Vol. 89 No. iv. - The University of Chicago Copyright 1979 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, January 15, 19805400 wrap-upTenants proclaimBy Curtis BlackThe tenants of 5400 S. Harper areclaiming a victory in their out-ofcourt settlement with their build¬ing’s management. “The landlordagreed to the tenants' demands,”said Nancy Cleveland, president ofthe building’s tenants association.Rents withheld in a nine-monthrent strike will be applied to build¬ing repairs, and lawsuits initiatedby both tenants and managementagainst each other will be droppedunder the agreement signed De¬cember 5. Leases for the strikingtenants are to be renewed untilSeptember 30.Personal injury suits by individ¬ ual tenants are not affected by theagreement. At least seven tenantswho were hospitalized with carbonmonoxide poisoning in a boiler leakon March 15, 1979 which killed onewoman, are suing the owners fordamages up to S15,000.Following the death and hospi¬talizations. tenants organized the5400 Harper Tenants Associationand attempted to meet with DaltonManagement Co. When the ten¬ants failed to get action on their de¬mands, they began a rent strike,with over half the tenants of the 49-unit building depositing their rentsin a secret tenant association bankaccount.Over the summer members ofI.C. rapist soughtBy Jett DavitzAn eighteen year old highschool student was raped lastSunday at approximately 8:40 pmat the 59th St. I.C. station.Police described the assailant as a black male about 20 yearsold, five feet seven inches and be¬tween 140 and 150 pounds.This is the third rape at the 59thSt. station in the last six months.Chicago police feel that the sameindividual may be involved in allthree cases.On August 14 a 25 year old Uni¬versity of Chicago graduate stu¬dent was raped and beaten underthe 59th St. IC viaduct as she waswalking back from the Stony Is¬land bus stop. The rape occurredat 9:30 pm.On November 25, a 23 year oldUniversity employee was robbedand raped in the waiting room ofthe station late in the afternoon.Two assailants were allegedly in¬volved in that incident..According to police, the highschool student raped last Sundaydid not attend school in HydePark They say she had been vi¬siting friends.Turn to Page 3 victoryProtesters outside 5400 S. Harper building during inspection last Au¬gust.the 5400 Harper Tenants Associa¬tion joined other tenants and theAd Hoc Tenants Committee toform the Hyde Park TenantsUnion The building’s tenants asso¬ciation also helped tenants of an¬other building on Harper orga¬nize.When Dalton Managementbrought eviction suits against 27striking renters, the tenants asso¬ciation requested jury trials, andfiled countersuits for damagesfrom mismanagement.In August the building owners,who hold the building in a blindbank trust, changed managementcompanies from Dalton to Realtyand Mortgage Company, one ofChicago’s largest realtors. Cleve¬land said then she felt this too wasa victory for tenants, since Realtyand Mortgage is a “reputable andprofessional” realtor, she said.Prior to the settlement, manage¬ment was already making repairswhich had been requested, rehaul¬ing the faulty boiler and the heat¬ing system, and rewiring the elec¬trical system.About $20,000 withheld by 12 ten¬ants since April is to be depositedin an escrow' account to be admin¬istered by lawyers for the tenants association and the owners. Thataccount will be used to pay for theinstallation of an intercom system,lighting at the front door, and re¬pairs to mailboxes, fire doors. sinks, exterior masonry and win¬dows. as well as three gallons ofpaint for each apartment.Turn to Page 3Fees up sharply at other schoolsBy David GlocknerStudents here are likely to re¬ceive bad news in the next fewweeks, judging from tuition andfees increases already announcedby private schools around thecountry. Six major private schoolswill charge between 11.5% and 15%more for tuition and room andboard fees during the 1980-81school year.These figures are particularlyominous for University of Chicagostudents because last year’s 10% increase in tuition and fees herewas among the sharpest in the na¬tion. No Ivy League school in¬creased its tuition more than 9.7%last year, with the majority of in¬creases falling between 8% and9.5%. University officials are ex¬pected to announce next year s tu¬ition and room charges sometimein late January or early Febru¬ary.the greater 1979 general infla¬tion rate is the major factor in thisyear's larger tuition increases.Soaring energy prices — which alone will cost Harvard studentsS100 in added room charges nextyear — and costly union wage con¬tracts have posed particular prob¬lems for financial officers atschools around the countryFaced with these cost increases,schools have had little choice but toincrease tuition. The poor perfor¬mance of the stock market thisyear has meant that endowmentincome, the main source of fundsfor most private universitites. hasincreased only slightly, usually atTurn to Page 3Zonis on Iran: U.S. should ‘‘hang tough” and not impose sanctionsBy Greg MizeraMarvin Zonis, associate profes¬sor of human development andformer director of the Center forMiddle Eastern Studies, last Fri¬day criticized efforts by the UnitedStates to impose economic sanc¬tions against Iran and said theCarter administration should“hang tough” on the hostageissue.Speaking to about one-hundred-and-thirty people at the HillelFoundation, Zonis said that inter¬national economic sanctionsagainst Iran would be counter¬productive to the release of ap¬proximately fifty Americans heldcaptive in Teheran by Iranian mili¬tants demanding the return of de¬posed shah Mohammed Reza Pah-levi.(On Sunday, the Soviet Union ve¬toed a United Nations SecurityCouncil resolution requested by theUnited States to impose such sanc¬tions. It appears likely that the United States will now try to orga¬nize an embargo among its allies ofall goods, except food and medi¬cine, exported to Iran.)Zonis said that such sanctionswould increase anti-American feel¬ings in Iran and “unify the Iranianpeople behind (Ayatollah Ruhol-lah) Khomeini at the very momentwhen it looks like the unity of hissupport is falling apart . . . TheIranians would rather starve foryears than give up the hostages ifthey thought it was a question offaith. I’m absolutely convinced ofthat.”According to Zonis. the UnitedStates should continue to carefullyobserve events in Iran and respondwith caution. “Every time theyraise the ante, we should raise theante ... We should hang tough . . .and show them that they need usmore than we need them.”However, Zonis said that re¬straint might be politically infeas¬ible for President Carter in an elec¬tion year. “The problem is that the best solution would mean some badpublicity.” and that Carter’s oppo¬nents for the presidency mightpush him towards stronger mea¬sures, Zonis said.During a • question-and-answerperiod after the lecture. Zonis saidthat putting the hostages on trialfor espionage, or using them aswitnesses in a "trial" of Americanforeign policy, might provoke mili¬tary retaliation. According toZonis, adverse public reactionwould effectively finish the presi¬dent’s political career if such atrial was allowed to take place.Zonis said that some encourag¬ing signs have come from Iran re¬cently. Among these he listed in¬creasingly ‘‘moderate’’statements issued by Iran’s Revo¬lutionary Council and the Iranianforeign minister, Sadegh Ghotzba-deh. Zonis also noted that Khomeinihas ceased his vocal support of thestudents, and called his refusal tohand over U.S. charge d’affairesTurn to Page 3 Marvin ZonisOur waiting for winter isfinally over....come ski with us,U.C.SKI CLUBSPRING BREAK MAR. 21 - 30RT. 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Navv ran help von fulfill that dream with a medical/osteopathic scholarship that pavs 100% tuition, hooks, fees and amonthly stipend of $453 per month. This scholarship can help ease theburden of financial worries and allow y ou to usde vour energy to do yourhest in medieal/osteopathie school.Sound interest in "7 Find out more about the Navv scholarship program l>\calling the Medical Programs Officer at 657-2169. collect, or hv writingto:MEDICAL PROGRAMS OFFICER (II PSP}\RD Clii<*tiooRl<l«i. 1 I. NAS (ilenview. IE. 60026REFORM RABBIS ARE NOT- PSYCHOLOGISTS— CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGISTS— LEGAL ADVISORS- SOCIAL WORKERS- MARRIAGE COUNSELORS- TEACHERS- RELIGIOUS LEADERSTHEY ARE MOREThey are RabbisHill)l>i Siinini'l K. Insi'/tli. \<iliomil Ihrri lnr of tilmissions.IIrlirrit I niun (.nlli'gi'-.lim isli Institute ofIdiuion.n ill lnj nil ciiin/ins It i'iIiii'siIiiy. Inniuii Y I o hi10 f. 1/. - / /*. M. (.nil 7 >2- / 127 lot nil niiiniinlini'iil.The College-Institute also offers degree programs in Jewish Education.Jewish Communal Service. Cantorial Studies, and Graduate Studies.2—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 15, V980Rhodes ScholarsFourth year college students Adam Schulman (left) and Gordon Crovitz, RhodesScholarship winners. This photo was omitted from last week’s Maroon.5400Continued from Page 1The tenants association deposited $3,000 inJanuary rents in the escrow account whenthe intercom system was not completed byDecember 31 as had been agreed, after$2,000 had be advanced from the accountduring December.“The management company should beaware that even under the terms of theagreement there is still the possibility of fur¬ther action” by the tenants, said Ed Sacks,author of the Chicago Tenants Handbook,who advised the tenants association. “Thedispute is being mitigated, but it is not overuntil the entire list of repairs is completedand the management company continues toshow good faith by communicating with thetenants,” Sacks said.Also unaffected by the settlement is thecriminal housing court case against thebuilding’s management. The most recent in¬spection added sixty violations, which werefound in four apartments, to the 79 multipleviolations already listed in the case. An¬other inspection is scheduled for this week.Sacks attributed the success of the tenantsassociation to several factors. “The manag-ment company refused to negotiate. Theywere arrogant. Every time they lied or re¬fused to respond to reasonable requests theymade the tenants stronger.” he said. Sacksalso noted “the great dedication and supportthe building had for its tenants association,”which he said gave the tenants “a common¬ality and a human bond which sustainedthem through their emotional and legalshocks.” Sacks also praised the tenant asso¬ciation leadership.Sacks said the success of the tenants at5400 Harper “will be an encouragement toother tenants groups to stick to their guns,”as well as a lesson that “things don’t happenas fast as they might think — they take pa¬tience and tenacity.”ZonisContinued from Page 1Bruce Laingdon to them “the first defeat thestudents have suffered” since they occupiedthe American embassy on November 4.Besides Khomeini and the students. Zonissaid, there are several other "powercenters” in Iran, including militant minori¬ty groups which consider the new Iraniangovernment illegitimate. The constitution ofIran, ratified last month by popular vote,gives the majority Shi ite Moslem sect al¬most total control of the political process.But Zonis noted that Sunni Moslems andother minorities “stayed away in droves”from voting places, and that some have since joined in anti-government insurrec¬tions. He said that “the possibilities for ashort-term return to stability in Iran are . . .close to zero.”AfghanistanZonis began his lecture with some com¬ments on the Soviet Union’s invasion ofAfghanistan, which lies on the easternborder of Iran. He outlined several motivesfor the aggressive action, including Soviets’concern over their future oil supply and adesire to insulate Moslems in the SovietUnion from effects of the Iranian revolution.He also said that leaders in the Kremlinwere disappointed by the likely defeat of theSALT II treaty in the Senate and the UnitedStates’ decision to build the MX missile sys¬tem. yet probably counted on the UnitedStates’ unwillingness to intervene in Afgh¬anistan once the invasion had begun.But Zonis said that the cost of the invasionto the Soviet Union will be greater than an¬ticipated. The foreign threat will uniteusually quarrelsome Afghan guerillagroups, he said, and bring increased finan¬cial and military aid from Arab states.Zonis also pointed out that the amount oflives and money the Soviets are losing in thefighting is extremely high. "To some extent,it (Afghanistan) will be the Soviet Union’sVietnam,” he said. However. Zonis said, theanalogy is.limited because there is no wide¬spread media coverage of the invasion inthe Soviet Union or a 10.000-mile supply linebetween Soveit troops in Afghanistan andtheir homeland.Grain embargoAs for the United States' embargo of grainto the Soviet Union, Zonis said it was “ex¬tremely important” to protest the invasionstrongly and called the embargo “a wisemove.” But he added that the United Statesw'ould have to enlist the help of its allies inorder to make the embargo effective. In anycase, Zonis said, “there is no quick fix” tothe problems in southwest Asia and theSALT II treaty should not be endangered bySoviet actions in that area.TuitionContinued from Page 1levels below the inflation rate. Nor haveattempts to increase donations been partic¬ularly successful, with two notable excep¬tions: Harvard, which successfully complet¬ed a $250 million fundraising campaign lastyear, and Emory University, which re¬ceived an early Christmas present of $100million from the heir to the Coca Cola for¬tune. Income from tuition and tees, the onlyform of income schools have complete con¬trol of. has had to be increased to meet ris¬ing expenses.The tuition increases have been accom¬panied by budget cuts at many schools. News BriefsNuclear weaponryexaminedTheodore J. Postol, physicist at ArgonneNational Laboratories, will discuss “TheNature of Strategic Weapons” Thursdayevening at 7 pm. in Ida Noyes Library. Aslide presentation about current nuclear ar¬senals, the satellites of the world powers,and the effect of nuclear w-eapons is sche¬duled.Postol has published articles about nu¬clear weaponry in The Bulletin of AtomicScientists. The Los Angeles Times. The Chi¬cago Tribune and The Progressive. Heserved as a consultant to the Center for De¬fense Information, and filed a technical af¬fidavit to the federal court in the Progres¬sive H-Bomb case.The talk and slide show is sponsored bythe University Committee for a NuclearOverkill Moratorium < NOMOR).The sensible candidateThe John Anderson for President Commit¬tee will meet Thursday at 7:30 pm in IdaNoyes Hall to discuss campaign plans forthe March 18 primary. Tom Powers, thechairman of the committee, will outlineplans for campaign activities on campus, inHyde Park, and throughout the statePowers said that Anderson, the Rockfordcongressman is scheduled to speak oncampus Friday, February 8 at 9:30 am inQuantrell auditorium. Powers also hopes toRaj DaryananiJohn Anderson bring State Representative Susan Catania(R-22 , to speak on Anderson’s behalf some¬time in late January or early February.Persons interested in further informationabout the Anderson campaign should callPowers at 753-2240Tough talk from TexasJohn Connally supporters at the Universi¬ty are optimistic about having their candi¬date appear on campus sometime before theMarch 18 Illinois primary. The newlyformed group was disappointed last weekw hen Connally’s son Mark canceled a recep¬tion at Ida Noyes on the morning of the dayhe was due to appear. But Connally’s desireto visit a campus in Illinois and his reluc¬tance to visit a state school has given theUniversity a good shot at getting him tovisit."We are expecting either Connally or amajor surrogate speaker, such as TexasSenator John Tower.” said Greg Wendt, oneof the organizers of the campus organiza¬tion. “The chance that Connally will be visit¬ing either the U of C or Northwestern is verygood and the prestige of the graduateschools here may give us an inside track.”The campus Connally group has notdrawn well from the college in the earlygoing, but interest from both law andbusinss school students may move the baseof the group to one of those areas. There wasalso talk of having a separate Law Schoolstudents for Connally group Students orfaculty from any area of the University in¬terested in Connally should contact MarkRobinson at 753-2240. Rm 1801 for details.Memorial for ChauvinA memorial service was held last Satur¬day for graduate student Randall Chauvinin Bond Chapel.Chauvin. a graduate student in EnglishLiterature, died on November 29th from abrain tumor He was a native of DeLandFlorida.He is survived by his wife Victoria who isthe assistant program director at the Inter¬national House.PI director quitsThomas Mullaney has resigned from hisposition as director of public informationMullaney left his job December 1 and is nowdoing free lance journalism. He is also doingconsulting work for universities in commun¬ications including work for the GraduateSchool of Business.The public information office last yearwon the CASE award for excellence innewswriting. No new director has beenhired.Princeton will eliminate 15 full-time facultymembers over the next three years, cutdeeply into the number of administratorsand clerical personnel, carve $150,000 out ofits library’s periodical budget, and try tomake a little money by renting out unusedrooms. Several other Ivy league schools arealso contemplating reductions in faculty hir¬ing. Bryn Maw r College officials have decid¬ed to help meet expenses by increasing theirenrollment from 1000 to 1200.Five of the six schools have announced in¬creases of between 11.5% and 13%. Cornell’stuition increase is the lowest in the group, uponly 11.5%. while total costs at Harvard willgo from $8140 to somewhere near $9200 nextyear, a 12% increase.Total costs at Stanford and Princeton willboth increase 12.2%. to reach figures of$8921 and $8871 respectively The increase atthe University of Pennsylvania is slightlyhigher, with tuition and tees up 13% to $5955per year The steepest tuition increase in thegroup will be at Oberlin College, where tu¬ition is set to increase $700 — a 15% jumpDespite the unusual and. in Princeton’scase, unprecedented, size of these in¬creases. lew students seem interested infighting them The only opposition toemerge thus far has been at Georgetown,where a student-faculty-administration committee recommended a tuition increaseof $550. Georgetown's student governmentpresident has threatened to call a tuitionstrike if his proposal to reduce the size of theincrease to $400 is not given fair considera¬tion.Nor have escalating tuition costs ap¬parently discouraged students from apply¬ing to well-known private schools in recentyears. Most prestigious private schools con¬tinue to receive many more applicationsfrom qualified students than they can ac¬cept. A recent study at Stanford found thatof students accepted by Stanford who decid¬ed not to attend. 84% enrolled in privateschools costing as much as StanfordI.C. RapeContinued from Page 1All three women have reviewed photosfrom a mugbook. but so far police report nopositive identification Police have releasedtwo sketches based on the first two inci¬dentsA policeman who spoke with The Maroonrecommended that unaccompanied womennot use the station after dark All threerapes have occurred according to him w henthe station has been “d a r k and deserted.”The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 15, 1980—3cooooccocococooccoooooc<THE JEWISH RESPONSE TO THE CULTSRABBI SAMUEL JOSEPHNational Director of Admissions,Hebrew Union College, Jewish§of Religion (Cincinnati, NewLos Angeles, Jerusalem)§ WEDNESDAY JANUARY 16 •jjHILLEL FOUNDATION, 5715 WoodlawnSxeccocosoooocccosoososcccoccosooooaic Ruby'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.72\1 GM QUALITYJS'I SERVICE PARTS ' keen / hut (rrmGM/fer/in#u ithft?3ENEBAL MOTORS BASTS DTVISJON (,t.U l\ttiM huh’A RUBY’SCHEVROLET72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9 Saf. 9-5 Parts open Sat. 'til NoonRUBY’SVOLKSWAGEN72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, So*. 9-5 Parti open Sat. 'til Noon ModiThere are better ways to handle atough semester of math.rm ITI-SOComstar »t M»*mcryrS]la][3]Uj G CD EJThe SlimlineBusinessAnalyst-ll,Mfor businessand finance. The SlimlineTI-50 wfor scienceand math.(ecu)Choose the Texas Instruments calculatorthat’s right for your major.When you’re working in a specialized field,you need a specialized calculator. That’swhy Texas Instruments designed theSlimline Business Analyst-II11 for busi¬ness and finance . . . and the Slimline TI-50'” for science and math. Each providesthe tailored power and the reliability you’llneed as you learn to solve the problemsyou'll face as a professional. And each has aprice you'll appreciate as a student.Slimline Business Analyst-II.Sleek LCD calculator with versatilebusiness capabilities.Solving financial problems with theSlimline Business Analvst-II can makeworking with your old calculator seem likepencil-and-paper arithmetic. The functionsrequired to perform many common busi¬ness, financial and statistical calculationsare built in to help you make quick, accurateevaluations of many complex businesssituations.Special financial keys are used to handletime and money problems such as com¬pound interest, annui¬ty payments, mortgageloans, investment yields,amortization schedulesand more. Statistical and linear regression capabili¬ties provide the power you’ll need to boildown data and automatically handle prob¬lems such as sales and earnings forecasts.Profit margin calculations concerningcost, selling price and margin can be per¬formed rapidly when any two of the varia¬bles are known. Other features include afour-function data register with ConstantMemory'” feature that retains its contentseven when the calculator is turned off. Twominiature batteries provide up to two yearsof operation in normal use. And TI’s API)automatic power down feature helps pre¬vent accidental battery drain.The Business Analyst-II, with detailedowner’s manual and suede-look vinyl walletwith pockets for notes, $45.00*.The Slimline TI-50 packs 60 power¬ful functions into a handsome,compact package.The pocket-portable Slimline TI-50 is a re¬markably powerful LCD slide-rule calcula¬tor. Yet it’s as thin as a pencil and weighsonly three ounces!Its 60 versatile functions can help youhandle a wide range of college math prob¬lems. Capabilities include common and natural logarithms. Six trigonometric oper¬ations that can be performed in three angu¬lar modes (degrees, radians or grads). Twoconstant memories that retain their con¬tents eren when the calculator is turned off.And more.Seven built-in statistical functions sim¬plify the task of boiling down large sets ofdata points so you can perform accurateanalyses and draw reliable conclusions.The power of the Slimline TI-50 is madeeasy to use bv TI’s A()S'” algebraic operat¬ing system, which provides 15 sets of pa¬rentheses and accepts up to four pendingoperations. That means you can enter mostproblems just as they’re written, leftto right.Two miniature batteries provide up totwo years of normal operation. And TI’sAPI)1” automatic power down featurehelps prevent accidental batteiw drain.The Slimline TI-50 includes a detailedowner’s manual and a durable vinyl wallet,$40.00*.Make sure your next calculator has thespecialized power to handlethe problems unique to yourmajor. See the Business Ana-lyst-II and the Slimline TI-50at your college bookstore orother TI dealer today. I Fifty Years, ofInnovationTexas Instruments technology—bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips.Texas Instruments'll S suggested retail price© 1980 Texas Instruments Incorporated I NCORPORATED 45684 ANEED CREDIT? ^ofor THE CREDIT GAME• Too young to borrow7• 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 TaxiEnclosed is $ forNameAddress . . ...City ... - State Zip __Allow 3 weeks for delivery.4—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 15, 1980Hither & Yon Campus filmBy Peter Chapmonand David GlocknerSparts here, Sparts thereChicago is not the only place where mili¬tary recruiters draw fire, nor where the de¬monstrators themselves face opposition. AtOberlin College, a recent appearance oncampus by Air Force recruiters spurred de¬monstrations by members of the SpartacusYouth League, who marched, carried signs,and chanted such familiar strains as “Downwith the Air Force,” and “No to the draft!”One member of the SYL charged that theAir Force protects the rights to kill andbutcher rather than to speak freely.During the demonstration, a larger groupof students assembled before the protestorsand sang the familiar strains of “God BlessAmerica.” One student said that membersof the SYL group were not protectors of freespeech themselves. Another explained thatthe military offers many benefits, including,for some, a chance to go to college to whichthe SYL offers no alternatives. Lest thissound too familiar, the recruiters did actual¬ly arrive at Oberlin. One recruitier said thathe’d be more than happy to hang up his uni¬form, but that there is a need for the mili¬tary.Four jailedfor talking in classEach of three members ot the Revolution¬ary Communist Party (RCP > has been sen¬tenced to a year in prison after trespassingand disrupting a class on the campus of theUniversity of North Carolina at Greensboro.A fourth member has been convicted of tres¬passing and sentenced to the maximum six-month term.A business lecture was in session when thefour, three men and a woman, entered theclassroom and interrupted the professor,shouting slogans and distributing politicalleaflets. Campus police made the arrests.All four defendants are from outside NorthCarolina. Ten other members of the RCPhave also been arrested on the Greensborocampus in related events, attempts to publi¬cize the recent appearance there by BobAvakian, national head of the RCP. Studentmembers of the RCP, not surprisingly, ac¬cused the University of harassment.* * * * :JeNo raise, no gradesPenn TA’s sayA group of teaching assistants in thechemistry department at the University ofPennsylvania have threatened to withholdgrades from students during the present se¬mester unless the University increases theannual stipends awarded them Teachingassistants at Penn receive an annual $4,500stipend, as well as free tuition; they seek anincrease of SI.000, which would raise thelevel to the current Ivy League median.The teaching assistants hope to force theuniversity to increase the stipends by with¬holding students’ grades, an action one offi¬cial labeled, “blackmail.” No solution hasbeen reached, though one official suggestedthat each stipend could be increased by reducing the number of teaching assistantsand redistributing the stipend allocationCurrently, there are 45 teaching assistantsin the Penn chemistry department. Theyhave not said how long they would withholdthe grades. Harvard’s woman problem...and oursA shortage of tenured women professorshas sparked controversy at Harvard Uni¬versity, where women hold only 3.1 percentof the tenured professorships. Women arescarce in several departments at Harvard,especially in the humanities.Recent public pressure has forced the uni¬versity to study possible ways of increasingthe number of women and minorities on thefaculty. One Harvard official has announceda plan to meet w'ith departments wherewomen and minorities are least concentrat¬ed, to be certain that all qualified candi¬dates tor a seat are considered. Other ac¬tions suggested include reallocation of apresent tenure funds to those departmentswhich actively seek minorities and womenand a $250 million fund to provide newchairs in departments where they are un¬derrepresented. Each suggestion has drawncriticism, but officials say they are deter¬mined to increase the number of tenuredwomen and minorities even if the effect ismerely symbolic.Another sensitive problem at Harvardconcerns the Afro-American Studies De¬partment, which has been unable to attracttenured faculty and has become isolatedfrom Harvard’s intellectual mainstream.The number of students in departmentcourses, and the number of those concen¬trating in Afro-Am. have declined in recentyears. A visiting committee has proposedthat the department be changed to an inter¬disciplinary committee, but University offi¬cials are determined to maintain and sup¬port the department as it stands. Bothstudents and faculty members believe thatAfro-Am is a viable department, but theyfeel that the university has done little to pro¬mote the department’s potential.Officials have not made specific proposalsfor changes, but they say that the Universityhas invested heavily in the department andhas actively sought tenured appointmentswithin the department The visiting commit¬tee’s recommendation is not expected to befulfilled, since a faculty vote would be re¬quired to change the department to a com¬mittee. Breaking up is hard to doUpset at the loss of his girlfriend, a mandetonated a powerful bomb outside herWashington State University dorm room,killing himself and injuring five others. Hisgirlfriend was not injured in the blast, whichoccurred just six days before Christmas.Eighteen-year-old John Stickney, a juniorhigh school dropout employed as a “powderman” in a mine, came to visit his girlfriendafter learning that she was seeing anotherman. Stickney left the dorm when a supervi¬sor told him the girl was not at home, butreturned the next afternoon carrying a shoe-box and demanding to be taken to his girl¬friend’s room.The girl, her roommate, and their resi¬dent head locked themselves in the girl’sroom to keep Stickney out and called policewhen Stickney tried to kick the door in andtold them he had a bomb. The three womenthen quickly opened the door and fled, leav¬ing Stickney standing in the hallway.By the time police arrived, most of thefloor’s other residents had also fled. Policefinished the evacuation and then tried totalk with Stickney, but he responded by de¬tonating the bomb. Two policemen on thefloor were injured by the blast and threewomen standing outside the building werecut by flying glass.The explosion completely destroyed therooms on the building’s fifth floor and blewout doors and windows on several otherfloors. Damage caused by the blast forced45 students to relocate.*****J. P. Stevensstill under fireStockholders and management of J PStevens and Company, the nation's secondlargest textile manufacturer, are facing in¬creasingly strong attempts to organize aboycott of their products. An effort to boy¬cott Stevens products is gaining support onthe campuses of Cornell, Princeton. Stan¬ford. Brandeis, Berkeley. Dartmouth. In¬diana, Illinois, Temple, and Columbia. Join¬ing the students in support of the boycott arethe legislatures of Connecticut. Hawaii, Cal¬ifornia. Massachussetts. and most recently.Wisconsin.The boycott movement is an attempt toforce J. P. Stevens to honor union contractsand improve working conditions for its em¬ployees. Stevens workers are paid 31% lessthan the national average for textileworkers, and dust levels, noise levels, andsafety hazards are said to be the worst in theindustry. Stevens employs 37% of the indus¬trial labor force in North and South Caro¬lina.***** Cabin in the Sky (Vincente Minnelli, 1942);An outrage, but great. This all-black musi¬cal. Minnelli’s first film, tells of Petunia’s'Ethel Waters) attempts to save her hus¬band. Little Joe (Eddie “Rochester” Ander¬son), from the devil. Lena Horne, LouisArmstrong, and the Duke Ellington bandwork for the opposition. Stereotyped charac¬ters and weak acting emphasize the trite¬ness of the story. Yet, Minnelli adds roman¬tic depth to the narrative through themusical numbers, which emanate a pro¬found joy that carries into the rest of thefilm. “Happiness is a Thing Called Joe.”“Taking a Chance on Love,” and “Shine”all rejoice in everyday life. Still, if you havea strong social consciousness, skip it Tues¬day at 7:15 in Quantrell. $1. — G. BThe Clock (Vincente Minnelli, 1945); Achance meeting in Penn Station between alonely girl (Judy Garland) and a soldier(Robert Walker) on 48-hour furlough ripensinto love, even though the clock in the sta¬tion constantly reminds them of their brieftime together. Minnelli’s graceful directionbrings out the charm of the story and cap¬tures the hectic atmosphere of Manhattan.Though the romantic pair is the center of at¬tention. the film also contains a cast of inter¬esting supporting characters. Both juvenileleads, as expected, exude warmth and inno¬cent charm. Garland, however, does notsing a note, for onc£ Tonight at 9 in Quan-trel. $1. - T. S.Little Women (George Cukor. 1933 cCukor's able hand transforms the familiarAlcott story into a geniune and memorablepiece ot Americana. His tasteful and imagi¬native mise-en-scene. his precise recreationof the atmosphere of the period, his meticu¬lous care for characterization, and his finefeeling lor ensemble acting all contribute tomaking this film a lasting tribute to ap ageof innocence. As a result, even though thetone of the film is overtly sentimental, itnever descends to mawkishness. KatherineHepburn, as Jo. gives one of the most incan¬descent performances of her career, whichfuses her and Jo forever in the public'simagination. A classic. Tomorrow at 8 inQuantrell. SI. — T.S.She Wore a Yellow Ribbon Thursday at8; 30. Law School. $1.50.What’s Up Tiger Lily (Woody Allen. 1966and The Legend of the Lone Ranger ! threeshorts from the TV series); Shown by Men'sCrew Club. Thurs at 8:20 and 11:05 ( TigerLily); 7 an 9:45 (Lone Ranger* in Quantrell.Everything for SI.50. Tiger Lily is Allen'sleast pretentious film and in its own way hisfunniest He manages to take one gag (dub¬bing in his own sound track to a Japanesedetective movie* and stretch it over the en¬tire film with only a few weak moments. Asfor the Lone Ranger we know Clayton Moorewill always be the only daring and resource¬ful masked rider of the plains. And no judgecan stop you from wearing a mask to thisone. — A PTA1CHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 AM to 8:30 PMClosed Monday1318 EAST 63rdMU 4-1 OfThe Chicago Maroon- Tuesday, January 15. 1980—5Hello, Podunk, Welcome to Chicago!By Katharine KunkelMost of the time, says K.G. Wilkins, athird year student from Geneva, Nebraska(pop. 2,272), if you live in a small town, youwill receive little sympathy if you complainof boredom. It is simply accepted. On threeoccasions, however, you are allowed to par¬ticipate in a rite of passage which will re¬lieve the boredom. “The first time is whenyou're a teenager and you have a right towake up in a bed with mud all over yourbody and no idea where you are. who youwere with, or what you were drinking. Thesecond time is when you get married — withor without child. The third time is when youare eighty and then you can drop dead inthemiddle of your high school reunion. Andyou wonder why I decided to go to school inthe big city?” The five people interviewedall had varying reasons for leaving theirsmall town, but one plaint was unanimous:“It’s boring!’’Even Terry Sykora of Windom, Minnesota(pop. 4,000) who would like once again to re¬turn to a farm some day said. “When Iwalked down the street 95 percent of the peo¬ple were blonds — Norwegians. Swedes,Danes. There’s not much heterogeneity inthat. The U of C isn’t always a pleasant ex¬perience. but it’s certainly an interestingone because of the variety of people. It real¬ly came home to me in the summer of ’78when I raised a hundred and some feederhogs, how boring it is. Of course the same Small-town activities are usually connect¬ed with the school or with church groups.There is only an occasional policeman’s pic¬nic, parade. Lion’s Club dance, or fiddlingcontest. John Hauser, from Sturgeon Bay.Wisconsin (pop. 7.500), commented that,“There are a lot more things to do by your¬self in Chicago. In Sturgeon Bay you need alot of people.” In Wilkin’s small Nebraskatown, which has only one movie theatre thatshows third run movies once a month, thesolution for young adults is to “go out andget beer, as much and as soon as possible,get in the car. drive to the high school park¬ing lot where everyone gets into everyoneelse’s car, drives out into the country andgets completely wasted. ”Political issues also provide entertain¬ment. In Sturgeon Bay. “the whole towngets involved. There are usually two fac¬tions and there are not very many peoplewho don’t care. People get very heated.”Issues tend to be local, though Sykora be¬lieves that there is a certain portion of thepopulation that are also astute concerningaffairs of the world. Usually, though, what’smore important are the school board andbond elections, the building of a new bridge,or location of the new junior high. “Thereare no real issues,” Lutz commented..“There are only personalities.”Sally Huff (who prefers her real name notbe used), from a town of 6.000 in Illinois, be¬lieves, "Small town people are more exis¬"A small town isn't really a place, its a state ofmind."aspects that make it boring are also a seren¬dipity of time and place if you wish to bealone to think or read. The farm is great ex¬cept for the obvious cultural problems.There aren’t many opportunities to justhead off to the Art Institute, or to an opera, aplay, or a concert.”Or a bar, Mark Lutz, a senior from Gib-sonia, Pennsylvania (pop. 1500) added,“When I got into the big city and saw allthose different bars, my eyes just lit up.”Lutz considers his roots fairly ruralthough his home town is only an hour drivefrom Pittsburgh. “A small town isn’t reallya place, it’s a state of mind.” he says. “Itmay be almost a suburb but everyone therethinks pretty much alike. A lot of mygraduating class had only been to Pitts¬burgh twice in their lives. A small town isdefinitely no place for someone our age un¬less you want to work in a grocery store, docontruction, or pump gas. I had to get out Icould always go back, but I’d probably findthe same things that made me leave in thefirst place — boredom, narrow-mindedness,and my own restlessness. But I’m still closeto a lot of people there.” tential, but they don’t know it. They are onlyaffected by what is immediate and present.They have a talent for telling anyone whatshould be done about anything. Issues arevery simple because they don’t have this■nuck of knowledge to deal with so they canform opinions on anything and summarize itin one sentence.”A harsh vision of a small town? Perhaps,out the resentment is understandable be¬cause coming to the University of Chicagowithout a “muck of knowledge” can be adistinct handicap. The quality of small towneducation varies greatly depending on theteacher. Wilkin’s high school was taughtmostly by “young state-school educatedwomen who just wanted to get married.There weren’t many experienced teachersbecause the turnover rate was so high.” Thesmall-towners found good creative teachersbut also quite a few that had been stagnatingin the school for 25 years, interested only incoaching, not teaching. Reading on one’sown was a more consistent means of educa¬tion.The city lights were also difficult to adjustto initially. Lutz had trouble finding places?. -V"ZmmA John Kimin the city. “I didn’t have any idea where Iwas. It was all a blur. It’s hard to get lost inGibsonia. Main Street has only the 3D Opti¬cal Company, an Atlantic Station, and a postoffice. It was quite a switch.” Wilkins wasafraid she would take public transportation,end up in Evanston, and have to transfer toNorthwestern. “I never could have foundmy way back the first couple of months.”But everyone, like Hauser, now “knowswhere not to go and what not to do.” Sy-kora’s stereo and typewriter were stolen, there’s always an engine or a radio in thebackground, and then there’s the issue ofhills. There aren’t any.” Sykora sometimesfeels the city is oppressive. “Sometimes Iwant a total feeling of privacy and isolation.There’s something about walking on yourown land in the winter. On Christmas vaca¬tion I go out around eleven-thirty at night.Everything is crisp and still and the onlysound is the whirring of the fence lines. Imiss that.”Huff misses the openness and honesty of"Everything is crisp and still and the onlysound is the whirring of the fence lines. I missthat."Wilkins was startled by a flasher, and Huffhad to hide in an alley behind trash cans toavoid further verbal harassment by twomen in a car on the north side. But Huffadds, “You can find thieves and pervertsanywhere. It’s not always safe and quiet in asmall town either. There is the occasionalax murder or shooting.” “Most people inGibsonia don’t lock their doors or cars andthe police department in Gibsonia closes at 8p.m.,” Lutz explained. “People get muchmore excited about crime in small towns be¬cause it is something unusual. They are notas hardened as urbanites.”By far the worst thing about the city wasnot crime but the lack of country. Everynow and then Lutz feels “like 1 want to gosome place and be alone outside. In the city. her small town. “People in Chicago are in¬sincere. They ask questions and they don’tcare about the answers. If you have a friendat home, they are a friend for life, not likehere where friendship can decrease withtime or absence. Also in a small town youget more reasonable offers for friendshipand romance.” Hauser agrees that is diffi¬cult at times. “People are a little colder andrelationships not as easy to form in thecity.”“The main difference between urban peo¬ple and small town people,” said Wilkins,“is that urban people keep wanting to sit medown and give me lectures on Life In TheCity. At home, though I’ve been in Chicagoalmost three years, they assume I haven’tchanged because not too many of them have6—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 15, 1980Of©By Philip MaherMy wife and I accepted Jane Byrne’s invitation and attended herNew Year’s Eve Gala. We live half a mile from State and Randolph,and the weather seemed mild, so we set off walking.State Street bustled for that time of night: merry-makers and cu¬riosity-seekers babbling towards the Loop. We saw women in furcoats and party hats escorted by ad-men holding champagne bot¬tles; we saw drunk teenagers, and we saw an entire Mexican fami¬ly, from abuela down to little bebe. Only the local winos party-pooped; they plodded against the current, flushed out of theirnormally comfortable quiet alleys and entranceways.At the River, midnight revelers flowed in from other tributaries,off Michigan, Wabash, Clark and LaSalle. We heard a great din inthe distance. I had my camera so I began to take pictures. It wasquarter to twelve.At the lip of the gathering we hesitated, because the crowd buzzedwith electricity. There was supposed to have been a big band and adance floor, but although we did see some kind of bandstand, the riotand roiling of the crowd obscurred any hint of clarity. 1 gave uphopes of seeing the mayor. “C’mon,” Kathleen took my hand, “We’llgo up front and you can take pictures.’’Before I knew it we were in the soup, following a thin snake line ofthose people determined to be in the middle.The path grew narrower and resistance tighter, till finally wewere stuck, as in thick mud, with no way forward, back, or up, andcertainly not down. When more intent drunks and stoners camecrashing through, our main effort became to stay standing.Visions of Cincinnati passed through my head. I clutched Kath¬leen. and our eyes clutched the clock, which said five to twelve.The mob sifted and shifted ever so slightly, slow as molasses. Anoccasional angry drunk strong-armed his way through, snarling andthrashing. Still people tried to move with absolutely no place to go,so the crowd lurched first one way and then the next, in chain reac¬tion waves. “I feel like a domino,” someone said.Kathleen is scared of crowds, and I am not particuarly fond ofthem. I held her tight with my elbows out to create air, and I pattedher back, saying, “brave, baby,” over and over. Each lurch of thecrowd summoned a terrifying rush of helpless despair; the feelingof a madman trying to push you off a cliff, so you grab onto him, butoh, that look in his face.The shouting swelled as time ticked on. Some creep lit a string offirecrackers and the crowd drew back the best it could, shoving meinto a young woman with glasses, “excuse me,” I said, and sheglared at me with glasses askew.Finally, midnight, and 50,000 people screamed as the firstfireworks began spiralling up in crazy angles. The booming echoedthrough the city and down State Street like thunder. More and stillmore, the shelling shrieked while the crowd howled and wailed. At12:01 the grand finale: Boom, Boom, BOOMBOOMBOOM! Night be¬came day in the flashing, and cinders fell on our heads. The mobcried with joy, and it was over.Come 1980, we had no control. The crowd that had swallowed usnow dispersed, stumbling and floundering down the four channels ofthe compass. Kathleen and I, in shock, clung to each other like cast¬aways, pitched and tossed till finally spit out on shore. We stood atState and Lake behind an El post with the new year flowing aroundus. We lit cigarettes and listened to the talk.“That Jane Byrne, what an idiot! What did she expect inviting thewhole city to one little corner? Someone might have been killed.”“Oh hell, no one got killed. 1 had a great time.”“You did huh? Well did you see that poor little girl behind you.who was scared stiff? And that baby — I can’t believe someonebrought their baby into that mess.”A gang of youths swept by. “Happy New Year! Happy New Year!Happy New Year!” One shook his fists at the sky. “1980! Alright,what a kick-ass year!”changed that much It wouldn’t matter if Iwrote a best selling novel. They wouldn'tcare. They wouldn’t read it." No one noticesthat Huff has been changed by college and comfortable if you try to act different thanwhen you were in high school. They call meCollege Boy but they don't inquire into thechange." Hauser is perhaps the most fortu"There's something about walking on your ownland in the winter."city experience because she acts the same.“1 pretend 1 never went and that's the way 1like it because I’m hoping the way UCmakes me feel is only temporary.” Lutz observed that. “People back home have plant¬ed me in a certain role. It makes them un- nate: The people of Sturgeon Bay have re¬cognized the uniqueness of his city experience. For the rest, a modification of ThomasWolfe's line seems appropriate: “You cango home again — but you may not wantto ” Classified adsare cheapand effective.U.C. People:60 cents per lineNon-U.C. People:75 cents per lineDropoff your ads inthe Maroon office,Ida Noyes Room 304The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 15, 1980—7t** swuaM cooperative ftocurofte. S7ST southVMIVffcSlTY* 8 MGN-T»U> * FR» • //- *i S*T • Mallory’smmuBmuRestaurant iTenth Floor1525 East 53rd StreetHyde ParkChicago. 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Industrial Hygiene and Safety Health Sciencesand Community Health Sciences. Administration and Health Law Health Eduration Population Sciences and International HealthFinancial assistance is available through Public Health Traineeships and Research Positions Deadline to apply for M P H Program is February 15. 1980Deadline for M S . Dr P H and Ph D Programs is six weeks prior to the quarter m which the applicant wishes to enterFor further information write or telephoneJames W WagnerAssistant Dean for Student AffairsUniversity of Illinois at the Medical CenterP 0 Box 6998Chicago Illinois 60680(312) 996-6625The School encourages applications from qualified minority students i\\e Potion*STANLEY H. 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In C.ntrr Self-Study „INI o»a» A an Hu. to .# u» c*m a wm Sojjtmminr.jmjTtcau roa n**i:mo-22jm7«^18—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 15, 1980Kurucz quits; on to New MexicoBy Andy RothmanIn a move that came as a surprise to most,University of Chicago head football coachTom Kurucz announced to the Maroon foot¬ball team last Thursday that he was resigning from his position at Chicago to take anassistant coaching job at the University ofNew Mexico.The newly appointed head coach at NewMexico, former New York Giants runningback Joe Morrison, had been the head coachat the University of Tennessee-Chattanoogaat one time and Kurucz had served as an as¬sistant there under him. The New Mexicocoaching staff has been turned over after re¬cently being penalized by the National Colle¬giate Athletic Association for recruiting vio¬lations in both football and basketball.BasketballersdownedAfter playing their hosts, Carleton, even¬ly for 30 minutes on Saturday, the Maroonmen’s basketball team wilted in the final10 and went down to a 68-54 loss.Chicago did not get strong games fromforwards Vlad Gastevich, who managed toscore 12 points but committed several un¬forced turnovers near the end, or RichMartin who shot 2-11 from the field. Never¬theless, Carleton led by only two at the halfand the teams stayed that close throughmost of the second half.Coach John Angelus later explained thathis team was getting the 15 foot shots theyrely on but were simply not hitting themwhile Carleton was getting some hot pe¬rimeter shooting. The Maroons were ledby sophomore guard Eric Kuby who cameoff the bench to score 14.The Carls’ 6’8” center, Jim Tolf, atransfer from Chicago, scored 18 points topad his 17.2 points-per-game average,good for fourth in the Midwest Conferencebefore the game, Saturday’s game countedin the conference standings for the westerndivision Carls (now 7-4 in the conference,7-6 overall) but not Chicago. Angelus felthis club did a respectable job in trying tostop Tolf.The loss evened Chicago’s record at 3-3but the Maroons conference mark held at0-1. The Maroons make their only home ap¬pearance of January tonight in the fieldhouse with a non-conference game againstNiles College. The game can be heard onWHPK, 88.3 FM beginning at 7:15 p.m.Andy Rothman committed to making a long term invest¬ment and effort to do the best he could forthe football program and for the depart¬ment. for the students, for the University.”Metcalf said he first found out aboutKurucz’s intentions, "When he came to seeme at the Fairmont Hotel in New Orleanslast Monday at noon. I knew that he wasgoing to be in town of course at the sametime, I was there for the NCAA convention,he was there lor the AFCA. American Foot¬ball Coaches Association convention so Icalled his hotel and left a message suggest¬ing that we get together. He came over tosee me and said he was resigning.” Metcalfsaid the job offer may have come as a sur¬prise to Kurucz too, "He claimed, when Isaw him last Monday in New Orleans, thatthese people had come to him and he was notin fact, out looking for a job.” In mentioningKurucz’s connections with Morrison, Met¬calf added that, "I suppose it was an aspectof the ‘old boy’ network thing at work.”As for filling the vacant position. Metcalfsaid he did not think it would take very longto hire a new coach and that a thoroughsearch would begin immediately. "If we canfill it right away with the best man we will.If we think the best man is someone whoisn’t available right away then we will justhave to wait,” he added. The Chicago football program appears tobe headed for another year in limbo as theteam awaits the hiring of its third coach inas many years Recruitment efforts are li¬kely to be seriously harmed for the secondstraight year, although, according to Met¬calf. “I am not aware, at the moment, thatanything was going on in any event, whichsueeests to me that Mr. Kurucz knew that hewas going to be leaving here quite a longtime before he got around to mentioning it tome. So far as I am aware, we had a staffmeeting yesterday and we were discussingthe recruiting situation, Mr. Kurucz has notcome up with one single prospect who wasinterested in the game of football.”Last year, co-capains Mark Meier andNick Filippo handled most of the recruitingthat w'as done following Bob Lombardi’s de¬parture. Players will be counted on in 1980 todo the same, as Metcall put it. "once again Ithink it’s going to be a matter of having todepend very heavily on the good will, effortsand the spirit of the members of the teamwho volunteer to help out. They are going tobe critically important, I think, to any suc¬cessful recruitment. It's got to be guys whoare here now. who are student athletes get¬ting on the phone, writing letters and gettingthe message out to appropriate prospects.”Metcalf: “So far as I am aware, Mr.Kurucz has not come up with one singleprospect who was interested in thegame of football.”Kurucz had given indications that heplanned to stay at Chicago for some timeafter guiding the Maroons to 2-6 record inhis first season ever as a head coach in 1979.He said that he was making a strong effortto blend his coaching philosophies with theUniversity’s attitude towards sports in apost-season interview with the Maroon.Kurucz’s season did not proceed as smoothlyas it could have, however, as he ran into sev¬eral personality conflicts with his players,most notably with sophomore second-stringquarterback and Stagg scholar. Do Kim,which resulted in Kim’s departure from theteam late in the season and left his status fornext year unclear.University of Chicago Athletic Director,Jeff Metcalf, speaking on VVHPK’s SportsSaturday over the weekend, said Kurucz'smove came as, “rather a surprise. I had notheard even a glimmer about this from him.In every conversation I had had with him hehad been very positive about the future atChicago, the future for the football team, thefuture for himself. He seemed to be quite Women drop three at ISUBy Darrell WuDunnThe University of Chicago women's bas¬ketball squad travelled to the Illinois StateUniversity Invitational last weekend to openthe 1980 season. The tournament provedlong and tiring for the Maroons as they re¬turned home winless in three games againstISU, EIU, and Quincy College.Chicago was not expecting too much goinginto the tournament. Most of the otherteams invited were much stronger thancoach Marian Hurt's club. Some of thelarger schools even had two teams repre¬senting themOn Friday, in their first game of the year.Chicago faced Illinois State's second teamNot a gracious host. ISU routed Chicago71-53. The Maroons never really threatenedas they were outscored by about ten pointsFreshman lead Chicago Mermen to 6thBy John CondasCoach Fete Anderson was pleased with hisswimming team’s outstanding performancein the Illinois Intercollegiate Champion¬ships held this past weekend at the Universi¬ty of Illinois-Circle Campus. Chicago cap¬tured a strong 6th place finish in the overallDivision III standings. The championshipwas won by a powerful Triton College teamwhich, although tired from hard pre-meettraining, held on to beat second place finish¬er North Central College.The competition behind 2nd place NorthCentral was equally stiff, w ith Rockford Col¬lege placing 3rd, Wheaton placing 4th, andthe College of DuPage finishing in 5th place.Chicago's 6th place finish, however, was en¬couraging for Coach Anderson. He said,"The whole team swam extremely well,especially considering how tired we wereafter a hard week of practice.” Andersonalso emphasized the team swam as fast andas hard as possible, a difficult task after anentire week of two-a-day practices.As far as individual performances, Ander¬son felt that freshman Mike Noble was theteam’s outstanding swimmer in this meet.Noble was in the finals of three events, the500 yard free-style, where he placed eighthoverall in Division III, a seventh place finishin the 400 yard individual medley, and a sixth place finish in the 1650 yard tree-styleHe also was a member of two successfulrelay teams.Another outstanding freshman whoturned in an excellent performance in hisfirst tough intercollegiate meet was PhilHofmann. Hofmann captured fourth placein the 200 butterfly and second in the 400yard individual medley. Also. Hoffmanswam in all three relays for the team, the400 medley, the 400 freestyle, and the 800freestyle.Freshman swimmers were not the onlyones who turned in outstanding results. Jun¬ior captain Adrian Trevino captured a thirdplace finish in the 100 butterfly and he alsoswam well in the 400 medley relay. Anotherjunior, Andy Neff, placed fourth in the 400individual medley, eighth in the 1650 frees¬tyle. and also swam legs in all threerelays.Other fine swimmers for the team includ¬ed sophomore Tim Iida, who had a secondplace finish in the 100 yard breast stroke anda strong finish in the 50 yard free style. Healso swam well in the team’s medley relay.The only senior on the team. Mike Kund-mann, captured eighth place in the 20ubreast stroke. Mark Zoeller. a junior, placedfifth in the 200 breast stroke, and alsoturned in an excellent peformance in the 1650 yard f reestyle The other captain of theteam. Steve Frederick, took seventh placein the 200 butterfly and performed well torthe team in the 200 and 500 yard freestyleand in the 800 yard free style relay.Scott Cory, another excellent freshmanprospect, just missed qualifying for the 100and 200 yard tree style finals, but he did per¬form well in all three team relays. Twosophomores. Don Dowling and Bill Lands-chulz. swam well for the team in the meet.Dowling excelled in some ol the longer dis¬tances. especially the 1650 free style, whileLandschulz distinguished himself in the 50and 100 lree-styles and in the 800 freestylerelay.Three other sw immers worthy of mention¬ing because of their strong performancesare Mike Gatch. John Errazti, and TadMcGwire. Gatch. a freshman, set two per¬sonal all time best swims in the meet. An¬other freshman. Errazti. produced excellenttimes in the 50 and 100 yard free-styles.Diver Tad McGwiref proved he can do morethan just dive well w ith a strong effort in the50 yard free style.Encouraged by the team's overall strongperformance. Coach Anderson is lookingforward to the team’s next match, beingheld at Loyola Uniersity this Thursday nightat 7:30.The Chi each half. Their play was marked by anoverly cautious offense and a poor showingfrom the foul line. Individually, captainNadya Shmavonian had a superb game,scoring a team high 25 points. However,without much support from the rest of theteam, the Maroons fell to defeat.After a night's rest. Chicago played thesecond team from Eastern Illinois Universi¬ty. In a game similar to the previous one.EIU gradually opened up a large lead andeventually downed Chicago 65-43. Again, theMaroon played too carefully on offense. Theteam was passing too often instead of shoot¬ing. "We only had 65 or so shots instead of 90like we should have." explained coach Hurtlater. Hurt cited the players lack of confi¬dence in their shooting as the key to theproblem Again. Shmavonian led theMaroons in scoring with 19 points.Later on Saturday. Chicago played itsthird game w ithin 24 hours against a toughQuincy College team. Chicago lost thegame. 58-57. but markedly improved theirplay as they seemed more confident on of¬fense. Down by as much as nine points witha few minutes left to play. Hurt's playersrallied back just falling short. Led by Shma¬vonian. the Maroons developed a muchstronger offensive attack than in the firsttwo games. Shmavonian. who had an out¬standing weekend, put in 22 points while for¬wards Cheryl Flynn and Mary Klemundt.and guard Kim Hammond each finished indouble figures.Coach Hurt was very pleased with theQuincy game. She felt that this game wasmore important than the others becauseQuincy better represented the small col¬leges that Chicago would play in districtcompetition. Quincy, who finished third inthe state tourney last year, had just barely-edged out her teamOn the whole, coach Hurt felt her squadplayed fairly well during the weekend Hurtdefended her team's performance in thatdue to the lack of bench strength, the team'stop six players saw very little rest. Most ofthe opposing teams were able to balance theplaying time amongst nine or ten players.The women's basketball team played itsnext game at Northern Illinois University onMonday itoo late for presstime >. NorthernIllinois, a Division I team, should have pro¬vided Hurt's women with some extremelytough competition.cago Maroon-Tuesday, January 15, 1980—9CalendarTUESDAYPerspectives: Topic — "The Influence of Experimen-al European films on the Popular Film in America"guests Virginia Wexman, Jerry Carlson, and DavidElliott. 6:09 am, channel 7.Women's Exercise Class: meets 10:00 am. IdaNoyes Hall1 rossroads: Free cooking demonstration: Frenchuisine, 10:00 am.Kockefeller Chapel: Edward Mondello, Universityorganists, will give a demonstration recital, 12:15pm,Career Counseling and Placement: Summer JobsWorkshop. 12:30 pm. North Lounge, ReynoldsClub.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Film — "InnerLife" traditional world of Islam film. Pick 016 at1:00 pm.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:30-8:00pm.. Bartlett gym, free.Student Volunteer Bureau: Meeting. 7:00 pm., inhe Blue Gargoyle Library. 5655 S. University.X>C Films: "Cabin in the Sky" 7:15 pm, "The Clock"9:00 pm. Cobb.ASHUM: "Alternatives To Regulation in HealthCare Policy" speaker Walter McClure, 7:30 pm. So¬cial Sciences 122Hillel: Israeli Folkdancing 8:00 pm, Ida NoyesTheatre 3rd floor. WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic — "American Films and Ameri¬can Culture" guests Virginia Wexman, Jerry Carl¬son, and David Elliott, 6:09 am, channel 7.Women s Exercise Class: Meets 10:00 am, Ida NoyesHall.Alumni Association: Presents “Life After Gradua¬tion: The Management of Non-Profit Organiza¬tions guests Paul Chummers, Alene Valkanas, andGordon Williams, 12 noon. 5733 University.Rockefeller Chapel: Robert Lodine. UniversityCarillonneur will give a recital 12:15 pm.Smart Gallery: Gallery Talk — "Vienna Moderne atNoon: A Non-Caloric Alternative" 12:15 pmCommuter Co-op: get-together in the CommuterLounge, G.B.l. 12:30 p.m.Crossroads: English Classes for foreign women, 2:00pm.Cog Com Colloquium Series: "The Role of CognitiveEffort in Selecting Strategies for Binary Choice"speaker Jay Russo 4:00 pm, B-102.Little Red Schoolhouse Lecture Series: “Doing ItAgain III: Revising Paragraphs" speaker Gregg Co-lomb, 4:00 pm. Harper 130.Rhetoric and All That: "The Irony of Rhetoric"speaker Wayne C. Booth, 4:00 pm, Swift Lecturehall 3rd floor.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 5:00-8:00pm. Bartlett gym, free.Tai Chi Ch’uan’ Meets 7:30 pm. Blue Gargoyle. Badminton Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes gymna¬sium.Women’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm. Blue Gargoylein Women's Center.Hillel: Lecture — "The Jewish Response to the Cults"speaker Rabbi Samuel Joseph. 7:30 pm, Hillel.Hillel: Jewish Cooking class, 7:30 pm, Hillel.DOC Fiims: "Little Women" 8:00 pm. Cobb.Country Dancers: Meet 8:00 pm. Ida Noyes CloisterClub. New members welcome.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes. Ev¬eryone welcome.Oriental Institute: 60th Anniversary Lecture — "TheArt of Egypt" speaker David Silverman, 8:00 pm.Oriental Institute.THURSDAYPerspective: topic — "Problems for EmergencyRooms in Inner City Hospitals" guests Dr. Jay Ber-kelhamer, Sister Sheila Lyne, and Dr. Alfonso Hol¬liday, 6:09 am, channel 7.Women’s Exercise Class: Meets 10:00 am, Ida NoyesHall.Citizen's Party Meeting: 1st Congressional District,1607 E. 50th Place apt. 1-C. Info call 324-1098.Hillel: Faculty Lunch — "Israel and the Palestinians'speaker Morton A. Kaplan, 12:00 noon. Hillel.Lunchtime Concerts: Sponsored by the Music Dept..12:15 pm. Reynolds Club North Lounge. Orthodox Christian Fellowship: Meets 3:00-5:00 pm.Rockefeller Chapel.UC Gymnastics Club: Instruction available 4:00-8:00pm, Bartlet gym, free.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction to theDEC-20 4:00-5:30 pm. Cob 102.UC Judo Club: Meets 6:00-8:30 pm, Barlett gym. Be¬ginners welcome.Ski Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes first floorlounge.Table Tennis Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.Law School Films: "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" 8:30pm, Law School Auditorium.VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1V2 and2‘/2 Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$192,« $291Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus Stop324 0200 Mrs. Groakmoviedoublefeaturei ^— i r ■\thurs.jan. 17cobb hall *\WHAT’S UPTIGER LILY?woody alien8:20 & 11:05 THE LEGEND OFTHE LONE RANGERclayton moore7:00 & 9:45 $1.50men’screwclubThe University of ChicagoAlumni AssociationpresentsLIFE AFTER GRADUATION:THE MANAGEMENT OFNON-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONSan informal discussion of careeropportunities in the managementof non-profit organizationsGuests:Paul ChummersManager, Chicago Symphony OrchestraAlene ValkanasProgram and Publicity DirectorMuseum of Contemporary Art"Gordon WilliamsDirector. Centerfor Research Libraries"12 noon, January 16, 1980Alumni House, 5733 University AvenueBring your own lunch. (Beverages provided) FRESH Si 29SPARE RIBS 1 ,b.FRESH Si 19PORK STEAKS II lb.ARMOUR STARPork Chitterllng .. . io*. SE99pailGOLDEN DELICIOUSAPPLES 3ib.GOLDEN RIPEBANANAS 25c,RED LABELICECREAM ,.,99cHueFINER FOODSSERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 2911 VERNONWhere You Are A Stranger But Once!10—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 15, 1980CLASSIFIED ADSAD RATESMaroon classifieds are effective andcheap. Place them in person atthe Maroon business office in IdaNoyes Hail by mail to the Maroon, IdaNoyes Hail room 304. 121? F. 59th St.,Chicago, 60637 Ail ads must be paid inadvance. Rates: 60' per iine (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. 753-3263SPACEProfessor here Spring quarter onlyseeks nice apartmen* or house to rent753-8712SUMME R SUBLEf 3 or 2 ba apt. dateand price negot. Full, equipped ONCAMPUS modern 947 9597eveLarge Studio in ideal location at 59th &Blackstone beginning Feb 1st. Rent is$220 a month Call Jan at 363 5256.ROOMMATE WANTED Privateroom, ample kitchen, and view of lake.Rent 143/monfh. 4850 Lake Park. Call548-4911 or 363-5256FOR SALE71 Plymouth Duster. New tires, battery. Good running cond. $650 or bestoffer. Call 667 7529,Stereo system. Niko receiver. Garrardturntable. $175 or best offer. 667-7529.RADIO VOICES, TV Horror, UtopianDreams, Henry Darger, Dance MagicComics. Special “Surrealism andPopular Culture" issur of CulturalCorrespondence. Available now atlocal bookstores.Queensize SofaBed in good condition.$200 or best offer. Call 363-5256.VW Red 1968 Bug. Excellent Radio.Extra Heater. $500.493-57743/4 Cello and Case European make.Good condition. Ideal for young begin-ner. Call 643-2173 eves.1971 Volkswagon. Square back, lightblue. Poor body, good motor (looksbad, ,-uns well) Priced accordingly.Call 643-2173.PEOPLE WANTEDRECORDING FOR THE BLIND INC.We need a studio director for its U of Cbranch, College degree required.Stimulating work supervisingvolunteers. Hours flexible. Mathbackground A plus. Call 288-7077.939-4162.PART TIME HELP WANTED Tem¬porary secretarial work-typing, filing,telephone. 10am to 3pm. Weekdays, atHinds Blgd. Call GeophysicalSciences. SMRP. 753-81 )4,Participate in a research experiment.Normal healthy volunteers over age 21needed. Earn up to $8.00 per hour. Youmust be available for 6-9 hours perweek for at least 10 weeks. For furtherinfor call Dept, of Psychiatry. 947-6984or 947-1211.Free tickets to the Folk Festival in ex¬change for a few hrs. of your time. Avariety of jobs available. For more in¬fo. call Karen 955-9112or Lee 955-5770.Native speaker of Tamil with cleanenunciation in formal and colloquialstyles needed for taping and other ser¬vices. Wnt Spr Qurs. Hrs vary 4-10hrs/wk $5/hr. Call Prof. J. Lindholmfor appt. 753-4355.Over 270,000 Summer Job. Full refundif you don't get your choice through us.Send $2.95 to: Collegiate Press Box556, Belleville, Mich. 48111.CLERK WANTED-part-time, mornings. Call 324-3965 before noon. The Department of BehavioralSciences needs people who want toparticipate as paid subjects inpsycholinguist ic and cognitiveisychology experiments. For furtherinformation call 753-4718DRIVER WANTED must nave own;ar and be available early morninghrs. and weekends. Call 324-3965before noon.TUTOR WANTED for STEP TutoringProgram Volunteer two hours eachweek to help a high school or gradeschool student. STEP isa U. of C StudOrg. Contact Carla at 241-5044 or Dave241 5178Faculty family seeks unlv. student tokeep elementary school age girls company and prepare simple meal (optionto stay and eat) Tues. and or Thurs.2:30-7:00 p.m. Good pay on campus955-6384 eves.Participate in a research experimentNormal healthy volunteers over age 21are needed Earn up to $8.00 per hourYou must be available for 6-9 hoursper week for at least 10 weeks. For further info call Dept of Psychiatry947-6984 or 947-1211.Discuss career opportunities inManagement of Non-Profit Organizations with Alumni in the field Wed Jan16 Noon 5733 S. University. Bring yourown lunch.Person 2 hours day/5 days a week between 2 pm and 5 pm to run errands oncampus, take care of receiving andshipping of research supplies andmaterials within research building.Physical strength would be beneficial,reliability essential. Call 947-1867George or Sharon.FULL TIME RESEARCH TECHNICIAN (or senior research technician)to work in a Virology laboratory. Posi¬tion involves biochemical work anacertain supervisory duties.References required. Call Dr. NizaFrenkel at 753-2702.PEOPLE FOR SALEWill do professional typing from copy,dictaphone or shorthand. (821-1868).Excellent, accurate typist w/legal ex¬perience will type papers and disserta¬tions or IBM. Reasonable rated.684-7414.ARTWORK posters, illustration,calligraphy, invitations etc. NoelYovovich 5441 S. Kenwood 493-2399.Thesus, Disert, Manuscripts, LatestIBM Corrective Sel II typewriter,Rates based on Vol and Condition ofdraft Best Eminence Bond turn. Mrs.Ross. 239-5982.FRENCH native teacher offerstutorials-all levels. 268-9262.SCENESProblems of underdevelopment studygroup sponsored by Progressive Unionand Union for Radical PolificalEconomics Wed Jan 16 7:30 pm IciaNoyes.Scientific status of Marxism-StudyGroup. Union for Radical PoliticalEconomics Wed Jan 16 3:30 pm, Pick118.PERSONALSThanks to passers-by who stopped tohelp my dog last Wednesday He isO K. Nothing was broken.THIS is my ONLY authentic personalad. YOU know what that means.There's a unicorn in the garden and heate a rose. Dark LadyHey Jay, my oranges are stickingtogether! Fix 'em!To the people who threw small redballs all over my apartment. I'll get-cha! One way or another.Geoff,Did you bring me back some Nassausun? Jan. Dear ReindeerI left the you know-what at home to¬day Please forgive One size smallerRemember all seats to The Blues Jan.18 are general admission Buy now andavoid the rush. $2 for MAB fee payers,$4 for others at the Box Office $3 and$5 at the door, doors open at 7, concertat 8HLN (aka king of L A.) Bring yourSherlock Holmes to bed tonight and I'lldo my Dr Watson hugs and kisses,you know-who.CHICAGOLITERARYREVIEWThe Chicago Literary Review wants toimprove the grow Join our staff Sun¬day nights at 7:30 at the Maroon, IdaNoyes 303. During the cold monthswe'll think up beautiful, printablealternatives. Come or call 753-3265.VOLUNTEEROrientation and introduction tovolunteer positions and the studentVolunteer Bureau. 7:00 pm, Thurs.Jan 17 in the Blue Gargoyle library.5655 S. University. Call Anne Kok orBob Rueter for info at 955-4108BOOK SALEWednesday, Jan. 16, 11 am-2 pm inReynolds Club Lobby. The CHICAGOREVIEW will be selling review copiesof recent books and will be offeringsubscriptions at reduced ratesCOMP-CENTERCLASSESThe Winter Quarter class list is cur¬rently available. Seminars are in-droduction to: SCSS, Superwylbur,1022, and SCRIPT, Courses in: SASand BASIC. For more information,come to main Computation Center.R.l. C-B27, or business Office, 5757University or calf 753-8400WOMEN'SEXERCISEWomen's exercise class meets T-Th,10am in Ida For more informationcall 752-3651 eves only.BASIC CLASSLearn to program in BASIC on theDEC-20 computer Register at Computation Center before January 16 fora session course beginning January 22.Cost $25. Computer time providedCall 753 8400 for more information.TAI CHI CH'UANThe Tai Chi Ch'uan Club invites you toan introductory class of Tai ChiCh'uan on Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1980.Tai Chi Ch'uan is slow, soft, graceful,balletic and a rational means of selfdefense. Tai Chi meets every Wed.7:30 pm at 4945 S. Dorchester (enter on50). Also Kung-Fu every Sunday 6:30pm, 4945 S. Dorchester.DECSYSTEM20Learn to use the Comp-Center'sDEC-20 computer. An introductin tothis friendly and interactive computerwill be given on Thursday, January 17,4:00-5:30pm. Cobb 102. All welcome,No charge.MICHIGANTHREE OAKS TWP 485' on Picturesque Galien River-beautiful two levelcedar home on wooded two acres gent¬ly sloping to the River-3-4 BR withmany amenities. Call for details!$119,500.(616)469-3950. JOYOUS LIVING with Lake viewfrom this lovely 2-levei furnishedhome with beautiful Sun and Fun PoolEnclosure, whirlpool bath, sauna, tennis court, nice skating rink. Cail for aviewing1 $295,000. (616) 469-3950ENJOYComplete a Oay of study by giving andreceiving a deeply relaxing massagebefore a warm crackling fire. Ambientenvironment, friendly people, excellent instructor, center of campusThurs. Jan 31, 7:30-9:30 pm. 5655University 7 sessions $70. Reservetions call bobbi 288-3706 o, 337 8100.YOGA TEN-TWENTY-TWOMaintain a bibliography? Index arecord collection? Keep a name andaddress file? System 1022, which runson the Comp center's DEC-20 computer. will help you in these tasks andmany more involving entering andretrieving data. A two session introductorv seminar to 1022 will be neldMonday and Wednesday, Jan 21 and23, 3:30-5:00 pm. Cobb 102 Allwelcome No chargeUC HOTLINE 753-1777Got the Winter Quarter blues’ If youwant to talk, have a question or need areferral, try the UL Hotline-7 pm-7am. ^ ART EDITORWANTEDWill you cast a discerning eye aboutChicago for us? Recruit reproducibledrawings, woodcuts, prints, etc & Alsophotographs You need not be a prac¬ticing artist to make a graphic contribution to our quarterly. Call 955-8321or 753-3265MAGICIANExperienced Magician will providemystical entertainment for partiesand gatherings. Perfect for children'sparties. Call Marc 753 2240ext. 1610.Reenergize and harmonize body,mind, and spirit Begin Yoga Jan 29 atthe Gargoyle 5:30-7:00 pm Hathapostures, breathing, energization,meditation and deep relaxation. 7 ses¬sions $40 Call Dobbi 288-3706 or337 8100.BLINDJOHN DAVIS"You'll feel the Power"Triad GuideBlues and Boogie woogie piano at itsbest.BE APRODUCER!Festival of the Arts first organizational meeting of the quarter isThurs-day at 7:00, Ida Noyes rm 217. Freshfaces and creative minds are neededto plan programs, everyone welcome.NUTRITIONSEMINARThe Chicago College of OsteopathicMedicine, 1000 East 53rd Street, issponsoring a free community healtheducation seminar entitled, “How theFood You Eat Affects Your Heath," onJanuary 24,1980 at 7:00pm. Ward Per¬rin, DO., professor and chairman ofthe CCOM Department of InternalMedicine and Dean of ContinuingMedical Education will speak on“Nutritional Approaches to the KillerDiseases," ana Wendy Rupp, Directorof Food Services at the ChicagoOsteopathic Medical Center, willspeak on “Nutrition in the Supermarket and the Kitchen." Theseminar will be held in the auditoriumof the Chicago Osteopathic FamilyOutpatient Clinic.SPACE INVADERSPART TWO NOWATTHEPUB VISUALIZATIONANDHOLISTIC HEALTHEnioy 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 Thurs at the Gargoyle5 30-7 30 beginning Jan. 31. Call Dobbi288-3706, or 337-8100.SELF-HYPNOSISSEMINAROn campus beginning Jan 29 from7:00-9 00pm. Learn the fundamentalsof Self Hypnosis and develop fhe skilland technique necessary for its use."It has tne power to help youtransform whatever area of your lifeyou address it to from enhancing studyskills and improving health to deepen¬ing relationships and clarifying andhelping you attain future goals" 7 ses¬sions, $70. Taught by a clinical hypnotherapy program graduate CallDobbi 288 3706 or 337-8100 GRADUATESKOKOTAYLOR(can sing blues better than she can --Willie Dixon.ICE SKATES A MAB membership card can meangreat savings for you at MAB eventsSet them now at the Reynolds ClubBox Office Only $4 gets you savingsall winter Buy two tickets to THEBLUES and you'll earn your moneyback (Undergraduates areautomatically MAB fee payers.)LUNCHTIMECONCERTSEvery Thursday at 12:15 pm inReynolds North Lounge This Week.January 17, Hugo Wolf Lieder onpoems by Goethe performed by JamesTucker, baritone, and Robert Ray,piano Sponsored by the Departmentof Music Bring your lunch!FENTONROBINSON'SBRAINY BLUES."Fenton is always coming up withsomething you don't expect --fromRolling StoneAre available from Ida NoyesCheckroom, Mon-Sat 10-9, Sun. 4-7.U.C. I.D. required.31 BEERSBottled beers, that is. In addition toour eight great TAP BEERS now atthe Pu The Tai Chi Ch’uan Clubinvites you to an introductory class ofTai Chi Ch'uan on Wednesday, Jan. 16,1980. Tai Chi Ch'uan is slow, soft,graceful, balletic and a rational meansof self defenseTai Chi meets everyWednesday, 7:30 p.m.at Blue Gargoyle5655 S. Universityand every Sunday. 7:30 p.m4945 S. DorchesterEnter on 50th StreetalsoKung-fuEvery Sunday. 6:30 p.m.4945 S. DorchesterMa|or Activities BoardKoko TaylorFenton RobinsonBlind John Davis The BluesMandell Hall - Jan. 18Doors open at 7, concert at 8Tickets available at the Box Office$2 MAB fee-payers / $4 othersAt the door$3 MAB fee-payers / $5 othersall seats general admissionThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, January 15, 1980—nThe Friends of the Symphony 8c Music Departmentpresent the fourth in a seriesof five concerts featuringTheCHICAGOSYMPHONY WINDSin music ofMOZARTSaturday, January 19 8:00 p.m.MANDEL HALLProgram Highlights:—Divertimenti No. 1 in B-flat, K. 439 bNo. 9 in B-flat. K. 240—Serenade No. 11 in E-flat, K. 375—Duets for 2 horns, K. 487TICKETS AT REYNOLDS CLUB BOX OFFICE.Single Concert Prices: General Public $6.50, Faculty/Staff $5.50,U.C. students $4.50For further information call 753-3580 or 753-2612Remaining Series Concert Date:February 22 ASHUM-AMSASeminar Series 1979-80Program in the Arts and Sciences Basic to HumanBiology and MedicineandAmerican Medical Students’ AssociationPresentWalter McClure, Ph.D.Vice President and Director of Health Policy Group at InterStudyspeaking on the topicAlternatives ToRegulation in HealthCare PolicyTUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 19807:30 P.M.SOCIAL SCIENCES 122CalligraphyQuiltingGuitarLeaded glass The SAO Mini CoursesBread-bakingBeginning discoAdvanced discoAmerican sign language WeavingPhotographyWine-tasting(21 years & older)Registration:For Students: Tuesday, Jan. 15(Bring UC id) 9:30 a.m. - 4 p.m. Ida Noyes 210, SAOWednesday, Jan. 169:30 a.m. - 4 p.m. Ida Noyes 210, SAOFor Faculty, Staff, Alums Th ^ ,(and late students registration): ' nursaay, Jan. 1711 a.m. - 3 p.m. Reynolds Club CorridorFor additional Info, CallStudent Activities753-3598