City evicts several Plaisance Court residents11*! By T!M RUDYResidents of three townhouses of the 16townhouse complex, Plaisance Court, 60thPlace and Blackstone Avenue, were evictedyesterday morning by officials of thesheriff’s office and of the Department ofUrban Renewal (DUR). The evictedresidents had received their eviction noticesmonths ago and held no leases. Thetownhouses were boarded up. All the evictedresidents had found temporary livingquarters by the late afternoon.Along with the eviction of several residentsfive empty townhouses were also boardedup. One of the evicted residents complainedthat her furnace was damaged by a wrench-wielding official who smashed some pipes. Another mentioned that an official had saidtheir instructions were to make thetownhouses “unlivable.” Residents believedthat the eviction action was taken in order tointimidate the residents of the remainingeight townhouses who hold leases.Plaisance Court tenants have been in¬volved in a dispute with the DUR and theUniversity of Chicago for several years. Thetenants believe the University wants to buythe building, but has no plans for it except totear it down.Those evicted from Plaisance Court hadpreviously been invited by the otherresidents of the Court to live there. Thoughthey held no leases, one of the evicted told theMAROON that she had offered to pay rentand sign a lease with the DUR, but that the DUR would not agree. (It was reported thatDUR has, at times, refused to accept renteven from those who hold leases.) Those whohold leases with DUR have relocation rights.All those evicted Thursday have no suchrights.The eviction proceedings began shortlyafter 9 am. Bailiffs of the sheriff’s office, itwas reported, handled the eviction, whileofficials of DUR boarded up the houses.Furniture and residents’ personal belongingswere moved out into the street. Most of thebelongings were later moved back into otherother townhouses, but as the MAROON wentto press mattresses, desks, chairs, and arefrigerator were still in the street or on thesidewalk.Some of the remaining residents expressed the hope that yesterday’s eviction would onlystrengthen their resolve to remain and fightthe University and DUR. The tenants and theUniversity signed an agreement on August1st of last year after much controversy. Thetenants payed the University $600 as a firstrent payment. Some residents reported,though, that there were residents who havesince received their checks back from theUniversity.The residents of Plaisance Court were veryangered by the evictions. One elderlyresident said, “I think the whole thing iscriminal, analogous to Nixon bombingeverything in Vietnam without rhyme orreason.”The MAROON was not able to contactUniversity officials before going to pressL'nivercity ArchivesSpecial CollectionReftonsturn library”.:Co* - Pioiu ***#U £ POSTING*PAS fCkkNHPfmamii 74-** > licago MaroonThe University of Chicago Friday, January 5, 1973uances ruynlight UC winter activitiesSTYX: the rock group will perform at a dance here January 1 2.By "BIRD" MURPHY‘‘What does New England have that wedon’t?” demanded Richard Scotch, studentproprietor of the Student Activities programentitled “Winter Carnival”. ‘‘Take awaytheir ski slopes, the beautiful scenery, andthe New England quaintness and whatwould you have? A barren wasteland, verymuch like the Midwest.” Scotch mused aminute and then added, “You know, a coupleof years ago, New York City used the slogan‘‘New York is summer festival. Well, if theycan call New York a summer festival, Iguess we can call Chicago a winter car¬nival.”The reasoning notwithstanding, theStudent Activities Office has put together anexciting assortment of offerings for theWinter Quarter, with an accent on musicincluding that of Muddy Waters. Theprogram will kick off with a ‘‘Big John”Dance, on Friday, January 12. The bandStyx, is a first- rate rock group known fortheir single, ‘‘Best Thing” and an album,recently issued on Wooden Nickel. Thealbum was reviewed by David Witz of theChicago Daily News this August as ‘‘as gooda first album as I’ve heard.”In addition to the music, there will be anumber of door prizes distributed at adrawing between the sets. Several com¬munity and downtown stores have donatedpairs of ice-skates, and a number ofrestaurants are offering dinners for two.Participating restaurants include localestablishments such as the House of Eng,Cafe Enrico, Surf and Surrey, Gold City Inn,Agora, Lucitas, Sauers, and the OriginalHouse of Pancakes, and downtownrestaurants such as the Bakery, andBerghoff.As the dance is dedicated to the memory ofJohn Hancock (‘‘the first signer of theDeclaration of Independence to have a 100story building in Chicago named after him”), the posh restaurant “The Ninety- |Fifth” located in the John Hancock building <may also donate dinners. Admission to thedance will be $1.00 with UC ID required.The second major event will be a concerton Monday, January 22nd by the RamseyLewis Trio. Luckily, they were passingtheough Chicago at this time, and have beensigned up for their open date. Tickets will beon sale in about ten days at $2.00 in advance,$3.00 at the door, with a 50@ discount for U Cstudents.Less known, but fascinating in their ownright is the group known as Dan Hicks andhis Hot Licks, who will appear in Mandel onJanuary 28th. Besides their appearances onthe Johnny Carson show, the band has beenvery successful with college audiences aswell as commercial dates. Cash Box,magazine “In an age of supergroups,without a bit of hoopla and a minimum offanfare, this is truly a super group.” Or, asJohn Mendelsohn wrote in Rolling Stone“Dan Hicks is a person of no meanstrangeness, a genuine original, and one ofthe greatest superheroes in all of 20th Cen¬tury popular music. Only an imbecile couldbe excused for not getting hep to Dan and historrid accompanists, His Hot Licks, at hisearliest convenience.” Student prices for thisconcert will be $1.00.A second major dance will take place onSunday February 11th, when Muddy Waterswill perform in Bartlett Gymnasium.Waters, often regarded as the greatest of theblues artists, will perform with his owngroup and other Chicago performers in hisfirst campus appearance since his price hassky-rocketed.Other events will include “Son of FilmOrgy”, the incredible 3 1/2 hour pastiche ofsnippets from films of the 1940’s and 50’s,including old “Gardol” commercials,Hopalong Cassidy shows, Captain Videotapes, and similar inanities. This year’sversion is both shortened and supplemented, if that makes any sense, from the one shownhere last year. According to the represen¬tatives of Schlitz Brewing Company, who areproviding it, about 50% of the material isnew, and the remainder is carried over fromthe original. (For those who didn’t see it, theoriginal included sequences from the famousVincent Price study in credibility “TheTingler”, and a promo for “The Locusts thatate Chicago”, two classics which shouldn’tbe missed this year). There will also be aconcert by Dick and Anne Albin of An¬chorage Kentucky, and by the Madison-based bluegrass band knows as the MonroeDoctrine. As indicated above, student ticketprices for all events are being kept in the lowprice range, with no events more than $2.00and some concerts free.As you will see from the classified pages of the Maroon, there is talk of a snow sculpturecontest on campus this winter. If there isenough interest (and enough snow) a cashprize will be offered to the winner, withconsolation prizes to runners-up. And if theweather remains rainy? “We’ll have a rainsculpture contest” replied Richard Scotch.People who are interested may telephone753-3591.Again this year, North Field has beenflooded to supplement the Midway as a placefor students skating. It will be open from 3:30to 5:30 pm and 7:30-10 pm weekdays, and 7 to10 pm weekends. It is hoped that it willprovide more accessible skating on thenorth side of campus, as well as a place tofind refuge from the overly zealous hockey-players who zip around the midway.Hospital strike in eighthMUDDY WATERS: the great blues artistwill he on rompiis February 1 1 By MITCHELL BERLINThe employees of Woodlawn Hospital 61stand Drexel now enter the eighth month intheir protracted strike against the Hospitalmanagement. HELP (Hospital EmployeesLabor Program) representing elevatoroperators, linen room employees, maids,janitors, dietary employees, nursing aides,and orderlies continue to man picket lineserected last year in response to a breakdownof the five month negotiations with thehospital administration. The union demandsare: An increase from $2.25 to $3.25/ hourbase pay. This resolves into an increase from$90.00 to $130.00/ week before taxes; a unionshop, all hospital employees withinjurisdiction of the union must be unionmembers and must pay dues; sickness andaccident benefits commensurate with thoseof other Chicago hospitals; increased vacation benefits; establishment of regulargreivance procedures; reemployment of allstriking workers upon settlement of thestrike. In addition there are minor demandswhose simple resolution depend solely uponagreement to the preceding six. The hospitalcurrently opposes to all six.The overwhelming economic pressuresthat normally make the strike labor’s mostpowerful weapon seem to have been ef¬fectively neutralized. The seventy-fivestriking workers were immediately replacedby non-union strikebreakers who staff thehospital and perform its life functions atpresent pay scales.Union organizer John “Spike” Kozak ofTeamsters Local 743 claims that the picketlines have caused a dropoff in the number ofpatients entering the hospital but admits thatthe hiring of scabs has diminished the«trikp’<s pffpptivpnpcs * Affpr nearly eight monthmonths Woodlawn hospital continues to runwhile striking workers remain severed fromboth their work and the paycheck that formstheir lifesupport.The prospects for immediate settlementdidn’t initially appear as bleak as theypresently do. In December 1971 HELP,boasting an impressive five year record ofsuccessful organizing among formerly at¬omized Chicago hospital workers received104 out of 117 possible authorization cardsfrom the Woodlawn employees. Immediatelyrecognized as the employees sole bargainingagent the union entered into intensivenegotiations with the hospital management.The successful agreements hammered outpreviously with twenty-three Chicagohospitals served as blueprint andjustification for the workers’ demands.Continued on page 7LETTERS TO THE EDITORCo-opYour Friday, December 1 article “TheLettuce Boycotters Seized a Co-op” confirmsan opinion I have held for two years. TheHyde Park Co-op Supermarket engages inmany unscrupulous marketing practices yetsomehow has many of the naive intellectualsof the University of Chicago fooled. They arenot a Co-op in the Rochdale sense. Theirprices are outrageously high for a store theirsize. Their sale advertisements and shelfmarking are subtly deceptive. In short, theonly things worth buying at the “Co-op” aretheir imported foods which are reasonablypriced, everything else is both overpricedand of inferior quality. Harry PlossGraduate StudentGrad speakerThis letter is really addressed to all fourthyear students who are considering going to their graduation in June. If you are, read thearticle “Publish or Perish” by ArthurFriedman, distinguished service professor ofEnglish, in the October 31, 1972 issue of theUniversity of Chicago Record. That articlewas delivered as the graduation address toseniors last year.In the address, Mr Friedman defends theUniversity’s policy of “publish or perish”.He says “in a great university distinguishedpublication must be the most importantcriterion for retention and promotion.”Why? Because “it is through a reputation forscholarly excellence that a university is ableto gain the financial support through giftsand grants that makes certain kinds ofresearch possible.” Not only did Friedmaninform the graduating seniors that emphasisin “great” private universities had to be onresearch rather than teaching in order toraise money, but he also said that “from theinception of the University under Harper,this has been-to as high a degree as anyuniversity anywhere-a graduate and professional institution, and one of theproudest designations of the University hasbeen ‘a community of scholars’”.Although Friedman may reflect the ad¬ministration’s attitude towards the college, ithardly seems appropriate to promote thisview at a college graduation ceremony.University policy makes it possible forstudents to choose the commencementspeaker. There is no reason why we shouldn’ttake advantage of this opportunity to find aspeaker more tolerable than Mr Friedman.Seniors interested in doing this please call288-3635.Ellen Koblitz,Bonnie JandaRich ScotchSCOTCHRick Scotch, where are you when we need you? InmateMy name is Robert Brewer, I’m presentlyan inmate at the London Correctional In¬stitution in London, Ohio.I am without family or financial help what-so ever, therefore I’m appealing to your goodnature for help.I would like to hear from any and allconcerned persons, will answer all mail. I amam 26 years old, a Virgo and I am very lonelyfor someone to correspond with. Is there aconcerned student who will write to me?Robert Brewer #131659, PO Box 69, London,Ohio 43140.I would apreciate it if you would put theabove letter in your paper in order that I mayfind a concerned person that I maycorrespond with.Any help given would be greatly ap¬preciated. Thank you for your time and Ishall await your reply.Robert Brewer.HYDE PARK ART CENTER5236 S. Blackstone Ave.Chicago, 60615363-9565TERM II January 2-March 24 (12 weeks)Classes for Beginning• Intermediate • Advanced Studentsin• PAINTING • CERAMICS• DRAWING • FABRIC ARTS & WEAVING• SCULPTURE • POETRY READINGTUITION INCLUDES FREE WORKSHOP PROGRAMSREGISTRATION AT FIRST CLASS(Monday Classes register and meet on Jan. 8)Painting, Drawing, PotteryChildren s Classes on Saturday mornings.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO CHARTER FLIGHTS ANNOUNCESSUMMER IN EUROPE 197373A BOAC June 13Sept. 23 Chicago/LondonLondon/Chicago Weeks13 Payment DateMarch 12 Price$22473B BOAC June 17July 22 Chicago/LondonLondon/Chicago 5 March 15 $22473C BOAC Aug. 4Sept. 1 Chicago/ParisParis/Chicago 5 May 2 $23473D BOAC Sept. 1Sept. 29 Chicago/LondonLondon/Chicago 4 May 30 $19373E * BOAC June 20Sept. 5 Chicago/LondonLondon/Chicago 11 May 8 $395'This is a group flight, not a charter, accommodating 50 U of C members. The charge for children under 2 will be 10%of the full ticket price, for children between 2 and 12 half the full ticket price. Youths between 12 and 21 will becharged $313.Eligibility for flights is limited to U of C students, faculty and staff, spouses and children.A $50 deposit per seat is required to hold reservations. For application and information contactCharter Flights Office, Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th Street, room 306 or call 753-3598.Castie in Wales. Gondolas and Sails in Venice.2 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, January 5, 1973Lake Village East apartment plannedTwo Chicago developers are launching acampus campaign this weekend to acquaintsingles and young families with Lake VillageEast, a 26-story high-rise at 47th and LakePark Ave. The new building is expected tohelp alleviate the current shortage of goodstudent housing in Hyde Park-Kenwood.Studio apartments in the new high-rise willrent for as little as $115 per month; one-bedroom apartments, for as little as $125,and two-bedroom apartments, for as little as$158. Rents are figured on a sliding scale thatwill now exceed 25 per cent of adult adjustedincome.Lake Village is holding a special “Con¬tinental Breakfast Preview Open House,”exclusively for students, staff, and faculty,from 9 a m to 1 p m Saturday (January 6).Students, staff, and faculty will be admittedfor special tours of model apartments at 47thSt and Dorchester Ave and will be providedwith a free continental breakfast.The first 50 college-connected tenants willreceive a $50 merchandise certificate goodfor furniture or accessories at the Form Co¬op furniture store and will be eligible to win$500 free furniture. Only students or schoolpersonnel are eligible.Lake Village also will reserve apartmentsfor accupancy May 1 or later to aid studentswhose leases may expire in the spring.Designed by award-winning architectsHarry Weese and Associates and EzraGordon-Jack M Levin and Associates, thetower is made up of 38 different angled brickand glass walls of different lengths. Thiscreates a nearly circular design thatproduces an interesting exterior, and aninterior with short corridors for maximumquiet and privacy.Special features include floor-to-ceilingwindows providing spectacular views of thecity and plenty of light. There’s a fullyequipped laundry room, package receivingroom, bicycle and carriage rooms, and freedrapery tracks. Campus bus service isavailable and express buses downtown are atthe door. The tower is set on a spacious plaza andlined with outdoor benches landscaped with agrove of 200 trees. A playlot and free on-siteparking for 150 cars are nearby.Fifty studio apartments include a largeliving-dining area, L-shaped kitchen, and fullbath. Seventy-five one-bedroom apartmentsfeature a spacious living-dining room with two different views of the city and a masterbedroom as large as 15 by 11 feetSeventy-five two-bedroom apartmentsoffer a massive living-dining room as largeas 24 by 14 feet, a master bedroom as largeas 15 by 11 feet, and a second bedroom aslarge as 13 by 11 feet.Other features normally found in luxury buildings are provided: high-speedelevators, master television antenna systemat no charge, telephone jacks, free draperytracks, and a solid core wooden corridor doorwith peepholes and security locks.Lake Village East is part of a “people-planned” community that has earned praisefor its ingenuity and park-like atmosphere.Woodward lecture series continuesThe Woodward Court lecture series willcontinue during winter quarter, with sevenlectures to be offered on Tuesday and Sundaynights.The lectures, sponsored by WoodwardCourt resident master Izaak Wirszup, willcontinue to be held in the resident master’sapartment at 8 pm.The University has announced that thelectures are being recorded, and will be sentto approximately 80 radio stations in variousparts of the country, including 7 in theChicago area.The lecture schedule for winter quarter isas follows:Tuesday, January 16: Richard P McKeon,Charles F Grey distinguished serviceprofessor, department of languages andliteratures, and department of philosophy:Where is Philosphy?Sunday, January 21: Gary S Becker,university professor, department ofeconomics: An Economist Looks at Crimeand Punishment.Tuesday, January 30: Paul Meier,professor, department of statistics,department of theoretical biology, and thecollege: Medical Experiments on People.Sunday, February 4: Philip B Kurland,professor, law school: The New SupremeCourt.Tuesday, February 13: Stuart M Tave,William Rainey Harper professor, the college; chairman and professor, depart¬ment of English: Literature and Life.Sunday, February 18: Charles D O’Con¬nell, dean of students, associate professor,humanities collegiate division: Students andPrivate Higher Education: Can They AffordEach Other? Tuesday, February 27. Dr AlexanderGottschalk, professor and chairman,department of radiology; director andprofessor, Argonne cancer researchhospital: Nuclear Medicine.Admission is free and all students andfaculty members are invited.4 MAROON SPORTS CONTEST'* 1win two tickets to theCHICAGO BULLSvs«MILWAUKEE BUCKS(Sunday, February 4,1973)Simply predict the winner and final scoreof the Jan. 14,1973 Superbowl Game betweenthe MIAMI DOLPHINSandthe WASH. REDSKINSSponsored by the MAROON Sports Staff I Name. JI Address —J Phone J|| Ij Winner of the Superbowl Score I| IL- to JL !Place entries in Specially marked boxes atthe C-Shop, in Reynolds Club, the ParadiseLost in Ida Noyes Hall, or the Pick Coffee Shop.OR...send your entries via Faculty Exchange to:The CHICAGO MAROONIDA NOYES, Room 303Entries will not be accepted after midnightJanuary 13, 1973. Drawing will be held Monday,January 15, 1973, in Ida Noyes, Room 303You need not be present to win.Friday. January 5. 1973 - The Chicago Maroon - 3w2.98 LIST NOW 1.795.98 LIST NOW 3.59 6.98 LIST NOW 4.199.98 LIST NOW 5.99ONE WEEK ONLYCHARGEWITH BankAmericardOUJQA, RECORDS HYDE PARK1444 E. 57thMU 4-1505OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 5The Chicago Maroon - Friday, January 5, 1973 HiRECORDS fr 1I KK IIMOM) 1xpiypox J&KPOK I jCPXDOK40 % OFF LIST- RAINCHECKSAVAILABLE IF PAID FOR AT TIME OF ORDERBurglarFREE is officially launched' SALVATORE AAADD!: Burglar FREE's organizer was present at the program s launchyesterday.Operation BurglarFREE, a communityaction safety program co-sponsored by theHyde Park-Kenwood Community Conferenceand Hyde Park Federal Savings and LoanAssociation, was officially launched at 11 a m,Thursday, January 4. The kick-off washeld at the Hyde Park Federal Savings andLoan Association, 5250 S. Lake ParkAvenue.Participants included Salvatore Maddi,chairman of the Operation BurglarFREETask Force; Mary Houghton, president ofthe Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Con¬ference; Paul Berger, president of the HydePark Federal Savings and Loan Association;Bob Wright, director of the ConferenceTenant Union Community Action Center;Walter Walker, Vice President, University ofChicago; Brian Grainger, president of the5411 S. Ellis Tenant Organization; and JimO’Grady, Commander of the 21st District,Chicago Police Department. After a briefopening ceremony, the group visited the firstbuilding to participate in OperationBurglarFREE, at 5411 S. Ellis Avenue.Operation BurglarFREE is designed todeter breaking and entering in communityresidences. It is the third Con¬ference sponsored safety program and byfar the most comprehensive. It will attemptto organize the Hyde Park-Kenwood com¬munity according to housing types aroundthe issue of collective security.BurglarFREE complements the other twoConference safety programs, ProjectWhistleSTOP which concerns safety on thestreets, and Operation ID which concerns theprotection and recovery of valuables.Persons wishing to join OperationBurglarFREE should obtain the safetymanual entitled “Against Breaking andEntering—LET’S STAND TOGETHER.”The manual is available for 75 cents. It canbe purchased at the following locations:Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Con¬ference, 1400 East 53rd StreetHyde Park Federal Savings and LoanAssociation, 5250 S Lake Park Ave.Exclusive Cleaners, 1553 E Hyde ParkBlvd., 5319 S. Hyde Park Blvd., 1340 E 55th St., 1309 E 57th St. and 1442 E 57th St.Anderson’s Hardware, Kimbark Plaza,1304 E 53rd St.University of Chicago Bookstore, 5750 SEllis Ave.Berman’s Hardware, 1377 E 53rd St.The Book Center, 5211 S Harper Ave.Alderman Leon Despres’ office, 1623 E 55thSt.Considerable research involving police,equipment experts, victims, tenantorganizations, lawyers, and ex-burglarswent into the manual. It includes practicalinformation concerning the nature ofbreaking and entering in Hyde Park-Kenwood, the conditions under which itoccurs, and physical, social, and legalmeasures for its deterrance.Under the heading of physical safety, themanual gives information on kinds and ef¬fectiveness of locks, door frames, intercoms,burglar alarms, watch dogs, and lighting.Recommendations are made, and areahardware stores (some of which will offerdiscounts to Operation BurglarFREE members) that carry the equipment arelisted.Concerning social measures, the manualdetails a number of ways to organizetogether, from simply knowing your im¬mediate neighbors well enough to realizewhen they will be away from home todeveloping an escort service for neighborsarriving by public transportation after dark.Also emphasized are individual actions toincrease security. A tenant should never, forexample, use the intercom to open the door toanyone unless he has been identified, or callattention to his absence by leaving a notesticking out of the mailbox or lettingnewspapers pile up on the front porch.This section, too, discusses the dubiousvalue of firearms in the home. Research hasshown that the great majority of personsburglarized who owned firearms never got achance to use them. When the apartment orhome is burglarized in the owner’s absence,the firearm is almost invariably taken.In the realm of legal considerations, themanual explains a tenant’s rights under theChicago Building Code, the landlord’s responsibility for criminal acts, and theimportance of pressing charges against aburglar. Potential areas of collectivebargaining between tenants and landlordsare outlined and building codes which in¬clude provisions for safety from breakingand entering now in operation in other citiesare mentioned as models for Chicago.At the end of the manual is a three-pageBuilding Security Profile Checklist whichenables a person to identify securityproblems in his residence and building.Participants in Operation BurglarFREE areencouraged to read the manual and completethe checklist. They should then comparetheir checklist with those of other residentsin their building or housing complex to obtaina group security profile.When the Building Security Profile hasbeen completed, persons are asked to con¬tact the Operation BurglarFREE task forceto set up a meeting for concrete suggestionsand actions on improving security.Task force volunteers can help residentsdevelop a complete plan for safety frombreaking and entering which will includesuch specific considerations as geographicallocation, general conditions of the building,rate of turnover among residents, presenceand absence of occupants, and other factors.In addition, task force volunteers can helpin obtaining needed expert services fromlawyers, police and equipment specialists.Salvatore R Maddi, chairman of OperationBurglarFREE, comments, “The manual andOperation BurglarFREE are a call tocollective action, a call to organize toward amore closely knit and better functioningcommunity. The approach to the burglaryproblem which stresses elaborate hardwaremaking one’s residence a fortress has failedwhen tried here and in other places becauseit increases anonymity, isolation, andcommunity fragmentation, and because forevery technological advance there is acounter technology. The answer for us liesrather in standing together as a community,by involving ourselves in each other’s liveson a day-to-day basis and by working towardneeded local reforms.’’KNOW YOU NEED THOSECOURSE BOOKSSo Come to Us FirstWhat We've Got IsVi PRICEHurry on in, our supply is limited,but we’ve got lots of Western Civ.,Common Core, Soc. Sci.,Common Core Hum., etcSTUDENT CO-OPin Reynolds Club Basement 5706 S. UniversityToday 9:30 - 7:00 Monday - Friday 9:30 - 6:00Saturday 11:00 - 4:00We are also BUYING used books-Buyers will be availableOr leave books for overnight service.NEW RECORDS AT DISCOUNT PRICES IALL LABELSPOPULAR. JAZZ A CLASSICAILOWEST PRICES IN CHIC AGO!Friday* January 5„ 1973 - The Cfriicogo Maroon • 5L/C Maroons to hostColorado tomorrow at 1On Saturday, January 6 a smoulderingMaroon basketball squad will seek vengence,when they meet Colorado College as l pm inthe UC field house, 56th Street and Univer¬sity. The Maroons humbly took second placewhen they were soundly beaten 74 to 66 byColorado College December 21st at Chicagoattempted to retain their championship titlein the annual Colorado Christmas Tour¬nament.The Maroons fought their way to thechampionship game again this year bydefeating Grinnell College of Iowa. The teamovercame a first half deficit of twenty-twopoints, and went on to defeat the Iowa teamby a score of 72 to 68. The stand-outs of theGrinnell game were clearly Frank (Hot dog)Edwards who, recovering from an ankleBASKETBALL: Frank Edwards scores forChicago in one of last year's games. injury, led the Maroons with 27 points andfreshman Luthor Rolands who got 10 points.Prior to the Colorado Christmas Tourneythe Maroons defeated Northwestern Collegeand Niles College in two hard-fought contestsat the UC field house.On December 9 the Maroons squeaked pastRudy Harper and Niles College by a score of77-75 when Gerry (The Shark) Clark sunk afield goal with 13 seconds left. The Nilessquad’s attempt to tie the game was turnedback by the tough Maroon defense. Creditshould be given to the defense for holding thehigh-scoring Harper 10 points under his 28point-a-game average. Harper, who isconsidered by many to be one of the topcollegiate basketball players in the state,was put in foul trouble early in the first halfas Niles attempted to brake the sharp Maroonoffense.One week later, at the UC field house theMaroons faced Northwestern College. Evenwith the less than capacity crowd, thewarmth of the field house and the home courtadvantage gave the Maroons the necessaryimpetus to defeat the Northwestern team.The Maroons fell behind the Northwesternteam early in the game and went into thelocker room at half-time several pointsbehind. Spured on by sophomore center JedBarrett’s ten points in the second half theMaroons went on to defeat Northwestern 63to 53.With a week’s rest, some home cookingand the home court advantage the Maroon-Colorado game should prove to be a greatcontest. With the return from the injured listof Steve Kroeter and Sherwin Waldman, thescales should be tipped in Chicago’s favor.The explosive Maroon offense, loaded withthe high scoring Clark who is leading theteam with his 22 point a game average, andEdwards their leading rebounder with 12.3rebounds a game, should complement thetough defense of Kroeter and Jeff Salbergoutfront of the key. With big Jed Barrettworking up the middle the Maroons look tohave a more balanced squad for their outingagainst Colorado college tomorrow. UC CHESS TEAM: For the fourth time, a group of University students has won thenational chess title.Chess team wins titleUniversity of Chicago’s “A” team topped arecord 108 teams of 450 players from 23states, 3 Canadian provinces, and 2 LatinAmerican countries (Dominican Republicand West Indies) to win the Pan AmericanIntercollegiate at Columbus, Ohio,December 26-30. Chicago “A” won 6 matches,drew 2, and lost none to finish a clearhalf match point ahead of Texas, UCLA, andWestern Ontario who tied for second. Thetournament was not decided till the lastround when Chicago crushed a strong McGillteam 3-1/ 2-1/ 2 while Texas upset front¬runner UCLA by 2-1/ 2-1-1/ 2. Chicago alsowon the US Intercollegiate title at thistournament while Western Ontario becamethe new Canadian champion.Harry Ploss was the high scorer forChicago “A” with an amazing 7-1/ 2-1/ 2record on Board 2. Gary DeFotis scored 4-1/ :-3-l/ 2 against very strong opposition onBoard 1 while Ed Friedman was 6-2 on Board3 and Robert Reynolds 5-1/ 2-2-1/ 2 on Board4. All are graduate students: Ploss in Physics, DeFotis in Chemistry, Friedman inBiophysics, and Reynolds in the SocialSciences Divisional Masters Program. Plossand DeFotis were veterans of the Chicagochampionship team of 1968-69. Chicago nowhas tied Columbia University for the honor ofhaving the most national chess titles since1945—each school has won 4 times while noother college has won more than twice (onlyCCNY and MIT have won twice).Demonstrating tremendous depth,Chicago’s “B” and “C” teams also wonprizes. The “B” team tied for 12th place andalso for best second team from a school;while the “C” Team tied for best team withrating in the 1600’s (tying for 34th overall).The final standings of the top 11 teams (thetop 10%of the tournament): 1. Chicago A 7-1;2-4 Texas, UCLA, Western Ontario 6-1/ 2-1-1/ 2 (in that order on tiebreak; 5-11. York,McGill, Temple, Harvard, Toronto, CarnegieMellon, Rochester (in that order ontiebreak). 6-2.THE UNIVERSITY CHARTER FLIGHT PROGRAMWILL HELP YOU ESCAPE CHICAGO WEATHERTHIS MARCHMarch 16 to March 26 Charter Flight to Nassau, Bahamasvia Air Canada, $135 round trip. Special group rates athotels are available to charter passengers.Spend early Spring in Paris. Take our group flight March17, return March 26. Air France fare and accommodationsonly $315.Visit La Plagne, France for 10 days'of Alpine skiing. Groupflight via Air France and accommodations, $315.$50 deposit per seat is required to hold reservations.Final payment date for Spring flights is February 8.Eligibility for all flights is limited to U of C students,faculty and staff, spouses and children. For applicationsand information contact Charger Flights Office, Ida NoyesHall. 1212 East 59th St., room 306 or call 753-3598, 1:30to 5:30 weekdays. TO ALL COLLEGE STUDENTSA REMINDERYou should validateyour I.D. for WinterQuarter by January 5,1973 or you will haveto pay a LateValidation Fee. Bringthe printout of yourWinter Quarter cour¬ses to the Office ofStudent Accounts.6 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, January 5, 1973Woodlawn Hospital strike continuesContinued from page 1After three months and nine sessionsnegotiations were stalled by union charges ofmanagement bad faith. Met by near totalmanagement intransigence on all majordemands and by repeated instances on Ad¬ministration bad faith, HELP called a strikeof hospital employees in June 1971.Accusations of bad faith were leveledagainst the hospital Director, Samuel Eblenand his attempt to undermine HELP byestablishing a company union. All chargeshave been verified by professor Reynolds C.Seitz, of the University of Wisconsin im¬partial fact finder authorized by both partiesto the dispute.On March 17, despite stated recognition ofthe union, Eblen engineered the first meetingof the Employee-management Committeedesigned to: 1. Provide a medium of com¬munication between employees and Ad¬ministration..^. Achieve cooperative in¬tegration of the total employee group. 3.Develop a common spirit of loyalty andpride.”Its purpose was “1. Consultative”, ‘‘2.Communicative”, and most importantly ”3Representative.” All leadership positionswere staffed by management represen¬tatives. To facilitate defection from theauthorized union to the new “Committee”,Eblen offered a thrity-three cent/ hour payincrease to all employees who renouncedmembership in HELP. In immediateresponse the union attacked the Ad¬ministration and the Employee-Management Committee as an attempt to“blatantly usurp the functions andprerogatives of the recognized union ” TheCommittee immediately ceased meeting andcollective bargaining sessions became moreand more acrimonious until the June strikecall.This initial attempt to break the union hasbeen recast and reused again and againthroughout the strikes’ history. Alongside theimportation of scabs the management hassingled out eighteen workers it would underno conditons reemploy. A list was compileddividing the strikers into two groups. Eighteen employees have received lettersdenying them future employment with thehospital on charges ranging from derelictionof duty to assault and battery. According toRobert Simpson of Local 743, “The eighteenfired employees were the first to walk off thejob as soon as the strike had been called.” Heconsiders the list, “an attempt to bully theeighteen workers... a threat against theremaining strikers.” All workers thus firedhave been threatened with confiscation oftheir belongings remaining in hospitallockers.In October 1972 the whole matter wassubmitted to professor Seitz by, “voluntaryagreement of the parties, for impartial factfinding.”In his report he says: “1. It is the an¬nounced policy of the hospital to maintainsalaries competitive with salaries of otherChicago hospitals, and to reflect increases inthe cost of living index. 2. The demands andposition of the Union were in accord withA small group fo Hyde Parkers donateiheir weekends to the grubby job of recyclingfor the simple satisfactions of knowing theyare doing something worthwhile.The Recycling Center grew out of a BretHarte eighth grade project “CRUSH” and aUniversity of Chicago project called Ecosex.Ecosex was located in an alley behind theBlue Gargoyle for about a year, but the spacewas too small for the land-office business inbottles and cans and volunteers to crush cansand smash bottles were hard to find.Eventually the program organizers went tothe Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Con¬ference to ask for help in finding a new siteand some new volunteers.The Co-op offered a corner of its parkinglot. Marshall Korshak, fifth ward committeeman, set up a meeting with the cityDepartment of Streets and Sanitation. Elliott Dudnick prepared mock-ups of the neededbuilding. Fran Grossman borrowed somemoney to prepare the site.Jan Blakenhorn, overall chairwoman forthe center, says the project is partially amoney-making proposition. Glass is par¬ticularly salable. The four or five tonscollected every week is sold to Metro Glass inDolton where it is melted down and reform¬ed. Some of the money is used to pay RossBabcock, a Kenwood High freshman whotidies up during the week when the Centerisn’t open, and Joel Heilman, who is themanager. The rest goes back to the Con¬ference to be donated to other communityprojects, such as the Wooded Island Festival.There is also a small profit in the paperwhich goes to STEP (Save Trees, En¬vironment and People.) But cans havebecome a losing proposition, since it coststhe city more money to truck the cans away wage scales and benefits established in otherChicago hospitals and to reflect increases inthe cost of living. 3. The hospital has failedand refused to make its books and recordsavailable to support any assertions that itcannot afford to pay wage scales andbenefits competitive with other Chicagohospitals.”His recommendations were not binding,and the hospital Administration rejected thereport outright in their letter of November 4.No further attempts at reapproachmenthave been attempted.Recently at a student rally in support of theBaton Rouge Strike members of HELPappeared to request student support for theWoodlawn strike. They emphasized the roleof professor James Lorie, of the Universityof Chicago School of Business, and chairmanof board of directors of Woodlawn Hospital,and asked the University to call uponprofessor Lorie to press for immediatesatisfaction of Union demands.than can be recovered by selling them. Thereis some speculation that the can operationmay eventually have to be discardedA lot of credit for the center’s success goesto James McDonough and the Department ofStreets and Sanitation, who have been sowilling and obliging in working with thecommunity on the recycling project. Thereal bedrock remains the dedicated volun¬teers: Alice Weiner, now in high school, whostarted working with CRUSH and now helpsto call in volunteers on the weekendsThe Recycling Center, if it could re¬organize its space and find a few morevolunteers, could handle other recyclablematerials such as cardboard containers,plastics and aluminum. But an expandedoperation requires more planners and moredoers. Just now there isn’t time to handlemore materials, sort and distribute them.HPKCC recycling center a successCONTEMPORARY EUROPEAN FILMSWINTER QUARTER SCHEDULESaturday Jan. 6Saturday Jan. 13Saturday Jan. 20Sunday Jan. 21Sunday Jan. 28Saturday Feb. 3Sunday Feb. 11Sunday Feb. 18Saturday Feb. 24Sunday March 4Saturday March 11 The Garden of the Finzi-ContinisThe Wild ChildLa SalamandreClosely Watched TrainsSuch Good FriendsTokyo StoryThe Passion of AnnaThe BoyfriendThe Green WallWoman in the DunesCarnal Knowledge 7 & 9:15 Cobb7 & 9:15 Cobb7 & 9:15 Cobb8:00 Mandel7 & 9:15 Cobb7 & 9:30 Cobb7 & 9:15 Cobb7 & 9:15 Cobb7 & 9:15 Cobb7 & 9:15 Mandel7 & 9:15 CobbDue to circumstances beyond our control, we will be unable toshow THE SORROW AND THE PITY until Spring Quarter.Single Admission $1 Series $5Friday, January 5, 1973 - The Chicago Maroon - 7£r***********£% C*mllR*ut *i 1645 E 55TH STREET £* CHICAGO, ILL 60615 *•T Phone: FA 4-1651 w5c******3Mc»aM% ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS' 62 0 E S 3 • c: S'288-2900The Lookof the30/Get it together in thegreatest collectionof sweaters, shirts,baggies & other 30’sthreads! Lots ofpatterns & groovycolors to pick. Plus aton of jeans alwayson hand. You’ll dig it.\u -the kts(J1^ OBT rPART OF COHN & STERNHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55TH & LAKE PARKKJJNDAllNlTOGAINSTRUCTION WILL BE GIVENWINTER QUARTER FROM JAN S'*, IN THE "*—■REYNOLDS ClUB SOUTH LOUNGE. MON 6c THURS™-EVES 5 30-7:00, BY DOBBt KERMAN. ** $30 FOR !S~CLASSES COP TO *10 REBATE, DEPENDING ON ENROLLM’t)SION UP BEFORE JAN 5th TO RESERVE PLACE -- CONTACTSTUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE: IDA NOYES ROOM 209EXT 3-35918 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, January 5, 1973 Winter is Happiness,Winter is Cosiness,Winter is Creativeness,at SCANDIA CRAFTS,School of Embroidery,Needlepoint, Knitting,Crocheting, Dressmaking,Design and Breadmaking.To enroll please callMrs. Gunvor Refetoff373-0989Find us . . .(CERMAK)22ND STREETYOU'LL BEGLADYOU DID . . .EMIL MARESPONTIAC2232 BLUE ISLANDAVENUEIN CHICAGO254-2900HEADQUARTERSFOR. PASSPORTD PHOTOGRAPHS^ .APPLICATIONSh\ PHOTOGRAPHSI black & whileand colorCall MU 4-7424 nowfor an appointmentCorona Studios1314 E 53RD*StudentDiscountModelCamera1342 E. 55th493-6700Most complete photoshop on South Side.LOSE 20 POUNDSIN TWO WEEKS!Famous VS Women Ski Team DietDuring (he non-snow off seasonthe U S Women’s Alpine Ski Teammembers go on the “Ski Team" dietto lose 20 pounds in two weeksThat's right 20 pounds in 14 days!The basis of the diet is chemical foodaction and was devised by a famousColorado physician especially for theIJ.S Ski Team Normal energy ismaintained (very important') whilereducing You keep “full" nostarvation because the diet is de¬signed that way' It's a diet that iseasy to follow whether you work,travel or stay at homeThis is. honestly, a fantasticallysuccessful diet If it weren't, the U S.Women's Ski Team wouldn't be per¬mitted to use it! Right1 So. giveyourself the same break the IJ.S SkiTeam gets Lose weight the scientific,proven way Even it you’ve tried allthe other diets, you owe it to your¬self to try the U.S Women’s SkiTeam Diet That is. if you really dowant to lose 20 pounds in two weeksOrder today Tear this out as areminderSend only $2 00 ($2 25 for RushService) - cash is O K to Infor¬mation Sources Co., PO Box 982,Dept ST. Carpintena. Calif 93013Don't order unless you expect to lose20 pounds in two weeks! Becauseth»»> wh»i ih* T »am IWt will Ho' accent/sSTMTS SAT. JAN. NilREDUCEDUP TOLAMPS GIFTS COOKWAREDINNERWARE FURNISHINGSSPECIALS WHILE SUPPLIES LAST• XmasOrnaments 50% OFF• Fondue Cookers,Enamel Pot Forks Reg. 16.50 SALE ir°• Directors Chairs, Chrome Frame,Vinyl Sling, Req 29.95 SALE 19”• Ice Bucket,Leather Handle Reg. 10.00 SALE ooOO• Twelve BottleWine Rack. Reg. 15.00 SALE o o• 1973 Calendars,Your Choice ALL REDUCED 50%• Tira Ceramic Dinnerware(Red, Blue, Yellow) REDUCED 30%• Vinyl Place Mats,Your Choice REDUCED 30%• Hand Crafted Jewelry,Pins, Bracelets, Earrings REDUCED 20%• Traveler, Swinger,Wall Lamps REDUCED 40%accent SORRYNO FREE GIFT WRAPPINGOF SALE ITEMSaccent/shop, inc.1437 E. 53rd• Comer 53rd and BlackstoneMl 3-7400accent coParochial vs. Public school:Dilemma in race relationson South SideBy ALAN WERTHEIMERPast the border of the Hyde Park community,beyond the skeletons of the burned-out tenements on62nd Street and Dorchester, under the 63rd Street Eltracks, and into Blackstone Ranger territory, is athriving, expanding boy’s parochial high school,claiming “over seventy years of excellence ineducation.”Much like the University of Chicago, Mt CarmelHigh School, on 64th St and S Dante, is apredominantly White school, situated in an over¬whelmingly Black community. Although confined toone building, with several modernistic annexes, MtCarmel High is a community within itself, drawingfrom sources outside of the Black ghetto surroundingit in order to sustain itself.Of the approximately 850 students attending MtCarmel, according to the school spokesman, registrar-teacher Walter Koza, 90 percent are Roman Catholicand 85 percent are White.In contrast, Hyde Park High School, located a fewblocks away, on 62nd St and Stony Island, is a publicschool, 98 percent of which student population isBlack, the other two percent being of Mexican orPuerto Rican parentage.Mt Carmel High, maintains Koza, contains a “cross-section” of the population of Chicago and its environs,as well as students from the Indiana suburbs such asHighland and Riverdale. Students reach the school bythe Illinois Central, the CTA, and four private buses.In addition, many students own their own cars—fewwalk.Tuition of six hundred dollars a year plus fees perstudent raises the money necessary to support theschool, according to the administrative represen¬tative. In addition, there are fund-raising activities,such as last year’s five-car raffle, which contribute.With the exception of a few scholarships, to needyBlack student-athletes the Archdiocese gives no grantto the school.Koza states that when they are short of funds, ac¬tivities are simply cut-down; however the fact thatthe fourteen religious teachers, out of a faculty offorty-two, do not receive full salary, augments thebudget.The tuition factor is an important determinant in thetype of student found in Mt Carmel. Entranceexaminations, and the location of the school itself arealso limiting factors in the formation of the studentbody. A strong sense of tradition draws members ofthe same family in succeeding generations to theschool, and alumni are to be found both on the facultyand as frequent visitors to the school grounds.Entrance examinations are given by the Ar¬chdiocese. These standardized exams are part of thelarger uniform Catholic school entrance examinationsystem, which is offered nationally each year. Inaddition to the scores which result from these tests,recommendations from former teachers will deter¬mine the placement of the individual within his class.Koza maintains that, “If a boy applies, if he canafford the tuition, he can attend.” There is no systemof districting which chould deny students of particularareas access to the school, as often occurs withrespect to local public schools. According to Koza,there is also no cut-off with respect to examinationscores. In fact, of last year’s 240 applications, all wereaccepted. The fact that only 225 students were enrolledwas explained by the fact that fifteen of the studentsdeclined to enter the school for personal reasons.A random sample of White students said that thingsat the school were becoming “looser.” The fact thatthere were more electives and a generally broadeningcurriculum was a reason for attending Mt Carmel asopposed to a local public school.These students felt that Mt Carmel was like “onebig family.” One student said, “Everybody’s reallytogether. We hang together.” He went further to ex¬plain that this was also a factor in choosing a college.Ninety percent of the students enter college, ac¬cording to Koza, but no records have been kept by theschool administration.Tuition was described by students as “high,” andincreases yearly. The seniors who pay $600 now, paid$425 as entering freshman. The consensus was thathigh ratings with colleges and the good teacher-student rapport made the Mt Carmel experience worth the expenditure.Koza stated that there was “no major raceproblem” in the school. White students agreed, andadded that they had no serious problems functioningwithin the immediate neighborhood. In the regulationsof the school, it is stated that, “No student is allowed toleave the school property without the explicit per¬mission of the disciplinarian or one of the vice¬principals.”One Black student claimed that the Whites were“always picking fights with the Black students,” andnoted that there was offensive anti-Black graffiti to befound in parts of the school. In addition, he noted thatof the 225 entering freshman, only “two or three” werefrom the neighborhood.According to this student, most Blacks did not haveenough money to finance the education of their sons atMt Carmel. He maintained, however, that he did notthink that one learned as much in an all Black publicschool as in an integrated parochial school.Black students at the school have formed a BlackStudent Union, comprising over a hundred members,according to the estimate of several members. The“heavy” squads of the deeply sports-oriented MtCarmel are predominantly Black.One member of the Varsity Basketball “heavy”squad noted that the only White students with whomhe had any communication were the two Whitestudents on the team.Mr Konkol, a young White English teacher, feelsteaching at a parochial school is more reward¬ing than the minority high school at which hedid his student teaching. Although the monetaryremuneration was $1500 less, Konkol felt that both theacademic and social discipline, including the concernabout grades which he found at Mt Carmel, was one ofthe aspects which made teaching at the parochialschool more gratifying.In contrast, however, Konkol stated that it was atthe minority high school, in which the studentpopulation was Black and Indian, where the “moreserious and demanding” questions were asked. Thisphenomenon he attributed to the fact that publicschool students had “seen more of the world,” and had“more previous experiences,” than the suburbanstudents he is now teaching. Konkol noted that most of the Black students in MtCarmel were from “middle-class” homes. Accordingto Konkol, these students came to the parochial schoolboth for educational and status reasons, and had apredominately Catholic background.Ms Sybil King, a Black woman, teaching English,Mythology, and Acting, commented that “Blackparents nowadays want the same things (i.e., middleclass values) for their kids.” Ms King, one of twoBlack women teachers on the faculty, felt that the factthat most of the students, both Black and White, comefrom the same type of background relieved a lot of theracial tension of the school. The Mt Carmel HighSchool Regulations state, “Each young man’s per¬sonality is respected, but his conduct as a Carmel manmust be viewed as a member of a special community.We expect each of our students to be a little bit dif¬ferent, a little bit better, a person with a little moreclass than a boy from any other school.”Discussing racial tensions within the school on thefaculty level, Ms King noted that, “Sometimes it canbe a hassle.” She added, however, that “no matterwhere you go, you can't escape a certain amount ofthat sort of thing.” Ms King continued that she foundthat racial tensions were a result of personalityclashes which mushroomed into racial clashes whenthe persons were of different colors.Ms King found that the “Public School system isfoul.” She characterized that system as “political,”with its strikes, stiff certifications, and the difficultyin acquiring assignments. When Ms King graduatedfrom college in May, 1972, she found that she couldaccept the lower salary of the parochial schoolbecause of alternative benefits, such as a “morecongenial faculty,” the student body not being as“bad.” and “a strong discipline office.” She feels thatshe cannot teach and “babysit” simultaneously,which she thinks would be the result of teaching in apublic school.Ms King agreed that tuition and tradition drew acertain “ ype” of student, but pointed out that withregard to Black students, a feeling of allegiance to theschool did not exist. Black students do not feel a part ofthe tradition which has kept the school within “one bigfamily.”One of the religious teachers added that the reasonthat very few neighborhood kids are recruited fromnearby elementary schools is that “the kids can'tmeasure up to our standards.” Only the Catholicelementary school next door serves as a feeder of a“few students each year.” As this Father expressed it,“Let the kids in the neighborhood come up to us, aslong as the IC tracks stay here, we're full.” He furthermaintained that the suburban kids “get an educationin coming to school.” in seeing the area, “and the waythe Blacks live.”Konkol stated that in 1924 when Mt Carmel High wasdedicated, the neighborhood was White and “well-to-do;” predominantly Irish-Catholic. Many priestsworking with the school today are from thatbackground. As Blacks began to move in to thecommunity, and Whites began to move to thesuburban districts, the school no longer could becharacterized as a “neighborhood school.” Konkolappreciated that the school continues to be less so.Konkol sees the widening arc of the White flightfrom the Woodlawn Community as having a negativeeffect on the school and its relationship with itsstudents. He claims that students were formerly of¬fered “more campus life” and notes that attendanceat school social functions is dropping.On the other hand, Konkol suggests that the servicesprovided, independently of the high school, by theCarmelite Fathers in the Woodlawn area compensatesand “benefits the neighborhood as well as possible,”their work being at once both “diplomatic andhumanitarian.”Both Konkol and Ms King feel that the neighborhoodwill change again into a predominantly White area,although Konkol does not foresee this development for“many, many years.” Ms King explained further thatthe city itself was producing the change, as high-riseapartments with high rents replaced slum housing andforced poorer Blacks to leave these areas in favor oflower-cost housing farther south on the South Side. Inaddition, the expansion of school facilities was acting,according to Ms King, as in the Hyde Park com¬munity, as a stimulus to this evolution.Friday, January 5, 1973 - The Chicago Maroon - 9rABOUT THE MIDWAYCAP speaker“I’m shocked at you.” So Mayor RichardJ. Daley characterized Father LeonardDubi’s form of activism. Father Dubi, thefounder and co-chairman of CAP, will speakon campus Wednesday, January 10, at 7:30 inSS 122.Father Dubi first came to light as a leaderof the Campaign Against Pollution, aChicago-based group of concerned citizensinvestigating links between big polluters andbig politicians. The first CAP branched outinto a full-scale citizens action program,(initials forming the second “CAP”).CAP has been active in opposing thecrosstown expressway, uncovering waste inthe Board of Education, and fingering somedelicate dealings in the cook CountyAssessor’s Office. CAP’S involvement in thelatter activity earned it the accolade of“amodel for the whole country” from Saul Alinsky and the perhaps greater accolade of“amateurish and irresponsible” from P. J.Cullerton, Cook County Assessor.Father Dubi will be speaking on whateverissues in CAP’S broad spectrum the audienceis interested in but will be directing hiscomments to specific methods for universitystudents to get involved in curbing the harmsof big business and big government. Hisappearance is being sponsored by StudentGovernment, and the admission will be free.ConvocationThe University awarded four honorarydegrees and 431 academic degrees at its342nd Convocation last Friday, December 15,in Rockefeller Memorial Chapel.Those receiving honorary degrees were:Boris Ephrussi, professor of genetics atthe University of Paris and director of thelaboratory of physiological genetics of the centre national de la recherche scientifiqueat Gif-sur-Yvette, Paris, doctor of science;Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, the WolfsonResearch Professor of the royal society,director of the chemical crystallographylaboratory at Oxford University, and a 1964Nobel Laureate in Chemistry, Doctor ofScience; Herbert Hunger, professor ofByzantine studies at the University of Viennaand general secretary of the AustrianAcademy of Science, Doctor of HumaneLetters; and Dr Niels Kaj Jerne, Director ofthe Basel (Switzerland) Institute of Im¬munology, Doctor of Science.Soia Mentschikoff, Professor of Law at theUniversity, delivered the Convocation ad¬dress, entitled “Awareness.”Cancer grantFATHER LEONARD DUBI: the leader of the Campaign Against Pollution wihere next Wednesday. speak A contract for $117,000 from the NationalCancer Institute (NCI) for a study on the“Biochemical Nature of Hormone Depen¬dency in Breast Cancer” has been receivedby the University.Principal investigator under the grant isEugene De Sombre, Assistant Professor inthe Ben May Laboratory for CancerResearch in the University’s division of thebiological sciences and the Pritzker School ofMedicine.The contract is among 14 breast cancerresearch contracts given to 12 US univer¬sities and medical centers. The contracts,totaling $985,000, were awarded by the ex¬perimental biology subcommittee of theNCI’s Breast Cancer Task Force, formed in1971 to plan and coordinate and expandedresearch program in breast cancer.Breast cancer is the most common form ofcancer among American women, striking70,000 women and causing 31,000 deaths eachyear. Most cases occur in women after theage of 45 when many changes are takingplace in the body. According to the NCI, sexhormone balances may play an importantrole in the development of the disease. TheUniversity’s Ben May Laboratory for CancerResearch pioneered in the study of sex hormone-related cancers such as breast andprostate cancer.De Sombre, a specialist in estrogen(female sex hormone) research, will studyhow estrogen and other hormones interactwith mammary cancer cells and affect thecells’ activities. Normal tissue and cancersthat need estrogen for growth and others thatcan grow without it will be contrasted. Theresearch will seek differences that couldexplain why the hormone loses its ability toregulate growth as cancer progresses.Education surveyThe University is rated best in the teachingof educational administration among 80institutions of higher learning in the UnitedStates, according to a recent study.A survey, patterned after the much-publicized 1969 American councileducation rating of graduate programs,shows the University’s midwest ad¬ministration center ranking first in both thequality of its faculty and the quality of itsprogram of study-the two categoriesevaluated.More than 450 scholars in the field ofeducational administration responded to thesurvey prepared by Russell T Gregg,professor of educational administrationresponded to the University of Wisconsin,and Paul D Sims, assistant professor ofbusiness at Albany Junior College, Albany,Georgia.Following the University in the rating offaculty quality were, in order of rank, theuniversities of Wisconsin and Oregon, NewYork University, the University of Californiaat Berkely, Ohio State University, andStanford University.The University of Wisconsin also was ratedsecond in program quality, followed by OhioState, Standford, and Harvard.Educational administration departmentsof these institutions all were labeleddistinguished in their particular category.The survey also ranked those departmentsconsidered strong. Survey respondentsm CO-OPSPECIALS m4Q ARMOUR.-^ CALIF. WEjjpfek-k COUNTRY'S DELIGHTARMOUR TESTENDER BEEF ■iM 2% LOWU. S. CHOICE f Q9 TANGELOS FAT MILKROUND STEAK...I «, MAOU. S. CHOICE 1 29 3 1b.bog lf|| dpP,N‘’' 39pRUMP ROAST ....I ibNOW! 15 CHECKOUTS TO SERVE YOUTHE NEW YOGURT CENTER IS OPENNEW HOURS MONDAY-WEDNESDAYTHURSDAY-FRIDAYSATURDAYSUNDAY 9 A.M. -7:30 P.M.9 A.M.-9 P M.9 AM. 7 P.M.9 A.M.-5 PM.HYDE PARK CO-OP SUPER MARKET1526 E. 55th STREET10 - Tha Chicago Maroon - Friday, January 5, 1973hABOUT THE MIDWAYevaluated faculties primarily on theirresearch activities, teaching effectiveness,publication record, professional servicecontribution, and special achievements andrecognitions.Programs of study were judged accordingto the eminence of faculty, quality ofstudents and graduates, availability ofsupportive research facilities and libraryservices, size of faculty, and the strength ofrelated departments. Programs ofeducational administration were notevaluated in the 1969 American council oneducation’s survey which, according toGregg and Sims, prompted their study. Theirstudy was published in the fall issue ofEducational Administration Quartely.Prize winnerThe American Historical Associationawarded the 1972 Herbert Baxter AdamsPrize to Richard Hellie for his book En-serfment and Military Change in Muscovy,published by The University of ChicagoPress.Hellie, who is associate professor ofRussian history at the University, receivedthe Adams Prize December 28 at the nationalmeeting of the association in New Orleans.The prize is awarded annually for anAmerican author’s first book in the field ofEuropena history, and carries a cash grantof $300.Published in 1972, Enserfment andMilitary Change in Muscovy is a study of theproblem of enserfment, the interests of thelandholders, and the pressures on thegovernment created by changing militarytechniques and the emergence of a gentryclass.MentschikoffA University of Chicago law professor isslated to become the first woman presidentof the Association of American Law Schoolsin that organization’s 72-year history. Soia Mentschikoff was named president¬elect for 1973 of the Association during itannual meeting December 27-30 in New YorkCity.Miss Mentschikoff, an authority oncommercial and international law, helpeddraft the US Uniform Commercial Code incollaboration with her late husband, KarlLlewellyn. The Code is considered one of themost important pieces of civil legislationenacted by the states during the 20th cen¬tury.The Code, enacted in 52 jurisdictions, in¬cludes laws on sales, negotiable instruments,bank collections, documents of title, andsecured financing.Her husband served on The University ofChicago’s Law School faculty from 1951 untilhis death in 1962 and was president of theAssociation in 1950.She was born in 1915 in Moscow, Russia, ofAmerican parents. She and her familymoved to the United States two years later.Ferguson deathDr Lloyd Allen Ferguson, associateprofessor in the department of medicine andassistant dean of students in the division ofbiological sciences and The Pritzker Schoolof Medicine at The University, died at 12:30 am on Monday, January 1. He was 40. He diedof lymphoma, a form of cancer. Dr Fergusonhad been a patient in the University’shospital when death occurred.Dr Ferguson had been chief of a section ofgeneral medicine, and medical director ofthe Greater Woodlawn Assistance Cor¬poration at 950 E 61st Street. In addition, hehad served in the General Medicine Clinic inthe University’s Hospitals and Clinics.Dr Ferguson is survived by his wife whoseprofessional name is Dr Joel Murray, anassistant professor in the department ofmedicine and a member of the NeurologyClinic at the University.Other survivors include three daughtersfrom a previous marriage. They are Donna Marie, 16; Debora Kay, 14; and Diana Sue, 9.Memorial services were held in BondChapel on January 3.Musicians neededThe University concert band needs morequalified musicians. Double reed players,percussionists and trumpeters are especiallyneeded but openings exist in every sectionof the Band for interested musicians.Rehearsals are held on Tuesday andThursday evenings from 5:30 until 7:00 inLexington Studio, 5835 S University Ave. Ifyou want to play in this fine ensemble, pleasefeel free to attend any rehearsal or call thedirector at 3-2534 for additional information.HassThe December 16 National Obervernamed “1972’s 10 Nicest People in Sports,” and first on the list is ‘‘Wally Hass, athleticdirector and football coach at The Universityof Chicago, a place where playing the gameis what counts and where, by golly, it’s evenfun to play... Where the coach can smile, anddoes, when a play is botched.” Hass isProfessor and chairman of physicaleducation.RecitalEasley Blackwood, professor of music atThe University, will be heard in a pianorecital at 4 pm Sunday, January 7. He willperform in Mandel Hall, 1131 East 57thStreet. Admission is free and open to thepublic. The program is being presented bythe University’s department of music.Blackwood will perform one of theprograms which is planned for his Europeantour in February. The program includes theSonata in F, opus 10, number 2, byBeethoven; the Sonata Number 3 (1965), byPhoto by Liz RussoCordially Invites You To BreakfastSaturday, Jan. 6,10 a.m.-to 1 p.m.SPECIAL U OF C PREVIEW SHOWINGCome have a free continental break¬fast on us at a preview apartmentshowing for U of C students, staff,and faculty. Check out our rents thatrespect college incomes (as low as$115 per month for a studio, $ 125 fora one-bedroom, $158 for a two-bedroom). See our beautiful modelapartments. Or simply make a men¬tal note to stop by before your Satur¬day errands if you're hungry (there'sno obligation). Learn too about the $50 furniture mer¬chandise certificate that goes withevery apartment and the $500 freefurniture that is yours if you rent, andthen win our prize drawing. Fulldetails can be seen in the advertisingsupplement in today's ChicagoMaroon.See you Saturday from 9 to 1 p.m. at 47th & DorchesterDRAPER & KRAMERManagement Agents For more information,call our "Campus Hot Line"624-4793Friday, January 5, 1973 - The Chicago Maroon - 11ABOUT THE MIDWAYSessions; and Schubert’s Sonata in A, D. 959.Blackwood, 39, came to The University in1958 as an instructor of music. He was namedassistant professor of Music in 1960,associate professor in 1964, and professor in1968.Blackwood studied composition withBernard Heiden and with Olivier Messiaen.He received his Mus M degree from YaleUniversity, where he studied with PaulHindemith. Later, on a Fulbright Scholar¬ship in Paris, he was a pupil of NadiaBoulanger.Debate teamTwo undergraduate students at theUniversity recently won the Iona (NewRochelle, New York) College nationalparliamentary debate tournament.They are Joseph A Morris, of Gary, In¬diana, and Mitchel Glass, of Philadelphia,Pennsylvania. He is president of theUniversity’s debate society. Both studentsare seniors in the college.Morris and Glass defeated teams fromTowson State College, McGill University, StJohn’s College, Princeton University,Providence College, and Colgate University.The University team also scored morepoints than did teams from Yale, Wesleyan,Hamilton, and the Royal Canadian CoastGuard.Van AltenaWilliam F van Altena, associate professorin the department of astronomy andastrophysics at the University has beenappointed Director of the University’sYerkes Observatory in Williams Bay,Wisconsin. The Observatory is used forresearch and graduate instruction.A native Californian, van Altena receivedhis A B and Ph D from the University ofCalifornia, Berkeley, in 1962 and 1966,respectively. He came to the University in1966 as an instructor.Van Altena’s interests are primarily inastrometry, the study of the motions anddistances of the stars, structure and stellarcontent of star clusters. Yerkes, which houses the world’s largestrefracting telescope, is said to be ideallysuited to this study, as the telescope isespecially useful for astronomicalphotography. Since many photographs weretaken soon after Yerkes’ construction in 1897,photographic comparisons showingsignificant interim movement of stars arepresently under study.Van Altena succeeds C. Robert O’Dell asDirector. O’Dell is on leave of absence at theNational Aeronautics and Space Ad¬ministration where he is Project Schientistfor the Large Space Telescope Program atMarshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville,Alabama.PI writersThree writers have joined the staff of theUniversity’s office of public information.Howard S Bimson and Iris Poliski havebeen assigned to the University’s biologicaland physical sciences, respectively. Theyalso will have editorial reponsibilities forseveral publications in their areas ofspecialization.Lezlie Carr, the third new member, will beresponsible primarily for the coverage ofactivities in the social sciences and of thedivinity school.Bimson, a native of Elizabeth, New Jersey,came to the University from the nationalassociation of boards of pharmacy inChicago where he was editor of publications.He received both his bachelor’s and master’sdegrees from the medill school of journalismat Northwestern University.Poliski previously was managing editor ofand feature writer for several Chicago-areatrade publications. A graduate of NorthernIllinois University, DeKalb, she also hasbeen associated with the Bulletin of AtomicScientists and the University of ChicagoPres. She is a native of Calumet City,Illinois.Carr, of Downers Grove, Illinois, wasmanaging editor of Mile Square Courier, aChicago community newspaper published bythe Chicago Commons Association. Forseveral years she also was a public relationsspecialist with the A 0 Smith Corporation ofMilwaukee. Born and raised in Maywood, Illinois, she is a graduate of Ripon College,Ripon, Wisconsin.Navajo healthDr Chase Patterson Kimball, associateprofessor in the department of psychiatryand medicine at The University and directorof programs in intercultural medicine atChicago and at Yale University, has beenappointed to the Board of Commissioners ofthe Navajo Health Authority.This authority has been established toplan, develop, and implement a School ofMedicine for American Indians which willseek to integrate traditional native practiceswith those of Western medicine.Dr. Kimball, a specialist in interculturalmedicine and the psychological aspects ofmedical practice, came to the faculty of TheUniversity of Chicago’s Division of theBilogical Sciences and The Pritzker School ofMedicine in July 1972 from Yale. For the pastfive years he has conducted a summerteaching and research program for Yale’smedical students on the Navajo Reservationin Arizona and New Mexico.He hopes to enlist twelve University ofChicago and eight Yale freshman andsophomore medical students in the summer1973 program. The students will help provideprimary health care in Navajo Indianhospitals.The program involves an orientation phasein spring, 1973, at which specialists in Indiancultures will speak. The clinical period workwill include work in a US Public HealthService Indian Hospital or clinic and a studyproject on the Navajo Reservation. Asumming-up stage will follow in which theexperience and projects will be reviewed inseminars on the Chicago and Yale campuses.VermeerThe Vermeer Quartet will make its secondconcert appearance this season at theUniversity at 8:30 am Friday, January 5, aspart of the Chamber Music Series. They willperform in Mandel Hall, 1131 E 57th St.World-renowned cellist Raya Garbousovawill make a guest appearance with the Quartet.The Quartet, consisting of violinists ShuelAshkenasi and Pierre Menard; violist ScottNickrenz; cellist Ronald Leonard; andMadame Garbousova will perform theQuintet in E, opus 13, number 5, by Boc¬cherini. The group will also perform QuartetNumber 5, by Bela Bartok, and the Quartetin E minor, opus 44, number 2, by Men¬delssohn.Admission to the concert is $4. All seats arereserved. Tickets and information areavailable at the department of music’sconcert office, 5835 S University Ave, or byphone, 753-2612. Checks and money ordersshould be made payable to the University,and a self-addressed, stamped envelopemust be enclosed.Art classesEscape the midwinter “blahs” by takinga Hyde Park Art Center course at the school(5236 S. Blackstone) beginning the week ofJanuary 2 and continuing through March 24,advised Mrs Leonard Horwich, Art Centerchairman. “We have an eclectic schedule foradults and children and may soon offer ateenage after-school class. It doesn’t makeany difference if you are a rank beginner orif you have an art background. All studentsreceive individual instruction.”Courses are scheduled as follows:Tuesdays from 7 to 9:30 pm, Fabric Art andSimple Weaving will be taught by NancyHood. By popular request, Hardy Schliek isscheduled for three ceramics classes, twomeet from 7 to 9:30 pm on Monday andWednesday evenings; and on Wednesdaymorning from 9:30 to noon. Sonia Katz, a wellknown Hyde Park artist, is continuing herSculpture class on Tuesdays from 7 to 9 pm.Limited to 14 students, early registration issuggested. For those free du; ng the day, theArt Center has Painting clfcss on Mondaysfrom 1 to 3:30 p.m. taught by Nancy Red¬mond. Featured also art two eveningPainting and Drawing classes from 7 to 9:30p m: Painting taught Mondays by KenAvick; and on Wednesdays Life Drawingwith Ai Wen J. Kratz. A Poetry Workshopwill be held Thursdays from 3:30 to 5 pmSI33 Down $68.05 Monthly 36 poymonrt,A (Wool fercantog* Rot* to M.54.Total D*terr*d pr«• $3982JO.VOLKSWAGEN SOUTH SHOREs133 nwtSoImTok S*tra$6805Phone 288 4900 7234 S. STONY ISLANDOpen Daily t, Saturday Closed Sunday Department of Music presentsEASLEY BLACKWOOD pianoBeethoven • Sessions • SchubertSUNDAY • JANUARY 7, T973 • 4:00 P.M.MANDEL HALLAdmission is freei JESSElSON*Sj KATSAR0S P U A & M A ( Y,.nc• Complete Prescription Needs• Prompt Delivery Service1521 E. 53rd ST. Phone 288-8700FRESH FISH A SEAFOOD7S2-MTO. 7S341tO, MMIM- 13401. SM @ authorized se es & serviceMANDEL HALL JANUARY 18 at 8:30 P.M.Tickets: $5. $4, $3 (students with U. of C. t.D. $2)available at Ida Noyes Hall 207Sponsored by the University of Chicago and Chicago Dance Foundationin cooperation with the National Endowment for the Arts and the Illinois Arts0 Counci1 Thank goodness some thingsnever change.Good things, like expressingyour love with a diamond.And good things, like the 62 year oldHollands Jewelers policy of returning yourmoney if you're not satisfied.Lots of things have changed, too. Forthe better. Like the newest cuts in diamonds,especially our exciting new heart shapes.And the large selection of beautifulnew settings that you'll find at .Hollands Jewelers today.Hollands Jewelerstine* 1*10Downtown Ev*rgr**n Pitt* Lak*hur«t Woodhtld 312-mi 3-3113^foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.*^^*^5424 south kimbark avenue • chica 60615KIMBvRKLIQUORSINE MERCHANTSOF THE f NESTIMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESfeaturing our direct imp *rt*.bringing bolter value to outTUI ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HVDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS INC.12145.53rd St.53-Kimbarfc Plain NY 3-33551 2 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, January 5, 1973ABOUT THE MIDWAYwith Hyde Parker Tobie Harris.Saturday morning at the Center is devotedto children’s classes. Alice Shaddle Baumand Kay Campoli oversee a happy crowd of 6to 12 year olds up to their elbows in paint andclay. Since the Winter term begins onTuesday, January 2, all Monday classes willregister and meet on Monday, January 8.For further information, phone 363-9565. Weather permitting, skating will start atNorth Field this Saturday. Hours are 7 pm to10 pm on weekends; on week nights 7:30 to 10pm and 3:30 - 5:30 on weekdays. A peek out ofthe MAROON window shows the ParkDistrict at work flooding the Midway, sothere really is no excuse not to try your feetat skating.Debate 2 LunchThe Debate Club will hold intramuralsessions of off-topic debating, according toMitchell Glass, Debate Club President. “Wefeel it will give students a chance to try outtheir skills at public speaking”, said Glass,“under the tutelage of skilled orators.” Whenpressed, he admitted that the orators are tobe present officers of the club.Announcements of details will appear oncampus bulletin boards.Ice skatesWhy not make ice skating part of yourWinter Quarter? You can, even if you’refrom the South and have never seen skates,because of the ice skate loan service whichwill open next week. It will run on a freebasis (all you need as collateral is your UCID) and is part of the “Chicago is a WinterCarnival” theme of the Student ActivitiesWinter Quarter Program. A range of sizesfor both men and women is to be offered,although currently there is a shortage ofwomen’s skates. Hockey, racing and figureskates will be available for men.Better yet, tempt your chances at winninga door prize at the “Big John” dance onJanuary 12 (music by Styx) at which twopairs (so far) of ice skates are up as prizes:one donated by the Nestor Johnson Mfg Coand the other by Klein's Sporting Goods.Later this quarter, the Student ActivitiesOffice will host a giant ice skating party onthe Midway. Host, insofar as the SAO willrent about 75 pairs of skates to supplementit’s own collection, for one night on theMidway. Hot chocolate will be served in Idafollowing this event to cold or bruisedskaters. There will be a luncheon for commutingstudents on Monday, January 15 at 12 in theCloister Club of Ida Noyes Hall. All freshmancommuters and those upper classmen whocommute from outside the Hyde Park-SouthShore area will be invited. The luncheon issponsored by the Office of the Dean of Un¬dergraduate Students with the hope of get¬ting at some of the problems and experiencesof the commuting student.The idea for the luncheon arose fromconversations a number of commuters hadwith their advisers. Several problemsseemed to be common. Many commuters feltisolated from their fellow students. Theclassroom did not seem to be a good place toget to know people. Some students wanted tobecome more involved with student life inthe dormitories. Transportation was anotherproblem. Many commuters rely on publictransportation but are afraid to use it atnight. Some students would like a car pool.Commuters often have to bring many booksbut have no place to leave them. There is apossibility of lockers being provided forcommuters.At the luncheon these and other problemswill be discussed. Opportunities for com¬muters to become involved in the dormsthrough Associate Memberships in theHouses and partial meal contracts will beexplored. The freshmen will have a chance tohear how the upper classmen have tried tosolve some of the commuting problems.Hopefully, this will be the first of a series ofattempts to bring the commuting studentinto more active participation in campus life.Fano appointmentUgo Fano, an authority on theoretical atomic physics, has been appointed chair¬man of the department of physics at theUniversity.Fano, 60, is a professor in the departmentof physics, in the James Franck Institute,and in the College. He joined the faculty in1966 as a professor.A native of Turin, Italy, Fano received hisSc D degree from the University of Turin in1934 and then spent his early academiccareer engaged in research at the Universityof Rome under the tutorship of EnricoFermi.Fano was also a visiting professor at theUniversity of California, Berkeley, and at theCatholic University of America beforejoining the University.In 1956 he received the Rockefeller PublicService Award for distinguished service tothe government of the US and to theAmerican people. In 1957 he was granted aGold Medal from the US CommerceDepartment for outstanding scientific workleading to a more accurate radiationmeasurement.A member of the radiation researchsociety, Fano has been a fellow in theamerican physical society for the last 16years.AstronomyEugene Parker, originator of the “solarwind” concept, has been appointed chairmanof the department of astronomy andastrophysics at the University.Parker is professor in astronomy andastrophysics, the department of physics, theEnrico Fermi Institute, and the College. Hisspecial fields of interest include the behaviorof gas particles, and magnetic fields in spacearound the earth, in the sun, and in thegalaxy.In addition to his previous work on thesolar wind. Parker is also known for his“general dynamo equation” which statesthat the general magnetic field of earth, ofthe sun, and of the galaxy (the Milky Way),may be generated by the motions of thefluids and gases within.Parker received his B S degree fromMichigan State University and his Ph D from California Institute of Technology. He was aninstructor and then assistant professor at theUniversity of Utah. He came to theUniversity in 1955 as research associate inthe institute for nuclear studies, now theEnrico Fermi Institute. He became associateprofessor in 1960, and professor in the in¬stitute for nuclear studies and department ofphysics, in 1962. He was appointed chairmanof the department of physics in 1970, a post heheld for two years.Crafts programWood carving, beginning percussion, andsimple bookkeeping are among the newcourses to be offered in the Hyde ParkNeighborhood Club’s winter Craftsmen’sProgram. The program gets underway theweek of January 15, 1973. All classes will beheld in the evenings from 7 to 9 pm. Allclasses will meet for eight weeksWood sculptor Ross Red, who is currentlyexhibiting at the Deer Path Art Gallery inLake Forest, will teach the wood carvingclass. The wood carving class will meetThursdays. The fee is $25 plus the cost oftools. Beginning percussion, taught byMurray Finkelstein, will introduce studentsto a variety of percussion instruments, in¬cluding drums, cymbals, triangles, bongos,and congas. The course is $20 plus cost ofmaterials and will be taught Wednesdays.Simple bookkeeping can prove invaluable foranyone required to keep a set of books.Geoffrey Barnes, an accountant with theMidwest Stock Exchange, will teach thisclass which meets Tuesdays. The cost is $25Jens Simonsgaard will teach bothbeginning and advanced upholstery.Beginners will learn to w'eb, tie, and cover afootstool. Beginning upholstery will be of¬fered Mondays at a cost of $25. The advancedupholstery class will be taught Tuesdays andwill cost $30. The basic techniques of designand construction will be taught in TedDrendel’s silver jewelry class. Students willhave an opportunity to make necklaces,bracelets, earrings, cufflinks, and rings andwill learn how to set precious and semi¬precious stones in jewelry. Classes will beheld Tuesdays. The fee is $25 plus cost ofsilver and tools.CEF Presents Saturday, January 6Cobb Hall THE GflRDEN 0F THE FIWZI-CONTINIS 7 & 9:15ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEUSunday January 7, 1 973 1 1:00 A.M.BERNARD (). BROWNAssistant Dean of the Chapel"THE FEAST OF TIME"SUNDAY SEMINARJanuary 14, 9:45-10:45 a.m. in the Chapel Un¬dercroft, The Reverend Philip M. Dripps,, UnitedMethodist Chaplain, will lead a study ofChristianity and Culture by T.S. Eliot, paperbackedition available in the seminar.PLAY TENNIS ALL WINTERFor As Little as $2/HourPrivate and group lessons available.Courts open from 9 a.m. -10 p.m.7 days a week.Located only 20 minutes from Hyde Park.For further information call849-1235South Side Racquet Club1401 E. Sibley Blvd. DESKS-B00KCASES-FILESSWIVEL CHAIRS-LAMPS-TABLESNEW & USEDBRAND EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.Used 3 Drawer FilesLetter & Legal Size8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:00RE 4-2111Immediate DeliverySpecial Discount for Studentsand faculty with I.D. cardThurs. till 9:00 P.M.MOVING?- PETERSONMoving & Storage646-4411 free estimatesComplete Pre-Planned Moving ServiceLocal • Long Distance •Packing • CratingImport - ExportContainerized StorageFormerly at General Office55th 8 Mis 12655 Se. DotyChicago, Nl. 60633 When (if) the Vietnam Warends,Uncle Sam will still wantPAWNS★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★“PAWNS...could not bea more graceful, temper¬ate, sane or entertaininglyserious critique of what’swrong with the military...His list of remedies is longand brilliant."—Robert Sherrill,Book World“PAWNS is a public ser¬vice... It should be es¬sential reading for allmembers of Congress—among others.”—San FranciscoChroniclePAWNSbyPETER BARNES$1.50Now in paperback fromWARNER PAPERBACK LIBRARYFriday, January 5, 1973-The Chicago Maroon • 13ABOUT THE MIDWAYThe identification, quality, and styles ofantiques are among the topics to be coveredin Sara Simonsgaard’s course in antiquecollecting. The student will learn how toattend auctions, how to buy in junk shops,and how to buy antiques as an investment.The class meets Wednesdays and costs $20.Potter George Lee will teach two sessions ofpottery making. One session will be onMonday evenings and the other on Tuesdaysfrom 10 am to noon. The fee is $25 plus $20 formaterials.Tuition is payable in advance of the firstclass and cannot be refunded unless the classis cancelled or a registrant drops out beforeclassed begin. Persons wishing to enroll inany of the courses should pick up aregistration form at the Neighborhood Club,5480 S. Kenwood.Plant exchangeThe Student Activities Office has come up with an idea to help through the bleakmonths: a combination plant exchange andpotting bench.They work like this: if you have somethingto exchange (plants, cuttings, pots), it worksas an exchange; if you have nothing but areinterested in trying your hand (ratherthumb), at getting something to grow, youare eligible for a freebie. (The rootings havebeen growing in a sunny window in Ida Noyes217. Many of them have been contributed byfriends and staff of the University at largewho are “into” plants and the rest have beencontributed by Mr Joseph Galinis, MasterHorticulturist at the Botany Greenhouse andthen watered and talked to by the StudentActivities people and Ida Noyes regulars.)That part is called The Plantry. Thesecond half of this service is the PottingSpotte: a potting table in the basement of IdaNoyes complete with pots, dirt, gravel, etc. (donated by the Plant Department). Ideallythis will be an on-going thing, but it won’thappen that way if, as has already happened,one person takes a pot of vermiculite com¬plete with 8 rootings! The ideal way would befor people to bring in at least one cutting forevery one they take.Later on this quarter, there will be a tulip¬growing contest. Woolworth’s on 55th hasdonated a batch of tulip bulbs for thisproject. Prizes will be awarded to the besttulips in the following categories: sub¬standard conditions (basement apartmentswithout windows or people with plant-eatingcats); standard Hyde Park conditions (in¬cluding dorms) - bad light, bad air, etc.;Good conditions (people with cellars, win¬dows on all sides, etc.); People having ac¬cess to greenhouses or other ideal conditionsare excluded form this contest, for whichprizes will be given.BlackfriarsBlackfriars, the campus musical comedyCALENDAR society, will hold a get-acquainted party inthe Ida Noyes Library, Sunday, January 7 at8 p m. All who are eager to participate in thewinter playreadings and Spring productionare urged to come to satisfy their curiosity.A final reminder: the deadline for sub¬mitting original musical scripts for theannual Spring show is January 12. Scriptsshould be submitted to the Blackfriars box inIda Noyes.The playreading series, also to be held onSunday evenings at Ida Noyes, is an ex¬tension of traditional Blackfriars’ activities,and will provide a continuing activity bet¬ween the organization’s major production.The general theme behind the plays selectedfor the readings is to present the plays, mostof which are obscure, on which famousmusical comedies were based. Plays to beread include “Green Grow the Lilacs,”which provided the basis for “Oklahoma,”and “They Knew What They Wanted,” thebasis for “The Most Happy Fellow.”FRIDAY/ JANUARY 5FLICK : Doc F ilms: McCabe and Mrs. Miller, 6:30, 8:30, and10:30 pm, CobbLECTURES: "Speculations on the Cores ot Earth andMoon," Robin Brett, NASA, 3:30 pm, Hinds 101"Life in the Weimar Republic: Memories and Reflections," Prof. Gerhard EG. Meyer, H i I lei, 8:30 pmMUSICAL TYPE CONCERT: Chamber Music Series:Vermeer Quartet and Raya Garousova, 8:30 pm, MandelHall call 753 2612TRAVELOGUE TO SCANDINAVIA: Little bit of the Oldcountry movies, literature, etc., 8:00 pm, Home Room:International HouseIDIOT BOX: "The Problems of the Non Public School." aview of big city planning presented on our favorite media,6:30 pm, Channel 7ECOLOGY)?) OR EXCHANGE: Opening of Plantry: tradeyour herbs for better ones (?) 2:00 pm, Ida NoyesSATURDAY, JANUARY 6FLICK: CEF Films The Garden of the Finzi-Continis, 7:00and 9:15 pm, CobbJOCK JUNK: Varsity Indoor Track, UCTC, and open, 6:00pm, Field HouseBasketball (men's), vs. Colorado College, 130 pm, Field HouseART EXHIBIT: Bergman Gallery: Photography Exhibit:50 photographs by John Smart, 12 :00 5:30 pm, Cobb 418SUNDAY, JANUARY 7SPIRITUAL ENLIGHTENMENT: Reverend Bernard OBrown will speak on "The Feast of Time" 11:00 am,Rockefeller ChapelFOOD(!!): Mandarin Chinese Meal at Bonhoeffer House,12:40 pm, 5554 South Woodlawn (first 30 people)LECTURE: "Population Issues" delivered by Don Shaw at7:00 pm, at Brent HouseJOCK JUNK: Gym will be available ( Bartlett, that is) from1 00 to 5:00 pm, every SundayMONDAY, JANUARY 8LECTURE: "The Design of Sequential Experiments,"Stephen Stigler will speak, 4:00 pm, Eckhart"Processes Governing Behavioral States of Readiness:An Experiment Approach to Aggression," Walter H.Heiligenberg, Max Plank Institute, 4:30pm, Zoology 14, 1101E. 57thART EXHIBIT: Shapiro paintings on display sponsored byIda Noyes Cloister Club, 11 00 2:00 pm and 4:30 12:00, IdaNoyes.Friday 6:30,8:30,10:30Robert Altman's CobbMcCABE anSunday 7:15 & 9:30Roman Polanski's MRS. Mil LERKNIFE IN THE WATEI RDoc FilmsEPISCOPAL CHURCHat theUniversity of ChicagoBond Chapel Services4:30 Tuesday, Evensong1 2 noon Thursday, Holy Communionand MeditationSt. Paul and the RedeemerSundays 8 and 10 a.m.Brent House, 5540 Woodlawn5 p.m. Sundays Underground Church"6 p.m. Student-Faculty Supper7 p.m. Fireside DiscussionJune 7 New Issues in Populationand Environment."Leader: Don Shaw, Director of theMidwest Population Center.ALL WELCOME *#***#******#*t***t*##*# 1}*****GOLD CITY INKgiven **** #by the Maroon*New Hours: Open DailyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9:30 p.m."A Gold Mine Of Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559(near Harper Court)Eat more for less. ◄1 WINTER CUSSESJAN.I5MRR.I7^ ircHinq.y nqurdnarifiauretnaMiMifdtfcryWoodcut(Try our convenient take-out orders.)1 4 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, January 5, 1973:://• o.u:: ... id) >,».‘M i icur oiMAROON CLASSIFIED ADSSCENES plus utilities Hyde Park. Call 684 0860 Trial lesson no charge Call 247 1420 STUDY YOGA and COBOL $25 Comp Center, C B 12,753 8409, for detailsGrand opening of The Plantry &Potting Spotte today, 2 00 p.m., IdaNoyes 217. Bring your green thumb.The Mystery Library is a hugh suecess: the shelves are almost barePlease return books to keep themcirculating Donations appreciatedKARATE for self defense, conditioning and self discipline.Demonstration Mon 8 Jan 73, IdaNoyes, 7:00.Circulation cut! Transfusions neededfor Ida Noyes at Mysfer Library.STARTS JAN 5 at 5:15 pm INTRODUCTORY ASTROLOGYI COURSE basic sign and planetarymeanings, how to set up and interpretbirth charts, a private session on yourown chart. At Maura Cleary's 5465Cornell 2885259 subsequent classes onSundays stud $60.Freshman: check into Psi UpsilonFraternity. There will be a smokerThursday evening 7:30 10:30.Life in Weimar Republic: Memoriesand Reflections. Lecture by Prof.Gerhard EO Meyer (Soc Sci. &NCD) at Hillel, 5715 Woodlawn, tonightat 830.Free Swimming Instruction forAdults Tuesdays, INH 6:30 7:30 PMBring Suit , Towel, and Cap BeginsJan 2.The Coffee House is open every Frinight. Good folk and jazz music.Coffee, teas, and goodies. 8 12 IdaNoyes Library.Mythological Dance Theatre Coopening membership Winter Quarterperformer Violetta Karosas, RuthPage Ballet Co Arve Trio, teacher 3classes/wk Union Church 56thWoodlawn 18 classes $50 further infocall Belle 288 3706SPACEWanted: apt to sublet til June bycouple. Cal DO 3 2400 leave messagefor David FeltonGrad student wants room or to shareapt. Call Tony Sheehan at 268 0448Married or single stud sublet effic.apt married stud hs. $127/mo furn493 0582 or 3 3965.Large, Clean So. Sho Apt., 3 bdr., 2I full baths, 1 block to campus bus stable| neighborhood vie. 77th & Essex Subletj 15 mo Avail. Feb 1, $185 Days, call! John at 996 2632 (office) eves. &Weekends, call 734 3195.j Male roomate wanted share beautiful] spacious air cond apt $75/mo. A reallyI nice place Larry 667 2775 aft 6.STUDENT HOUSING If you plan orwant to move ANYWHERE into thedorm system, help me get out of mycontract call Aaron 753 2261 Rm 817PleaseTENANT REFERRALREASONABLE RENTALSDESIRABLE APARTMENTSfurn. & unfurn.LAKE FRONT COMMUNITYSOUTH SHORE COMMUNITYSERVICES2343 E 71st St.See: MONICA A BLOCK467 2002 or 667 2004CHICAGO BEACH HOTEL. 5100Cornell D03 2400 Beautiful FurnishedApartments near beach, park, 1Ctrains, U of C buses at door. Modestdaily, weekly, monthly rates. CallMiss Smith.Female roomate wanted to snare wits3 others large apartment. $80 per moDR. A. ZIMBLERDR. M. MASLOVOp>owmri<ffyt (xofmooltofiicontact lensesin theNow Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363JAMESSCHULTZCLEANERSCUSTOM QUAUTYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933 F roommate wanted to share Hyde Pkapt on Univ day 8, mini bus rt. ownroom large & spacious Reasonablerent. For details call 324 3478.Male student wanted to assume room& board contract at Fraf 288 9870.Need rmmate in apt. with 3 others.Own rm $70/mo 58th & Kenwood Call493 8451SUBLET approx Jan 20 through July2 1/2 rm plus large porch very brightairy, faces street $145 or belownegotiable C bue at door East HydePark. Margot, Bill 667 1467 keeptrying.3 bedrm., 2 bathrm., S216/mo., 5309Harper, call 947 0330 available Jan. 18PEOPLE WANTEDStudent wanted to do child care andlight housework mostly evenings inexchange for room and board. 2children ages 4 & 6 . Townhouse near55th, Kimbark, Call Orlinsky 684 1265after 9 p mBank tellers full 8. part time Exponly, no trainees. Excell, salary 8ihours. Call Miss Scott, Univ. NationalBank, 684 1200Need electrical engineer to diagnoseproblem and repair stereo speakerW.ll pay Call Mark 3 3774 eves.Babysitter needed winter quarter,Thursday mognings, 8 30 12:30 Toprates Call 955 7026.Board and room in exchange for childcare School age boy and girl Hoursarranged Eves 955 2179 days 947 5514BABYSITTER lyr old. home nearcampus Tu Fr 9 2 start Jan. Call 9470706WANTED: A number of males age 21 orolder to serve as paid research subjects for studies on human fertilityApply Drs. Tom Joans and RichardLandau, M 168 Billings Hospital, 9475534Wanted A reliable babysitter forthree year old child from 12:00 PM to5 00 PM Mon. thru Fri. For furtherinformation call 225 6367 after 5:30 pmor call Mrs Sanghavi, MO 4 6600 Ext333 during the dayPEOPLE FOR SALEIsraeli teacher gives private lessons inHebrew cheap call 947 0474.25c per page, double spaced typingSouth Shore Drive location call 7341068Learn Russian from native teacher.A professionalABORTIONthat is safelegal &inexpensivecan be set up on anoutpatient basis by callingThe Problem PregnancyEducational Service, Inc.215-722-536024 hours—7 daysfor professiOi«al. confidentialand caring help.REGAL NOTESunderstand plays, novels and poemsFASTER WITH OUR NOTES»'re new and we're the bigesH Thousand* ofp.C* reviewed lor quicker understanding. Ourbjecte include not only English, but Anthro¬pology, Art, Black Studies, Ecology, Eco-ics. Education, History, Low, Music,lotophy, Politfcal Sc-ence, Psychology,igion, Science, Sociology ond Ur bon Prob$. Send )2 lor your catalog of topics ovoil-REGAL NOTES3160 “O” Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20007Telephone: 202-333 0201EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde-Park 3-8372 Experienced typist Weekends andEvenings Call Diane 349 0586TYPIST exp. 752 8119 after 6 00 pm.Brush and Ladder guality interiordecorating for the Hyde Park area Wealso refinish floors and remove oldwallpaper Call 955 8576DRAFTING: Figures, Graphs, Lettering Call 643 2450 eveningsExperienced manuscript typing onIBM Selectric 378 5774FOR SALEMattress Double bed size Firm foamOnly four months old! ReasonableCall 947 9566For Sale, Karmann Ghia'65 (VW Sort)very good conditions 350$ or best offer.Call eve. 363 3044. must sell.Old Kenmore gas dryer Satisfactoryworking condition $25 955 7026.30 Inch Bell bottoms New on Sale atRADICAL RAGS 1375 E 53rd 493 5458SALE Navy Bells $8 RADICAL RAGSFor Sensous People turtlenecks,italian knits 8. velvets RADICALRAGS1963 Rambler body perfect, engineneeds work $50 call 667 1723SLEEP LABSUBJECTS WANTED f-UK SLEEPSTUDIES BOTH GOOD AND POORSLEEPERS FEMALES ONLY $10per NIGHT APPLY IN PERSON TO5741 DREXEL ROOM 302, M F 9 5onlyUC KARATE CLUBKARATE for conditioning, selfdefense, and self disclipine Instructorfrom Japan Beginners welcomeDemonstration this Monday in IdaNoyes Hall at 7 00 pm $25 firstquarter feeLOOKING FOR APLACE TO LIVEStudent needs furnished room Willingto share quarters with other female orfamily. 955 4068RABINICAL STUDIESAT HUC-J1RStudents interested in the Rabbinate &Hebrew Union College Jewish Instltuteof Religion may meet with Dir.of Admissions Mon, Jan 8, in ChicagoCall Mrs Motch 782 1477 for appt Session Kunaini Yoga Winter quartHealth unity tranquility of body mindSispirit. Jan 8 in Reynolds ClubSouth Lounge $30 for 18 classes (up to$10possiblerebate)for into 8Ho sign » upcat' nr visit Student Activities OfficeIda Noyes 209 x 3591 Sign up before Jan5thPARADISE LOSTParadise Lost will open this Sunday at5 p.m. Hours tor the Winter QuarterWeekdays 11:30 am 11:30 pm.Weekends 5pm 11.30 pm Home of the7c coke and the 49c sundaeUC FOLK FESTIVALHelp prepare for the Folk Festival,earn tickets by working in phone orbox office, putting up performers,cooking meals. For info come toFolklore Society meeting in Ida Noyeseast lounge Mon 1/8 8 00 pmSPSS CLASSLearn to use the Statistical Packagefor the Social Sciences (SPSS) tortransforming and analyzing yourdate take a Comp Center course andrun jobs on the IBM 360 $20 Come tothe Comp Center, C B 12, 753 8409, fordetails.ASSEMBLERLANGUAGELearn to write programs in assemblerlanguage Course covers in syntax andlogic of the language, IBM 360 architecture, and linkage to FORTRAN WANTED: SNOWSCULPTURE ARTISTSTo work out their art on the Quadsduring Winter Quarter Win fame andcash prizes! Call 753 3591THEATREWORKSHOPSSpecialized technical workshops indesign, lightning, stage craft will beheld at 6 30 p m Tuesdays in ReynoldsClub Theatre. First one will be Jan. 9in costume building Call 753 3581between 12 and 5 tor information onacting and dance workshops.LOST & FOUNDFOUND NEAR BARTLET GYM onepair of EYEGLASSES. Call 493 0685INFORMATIONWANTEDI am looking for evidence of governmental repression If you have aninteresting or important incident toreport, send it to Mark Gruenberg c oThe Maroon, 1212 E 59th St., Chicago,Thanks very muchMcCABE &MRS. MILLERRobert Altam’s gritty story ofcapitalism in the old west WithWarren Beatty and Julie ChristieDOC Films, tonight, 6:30 , 8 30, 10 30,Cobb $1 00HAVILL’SRADIO, TELKVISION& HIGH HDEUnSALES SERVICE & ACCESSORIES/rmth — I’anaxunn-Wnsteruork — Kill1388 E. 53rd, Chicago 60815 • PL 2-780045 Y--ars Serving Hyde Park9 AM - 9 PM 7 Days A WaakHYDE PARK PIPE AND TOBACCO SHOfc1552 E. 53rd - under 1C tracksAll students get 10% otyask for "Big Jim"Pipe*Pip* Tobaccos Imported CigarettesCigarsIN THE KINGDOM OF NIGHTJanuary 5LIFE IN THE WEIMAR REPUBLIC: MEMORIES AND REFLECTIONS.Prof. Gerhard E.O. Meyer, Social Sciences College and NewCollegiate Division.January 12REFLECTIONS ON JEWISH LIFE IN GERMANY AND HOLLAND1 930-45. Prof. Erika Fromm, Psychology Dept, and College.January 19THE JEWISH PAST AND RESISTANCE: THE NEED TO ACCEPT ANDTO REJECT1 Mr. David Abraham. History graduate student, U.C.(rescheduled from fall quarter) Friday evenings at 8:3CB’NAI B’RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO5715 WOODLAWN AVENUE • CHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60637 •PLAZA 2-1127the thinking man s bistroTHE EAGLEcocktails . . . luncheon . . . dinnor . . . late snacks . . .SSU BUCKST0NE BANQUET BOOM NY S-118 CHESS CLUBChess Club, home of the PanAmerican Intercollegiate meetsMondays, 7 00, Iday Noyes HallGAY LIBERATIONGay Women's Coffee House at theGargoyle tonight 8, 1st Fri ot everymonth All women invitedPERSONALSLOVING HOME offered to AgathaChristie's, E S Gardner's GeorgeSimenon's etcl Ida Noyes MysteryLibrary or x 3591/Whose birthday is January l?’Plantry (plan'tre), n. 1 Sunny southwindow on 2nd floor of Ida Noyes Hallwhere plant roofings abound; 2 Aplant exchange. 3 A place to get a freerotting if you have nothing to exchangePotting Spotte (pot'ing spot), n T.Area in Ida Noyes basement torpotting plants; 2 A table for pottingplants. 3 A collection of pots, soilgravel, etc for plant pottingU.C. ivy free in The PlantryTo the first five loneliest hearts, a freepurple passion plant Ida Noyes 217.Coleus schomoleus! Even you cangrow a coleus! The PlantryBRENT HOUSE Sum Jan 7 at 7 00p m , come and hear Don Shaw speakon Population Issues" At theF ireside discussion hour After supper6pm (only SI plus 25c for wine)Lecture Series In the Kingdom ofNight, at Hillel Fridays at 8 30 p m1 5 Gerhard Meyer, 1 12 ErikaFromm, 1 19 David AbrahamCome and hear Don Shaw speak onPopulation issues" at the firesidediscussion hour after supper 6 p.m(only SI plus 25c for wine) at BrentHouse, Sun Jan 7 at 7:00 pmCHICAGO that down 8, dirty city.Wash off the soot with scented soaps &bath oils from RADICAL RAGS 1375 E_13CRACKING PLASTER0 Hide it undera Prayer Rug S6 $26 RADICAL RAGSPut a taco in your tummy Lucita'sMexican Food. 11 a m 11pm FnSat 1 a rn 1440 E 57th St 955 0888WRITERS WORKSHOP (PL2 8377)We need people to play in the CoffeeHouse Call Debbie 753 3444 (DU)tahsamPSnCHINESE AMERICANrestaurantSfcritlmng mCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOtaNDARY11 A.M. TO 8:90 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOUOAYS13 TO 1:90 P.M.Orders to take outUJJEostAJrd^MU*! 0*2PIZZA Ii PLATTER 'i 1460 E. 53rd| I| Ml 3-2800 i1I FAST DELIVERY I| AND PICKUPUNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAYS684-3661HairstylingRazor cutsHYDE PARKFIREWOODOAK$50 Ton DumpedALSO •CHERRY, BIRCHMAPLE & HICKORYSmaller AmountsAlso deliveredCall Art Mlchaner955-2460Friday, January 5, 1973 - The Chicago Maroon -1515th ANNUALJANUARY WHITE SALEOnce again we will slash prices onanything with white labels, cut your costson white wines, rip up prices on gin, andscare all other people who have annualwhite sales so badly that only people whoare as stern and fearless as we are evendare to have an annual white sale. Almostevery white wine in stock will be reduced.Never before such daring! Never beforesuch outrageous values! Never beforesuch a silly sale! We have doneeverything possible to enable you toreplenish your depleted stocks. Don’ttake our word-Come see for yourself!1 6 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, January 5, 1973