Lord, Bissel & Brook lawyer Harold L. Jacobson, who requested thegag order Photo by Jacob Levine Circuit judge denies UC requestfor gag order in Manteno caseBy Jacob Levineand Jaan EliasA request by University lawyersthat would prevent parties in¬volved in a lawsuit concerning ex¬perimentation on patients at Man¬teno State Hospital fromdiscussing the case with the presswas denied by Circuit Court JudgeMarjan Staniec last Friday.The University’s motion for agag order, filed early Fridaymorning, was effective whileJudge Staniec deliberated on the request. The gag order was thrownout at 2 pm, but lasted long enoughto cancel a scheduled press confer¬ence at the Mental Health Associa¬tion of Greater Chicago.Dr. Robert DeVito, Director ofthe Illinois Department of MentalHealth (IDMH) and a defendant inthe Manteno case along with theUniversity, had been scheduled toappear at the press conference.In addition to DeVito, Dr. Her¬bert Meltzer, professor in the de¬partment of psychiatry, and Dr.John M. Davis, professor in the de¬ partment of psychiatry and Direc¬tor of the Illinois State PsychiatricInstitute (ISPI), were also to ap¬pear.“We wanted to get the thing outof the press and into the hands ofthe lawyers,” said UniversityVice-President for Public AffairsD. J. R. Bruckner. Allen Grischke,attorney for the IDMH, told report¬ers at the press conference that theIDMH had not been informed in ad¬vance of the University’s motionfor the gag order.to 5News analysisMcNamara: Defense daysBy Andrew Patner“McNamara’s previous careeras a civil servant was completelyextraneous to the award.’’ —Chauncy Harris, director of theCenter for International Studiesand a member of the Pick Awardselection committee.On May 22, President Hanna Hol-born Gray will present, on behalfof the University, the first AlbertPick, Jr., Award for OutstandingContributions to International Un¬derstanding to Robert StrangeMcNamara. The award carrieswith it a $25,000 cash prize and anoriginal sculpture by Virginio Fer¬rari. McNamara was chosen be¬cause of his efforts in aidingmembers of the Third World aspresident of the International Bankfor Reconstruction and Develop¬ment, commonly known as theWorld Bank, according tomembers of the selection commit¬tee. But from 1961 to 1968, McNa¬mara was Secretary of Defenseunder Presidents Kennedy andJohnson, and in that position hewas the chief impetus behind theescalation of the Vietnam War. Itis this position that has membersof the faculty and the Universitycommunity, as well as other resi¬dents of Hyde Park, so incensedabout the award.From the initiation of the bomb¬ing of Hanoi to its increase, fromthe sending of ground troops to thecalling up of the reserves,McNamara was the firm and vocalcate of greater American partici¬pation in Southeast Asia. He“either laid before the President orseconded every single step of esca¬lation in Vietnam," Douglas Kikerwrote in the Atlantic Monthly inMarch, 1967.“Whiz Kid”McNamara came to Washingtonwith impeccable credentials. Hewas the consummate organizer,- Best or brightest?-On Sunday, The Maroon talked with David Halberstam,author of The Best and the Brightest, an alalysis of the men whodirected American involvement in Vietnam. Halberstam wonthe Pulitzer Prize for his New York Times coverage of the warin 1964.“Oh that’s really nice,” said Halberstam when told of theaward “What are they awarding him for? Increasing interna¬tional understanding with the Vietnamese from 35,000 feet?“I find the award amazing. The University of Chicago mustthink the Vietnam War is really over if they have gone about giv¬ing a chickenshit award like that.“Mr. McNamara has yet to say that he has ever made amistake on Vietnam. But the interesting thing about Mr.McNamara beyond the unbridled arrogance and the in¬comprehensible stupidity of his decisions during the war, andhis impassioned hostility towards dissenters, and his duplicity inthe cocktail party chit-chat with liberal friends and thehawkishness in the corridors of the Pentagon, is his crime ofsilence.“His is a crime of silence that began the day he left theDepartment of Defense and continued through that day that thelast American was out, a period where 25,000 young Americans,young Americans from lower-class and impoverishedbackgrounds, not to mention hundreds of thousands of Viet¬namese, were killed.“If the University of Chicago will make this kind of award to aman with that lack of sensitivity, a man who sat on the sidelineswhile thousands of young men were killed, then that is sayingsomething not so much about Mr. McNamara, but about theUniversity of Chicago itself.”A* *■— .-ri ,rnr ■ 1'» " driver, and developer. His mindwas said to be a computer; his ca¬pacity for work was boundless. Herose at 6 am and worked throughthe night. He had no time for playor passion: he was reason andquantification, the voice of cost-ef¬fectiveness.In the Air Force McNamara wasa systems analyst and helped to de¬velop the B-29 bomber, the planethat dropped the atomic bombs onJapan. As a “whiz kid” at the FordMotor Company, he stopped theEdsel and built the Falcon. He wasconcerned with efficiency in sys¬tems and rationality in men.^e brought these and other cor¬porate traits with him to the De¬fense Department. He had a fiercesense of loyalty and a heavy-hand¬ed paternalism. He expected De¬fense to be run like a business —and to McNamara, a businesswould run well on efficiency andeven better on deceit. McNa¬mara's devotion to the war led himto lie about all of its aspects: itscost, its troop commitment, and ul¬timately its length.According to David Halberstamin The Best and the Brightest,McNamara would “lie, dissemble,not just to the public, they all didthat in varying degrees, but inside,in high-level meetings, always forthe good of the cause.”From January, 1962, to July,1966, he told the country no lessthen seven times that the warwould be over in six months. Thesituation was, he told reporters,“improving,” “getting better andbetter,” “significantly improved,”“excellent.” In 1966, we had“stopped the war.” In 1967, hewould not change “one word” ofhis previous assessments.McNamara believed in what hesaid. In 1964, he believed that300,000 men would end the war inless than a year. In 1965 he be¬lieved the bombing of Hanoi wouldstop the war cold. And he justifiedhis belief with what some might re¬gard as a twisted, but nonethelesscommitted, sense of morality.“There are two ways you can kill aman,” he told a group of protestingministers in 1966. “You can kill hisbody or you can kill his soul. I’drather kill a few thousands bodiesthan kill fourteen million souls inVietnam ”to 5 SECC Executive director Julian LeviSECC to releasearea crime countBy Abbe Fletmanwith Andrew PatnerSouth East Chicago Commission(SECC) officials agreed Friday torelease Hyde Park crime statisticson a regular basis. SECC Execu¬tive Director Julian Levi will meetagain with Women’s Unionmembers May 18 to release statis¬tics for the period January 1 toMarch 31.Statistics will be reported for ei¬ther four or eight quadrants thatwill be created for the purposes ofthe reports, Levi said in an inter¬view Friday. Reports will be eitherquarterly or monthly, he said.Women’s Union members wouldlike statistics released every otherweek, but will settle on monthly re¬leases, a Women’s Union represen¬tative said Sunday.Women’s Union members stillhope to convince Levi to releasemore specific locations, the repre¬sentative said. The group request-1ed a block-by-block breakdown ofcrime and will ask for the releaseof the day and time when eachcrime occurred, she said.The crime statistics will be re¬leased with an accompanying mapand will be broken into nine cate¬gories. homicide, rape, serious as¬sault, robbery, burglary, pursesnatch, automobile theft, theftfrom automobile, and “other.” TheWomen’s Union representativesaid these categories are ambigu¬ous and that Women's Union will ask that they be clearly defined atthe May 18 meeting.“We are somewhat optimisticthat we are getting the statisticsreleased at all,” said the Women’sUnion representative. But, shesaid they are releasing the statis¬tics now only because they are“under pressure.”Levi said he has two reserva¬tions about releasing the statistics.In order to successfully prosecuteassailants when they are caught,the SECC “must be very carefulabout what was released at anypoint so that publicity would notmake a trial impossible.”to 2Not Our FaultBecause of a printer’s error,the two photographs on page oneof Friday’s issue were switched.Distribution of the mistakecopies was halted at 10:30 am andby 3.30 pm The Maroon’s secondedition was on the street.First edition copies were hid¬den, burned, and thrown out.The Maroon apologizes to Deanof the College Jonathan Z. Smithand to those who were made towait patiently for Friday readingmaterial. Also, we thank all whohelped us dispose of the first edi¬tion.5400 UpdateTenant group barred from testifyingHousing Court Judge Sara Whitting. A courtdate was set for 2 pm. May 17 at the DaleyCenter to accept affidavits from tenantswho wish to enter the proceedings.Hearings will begin May 24 on 64 buildingcode violations found by City investigatorsat the building. Chief Code Enforcement Of¬ficer Frank Barnes led a team in reinspec¬ting the building Tuesday. He said Thursdaythat tuckpointing is being done on thebuilding’s exterior but no other repairs havebeen started.Tenants Association attorney EdwardVoci, also presented the attorney forForce meetsbably be made public after the CollegeCouncil meeting May 15.Task Force members decided both toevaluate the current state of liberal artseducation in the College and to issue specificrecommendations “where appropriate,”Shute said.The Task Force will spend the remainderof the quarter planning the procedure fornext year’s evaluation. Shute said.The Task Force will meet again Monday,May 14 in Ida Noyes Hall. New members areinvited. Lustbader and Co. with a petition signed by48 tenants stating that “We. . .believe thatthe 5400 South Harper Tenants Associationrepresents our interests and complaints,both building-wide and in regard to in¬dividual apartments, and authorize theAssociation to present them to you.”The petition requested a meeting with thebuilding management on or before May 5,1979, “to set specific dates for negotiatedrepairs and improvements.” TenantsAssociation president Nancy Cleveland saidSunday there has been no response to thepetition.Voci said Thursday that the TenantsAssociation previously requested a meetingwith the building management to discussproblems in the building. Dalton Manage¬ment representative Roy Rutkoff respondedwith a letter to individual tenants solicitingcomplaints and suggestions regardingbuilding maintenance.Several tenants at the hearing Thursdaysaid they believe both the letters to thetenants and the owner’s objections toTenants Association involvement in the suitare attempts to deny the existence of theTenants Association.Over 10 members of the Tenants Associa¬tion were present at Thursday’s hearing andwere kept waiting over two hours whileJudge Whitting and the attorneys for thediscusses women in curriculumBy Eric Von der PortenThe 5400 South Harper Tenants Associa¬tion will not be allowed to participate in theCity’s prosecution of the owner of thebuilding, according to an agreement reach¬ed Thursday between repfesentatives forthe Tenants Association, the City Corpora¬tion Counsel, and Marvin Lustbader andCo., the building’s owner.The 43 tenants who petitioned to enter thecase will be allowed to participate as in¬dividuals, according to a ruling by CriminalCollege TaskBy David GlocknerThirty members of the Dean’s StudentTask Force on Education in the College metSunday evening to map out future plans fortheir evaluation of the College.Although Sunday’s turnout was downfrom the 50 who attended the organizationalmeeting last week, Task Force ChairmanDavid Shute said this does not indicatedeclining student interest in the group andthat the remaining participants were likelyto stay actively involved.Members decided to concentrate onacademic activities in the College, and haveno current plans to study student life.Task Force members chose to examinethe philosophy underlying liberal artseducation in the College and to study theconsistency of the programs in the Collegewith its philosophical aims.According to Shute, the Task Force isunlikely to conduct a full-scale study of Col¬lege curricula, but will instead rely on theforthcoming 96-page report of the standingcurriculum committee of the College Coun¬cil for specific information about cur¬riculum. The Committee report will pro- GroupBy Abbe FletmanSeven faculty members and more than 40students met Thursday to discuss in¬tegrating the study of women into the cur¬riculum.Calling themselves “The Ad Hoc Commit¬tee on the Study of Women,” participantslistened to Committee on General Studies inthe Humanities Chairman Janel Mueller, De Paul University professor SuzanneGossett, and University Women’s Unionmembers describe efforts to include thestudy of women in the curriculum here apdat other institutions.Assistant professors Elizabeth Helsingerand Elizabeth Abel, committee moderators,then opened the meeting to discussion.Women’s Union members criticized Deanof the College Jonathan Z. Smith for being“vague.” According to the Women’s Unionmembers, they met with Smith, Master ofthe Humanities Collegiate Division BraxtonRoss, and Master of the Social Sciences Col¬legiate Division Bernard Silberman thissummer. The three administrators were“sympathetic,” Women’s Union memberssaid, but there was “not concrete pursuit”of the integration of women’s studies intothe curriculum.Smith said Friday he had been “snarledby scheduling” and that he regrets not hav¬ing met with the group again. He supportstheir efforts and will hold a meeting withrepresentatives of the group in a week ortwo, he said.“There will be ways to do a bit better,”said Smith, but he added he is “not convinc¬ed it adds up to a degree program.”Smith said he is sympathetic to makingthe study of women “part of ordinary offer-SECC statsfrom 1He said it is also “extremely importantthat the privacy of the victim be protectedand that they be bothered as little as poss¬ible.”Levi said the SECC has “always had thepoint of view that it is desirable that peoplein the community be aware that this is not ahigh-crime area.”But a Women’s Union member who metlast year with SECC special consultantJames Mann said she was told the SECC didnot compile statistics. In a 1971 urban stu¬dies journalism fellowship study, HydePark-Kenwood, a Case Study of Urban Ren¬ewal, however, author Valetta Press usedcrime statistics broken down in quadrantssupplied by the SECC.“They are releasing the statistics now be¬cause of pressure,” a Women’s Unionmember said.The SECC is a not-for-profit organizationfunded primarily by the University. It wasformed in the late 1950’s by former Universi¬ty President Lawrence Kimpton and com¬munity residents for the planning and exe¬cution of urban renewal. Its chief activitytoday is reducing crime and aiding in theprosecution of criminal suspects. Photo by Carol Studenmundthree interested parties discussed the casein chambers. Sharon Foster, interim ad¬ministrative assistant for 5th Ward Aider-man Lawrence Bloom; Ralph Scott, arepresentative of Hyde Park Tenants Com¬mittee; Ed Sacks, author of the ChicagoTenants Handbook; and several membersof the press were also present.ings” rather than creating special coursesor programs devoted solely to the study ofwomen.Gossett outlined the formation of a com¬mittee at De Paul that created a five-courseminor in women’s studies. She said thereare two ways to ensure a women’s studiesprogram at the University: studentpressure and faculty pressure.Mueller said that as long as she canremember there has never been a “serious”discussion of women in the curriculum inany of the University faculty governingbodies.She criticized the University Committeeon Women, formed in the late 1970’s afterthe release of the Neugarten Committeereport on Women in the University.The Committee is “an appearance only”committee, she said. “It seems to givereceptions. I’m not sure what else they do.”According to one participant in Thurs¬day’s meeting, the key to integrating thestudy of women into the curriculum lies in“insisting on the intellectual credibility” ofthe program.The study of women “is not part of a popmovement, it is part of the responsibility ofthe University,” said Women’s Unionmember Sarah Schulman.The meeting drew only one man, but meninterviewed after the meeting said the Com¬mittee’s poster, which invited only womento the meeting, discouraged them from at¬tending.The meeting was dominated by Collegestudents, leading one student to rise “to putin a plug for my constituency - the graduatestudent.”A proposal for establishing a smaller com¬mittee of twelve faculty members, ad¬ministrators, and students was introduced.The proposal charged the committeewith:• recommending guidelines for the in¬tegration of the study of women into the ex¬isting course of study;• creating incentive for faculty membersand students to pursue the study of womenin their respective fields; and• investigating the development of adegree-granting interdisciplinary commit¬tee on Women’s Studies.Ad Hoc Committee members disagreed onthe formation of the twelve-member com¬mittee. Some said they preferred to con¬tinue meeting in a large group, breaking in¬to subcommittees for specific projects.But participants did agree to meet again -Thursday at 5 pm in the Ida Noyes HallLibrary. Men are invited. Suggestions forthe meeting agenda are being solicited andshould be left in the Women’s Union box inIda Noyes Hall before Thursday’s meeting.ms-Daniel Heifetz. Classical Violinist8:30 pm Mandel Hall, May 14$3.50 / $4.50 students. $5 / $6 othersMaster class Tuesday, May 15 -10.30 amOpen to AuditorsLecture 130 pmBoth in Ida Noyes LibraryAdmission is without ticket or chargeFestival of the Arts2 _ The Chicago Maroon — Toesdaf May 8, 1979rCollegePrograms DayCollegiate divisional masters and facul¬ty members will be available Wednesday,May 9, beginning at 3 pm in QuantrellAuditorium to discuss divisional and con¬centration requirements in the College.From 4 to 5 pm., special presentationswill be made in classrooms in Cobb Hall byrepresentatives of each field of concentra¬tion in the College. At 5 pm, there will be areception for students and facultymembers in the Bergman Gallery.First-year College students as well asundecided College students are urged toattend. In the past, the food at the recep¬tion has been exceptional.Fire at I-HouseScores of International House (I-House)residents wearing only pajamas or over¬coats evacuated their rooms early Satur¬day monring when an electrical fire sentsmoke through much of the west wing ofthe building. No one was hurt in the inci¬dent.The fire, which occurred in a motorlocated in the basement used to operaterefrigeration equipment for the I-Housecafeteria, started at about 1:30 Saturdaymorning. Smoke from the fire traveled tothe upper floors of the building through anelevator shaft. Although the seven-floorwest wing was most heavily affected,residents from as far away as the ninthfloor of the east wing reported smellingsmoke.Chicago city firemen used a dbg to sniffout the exact location of the fire. “I’dnever seen anything like it,” said JohnDavidson, a resident head at I-House. “Wecouldn’t find which motor it was, and thenthe dog walked right up to it.”Wright winsLaing PrizeSewall Wright, Ernest D. BurtonDistinguished Service Professor Emeritusin Zoology, has received the 1978 Gordon J.Laing prize for the third volume of hisfour-volume study Evolution and theGenetics of Populations, The third volume,entitled Experimental Results and Evolu¬tionary Deductions, was published by theUniversity of Chicago Press in 1977.Wright, 90, joined the faculty in 1926,after 10 years with the Department ofAgriculture. Since his retirement in 1954Wright has served on the faculty of theUniversity of Wisconsin at Madison andwas President of the Tenth InternationalCongress of Genetics in 1958.The Laing Prize is given annually by theBoard of University Publications to thefaculty author whose book has brought thegreatest distinction to the University ofChicago Press within the last two years.Pangleto speakThe second of three Collegiate Lecturesin the Liberal Arts this quarter will bepresented Thursday. May 10, 8 pm inHarper Memorial Library 130. ThomasPangle, professor in the political sciencedepartment at Yale University, will speakon “The Philosophy of History fromRousseau to Marx.”Refreshments and discussion will followthe lecture, the tenth such lecture thisyear. Admission is free and open to thepublic.I ■NNews BriefsLevi to lecture tonightFormer University President EdwardLevi will deliver tonight’s WoodwardCourt lecture on ‘ Some Aphorisms AboutBomb beautiesUniversity Nuclear OverkillMoratorium (NOMOR) Committeemembers are staging a “Mushroom CloudBeauty!?) Contest” today in Cobb Halland Wednesday in Reynold’s Club. Thedisplay will provide informationalliterature, petitions to Congress, and colorphotographs of actual U.S. detonations.The pictures will be judged according towhich one the voter would most like to beunder.NOMOR is asking for a halt in produc¬tion of more nuclear overkill weapons.Rust on panel tolook at Com Ednuclear plantsDr. John Rust was named by Com¬monwealth Edison Co. to a six-member in¬vestigative panel which will determinewhether or not additional safety measuresare needed at the company’s sevennuclear reactors. Rust is professoremeritus in radiology, pharmacologicaland physiological sciences, and theFranklin McLean Memorial Research In¬stitute.Also appointed to the panel was RobertLaney, deputy director of Argonne Na¬tional Laboratory.Nature’spaintbrush"Spring is strong and virtuous.broad-sow ing, cheerful, plentious. . .So deep and wide her bounties areThat one broad long midsummer's dayShall to the planet overpayThe ravage of a year of war. . .”—EmersonBe sure to look around the greater worldof nature in this fragile space betweenwinter and summer. Sunday was sogorgeous and filled with light and colorWe have been asked to point out in par¬ticular the trees in bloom which frame the57th St gate to the Quads. Government.” Levi is also a former U. S.Attorney General and Glen A. LloydDistinguished Service Professor in the Col¬lege, Law School, Committee on SocialThought, and Committee on Public PolicyStudies.The lecture begins at 8:30 pm in theWoodward Court dining hall. A receptionin the Resident Master’s apartmentfollows. All are cordially invited.The Visiting Committee of the Depart¬ment of Music is sponsoring a paneldiscussion by four distinguished critics onthe subject, “judging music.” Par¬ticipating will be: Donal Henahan of TheNew York Times, Paul Hume of TheLoren Madsen's "Timber Ring” will beon campus for four or five months, ac¬cording to Robert Zolla. a Chicago galleryowner who w as the instigator of the show¬ing. Zolla said Madsen. 35. has been ac¬claimed as "one of the finest youngsculptors in the country” and has severalsculptures on permanent display inmuseums and office buildings around thecountry. "Timber Ring” was formerly ondisplay in Grant Park, just South of the ArtInstitute, in late fall and winter.The shoeing is being sponsored by theUniversity’s Art Department. No arrestsin rapesAccording to a 21st District PolicemanSunday, no suspects have been arrested ineither sexual assault case reported in Fri¬day’s Maroon. One woman was assaultedSunday while jogging in Jackson Park,and the other was assaulted in her apart¬ment in the 5400 block of Woodlawn Ave.Darnell winsRicketts AwardThe University’s Ricketts Award waspresented to Dr. James E. Darnell, Jr., theVincent Astor Professor at RockefellerUniversity, yesterday for "outstanding ac¬complishment in the field of the medicalsciences.”Scientists consider Darnell’s studies as amodel for the synthesis of messenger RNAin all living cells. Darnell delivered the an¬nual Ricketts lecture, entitled “Transcrin-tiorrand Processing of Nuclear RNA: Im¬plications for Gene Regulation.”The award commemorates HowardTaylor Ricketts, a University pathologistwho demonstrated that Rocky Mountainspotted fever is transferred to man byticks. He was the first to describe theRickettsia organism that causes thedisease. Later he found — at the cost of hislife — the related organism that causestyphus.Washington Post, Nancy Malitz of The Cin¬cinnati Enquirer, and Andrew Porter ofThe New Yorker.Joining them on the panel will bemembers of the music department andTed Cohen, chairman of the philosophydepartment.The critics will examine the notion thatthey are responsible for makingjudgements both of performances and ofnew compositions and w ill discuss the con¬sequences of performing such a functionThey also will explore the broad effects ofresponsible and irresponsible musiccriticism on music history.The discussion will take place Wednes¬day at 4 pm at Brested Hall in the OrientalInstitute. Admission is free and open to thepublic.Fellowshipsto 3 facultymembersThree University faculty members havebeen aw arded 1979 fellowships by the JohnSimon Guggenheim Memorial P'oundaLon.They are:Glyn Dawson, associate professor inpediatrics and biochemistry and theJoseph P Kennedy Jr Scholar Pediatrics,for "Biochemical Models for Drug Addic¬tion.”William H Kruskal. Ernest DeWitt Bur¬ton Distinguished Service Professor inStatistics and the College. Dean of theDivision of Social Sciences, and a memberof the Committee on Public Policy Studies,for "The Application Of Statistical Theoryto Social Problems.”Donald N. Levine, Professor ofSociology and chairman of the sociologyprogram in the College, for "The Formsand Functions of SociologicalKnowledge.”/Music Dept, sponsors panelThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 8, 1979 — 3, ' ..... ... . : . , . . " “IgigP :'■* '}THE NATIONAL HUMANITIES INSTITUTEpresents a lecture entitledHENRY ADAMS'SSCIENCE FICTIONbyALFRED KAZINDistinguished Professor of English, Graduate Center, City University of New York;Academic Term, 1978-79, William White Professor of English,University of Notre Dame.TUESDAY, MAY 8, 19794:30 P.M.LAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM • INI E. 60TH STREET (ynimmmvmMimmwax.I BLACKFRIARSPRESENTSDirected by Victor SmithChoreographed by Gina Ron rathMusic Direction by Peter Burkholder Book by Neil SimonMusic by Cy ColemanLyrics by Dorothy FieldsMANDEL HALL. 8 30 P.M.MAY 11.12,13$3.00 General $2.00 StudentsTickets on sale at Reynolds Club Box Office and Cobb Hall IFriends of the Symphony & the Music Department PresentRay Still, FounderMusic & Refreshment appropriate for a Spring AfternoonStrawberries and Ginger Ale will be served at each tableTickets at Mandel Box Office$3.50 U.C. Students, $5.00 other U.C.I.D., $6.00 General Public- ■ • ' ; ••• v • .• - ■ ' ' 'Two groups protest at WalpurgisnachtBy Bruce LewensteinMore than 25 women marched into Hut¬chinson Commons Saturday night to protestthe Walpurgisnacht ceremony, as a group ofsix or seven men took advantage of the con¬fusion to attack the actress playing the roleof the “sacrificial virgin.” She was rescuedunharmed by members of the Student Proj¬ects Committee (SPC), which organized theannual ceremony.The women were protesting Universitysupport of symbolic rape, said a representa¬tive of the group, and carried a banner say¬ing ‘‘Rape Is No Joke — Stop All ViolenceAgainst Women.” In the Walpurgisnachtceremony, a virgin is sacrificed to Old ManWinter to mark the beginning of spring.The protesters did not touch the actors inthe ceremony, according to the group’s rep¬resentative, but circled the platform onwhich the ritual deflowering was occurring.The men ran to the platform from the oppo-Manteno gagfrom 1In ruling against the University’s request,Judge Staniec said “The court realizes theconcern the University of Chicago has(about allegations concerning experimenta¬tion at Manteno) . . . but the University ofChicago has other remedies it may exerciseif it so chooses.”Harold Jacobson of Lord, Bissel & Brook,attorneys for the University, told reportersafterword, “I do not know what those otheravenues might be.” Jacobson added that themotion for the gag order had nothing to dowith the press conference.Acting Cook County Public Guardian Pa¬trick Murphy, who filed the suit against theUniversity and the IDMH, said, “I don’t un¬derstand why the University asked for that site direction, and reached it at the sametime as the leaders of the women.The men pulled Old Man Winter off theplatform and then attempted to carry theactress towards the Quadrangles. “Theytried to disrobe me, and untied my dress,”said the actress after being rescued. Univer¬sity security officers and Chicago Policewere called to the scene, but no witnessesidentified the attackers.The attack lasted only a few moments,and was over by the time most of the pro¬testing women arrived on stage. The womenwere joined by about 25 more people fromthe audience. They chanted slogans forabout 10 minutes, receiving both cheers andhisses from the audience.Reaction among those remaining in Hut¬chinson Commons — most of whom were un¬aware of the attack — was mixed. “Tonightwas supposed to be a fun night,” said oneman, “but (the protesters) had to go andorder deniedorder. I’ve been trying to Keep tne Universi¬ty out of things in the last two weeks. TheUniversity is a relatively minor defendant— my fight is with the Department of Men¬tal Health.”In addition to the suit against the Univer¬sity and DeVito, Murphy has filed threesuits naming DeVito as a defendant, includ¬ing a $5 million suit against the IDMH on be¬half of a Chinese patient, David Tom. Tomwas kept at Manteno since 1951, allegedlybecause he could speak only Chinese.On Wednesday, Murphy’s suit against theUniversity and the IDMH will be heard be¬fore Judge Raymond Berg in the CircuitCourt. Murphy has subpoenaed Dr. JohnCrayton, professor in the department of psy¬chiatry and medical superviser of the Man¬teno clinical investigations unit, to testify ruin it.”A woman standing with him responded,“yeah, but they had to make their pointsomehow.”Robin Potman of the SPC said she be-from 1“He Knew nothing about Asia,” Halber-stam wrote. “About poverty, about people,about domestic politics, but he knew a greatdeal about . . . exercising bureaucraticpower. He was classically a corporateman.”“This man whose only real experiencehad been in dealing with the second largestautomobile empire in the world, producinghuge Western vehicles, was the last man tounderstand and measure the problems of apeople looking for their political freedom.”McNamara went to Washington to wrestcontrol of the Defense Deprtment from thedominance of the military. “The questiontoday,” Kiker quoted a government officialin 1967, “is no longer whether there is civil¬ian control over the military, but whetherthere is public control over the civilians inthe Pentagon.”“It was,” Halberstam concluded, “not aparticularly happy chapter in McNamara’slife. He did not serve himself nor his countrywell, he was, there is no kinder word for it. afool.”When McNamara was eased out of De¬fense and into the World Bank by Johnson,the understanding of most observers wasthat he had become too son on Vietnam,that he had come to doubt his actions. But ifthere were indeed any doubts in McNa¬mara’s mind, he did not display them. Whenhe finally did argue against the escalation ofthe war, it was only against that escalationand never for American withdrawal fromVietnam. He never abandoned the rhetoricof the war’s supporters, rhetoric he hadnelpen to create lieves many people were “disgusted” by theprotest, but she said she expected some sortof protest. “I’m surprised more peopledidn’t realize that something was bound tohappen,” she said.In his reflections on his tenure at Defense,The Essence of Security, in 1968, McNa¬mara did not acknowledge that the war evenexisted except to discuss weapons use and tocondemn the war’s opponents He dismissedthe protesters as “giving comfort to theenemy,” and — in an incredible distortion oftheir dissent — accused protesters of ignor¬ing “social injustice here at home.”“The Negro service man,” he wrote, “hasbeen loyal and responsible to his country,but the people of his country have failedhim.” McNamara, the great quantifer,could feel comfortable with this statementwhile the $17 billion cost of the war wasdraining the budget and drawing attentionfrom the nation’s social programs, andwhile, by his own estimate, 20 percent of thewar’s casualties were black.This is the first part of a two-part senes onRobert McNamara and the Pick Award. Thesecond part, on McNamara and the WorldBank, will appear Friday.ClarificationFriday’s editorial “Who will lead?” said“President Gray has suggested an in¬crease in the College enrollment to nearly4000 students.” Although Gray has com¬mitted herself to discussion of a rise in thesize of the College, the only number to bereleased from her office is 3000, said arepresentative of the President. Thisfigure is only “a stimulus to discussion,”he said.McNamara at DefenseCOLLEGEPROGRAMSDAYCOBB HALLMAY 93-6 RM ^ Mastersm Collegiate Division4:00 & 4:30 SpecicU presentationClassroom by each fie)d ofPresentations concentrationFind out civisional and concentrationrequirements. Talk to cfivisional Mastersand faculty members.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 8, 1979 — 5By Claudia Magat“It was summer of 1976, and Charlie and Iwere here taking organic chemistry. Wewere talking a lot about pressure, trying todecide if the University still had the numberone suicide rate in the country. We dis¬cussed other schools, realizing that while weare under just as much if not more pressurehere, we don’t have the same services thatother schools do.”Mark Golberg. a fourth-year anthropolo¬gy student, is talking. It is 8 pm on a Mondaynight; we are sitting in one of those glassed-i" in rooms on the fourth floor of RegensteinLibrary. It has been a long time coming tothis room, to this meeting. Golberg andCharles Carpati, a fourth-year ASHUM; (Arts and Sciences Basic to Human Biologyl and Medicine) student, have finally hadi their plans for a University Hotline ap-k proved.I The Hotline, which will begin operation at| the beginning of fall quarter, is not "an al-| ternative to clinical (Student MentalHealth' help, but rather an alternative to nohelp at all/' The feeling of faculty and stu¬dents involved in the service is that manyundergraduate and graduate students are1 afraid to reach out to Student Mental| Health, or even to other students. With a hot-I line, both the caller and the listener remainanonymous. The proposed hours of the ser¬if vice. 7 pm to 7 am. are an additional asset :surely there are few students who have noti found themselves, perhaps morose andI drunk, at three in the morning, sensing sud-I denly and lucidly the weight of an incom-! plete, a relationship gone sour, or a loneli-l ness that runs deep and dark.[ Lonelinesss. compounded by severe intel¬lectual pressure and fear of failure, is cen-I tral to student — and perhaps faculty — un-| happiness at the University, according toBertram Cohler. William Rainey Harper as¬sociate professor of social sciences in theCollege. Cohler has been encouraging Gol-r berg and Carpati since they first ap-| proached him late in 1976. and will serve as\ "a friend of the Hotline” on its Advisory\ Board.t "This is a high-powered intellectualplace. " Cohler said. "People feel that no onecares about what they do. There are nomechanisms for reaching out. and tradition¬ally there has been little funding for specif¬ically undergraduate accommodations."I am an anti-administration type by na¬ture. but really, the advisors and adminis¬trators and faculty do care about students.It s a money problem, aggravated some¬times by lack of appreciation of studentneeds.”Cohler. who attended the College, said stu¬dents today are plagued by the same prob¬lems they encountered 10 and 20 years ago.“I remember how hard we worked, on TheMaroon, and on student government, tryingto get a quorum. . ” he said. “Nothing haschanged. . . least of all the pressure and de¬spair.”‘‘The Hotline can’t hurt. Students can helpeach other in ways that psychiatrists can- A Hotline staff meeting, after which Charles Carpati asked, “Okay, is everyonesatisfied?”not.”Hotline StaffIn addition to Cohler, Advisory Boardmembers are Barbara Baldwin, a lecturerin Social Service Administration (SSA);Paul Gitlin, associate professor in SSA;Janet Kohrman. senior lecturer and asso¬ciate advisor of field work, SSA; RosemaryMcCaslin, lecturer in SSA; Katie Nash, as¬sistant to the dean of admissions; Eleanor Tolson. instructor, SSA; and Beth Logan ofStudent Mental Health.“These people cannot be thankedenough,” said third-year Public Affairs stu¬dent Sara Newman, who will aid Logan ininterviewing Hotline applicants. “It’s onehell of a commitment,” said Newman, “interms of time, emotion, in terms of one¬self.”Newman, who is the only present memberof the Hotline who has had previous counsel- Mark Golberg, a founder of tling experience (at a Crisis Center in subur¬ban Birmingham. Michigan: “I was 15 or16; I counseled people about things I’d neverexperienced”) has a strong commitment tothe Hotline that is rooted in her own experi¬ence at the College."This place has been somewhat charac¬ter-destructive for me. . . I’m never en¬couraged in the College but when I get out ofthe quads I find people who are interested inmy work, people who are supportive. I hateto sound so extreme, but the College is no¬torious for its generation of bad feelingsabout oneself,” Newman said.“They never tell us, You are the power,you are the beautiful.”Newman feels that loneliness threatensfirst and second-year students in particular,“I look at them now and I think, oh, thepain, the pain.’ You do learn to survive here,though. I survive by splitting my priorities;I get involved with extra-curricular activi-#■ '• pm CrHjD *FOR QUALITY TOYS AND GAMESft i - 1517 E. 53rd St.m THE HYDE PARK BANK BUILDINGWm. DUNGEON MASTER or BEGINNER?We have a complete line ofAdventure Modules.We also have Frisbees andKites for Masters and Beginners— Tuesday, May 8, 1979• > * 6 jK*/Vft- ' ' ...am : ,.' ..... . .....four 4 amSara Newman, a third-year Public Affairs student, will be interviewing Hotlinevolunteers.the University’s Hotline.ties, I force myself out of the library. And 1know I have to shop, to eat, to clean theapartment. These are buffers.”Leah Mason, a fourth-year student in An¬cient Near Eastern Civilization, is setting upthe two-week training period for Hotline vol¬unteers. The training session will be con¬ducted by members of the Advisory Boardand outside consultants, and will emphasize“listening skills.” More specialized sessionsabout drugs, sex, alcohol abuse, suicide, andwomen’s issues are also planned. Masonsaid that listening skills are difficult to mas¬ter: “You have to hear verbal cues, and youhave to hear what is not being said. The phi¬losophy of a hotline is not to present a patjudgement or solution, rather you try to helpthe caller focus on the real anxiety — thecaller does it all himself, the listener is a ca¬talyst of sorts.”Mason also anticipates a large percentageof ‘loneliness’ calls. “But the loneliness stems from that silly pressure to be the bestscholar, it comes from procrastination,grand delusions, big disappointments.”Having grown up in Seattle, Mason saidshe first encountered “certain socio-eco¬nomic realities” at the College. “There’s somuch surplus wealth here. . . there are realclass problems at the University. It’s a verydifferent society from what I knew in Seat¬tle. .. I didn’t flip out over it, but I was. well,surprised. It troubled me, and it bothers many students.”Asked what she thought about studentswho say they would sooner talk to a closefriend about a problem than call a hotline.Mason said. “How many times a day canyou talk to a friend about the same prob¬lem? Friends are not always 100 percentsensitive. . . if you’re approaching someonewith the same problem for the fiftieth time,what can he say? — T know you, you’vedone this before, you're doing it again,’ and you say, ‘Yes, but I feel bad now...’ That’swhere the Hotline comes in.”, BeginningsAlthough Golberg and Carpati conceivedthe idea of a campus hotline in 1976. it wasnot until almost a year later that they ap¬proached University administrators. “Wetalked first to Paul Ausick (assistant dean ofstudents) and the late Anita Sandke (formerhead of Career Counseling). They were verycritical, administratively and bureaucrati¬cally skeptical.” By this time, Golberg andCarpati had visited Room 13. Harvard'stelephone and drop-in clinic. The UniversityHotline is primarily modeled after Room 13and the M.I.T. Hotline, which was estab¬lished earlier this year.After more conversations, conferences,and negotiations with administrators, it be¬came clear to Golberg and Carpati that theUniversity was worried about its legal re¬sponsibilities to a campus hotline. “Therewere certain issues. . . privacy, accountabil¬ity for a person’s actions after he calls, howwe would present ourselves: professional ornon-professional.” A legal report was pre¬pared by Raymond Kuby of the University’sOffice of Legal Counsel, and delivered toDean of Students Charles O'Connell.“I suspect it was more than pure legali¬ties.” said Golberg. “There was. too, the un¬derlying political issue: that the Universityshould have set up this sort of thing a longtime ago." Carpati added, however, that thered tape and administrative skepticismforced himself and Goldberg to put togetheran airtight Hotline proposal. “We weren'tsure of what we wanted exactly, and now weare sure,” he said. “We also were forced toexamine the good and bad parts of other, es¬tablished hotlines. That was very helpful.”Golberg and Carpati visited hotlines atMIT.. Princeton, University of Michigan.Northwestern. University of Wisconsin. Uni¬versity of Illinois (Circle), Brown, Cornelland University of Pennsylvania. Some ofthese hotlines, like Michigan's, are staffedby salaried professionals: others, likeNorthwestern's, are “piecemeal. " The Uni¬versity's Hotline will be unusual in its inten¬sive. ongoing training sessions, and itshierarchy of policy coordinators.Armed again with Kuby's legal report, andnew statements of commitment to the Hot¬line from several faculty members (whonow sit on the Advisory Board;. Carpati andGolberg once more approached the adminis¬tration. But now they asked us. "Do you re¬ally think there’s a need for a hotline*”,Don't you think the hotline would dupliatethe serv ices of Student Mental Health*” ”So Golberg and Carpati conducted an ex¬tensive written survey of undergraduateand graduate students to determine whetherthere is a need for a University hotline. Theanswer was overwhelmingly yes And final¬ly, last January , O’Connell said yes, too.Standing outside Harper Library on Sun¬day. a second-year student articulated aloneliness he has long intimated. “I feelvery isolated.” he said. “Sometimes I go anentire day without talking to anyone.”STUDENTS FOR ISRAELWEDNESDAY, MAY 9th, 12:30 P.M.SPEAKER: MR. EVAN BRANDSTADTER,Community Consultant for theAnti-Defamation League < Midwest)SUBJECT: PETRO DOLLARS FORSCHOLARS: THE INFLUENCE OF ARABOIL MONEY ON AMERICAN CAMPUSESHillel Foundation, 5715 Woodlawn STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORKin cooperation withTHE DEPARTMENT OFEDUCATION AND CULTURE, W.Z.O.announces its 1979THIRTEENTH SUMMERACADEMIC PROGR AM inISRAELEarn up to 9 Undergraduate or Graduate CreditsFor information write or rail:Office of lnternation.il EducationStale I niversitx f'nlleueOiieonta. NY CVCM Hi#Tt UI-XHW The University of ChicagoDIVINITY SCHOOL ASSOCIATIONBOOK SALENew Books *2 - 2n off list.Also used books.MAY 10-11 9-3:30SWIFT COMMONS 1025 E. 58th St.Theology • History • Church History • EthicsMinistry • English Literature • SociologyBiblical Literature • Anthropology • PhilosophyNear Eastern StudiesThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 8, 1979 — 7ZT5Giff STUDENT HEALTHINSURANCE 1979-80Important NoticeSTUDENTS IN THE COLLEGE - You wifi be required to make adecision about health insurance for 1979-80 when you pre¬register THIS MONTH.GRADUATE STUDENTS — You will be required to make a de¬cision about health insurance for 1979-80 at AUTUMN REGIS¬TRATION.PICK UP A BROCHURE NO W.Student Blue Cross/Blue Shield Plan BrochuresAvailable at:• Registrar’s Office• Student Health Service• Deans of Students OfficesIf you have any questions about insurance coverage, contact the StudentInsurance Officer at 947-5966. from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday throughFriday.r SALE DATE - May 10,1979Grade A Center Cut ~ .Pork Chops *g£*BonelessPork RoastTennesse PridePork SausageArmour Star SlicedBaconKraft Sharp Cracker BarrelCheeseRoyal CrownColaSwiftningShorteningFresh CaliforniaStrawberries 10 oz.12 oz. can-6 pack42 oz. - canIceberg4JJead Lettuce^ H-fye reserve the right to limit quantities and correct printers errors.$1.89$1.89$1.59$1.49$1.49$1.39$1.5939<L39tf lb. M/lb.ih.£-—ea. A • lye Examinations• Contact Lenses(mi• Prescriotions FilledDR. MORTON R.MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSContact lensesand SuppliesHyde ParkShopping Center15101.55th363-6363 & COURT TbCATKe?>■ 5/06 5 UniverMtv Avenue Chicago, Mhnots 606J7 ( 753- 3581Open discussions ofMEASURE FOR MEASUREAfter the performances on April 26and May 10In Reynolds Club LoungeDiscussions will begin about 10:50P.M.David Bevington and Mark Ashin,discussion leadersPerformances are through May 138 - The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, May 8, 1979 For Goodness Snacks...8:30 am - 4:30 pmMonday - FridayWeiSS - Mezzanine of Harper Library(both Weiss & Cobb now offer soft drinks!)Cobb - The Basement of Cobb HallNonesuch - 3rd floor of Wiebolt HallCoffee, Variety of Teas.Sandwiches from the B School LoungeYogurt, Milk, Soft Drinksall at reasonable pricesTuesdayThe Importance of BeingEagerBy Suzy SuccessBusiness school students. The University’s intellectualstepchildren. Wearers of three piece suits. Drinkers ofunblended scotch. Collectors of lucrative job offers. Butthese future captains of industry are spurned, dismissedas dull, boring and unimaginative. They bear the slingsand arrows of the Hyde Park literati, but still are milkedas the University’s cash cow.Is it money alone that drives the B-School student? Can$25,000 possibly be compensation for two years of suffer¬ing the contempt of those living the life of the mind? It isneither love nor money that keeps their calculatorscharged. Rather, it is eagerness. “Reducing to figureswhat is the matter, what is to be done.. . taking necessaryrisks,” the business school student understands the im¬portance of being eager. Some are born to eagerness,some achieve eagerness, others have eagerness thrustupon them.Look hard at a B -School student. Beneath his BrooksBrothers suit beats the heart of Joe Eager, incompetentpar excellence. Joe Eager, the man in the chartreuse lei¬sure suit, worries about failing accounting and about com¬promises made for business success. He decorates hisapartment (albeit in Regent’s Park) with flush letters,and wonders if the fast track is really what he wants. Busi¬ness will test his skills, asking questions that require an¬swers, not contemplation. He’s scared. Two years of fi¬nance and economics have not prepared him for the realworld. He enters each interview, hoping to hide his naive¬te behind his Wall Street Journal. But the worst happens.He becomes an embarrassment to the business school: anMBA without a job. Fortunately, Joe understands the im¬portance of being eager. Ever resourceful, rationallymaximizing his self-interest, he is able to turn the freemarket to his own advantage.A mythical figure? No. JOE EAGER LIVES. And he isthe star of an original musical. The Importance of BeingEager. How could dull, boring and unimaginative busi¬ness school students conceive of such a venture? Two ob¬vious motivating facgtors: eagerness and money.One morning last summer, commuting to their lucra¬tive summer jobs in the Loop, two second year businessstudents considered with despair another year of financeand accounting. Surely they could come up with some di¬versions from the capital asset pricing model. There hadto be something to dispel the greyness of A-level and theboredom of financial analysis. Thoughts of fame and for¬tune began to dance in their heads. Plans for a big budgetmusical, complete with original cast album and East«The University of ChicagoDepartment of MusicVISITING COMMITTEEXXXXXXXX>/X(XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXX)XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX>xxxxxxxxxxxxxxra xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxjooooocmXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX present* * SYMPOSIUMxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxXXXJKXXXXXXXXXxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx JUDGING MUSICxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx XXX xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx X xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx• xxxxxxxxxxx X xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxXXXXXXXXXX XXX xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx XXXXXXXX XX xxxxxxxaxx XXXXXXXXX XXX XXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXxxx xxrrrx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxax xxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxax xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxax xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxaxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxaxxxxxx xxx xxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx/xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx^xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx* xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxx•xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxx•JCX xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxOCX xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxax xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxaxxx xxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx•CXXXX xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx:> XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX XX XXXXXXXXX AIM XSSI QB IS WITMCXT TICKET AML WITHOUT CHAM IE00NAL HENAHAN(New York Tiaes)PAUL HUME(Washington Post)NANCY MALITZ(Cincinnati Bujuirrr)ANDREW PORTER(The Yorker)WEWffiSMY, MAY 9, 1979 . 9:00 F.*.MU5ASTK0 HALL . 1199 E. 98tt St. Joe Eager, first gear student, adjusting to G- B S- life.Coast tour were laid. Their entrepreneurial appetiteswere whetted; they had a hit on their hands. Only a fewobstacles lay in their paths: they had no show, no actors,no musicians and no money. Was there enough creativityin the Business School to write and produce anything thatcould not be reduced to a linear programming problem0The talent search was on. Flipping through the resumeFLAMINGO APTS. VERSAILLES5500 S. Shore Dr. 5254 S. DorchesterStudio & One Bedrm WELL M AINTAINEDKurn. I nfum. BUILDINGShort & Term ReniaU$200 - $ 100 Attractive 1V2 and2 Vi Room StudiosParkin". |M*ol. re»ianranl. Furnished or l nfurnished\alel. deli and iran*|ior- $189 - $287lation. ( ar|riin». dra|M>. Based on Availabilityinrl. All Utilities includedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. Groak752-3800SNOWED UNDERDuo to Tvping Delays9RELAX!\void the Rush and Leave the Typing to Us.We Do :Manuscripts / Theses / DissertationsResumes / Reports Transcriptions24 Hour Telephone Dictation ServiceEM A KWIK SECRETARIAL SERVICE1 ho West Washington 236-0110Weekends & Evenings 726-3572 book was the first strategy, but it led nowhere. A futureaccountant doesn’t want a corporate recruiter to knowthat he does a great soft shoe — evidence of instability.World of mouth collected enthusiasm and a few writersLong winter evenings, lots of beer, selective plagiarism,and The Importance of Being Eager was born A vaguescript, clever music. Visions of The Producers, wherewere we going to get the money to finance the world pre¬mier of a new work by a hitherto undiscovered talent? Wewere business school sutdents. We prepared our prospec¬tus and went to the market.Investors flocked to Eager, proving that the efficientmarket hypothesis was false. Here was a stock that pro¬vided the rarest of investment opportunities: low riskand high return. News of this sure thing reached beyondHyde Park: calls from the investment banks featured inthe play poured in. August faculty members wanted apiece of the action. Our success at raising money came asno surprise; after all. that was what we were supposed tobe learning how to do in B-School. Securing equity capitalis an easy problem. Finding business school students whocould sing and dance was not going to be easy. Or so theproducers thought.A casting call at the beginning of spring quarter attract¬ed an army of eager students. Any one who had been somuch as a Christmas tree ornament in their second gradeplay w as anxious to appear in this theatrical extravagan¬za This may be their last chance to shine before disap¬pearing into the corporate jungle. Tap dancing invest¬ment bankers. Singing economists. Yet the most eagerthespians are drawn from the ranks of those consummateactors, the faculty. Eminent economists, w'ell-respectedstatisticians, distinguished marketers are moving theiracts from the classroom to the stage.Why are they doing this? Fortune isn’t enough for allB-School students Some want fame. too. however fleetingJoe Eager may become a capitalist tool, but the smell ofthe greasepaint and the roar of the crowd is irresistable.Show business. Money talks, and sings and plays anddances.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 8, 1979 — 9CalendarTUESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Environmental Problems Relat¬ed to Mining” guests Ray Hinchman, Donald Johnson,and Stanley Zellmer, 6:30 am, channel 7.WHPK: Wake up and Stay awake with WHPK Rock,6:30am — 4:00 pm.Comm, on Developmental Biology: “The Distributionof Mysoin in Cultured Myocytes” speaker Dr. RobertKulikowski, 12:00 — 1:00 pm, Abbott 133.Rockefeller Chapel: University organist Edward Mon-dello will give a lecture-demonstration and recital,12:15 pm.Hillel: Students for Israel meet to hear: Mr. EvanBrandstadter speak on “Petro Dollars for Scholars: TheInfluence of Arab Oil Money on American Campuses,12:30 pm, Hillel.Resource Analysis Seminar: “Can ThermodynamicsSay Anything Useful About the Economics of Producti¬on?” speaker Natashz Meshkov and Bert deVeries, 1:30,Wieboldt 301.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Film —"The Negevand Sinai Deserts”, 4:00 pm, Breasted Hall, Oriental In¬stitute.WHPK: Folk Music, 4:30-6:00 pm. Classical Music, 6:00 -9:30 pm. Jazz, 9:30 pm -3:00 am.Hellenic Civilization: "On the Indo-European Parlia¬ment in Greece”, speaker Eric Hamp, 4:30 pm. Classics10.Social Service Administration: “Social Justice: Ideasand Action" 4:30 pm, School of Social Service, speaker J.David Greenstone.Urban Studies Faculty Seminar: “Cultured and SocialPerspectives on Municipal Animal Control Issues”,speaker Constance Perin, visiting urban anthropolo¬gist, 4:30 - 6:00 pm. Pick ground floor lounge.Ki-Aikido: Practices 4:30 - 6:00 pm, Bartlett, next tosquash courts.Christian Science Organization: Inspirational meet¬ing. 5:00 pm, Ida Noyes second floor, East Lounge.Kundalini Yoga Society: Meets5:00 pm, Ida Noyes EastLounge.Archery Club: Practices 5:30- 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes Gym.New members welcome.Hillel: Lecture by Prof. Robert Hess “New Focus on theFalasha: The Plight of Ethopian Jewry”, 7:30 pm, Hil¬lel.Sexuality Rap Group: Sponsored by the UC Gay andLesbian Alliance, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes 3rd floor. Info call753-3274 Sun - Thurs 8 - 10 pm.Hillel: Israeli Folkdancing, 8:00 pm, Ida NoyesTheatre, 8:00 pm.Woodward Court Lecture: “Some Aphorisms aboutGovernment” Edward H. Levi speaker, 8:30 pm, Wood¬ward Court Resident Masters apt. WEDNESDAYStudents for a Libertarian Society: “RevolutionaryRun-Eight Miles, the distance to the Federal Building.”6:15 am, 59th and University.Perspectives: Topic: “Land Reclamation Around Min¬ing Sites”, guests Ray Hinchman, Donald Johnson, andStanley Zellmer, 6:30 am, channel 7.WHPK: Wake up and stay awake with WHPK Rock, 6:30am - 4:00 pm.Commuter Co-op: Get-together in Commuter Loungein basement of Gates-Blake, 12:00 pm.Rockefeller Chapel: University Carillonneur RobertLodine will give a recital at 12:15 pm. Persons wishing atour should be in the Chapel Office by 12:10 pm.Crossroads: Free English classes for foreign women,2:00 pm.Comm, on Social Sciences: “Traditional Apprentice¬ship and western-Style Schooling: Some Cognitive Con¬sequences of Two Forms of Education and Their Interac¬tion" 4:00 pm, Beecher Hall 102.WHPK: Folk Music, 4:30 - 6:00 pm. Classical Music,6:00 - 9:30 pm. Jazz, 9:30 pm - 3:00 am.Dept of Biochemistry: “Maximizing the expression ofCloned Genes”, speaker Thomas M. Roberts, 4:00 pm,Cummings room 101.Chicago City Colleges: English as a Second Language-classes, 4:30 - 6:30, Ricketts Lab.University Duplicate Bridge: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida NoyesHall. New players welcome.Badminton Club: Practices 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes gymna¬sium.Country Dancers: British folkdancing. All dancetaught. Morris, 7:30 pm. Dancing, 8:00 pm. Refresh¬ments, 10:00 pm. Ida Noyes Cloister Club.Tai Chi Club: Meets 7:30 pm at the Blue Gargoyle.Panel Discussion on the Illinois Prison System: WithNorval Morris, Jeanette Musengo, 7:30 pm, Law SchoolCourtroom, 1111 E. 60th St. Sponsored by the U of CChapter of the National Lawyers Guild.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.Everyone Welcome.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic: “The Effects of Petroleum on Mex¬ican Society”, guests John Coatsworth, Lorenzo Meyer,and Angel de la Vega, 6:30 am, Channel 7.WHPK: Wake up and stay awake with WHPK Rock, 6:30am, Channel 7.Noontime Concert Series: Mozart: Quintet for Pianoand Winds, 12:15 pm, Reynolds Club.Advanced Genetics: “Molecular Genetics of NitrogenFixation” speaker Fred Ausubel, 2:30 pm, Cummings101. Nuclear Overkill Moratorium: Meeting at 3:00 pm, IdaNoyes 2nd floor East Lounge.WHPK: News and sports 4:00 pm. Local Beat, 4:15 pmwith Charles Seigel, Guest, 7th Ward Alderman JosephBertrand. 4:50 pm, Young People’s Calendar.Ki-Aikido: Practices 6:00 - 7:30 pm. Field House bal¬cony.Table Tennis Club: Practices 6:30 -11:00 pm, Ida Noyes3rd floor.Students for a Libertarian Society: Illinois LibertairanParty chairwoman Anne McKraken speaks against thedraft, 7:00 pm, IdaNoyes Hall.Debate Society: Meets to practice 7:00 pm, debate at8:00 pm, Ida Noyes East Lounge.Festival of Iranian Films: “The Mongols", 7:30 pm,“Stone Garden,” 9:30 pm, International House Audito-rinmCampus filmBy Ethan EdwardsThe Lawless (Doc) Directed by JosephLosev. In his second film Losey tacklesracial discrimination and mob violence in asmall town called Sleepy Hollow. The plotinvolves the hostility of local SouthernCalifornians to Mexican-American fruit-pickers, but it is Losey’s stylish approach tothe preachy script that is most interesting.With Gail Russell, MacDonald Carey, LaloRios, Lee Patrick and Martha Hyer.Tuesday at 7:30 pm in Cobb Hall.The Boy With Green Hair (Doc > Directedby Joseph Losey. Losey’s first film is a ge¬nuine Hollywood oddity. The ridiculousparable of a boy with green hair who suffersthe humiliation of orphans of World W'ar IIis played with such seriousness of tone thatit almost works. Still, every time Loseydraws you in. you step back to marvel at thesheer lunacy of the goings-on. I am ashamedto say that I so love sentimental 1940’smovies that I actually enjoyed and wasmoved by this film, but I honestly doubt thatyou will like it. With Dean Stockwell, PatO’Brien and Robert Ryan Tuesday at 9:00in Cobb Hall.Reign of Terror or The Black Book < Doc)Directed by Anthony Mann. A va’uablediary that eludes the grasp of both sides in the French Revolution provides the focalpoint for this costume drama starringRobert Cummings, Arlene Dahl, RichardHart. Richard Basehart and Beulah Bondi.Unseen by this reviewer. Wednesday at 7:15pm in Cobb Hall.The Glory Alley (Doc) Directed by RaoulWalsh. The master director of action films,Raoul Walsh, here applies his straightfor¬ward style to circuitous Freudianflashbacks. The multiple influences of styleand subject matter don’t quite cometogether in this film that is derivative ofpsychological westerns of the early 1950’sand based a standard Hollywood plot, yetset in the unconventional (for a film noir)world of New Orleans. When Ralph Mekkerquits the fight game just before a champion¬ship bout, the film flashes back to his earlydays as a fighter and the price he has paid tothe mob to get to the top. Wednesday at 9 pmin Cobb Hall.Captain Blood (LSF) Directed by MichaelCurtiz. Curtiz has defied categorization foryears. A few critics consider him thegreatest director of the 1930’s, but most feelhe is a competent technician lacking thesoul of an artist. Probably the reason Curtizis so little appreciated is that he does notpossess a recognizable visual style; thus,the auteurists fined it difficult to identify hissignature. If Doc goes through with its plansfor a Curtiz festival next year, perhapscampus audiences can achieve a bet¬ter understanding of the body of hiswork. Captain Blood is the mid-1930’s swashbuckler that introduced Errol Flynnto the genre. Flynn plays a mild-mannereddoctor who is driven to piracy by the world’sinjustices and his love for OliviaDeHavilland. Some of the best scenes in¬volve Flynn’s temporary partnership withthe evil Basil Rathbone. Light, but fun.Thursday at 8:30 pm in the Law SchoolAuditorium. La Collectioneuse (Doc) Directed by EricRohmer. This film is the fourth of Rohmer’sSix Moral Tales, though it was made beforeboth My Night at Maud’s (the third) andClaire’s Knee (the fifth). Haydee. a youngeollector of men. sleeps with many, but nother roommates, Daniel (a painter) andAdrien (an antique dealer). Unseen by thisreviewer.10 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 8, 1979CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEFour bedroom, partially furnishedapartment to sublet, July throughSeptember, near 1C and shopping,S375°month. Call: 753 2240. Ask forCarol (#1001) or Leora (#1913), orleave message.3 bedrm apt available June 1Everything new, 238-7941,924-4287.Park Forest House for Rent. Prof orstudent with family. 1C station near. 4Bdrms. Fm-Rm Garage Cent. air.Range. Carpet. Drapes. No Pets.Avail. June 1. Lease. Deposit $495.747 3851.Huge, sunny 1 BR apt. by the Lakeavailable for summer sublet. $250+Util. 643-9059.Deluxe 1 bdrm. turn. apt. with indoorparking included avail. July 1 at 1400E. 55th. Call 657 1191 $400/mo.2 bedrms. avail, in modern 3 bedrmapt. starting end of quarter, overlook¬ing lake and city from 34th flo ofRegents Park $162 mo. each Beth288-0189.CONDO-2 BR 2 bath, Univ. Pk on 55;within block of Bank, Co-op, 1C, bus;modern bldg, garage sp, 24 hr. sec.garden sundeck, etc, low as smt in¬cluding heat, elec; carpet, 3 AC;panoramic 9 fl. North view, Sept, oc¬cupancy, call 753-1811. PEOPLE WANTEDSUMMER JOBS NOW! WorldCruises! Pleasure Yachts! No ex¬perience! Good pay! Carribean,Hawaii. World! Send $3.95 for AP¬PLICATION and direct referrals toOCEANWORLD, Box 60 1 29,Sacramento, CA 95860.EASY EXTRA INCOME $500/1000Stuffing Envelopes-Guaranteed. SendSelf-addressed, stamped envelope toDexter Enterprises, 3039 Shrine PI.LA, CA 90007.JOBS! LAKE TAHOE, CALIF! Fantastic tips! $1,700-$4,000 summer!Thousands still needed. Casinos,Restaurants, Ranches, Cruises. Send$3.95 for APPLICATION/INFO toLAKEWORLD, Box 60129, Sacramento, CA 95860Part time interviewer work. Mainlyweekends on call basis. Must enjoypublic contact. Home economicsbackground helpful. Hyde Park area.Call 752-7111.8:30-10:30 or 3-4,Mothers and their infants (age 9 mos.)are needed for an observational studyto be conducted at home. Please call753-4718. Track. Many extras $7900, 747-3851.Furniture sale call 881-8278. Otherhouse items for sale also.For sale: Mahogany dining table, 6chairs, sideboard, side table, $250 Airconditioner, iike new, $250. CallMarilyn 753 3486 (day); 752 8019(evening).PEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK of all kinds-drawingcalligraphy, illustration, hand addressing of invitations etc. NoelYovovich. 493 2399.Experienced painters, interiorspecialists, neat, high quality work.Spackling and wall repair atreasonable rates. Free estimate Call753-8342. Leave message with operatorfor D. Dorfman.Astrology: Explore a new symbolsystem. Charts and classes. Ann Ar-duavid. 752-2551.Excellent, accurate typist with collegedegree will type themes, term papers,and theses as well as letters, resumesor whatever your typing needs. Workdone quickly and neatly at veryreasonable rates. Call Wanda at684-7414 evenings. Free pick-up anddelivery.Cartography and graphs professional¬ly drafted. Best possible rates. CallJoe 288-1831 eves or leave message inWalker 100A.8085 Programmer needed for bio ex-per. Student preferred call Brian CpCMCC261-4075 after 8.5405 S. Woodlawn 2 1/2 rms turn. Occ.June 1 person 643-2760 Ms. Green.LONDON 2 bedroom furnished flatavailable September for academicyear. $325 Royston 4074 Grove,Western Springs, II. 60558.246-1762.AVAILABLE to grad student/teacher(male only), 1 1/2 rooms, telephone,private bath, kitchen, desirable loca-tion, $140 (Plaza 2-8377).2 bdrm apt. on lake nice view availmid/late June 390 mo. 363-0579 after 4 Hindi teacher needed for adult stu¬dent. Would like to learn written andconversation. Only qualificationsneeded is ability to teach the languageand speak English. Hours and salaryflexible. Will pay well. Call: 565-0109.ALTERNATIVE JOBS! Nationalwidelistings of Jobs is non-profit, socialchange community groups. Take on achallenge. For free sample listing,write: Community Jobs, Box P, 1766 CUnion St., San Francisco, CA 94123. POTTERY CLASSES small groupslots of attention new daytime groupsforming 624-7568.INDIA AND AMERICA An intercultural workshop. Clinton Seely on In¬dian epics; speakers and slides on theIndian immigrant experience; audio¬visual curriculum kits. Saturday May12 from 10 am to 12:30 pm, 1-House,1414 E. 59th.Info: 753-4132/4342.TAMIL FILM Sat May 12, 4:30 pm $2Ida Noyes Library Info: 684 5103.pm.One to three temale roomates to sharean apartment at 55th and Everett.Kosher kitchen-vegetarians welcomecall Miriam at 752-2159 or 752-2467. FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS While-U-Wait.MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 55th St.493 6700. LOSTAND FOUNDLost: Black cat Vic. 54th and Everettsilver tag #83250 white patches neck,stomach. Reward. 493-3647. YEARBOOKAfter a long absence the Cap andGown is back....but only 500 copies willbe printed. Don't be caught without acopy, order your copy now. Call753 2249 ext. 3428 or 1414 or 955 4437.MARK TWAIN"Mark Twain in person" a one manshow featuring Richard Henzel."Highly Recommended!" says IrvKupcinet of the Sun-Times. 8 p.m..May 12, Cloister Club, $2 UC Students$3 others. Tickets available in theReynolds Club box office. Festival OfThe Arts.MINOLTA DEMOSat. May 12,10:00 a m. - 4 p.m. Stop inand see the new Minolta XG-1 andXD 5 cameras Special prices for thisDemonstration Day. MODELCAM E R A, 1344 E. 55th St. 493-6700DANIEL HEIFETZClassical violinist Daniel Heifetz. May14, 8:30 p.m. Mandel Hall. $3.50/84.50students, $5/$6 others. Ticketsavailable in the Reynolds Club Box Of¬fice Festival Of The Arts.DANCEA Dance Concert featuring the UCModern Dance Group directed by ElviMoore, May 15, Mandel Hall, 8 p.m Noadmission charge. Festival Of TheArts.WOMENThe Ladies Literary Circle meetsWeds, at 7:30 Sharing of feministreadings and books. Sponsored byUFO. Woman's Center. 3rd floor. BlueGargoyle.CLASSICALLYYOURSSPACE WANTED, U of C student will babysit in return forroom/board in Hyde Park this sum¬mer Ref. available. Clarice. 753-2233rm. 425.’ PhD student and editor wife want to, house sit for summer. We will takegood care of your home. During work¬ing hours. Call Roberta at 236-2615.After 6:00, call 271-0296.Apartment or house to sublet wanted,June to December or Shorter, walkingdistance to University. Professor andwife, no children or pets. Prefer twobedrooms. Call 753 2969 days or241-5839 evenings.WARM AND CALCULATING Mathstudent (female) seeks quiet residence,for summer and/or 79 80. Broad in¬terests, easygoing, prefer same.Reliable. Room with a family an ex¬cellent possibility. 753-2240 ext. 14091 message. NEW Komura 7-element Tele¬extenders in stock. Absolutely betterthan any other tele-extenders in theworld! Stop in and try them. MODELCAMERA 1342 E. 55th Si, 493-6700.NEW Olympus OM-10 in Stock! ModelCamera, 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.New Canon AV-1 in stock! ModelCamera. 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.Full Size Violin, newly refurbished,good tone $200. Newly rehaired bow$30. Call 753-3751 rm. 318. Leavemessage.Deluxe 1976 Ford Camper conver. Likenew. Used only for Rec-V. Garaged allWinter. 351 V-8 Eng. Sleeps 4. Com¬pletely Equipped Cruise contr. FM Lost-Hudson bay jacket (white withmulti-colored stripes) on st between55th-Law School call Mike Bailey:684-1797.Lost in vie. of Hutch, Tyrolean hat. $20reward to finder, call 751-3709. LostMay 2.BLACKFRIARSFor fun, laughs, good times, see NeilSimon's SWEET CHARITY, the storyof a girl who wants to be loved, MandelHall, May 11,12, and 13, 8:30 pm, $2.00student, $3.00 general. Tickets go onsale at Reynolds Club and Cobb HallMay 7.DONATIONSDonate rummage for parent co-opFund Raising sale. Call for Pick-up684-6363. Tax deductable. Noontime chamber music concert,Reynolds Club Lounge. This Thurs¬day, May 10. Mozart-Quintet for pianoand winds.BOOKSALEDSA BOOKSALE in Swift CommonsRoom, Thurs. Fri. May 10-11. See ad inthis issue of Maroon.GO FLY A KITE!So there's no spring in Hyde Park? Atleast there's wind. Kite flying FOTABeside/Bartlett Gym Fri. May 11.Noon. Free.NEWYORKERCRITICMoody Lecture Committee and theSTANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 40 Years The Standard ofExcellence In Test PreparationPREPARE FORf MOAT* DAT* LSATlI fiRF • RRF PSYCH • KRF Rif) • RMAT ■SRI • GRE PSYCH • GRE BIO • GMATPCAT • 0CAT • VAT • MAT • SAT■ NATIONAL MEDtCAL BOARDS * VQE - ECFMC1 FLEX-IIAn DENTAL BOARDSPOOUTItr BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFlexible Program* and Hour*-H.NMKfdNil CMttrJ SKigjpij^j^| [tocttiMU Cm UrInLr IN MMwi AmN.V. 10023 (nr M (L) Visit Any Center And Set ForTiwsolf Wky Ni Mitt Tke DitterenceTEST PREPARATIONSPECIALISTS SINCE IDS*Crottri * «U|« US Ctlm E«*i« ticotoroolo C«u4t A L,|m SaitnrlwtI CHICAGO CENTER16216 N. CLARKCHICAGO, ILLINOIS60660| (332)764-5151IIS. W, SUBURBAN19 S. LAGRANGE HD.SUITE 201LAGRANGE, ILLINOIS60525(312)352-5640Fo# ^formation About Other Com#r» InOUTSIDE N.Y. STATE CALL MlMfi SUMMER•rninMj wV™MvfcnFAUINTfNSfVESCOURSES STARTINGTHIS MONTH:LSAT GMAT 4 4KLSATNEXT MONTH:SUMMER MCATSUMMER SATMors Than BO Mayor US CiHOO 4 AbroadTOLLI IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIOUTSIDE N.Y. STATE CALL TOLL FREE: DOO-223-1712 J ValuableCoupon!The 4th is free whenyou order 3When you order 4 same-size color reprints of yourfavorite KODACOLORNegatives, you'll pay toronly 3 This couponentitles you to 1 Free It'san offer you wan t want tomiss, but it expires May16, 1979 So you’ll haveto hurry Just stop in formore details, and be sureto bring this couponwith youASM POMCOLORPROCESSINGKodak Model Camera1342 E. 55th493-6700VALUABLE COUPON-CUT OUT Department of Music present a lectureby Andrew Porter: "The Composer asScenic Designer" Tonight 8 pm.Breasted Hall Oriental Inst. FREEGOT A BAND?The Student Activities Office is sponsoring a giant OUTDOOR CONCERTon May 27 If your group would like toplay, come to Ida Noyes 210 or callx3598 to sign up. No charge. We do allthe technical work, publicity, etc.PARDESPardes Institute of Jewish Studies,Jerusalem, a coeducational programfor serious study of Torah combiningtraditional atmosphere of a BeitMidrash and intellectural freedom andsecular disciplines of the University.INTERESTED? Meet the Director,Rabbi Levi Lauer, at Hillel, 5715 S.Woodlawn, WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, at12:30 pm. WANT AN APPOINT¬MENT? CALL 752 1127FOTAAll would-be Ben Franklin's andfrustrated meterotogists-The day ar¬rives to experience the atmosphericconditions. Kite Flying across fromJoe Reg Fri. May 11, noon.JUNIORPROGRAMMER/ANALYSTThe University of Chicago is seeking aJunior Programmer/Analyst to workfull time in the Applications Systemsgroup. The job will include programdevelopment and maintenance on theIBM 370/168 and DEC-20 computers,program advising, and teaching shortcourses and seminars. Applicantsshould have a good knowledge of FORTRAN and familiarity with either JCLor the TOPS-20 command language.Knowledge of research methods in asubstantive discipline is highlydesirable. If you are interested in thisposition, please contact Hal Bloom,Manager of Applications System, 5737S. University Ave. (753-8439). The Univeristy is an affirmative actionequal opportunity employer.REFORMSHABBATONMAY 11-13The Bayit and Hillel at UC invite all"Reform" "Liberal," "Progressive","Etc," students in the Chicago area toparticipate in a Shabbaton from May11-13, for a discussion and celebrationof ideas, issues and events that "Etc"Jews face today. Guest speaker on Fri¬day, May 11. 9:00 pm at Hillel will beRabbi David Saperstein, Co-DirectorReligious Action Center of ReformJudaism, Washington, D C. speakingon "A JEWISH SOCIAL ACTIONAGENDA FOR THE 1980s" Saturdayevents will include: workshops withRabbi Saperstein, Chicago RabbisDaniel I. Leifer and Andrew Baker.Saturday evening an Israeli-styie BeitCafe with live entertainment, dancing,singing at Hillel. Closing event withLox and Bagel Brunch on Sunday, atHillel. For information regardingregistration for the SHABBATON,please call The Bayit, 752-2159 or752 2467.DATAPREPARATIONCODERSResponsible persons for job demanding high accuracy, concentration andattention to complex details. Prior ex¬perience not required Some collegepreferred. Full time beginning im¬mediately through August. Hyde Parklocation, survey research organiza¬tion. 3.75/hr. Call for appointment.947 2558 An equal opportunity/affirmative action employer.IRVINGWHERE ARE YOU?LaVerne: You're just like heaven totouch. I want to hold you so much. Letme love you, baby. Let me love YOU.Contact: IrvingRuby's Merit ChevroletSPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago you areentitled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Chevrolet Parts,Accessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from Merit Chev¬rolet Inc. 2r/2sl GM QUALITYL>2/| SEflVCE BUTTS A(■<•/> / hut (jG W tertinnU 1 ik ,rruf -^T,<< TV*GENERAL MOTORS PARTS DIVISION Gfc W/UG W Mi/liI ttiiwmMER aCHEVROLI ET &72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9 Sot. 9-5 Port* open Sat. 'til Noonyfj) VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Doily 9-9, So+9-5 Port* open Sof 'til NoonThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, May 8, 1979 — 11DoraleeRemember all the specialmothers in your life -- Mom,Grandmother, Sis, Aunt,Daughter — with beautifulHallmark Mother's Day cards.Fannie May CandiesAlways the finest selection ofchocolates to please everyone.Fritz on 55thBlouses, skirts, T-tops —regularly $13 to $36 -- NOW$5 to $22. Thru May 12th only.Hyde Park CO-OPBlooming plants from $1.69 to$6.99. Cut flowers from $1.69to $3.99 per bunch.Parklane Hosieryhas body-hugging fashion thatfit you and your lifestyle.See us for the latest inswimwear. Shoe CorralPleasant ShopMother's Day at the PleasantShop -- lingerie, gowns, 14 Kt.jewelry, designer watches,blouses. Gift wrap free. Acrossfrom Co-op. A complete line of Daniel GreenComfy Slippers from $10.95.Also featuring new, beautifulHush Puppy Sandals at $24.95.Susan GaleSpecial for mother: handbagsand Tote bags $8.00 to $25.00.Also, tops, scarves, hats,gloves and flowers.Walgreen’s25% off on jewelry. Dr. SchollsExercise Sandals $10.99.F.W. WoolworthInstant dresses and skirts inknits, wovens, prints andsolids. Yours on sale at just$4.97 each.See hundreds of othergift selections. Andconsider the manysolid reasons to shophere — convenience,variety, everydayvalues, ample freeparking and services.COHN & STERN - DORALEEFANNIE MAY CANDIESFLAIR CLEANERS • FRITZ ON 55THHYDE PARK BANK AND TRUST COHYDE PARK CO OPLAKE PARK CURRENCY EXCHANGEDR MORTON R MASLOV, OPTOMETRISTPARKLANE HOSIERY • PLEASANT SHOPSHOE CORRAL • SUSAN GALEWALGREEN COMPANYF W WOOLWORTH CO HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER55th Street and Lake Park Avenue