further information from theathletic department, Bartlett 101, 753-4680.Entries are also being accepted forchildren’s sports core, a program for 8thru 15-year-olds from the Universi¬ty/Hyde Park community featuring pro¬fessional instruction in a variety of sports.Registration is in Bartlett 101; those seek¬ing further information can call either 753-4682 or 753-4691.Staggs & Dudleys weighs 180 pounds and is a liberal arts ma¬jor *Kim v/as all-city quarterback last yearas well as an honorable mention all-statecenterfielder.‘Audrey Lynn Light, an Economics ma¬jor from West Lafayette, Indiana. Lightwas named to the all-conference squadfrom a volleyball team that won their sec¬tional tournament the last two years. Lightalso lettered in basketball.‘James Moskal, a 6’, 170-lb. liberal artsmajor from Alma, Michigan. Moskal ledhis team to the second spot in the statebasketball tournament with a 20 points-pre-game average. Moskal was an all-areaguard as a junior and was all state thisyear.announcedStagg and Dudley scholars for the 1978-79 academic year were recently announc¬ed by the respective athletic departments.The five winners of the awards are:‘Laura Bocian, a Humanities majorfrom Ridgewood. Illinois. The 5’7” Bocianmade the all-conference honorable men¬tion teams in both volleyball and basket¬ball.‘Steve Campbell, a 5’11” liberal arts ma¬jor from Oak Grove Village, Illinois. The180-lb. Campbell was captain and MVP ofhis football team which went to state thelast two years, finishing in the quarter¬finals this year. He is also an all-statehonorable mention linebacker for 1977.‘Do Kim. a 6’1” football and basketballstar from Fort Wayne. Indiana, Kim alsoV Women’s teams stateBoth the women’s softball and trackteams left for their respective state meetsin the past two days.The Maroon nine is down at Greenvillewhere they will be attempting to defendtheir state crown. Chicago is seeded thirdbehind tough opponents from the hostschool and Augustana.Meanwhile the harriers are at Milikanwhere they expect to be in strong conten¬tion. Coach Larkin is relying on strong per¬formances from Sheila Martin in the 880,Cindy Sanborn in the two-mile, and VickiPowers in the 440, long jump, 880 medley,220, and 440 medley relay with Martin,Donna Ceoffi, and Elise Bloom. “If we getgood performances, we could finish first.” a MHiiY HIStagg Field. An army of 48 Maroons suf¬focated the opponents, beating Concordia105 to 48 and Beloit 120 to 32. Among the 14first places Chicago took, six of them wereseason’s bests: Jim Read took both the 440and 110 hurdles (55.7 and 15.2), DaveGreen led a Chicago sweep of the mile with4:27.7, Jerry Stephenson won the pole faultwith 11’6”, Rich Gordon stole the 100 in10.3, and the mile relay team of Butigan,Dunning, Derse and Green posted a 3:27.0win. The clear balmy weather alsoassisted personal bests by Doug Sibery inthe shot (2nd. 43’8”), Tom Matisky in themile (4th, 4:30.4) and Joel Fischer in thethree-mile (5th, 16:07). With these twowins Chicago’s dual meet record isbrought to 8 wins/2 losses, while includingthe invitational scorings it is 39/13. Thisweekend brings an open UCTC meet atStagg Field, where the varsity will be freeto experiment and test its strength inpreparation for next weekend’s MidwestConference Championships held here.By Marc DeFrancisNick Dunning probably failed to psycheout his own teammates by saving all of thefast animal crackers for himself at lunchlast Saturday; that evening Chicago finish¬ed right in the middle of a tough 21-teamfield in Wisconsin at the Beloit CollegeRelays. Central Iowa took the meet with 91points, but Chicago upheld its tradition ofcontention by placing in six events, in¬cluding one gold, to finish eleventh in thefield.The packed schedule forced most ofthem to double and triple in races, butChicago’s athletes responded with fine ef¬forts. The Maroon’s score was aided bytwo sixth places in the sprint area:Butigan. Rivers, Pfaller and Gordon in the440 relay and Goodrich, Rivers, Wendelland Pfaller in the 880 relay. Wendell cameback to place fifth in a closely contestedlong jump with a 21’0” leap. Gordon cameback to defy the slow, dry cinder trackthrough two heats of the 100 but lost in thefinal contest. The open three-mile foundChicago soph Dave Taylor in the middle ofthe finishers with a personal best ofIM’s slowed by weatherBy Howard SulsSoftball action was again delayed lastweek due to the onset of the monsoonseason, deluging the Midway. All teams areadvised to check the 1M Office as many ofthe games have been rescheduled forweekends. Top ten action was limited thisweek, the big Penguin-Human Capital gamebeing rained out. Legal Eagles subpoenaedKarate Supermarket, crushing them 22-4.Cold Storage defeated Med I by forfeit, andBreckinridge had trouble with a weakChamberlin team 8-7. Laughlin II took adive to Coulter House 25-15, dropping out ofthe rankings in the process. Eighth-rankedSammy Walker devoured Eat My Shorts 15-9. while Walloo’s Wacks wickedly whippedthe Great Dictators 24-6. Pumphouse Gangnipped the Mad Dogs 16-10, and YourMother Rides Again moved into the top tenwith a 22-10 crunching of DivinityDogmatics, and the thrashing ofUbermenschen 15-6.Coed scores had Salisbury smashing Shorey 22-5 and triumphing over Tufts 16-10;Lower Flint outbattling Bishop 15-6; Com¬muters taking Corpus Cavernosum for aride 13-6, Penguins over Scraped Together18-4, B.S. Hitters crunching ScrapedTogether 17-6, and Art Department outstroking the BS Hitters 6-3. Lone women’sscores had Upper Wallace over Snell 15-8.Softball topTop Ten 10points1. Penguins (2) 472. Human Capitals (2) 453. Legal Eagles (1) 434. Cold Storage 315. Breckinridge 306. Hitchcock 277. PsiU 208. Sammy Walker 139. Walloo’s Wacks 1010. Your Mother Rides Again 5Votes: Phi Gamma Delta, Vincent, Pum¬phouse GangSports 15:27.8, while teamate Pete Smith, whocomplained of emotional anemia, was notamong the finishers at all.An absurd tragedy befell the team in theshuttle hurdle relay, (an event somethinglike a labor day potato race with hurdlesfor potatoes). Chicago repeated theirmisfortune of last year, missing a solidshot at a gold or silver through a false startdisqualification. Perhaps as penance,starter Jim Read returned with anoutstanding quarter (51.4) in the sprintmedley relay, helping teammates Pfaller,Derse and Dunning home to fifth place in3:42.2. The four-mile relay, the only relayheld under natural afternoon light, got offto a good start with fast miles from JimThvedt (4:30) and John Pearson (4:33) butChicago then fell back from fourth to crossthe line in sixth place, (the minimum scor¬ing position.The evening was crowned by Chicago’sperformance in the two-mile relay, wherethe team’s depth in strong middle distancerunners showed through. Lester Savitlabored through his lead half-mile, movingfrom behind to overtake a quick-startingmob. Marshall Schmitt connected withSavit in fourth place, his early ner¬vousness paying off as he streaked intothird and handed off to a determined TimBastian. Bastian knocked off the next twoplaces and strode in paired for the lead.Anchorman Dave Green floated justbehind the leader, then cleanly decided theissue with a calculated exertion on the se¬cond lap that left the whole field out ofview, crossing in 7:58.3. For their effortsthey were hung with pendulous goldmedals from two buxom Relays Queens,who had to endure especially theatricalkisses from young Schmitt. UnfortunatelyGreen, who was quietly vomitingsomewhere else, missed his reward.Coach Haydon was happy with the out¬come of the meet, and pointed out that theMaroon’s scoring relative to the eightMidwest Conference teams there lookspromising for the upcoming Midwest Con¬ference Championships (Stagg Field, May19, 20). Chicago defeated the four Con¬ference teams who finished in front atBeloit in the Indoor Conference meet thiswinter, and has little to fear from a schoollike Monmouth which scored most of itspoints at Beloit (finishing 8th) through asingle weight man. After Carleton andCoe, it looks as if Chicago has the field toitself.Three days after their Beloit trip theChicago squad hosted a double dua' meetagainst Beloit and Concordia colleges at22 —The Chicago Maroon — Friday', May 12,1978 'CLASSIFIED ADSSPACELooking for apt or tenant? Come toStudent Government Housing Serviceafternoons or call 753-3273.Wanted: Studio or One-bedroomapartment starting May, June, or nextfall. Up to $160/month includingutilities. Peter, 288-1082.4 bedrms. 3 baths S400/mo. by qtr.Quiet grads. Leave name ToreesWilson, 5508 Cornell. Avail. May 1.Dieter's Delight. Spacious but kitchenless 2 room apt. on northside2600 Lakeview. Hardwood floors,walk-in closet, etc. Sublet - June 1around $150 per. Call between 11-12p.m. 871-4502.Woman over 30 seeks roommate toshare lovely 2 bedrm. apt. 493-2040.Wanted: 3 bedroom apt. for summersublet. Fall option preferred. Pleasecall Brenda, 324 5696 leave message.Large room available in furnished 2bedroom apt. now through Aug 57thand Drexel 241 5457. Keep trying evenings or after midnight52nd & Greenwood ave. Studio apt.; Virms. $125.00 per mo. (bsmt.) TravisRealty Co. 994 7200.51st 8. Drexel Ave. 2Vi rms. 1 bdrm.S150.00 per mo. available for 6 to 8months. Ideal for student who needsapt for less than a year. Travis RealtyCo . 994 7200.SUBLET Furn 2 bdrms. in h'uge 3bdrm. apt. 2 bths., mid-June to mid-Sept. Possi fall option $100/mo./rm.55th 8, Univ. Call 955-1589.Responsible married couple need summer sublet end of June to end of Aug.Call Gary 753 3559,Sublet one bedroom apt. avail, im¬mediately through Aug. 15. Balconyand lakefront view. 51st and Hydepark. Call 326 2347.SUMMER SUBLET 2 bedrooms of a 3bedroom apt. 20th floor with a FANTASTIC LAKE VIEW at 50th and LakeShore Drive June - Sept. CALL324 7536.Summer Sublet 6°20 9°20 Bedroom 4rooms 5400 S. Woodlawn. $195 a month.Call 324 4329Responsible couple desires 1 bdrm.apt. for June 15 occup. Call Carla955-1424.3 bedroom apt. fully furnished 55th andBlackstone. call 753-3764 evenings ..weekends. 643-0629.Apt. sublet fall option avail. 6°1 $160.00includes utilities. Call Barbara days753 3291.HYDE PARK SUBLET June 1 w°falloption. Lge studio in quiet well main¬tained safe building on minibus route.$!85°mo. incl. utilities. Furniture forsale CHEAP. 684-3092. (6 10pm)Room available for summer, 1# blocksfrom quads. Call at breakfast or din¬ner 684 4325. Keep trying.Share house with 3 grad students,yard, fireplace, washer°dryer, garage$l00°mo. avail. June 10.643 7258eves.HYDE PARK nr U of C Irm apts wellkept bldg Adults. Near 1C Bus ParkLake Reasonable BU8-0718.Female roommate wanted for 3bedrm. apt., 56 & Univ. Call eves643 2454.LONDON. 2 Bedroom furnished flatavailable September for academicyear. $285. Royston, 4074 Grove,Western Springs, IL 60558. 246 1762.SUMME R SUBLET: 1 bdrm. apt. nearCO op $165 + util. ph. 752 7389.$50 REWARD for info leading to thecapture of a 2 or 3 bedrm. apt. nearcampus, start summer or fall. JoeUlowetz 753 2249 rm. 3211. Leavemessage.Room for rent. Private bath, nearcampus, summer qtr., men only.DQ3 2521.House needs people. Two blocks fromcampus. $97 mo. plus utilities. Sum¬mer, possible fall option. Grad pret.241 6171.CRICKETCricket Practice Match Sunday May14 Stagg Field 11 a m. to 1 p.m. Interested welcome to play.BLOOD DONORSDonate your blood to So. Chicagohospital (2330 E. 93st, 978 2000 ext.5114) for G. Graf, and I will donate $10to your favorite charity. Call 731 4035.TAI-tfAM-WfCHINESE AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M.TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.MOrders to take Out1318 East 63rd MU 4-1062 PEOPLE WANTEDCounselors to teach tennis, sailing,baton, dramatics and dance. Also jobsfor nurse and kitchen help. Girls campin Wisconsin. June 18 to August 19. Call7611838.Do you want to teach young childrenbut lack teaching certification? TheDepartment of Education offers a flexible program leading to teacher cer¬tification at the elementary level and aMasters degree. The program can becompleted in 1 year of full-time studyor 2 years of part time work. For moreinformation call 753-2616.Free room w/bath on own floor plusS25/wk for 10-15 hours of babysittingw/8 & 12 yr. old girls F only, carpreferred, driver's license essential.Call 337 2511.Half day summer camp counselors forchildren 3-6. June 19 Aug. 11. Call GaleBier 363 2770. Hyde Pk. JCC.Summer Work Ecology ActivistsCitizens for a Better Environment. Il¬linois' largest and most aggressive en¬vironmental organization will be hir¬ing 20 30 college students for salariedpositions involving canvassing, fundraising, and public education. Alltraining provided. Opportunities tomove rapidly into management posifions. Further advancement for thoseseeking long-term full-time employ¬ment in issue orientated campaigns.For interview, call: Citizens for a Bet¬ter Environment, 59 E Van Buren,Chicago (312) 939-1985Manuscript typists wanted for publicafions unit. Must type 55 wpm. Parttime and full time, school year andsummer $3.62 an hour. Call Pat Morse753 2518.Part time order picker and packer forlocal publishing Co. New modernequipment and excellent working con¬ditions. Mornings preferred. Call Personnel Department for appointment,643 8400. Equal OpportunityEmployer.U of C Sailing Club seeks full time sailinstr.°dockmaster from June SeptCall 643-8543.Buyer for South Side food co-ops. Tenhours a week, $4.00 an hour. 363-6748 or288 7119.The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center invites you toparticipate in a long-term group ex¬perience. The group meets everyThursday evening, from 8 to 10 p.m.Dan Massad and Bill Bradley,psychotherapists on the Center Staff,will facilitate. There are currently twoopenings in the group, and prospectivenew members are now being inter¬viewed Anyone 18 years of age orolder is welcome to apply, during thecourse of the next six-month contractperiod more new members may be ac¬cepted, but the size of the group willalways be limited to 10. Location . TheChicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center, 5711 S.Woodlawn, Chicago. 60637. Fee: $40per month per person, the first twomonths paid in advance. For more in¬formation call 684-1800. Ask for DanMassad.Subjects wanted for psycholinguisticsExperiments, will be paid. To registercall 753 4718.SECRETARIESAs a secretary at The University ofChicago you can choose the area thatinterests you the most: ACADEMIC,BUSINESS, MEDICAL, A minimumof 1 year experience, good com¬munication skills and 50 wpm typingcan qualify you. For a competitivestarting salary, outstanding benefitsincluding 3 weeks paid vacation . freeBlue Cross-Blue Shield and promotional opportunities in our stimulatingenvironment, call: 753-4476. MARLARIVERS; THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO. An affirmative action,equal opportunity employer.MATH and ENGLISH tutor for twohigh school boys, preferably graduatestudents. Top undergraduates will doHyde Park residents. Evenings andweekends. Call 324 7875 after 5 p.m. forarrangements.Rent free room in house for the summer, in return for 20 hr.°wk. home improvements. Call Leslie at 3-4137, 1-5,M F.PEOPLE FOR SALEFor experienced piano teacher of alllevels call 947 9746FLAMINGO APTS5500 S. Shore DriveStudio and One Bedrm\pts.Furn &TnfurnShort & l,onfi Term RentalsParking, pool, restaurant,drycleaning, valet, deli.24 hr. switchboard. U of Cshuttle bus Vz blk. away.Full carpeting & drapes incl.Special University RatesAvail.752-3800 Artwork - Illustration of all kinds, let¬tering, hand addressing for invitafions, etc. Noel Price, 493 2399.Typing, writing, editing done by col¬lege grad. MA in journalism terrrrpapers, theses, law briefs,manuscripts, letters, resumes. IBMpica, fast, accurate, reasonable OldTown. 787 3715.Psychic can advise on business, lovepersonal direction. JAMIL, PO box10154, Eugene, Oregon 97401. (503)342 2210 Donations appreciated.TUTOR: Exper teacher, UC MA willtutor in high school English 8. socialstud., now thru summer. Exper.w°Lab Sch, HP resident Low rates.536 2318.Thesis, Dissertations, Term Papers,ti»c Foreign language gen-corres.Latest IBM corrective SEL IItypewriter, Reas, rates. Mrs. Ross239-. bet. 11 a.m - 5 p.m.Student's wife, mother of 1# yr. childwill babysit part or full time. Call324 2962.SCENES"Abortion: A Woman's Right ToChoose, 1973-1978", sponsored byACLU/lllinois; Sat., May 13, 1:30p.m., 740 N. Lake Shore Dr. (Nor¬thwestern Univ. Law School - Chicago)236-5564 , 752-1081.WILD ONION DAY CAMP offers afull day program for children ages7 10. Our quality program includes instructional swim, crafts, nature studyand sports. Call 363-3716 (eves) or3 8693 (afternoons) for more info andan application.Move your butt over to the LasciviousCostume Ball Sat., May 13 8 p.m.w°costume $3.00, in costume $1.75, w°oclothes, free.The UC College Republicans will holda meeting on Tuesday May 16 at 7:00 inIda Noyes. Every one is invited.Parent co-op for early learningpreschool is holding a communityrummage sale May 20. The sale will beheld on the school lot, 5300 S. shore Dr.10 a m. to 5 p.m. Refreshments, facepainting, balloons and tours! TheParent Coop is a community, nonprofitday care center for children ages 2-6.Funds from the sale will be used to aidthe school's 1978 program.All Day Summer Program for 6, 7, 8yr. olds and pre schoolers. Swim, fieldtrips, sports, art, dancing, lunch incl.Sohourner Truth 4945 Dorchester 7a.m. - 6 p.m. 538-8325.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOSWhile U WaitModel Camera 1344 E. 55th St.2 BR Condo in E . Hyde Pk 493-3822 ~68 Olds, good condition. Newstarter/muffler, $350. Sears electrictyepwriter 4>/2 yr. warranty, must sell$80. Extra thick blue carpet padding(105 x 122) 1 yr. old, $50, evening947-9749.1971 VW Bug 87,000 miles. Reliabletransportation, looks good, AM FMradio $450.00.221 2856.MGB, 1967 $400. Call 667-7671.CELESTRON II x 80 Binoculars instock.MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 55th St.MODEL CAMERA PHOTOSHOWOur largest photo show ever! Morethan one dozen major manufacturerswill be represented in this photo spec¬tacular! Prices will never be lower.May 19 20th, 9:30 a.m. 6 p.m. 1344 E.55th St.Chest $75, bed stand $25 drapes $25dressers $50 Parlor chair $25 table &lamp $35, etc. 978 1832.Apt. Sale: Oak rocker, wicker chairs,small wooden desk, rug bookcase,lamps, dresser, sewing machine,wooden cabinet & lots more. Nothingover $30. Sat., May 13, 10-3 p.m. 1316 EHyde Park Blvd., Cash only.1974 Datsun 710 4 door, steel beltedradial tires, new muffler, goodmileage, AM°FM radio with cassetteplayer, rear window defroster, rustproofing, $1700 - Call 753-8624.Two WARREN ZENVON tickets forMay 13, call 324 7859, 955 9351.PERSONALSWriters' Workshop (PLaza 2 8377)DATINGSERVICELow cost over 1400 members 274 6940I need some information on the EqualRights Amendment. Who can I writeor call? If you can help me, call Carolat 363 3585 or leave message for CarolSwanson at 3 3751.eye examinationsFASHION FA'EIVEARCONTACT LENSESUR. KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd Street493-8372 Swift and Pentwater are his passions.Green hats, gray shirts his favoritefashions. He's now reached 60, and allwe can say is: We love you dear Ned,Have a Happy Birthday! Dan andTinaAttention: All current prospective andinterested members of the UC In¬stitute for the Advanced Study ofAlcohol Intoxication: RedeemYourselves! It's seventh week and nottoo late Drop those books and hoistthose glasses! Science has firmlyestablished the fact that the consumption of Massive Doses of Alcohol is in¬strumental in the destruction of Harm¬ful Brain Cells which have been shownto inhibit the process of CreativeThought.PREGNANCY TESTS SATURDAYS10 1 Agustana Church, 5500 S.Woodlawn. Bring 1st morning urinesample. $1.50 donation. SouthsideWomen's health. 324-6794.Pregnant? Troubled? Call 233 0305. 10a.m. - 1 p.m. M F or Mon and Thurs.7-9 p.m. Lifesaving helpt test ref.Bilbert and Juanita SUCK.Busts in the wind. He blinks his eyesand another year is gone. His eyesflash before his life: So it came to Passhe found the magic ring, the missinglink, the green goo that stuck to himand puffed him in until he was part ofthe Emerald City, giving him refugefrom the munchkins. The wizard, theartist, the cowardly lion were there,and the scarecrow and tinman showedhim the moon and stars, and it wasgood. They're leaving now some ofthem. Nothing lasts forever but Lewisand the sky. Today they celebratetheir existence: their magic ring andmystic tie, uncontrolled staves whiledrinking scqres, for in a click of a heel(there's no place like home) it will be amemory to a young girl from Kansas.LCBThe Lascivious Costume Ball comesbut every other year so come Sat.,May 13, 8 p.m. Free, $1.75, $3 00. ValidUCID requiredVOLUNTEER ARMYPresidential advisor Charles Zwickwill speak on "Military Compensationin the Contemporary Army" Wed.,May 17,1:00p.m. Business East 101.SECOND CITYSecond City, the resident company, 8p.m. Mandel Hall, Monday, May 15 $2UC students $3 others. A few ticketsleft.WATCH RUGBYThe UC Rugby Team vs Fox ValleyRFC Sat., 1 p.m., Washington park.Party at 4 p.m.HEALTH80% of disease is stress related. Stressreducing disciplines are thus integralto health. Workshops in yoga, massage& touch for Health which contribute tostress reduction 8, the creation of ahealthy lifestyie begin this Mon. &Wed at the Blue Gargoyle taught byDobbi Kerman who will be teaching atcore courses on Holistic Health sponsored by the Assoc, for Holistic healthat San Diego State. See Revitalizationclassified or call Dobbi 288 3706 ansserv 787 8853. Special low universityratesSUMMERSUBLET56th at University. 2« bdrms., $315 mo.Eva 241-5948TAI CHICHUANThe UC Tai Chi Club meets every Sunday at 4945 S. Dorchester (enter on50th) Kung Fu at 6:30. Tai Chi at 7:30.Tai Chi is soft, flowing, and balleticbut a rational system of self defenseAll are welcome for a free introduc¬tory class.RAP GROUPA Women's Rap Group will meet everyMonday at 7:30 p.m. on the 3rd floor ofthe Blue Gargoyle For more info752 5655WANTED TO BUYA good quality, wooden B flat clarinet,call 241 5999 eve.DOROTHY SMITHBEAUTY SALON5841 S. BLACKSTONEHY3-1069Call for appts.7 A.M. • 7 P.M.Monday thru Friday,closed Saturday* Hair Styling • PermanentsTinting-Facials-Skin Care REVITALIZEHeighten your enjoyment of life. 3workshops to revitalize body-mind andspirit begin this Mon & Wed. at theGargoyle May 15 & 17 YOGA 5:15 -6 64 p.m text. Integral Yoga Hatha bySatchidan - and a Postures, breath,control, energization, meditation,relaxation. TOUCH FOR HEALTH6:45 8:15 p.m text TOUCH FORHEALTHby Or. Thie DC Learn applied Kinesiology a form of biofeed¬back using music testing to detect imbalances in the body & correct themwith accupressure, meridan massage,neurolymphatic and vascular pts improve posture, energy flow. Health,alleviate physical & mental stress.ART OF MASSAGE 8:15 - 9:45 textThe Massage Book, Downing Learntotal body massage throughdemonstration and exchange.Pleasurable and deeply relaxingTaught by Dobbi Kerman who has ledworkshops on campus since 1971.Special low university rates Yoga $15.TFH $25, massage $25. $5 rebate for 2,$10 rebate for 3 classes. Register at 1stclass. INFO call Dobbi 288-3;706, ansserv. 787 8853.UNIVERSITYCHAMBER OR¬CHESTRAThe Universith Chamber Orchestraled by jeanne Schaefer & Michael Jin-bo will perform Mozart, Tchaikovskyand Arensky this Saturday at 8 p.m. inHutchinson Commons. Free fromFota.Kathleen Terbeek, Soprano; MarkLolezzi, Tenor and Elaine Smith, pianowill perform Beethoven, Berg,Schumann and Schubert on Sunday the14th at 8 p.m. in the Cloister Club, IdaNoyes Hall. Free from Fota.FOR SALE67 VW$350 see Sat. 8. Sun at 5301 3 D S Kimbark.RIDE BOARDI need a co-driver to Boston May 30Telephone 752-7022.Ride to and from Midlothian to Univ ofChicago Will pay for ride call947 3865 ask for WandaBOOKS BOUGHTBooks bought and sold everyday,everynight 9 a m - 11 p.m., Powell's.1501 E 57th St.FLAMINGOON THE LAKEStudio. 1 bdrm. apts. turn., unfur.short, long term rentals, parking, poolrest , trans . 5500 S. Shore Dr. 752-3800 DONATE RUMMAGEIt's too good to toss but not goodenough to keep? Parent Co-op for Early Learning Preschool is solicitingdonations for upcoming communityrummage sale May 20 at the School'slot, 5330 S. Shore Dr. Donate to a worthy community school - call CarolHeller, 684-6363. After 6 p.m., CallLynne Levine, 288-6830. Items such asold furniture, clean clothes, toys,books, records, crafts, tools,household items, etc. Arrangementswill be made by the School for pick up.BAYITLive at the Bayit. We are looking for 2or 3 Jewish women and 1 or 2 more merfor next year We have a beautiful 5bdrm. apt. The Bayit is a communalJewish home which also provides acenter for Jewish activities on campusNo previous religious experiencenecessary. Undergrads preferred Awonderful alternative to dorms or stu¬dent slums Please call David 684 8536or Sander, *43-0395.VOLVOS WANTEDDEAD OR ALIVE will give yours goodhome or recycle it. Don't send it to unsympathetic dealer or junk yard.493 0680 pvt also have parts. Save adplease.HOME FOR SALEIdeal for family wifh children andbooks in Beverly Hills Spacious, comfortab'e, well maintained. Largestorage areas, full basement, in¬sulated for low cost heating. First floorliving room, dining room, library, kit¬chen, bedroom, full bathroom; 4-5bedrooms upstairs Screened porchesall around. Lovely yard, tow cargarage - low $80's serious buyers onlyphone for appointment 8-10 a m. or4 8pm daily 445-8381QUAKERMEETINGThursdays 12-12:30 CTS victor Lawsonroom all welcome.MUSICDon't forget the University Chamberorchestra concert and Lieder Recitalthis coming weekend. Both begin at 8p.m and are Free. Sponsored by FotaPIZZA PLAT Kit1460 E. 53rd St.OUR SPECIALTYPizzo Also Italian FoodsPick Up OnlyMl 3-2800FOLKDANCINGJoin us at Ida Noyes Hall for international folkdancing each Sunday andMonday at 8 pm Mon beginners, Sungeneral level, with teaching bothnightsRECORDSWANTEDWe pay cash for used Records, alltypes, 33 RPM only. Second HandTunes 1701 E 55thSt. 684-3375 or262 1593.QUAKERMEETINGThursdays 12-12:30 C.T.S. VictorLawson'srm., all welcomeTAKE ADVANTAGEDon't miss the bi-annual LasciviousCostume Ball on Sat., May 13, 8 p.m.Free, $1 75, 3.00 Valid UCID requiredDouble your pleasure, etc.LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera is on sale in most Hyde Parkstores Bob's Newsstand We needwomen to join the editorial staff Call752 5655 if you can help out. How to finda summer job.VERSAILLES5251S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBULB INSAttractive l Vi andIVi Room StudiosFurnished or l nfurnUhed$171 to $266lin***d on \vailabilit\Ml l tililio included\i (ampii* Bn* Slop324-0200 Mr*. <>roak Talk to Manpower.We ve got summer jobopportunities *or temporaryworkers. In factories, warehouses, stores... indoorsand outdoors.Work as much as youwant. Or as little It's upto you.There s a Manpower officealmost anywhere you respending the summer Stopin and we ll plan a jobschedule for youMANPOWERAn equa* opportunity employerThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 12, 1978 — 23Good times are great times for the easy taste ofKING OF BEERS- • ANHEUSER BUSCH INC • ST LOUIS— The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 12, 1978