ShorelandBy Jamie GraffThe College disciplinary com¬mittee last Monday suspended asecond-year College student forone year for the student’s part in abrawl at the Shoreland dormitoryon October 6. The student has leftthe housing system.Lorna P. Straus, dean ofstudents in the College and thenon-voting chairman of the com¬mittee, stressed the confidentialnature of the proceedings. Strauswould say only that, “the commit¬tee has been convened, has met,and has concluded its sessions.”However, the committee’s rulingwas confirmed by several unof- student isficial sources.The student came to a party onthe 10th floor of the Shoreland ear¬ly on Saturday morning, October 6,with two companions and a 26-inchbannister standard. The standardwas allegedly one of 14 kicked outof an apartment stairwell at 5426 S.University Ave. earlier that even¬ing. At the Shoreland, a fight brokeout, and two students received stit¬ches for head wounds inflicted bythe club.The disciplinary committee wasfirst convened on October 16,heard testimony on October 19 andreached its decision last Monday,October 22. In response tocriticism that the committee didnot act soon enough after the inci- suspendeddent, Straus said, “I can justifyevery increment of time betweenthe incident and the decision.”The committee has seven votingmembers: one faculty memberfrom each of the five Collegiatedivisions, and two studentsselected from a pool of fivenominees from the divisional stu¬dent advisory committees. A stu¬dent may appeal the committee’sruling within 15 days to an appealscommittee consisting of one facul¬ty member, the University dean ofstudents, and a College student ap¬pointed by the dean of the College.The suspended student would notcomment on the committee’s ac¬tion or on the possibility of an ap¬peal.The Chicago Maroon“Solitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a new world.” —Walt WhitmanVol. 89, No. 17 The University of Chicago s 'Copyright 1979 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, October 30, 1979assasaSi WSSmBmSm. ■' ■ j*'II i" ■SB*——.£1Boycott viewed Tim BakerCesar Chavez to speak Argonne may take A-wastesBy Phoebe ZerwickCesar Chavez, farm labor lead¬er, will speak at the LutheranSchool of Theology, 1100 E. 55th st.,at 4:30 pm, this Thursday, No¬vember 1, to raise support for thecurrent lettuce boycott of theUnied Farm Workers (UFW).In conjunction with Chavez’svisit, University activists spoke toRichard Hennessy, director of theUniversity food service, about thepossibility of the food service par¬ticipating in the UFW boycott.The food service is responsible tothe students who eat in the cafete¬rias, Hennessy said. It buys foodfirst for quality, then for price. Ac¬cording to Hennessy, whether ornot a person eats lettuce is up tothe individual; if students stop eat¬ing lettuce, then he will stop buyingit.Presently, the food service doesnot buy brands of lettuce that aresubject to boycott. Most of the caf¬eterias serve Rich and Bud, whichis teamster lettuce. HutchinsonCommons serves Cocky and OchinBucket. But Alice Thomson, of theUFW, said that although these arenot union lettuces, they are not tar-getted by the UFW boycott. Hen¬ nessy said that he would be willingto let customers know what kind oflettuce they were buying if theywanted to participate in the boy¬cott.No policyThe University does not have aset policy concerning boycottedfoods. In order to have a policy es¬tablished, the Progressive Unionwill be bringing the issue tovarious house councils for action.The ten month long boycott istargetted against “Red Coach”label iceberg lettuce, produced byBruce Church, Inc., of California,the nation’s third largest lettucegrower. The boycott was organizedin support of striking farm workerswho walked off their jobs whengrowers refused to negotiate withthem about improved wages,health and safety.Chavez, says that lettuce grow¬ers have broken the strike with ille¬gal and undocumented alien strike¬breakers. Furthermore, pickettingworkers have been brutalized byheavily armed foremen and pri¬vate guards, and on February 10,Turn to Page 3 By Jaan EliasArgonne National Laboratoriesare being mnsidered as a storagesite for low-level radioactivewastes, according to Gary Pit-chford, director of public informa¬tion for the Department of Energy(DOE).Pitchford said that the NuclearRegulatory Commission has open¬ed discussions with DOE over thepossible use of all nationallaboratories as temporary storagefacilities for radioactive wastescreated from medical uses.Argonne has not received any of¬ficial notification that it will be us¬ed for this prupose.Argonne is operated by theUniversity under a contract fromDOE and is located near Lemont,Illinois, 20 miles west of campus.The move to use nationallaboratory facilities as storagesites for radioactive wastes was in¬itiated following the closing ofcommercial dumping sites inCalifornia and Nevada.Local State RepresentativeCarol Moseley Brown (D-24) saidshe will reintroduce legislationtomorrow' w'hich would necessitateIllinois General Assembly ap¬proval for any out of statetransfers of nuclear wastes into Il¬linois for storage.Temporary sitePitchford emphasized thatArgonne would be used only as atemporary disposal site fornuclear wastes since no facilitiesexist for permanent dumping atArgonne. It is common practice,however, to store wastes forperiods up to several years beforemoving them to a permanent site,he said.Before a final decision concern¬ing using Argonne is reached, areview of all facilities will bemade, Pitchford said. In the past,Argonne has had a good record ofhandling nuclear wastes, ac¬cording to Pitchford.Low radiationThe medical isotope waste has avery low-level of radiation, ac¬cording to Alexander Devolpe,chairman of the Concerned Scien¬tists at Argonne. Argonne pro¬duces and stores waste materialswith much greater levels ofradioactivity from their own fuels research program.Devolpe said that while Argonneis not qualified for permanentstorage, short-term storage ofmedical isotopes could be handledwithout danger.Dr. Malcolm Cooper, director ofnuclear medicine at BillingsHospital, said that if no nuclearstorage facilities are found therecould be a cutback in the use ofradioactive materials in medicine.However, no problem has yet oc¬curred in the availability ofisotopes. Cooper said.Radioactive isotopes are used asa diagnostic tool primarily in pa¬tients with cancer and car¬diovascular diseases. The isotopeshave a short half-life (they decayand lose their radioactivity) andare injected into patients to allowdoctors to investigate the extent ofillnesses.“The problem is that we wouldbe depriving patients of essentialcare,” Cooper said.The waste materials created bynuclear medicine are primarilyfrom the support materials for theisotopes. Syringes and the mediain which the radioactive materials are contained must be disposed ofat nuclear dumping grounds.“There is a great different be¬tween industrial nuclear wastesand medical wastes,” Cooper said.Industrial wastes often have longhalf-lives and greater levels of ra¬dioactivity.LegislationBraun said that she will rein¬troduce legislation which would re¬quire the General Assembly to ap¬prove of all transfers of radioac¬tive wastes from out of state.Previous attempts to pass suchlegislation failed earlier this year.Braun said that because ofpowerful nuclear interests in thestate, no real attempt has beenmade to deal with the problems ofnuclear dumping, despite plans toexpand nuclear storage facilitiesat the Zion nuclear power plant innorthern Illinois and to makeArgonne available for medicalisotopes storage.Braun said that she will be ableto introduce the legislation in the'veto session of the GeneralAssembly because House rulesmake it possible for the introduc¬tion of “crisis” legislation.6Z61'oejaqopo'Aepsanj.—uoojewo6e:>!ioam—i pillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfc 'LSLZ2SI‘8ZZJSdjeHu;| Iuauoqepyspyloejuooasea/duoqeuuo}j I-ujajou/joj(a/qepoBauAed)sasjnoo| |ABo/oigiaAa/-QQ£pueajoQuoiuluoq1 |jopnO)sjuaprnsjeaAipppue'pj£| |ajenpeuBspaauaap/uiujoQAjosmpy| tuapnjssaoua/og/eo/Bo/oigaq± aaiNVM saoiru ^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiii?; 00‘IgKia^yu<>p|o-) oo*isU9JPi!43 00'Z%s*|nPV 0009“t££ M*9£*SB3££9I MOHS1VD pnuuDpjii_|4ji3L|4-s+uesejd sjdpuo-j+D3peejquvOHDVW18909swuijjj‘ofjmiyj 1™HSymN-fy/M)$V3HH 0OVDIHDHOAIIS33AINI13HIIV asnoHivNoiivNHaiNi ;uoi;vj,;sitiajLay;aofa6dvyaoj\[ aoiffOmsy-vou/y s$du,t)uoQysunapp\JL0jfaay; puv 3S3OHIVNOLIVNU3INI fiqpauosuod§ •iu'doo:8o;•wvo8:6 6161AAdquiaaoN S3DN3I333X3 ciiuoa\amhiaNVHsmsr AIIN33Q0W01NOIIIQVUI30 NOIIVIdVaVHHINO 3DN3U33N0D3HI 0I3N0D33M -0BVh\0 ssejppv 01UBN omo‘ueuupuio fromxoaezUioou sjauojss||/\|Ajbuju0|O A|uoja;sod am;oAdooaaj;ba^np,|■ •ja;sodaaj;aq; puesjaucMSsiwAjbluu0|9 aq;q;|Msaqmrqjoddo jnoqeuoqBWJOju!0>i||pj■ •A||B!ju0p!}uoo pa;Baj;aq||iaaisanbajjnox •jsaudJO‘J0is|s‘jaq;ojg 0!|oq;BQesb‘d|aqugonoA -Moq;nopinjiiasjnoA— BiqoB|BddvpusMinos|bjnj aq;;oaidoadaq;qjjMajsqs o;6u!q;aiyosaABqrroxIT(1.: IP UP.[5ChavezContinued from Page 11979, UFW striker, Ruffino Contreras wasshot to death.Chicago area customers are the primaryconsumers of Red Coach lettuce. HydePark, though, seems to be free of RedCoach. The Co-op has no definite policy, butthey tend to buy union lettuce. The localA&P and Mr. G’s have definite policies tobuy only union lettuces, according to a Pro¬gressive Union member.Chavez’s visit to the Lutheran School ofTheology is sponsored by Latino Studies atMcCormick Theological Seminary and theHispanic Program at the Lutheran School ofTheology. His visit is part of a Midwest tourto raise support for the boycott. By David GlocknerPenn stationkeeps licenseThe University of Pennsylvania studentradio station, WPXN, won a six-year battleto stay on the air this month when the Feder¬al Communications Commission (FCC) in¬dicated that it would grant the station a newlicense. WPXN’s troubles began in 1973when it broadcast a series of mock commer¬cials that the FCC found obscene for a prod¬uct called “Stay Hard.” The troubles werecompounded by additional commercials anda call-in show which also raised the hacklesof the regulatory body.The FCC revoked WPXN’s license lastspring but allowed it to remain on the airwhile other groups were permitted to applyfor its frequency. When no other group be-Texos InstrumentsProgrammoble58C8 c’ 8 '■ 8MATRIX ADDITlON AND MULTIPLICATION ML OJ? :Texas InstrumentsINCORPORATEDAdvanced programmable calculator withSolid State Software™ libraries andnew Constant Memory™feature.Step up to a new level of productivity with the TI-58C, the computer-like programmablecalculator that can help make short work of long, repetitive calculations. Over 170 functionsand operations allow you to write programs to meet your needs- up to 480 steps or usingup to 60 memories.University of Chicago Bookstore5750 S. Ellis AvenueCalculator Dept., 2nd Floor753-3303MASTERCHARGE & VISA ACCEPTED Hither and Yonsides the University of Pennsylvania sub¬mitted a complete request for the fre¬quency, the FCC decided to grant a newlicense to the University.The University of Pennsylvania spentmore than $200,000 in legal fees during thefight to defend the station.Fast-buck FondaTom Hayden and Jane Fonda drew lessthan rave reviews from the University ofMichigan student group which sponsoredtheir appearance there earlier this month.Angry at what they claimed was a misrepre¬sentation of the nature of Hayden andFonda’s appearance, the Michigan Univer¬sity Activities Center has threatened towithhold part of the $5,000 fee originally pro¬mised to the couple.Sponsors of the appearance said that Hay¬den and Fonda had promised that the ap¬pearance would be a lecture, and that theywould participate in other activities whileon campus. But Hayden and Fonda arrivedU of M’s not Fonda her45 minutes late, appeared ill-prepared,turned what was billed as a lecture into a po¬litical rally, were responsible for numerouslogistical problems, and seemed interestedonly in raising money, the sponsors said.Representatives of the Hayden-Fonda or¬ganization denied the charges, saying theyresulted from misinterpretations made bythe student group. “I’m sorry they had mis¬conceptions,” a spokesman for the Cam- Chris Persanspaign For Economic Democracy told theMichigan Daily, but “there is no such thingas an impression. We Jiave a legal con¬tract.”More than 4,000 spectators paid $2 each tolisten to the couple during their appear¬ance.No quartersfor WheatonDespite student opposition, Wheaton Col¬lege in Chicago’s Western suburbs has be¬come the latest in a long string of colleges todesert the quarter system in favor of a se¬mester schedule. The main reason for thetransition, according to college officials, isthe expected 20-30 percent savings in certainadministrative costs resulting from de¬creased bookkeeping chores. Most text¬books are arranged in ways which favor asemester system, officials added. Approxi¬mately 70 percent of the students participat¬ing in a referendum on the subject lastspring opposed the semester system. Sixty-three percent of the nation's colleges nowoperate on the semester system while only23 percent retain the quarter system, Whea¬ton officials say.Stopping skippersStudents at Pittsburgh's Duquesne Uni¬versity had better get into the habit of wak¬ing up for their early classes. Under a newmandatory class attendance policy an¬nounced recently, students who miss anumber of classes more than twice thenumber of credits for the course will auto-maticaly receive failing grades. The policy,which has been predictably unpopular withstudents, is a last-ditch effort to bolster sag¬ging attendance levels which have plaguedsome classes.Reading mattersFor those lonely nights without ho¬mework. Virginia Polytechnic Institute andState Unversity has provided its studentswith an alternative to frivolous diversion.Each of the school's 4,000 freshmen thisyear received a subscription to the AtlanticMonthly along with his course schedule andorientation materials. School officials saythe mass-subscription is an attempt to ex¬pose students to good writing and to stimu¬late discussion of current issues.Material for this column was compiledfrom the Michigan Daily, the Daily North¬western. the Daily Pennsylvanian, theWheaton Record, the Chronicle of HigherEducation, and the Carletonian.Following THE LOST WEEKEND (7:15) and THE PRIVATE LIFE OF SHERLOCK HOLMES (9:30).our special midnight movie treat is Roger Corman'sTHE MASQUE OF THE RED DEATH(separate admission)Tuesday Oct. 30 Cobb Hall $1Spend Your Halloween with Doc Films!The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 30, 1979 — 3The U of C Folkdancers Present17th InternationalFolk Dance FestivalNovember 2,3 & 4 Fri. 8 pm, Sat. & Sun. 9 amWorkshops with: Nelda Drury - MexicanAtanas Kolarovski - MacedonianTom Roncevic - BulgarianFOLK CONCERTSaturday, November 3 - 8 pmMandel Hall 1131 E. 57th St.Tickets: perworkshopGeneral $2.50Student $2.00 weekend Saturday Concertw/concert w/concert only$18.00 $.9.50 $3.00$14.50 $8.00 $2.50For further info Call Blythe 324-628725% OFF SALE*GET ACQUAINTED SALE FOR U of CSTUDENTS AND FACULTYBrand name clothing such as H. FREE¬MAN, CHAPS, DONALD BROOKS, MAL¬COLM KENNETH, AQUASCUTUM, LON¬DON FOG, SERO and others at 25% off ofour very low listed prices.This is a special offer for U of C studentsand faculty only. This sale applies Mon -Fri from 3 PM - 6 PM and SAT from 10AM to 4 PM.Your U of C ID card is necessary for ad¬mission to this sale.Slight charge for other than basic alter¬ations.WILLIAM’S TRADITIONALCLOTHING19-S. LaSalle St. - 782-9885(Entrance on Arcade Place) Students and Faculty invited toThe organizational meeting of theCommittee for theStudy of WomenThurs., Nov. 1 at 4:30 p.m.Ida Noyes LibraryChicago Sinai Congregation5350 S. Shore DriveThe Renowned Photographer ROMAN VISHNIACwill speak in the Main Sanctuary at Chicago Sinai Con¬gregation at 5350 South Shore Drive. Topic:“THE VANISHED WORLDOF THE SHTETL”SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4,1979 at 11 A.M.Dr. Vishniac presently teaches Master’s classes in photography at NewYork University. The lecture, which is accompanied by slides, is free and opento the public.STUDENTS ARE WELCOME288-1600 'SG Office Ida Noyes 306753-3273STUDENTGOVERNMENTMEETING1 week from today8:00 PMIDA NOYESEast LoungeInitial meeting forFRESHMAN REPRESENTATIVESCall for more information4 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 30, 1979News BriefsCancer researcher awardedLibrary head resigning• v vrvA*4 V*g^gpiStanley McElderryArts grantsFour arts organizations affiliated with theUniversity have been awarded grants by theIllinois Arts Council. The council granted$3,000 to the Chicago Review, $4,000 to theOriental Institute’s educational programs,$6,000 to the Smart Gallery for 1979-80 ex¬hibitions, and $5,500 to the RenaissanceSociety foi* exhibitions.In other local grants, the Hyde Park ArtCenter and the Chicago Children’s Choir re¬ceived a total of $9,000 for personnel. Stanley McElderry, director of thelibrary, will retire at the end of thisacademic year.McElderry has been director of thelibrary system for the last eight years. Asearch committee will be formed in the nearfuture to name his successor.In a letter to the library staff, McElderrysaid “When an announcement of this kind ismade there is always speculation about thereasons for the decision. The truth is that Ihad planned to retire for some time. I feelthat now is the time to do it.” He could not bereached for further comment.Lab teachers settleUniversity Laboratory School teachersvoted 75 - 13 Oct. 18 to ratify a new contractwith the University. The contract providesfor an immediate 7.75 percent raise and pro¬visions for a 2 percent annual raise in futureyears.The settlement averted a strike threaten¬ed by the union representing the school’steachers, who had been working without acontract since June. The teachers hadoriginally demanded a 13 percent raise,while the University’s first offer was for afive percent salary hike. Teachers at theLab School now earn between $11,730 and$27,100 a year. Kennedy group formsLocal political activists have announcedthe formation of the First CongressionalDistrict Citizens for Kennedy Committee.The group, convened by Democratic StateCentral Committeeman Sam Ackerman,will field candidates for delegates and alter¬nate delegates to the Democratic NationalConvention pledged to Senator Edward M.Kennedy (D.-Mass.). Kennedy yesterday an¬nounced an exploratory committee for hiscandidacy for President. Others initiating the Kennedy Committeeinclude Fifth Ward Democratic Committee¬man Alan M. Dobry; Fifth Ward AldermanLawrence S. Bloom; Timuel D. Black, can¬didate for State Representative in the 24thDistrict; and South Shore activist RosaMoore.A campus Kennedy organization is now-being organized. No local or campus groupshave been announced for any other Presi¬dential candidates, including PresidentCarter.Mandel renovations president, er, Senatoi KeiutcayStudents to fastThe Joseph and Helen Regenstein Foun¬dation has pledged a gift of nearly $2 millionfor the comprehensive renovation of MandelHall.The renovation, the first in the hall’s 76-year history, is planned to improve theacoustics, provide two orchestra lifts infront of the stage, and add to the utility sys¬tems in the hall. In addition, a new structurewill be built behind the present backstagewall, in between Mandel and Eckhart Halls,to provide support areas for the theater, aloading dock, and storage space.The hall will be able to accommodate avariety of stage settings, ranging from atraditional theater stage to a stage for a fullsymphony orchestra. The seating capacitieswill range from 800 to 886 depending uponthe stage setting. The hall will be sound¬proofed and a full range of dressing roomswill be provided. The balcony will be ex¬panded by moving the projection booth ontothe roof outside the balcony.The work is scheduled to begin shortly, tobe completed within a year. Architects forthe renovation are Skidmore, Qwings andMerrill. Walter Netsch, the designer of Re¬genstein Library, is the chief architect. The Hunger Concern Group, which grewout of a group from Calvert House, isorganizing a series of fasts for studentsholding University meal contracts.The fast nights will be Thursdays, sixthand eighth weeks of Autumn Quarter andfourth, sixth and eighth weeks of Winter andSpring Quarters. Food services will con¬tribute the cost of each dinner to the HungerConcern Group. This cost will not includebase costs such as kitchen and dining roomworker’s wages.The money will be distributed to organiza¬tions caring for hungry people. Last year,the funds were given to the Woodlawn Child Elwood V. Jensen, director of the Univer¬sity’s Ben May Laboratory for cancer re¬search, named as one of the recipients of theprestigious Gairdner Awards for “contribu¬tions in the conquest of disease and the reliefof human suffering,” by the Gairdner Foun¬dation of Ontario, Canada.Jensen received the award for his discov¬ery of receptor molecules for steroid sexhormones. He later developed a procedureknown as the Jensen estrogen receptor testbased on this discovery. The test is used topredict whether or not patients with ad¬vanced breast cancer will benefit from en¬docrine treatment, such as removal of theovaries or adrenal glands.A University alumnus and a member oithe faculty since 1947, Jensen is the CharlesB. Huggins Professor of Biological Sciences.Huggins received the Gairdner Award in1966, the same year that he was awarded theNobel Prize in Medicine.Health Center, which aids needy people inthe area, and to UNICEF. Those fasters in¬terested in deciding where the funds will gowill probably meet on one of the fast nightsto allocate the funds.The food service has stipulated that atleast one hundred meal contract holdersmust sign up to participate in the fast andthat the list of those people's names must besubmitted by Friday, November 2. Today,Tuesday, October 30, representatives fromthe Hunger Concern Group will pass outregistration forms to students eating dinnerat Pierce, Burton Judson and WoodwardCourt. Elwood JensenGray on Pulitzer boardHanna Gray was named to the PulitzerPrize board, Columbia University announc¬ed last week. Gray will be the first womanmember of the board, which awards annualprizes for journalism, literature, and otherarts.Also elected with Gray were syndicatedcolumnist William Raspberry and NewYork Times writer Roger W ilkins, both pro¬minent black journalists.Cambodia TodayEdwin Silverman, director of the Gover¬nor’s Information Center for Asian Assis¬tance will talk on the Cambodian situationthis Thursday night, November 1, at 7:30 pmat International House. Silverman, a long¬time participant in battling the problems ofSoutheast Asian refugees, will deliver a talkentitled “Cambodia Today: the Famine, theRefugees, and the Relief Effort.”No pornographyDana Lobell of the New York basedWomen Against Pornography will speak onviolence in the media tonight at 7:30 in theIda Noyes Hall Library. Lobell’s talk will in¬clude a slide presentation and is sponsoredby the Women’s Union and the UniversityFeminists.Local history nets prizeJean F. Block received an Award of Meritfrom the Illinois State Historical Society forher book Hyde Park Houses. An InformalHistory, 1856-1910.Block, a life-long resident of Hyde Park, ispresident of the Hyde Park Historical Soci¬ety. Her book is published by the Universityof Chicago Press.Kids need youTransit boss to speakLewis Hill, the director of the RegionalTransportation Authority (RTA), will speakabout “Urban Transportation in the 80s,”this Thursday November 1st at 4:30 inHarper 130. Hill was the Head of the Chicago Planningand Urban Development commission duringMayor Daley’s reign and was a close confi¬dante of the late mayor. The lecture is beingsponsored by the Public Affairs programand the Center for Urban Studies. Interested in working with kids on theirreading and math? The Hyde Park Neigh¬borhood Club runs a tutoring program onSaturday mornings for children in the firstthrough twelfth grades. All materials areprovided, and all you need to give is yourtime. Help a kid feel bright. Call or stop bythe Club at 5480 S. Kenwood Ave., 643-4062.October 30, 1979 — 5The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday,WKroch’s Brentanos.THf FULL SERVICE BOOKSTORES'^ Take afriend47 hometo studyfStudy with Cliffs Notes, becausethey can help you do better inEnglish class. There are more than200 Cliffs Notes covering all thefrequently assigned novels, playsand poems. Use them as a f|1 ■guide while you're W 1 ITTvVreading...and again as -ZVIMlil'ian efficient review for exams.They're great for helping youunderstand literature, andthey're ready to help you nowKrochs BrentanosTHi FULL SERVICE BOOKSTORES*29 South Wabash Avenue Chicago, IL 60603 • (312) 332-7500BRANCH STORES S16 N Michigan Avc • 62 E Randolph St • 16 S LaSalla St.1711 Sherman Avc . Evancton • 1028 Lake St . Oak Park • North Mall. Old OrchardOakbrook Canter • Evergreen Plaza • River Oaks • Lincoln Mali • Randhurat CenterHawthorn Center • The Mall at Cherry Vale (Rockford) • Woodfield Mall • Fox ValleyCenter • Water Tower Place • Orland SquareWANTEDStudents interested in government and publicaffairs. Students who would like a voice indetermining public policy decisions. Interviewswill be held to discuss graduate studies at theSCHOOL OF URBAN AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS,CARNEGIE-MELLON UNIVERSITYon Tuesday, November 13, 1979from 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.in the Office of Placement Services.GUITAR SALESave up to $60 on beautifulnew Takamine guitarsPrices slashed on every guitarin stockCome in now while selection is goodThe Fret Shop5210 Harper667-1060 11 am-6 pm M Tu. Th Sat12 - 6 pm Wed Fri. THE HOLIDAY SQUEEZE.Of course, you’regoing home for the holidays.Just like everybody else.But if you wait untilexam week to get yourflight home, you can alsobe squeezed out by every¬body else.That’s why booking onContinental now is thesmartest thing you can do.You'll get the flightyou want. The seat youwant. And save some buckson our low discount faresbesides.So pick up the phoneand call Continental oryour travel agent today.Then, do one otherlittle thing, please.Call Mom and let herknow you're coming.The Proud Bird with the Golden Tail.CONTINENTAL AIRLINES %US.A./Canada/Mexico/Hawaii/Micronesia/Australia/New Zealand/Fiji/Samoa/and the Orient.NEED CREDIT? send for THE CREDIT GAME• Too young to borrow?• New in town/no references?• Erase bad debt records• Skip bills without ruining credit• Receive loans within weeks of beginning this program• Information on updated credit laws and legislation• Your rights under the Federal Credit Acts SOLVE ALLTHESECREDITPROBLEMSwithTHE CREDIT GAMEMoney Order to WALL STREET PUBLISHING CO.% 303 5TH AVE.SUITE 1306NEW YORK, NY 10016 "Tired of being without credit, or up to your neck in'minimum payments'? With this book you will learn howto make the $300 billion credit industry jump at yourcommand."ONLY $5.95(N Y residents add 8% Sales Tax)Enclosed is S . ^ for RnnksName _____ _ ...Address __ ___City - . State _. ZipAllow 3 weeks for delivery.6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 30, 1979Real LifeBy Philip MaherThis is the start of a weekly column about real life, which is every¬where of course, but often goes unnoticed. I’m a little nervous on myfirst day, so I’ll jump straight in and tell you about a man I met theother day.I was late again, as usual, so I threw on my jacket and dashed outthe door. No buses in sight, too broke to hail a cab, I decided tothumb it.Mercedes, Cadillacs, Buicks rolled by — A fat-faced old womanglowered; little children laughed. Adamant, I persevered, withluck, yes! A ’64 Chevy, the original box-mobile, pulled over andstopped.I jumped in. “Thanks for stopping,” I said, looking the driverover. He brushed loose strands of stringy blond hair from sleepyeyes, and I saw that his face was scarred and lined with worry. Awarm smile though — good Samaritan, I summarized in a glance.“Sure, no problem,” he spoke with a voice as tired as his face,steering us carefully back into traffic, “I’m taking the Drive.”“Great. Just let me off at 57th if you can.”“All righty,” he nodded, “no problem,” he said again.I made conversation, “Nice little vehicle you got here.”“You like it?” he smiled, “You can buy it. Two hundredbucks.”My eyes bugged, “Oh yeah?”“Yep,” he grinned, “That’s a good price. And I just tuned her up.New points, new carb, only sixty-five thou on the odometer. Andlook,” he flipped the glove compartment open, “I’ll throw in thistape deck too. Works great. It’s just not plugged in right now.”“Damn I would, I’d love to but I’m busted — that’s why I’m hitch¬ing.”“Yeah. . . that makes sense.”“Oh well,” I shrugged, “Someone’s sure to buy it at that price.Actually you should get more than two hundred — three, four, atleast.”“Yeah,” he agreed, “I know, but I need the money fast.”“Really?”“Yeah — I’m supposed to turn myself in to the sheriff next week. Igot busted for possession. Four years and a day.”“That’s too bad.” Possession of what, I wondered.“Oh man,” his voice broke, “I can’t go to jail,” then he entreatedme as if I was the judge. “I got a wife and a beautiful little girl. . .What’ll they do? And me? I’m no tough guy, I’m a painter, a god¬damn house painter — four years and a day? In The County? Youknow what that place is like?” I nodded, having heard stories. “SoI’m splitting, man I don’t care. We’ll go to Canada or something. . .but I can’t go to jail, not now.” He fumbled with a cigarette pack, hisfingers trembling. “Look at me man, I’m a goddamn nervouswreck. I took two valiums to calm down, and I’m still uptight. I wishI had a joint.”“Mmm,” I sympathized, unsure how to reply. There was a joint inmy pocket but it was my last; I hung on to it and was silent.We tooled down the Drive in the middle lane at a moderate speed.Faster cars hurried by.“Damn it,” he blurted, “I thought the state would help me. I usedto be a paramedic you know.” He shook his head, ’T guess I thoughtwrong.”“What’d you get busted for?”“Aw, smack.” He grimaced. “I was on the cure — methadone,you know that clinic on Washington?” I nodded. “But the doc gotbusted. I was real sick so I did something dumb. Copped from a guyI didn’t even know. Must have been a set-up,” he shook his headagain. “Man, I'd never even been on probation — and they gave meI four years. I can’t understand it.”“Well I don’t blame you for splitting. You should. And take yourwife and kid with you.”“Thanks man,” he smiled a bit, “It’s good to hear someone’s onmy side.” I shrugged. “Hey!” he exclaimed, “My name’s Keith,” heheld out his hand.“I’m Philip.” We shook. “So where you going now?” I asked, “towork?”“Naw, I’m going to a friend’s house — lives on the north side. He'sI got some reefer, I hope.”“Ah.” 57th loomed up. :‘This is my stop.” I told him. He pulledover illegally; a Nova whooshed by, horn blaring. “Here man, takethis.” I reached in my pocket and handed him the joint, “Colom¬bian.”His eyes lit up, even through the Valium haze. “Wow! You’re allright Philip!” He was as happy as a kid at Christmas.“Aw you’re all right too Keith,” I was a little embarrassed.“Really man, thanks a lot.” His eyes searched mine then as iflooking for something.“It’s o.k.,” I said; we shook again, and I hopped out, “Well, take iteasy,” I waved.“You too man!” he called. I slammed the door and the beat oldChevy chugged away.Melancholy poured over me. The sun was sinking into the city; thesky had taken on the rich tones of evening. I stood on the trafficisland waiting for an opening, watching gulls circle high overhead.Well, he’ll make it, I thought.I looked back down — and for an instant, just one second thatseemed like a minute I caught a glimpse of a woman’s face in a car,rushing by, smiling at me. Lord knows why, but I smiled back, andthen, grinning like a fool, stepped forward. The road was clear; Iwas on my way. South SidePhotos by Tim BakerIt is a familiar maxim, even among non-Chica¬goans, that Hyde Park is surrounded on three sidesby ghetto. Even so, don't let that stop you from en¬joying the last of the beautiful weather on the lake-front south of Hyde Park. Clockwise from above: Acrane flies in Wooded Island; the Golden Statue inJackson Park; the splendor and decadence of theSouth Shore Country Club.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 30, 1979 — 7By Richard KayeWhen Maude Phelps Hutchins held aconference with a New York exhibitor todiscuss a prospective exhibition of hersculpture, she concluded her discussion bybecoming very severe about the precondi¬tions for a show of her work. Mrs. Hutchinstold exhibitor Carol Carstairs that shewanted absolutely no mention of her hus¬band’s reputation in the show’s advanceannouncements. In fact, she did not wanthis name mentioned at all during the ex¬hibit’s run. Mr. Carstairs, who was tre¬mendously impressed with Mrs. Hut¬chins’s sculpture, looked somewhatpuzzled.“Pardon me,” he said after a pause,“but who is your husband?”It was a question which most certainlythrilled Maude Phelps Hutchins, who oncetold a reporter that she “would rather put¬ter around in my studio than attend Uni¬versity luncheons and teas.” During thecourse of a versatile life as an artist, au¬thor, sculptor, and all-around Chicago en-fante terrible, Maude Hutchins was for¬ever trying to shake off the name of herhusband, the fifth president of the Univer¬sity, Robert Maynard Hutehins. When shefinally did shake it off legally in 1948 by di¬vorcing him, there were questions as towho exactly had shaken off whom.For the University’s innovative presi¬dent found his first wife to be stubbornly atodds with the traditionally genteel role ofthe wife of the president of the University through the bizarre anecdotes which hoverabout the myth that is Maude Phelps Hut¬chins (“Just Maude Phelps, thank you.”)There is the one about how Maude out¬raged Hyde Parkers by mailing out Christ¬mas cards with nude angelic children withcandles in hand, drawings which read“Christmas Greetings from Mr. and Mrs.Hutchins” and which were supposedlymodeled on her own daughters. There arethe stories about how Robert Hutchins be¬came so irritated by his wife’s wacky ex¬ploits that he ceased to bring Universityguests and colleagues to the president’smansion and instead held a large numberof meetings on the North Side in order toget away from her.No one at the University in 1950 is likelyto forget the scandal surrounding the pub¬lication of her novel, A Diary of Love,banned in Chicago as “so candidly filthy inspots as to constitute a menace to publicmorals.” Sometimes someone comesacross an old photograph of Maude and re¬marks on how tall and beautiful she was,how she bears an eerie resemblance toAnne Morrow Lindbergh, how she andRobert Maynard Hutchins look like Zeldaand Scott Fitzgerald in a photograph show¬ing the Hutchinses arriving in Chicago. So¬ciety pages in Chicago dailies doted onMrs. Hutchins as “charming and gracious... A lady who manages the householdwith a minimum of inconvenience, enjoysorgies of cookery, romps with the childrenand the dogs, tends to her bib lettuce withloving care, and when she is weary justThere is the one about how Maude outraged HydeParkers by mailing out Christmas cards of nude angelicchildren with candles in hand, drawings which read"Christmas Greetings from Mr. and Mrs. Hutchins" andwhich were supposedly modeled on her own daughters.of Chicago. Too much the rugged individu¬alist, too eccentric (“Well, dear, she is anartist,” a progressive Hyde Park lady re¬portedly said in her defense), too unpre-dictably mischievous and preoccupiedwith her own varied interests, Maude Hut¬chins was as spectacular as a gadfly in so¬cial and artistic circles as her husbandwas in the educational sphere. Today, inher eighties and quietly retired in Connec¬ticut, she often surfaces in Hyde Park simply loafs.” What is seldom emphasizedis that Maude Phelps Hutchins was terri¬bly serious about her art, whether it washer drawing or her sculpture or her fiction,and that contemporary critics oftenviewed it with equal seriousness. Like theheroes and heroines of Bloomsbury(where, one gathers, Maude would havevery snugly fit), today Maude Hutchins’slife often receives far more attention thanher art. from Diagrammatics, 1932The daughter of Warren RatcliffMcVeigh and Maude Phelps, she wasreared by a grandfather, born in Connecti¬cut, and a grandmother, born in Virginia.They lived in what her grandparentscalled the “country”, which was actually aeuphemism for the area around Bayshoreon Long Island, some forty miles fromNew York City. Mrs. Hutchins once re¬called that neither of her grandparentsever understood that the Civil War wasover, and so Maude’s childhood wasseaped in memories of imaginary strifebetween the North and South.“This is my third war,” she told peopleafter the start of the Second World War.Maude loved drawing as a child, but hergrandfather refused to send her to artschool in the city for formal training, be¬lieving that talent should be allowed to de¬velop spontaneously. When the young Rob¬ert Hutchins met her while he was visitinga cousin in Bayshore, he fell in love withher and they were married in 1921. Shortlyafter their marriage he became master ofa boy’s school in Lake Placid, New York.One of the duties of the master’s wife wasto teach the boys table manners. Maudefailed miserably at this. She found nothingto object to in the manners of boys in their“natural state.” She told her husband thatelbows were infinitely more comfortableon tables than off. charming hostess, a concerned wife whotook her husband away on week-ends forrelaxation and lessons in casting. Theywere spoken of at the famed AlgonquinRound Table, where Alexander Woolcotttold a story of the Hutchinses which has be¬come legendary University lore.According to Woolcott’s account, a Uni¬versity of Chicago gentleman, after be¬coming sloshed at a University party, wastelling a young woman next to him that hefelt that President Hutchins was an abso¬lute scalawag. He went on to tell thewoman that he had deep reservationsabout the activities of the president, who,after all, was nothing but an experiencedkid. The young woman asked him if heknew who she was.“No,” he said, “I’m sorry but I didn’tcatch the name.”“I thought not,” she said. “Well, I’mMrs. Maude Hutchins.”Sheepishly he asked, “Do you know whoI am?”“No,” she said.“Good!” Whereupon the gentlemanmade a speedy retreat from the room.Maude was never a great hostess, how¬ever, and she rarely if ever presented her¬self at University parties.The first Maude Hutchins splash camewith the publication of her book Diagram¬matics, which she co-authored with Mor¬timer J. Adler, then a University professorand long-time friend of Robert Hutchins.The book purported to “represent the ab¬stract by means of the concrete.” MaudeHutchins’s illustrations of nude femalesaccompanied Adler’s prose fragments,and the entire enterprise took a brutallambasting in the Chicago papers. Criticshad little trouble with Mrs. Hutchins’s sim¬ple line drawings, but Adler’s deliberatelyconvoluted prose (“W'e have triangulatedwith impunity in order that sophisticationwould neither digest nor slice our conven¬tional drainage. ..”) had them reeling anddismissing the book as a wierd parody.Mrs. Hutchins insisted upon the seriousimport of the project, and she and Adlerwrote letters of protest to the newspapers.Letters from Tribune readers attemptingto decipher the book ran as follows:“Diagrammatics” is a parody on edu¬cation at the University of Chicago, a bur¬lesque of Neo-Platonism, a polite snickerat the status of our midwestern intellectand finally a proof that Chicago’s sense ofhumor has never risen above Amos andAndy.”To which the original critic of the bookreplied:A sculpture by Maude Hutchins Neither of her grandparents ever understood that theCivil War was over, and so Maude's childhood wasseaped in memories of imaginary strife between theNorth and South.When Robert Hutchins joined the facultyof Yale University, Maude entered theYale School of Fine Arts. She completedthe five year course in three and a halfyears (an accomplishment which some be¬lieved was the origin of Robert Hutchins’sChicago Plan) and soon after began exhib¬iting her work professionally. Her firstshow was at the Cosmopolitan Club in NewYork, and soon after she won a first prizeat the Beaux Arts Institute in New Yorkwith her figure of a nude warrior. In NewHaven she took in several local prizes.After every show she claimed to havestage fright.“I guess I’m not prepared for it,” shetold a reporter once. “My work is there,and it seems unnecessary for me to bethere, too. If I had prepared to become anactress I would expect public appear¬ances, and they wouldn’t bother me. But asit is I hate that part of it.”When the Hutchinses came to Chicago in1929, Maude immediately cleared the loftof the presidential manse’s garage for herstudio and resumed her art work with herfamiliar zeal. For many years the Hut¬chinses marriage appeared to have all theexternals of marital bliss. There werethree lovely daughters, Mary Frances,Joanna Blessing, and Clarissa Phelps.Maude was reported to have been a “Well, well! At last the philosopherbearing the lantern stumbles upon thetruth. We thought that education at thePresident and Mrs. Hutchinsa — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 30, 1979University of Chicago was a parody in it¬self. But live and learn. As for the parallel¬ing of the Platonic abstraction in the aes¬thetic theory of our Midway collaborators,it was something we had expected.”“I wish I had never done it,” she said re¬gretfully years later. ‘‘I only learned thatto expound is to confound.”She continued to exhibit her work allacross the country, in most of the Chicagogalleries and salons, in the Wildensteinand American Fine Arts society galleriesin New York, the Brooklyn Museum, theSt. Louis Museum, the San Francisco Mu¬seum of Art, the Toledo Museum of Art,and in numerous other museums and gal¬leries. Awed admirers were forever askingdark-eyed Maude Hutchins how she foundthe time.”1 don’t find the time,” she answered. ‘‘Itake it.” She usually followed this withwhat reporters called “an impish whis¬per”.“I steal it from my friends.”Evidently Maude Hutchins stole a littleof that time from Robert Hutchins, andwhen their marriage approached rockyterrain after the notorious Christmas cardscandal, rumor had it that the Chicagopresident had quietly rented an apartmentand hired lawyers. The Sun-Times head¬lines on July 9, 1948 read “Hutchins Di¬vorced By Wife”, but social propriety pre¬cluded mention of what the Universitycommunity knew: it was the other wayaround. The settlement included whatmust have seemed an odd stipulation to allbut those who knew of Robert MaynardHutchins:“Mrs. Hutchins is to receive $1,200monthly for herself, $200 for two minorchildren, Joanna, 12 and Clarissa 6, untilthey are twenty-one or have completedtheir education,” read a newspaper reportwhich included a photograph of Mrs Hut¬chins leaving the courtroom with a regalsmile. “Mr. Hutchins is also to pay theirmedical and dental bills, and school tu¬ition, provided he approves of the institu¬tion they attend.”It was two years after her divorce thatMaude Phelos Hutchins made her sensa¬tional entrance into her literary career asa controversial, “daring” novelist of sty¬lized, erotic, elegant prose. The publica¬tion of A Diary of Love in 1950 brought herwide prominence when the book was brief¬ly banned in Chicago as “vulgar, purple,and in spots filthy.” The subject of Mrs.Hutchins’ second novel, according to a fa¬vorable review in the New York Times,was “sex, approached for the most partfrom a discreet distance by a very younggirl named Noel, through her diary.” Noelmakes her first appearance as she wanders aimlessly in a raspberry field ona country estate near New York City. Thefamily she stays with consists of a spinsteraunt, a senile grandfather, a cook with asurrealistic passion for a rubber doll, anda neighbor boy named Dominick whoseparents are attempting to bring him up asa “natural man”. The confusion of livingwith this weighty menage cause Noel tobreak out with latent tuberculosis. Thediary briefly tells of her three-year stay ina sanitorium out in a desert and her even¬tual return to her family — and Dominick.A Diary of Love eventually appeared inChicago bookstores, but in England eightthousand copies of the book were orderedto be burned by a local magistrate. TheChicago Civil Liberties Committee rushedto its defense, and everyone from Mor¬timer Adler to the poet Delmore Schwartzrallied in support of Mrs. Hutchins.“Mrs. Hutchins’s book has the wit of aRestoration dramatist and also an appall¬ing innocence,” wrote Schwartz. “To thepure it will be a pure book.”“You know my work in the plastic artsand I think you need not fear an immoraleffect of my present book,” Maude Hut¬chins wrote in a letter to a newspaper edi¬tor. “You will not find in it any cruelty,meanness, intolerance, viciousness, norhypocrisy. If my characters, whose speechand thoughts I cannot as an artist censor,sin, I do not advocate it. The only nastything about A Diary of Love is the descrip¬tive adjectives used by the self-righteousagainst it.”A Diary of Love was translated into Dan¬ish, Italian, German, and, for a while, intoan expurgated English version. Severalcritics hailed it as a “minor masterpiece”.Today it still reads remarkably well, re¬vealing Maude Hutchins to be a curiouscombination of Anais Nin and D. H.Lawrence, minus the former’s self-absorp¬tion and the latter’s heavy doctrine. Andthere is a quality which seems distinctlythe creation of Maude Hutchins, a knackfor making the pathological sound amus¬ing and lovely and mysterious. There is thebrilliant short story “The Wreck”, adreamy parable of a young homosexualboy who lies just beyond moral judge¬ment.“He was fourteen and out of thisworld,” the story begins. “He livedin a limbo of violence and innocentobscenity. His imagination rangedfrom heroes of the better sort tothieves and cutthroats, from sailorsalone at sea singing in the wind andmunching hardtack, their squarefaces encrusted with salt, and engi¬neers careening at top speed in long trains like strings of licorice throughburning mesquite and red-hottimber, to peddlers of dope, skulkingand cringing along outer edges, theirforearms and thighs punctured andscarred, their eyes like windows,their lips bitten and bloody, andenormous men, obese, with lumpyparts, strangling their women andsucking oranges all day long, andfour telephones; bankers, multimil¬lionaires with matted hair on cheststhat bulged like women's breasts,pink tits on them, horrible ”Then there were the calculatedlv "deca¬dent” passages which speak of the world ofsmokey opium dens and harlequins andnavels filled with moonstones, passageswhich Maude Hutchins could make bothriotous and chilling.“The powerful but benign malepressed into his palm a sheaf of bills,fifties, a couple of hundreds.For your work last night, he said,don t thank me.And tonight? said the pretty boy.He was dressed in a black trenchcoat and a white beret. People in thesubway stared, as well they mighthaveNot here, said the man; his iron-gray hair was pomaded and slickeddown over his ears and his face wasnaked and gross, in the lobes of hisears were sapphires. Can you playthe piano0 he asked.A little said the boy, if I had the op¬portunity. Here we are, said theman. his striped pants fit him sotight he walked as if he had a stom¬ach ache. They need music, he said,I will attend to the rest, give themeverything you have.The fair-haired virgin boy satdown at the luminous piano and ranhis girlish fingers over the keys; alovely and secret melody came outof the guts of the three-legged instru¬ment . . .” Often, as in “The Wreck”, the storiesend like sad. unsentimental cautionary-tales. We see the fair-haired boy upon thebeach, distraught and wandering:“Hop in, the Coast Guards said,and ride along with us, it will do yougood Little fairy, they thought.They stared at his pretty throat, hisfair, indecent hair, and they won¬dered and their lips curledI can’t — all the bodies, the boysaid He wanted to. he wanted to lookat them all. even poke at them as ifthey were swollen toads, but hisknees were turning to water, heshook all overBodies! they laughed. It s juststuff, why it’s just stuff, rottenstumps and logs and upholsteredchairs. Funny, all those upholsteredchairs, where they came from everytime. It's just stuffBut they were mistaken; way-down. a mile or so. they came uponthe ribs of a fisherman's boat, em¬bedded in the sand, and beside it thedrowned sailor, his square face en¬crusted with salt, his mouth open asif he had been singing in the wind.”Maude Phelps Hutchins reportedly leftHyde Park a sad woman, deeply commit¬ted to her art and never entirely comfort¬able as a president's wife. Her childrensettled elsewhere. She went on to writeseveral more works of fiction, all of whichwere published by major publishers orsmaller, more iconoclastic presses such asNew Directions.When Robert Maynard Hutchins died in1977 she was absent from his funeral Mostpeople said then that it was just like her,and very much to the point. For in examin¬ing the story of Maude Phelps Hutchinsone discovers that her career as the Uni¬versity’s first lady was just as she wishedit to be — a footnote to her much richer,more imaginative, and more importantlife as a sculptor, author, and artist.October 30, 1979 — 9r ^A Diary of Love, banned briefly in Chicago, was “so can¬didly filthy as to constitute a menace to public morals.”On November 21st the following APdispatch appeared in the New YorkDaily News:Novel ShocksChicago CopsChicago, Nov. 21 (IP). — Thepolice censor board today asked ajudge to read a novel written bythe ex-wife of Dr. Robert MaynardHutchins to see if he agreed withthe censors that it is ‘vulgar,purple and in spots filthy.”The book, “A Diary of Love,” isthe second novel by Maude PhelpsHutchins, divorced wife of thechancellor o f t he University ofChicago.Capt. Harry Fulmer, head ofthe police censorship division, andSgt. John Nelligan took a copy ofthe novel to Municipal JudgeMatthew Hartigan.If the judge indicates he wouldapprove banning the novel, thecensor board probably will takesuch action, Fulmer said.Fulmer said he felt the bookwas “so candidly filthy in spots asto constitute a menace to publicmorals.’The book was published recentlyby New Directions of New YorkL City. AN OPEN LETTER TOThe Mayor of Chicagoprotesting the attempt to banA DIARY OF LOVEthe novel byMAUDE HUTCHINSCHICAGO CIVIL LIBERTIES COMMITTEEJThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday,Campus FilmBy Rory McGahanA Man’s Castle: Frank Borzage (1933).This bizarre little Depression melodramafeatures Spencer Tracy and Loretta Youngas a couple who win out over both physicaland economic reality. Walter Connolly istheir kindly and doddering neighbor in thehobo camp, and the direction adds a proper¬ly insane atmosphere with some nicely iso¬lated and absurd images (Tracy as a walk¬ing billboard on stilts) Doc Films, Tuesdayat 7:30 pm.Disputed Passage: Frank Borzage (1938).Thick-accented Akim Tamiroff and SuaveJohn Howard duel over the relation of medi¬cine to the soul as Howard falls for ChineseDorothy Lamour. Borzage’s slick directionnearly conquers the rhetorical silliness ofLloyd C. Douglass’s novel and the soporificeffects of Miss Lamour’s languor simplythrough its repetitions of simple situationsin gradually more and more outlandish con¬texts. Doc Films, Tuesday at 9 pm.The Lost Weekend: Billy Wilder (1945).Wilder’s torturing dramatic strategies al¬most work in this tale of a failed aesthetictype (Hay Milland) who goes off the wagonfor the title weekend and some screamingd.t.s. Jane Wyman is knowingly cast as aTime investigator, and Frank Faylenmakes a finely menacing male nurse. Butthe whole conflict comes out a little too patand academic with Wyman’s patented“middle-class” parents, hulking Howard daSilva as the bartender, and a fever too oftenfought with dialogue or swelling music thanaction. Doc films, Wednesday at 7:15 pm.The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes: BillyWilder (1970). With 40 minutes missing, thisfilm suffers a bit, but it’s W’ilder’s best effortby far. Robert Stephens and Colin Blakelyturn in some elegant performances asHolmes and Watson; the images are pain¬stakingly composed; and the theatrical at¬mosphere fits the arch nature of the project,involving two “cases” which involve themore romantic — and sometimes perverse Witch way acceptance?By Laura CottinghamHalloween Syllogism:“We haven't done anything really crummy for a long time ”(c) Copyright, The New Yorker Magazine, Inc., 1975All witches were women;Hanna Gray and Jane Byrneare women;Hanna and Jane are witches?Hardly a perfect syllogism; but nonth-eless an interesting idea. How about:All witches had extraordinarypowers;Hanna Gray and Jane Byrnehave extraordinary powers;Hanna and Jane are witches.No more perfect, but perhaps more inter¬esting. Don’t both witches and politiciansderive their power from the faith invested inthem from exterior sources? Weren’twitches accused when times got tough inMedieval Europe and Salem, Mass, in thesame way that we blame Hanna for campusduress and find fault with Jane when theNumber One Hyde Park bus breaks down?E. William Monter, Professor of Historyat Northwestern University and scholar ofwomen and witchcraft, doesn’t think the re¬lationship between our current female lead¬ers and their historic sisters in sorcery is soclear: “Witches were conceived more asservants to the devil than as autonomous op¬erators. I think that both Mayor Byrne andHanna Gray are more free to act of theirown accord and are more officially autono¬mous.”Monter may or may not be correct in as¬suming dissimmilarity between the Medi¬eval people’s perceptions of the devil — in¬vested power of the witches and our ownideas of the Trustee-invested and Machine-honored powers of Gray and Byrne. But atone point in history, for a woman to be “offi¬cially autonomous” was enough to arousesuspicision because it implied “unnatural”masculine tendencies.One convicted witch, Joan of Arc, (theonly one who later went on to achieve sainthood) was accused of dressing and actinglike a man. Her “masculine tendencies” and other expressions of suspicious spiritu¬ality took her to a firery demise in 1431. Ho¬pefully, accusations of masculine tenden¬cies won’t conclude in the same fashion forHanna and Jane.Monter affirmed oher dissimilarities be¬ tween Jane, Hanna and former females ofpower. According to Monter, no witch eversat on the J.P. Morgan Board of Trustees. Itshould also be noted that there’s no histori¬cal tradition of witches who obtained theirpower through snowfall.— side of Holmes. Doc Films. Wednesday at9:30 pm.The Masque of the Red Death: Roger Cor-man (1964). Outside of the title and aboutthe last fifteen minutes this film.bears onlythe most tenuous of relations to Poe’s story.All the rest is gleefully filled in with lots ofrip-roaring stuff about Devil worship andGod worship, about people being thrown intodungeons and escaping from them, andabout a pair of midgets who try to get awayout of the whole mess. Vincent Price ispleasingly mannered, and most of the rest ofthe cast is best forgotten. The decadentimages, though by freaked-out photogra¬pher Nicholas Roeg, are something to see(especially the hallucinatory sequencewhere Hazel Court becomes the Devil’sBride) Doc Films. Wednesday at midnight.An Autumn Afternoon: Yasujiro Ozu(1962). This is Ozu’s last film and about theusual Ozu stuff — a traditional and middle-class father watches and comes to acceptthe loss of his daughter to a man she doesnot love. But this would-be-trivial hokum is.as always with Ozu, presented with such for¬malistic visual rigor and minimalist dra¬matics that it winds up as a beautiful medi¬tation on time and society instead. DocFilms, Thursday at 7:15 and 9:30 pm.The More The Merrier: George Stevens(1943). Due to the wartime housing shortageJean Arthur finds herself with two newroommates: Joel McRae and Charles Co¬burn. The direction of this comedy is byGeorge Stevens, and luckily falls into hispleasant and trivial (which is to say, enjoy¬able) vein rather than in his serious and im¬portant (which is to say, insufferable)one,and that along with Garson Kanin’switty script is all to the picture’s benefit.Law School Films, Thursday at 8:30 pm.All Doc Films are shown in Quantrell Au¬ditorium in Cobb Hall and cost $1.00 for theregular Tuesday and Wednesday shows;$1.50 for the Thursday and midnightWednesday shows; all Law School Filmsare shown in the Law School Auditoriumand cost $1.50. Sell it in the MaroonMaroon classifieds arecheap and easy to usePlace them in person or mail toThe Maroon, Room 304, Ida Noyes Hall,1212 E. 59th St.Rates: 60 cents per line (30 spaces)for U of C people, 75 cents for others10 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 30, 1979STANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 41 Years The Standard ofExcellence In lest Preparation.I'HI l'A«( t <JH[MCAT- DAT* LSATl1 BRE • 6RE PSYCH • SHE BIO • 6RRAT iPCAT • OCAT • VAT ' MAT • SAT !NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS •VQE*ECFMO !FLEX • NATL DENTAL BOARDS ‘TOEFL JPOOUTRY BOARDS • NURSING BOARDS !Flexible Programs and Hours 9Visit Ai| Castor AaO Sta Far IYaarsalf Why Wa Maka Tha Oitfaraaca ■I1 4(SBcittasai CastorUS Madison A vs.MV. 1SOU (nr. S4 ft.) TEST PREPARATIONSPECIALISTS SINCE 1SMCfMtrs m MU|0i US Cities. Puerto PicoToronto Conod* I lufono SoitMrlondCHICAGO CENTER6216N.CLARKCHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60660(312) 764-5151SJ. SUBURBANIDS. LAGRANGE ROADSUITE 201LAGRANGE. 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Yet we arestill in the infancy of the microelectronicsrevolution. And no company is doing more tospeed it than Intel.CHOOSE YOUR AREA OFINVOLVEMENTWe re an acknowledged leader in four majorproduct areas: semiconductor memories andmicroprocessors, and microcomputer systemsand memory systems. Plus we re extendingour leadership into data-base management.Our success has created a wide variety ofcareer opportunities in technical marketingand finance.FOUR GREAT LOCATIONS.We’ve built our facilities where the quality oflife is high, because only in such places can weattract the highly skilled, highly motivatedpeople we need. That’s why we can offer youCalifornia’s San Francisco Peninsula:Portland, Oregon; Phoenix, Arizona; or Austin,Texas, each with its own intriguing lifestyle.BUSINESS SCHOOLGRADUATES.If you're about to receive an MBA (and for posi¬tions in technical marketing have a technicalundergraduate degree); and you’d like to helpus change the way the world lives, we d like to talk with you. Stop by the Business School tosign up for interviews during our visit. Or ifyou’ll be unable to see us on campus, writeto any of our locations:CaliforniaIntel College Relations3065 Bowers AvenueSanta Clara, CA 95051OregonIntel College Relations3585 S.W. 198th AvenueAloha, OR 97005ArizonaIntel College Relations5000 W. Williams Field RoadChandler AZ 85224TexasIntel MRI/College Relations12675 Research BoulevardAustin,TX 78759An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/H.inU4&L0.(E<BdX£0£$ <D0-IRCEAIDOW <G»OT'lajrt,T>e^wi4 a., TTarCtWi,rKille-j-,rPSEtfjfcUS J gt-lDCCO®#c>?• <5peA_ g> P-M rw—'TKo«-s • U tO-ICS<2>E.0<U)ttApZV £<fc*<t>CPCEIR«aWlE.<5-G>iOTnH Q/PtOG/LE.DeSYTO'ir042>w»TreHQ)ras 9*3®.<$» <20 cheoThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 30, 1979 11■ ■ ■ECKANKAR®A Wav of Lift*presents a Regional SeminarSAT. NOV. 3 / SUN. NOV. 4SAT. - 10 am Free Lecture & Film Shown1 pm 1 st Session7 pm 2nd SessionSUN. - 9 am Free Lecture10 am 3rd Session* An ECKANKAR Seminar is an oppor¬tunity to meet with others who yearn toknow more about life and about the trueheavenly worlds.Lectures, films, books, and the creativearts present a straight-forward approach toa deeper understanding of the spirituallife, while the seeker may gain an individualexperience of the true nature of ECKAN¬KAR and its deep spiritual message, that itis the most ancient Kay of life known toman.Student Donation S3Adult Donation $5For more info call 585-337dAsk a Peace Corps volunteer why he teaches businessmarketing techniques to vegetable farmers in CostaRica. Ask a VISTA volunteer why she organizes therural poor in Arkansas to set-up food co-ops They’llprobably say they want to help people, want to usetheir skills, be involved in social change, maybe travel,learn a new language or experience another cultureAsk them:REGISTER NOW AT PLACEMENT OFFICE FORINTERVIEWS: WED NOV 7ISTA Taste the pride of Canada.Molson.You’ll get a taste ofnearly 200 years of brewing hentage every time you opena cool, green bottle of MOLSON GOLDEN.™North America’s oldest brewery got its start backin 1786. John Molson, our founder, wouldn’t recognizeour modem breweries, but he’d be proud of thegood, smooth taste of GOLDEN.™A taste that says Canada m every refreshing sip.Brewed and bollled in Canada; imported by Martlet Importing Co., Inc . Great Neck, N YEye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know the differ¬ence between advertised cheapglasses or contact lenses and com¬petent professional service.Our reputation is your guaranteeof satisfaction. | VALUABLE COUPON jS Valuable Coupon! iCOLORPROCESSING* Kodak The 4th is Freewhen you pay for 3Bring in your favorite color slideswith this coupon and we'll haveKodak make four same-size KODAKColor Prints for the price of threeYou get one FREE. Hurry, this offerexpires November 14,1979. Stop intoday for details.model camera» 342 ( Jsl SSlh St 493 6700VALUABLE COUPON-CUT OUT12 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 30, 19794Gridders grind Grinnell, 25-13By Andy RothmanTom Kurucz’s second victory as head foot¬ball coach at the University of Chicago final¬ly materialized Saturday at Stagg Field inthe form of a 25-13 trouncing of the winlessGrinnell College Pioneers.The Maroons were able to use everyplayer on their roster, including three dif¬ferent quarterbacks, as they broke a fivegame losing streak in their final home gameof the year.Chicago’s defense played another stronggame Saturday, as they shut down the Mid¬west Conference’s sixth leading runner,Grinnell’s Gene Reid, who came into thegame with an 81 yards-per-game average.In all, the Pioneers gained only 45 yards on30 carries.Unable to move on offense, Grinnell wasforced to punt in the middle of the firstquarter and did so very poorly, giving Chi¬cago the ball on the Pioneer twenty yardline. The Maroons did not do much with theball either, but senior Scott Jansen kickedhis first field goal of the yar from 33 yardsout with 7:08 remaining in the period to givethe Maroons a 3-0 lead.Another bad punt gave Chicago excellentfield position only minutes later. After NickFilippo kept the Chicago drive going with a13 yard run on third and six the Maroonswere again stopped and Jansen, having anoutstanding game on kickoffs and punts aswell, came on to kick a 28 yard field goalwith 1:20 left in the first quarter.On Grinnell’s next play from scrimmageReid had the ball pulled from his grasp andMaroon safety Do Kim recovered it on theGrinnell twenty-two. Kim, who saw consi¬derable playing time at quarterback behindstarter Mark Meier, got the Maroons a firstand goal on the Grinnell seven with a sneakon the first play of the second quarter in afourth and one situation. The next play sawKim find tight end Byron Trott for a scoringpass only 20 seconds into the second period.Jansen’s kick made the score 13-0.The Maroons were unable to capitalize onanother opportunity when defensive backAntonio Tijerina (who later intercepted apass) pounced on another Reid fumble onthe Chicago forty-two with 5:02 to go in thehalf.As the first half drew to a close, the Pio¬neers moved into Chicago territory only tohave Jansen intercept a pass and return allthe way to the Grinnell twenty. Chicago gotanother break when, on the next play, Grin¬nell was called for pass interference as aMeier pass sailed over split end Jeff Fore¬man’s head in the end zone and the Maroonswere given an automatic first down on theGrinnell one. Filippo then took a pitcharound the right side for another Chicagoscore. After a two point coverage attemptfailed, the score held at 19-0 for the half. ‘On the opening drive of the second half,Chicago came right back, aided by a face-masking penalty which gave the Maroons afirst down on the Grinnell thirty-four. ThenMeier hit Foreman for 22 yards and a firstdown on the Pioneer twelve. Two playslater. Fillippo scored his second touchdownof the day on a 12 yard run off the draw play.Jansen's kick was wide and the Maroonshad scored their final points at Stagg Fieldin 1979.Chicago’s rushing game received a muchneeded lift with the return of Filippo andScott Detwiler (in limited action) to the lin¬eup. The Maroons had rushed for anaverage of 20 yards in their previous twogames to rank last in the conference in thatcategory. On Saturday, Chicago gained 155yards on the ground on 45 carries. Filippo anMeier each had 51 of those yards.Grinnell managed to score two touch¬downs in the fourth quarter, after Kuruczhad begun to play his substitutes. After theMaroon line dumped Pioneer quarterbackTom Hanseter for an 11 yard los on a flea-flicker attempt, Hanseter (19-35 for 271yards in the air, with two touchdowns andthree interception) found Reid on a screenpass. Reid turned down the left side andwent 41 yards for the first Pioneer score.Mid-way through the period, Chicago de¬cided to t’ ' and keep a drive going on afourth and ix from the Grinnell thirty-four,Meier four >. end Thad McGwire on a deepslant for a ouchdown only to have the playcalled back because of a holding penalty.The Pioneers scored again with 2:08 re¬ maining in the game when Hanseter con¬nected with an unlisted end on a flankerscreen and thirteen yard touchdown. An¬other phantom player came on to kick theextra point.In their last three games, Chicago’s de¬fense has given up an average of only 15.3points-per-game. Linebackers Jim Coy andMark Kosminskas along with defensivetackle Dave Vacala all had outstanding games against Grinnell.With Lake Forest’s upset win over Beloiton Saturday, the Maroons have third placeall to themselves in the conference’s BlueDivision. Carleton is in first place whileLake Forest and Beloit are tied for second.Chicago will try to even their conference re¬cord at 2-2 this week at Carleton. A winwould also give the Maroons the sameoverall record they had last year, 3-5. Harriers 2ndThe University of Chicago varsity crosscountry team finished second in their owninvitational meet on Saturday in Washing¬ton Park. North Central College won themeet and Wheaton College was second.Chicago’s Mike Axinn took secondamong individuals in the race. Wheaton’sDan Henderson won in a time of 19:05,more than ten minutes better than Axinn’stime. Henderson was ranked in the nation¬al top ten after last year’s NCAA Division Icross country championships. Art Knightwas Chicago’s second finisher.Kickers outclass Ripon... to face IrishAfter what has been a rather frustratingseason all around the Maroon soccer teamtook out some of their frustrations in rippingconference opponent Ripon College by ascore of 4-2 on Saturday afternoon, on theroad. It was the Maroons first conferencewin (that was actually played) since their 6-0 blowout victory over Lawrence.The game itself was anticlimatic afterlast Wednesday’s thriller against LakeForest. Ripon was definitely overmatchedand the Maroons controlled play for the ma¬jority fo the game. Two of the Maroons fourgoals came on penalty kicks by Zbig Banas. These goals were his first and second of theseason. The other goals were added by ToddSilber who is proving to be an invaluable ad¬dition to the team. Silber scored his sixthand seventh goals of the season and he leadsthe team in both goals scored and totalpoints. Silber’s fine play may earn himsome recognition when the all conferenceteams are announced.With the victory the Maroons raided thefinal conference record to 3-1-1, which keepsthem in second place behind Lake Forest.The team’s overall record now stands at 4-3-1.The Maroons have their biggest non¬conference game of the year coming up this Tuesday against Notre Dame at South Bend,Indiana. Something of a rivalry hasdeveloped between the two teams sincetheir meeting last year so this promises tobe an exciting game.Last year’s game at Stagg Field saw anunderdog Chicago team take a 3-1 secondhalf lead before the Irish came back to tiethe score in regulation time. Both teamsdecided to play overtime though the extraplay was unnecessary because of thegame’s non-conference nature. Near the endof the second five minutes overtime, NotreDame’s Terry Finnigan scored on a headerand the Maroons have been waiting for arematch ever since.Spikers stopped twice at home, no statesby Darrell WuDunn“Disappointing” was what coach RosieResch used to describe the results of her vol¬leyball team’s matches with Wheaton andAurora Colleges on Thursday. After extend¬ing each opponent to the full five games, theUniversity of Chicago varsity squad fellshort twice, dropping both contests.The losses, however, were not the only un¬fortunate turn of events to beset the team.Before the matches, the Maroons hadlearned that Lake Forest had defeated Trin¬ity in their final district match thus ruiningChicago’s hopes of post-season play. Chica¬go finishes third in the district while NorthPark and Lake Forest, in first and secondplace respectively, will go on to the statetournament.Chicago opened the evening againstWheaton, a team which had already quali¬fied to represent their region in the statetourney. The match started in what ap¬peared to be a rout for Chicago. TheCrew's runBy Lina GoodeFollowed by a strong pack of competitors,Allan Brecher won the University ofChicago Women’s Crew three mile Run-for-Fun Saturday October 27 with a time of15:51. Second place in the men’s categorywent to Michael Brosnan at 16:21, while Cin-di Sanborn took first among the women in19:04, followed by Marianne Crawford witha time of 19:15.First place winners received dinner fortwo certificates from Giordano’s anddessert at Gertie’s. Second, third, andfourth place winners in both men’s andwomen’s competition were given parizes orgift certificates from the Hyde Park Co-op,the U.C. Bookstore. Powell’s Bookstore, andthe A< Jlete’s Foot.The Women’s Crewf enjoyed the opportuni¬ty to sponsor a community run, somethingout of the ordinary for Hyde Parkers. FunRun organizer Nora Murphy said, “We feltit was an unusual idea, and hoped that peo¬ple would like it.” Another run is planned forthe spring, she added.By charging a SI.50 entry fee. theWomen’s Crew managed to cover costs andgenerate some extra funds to help pay fortheir upcoming trip to Knoxville for theHead of the Tennessee. November 4. Theteam will be competing in the Elite Foursand Elite Singles represented byoars wo men Barb O’Brien, ElisseGhitelman. Nora Murphy. Susan Urbas. andcoxswain Virginia Smith. Maroons struck quickly, never giving Whea¬ton a chance to set up. and took the firstgame 15-4. Refusing to let up, Chicagograbbed the second game 15-9. Wheaton wasunable to organize themselves during thefirst two games, and Chicago looked like itwas going to sweep. Wheaton, however, re¬grouped during the next game, catchingChicago off guard, and won 15-5. From thenon the Maroons were never able to recover,as Wheaton simply overpowered them.Wheaton took advantage of Chicago’s poorservices and service returns and, comingback from two games down, took the matchby winning the last two games 15-10 and15-7.After their tiring match with Wheaton,Chicago then had to play a fresh Aurorateam. Still dejected from the opening loss,Chicago was unable to concentrate on thegame at hand. In the first game, theMaroons’ play was sloppy and unorganized.Aurora, a talented but somewhat unorgan¬ized squad, quickly took advantage of thesituation and won 15-6. In the second gamethough, the Maroons seemed to gain new-life. as they jumped to a 14-6 lead. Their sud¬den surge, however was short lived. TheMaroons saw their lead dwindle as Aurorafought back to even the score at 14. Fortun¬ately, Chicago was able to hold on, 16-14.The third game was very close. Chicagotrailed most of the game but rarely by morethan a couple of points. The team could notovertake the opponent though and fell 13-15. The fourth game began just as the secondone did as Chicago took a commanding lead.This time, however, the team muffledAurora's late rally and won 15-9. Fatiguefrom the previous match took its toll as Chi¬cago, never really threatening, lost the de¬ciding game 8-15.Afterwards, coach Resch said she was dis¬appointed that her players lost the matchesafter coming so close to winning. Like somany other times during the season, theteam came within a few points of victoryonly to fall short in the end. The club has thetalent, the coaching, and the discipline towin more games, but it is no longer a matterof skill w hen a team consistentlv fails to winin the clutch. According to Resch, the pro¬blem is psychological, “hey have the skillbut they just can’t win those last crucialpoints.”With the two losses on Thursday, the vol¬leyball team’s record lowers to a disappoint¬ing 6-10. “We’re a better team than our re¬cord shows,” defends Resch. Almost halfthe club’s losses were the result of close,tough matches which the team could havewon had they been able to win the importantpoints.Yesterday, the Maroons travelled to theCollege of St. Francis for their last roadgame (too late for presstime). On Thursday,the team will play their final game of theseason, at home, against North Central Col¬lege.VERSAIIIE5254 S. DorchesterWEI.I, MAINTAINEDBITI.DINfiAttractive 1V? and• 2>/2 Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$192 - $291Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus Stop324 0200 Mrs. Groak GOLDEN POODLESALONPROFESSIONAL DOG GROOMINGALL BREEDS2841 W. 63rd St.Appointment Calls Accepted From7 A M. to 10 P.MPick up and Delivery 778The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, October 30, 1979 — 13-8871The Late ShowCALENDARTUESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “The Consequences of theDepression and the New Deal for Ameican Gov¬ernment" guests Barry Karl, Fredrick Mishkin,and Antonin Scalia, 6:30 am, channel 7.Comm, on Developmental Biology: Seminar-“Organization of Aggregation in DictyosteliumDiscoideum by Intercellular Communication withCyclic-Amp" speaker Ken Tomchik, 1:00-2:00 pm,CLSC 610.Committee on Social Thought: Lecture - "Theoryof the Nascent State” speaker Francesco Al-beroni, 1:30 pm, Classics 20.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available be¬tween 4:00 - 8:00 Bartlett gym, free.Women’s Field Hockey: UC vs. Lake Forest, 4:15pm, Stagg Field.Hillel: Modern Jewish Philosophy class, 7:30 pm,Hillel.DOC Films: "A Man’s Castle" 7:30 pm,"Disputed Passage” 9:00 pm, Cobb.Women’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm, in theWomen's Center, Blue Gargoyle 3rd floor. Infocall 752-5655.Hillel: Israeli Folk Dancing. 8:00 pm, Ida NoyesTheatre, 50 cents.WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic: "Recent Business Cycle Episodes and the Great Depression” guests BarryKarl, Krederick Mishkin, and Antonin Scalia, 6:30am, channel 7.Rockefeller Chapel: Service of the Holy Commu¬nion, 8:00 am.Rockefeller Chapel: Robert Lodine, UniversityCarillonneur, recital, 12:15 pm, free.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women,2:00 pm.S.G. Academic Affairs Comm: meets 3:00 pm, IdaNoyes East Lounge.Dept of Biochemistry: "DNA Protein Interactionin Sie-Specific Recombination” speaker Lynn En-quist, 4:00 pm, Cummings room 101.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-8:00 pm, Bartlett gym, free.NOMOR: Committee meeting 7:00 pm, IdaNoyes 3rd floor sun lounge.DOC Films: "The Lost Weekend” 7:15 pm, "ThePrivate Life of Sherlock Holmes” 9:30 pm, Cobb.3Tai Chi Ch’uan Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Blue Gar¬goyle, 5655 University.Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyesgym.Hillel: Introduction to Jewish Mysticism Class,7:30 pm, Hillel.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Everyone Welcome.Country Dancers: Traditional dances of England,Scotland, and New England taught. Ida NoyesCloister Club, beginners welcome.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic: "Geothermal Energy: AGift from the Earth” guests Alfred Anderson, Jo¬hannes Weertman, Lee Younker, 6:30 am, chan¬nel 7.Noontime Concert: Vocal duets by Schumannand Brahms, performed by Jennifer Willard andDeborah Milamud, 12:15 pm, Reynolds Club NorthLounge.Center for Eastern Studies: Lecture - "The Artof Life in the Genji Monogatari” speaker EarlMiner, 2:30 pm, Foster Lounge.Dept of Microbiology: “Latent Infection byAdeno-Associated Virus and Its Possible Conse¬quences” speaker Dr. Kenneth Berns, 4:00 pm,Cummings 11th floor seminar room.Center for Urban Studies Public Affairs Pro¬gram: Lecture - "Transportation of the 80’s”speaker Lewis Hill, 4:30 pm, Harper 130.Rockefeller Chapel: Evening prayer, 5:00 pm.DOC Films: "An Autumn Afternoon" 7:15 and9:30 pm, Cobb.Table Tennis Club: meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.International House: "Cambodia Today: Plightof the Refugees” talk by Dr. Edwin Silverfhan,7;20 pm, I-House home room.Spartacus Youth League: Class series: Introduc¬tion to the Struggle for Socialism in the U.S. 7:30pm, Ida Noyes.Hillel: Class in Talmud, 8:00 pm, Hrllel.Law School Films: The More the Merrier” 8:30pm. Law School Auditorium. Science writers wantedby the Marooncall Andrew at 753- 3263Women's Union 8c University FeministsPresentsA Slide ShowonViolence in theMediaandDana Lobellfrom Women Against Pornography in N.Y.and discussion.Tues„ Oct. 30 at 7:30 P.M.Ida Noyes Library Freep^TWrrriir-irTanfMiii iwiwjii i<i>B)CLASSIFIED ADS 'papers, etc., expertly done on IBMSelectrlc II typewriter. Call Helene at757 7296after 6pm.AD RATESMaroon classifieds are effective andcheap. Place them In person at theMaroon business office In Ida NoyesHall by mall to the Maroon, Ida NoyesHall room 304, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, 60637. All ads must be paid inadvance. Rates: 60' per line (30spaces) for U of C people, 75' per lineotherwise. $1 for special headline.Deadlines: For Tuesday paper, 12noon Friday; for Friday, 12 noonWednesday.Display advertising rates areavailable upon request. 753-3263. fant^ On-the-job training. Call 375-6353 PERSONALSChicago Sinai Congregation seeks astary (40SPACE2 BR CONDO 2 BLKS FROM UC.Hdwd. firs., new kit. and bath. Avail,immed. *45,000. 565-1361, 321-0432.LASTUNITLEFT1 br condo in Kenwood - 4726 S. Green¬wood. Tastefully renovated *32,000. Byappointment only. Matrix Realty Co.240-6400.Need an apartment or tenant? Call theStudent Gov't Housing Search Service753-3273.4-6 weekdays.Mature and responsible male needsroom in University/Hvde Park areathrough November. Arr. flexible •work/board exchange or rental basis.Please call 493-2362 or 2361 morningsor evenings.1 RM. in 3 RM Apt. 57th and Harper *95month Tel. 241-6981.Sublet big de luxe studio Apt. 12thfloor Regents Park, sunny w/w carpet,campus bus. From Dec. 1st, *314/mo.363-2567/eve.1 BR APT. SUBLET - South ShoreDrive and 74th. Clean, quiet, sunny,recently carpeted and decorated. 1 bkfrom UC bus, at front door, near 1C.Avail. Dec. 1. *225 includes heat andhot water. 221 -3374 after 6 pm.WINTER SUBLET - Sunny one-bedroom in faculty building 5 minutewalk to Quadrangles. Available Dec.15 to Mar. 30. Will rent for all or part ofthat period. *282/month. Call 753-2969days or 643-3660.Co-op apt for sale-3 rooms; sm. bdrm.,separate Ivg and dng rms, kitchenette,bath. Good location. Safe, well- main¬tained bldg. Only *73/mo. incl. alltaxes and heat and gas. ONLY 20,000Call PAULA684-1716, 752-4506.Quiet room wanted for studious stu¬dent. As soon as possible, for theacademic year. Molly 684-6721 even¬ings.PEOPLE WANTEDThe Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects inpsycholinguistic and Cognitivepsychology experiments. For furtherinformation call 753-4718.Wanted: 15-20 hour position availablein local financial institution. Light typ¬ing and ability to deal with publicvital. Call Ulana McCoy, 955-4444.Babysitter wanted for 9 mo. old. Max.of 30 hrs/wk. Call 752-7402.Recent college graduate? Consider adifferent tack-home management.*150/wk. and benefits. 40/hrs. flexiblyscheduled. Interesting family. SouthShore home. Cook, clean, care for in- SERVICESfull time secretary (45 hrs.) for theRabbi. Excellent typing skills, someshorthand. Available December 1. CallMrs. Kalllsh 288-1600.Shopper needed • groceries and er¬rands run weekly. Car needed. Call955-0541 anytime.Part-time copy editor for quarterlyscientific journal. Equivalent of 2-3days per quarter; schedule flexible.Possible 3 year term. Contact T.Schopf, 753-8163, or send CV toPALEOBIOLOGY, HGS., 5734 S. EllisAve.Native Serbo-Croatian speaker to helpgrad student increase fluency inspoken language at least 1 hr. weekly.Call Masha -241-6878.Full-time person to care for 9-monthold boy In our house near 51st andWoodlawn. Light housekeeping. Call493-7697 evenings or on weekends,947-6389 days.Faculty family seeks student part-time for help with light housekeeping.Flexible hours. Call Jean or Paul.241-6766.PART-TIME SECRETARY approx¬imately 20 hr/week, flexible hours, fortwo faculty members, Dept, of theGeophysical Sciences. Cor¬respondence, manuscript andmiscellaneous typing. Shorthand notnecessary. Private Office see or callMary Rlchllk HGS (Hinds) 157 A753-8104.Babysitter wanted for Infant occas. BAD ADevenings call 684-5581. Writers' Workshop Plaza 2-8377.Patterns of sexual response can bechanged. Pre-orgasmlc women'sgroup now forming, led by two M.A.'swith special concern for women'sIssues. Call Linda at 996-1467 days,338-2163 eves.MARY MARGARETI asked you once, I asked you twice, Iasked you very, very nice. Those shoesand socks you bought from the store:WHO IN THE #«,*!#* DID YOU BUYTHEM FOR?Happy Anniversary, R.B.! Many moreof the same.PRIME MOVERS: 1 or 2 men w/bigtruck: We'll move your soul (andpossessions) 324-1977.CARPENTER Shelf-systems. Plat¬form beds. Minor remodeling.Repairs. Give me a call, I'll give you ahand. David 324-5447.MONTEITH& RANDMr. Monteith and Miss Rand seemnothing so much as two innocentsthreading their way, hand-in-handamong such hazards as mariguanaand cocaine, x-rated photo machines,sex change operations and extremistpolitics.FOR SALEPassport Photos while you wait. ModelCamera, 1342 E. 55th St. Chicago, III.60615. Call 493-6700.1975 DODGE DART for sale AC, V8,PS, PB, AM-FM, Mich, radials. Goodcond., Only *1950, best to call 7:30 a.m.Phone 684-4509.BMW 1600*950. David 324-5447,Closeout Special! Canon AV-1 with 50mm 1.8 lens now only *209.95! Specialbonus: a Canon hiking case, valued at*30.00 Special good until November 6,1979 or until out of stock. ModelCamera, 1342. E.55th St.Half-fare United coupons for sale. Call955-7472, 241-7282, except weekends.Fine Spanish Classic Guitar w/softcase. *450. neg. 324-5564.PEOPLE FOR SALEProfessional photography for modelcomposites. Call 684-2286.ARTWORK - posters, Illustration,calligraphy, invitations, etc. NoelYuovovlch, 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.AMBITIOUS PEOPLE - Start yourprofitable business. We help. 225-2583.Retired secretary will do typing of stu¬dent papers, etc. Student Rates821-1868.Full time openings in toddlerplaygroup. Campus loc. Meals,*55/work week. Call 288-5355.Will babysit full time in your home.Mon.-Fri. starting Dec. or Jan. HydePark -955-4197 after 5:00pm.Typing of Dissertations, thesis, term Can you write exciting seductivepublicity? Can you plan a program, aconcert, a reading, a noontime prankwith zing? FESTIVAL OF THE ARTSis offering all exhibitionists a uniqueopportunity to show their stuff, today4:30, INH 218. BE THERE!!!SCENESLesbian potluck Sun. Nov. 4th at 5 pmin the Blue Gargoyle for more in¬formation call 753-3274 Thurs. 8-10 or288-0123.WOMEN'S STUDIESAll students and faculty Interested inwomen's studies are invited to the firstorganizational meeting of the Commit¬tee for the Study of Women at 4:30 onNov. 1, Thurs in the Ida NoyesLibrary.PORNOGRAPHYFORUMWomen's Union presents Dana Lobellfrom Women Against Pornography inNew York, with a slide show:"Violence in the Media" and discus¬sion after. In Ida Noyes Library Tues.,Oct. 30, at 7:30 pm.SKI TEAMDon't think the Midwest hills arechallenging? Challenge the Midwest!Join the UC Ski team. PracticesTuesdays 4:15 pm at Bartlett Gym. In¬fo call Mitch Levine 752-5977.December Graduates..Campus interviews for Texas Instruments,Consumer Products Division, Lubbock.Manufacturing Operations,Management DevelopmentProgramSeeking motivated persons interested ;ncareers in high volume, dynamic, hightechnology business. Managementdevelopment program will offer opportuni¬ties in areas which include manufacturingmanagement, material management,warehouse management, financialplanning and purchasing. You will spend 6months in at least 3 of the above areasbefore being assigned permanent manage¬ment responsibilities Operations AnalystDevelop financial models for businessentities, prepare short and long termfinancial forecast, analyze actual perform¬ance to forecast, develop and implementsystems to enhance existing database andto perform special analysisInterviewing on CampusNov. 6 & 7If unable to interview at this time, sendresume to Jim Joiner P O. Box 10508M S 5841 Lubbock TX 79408Texas InstrumentsI NCOR PORA T E DAn equal opportunity cmployci M I FOLK DANCINGThe U of C Folkdancers have twoweekly meetings at Ida Noyes. Sun¬days at 8:00 Inn - Adv. and Mondays at8:00 beginners. At! are welcome.ARTISTS ANDCRAFTERSIf you are Interested in sharinggallery-shop space at 57th andWoodIChris 493-3290. Total dues will be*15. No commission, but a few hours ofwork per week will be required.NOTIMEFOR LOVE?Filled with gripes or wonderfully hap¬py stories of what It means to workwhile attending school? Maroonreporter writing series on studentswho work and needs to hear what youhave to say. Call Richard at 753-3265.BENEFITAUCTIONCome to an auction with dinner anddrinks at Sauer's Restaurant, 311 E.23rd St„ to benefit Hyde Park's An¬cona School on Nov. 2nd from 7 p.m.for a *10 donation. New householdequipment, original art works andmany items making nice holiday giftsare available. Call 924-2356 or 241-6617.PROGRAMMER/ANAYLSTThe Center for Research In SecurityPrices in the Graduate School ofBusiness needs a full-time program¬mer/analyst to develop and maintainresearch data bases and assist in theoverall research effort. Applicantsshould have experience with IBM370/168 (OS/VS or VM), knowledge ofPL/L or Fortran, (370 ASSEMBLERdesirable also); and prior trainlng-orwillingness to learn - finance andstatistics. Good communication skillsessential. Position available im¬mediately. Salary Range *17K-*21K,plus University of Chicago Benefits,including partial tuition remission.Position offers considerable flexibili¬ty, responsibility, challenge and op¬portunities for growth. If Interestedand qualified, contact ProfessorScholes, 753-3686. The University ofChicago is an Equal Opportunity/Af¬firmative Action Employer. and a costume contest at noon Comein costume and join us for a GREATTIME!WEAR A COSTUME!Tomorrow is Halloween—dress up forthe occasidn! Wednesday is costumeday!! YOGARe-energize and harmonize body,mind, and spirit. Begin Yoga this weekat the Gargoyle 5:30-7:00 p.m. Hathapostures, breathing, energization,meditation and deep relaxation. 7 ses¬sions (40. Call Dobbi337-8100. 288 3706 orCAMBODIATODAYInformative talk on Cambodia, theFamine, refugee problems, the reliefeffort, and effects on other So. EastAsian Countries. Given by Dr. EdwinSilverman, Director of Governor's In¬fo. Center for Asian Assistance. Nov.1, Thurs. 7:30 p.m. InternationalHouse, Home Room.PIANO LESSONSProfessional pianist seeks eagerstudents, beginning to advanced. Alsoavailable for accompanying andcoaching. Introductory offer: ONEFREE LESSON (no obligation). Oncampus. Call 955-9337 mornings.VISUALIZATIONAND HOLISTICHEALTHEnjoy high levels of health and well¬being. Learn about holistic health anddesign and implement your own pro¬gram through use of the life style diaryand visualization in a supportivegroup. Tuesdays at the Gargoyle7-9:00 p.m. Begin this week. Call Dobbi288-3706, or 337-8100,SELF-HYPNOSISSEMINAROn campus Thursdays from 7:00-9:00p.m. Learn the fundamentals of Self-Hypnosis and develop the skill andtechnique necessary for its use. "Ithas the power to help you transformwhatever area of your life you addressit to from enhancing study skills andImproving health to deepening rela¬tionships and clarifying and helpingyou attain future goals." 7 sessions,*70. Taught by a clinical hypnotherapyprogram graduate. Call Dobbi 288-3706or 337 8100. UC HOTLINE753*1777From 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. there is a placeyou can call If you have a Question,need a Referral, or want to Talk - TheUC HOTLINE.KOSHER KITCHEN?A Kosher Cafeteria is now beingorganized for '80 '81. If you would beinterested in buying some of yourmeals there, drop in at Hillel and leaveyour name.NEWYORKTIMES"Their most popular routines Includea conversation with a stoned bug andan encounter between two transexualswho discover they were once marriedto each other."Jennifer Dunning reporting onMonteith and Rand."A decidedly engaging and often in¬ventive couple."Walter KerrMonteith and Rand will be appearingin Mandel Hall Saturday, Nov. 2.Tickets are now on sale. MABSINGLESENJOY HYDE PARK SINGLES: Being singleand Jewish in Chicago need not meanbeing lonely. CHUTZPAHUNLIMITED offers a warm, sup¬portive atmosphere for Jewish adults,25-45. For info, call Ed 324 3686 orEleanor 248-2661.STAND AGAINSTHUNGERSign up this evening at dinner to fastseveral times during the year. Costs ofthe meals you give up will be given toorganizations caring for the hungry.Hunger Concern Group.HAPPYHALLOWEENJoin EF Clown and Co at Hutch Com¬mons on Oct. 31, 11:30-1:00. Festivitiesinclude bobbing for apples, a pumpkincarving contest, a face-paintinq booth Complete a day of study by giving andreceiving a deeply relaxing massagebefore a warm crackling fire. Ambientenvironment, friendly people, ex¬cellent instructor, center of campus.Tues., 9-10:30 p.m., 5655 University. 7sessions *70. Reservations call Dobbi288-3706, or 337-8100.WOMEN'S TRACKVarsity Indoor and Outdoor Track Infomeeting Wed. 7 at 7:30 pm in BartlettTrophy Room for more info call753-3574. LUNCHTIMECONCERTSEvery Thursday at 12:15 in ReynoldsNorth Lounge. This week, 11/1, vocalduets by Schumann and Brahms, per¬formed by Jennifer Willard, sopranoand Deborah Malamud, alto. Bringyour lunch and enjoy the concert!CONDO FOR SALEEast Hyde Park Condo For Sale.Large 2 BR, Sunroom w/b fireplace.Many extras. Phone 684-3167.Whom the Universityof Chicago has joined asroommates, let no womanput asunder.andabout twoISssSsS1men 2k 1 Qnd ert*,th $ m,.nThe Chicago Maroonn — Tuesday, October 30, 1979 — 15