rLabor problemsat the Museumsee page 2 Survey ofArgonne Labsee page 6The Chicago MaroonVolume 81, Number 46 The University of Chicago Tuesday, April 10, 1973Local social welfare programs arecrippled by Nixon's Federal budgeti By STEVE DURBINMany social welfare programs in the HydePark and Woodlawn areas have receivedcrippling blows from President Nixon’s newfederal budget, which includes the ter¬mination of the Office of Economic Op¬portunity and the Model Cities program.Woodlawn has been particularly hard hit,with a loss this year of over nine milliondollars in housing funds alone.“The general effect on the city is awful....Itterminates employment for some 30,000people, basically poor minority groups,mostly black, Hispanic, and Appalachianpoor whites,” explains fifth ward cityalderman Leon Despres. Besides the loss ofsubsidized housing funds, the types ofprograms which have suffered fundingcutbacks are: job training, summer em¬ployment, day care centers, health care,youth employment, special educationalprograms, etc. These cutbacks were sud¬denly announced at a time when the demandfor such social services was generallyacknowledged to be greater than ever.“In several senses, I think that the cuts aredevastating to the community,” remarkedDuke McNeil, Director of the Woodlawn Organization (TWO). “The most decisive isin the area of housing, with the 18 monthmoratorium on Federal Housing Authority(FHA) monies for subsidized housing,especially in a community like Woodlawn,where 35 percent of central and eastWoodlawn is either vacant or abandoned anda high percentage of housing is alreadysubstandard.”McNeil told of a housing developmentplanned for 63rd and Dorchester, costingthree million dollars and providing 105 unitsof housing, which had already been sub¬mitted for feasibility. This project has nowbeen completely wiped from the books. Inaddition, there are an anticipated 3,000 unitson the drawing board. These, however,cannot even move into the feasibility stagebecause of the FHA freeze.The Model Cities program, through whichmost of the housing funds are run, allocatednine million dollars to Woodlawn last year.By June, Model Cities will no longer exist.“It’s crippling to think of building if youcannot build subsidized housing, becauseconventional housing would be much tooexpensive,” added McNeil.Day care centers have been major targetsof the cutbacks. Head Start and early childhood development programs are closingtheir doors at the Harris YMCA, theWoodlawn Baptist Church, and the FirstPresbyterian Church in Woodlawn Thesewill effect some 300 children and 35 to 40 full¬time employees.The day care centers have not only been hitwith cutbacks, but the restrictions on theremaining funds have been greatly in¬creased. At the Hyde Park NeighborhoodClub (HPNC), Ms Marie Carr, day caredirector, explained how formerly a parentand child with a total income of $3,200 wereeligible for the Head Start day care program.Now, they are ineligible if their income is over$2,000. The effect of these new guidelines isthat out of 52 families now enrolled at theHPNC center, only 20 will qualify for sub¬sidized funding next year.The day care program had originallyasked for an increased allocation so that theycould expand to include a student and pre¬school day care service. Needless to say, themoney is not forthcoming.The Neighborhood Club is in the peculiarposition of having their federal funds fullyreallocated this year, at about $46,000.However, since the number of familieseligible has been reduced drastically, theywill have to search out families who areeligible, or else lose the excess funds nextyear. The HPNC is also expecting to have$20,000 reallocated from the state. No firmcommitment has been made yet, though it isknown that Governor Walker has sent hisbudget figures to the various departmentheads.The Hyde Park - Kenwood CommunityConference (HPKCC) reports that its DayCare Technical Assistance program hasbeen hurt by increased HEW restrictions andby a less generous matching grants policy.The Chicago Child Care Society seems tohave survived without any major cutbacks,but only one-fourth of their budget comesfrom federal sources. They rely heavily oncontributions from the private sector Theytoo were hoping to expand some of theirprograms this year, but these expansions arenow postponed indefinitely. Similarily theHyde Park YMCA has forgotten its plans tostart an after-school day care centerAnother area that has been hit very hardby the Nixon budget is job training. A $77,000Manpower Training grant in Woodlawn willnot be renewed. Last year. Woodlawn'sCareer Vocational Institute trained andgraduated two classes in the health servicesfield. This year, the program and others likeit will become next to non-existent. A $90,000NIMH grant for mental health training is notexpected to be renewed. The NeighborhoodYouth Corp (NYC), an organization whichprovided work and pay incentives for youthsall over the country, is now nearly extinct.In Hyde Park and Kenwood, Careers forTeens, a youth employment program run bythe HPKCC, had been receiving #35,000 ayear through OEO and Model Cities grants.This allocation will run out on June 30. TheHPKCC is trying to raise $5,000 from localsources for an alternative summer program.The HPKCC also runs the Health CareTask Force, which received $43,000 in HEWfunds through the Illinois Regional MedicalPractice* uRMH). However the IRMH is being phased out, so the Health Care TaskForce loses its primary source of fundsSome of the many programs that willdisappear due to the closing of the Office ofEconomic Opportunity are drug abuseeducation, mental health programs, adulteducation, visual aids, special education,and a variety of other supplementaryeducational programsIt is apparent that President Nixon'sbudget policies will ultimately have an effecton all of the social services, both directly andindirectly. As a spokesman for the ChicagoChild Care Society put it. “We know that theenvironment created by the Nixon Ad¬ministration. and it looks like it will bepervasive, means that we’re operating in ahostile climate as far as public funds go. butthe demand for services is as great orgreater than it ever was.”This means that the immediate future willbe a crucial time for the private sector Forinstance, the Hyde Park Kenwood Com¬munity Conference is trying to get interimfunding to maintain its programs in somedegree. Co-director James Kaplan ex¬plained. “It takes time to raise money, as ittakes time to identify sources of money ”Task forces are now7 working on this. Severalfoundations have been contacted, and localfunds are being sought.The inescapable fact is that many vital anduseful programs are disappearing overnightSome civic leaders fear that this may in¬crease disorder and despair in the city.McNeil elaborated further: “Theseprograms filled quite a vacuum, and thereare no alternatives available at present . Ingeneral these were enabling, self-helpprograms. When you wipe these out in aconcerned community like Woodlawn, it canbe stifling to the community...“In Woodlawn, where 25 to 30 percent areunemployed already, this kind of move is likeputting oil on a blazing inferno. You run therisk of a social combustion..“TWO will have to continue pressing forthe remaining federal programs, as well asstate and city programs, and in general ourefforts will have to turn to the businesscommunity, in terms of trying to attractindustry, in our continuing effort to rebuildWoodlawn "MaroonElectionsThe Maroon will elect next year’s editorthis Thursday, April 12. The meeting willbegin at 4 pm and hopefully not last morethan 20 minutes Both arts and news staffmust be present. Half the entire mastheadconstitues a quorum.If it is impossible for you to attend themeeting please give a proxy vote to someoneyou know will attend or drop it off at theoffice before then Associate editors MarkGruenberg and Jeff Roth are the candidatesAll staffers (all those on the masthead) areexpected to attend.Oman*talks aboutLife. Love.Health0)UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK OF CHICAGO1354 East 55th StreetChicago, Illinois 60615 Member F.D.I.C.FREE AstrologyRecord with$IOO.depositTell us yoursign of theZodiac, deposit$100 in a new orexisting Universitysavings account, andwe’ll give you a copyof this sensational, best¬selling record. SydneyOmarr, noted astrologer,discusses the cosmic phe¬nomena that affect your life,your health, your happiness.Want a second record for aloved one or friend? You can buyanother record for just $2.While supplies last you can getyour copy of the record that’s settingrecords all over the country, and takeyour astrology from an expert.TheUniversityBank2-The Chicago Maroon-Tuesday, April 10, 1973Museum employees upset with wagesBy CD JACOThe Museum of Science and Industry is astudy in contrasts. Located in a VictorianGreek Revival building that housed the FineArts collection at the 1892 Columbian Ex¬position, the Museum exhibits the prowess ofmodern American science and technology.Although it calls itself a museum, theUniversity’s Hyde Park neighbor avoids a static, isolated exhibits, the Museumfeatures a wonderland of buttons to push,movies to see, knobs to twirl, and demon¬strations to watch.The most striking contrast, however, isbetween the Museum’s public relations andits employee relations. The Museum’s publicrelations are spectacular. Each year, itattracts over 3 million visitors, more thanthe Cubs, White Sox, and Bears combined. biggest tourist attraction: President EdwardLevi and Manly Distinguished ServiceProfessor of History John Hope Franklin aremembers of the Museum Board of Trustees,and former University Presidents GeorgeBeadle and Lawrence Kimpton are HonoraryLife Trustees.The Museum’s relations with its em¬ployees, however, are far from spectacular.Of 45 employees interviewed. 42, expresseddissatisfaction with wages and workingconditions, and accused the Museum ofpaying inadequate wages, harrassing em¬ployees, ignoring poor working conditions,and intimidating Museum workers whoattempt to form unions.The employee complaints were not limitedto one group, but came from workers in theBoiler Room, Food Services, MaintenancePaint and Electrical Shops, and Tours andDemonstrations. A Food Service worker said“I’ve worked here eight months and still get$1.60 an hour. It’s a good thing I’m single.”Another employee, married and the fatherof two, said “I’ve been here 11 months andI’m making $2.15 an hour. My supervisor toldme that if I didn’t like the money I couldalways quit. My wife has to work, but it’shard to raise kids when we both work.”One worker, in his sixties, pointed to hischeck stub. “$375.00. I’ve worked here for 12years, and I get $375.00 every two weeksbefore taxes. After taxes, I end up with $280or $290. That ain’t too good after 12 years.”The Museum’s tour guides and demon¬ strators make $10.35 per day without acollege degree, and $13.65 per day with adegree. One woman said “Some of the peoplewho give tours and lectures are pensionerswho aren’t allowed to have much outsideincome. Still, some of us have to live on thechicken feed this place pays.”Another guide said, “My supervisor toldme that the Museum couldn’t afford higherwages because of the way in which it’sfunded.”The Museum is funded by residual oninvestments made with part of JuliusRosenwald’s original grant Rosenwald. awealthy Chicago businessman early in thecentury, gave an initial grant of $3 million tohelp found the Museum, and also contributedsubstantial amounts to the University.In addition, the Museum receives so muchper year for “maintenance” from eachexhibitor in the building Each industrialfirm, government agency, and trade groupthat has an exhibit also pays for the initialconstruction of that exhibit, and any sub¬sequent repairs.The exact amount each exhibitor pays peryear is not public information, but an em¬ployee of one of the firms that has an exhibitsaid “I’d be surprised if the Museum didn’tget at least $10,000 per year from each ofthese companies. Our exhibit isn’t all thatbig, and I think we pay $15,000 a year.”The total received by the Museum in anycontinued on page 7traditional museum format; instead of The University is connected with Chicago’sPROJECTIONS AND GEOMETRY: An exhibit of the Museum of Science and Industry.Photo by Mike BenedikFootball practice begins Monday for varsity squadBy MIKE KRAUSSSpring practice for the Varsity Footballteam will begin on Monday April 30th. Amajority of last year’s squad will return toStagg Field with a new attitude toward the1973 season.The graduation of team co-captains MikePrais and Charles Nelson will create a voidwhich will have to be filled in the Marooninterior line. Prais, was a hard hitting righttackle who played both offensively anddefensively throughout the ’72 seasondespite a torn leg muscle. Nelson, who holdsthe distinction of being the first four letterIN SPORTSman at Chicago in 35 years, played center onlast year’s team.The Maroons biggest problems are at¬titude and the interior line. Manpower is thekey and there simply are not enough big menon the team capable of playing the glorylacking position of lineman. Line coach DanTepke has been looking all year for somevolunteers. Presently it seems he may comeup with some very big surprises ranging inthe 200 lb and higher class.Quarterbacks Steve Kroeter, Gene Szuflitaand a new comer named Bryan O’Shaunsseywill be throwing to running backs and endsas the Maroon offense begins its work outs.Stagg scholar and veteran all state guardfrom Illinois, Mike Groesch, will be back atmiddle line backer.Head coach Walter Hass and defensivecoach Chet McGraw are urgning any in¬terested players to come to the athletic officein Bartlett Gym prior to the start of springworkouts.This fall the Maroons will play a sevengame schedule. An eighth game away fromhome may be added. The six games will be athome on Stagg Field. One game will beplayed on the road.Forty-eight members of Shorey house havesubmitted a signed petition to CharlesO’Connell, dean of students, requesting thatCoed intramural athletics not be dropped bythe athletic department.The possible discontinuation of Coed in¬tramurals was raised at the quarterly in¬tramural council meeting held on March29th. The council of 29 student .epresen-tatives was told by William Vendl, director ofintramurals, that when his office was issuedthe additional burden of coed athletics in autumn of 1971, it did not receive any ad¬ditional physical or financial assistance.“Nor has any assistance been forthcomingsince that time,” he said.Vendl complained that his three memberstaff maintains on average a 60 hour workweek. In addition each staff member hasadditional responsibilities other than in¬tramurals. “One woman,’’ commentedVendl, “must be responsible for all thesecretarial work of the entire department.”In 1971 the IM program was increased by40 percent with the addition of 15 coed sports.According to Vendl, participation now isgreater than ever anticipated, yet budgetedfunds for coed sports have remained con¬stant at zero.Walter Hass, director of athletics,promised that he would not allow coed in¬tramurals to be dropped. He commented thatcoed athletics were a major concern of hisdepartment and would maintain a highpriority.However, unless Hass receives additionalfunds from outside his current athleticbudget, money to support the current coedprogram would apparently come at theexpense of other athletic departmentprograms, such as improved facilities, on theavailability of faculties.Chloe Brokaw, a coed IM representativecommented, “The possible ending of coedsports together with the already inadequatefacilities would really discourage womens’participation in athletics.”James Vice, assistant dean of students,flatly stated that, “Coed Intramurals wouldnot be dropped. However, Vice would notprecisely explain from where additionalfunds would come.Dave Schfeling, an Intramural Councilmember, concluded, “I am dismayed by thefact that the University will not come up withadequate funds to support IM activities,except at the expense of other athleticdepartment programs.”The IM Council also heard proposals tostreamline and improve current mens’programs. A majority vote recommendedthe extension of the present mens’ basketballseason from 5 to 7 weeks. A unanimous voterecommended quarters in basketball gamesbe extended from 6 to 8 minutes.Eligibility rules for resident heads werealso discussed. The possibility of exclusion ofresident heads from competition will bedetermined later in the quarter.Current activities now under way includeSocim and table tennis. Competition in coedarchery will begin today. Entrees into themens’ doubles handball competition are duein the IM office tomorrow. Upcoming eventsinclude mens’ and coed softball, horsehoes,and bicycling as well as mens’ doublestennis. Errors by short stop Paul Yovovich andfirst baseman Mike Dotsey cost the Maroonstheir season opening baseball game onSunday against St Xavier College. Fourunearned runs came across in the first inningdue to the errors. Starting pitcher TimGeorge threw a fine five hitter while strikingout five.St Xavier’s starter Ed Kappell shut outTuesday, April 10LECTURE: Dr Daniel X Freedman, "Drugs and Society,"Woodward Lecture Series, Resident Master's apartment,5825 Woodlawn, 8 pmLECTURE: "Some Aspects of Stravinsky," Robert Craft,William Vaughn Moody Lecture Committee, Law SchoolAuditorium, 8 pmLECTURE: Jay Strauss, vice president of B B Cohen Co,will discuss Real Estate financing, Rosenwald 11, 3:30 pmFILM: "Bringing Up Baby," Cary Grant and KatherineHepburn, DOC, Cobb, 7:30Wednesday, April 11LECTURE: "General Tensions Among RevolutionaryChinese Women," Roxane Witke, Far Eastern Series,Breasted Hall, 8 00 pmCOLLOQUIUM: Ethel Shanas, UICC, "Measuring theHealth Status of the Elderly . Cross national Implications,"Beecher 102, 4 pmLECTURE : Philosopher Michael Scriven will lecture on thefeasibility of a teacher evaluation system, Ida NoyesLibrary, 8 pm >LECTURE: Irfan Shahid, Georgetown University,"Muhammad and Alexander: A Chapter in Cultural Encounters," Foster Lounge, 4:30 pm, followed by reception inKelly 413LECTURE: Graduate School of Business Lecture Series,"Entrepreneurship," A David Silver, Ventrech Corp, Swift106, I pm Chicago until the Maroon 6th when NorvalBrown reached second on a two base errorTeam captain Tom Cullen then slugged asolid base hit to right center driving inBrown. Bob Griffen, the Maroon thirdbaseman, came up with a clutch triple tocenter, but Chicago scoring stopped thereleaving Griffen on third, the Maroons theloser 4-2.CHEMISTRY SEMINAR Title to be announced, NathanSugarman, Kent 103, 1 30 p.mZABEL LECTURE Discussion of trends in modern poetryby ML Rosenthal, Soc Sci 122, 4pmBIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAR: Interaction of CyclicNucleotydes and RNA polymerase with the lac promotersite of E Choli," Jonathon Beckwith, Abbot 101,4 pmFILM: "Orphans of the Storm," D W Griffith's silentmasterpiece, Cobb, 7:30Thursday, April 12MAROON ELECTION. Entire Staff will meet at 4 pm in theoffice.SHERRY HOUR: For interested freshmen and sophomoresto discuss the BA/MBA professional option in the BusinessSchool, Burton Judson Library, 5 pmHEALTH FORUM: "Student Health Gynecology Clinic,"Dr James L Burke, Social Science Research Building, room122, noonPOETRY: William Vaughn Moody Lecture presents JosipBrodsky in a reading of his poems, Breasted Hall, 8 pm.CON GROUP: Consciousness groups for gay and bisexual,Ida Noyes, 7:?'j pmPHYSICS CC..LOQUIUM: Ezra T Newman, "A curios.*yarising from Maxwell's equations," Eckert 133, 4:30 pmLECTURE: S F C Milsom, London School of Economics,will speak on "Approaches to Legal History" in the upperlounge of Burton Judson, 7 pmSCI-FI FILM: "Phantom of the Opera," Cobb, 8 pm, SITuesday, April 10, 1973-The Chicago Maroon-3CALENDARCOLLOQUIUM: Demand for Services and CommercialVehicles: a Theoretical and Empirical Study ' Peter LSwan, Rosenwald 11, 2 pmThe Chicago Marooneditor-in-chiefLisa Capellbusiness manager news editor managing editorPaul Bates Fred Egler Breck Borcherdingassociate editorsJeff Roth Mark Gruenberg Tim Rudyassistant business managerRich BakerstaffSteve Askin, Mark Bushman, Joan Cecich, Steve Durbin, Samuel Feinberg, Mike Franzen, Larry Friske,Don Gecewicz, Clara Hemphill, Tobi Hofslund, Ben Huang, Andy Huddleston, Caryl Inglis,Howard Isaacs, CD Jaco, Roxanne Laux, Keith Levine, Peter Mensch, Dennis Moore, Marc Pollick,Robin Prince, Andrew Segal, Juana Sinclair, Mark Spieglan, Mike Strimling,Alan Wertheimer, Tom Yondorfsports editorMike Kraussphotography editorJohn Vailphotography staffBenedik, Pat Levitt Linda Lorincz Robert Newcombe Brian Roweqrts and entertainment editorElizabeth Russoclassical music editor pop music editor film editorJoe Mancini Gage Andrews 0ave Kehr drama editorDeborah Davisonbook editor culinary editor dance editorMark Ackerman Leslie Kohn Nancy MooreFounded in 1 892. Published by University of Chicago Students on Tuesdays and Fridays throughoutthe regular school year, except during exam periods and, intermitently during the summer. Of¬fices in rooms 303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637.Telephone (312) 753-3263. Distributee/ on campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free ofcharge. Subscriptions by mail $9 per year in the United States. Non profit postage paid at Chicago,Illinois. LETTERS TO THE EDITORConvocationHow do you uncreate an issue? How do Iconvince you that Alan Wertheimer’s article,(Maroon, April 3,1973) need never have beenwritten? The facts are, I think, regardless ofhow novel to read them here, the best meansof refuting Wertheimer’s worse-than-meaningless allegations.You have been informed, that theUniversity's Administration “stifled”students’ wishes for their own graduation,and that students were thus “frustrated”. I’dclaim that the Administration fulfilled whatwere indeed students’ requests, though notthe request of a vociferous minority whichmanaged to gain the Maroon’s ear. This isespecially painful to me, as a “studentrepresentative of the hierarchy”, since Ihave worked to assure that the Convocationwill indeed represent more than the tastes ofmy committee, a subcommittee of theStudent College Curriculum Committee, orthe group whose views were aired in theMaroon of April 3. My method of convincingyou will be none at all; as a debater, I amdelighted at this rare opportunity to actuallymake a case utilizing facts.Because of an element of discontent withthe speech of the June, 1973 Convocation, anelement of which I am a part, a groupdecided that interested students shouldgather in Reynolds’ Club one evening in theFall, to consider possible speakers for theJune. 1973 Commencement. This meeting,not all graduating seniors, put forth anumber of candidates, and a committeeselected eight speakers as acceptable in aletter to the Dean of the College, MrHildebrand.Mr Hildebrand contacted me as chairmanof the Student College Curriculum Com¬mittee to form a subcommittee, a Dean’sAdvisory Committee if you will, to advisehim on this issue and the selection of a newcollege dean. In a number of meetings,and via opinions rendered by interrogated students, we came to the conclusion thatstudents graduating did not want theirceremony to be a political rally. Suggestions,when profferred, often included the names ofMr Hildebrand and Mr Levi, belying Wer-thmeimer’s allegation that students have a“protracted, frustrating, and demoralizing”time in attempts to influence administrativedecisions. Not all students will ever besatisfied by any decision; perhaps the ad¬ministration is guilty of making the manyhappy at the expense of the “right people”,“concerned, responsible and enterprisingmembers of the University community,”regardless of whether they represent six-hundred or six. In fact, the “interestedstudents”, all of whom met at Reynolds’Club, made no mention of a “studentspeaker” at least not in their representativeletter to Dean HildebrandThe idea was brought up at the meeting ofthe six committeepersons, Dean Hildebrand,and myself, on February 21. Why did not MrHildebrand, if at that time as according toMs Koblitz a decision had already beenmade, reject the notion out-of-hand? NeigtherMr Hildebrand no the DAC had any ideathat this notion had any popularity; the deanobjected on practical rounds of selection,myself on the grounds that no student would(a) add anything particularly appropriate orsignificant, and (b) no student should thus besingled out for the high honor of boring his443 classmates.It seemed settled; the issue of the outsidespeaker having been decided by reason of itslack of specific appropriateness, and theissue of a student worthy of more con¬sideration. Not so by February 26, notwaiting for the dean’s or the DAC’s reply, thegroup fired off a letter to the President. Mr.Scotch, a former Chairman of the DAC, musthave decided that all such committeemembers are Administration stooges,though his experiences are quite differentfrom mine own. The DAC’s response, whichwas forthcoming, was philosophically andTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOThe Committee on theWilliam Vaughn Moody LecturepresentsJOSIF BRODSKYf The Contemporary Russian Poet)in aREADING OF HIS{The poems will be read in Russian and EnglishPOEMSTHURSDAY, APRIL 12,19738:00 P.M.Breasted Hall, The Oriental Institute1155 E. 58th Street, Chicago, Illinoisiu--r Cmti ;c:n without Ticket and without ChargeWy • iO, UL73 The Committee on Social Thoughtannounces a doctoral lecture to be given byROBERT VACCA"The Oresteia as Theodicy"All interested faculty and students are cordially in¬vited.Friday. April 13, 4:00 p.m. Soc. Sci. 302VOLKSWAGEN SOUTH SHOREAuthorized VW Dealer/' Open Doily—Cloied Sunday PhoiW7234 S. Stony Island BU 8-4900SAVE THIS TOLL-FREE 24-HOUR NUMBERIT’S YOUR KEY TO LOW-COST JET TRAVELTO EUROPE, ISRAEL, AND THE ORIENTEven if you're not eligible for youth fare, student fare, or ex¬cursion fares; even if you can't make your planned departure orreturn date match up with a charter; even if you're only lookingfor a one-way ticket; we can jet anyone to a number ofEuropean, Asian, and African destinations direct from NewYork, Chicago, and other U.S. departure points, on scheduledairlines like TWA, PAN AM, BOAC, KLM, etc., at considerablesavings. Some examples of our fares;NY-London, Round-trip: $220; One-Way, $120Chicago-Tel Aviv, Round-Trip: $550NY-Frankffort. Round-Trip: $280; One-Way, $150How do we do it? If you're really curious, check out an article inthe New York Times of Sun., Dec. 5, 1971, entitled, "The GreatAir-Fare War and What It Means To You." When you contact us,we can refer you to other newspaper articles detailing the kindof operation in which we are involved. But what the newspaperarticles can t tell you is that we pride ourselves on givingeveryone the kind of personal attention you rarely findanymore. You tell us where you want to go and when, and we lldo everything humanly possible to see that you get therequickly, safely and economically.If you re thinking about a trip abroad, Call us toll-free, anytime,day or night, at 800-223-5569EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS501 FIFTH AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y. 10017 DOROTHY SMITHBEAUTY SALON5841 S. BlackstoneHY 3-1069Op en Monday throughFriday from 7:15 a.m. until8:00 p.m. No SaturdaysSpecializing in Tlntlng-Soft naturalparmanantt-Naw hair thapa*.DOROTHY SMITHA professionalABORTIONthat is safe,legal &inexpensivecan be set up on anoutpatient basis by callingThe Problem PregnancyEducational Service, Inc.215-722-536024 hours-7 daysfor professional, confidentialand caring help.STANLEY H. KAPLANEDUCATIONAL CENTERb organizing classesfor the followinqtests:MCAT? May, 1973GRE: June1973;ATGSB: JuneAug, 73ISAT: July, 73TUTORING CLASSES START7 WEEKS BEFORETEST DATECALL EARLY2050W. DevonChicago, III.(312)764-5151O'LETTERS TO THE EDITORpractically against the idea, and the studentsasked replied, of a voice, “I’ll be there solong as there’s NOT a student speaker!’’Unfortunately for the Administration, thisis not what the “Reynolds’ Club six’’ orWertheimer wanted to hear; they hadassumed such was forthcoming and plowedinto their meeting with Mr Levi. Why theywere met is beyond the ken of such as evenand Administration lackey as myself.Perhaps the fact that the six could representonly themselves was of no significance to MrLevi; in fact the notion of “a studentspeaker’’ has been met negatively! WhetherMr Levi uses that “insensitive ideology’’ orthe most liberal attitude of laissez-faire, theresult should be the same; Mr Hildebrandwill be an eminently acceptable choice, andthere will be no student speaker at the JuneConvocation.Mitchell GlassPhD GlutIs it blindness or is it outright dishonestythat lies behind the University’s studyshowing “that the PhD ‘glut’ may be nothingmore than a myth — at least as far asUniversity graduates are concerned”? Doesthe University so cling to its venerable“tradition" as to be unaware of (or obliviousto) what really happens to its Ph.D.’s? As Isit here looking at my stack of “vacancyfilled” letters — all form — Mrs AnitaSandke’s optimistic remark that “the studybears out our conviction that the Universitydoctorate continues to be a very significantdegree’ rings hollow. One of these lettersstates that over 400 applications had beenrecieved for the position about which I wrote.I would like to see beyond the figures MrsSanke quotes. In particular, where are those63 percent of the Ph.D.’s teaching? No doubtU of C graduates can find jobs at 2-year community colleges in the middle ofnowhere! But in that case our education isconspicuously inappropriate. Again, of the 15percent doing post-doctoral studies, howmany were prolonging the waiting period inthe absence of job offers? The fact remains,the University’s “statistics” not¬withstanding, that the Ph D. glut is veryreal, as many of the faculty — if not theadministration — are begining to admit. Tolabel this problem “a myth" raises seriousquestions concerning just what kind ofpicture the University is painting for bothpresent and, more importantly, prospectivegraduate students.Juliana GeranPhilosophy DepartmentCo-ed intramuralsMost of the members of the college housein which 1 reside have recently sent a letterto the Dean of Students with regard to thepossible curtailment of coed intramuralathletics. The text of this letter follows:“Mr Vendl of the Intramural Officerecently informed the athletic managers ofthe college houses that there was a goodchance coed intramural sports would have tobe dropped by his office. He said that thebudget of his department for office per¬sonnel, equipment, and referees had not beenincreased to cover the added financialburdens accured. We, the undersignedmembers of Shorey house, think that coedintramural sports have enriched the socialenvironment of the University of Chicagoand should not be curtailed. We hope that thenecessary funds will be found to keep thecoed program going, especially since morecollege houses are now made up of both menand women.”I hope that serious consideration will begiven to this request and that, if necessary,funds will be diverted from the men’scontinued on page 9MASS MEDIA/73THE URBAN JOURNALISM FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM OFTHE CENTER FOR POLICY STUDYa public lecture byRobert Northshieldand Jack Fernof NBC television newsMonday, April 16,1973,8pm.The L,nv St.Hoof Auditorium 8 p m., 1111 Fast 6()U> StuRuu.'i 1 S' .in'' Mot I hsh.••'(!, NBC P'l.xlmvi <->' 8t.il>- ■ " ": was .uso F .ttloi t'V' iv . 'Mis nOiv 'ii \it.-v. York c-t, ■ >• jiiurlui ••>! vow ■'> '98- >'.*••• • > su*,|'lscvpi.i! ii (! v.-iMoiii'i documentaries, mciu it; . "Tin- V"-! Nam \ i L.o also b-'ivii .e. 0 • i • tin o' \Au'c;Revolution of 63 a tlio i- hoot r =«•-..s •>>* E.isi lot 8Cspec I,|I on tlu* Civil Rujhts movement i” t L ■ ■ United H" si'W’l thrri year, in ('■■■ P.11:161: liuii'U) '.'.1Steles M's otnei jir ojects include ducjinient.ii .es V.ii 11 when- h.iu .1 i "" lu! > epot tnni t• .onahout education, sports. Adolf Eichmunn. cancel, l.it>>i wo'ked 6>i CBS TV news as .1 reporter inon.iuci.il issues .od t!>e Emmy award .vinninu "Sol.a “iid National Assiunment EditoiEdipse A DeiFuwss At Noon ' He also Induced a \1Jt id .md Mi F.-m dud to „np..,-.veekly 1‘colO'1 y series, "In Which We Live "• „u. Mjss Med ctu.e si-ims spooso.ed Dy the U.Mf- -oftksm.'id was m cl1.1r.1e ol the j()um<)hsm Folio ■••ship. Proui.im of the Centei•Huntley Bnnkley Report” for .ilmost fou. yea. Sand Poh(;v Study University o! C',c,.,|0 These.,"has traveled from Atnc, to islands in the Pacific m Ins |J0SSlb|t „y ,.(<tnts ,,u. Juhn l)ll(i Md,vcareer with NBC As General Manarjcr of NBC News x1ark,() Foundation and th- 8 & H Foundationin 1964 he supervised primary, convention and Unal speaker 111 tin senes will Irelection coverageMi J.m k Fern is the Chicago l».is>‘d Direr.tor of Torso iy May 8 1973News fra \BC in tne’ Midwest Hr> has 1 Fi.a-j ,|i 1M- Pt< is-^Ai-T v, nmc ■l’| Ol !,.i I.-I ‘01 the H mile , 31 I: i.i • • . H " IJ. 1* 1 II. " 1 : > - M . ■IS" F .■ I t us! Pioii icTuesday May 3 l'J/3.IOSF P>' KpAI- 1 .GUILTY BYREASON OF RACEA Documentary by Robert Northshield of NBC4:00 P.M., FRIDAY, APRIL 134:00 P.M., MONDAY, APRIL 16Quantrell Auditorium, G>bb HallMr. Northshield will speak in the Law School Auditorium8;0Q P.M. Monday. April 16No Admission Charge No Ticket Required THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOThe William Vaughn Moody Lecture CommitteeandThe Department of MusicPresent A Lecture byROBERT CRAFTentitledTHE PRELIMINARY VERSIONSOF STRAVINSKY’S “LES NOCES”TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 19738:00 p.m.Breasted Hall, The Oriental Institute1155 E. 58th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637Admission is without ticket and without chargeTuesday, April 10, 1973-The Chicago Maroon-5fThe Argonne National Laboratory: PromcUniversity.” Many scientists at theUniversity, as well as their counterparts atother institutions, have been able to makeuse of the laboratory’s facilities, he said.The laboratory, which employs over 4,000persons, has a number of unique scientificfacilities. The Accelerator division operatesthe Zero Gradient Synchrotron, one of thelargest particle accelerators in the world.The device accelerates protons to an energyof 12.5 billion electron volts and shoots theminto targets provided by researchers fromvarious universities. The site also possessesa 12-foot Bubble Chamber, the world’slargest operating hydrogen-deuteriumchamber. This is currently being used forneutrino research. The laboratory’s com¬puter system includes an IBM 360 Model50/ 75 and a major CDC-3600 system. A newpicture-processing system, dubbed ALICE,utilizes a PDP-10 digital machine. ALICE isable to convert visual patterns into languagethe computer can understand. Thelaboratory also operates a research reactor,CP-5, to provide neutron beams for severalexperiments.Argonne’s history began with theAmerican atomic bomb program during thesecond World War. A major portion of thatproject was centered at the University ofChicago’s Metallurgical Laboratory. Theworld’s first nuclear reactor was to be builtBy JEFF ROTHSituated on a 3,700 acre tract in Du PageCounty, 27 miles southwest of Chicago, is oneof the country’s major atomic researchestablishments, the Argonne NationalLaboratory. The laboratory is operated bythe University for the Atomic EnergyCommission, under program policiesestablished by the Argonne Universities Association, a consortium of 30 universities.Robert G Sachs, director of the EnricoFermi Institute and a professor in thedepartment of physics, was recently namedthe new director of the laboratory. In aninterview last Tuesday with representativesof the Maroon and rap Sachs stressed thatpeople at the University should “realize whata tremendous boon Argonne is to theZERO GRADIENT SYNCHROTRON outside of Chicago in the Palos Park ForestPreserve (Argonne Woods), about 5 milesfrom the present site of the Argonne Lab. Butthe building was not completed in time andthe reactor termed CP-1, for Chicago Pile 1)was instead built in the squash courts underthe west stands of Stagg Field. It was therethat the first controlled nuclear chainreaction took place, on December 2, 1942.Chicago’s second “atomic pile,” CP-2, wasrebuilt at the forest preserve site, and theworld’s first heavy water reactor, CP-3, wasalso built there. In 1946, the newly-established Atomic Energy Commissionnamed Argonne as a permanent nationallaboratory, and began to purchase the landon which the present laboratory is built. Thestaff began in 1948 to move from theUniversity to the new laboratory, which wascompletely established by 1953. The site inthe forest preserve was abandoned, and littleremains there today except two granitemarkers indicating where the reactors CP-2and CP-3 and some radioactive material areburied.The present Argonne National Laboratorycarries out a wide spectrum of basicresearch in the fields of physics, biology,chemistry, mathematics, and metallurgy,among others. It also serves as a center forfurther reactor development. The primarygoal of the laboratory in this area is thedevelopment of the liquid-metal-cooled fastbreeder reactor for commercial use. Such areactor is particularly desirable as an an¬swer to the “energy crisis”, for it wouldproduce more nuclear fuel than it wouldconsume, and thus greatly extend thelifetime of the world’s energy resources. In1971, around 45 percent of the entirelaboratory budget of was devoted to thedevelopment of the breeder reactor.“People think that the concept of theenergy crisis and the concept of the en¬vironmental crisis are new ideas,”laboratory director Sachs pointed out. Ac¬tually, scientists were considering suchproblems in the ‘forties and ‘fifties. The firstproposal for a liquid-metal-cooled breederreactor was made by Argonne in 1946. Thatproposal came to life in 1951 with the con¬struction of EBR-I, which demonstrated thebreeding principle and also generated thefirst useful electrical power obtained fromnuclear energy.This first experimental breeder reactorwas constructed by the Argonne NationalLaboratory at its site at the National ReactorTesting Station, 50 miles west of Idaho Falls,Idaho. Following its success, a secondbreeder reactor, EBR-II, was built as anadvanced prototype for a central stationpower plant. It achieved its first testcriticality in 1961. Argonne is still studyingmethods for the economical production ofbreeder reactor fuel, interaction betweenstructural material and the liquid sodiumreactor coolant, and other aspects of breederreactor.BY EDWARD ALBEEReynolds Club 8:30 p.mApril 12,13.14.15 *1°°6-The Chicago Maroon-Tuesday, April 10, 1973oting a wide spectrum of basic researchTHERMOGRAPHIC RECORDERS: Recorders are placed on the bottom of LakeMichigan to monitor water temperature (above).ARGONNE 160- LITER ALGAE GROWTH TANK: (below)TRACING ELEMENTS: Fish from Lake Michigan are used to determine the types andamounts of trace elements present in the lake.The Argonne laboratory is also conductingan extensive program of research into en¬vironmental problems, which began in 1966.The project has resulted in the developmentof an Atmospheric Dispersion Model to aid inplanning for the control of air pollution in thecity of Chicago. This successful applicationof systems analysis to environmentalproblems has led the state of Illinois to begin,with Argonne’s cooperation, a program of airquality evaluation in several Illinois cities.The laboratory is also engaged in a study ofthe effects of situating nuclear power plantson the shores of the Great Lakes.Asked to compare the National Ac¬celerator Laboratory at Batavia, Illinoiswith Argonne, Sachs explained that while theBatavia laboratory is a very fine one it is asingle purpose institution, devoted to high-energy physics. Argonne, on the other hand,is a multi-purpose lab. “I guess it’s the mostextreme multi-purpose national laboratoryin the country,” he said. Basic research isbeing carried out in fields as diverse as themolecular structure of human antibodies,the chemistry of noble gas compounds, thephysiology of the thyroid gland in dogs, andthe study of neutrinos. ‘‘We have as broad aspectrum imaginable of activities,” Sachssaid. Although much of the research carriedout at Argonne may not seem to have anyimmediate application, he stated that ‘‘therehas never been a basic science activity thathas not had an ultimate payoff.”The achievements of the Argonne NationalLaboratory have been many and varied.Besides those already mentioned, theseinclude the first reactor to produce usableelectricity with plutonium as the major fuel,the first United States production-scaleatomic power plant, EBWR (ExperimentalBoiling Water Reactor), and the first use ofatomic power to light a town (Arco, Idaho).The institution is also responsible for the firstuse of a superconducting magnet in a full-scale high energy physics experiment, thefirst and largest quantitative studies ofradium metabolism, and the first facility forlocating radiation in the human body quicklyand accurately. Argonne has also developeda small, inexpensive hemodializer (artificialkidney).The laboratory maintains an extensiveprogram of educational activities. Facultyresearchers can spend a year at Argonneworking with staff members with similarinterests. There is a predoctoral fellowshipprogram to provide financial aid forBtddualc students to perform thesis reseat diat the site, under staff supervision. An honors program for outstanding undergraduatestudents brings over 150 such students toArgonne annually. Workshops on variedtopics are often held at the site, and helpstudents and faculty members to getacquainted with the laboratory. The ZeroGradient Synchrotron hosts over 400researchers each year. In the same period,some 1,000 high school and college studentsregularly tour th? site.Employees charge harassment atMuseum by supervisory personnelcontinued from page 3year is impossible to determine exactly, dueto changes in existing exhibits, new exhibits,and the Museum’s reluctance to releaseexact figures. However, employees of thefirms themselves roughly estimated that thefigure is at least $700,000 per year.An additional $1.5 million was received bythe Museum in 1972 from foundations,government agencies, and private in¬dividuals. Included in this amount were‘‘contributions for unrestricted purposes”from several funds and individuals, in¬cluding the Chicago Title and Trust Foun¬dation, the A B Dick Foundation, andChicago real estate magnate Arthur Rubloff.Several employees accused the Museum ofhaving sufficient funds to pay higher wagesand of engaging in a campaign of in¬timidation in order to discourage the for¬mation of unions. Ed Raymond, publicrelations director for the Museum said, ‘‘I’mnot aware if any of our employees are unionmembers or not. I’d have to check.”None of the Museum employees, as itturned out, were union members. A main¬tenance employee said, ‘‘In 1967 they tried toget a union in here. Everybody involved inthat was fired. Ever since then, most peoplehave been scared to try. There was a petitionlast year, but not much happened.”The petition was circulated by main¬tenance workers in 1972 in an attempt toorganize a union. Several employees saidthat the supervisory personnel called ameeting concerning the petition and toldthem that their wage and working conditiondemands would not be met. According tothese employees, the supervisors also saidthat ‘‘dissatisfied employees could talk totheir supervisors and didn’t really need a MOBIUS STRIP. Photo by Mike BenedikTuesday, April 10, 1973-TheChicogo Maroon-7union.” “Besides,” one woman said, “theytold us we could hit the street if we weren’tsatisfied.”Over half of the interviewed employeeslevelled charges of some sort of harrassmentat Museum supervisory personnel. Anemployee, speaking of regular meetingsbefore work which food service employeesare required to attend, said, “The super¬visors think that everybody here is alwaysdrinking, smoking dope, or ripping off. Some of these supervisors have this thing aboutdope. I don’t smoke myself, but I’ve beenhassled, along with just about everybodyelse, about it.”Another employee said that a supervisorhad shoved a food service employee in theMuseum’s kitchens. “It came out alright,though,” the employee said with a smile“The guy he pushed punched him in themouth.”ABOUT THE MIDWAYPubl ic affa irsThere will be an informal gathering forfrehsmen and sophomores interested in thepublic affairs program on Wednesday. April11. 1973 at 7:30 pm in Ida Noyes sun parlor,third floor west.Faculty and students currently in theprogram will be present to answer questionsand discuss Public Affairs. Refreshmentswill be served.Freshmen and sophomores interested inthe public affairs program can pick up ap¬plications and program announcements inthe offices of the Social Science CollegiateDivision. Gates Blake 217; the Dean of Un¬dergraduate Students. Gates Blake 117; theProgram Chairman. School of Social ServiceAdministration. Room E-3, and fromresident heads of freshmen dorms. Deadlinefor receipt of applications is April 20, 1973.Peace corpsApplications remain available forpositions in the Peace Corps and VISTA. Thenational office has extended the deadline forapplications until April 27 in the followingareas of need: for the Peace Corps, tradestraining in all areas; architects, nurses,medical technicians, athletics instructors,civil engineers, and business and economics-trained individuals in Central America, WestAfrica, and Southeast Asia; and thosetrained in math, sciences, english and otherlanguages in Korea, Afghanistan,Micronesia. Ethiopia, Iran, and west Africa.For Vista, the largest manpower needs arein the areas of urban planning, nurses,economists, tradesmen, vocational coun¬selors and tutors.Anyone expressing any interest at all inworking in either program is urged to apply;a fairly speedy reply is guaranteed, since allsummer programs begin in June. Any in¬vitation to participate in a training programcan always be refused.Applications are available on the secondfloor of Reynolds club. More information isavailable from the downtown office (353-4990), or from the campus representative atBrent House, 5540 S Woodlawn (telephone753-3392 for appointments).Ob/gyn lectureGeneral gynecological health care andparticular problems w'ith regard to birthcontrol and reproductive health for youngpeople will be featured in next week’sUniversity Health Forum at noon, Thursday,April 12, Room 122, social science researchbuilding. 1126 East 59th Street.Dr James Burks chief of the University’sstudent health gynecology clinic andassociate professor in the department ofobstetrics and gynecology, will discussvarious medical tests available, the kinds ofmedical problems young female patientsmost often face, their cause and treatment.Open to the public without ticket andwithout charge, the weekly Health Forumcovers a variety of subjects on personal andfamily health matters. It will continue to beheld each Thursday, at noontime, in thesame location through June 7.ChessThe Maroon Knights captured their 5thstraight tournament victory of the year bysweeping the Chicago intercollegiate in¬dividual Tornado held Sunday April 8 atNorthwestern University.Two UC teams placed 1st and 2nd ahead ofNorthwestern, Northeastern Illinois, Loop,Kennedy-King, and Roosevelt. Joe White ’75,Harold Winston (history), and Eric Schiller’76 tied for the individual championship with3.5 - .5 records. Robert Felt ’75, JimStevenson ’75, and Kurt Eschbach ’76 tied for4th place with 3-1 scores.This victory increases UC’s lead in theChicago Intercollegiate Chess League to 3.25points over 2nd place Northwestern. Theleague championship will be decided by atournament at Governors State Universitythe weekend of April 28-29.In other chess news, Dodd-Mead defeatedTufts 2-1 to win the playoff to deride theChess Intramurals title. Andrew McLennan’76, Hal Zeidman ’76, and Bob Charkofsky ’758-The Chicago Maroon-Tuesday, April 10, brought the chess crown to Dodd-Mead.Individual IM winner Paul Cornelius ’75scored the loan win for Tufts in the playoff.Steiner appointmentDr Donald Steiner, the discoverer of theinsulin precursor he named proinsulin, hasbeen appointed chairman of the departmentof biochemistry at the University.Dr Steiner, 42, is the AN Pritzker professorin the departments of biochemistry andmedicine and in the College.Dr Steiner has been a faculty member ofthe University since 1960. A native of Lima.Ohio, he was a 1952 graduate (BS) of theUniversity. In 1956 he received theUniversity’s Bordon Award for outstandingresearch during his medical training.He interned at King County Hospital,Seattle, and held a United States publichealth service postdoctoral researchfellowship and residency at the University ofWashington for three years.In 1960 he joined the University faculty asassistant professor in the department ofbiochemistry. He became an associateprofessor in 1966, professor in 1968, and theAN Pritzker professor in 1970.He received a US public health servicecareer development award for eleven con¬secutive years, from 1962 to 1972.Harris degreeChauncy Harris, internationally-recognized authority on Soviet urbangeography, has been granted a Doctor ofLetters degree by the University of Oxford.Harris, the Samuel Harper professor ofgeography and director of the center forinternational studies at the University,received the degree recently at ceremoniesheld in Oxford’s Sheldonian Theatre.A special faculty committee judged thathis published books and articles constituted“an original contribution to the ad¬vancement of knowledge of such substanceand distinction as to give him anauthoritative status” in his branch of learn¬ing. He was recommended for the degree bythe board of the faculty of anthropology andgeography at Oxford.Harris is a native of Utah. He received anAB degree in 1933 from Brigham YoungUniversity and a BA in 1936 from Oxford,where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar. In1940 he received his PhD from the Univer¬sity.He joined the University faculty in 1943 asan assistant professor. He was namedprofessor in 1947.Quantrell awardsRoger Hildebrand, dean of the college atthe University, has issued another call forstudent nominations for the Llewelyn Johnand Harriet Manchester Quantrell Awardsfor excellence in undergraduate teachingthis year.“Any faculty member who teaches aCollege class, no matter in what disciplineand no matter how small a class, is eligible,”according to Dean HildebrandNominations from students should be sentto the Dean in Gates-Blake 132. A committeemade up of the dean of the college, the deanof students, and the dean of students in theCollege will submit its nominations for theawards to the Provost. Student recom¬mendations weigh heavily in the finalselections, according to Hildebrand.The Quantrell Awards this year will beawarded at Convocation, Saturday, June 9.In recent years four or five awards havebeen given each year.The awards carry a stipend of $1,000 each.They were established in 1938 by the lateErnest Eugene Quantrell, a UniversityTrustee, in honor of his parents. They arebelieved to be the nation’s oldest prize foroutstanding college teaching.Brodsky readingJosif Brodsky, internationally-knownRussian poet, will give a reading of hispoems at the University on Thursday, April12.Brodsky, who left his native Russia lastsummer (1972), is poet-in-residence at theUniversity of MichiganThe reading will take place at 8 pm inBreasted Hall of the University’s Oriental1973 Institute. 1155 East 58th Street. It is spon¬sored by the University’s William VaughnMoody Lecture Series. Admission is open tdthe public without charge. The poems will beread in both Russian and English.Josif Alexandrovich Brodsky was born inLeningrad in 1940. He left school after theninth grade and during the next severalyears held a variety of jobs: milling-machineoperator, helper in a morgue, photographer,and participant in several geological ex¬peditions.Brodsky started writing poetry in his teensand began a long program of self-education.He was strongly attracted to Anglo-American poetry and prose, an interestwhich has continued to the present day.His initial publication in the Soviet Union,translations from Serbo-Croatian andSpanish, occurred in 1963. His first book ofpoetry in Russian was published in 1965 in theUnited States while the poet was in a Sovietlabor camp.Brodsky had been convicted by aLeningrad court of being a “social parasite,”with no occupation other than writing andfree-lance translating He was released in1966 after serving 18 months.His second volume in Russian waspublished in 1970 and received world-widefavorable reviews. It is regarded by some asthe most important volume of new poetry bya yount poet since the 1920s.Scriven lecturePhilosopher Michael Scriven will presentthe first in a series of public lectures on education at 8 pm Wednesday, April 11, atthe University.Scriven will examine the feasibility of ateacher evaluation system and how such asystem would affect the school ad¬ministrator-teacher relationship.His address will be given in the library ofIda Noyes Hall, 1212 East 59th Street.The iecture series, honoring the late LvleSpencer, Chicago businessman, philan¬thropist, and trustee of the University,complements an effort to attract youngscholars to the University who will con¬centrate on education. The Spencer Foun¬dation of Chicago is funding this seven-yeareffort with a $1.9 million grant.Scriven, the author of several books on thephilosophy of science and applied logic, isprofessor of philosophy at the University ofCalifornia-' at Berkeley. He received hisdoctorate degree at the University of Oxford,England, and has taught at IndianaUniversity and the University of Minnesota.Witke lectureRoxane Heater Witke, an Americanhistorian who last summer (1972) visited thePeople’s Republic of China doing research onChinese women and culture, will speak at theUniversity Wednesday evening, April 11.Witke will discuss “Generational TensionsAmong Revolutionary Chinese Women” at 8pm in Breasted Hall of the University’sOriental Institute, 1155 East 58th Street.The lecture is open to the public withoutticket and without charge. It is sponsored bycontinued on page 10SPIRIT OF AMERICALETTERS TO THE EDITORcontinued from page 5program rather than cut out coed sports.Encouragement and expansion of the coedprogram would be a way to bring studentstogether in an informal social situation. Itcertainly would be a shame to curtail therecently expanded coed sports program.No much publicity of the possible changeshas been provided to the campus by theIntramural Office, possibly because the finalrecommendations of that office are still indoubt. I would suggest that interested partieswrite to the Dean of Students and the In¬tramural Office in Bartlett Gym.Robert Owen Edbrooke, Jr.FratsI was recently granted the rare privilege ofspeaking with Mr Turkington (Director ofStudent Housing). Since I was made to un¬derstand that this honor is only conferredupon those who are the most persistent inbadgering his secretary, I would like tocommunicate the results of our discussion tothe student body. I asked Mr Turkington for his permissionto have some leafletts describing Phi SigmaDelta-Zeta Beta Tau fraternity in studentmailboxes. Although (after muchdiscussion) Mr Turkington agreed that therewere large numbers of students that couldonly be reached through their mailboxes, Iwas told that representatives of approvedunits of student housing are not allowed tohave this done, unless they happen torepresent the student housing office. MrTurkington explained that this policy existsin order to protect students from having theirmailboxes over-filled (despite my assurancethat there would only be one leaflett). Mysuggestion that his policy had something todo with his desire to prevent students fromreceiving information about alternatives toliving in the dorms was called “a lot of bull”.Students beware! Some of the leaflettshave slipped into the dorms. They offer suchspurious inducements as good food, lowprices, and co-operative, coeducationalliving DO NOT BITE ON THE FOR¬BIDDEN FRUIT, or the student housingoffice may have more vacancies than fresh¬man next year!David Axinn "SPIRIT OF AMERICA ': On exhibit at the Museum of Science and Industry.Photo by Mike Benedik'Ehc Qntocrsitu of ChicagoROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL59TH STREET AND WOODLAWN AVENUE . CHICAGO, ILLINOISX a Bad)JMaste in MinorTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRAND ORCHESTRA (30 Players)RICHARD VIKSTROM, DirectorELLIOTT GOLUB, ConcertmasterSUSAN NALBACH LUTZ, Soprano GERALD SCOTT, TenorPHYLLIS UNOSAWA, Contralto MONROE OLSON, BassLARRY MENDES, ContinueSUNDAY • APRIL 15, 1973 • 3:30 P.M.Tickets: Reserved $5.00 Chancel Seating $4.50General Admission $4.00 U. of C. Students $2.50Group rates available upon request to Chapel Music OfficeOn Sale: Reynolds Club Desk, 57th Street and University AvenueCooley’s Corner, 5211 Harper AvenueWoodworth’s Bookstore, 1311 East 57th StreetMail Orders to: Chapel Music Office, 59th Street and Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago 60637Please make checks payable to The University of Chicago and enclose stamped\ self-addressed envelope EDITORIALELECTIONTHURSDAYAPRIL 124:00 P.M.MAROON OFFICEQuorum of 50% essen¬tial. all staff on themasthead should attendand vote. (Proxies ac¬cepted.)$ * * ** * * * * * 9fC* CARPET CITY *J 6740 STONY ISLAND t£ 324-7998 £SL {2 Has what you need from a $ 10 Qw used 9x12 Rug, to a custom ITX carpet. Specializing in Rem- ^^ nants % Mill returns at ay fraction of the original cost. J^ Decoration Colors and Qualities.^^ Additional 10% Discount with JL^ this Ad. ^* FREE DELIVERY *Tuesday, April 10, 1973-The Chicago Maroon-9ABOUT THE MIDWAYcontinued from page 8the University's Committee on far easternstudies.Witke is an associate professor of historyat the State University of New York atBinghampton (on leave of absence) and avisiting associate professor of history atStanford University.During her visit to China, she conductedextensive interviews with Mme Tse-tung,Mme Chou En-lai, and numerous otherChinese women in various walks of life.Among her publications is “Mao Tse-tung,Women and Suicied in the May Fourth Era.”in China Quarterly, 1967, vol. 9.She is currently preparing a biography andmemoirs of Mme Mao Tse-tung to bepublished in the spring of 1974. She also ispreparing a manuscript on feminism duringthe May Fourth era in China, which is to bepublished soon by the University ofCalifornia Press. The May Fourth era inChinese history refers to a political andcultural movement between 1919 and 1923.Witke is an alumna of the University; shereceived an MA degree in history from theUniversity in 1962. She received a BA in 1959from Stanford University and a PhD inmodern Chinese history in 1970 from theUniversity of California at Berkeley.SG resolutionStudent Government, at its meeting ofApril 5, unanimously passed a resolution insympathy with Greek student rebels anddeploring the actions the Greek militaryregime has taken to supress the students. Inrecent weeks, five students have been killed,500 have been arrested, and over 100 havebeen drafted into the army in an attempt bythe Greek government to quell dissent.The resolution, besides protesting theoppressive acts of the Greek colonels, alsosupported the demands of the Greekstudents, which include the right of studentsto freely elect student governmentrepresentatives, immediate repeal of thedecree that empowers the Government topenalized students by revoking their militarydeferments, and withdrawal of militaryofficers who interfere with and supersede FLYING EXHIBIT: An early model aircraft at the Museum of Science and Industry. Photo by Mike Benedikdecisions of university administrations inGreece.MBAIn recent years, the College hascollaborated with several graduate andprofessional schools to offer programs whichaccelerate Bachelor’s and the completion ofthe Master’s degrees. These programs allowa student to shorten the time spent in school,saving both time and money.Of all the joint degree and professionaloption programs, that of the Graduate Schoolof Business professional option has beenmost used. This program allows the studentto begin the two year MBA program in thefourth year of college. After the fourth year, the student received a BA in ProfessionalOption/ Business, with the award of the MBAcoming after the fifth year.The appeal of the MBA professional optionis no doubt enhanced by the fine reputation ofthe Business School. The recent ascendancyof the Chicago School of economic theory inthe eyes of Washington and Wall Street hasbrought added recognition to the educationprovided in the Business School. Indeed,Richard Thain, the School’s Director ofPlacement, reports, “I’m getting a lot moreattention from Wall Street and, of course, theChicago investment community. People arecalling here who never called before.”The increased value of the MBA educationis reflected in an average salary offer ofmore than $14,000 to graduating MBAstudents. Thus the skills acquired in the MBAprogram are clearly in demand.Two changes have taken place in thebusiness professional option which should benoted. Applicants to the program now mustfollow a normal course in a regular collegeprogram of concentration. The pre¬professional concentration may be in anycollegiate division, not just the SocialSciences. Under the new requirements, astudent will still have open the alternative ofcompleting the BA in one more year in thepre-professional field of concentration.The second change is that the professionaloption is now available to one year transferstudents. Prior to this, transfer studentswere ineligible by a ruling of the CollegeCommittee on Academic Standing.One last point should be made about theBA/ MBA professional option. Therequirements for the MBA are separate fromthe pre-professional concentrationrequirements. Thus the content of theprogram in the fourth year is not com¬plicated by intermingling of pre-professionaland MBA requirements. Rather the studentsimply begins the first year of the two yearMBA programs in the fourth year of college.The BA in Professional Option/ Business isawarded upon completion of the first ninecourses in the MBA program.To discuss the opportunities available inthe BA/ MBA professional option, an in¬formal sherry hour has been scheduled forThursday, April 12, at 5 pm in the Burton-Judson Library. Burton-Judson Court islocated at 1005 East 60th Street. This meetingis designed to acquaint first aid second yearundergraduates with the professional optionin Business so that they may plan ahead(application to the program should be madeearly in the winter quarter of the student’sthird year). Present at the gathering will beLorna Straus, dean of undergraduates;Harold Metcalf, dean of students in theGraduate School of Business; and ArlinLarson, College adviser for the professionaloption students. For further information, callextension 3-3611.YMCA coursesIf you’re “up to here’ with everything,including the weather, it might be refreshing to take a class for fun. Maybe you have a tripplanned or one in mind, for your vacation tobeautiful Europe, South America or Mexico.Spansih, French, and German are part of theContinuing Education program at the HydePark Y. It is amazing what you will learn in 8weeks, and it’s rewarding to “be part of thepeople” you will be visiting.A money management 4 week series isdesigned to help you with your financialgoals and could make your dreams a reality.If you are a “stay homer” why not takea class in guitar? Three levels are offered soyou can enjoy your strumming where everyou are best suited.You can learn to type for personal use, forschool or for business. For quick note takingstenoscript is far out ranking other methodsand is a fine companion with typing. Ourmany art classes will bring out your creativetalents whether you are a novice, beginner orhave some previous experience.For your social life there’s the evenpopular bridge game, a beginner and in¬termediate class, and chess for those whoknow the basics and want to learn to planstrategy to carry on his attack.Are you fatiqued and pressured with everyday duties? Try yoga for your physical andmental fitness. It will serve you well andyou’ll be glad you did.Classes start the week of April 9th and it’snot too late to join many of them. CallMaxine Farewell Fa4-5300 for additionalinformation on these classes and othersoffered for you.SlanderOn Friday April 6 Maroon photographerRobert Newcombe was called uncivilized bya substitute chemistry professor.Newcombe, who was celebrating the last dayof the first annual Maroon Hyde Park photocontest, was wearing a “gangster type” hatat the time of the accusation.Dr Robert Gomer, who was filling in forthe vacationing Juergen Hinze, askedNewcombe and several other Chem 107students to remove their hats. As Gomerpointed to Newcombe and a hatted friend hestated, “take your hats off. Now that we’rehere studying chemistry there is no reasonnot to do the civilized thing.”“That guy’s got alot of balls,” commentedone female student. “Who the hell does hethink he is? He’s a real chauvanist pig; hedidn’t make the girls take off their hats.”Newcombe is challenging Gomer to a piethrowing duel to take place in the quadssometime in April. Gomer was not availablefor comment.The photo contest, by the way, endedFriday and was a tremendous success. Over180 people, both Hyde Park Residents andUC students submitted more than 700photographs. The thirteen winning pictures,along with several honorable mentions, willappear in a special issue of the Maroon onMay 1.MNESTING; A bird in the bush is worth...??iG-7!ie Giiiuyo Mui ovn-Tu«*auuy, il iC, 1973GARAGE $J>ACENEEDEDPrefer in Hyde Park for a moforcycle,a big garage w/small car would doCall Steve Room 215 , 363 9293WANTEDPotters wheel: Call 643 8384 after 6COMPUTATIONCENTERA 6 session course in Job ControlLanguage (JCL) will be taughtbeginning on April 24 We will teachyou to write JCL statements and explain why you need it to run IBM/360jobs We'll also present two seminarsthis quarter "Debugging with aDump" and "Advanced Use of theFORTRAN Compiler " For completedescriptions and schedules come to theComp Center, Rl C.B 12, 753-8409GAY LIBERATIONBusiness Meeting Sun 4 pm Ida NoyesCONSCIOUSNESS GROUPS ONSEXUAL IDENTITY are beingformed especially for those who areconfused or uncertain as well as forgays, bisexuals, and straights Cometo Ida Noyes Hall every Thursday at7 30 pm.COLOR BLIND(iOLOR BLIND PEOPLE wanted forvision research $2 per hr for 1C to 15hrs work. 947 6039PEOPLE TO PEOPLECorrespondence with fonety inmatescan be new experience 8. knowledgeTry it You may like it. CaU 772 4984PLAY TENNIS~Z indoor courts, 3 outdoor courts.Private & group lessons available.South Side Racket Club, 1401 E SibleyVI 9 1235.LAND FOR SALEWild lands in Maine. Parcels 1 acre to1000 acres. Much under $100/acreSome near skiing 8, near ocean AcadiaAgency, Milbridge, Maine, 04658 (207)546 7272MAROON CLASSIFIED ADS PERSONALSSCENESThe Univ of Chicago, Federal Law,and Sex Discrimination: a talk to begiven by Judith Lonnquist, VicePresident of Legal Affairs of theNational Organization of Women, onApril 19, at 5:00 pm.History Sherry Hour: This Friday,April 13, in the Social Science TeaRoom (2nd floor) at 4:00Gay Unitarian Caucus meeting! Fri.4/13. Call Henry 947 9645 for Info.Join us for a memorable summerexperience Back packing andmountain climbing excursions into thewilderness areas of Utah andWyominging. For details write P.O.Box 11658, SLC, Utah.SPACERoommate wanted to share house nrco op and campus. Call 643 8184.Two room apt 53rd Blackstone$110' mo Begin May 1 phone 947 9637after 6Two bdrm. apt. on campus for subletSummer qtr. S130/mo. Call 947 0079after 7:30 p.m.TAKE OVER LEASE EARLY JUNESpacious 2 bedroom apt. Univ. owned.$145/mo. Just south of the Midwayit's safer than you think. Call Barry orLavaun 288 4234 after 6.Lge mod studio, kit., AC, Ige. closets.Avail 6/15. E 55th PI. 955-2699.Need 1 bedroom or Efficiency apt. forSummer. Hyde Park or Near North.Require air conditioning 684 8139.Apt to sublet: mid June to late Sept.Spacious 3 bedrooms. Prime location.1156 E. 56th St $225/mo. Call Peter at955 0380.Have large dry basement for storage.324 6637 evesWe would like a congenial student tolive in Room 8. board small salary inexchange for light housekeeping andbabysitting. 548 4196Fm rmmte to share huge beautiful E.Hyde Pk apt w/3 bdrm w/bath. AvailMay 1 $80 8. utils. Call 684 0860 ROOMS AVAILABLE SPRING ANDSUMMER, MEAL CONTRACTS FORSPRING QUARTER WITH ORWITHOUT ROOM. CALL DAVE ORDENISE, 753 3112.Apt to sublet for summer : 2 1/2 roomsfurnished air con., parking. InFaculty Apartments across fromBillings. $153.50. Call M. Murrin at493 5357 after 7 p.m. on most weekdays.Kitchenet apt. w/fireplace: for quietperson only. $144/mo. Call 643 0741.Room available, prvt. bath in largeairy South Shore apt, $55/mo. oncampus bus route, 643 9455, keeptrying.2 1/2 rms. May 1 occ. $143/mo. inclw/w cptg. 8, utils.; 5254 S. Dorchester,call 947 9637 eve.; 684 400 x 29 days.5405 S Woodlawn 3 rms. furn. Availnow 643 2760 or 667 5746 Mrs. Green.Sublet May 1. Sunny 2 bdrm. apt. EastHyde Pk $172.50 new lease 493 6940Summer house in Ogden Dunes June toSept. 536 4354 after 6.CHICAGO BEACH HOTELBEAUTIFUL FURNISHED APARTMENTS Near beach, parks, I.C. trains11 mins to loop U of C and downtownloop buses at door. Modest dailyweekly monthly rates. 24 hr. desk.Complete hotel services. 5000 S.Cornell. DO 3 2400.Live in Federika's famous bldg.Nearby furn. or unfurn 2 8. 3 rm. apts.for 1, 2, 3 people. Refrig., stove, pvt.bath, stm. heat. Quiet. Sunny, view.Parking, trans. $120.00 up. Free Utils.Robinson, 6043 Woodlawn 955 9209 or427 2583. Short term lease or longer.PEOPLE FOR SALESpanijH English Translations. Artides, papers, letters, books.Reasonable Phone 241 6930 evenings.Sitter avail aft Lab school hrs. CallMerrilyn 947 6218 or 752 1140Cello instruction by experiencedteacher Will accept adults or.children. Call Van Bistrow 753 8339afternoons or 752 6151 eveningsHefty Hauling Lts. Light wt haulsrates adjust., Sherwin 493 8451.TOUR THE JOSEPH R. SHAPIROPRIVATE ART COLLECTIONTues., April 17 EveningBus leaving Ida Noyes at 7:00 and returningaround 10:00 $1.00 Come In to Ida Noyes 209to pay and sign up for bus.SUN INCOMESun Life’s new incomeprotection planCould you afford to stop working for a year?If not, talk with your man from Sun Life ofCanada about their new disability income plan... to keep the money coming in when you’renot able to.SUN LIFE OF CANADARALPH J. WOOD Jr.CLU2630 Flossmoor ltd.Ftossmeor, III. 60422799-2250 Experienced manuscript typing onIBM Selectric. 378 5774.Like Julian Bream's music? ForCLASSIC GUITAR STUDY 262 4689.Tax consultant will help prepare yourtax return. Call 731 9636Portraits 4 for $4 00 and up. MaynardStudio. 1459 E. 53 2nd floor 663 4083.PEOPLE WANTEDSURVEY COORDINATOR Detailoriented person to process surveyreports must be able to learn quicklyand handle customer contact. Sometyping needed computer skillshelpful some travel advancementpossibilities good salary Cal I 7532067Desk clerk. Motel loc. South Shore. 3day/wk will train 734 7030L League volunteer coaches thissummer—call 493 7980 eve/wknds.Wanted: Normal female volunteersfor hormonal research study.Requirements: 21 35 years old, nonpregnant, no hormone pills for 2months Call Dr. Rosenfield, 947 6349 Olivetti typewriter 536 4354 aft. 6LECTURESpencer Lecture Michael Scriven ofU Cal Berkeley "The Evaluation ofTeaching" Ida Noyes Library, WedApril 11, 8:00 pmBRIDGE MAGAZINE"The new Bridge Mag is out. Now onsale in UC Bookstore Read about theAdhesive Tape Orientals, PekingOpera, the Chin and Ching controversy, a review of "Chink!" adocumentary of ethinic prejudice inAmericaRUN FOR OFFICELast chance to file for SG and NSAelections! Any student may run;undergrads from their dorm, frat, or""ther college"; grads from divisionor school Ten signatures are all thatare needed, forty for a party of candidates. Pick up a form at SC orStudent Activities Office in Ida NoyesHallFOLK DANCING8 pm at Ida Noyes Hall: Sunday(general), Monday (beginners),Friday (requests) 50c donation. For Did you know that the female employees at the Univ of Michigan wereawarded several million dollars inback pay because of massive sexdiscrimination? It could happen herefind out how April 19 at 5:00 pm inSoc Sci 122NOTICE: I am going to some Greekislands via London and Germany thisMay and would like some companyInterested? Call John 929 6005Reward $10 brwn purse ID'S etc. lost4/7 Regenstein No questions Rick 6847446Women Are you being paid as well asthe man at the next desk’ Do you havean equal chance of promotion? No?'Find out what you can do about itApril 19 at 5:00 p m in Soc. Sci. 122Anyone interested in forming studygroup for MA exam in English pleasecall 752 9508WRITERS WORKSHOP (PL 2 8377).MADWOMANThe Election of The Editor 1973Thursday, April 12, 4:00 p.m. MaroonOffice All staff on the masthead shouldvote. Proxies accepted.Mature responsible person to livew/tamily (2 children). Low fee forroom, board Babysitting not to exceed10 hrs per wk Laun. facils. 324 6637eves.Earn 1 50 Undergraduate womenneeded to take part in a psych experiment involving perception Takesabout 45 min Call Carrie 947 0373 orLinda 667 5124Mothers helper needed for 10 1/2 yr oldgirl Some light housekeeping. Hoursflexible but prefer 3:30 to 7 p.m. Tues8. Thurs good pay 753 2783 or 548 4196after 5 pmAnyone interested in forming studygroup for MA exam in English pleasecall 752 9508Feminist Musicians interested inplaying music with other women.Need drummer and vocalist but all arewelcome Call Doralee: 221 9038.WANTED: Someone to coach me inprogramming PLATO IV (Plaza 28377) info, call Janet 955 8184BALLET CLASSESWednesday 10 30 a m. for adults atLehnoft Studios 1438 E 57th St. Taughtby Fredda Hyman, formerly withAmeican Ballet Theater Call 288 3500after 2pmRIDE NEEDEDI need a ride to and from work Mondaythru Friday. I work at the U of CBookstore from 8 to 5. My name is GertKwasny 8. I live in Calumet City onMackinaw Please contact me at thesnackbar in the bookstore or call 7534183. TRAVELFOUNDBlack male dog, med sized, in thevicinity of 57th and University on April6 Call 684 4634 morn or eve.Old English sheep dog. 288 3472 eves SPECIAL DISCOUNT FARES TOAND WITHIN EUROPE TravelCenter, 544 State, Madison, Wisconsin53703PANP1ZZADELIVERYThe Medici delivers 5 pm to 11 pm Sunthru Thurs. 5 pm to midnight Fri. andSat 667 7394. Save 60 cents delivery, ifyou pick it up yourself at 1450 E 57thStISRAELI DANCINGTHIS WEEK at Hillel, Thurs 8 10 pm I had lunch downtown the other daywith two good friends from the company I used to work for. One woman ismarried and the other is single andneither of them are feminists of therabid type But after the lunch wasover and I was walking back to the 1C,I realized that that was one of the mostliberating experiences I had had in along time. There we were, threewomen, all financially independent,sharing a lunch in a nice restaurantwithout having asked for anyone'sdollars or permission. And most important, we were there to see eachother because we like each other.I had dressed carefully, wearing mynewest and nicest outfit, and when Igot there I saw that both of them haddone the same We had dressed foreach other, because of mutual regard,and not for the effect on stray malesve might see And we talked andlaughed and enioyed ourselves,oblivious to all but the present company and the good food So much sothat the handsome young man fromthe office who was eating in the samerestaurant came over to say hello witha slight expression of pique (for us nothaving noticed him first?).All this fine feminine companionshipmay not seem like more than a ladies'lunch, but to those of us who has at onetime been fighting the lonely battle forourselves against the entire world,trying to get a place in the exaltedmale sphere and fighting our fellowfemales for the few positionsavailable, the feeling of true,unadulterated pleasure in the company of other independent women is athing to be savored MADWOMANMAKE UPWORKSHOPFOR SALEFull size violin good condition $150 call627 3996 after 7Great Books of the Western World Exccond $250 or best offer 734 5209Up to 26 acres of untouched grasslandin Park County, Col. Near skiing andNat l Forest. Asking 5350/acre. WmMyers, 115 Western Ave. N , St. Paul,Minn. 612 224 830110 x 14 Tent $60, Roper double ovenStove S150, Portable Dishwasher $75,Refrigerator 540; 955 8118 aft 6'64 Falcon good engine tires batteryBody very rusty $250 or offer 753 0435after midnight or 753 2270 withmessage for room 837Mozart trios Haydn trios 8, quartetsscores 8, parts. 6 Mexican chairs, Make Up Expert Herman Buchman inSpeical Lecture Demonstration,Thurs. Apr. 12, 6:30 RCT. FreeTHE VERSAILLESS254 S. DORCHESTERMAY 1STLEASINGWell maintained, securebuilding. Attractive 1 V»and 2% room studios;furnished and un¬furnished; (117 to (169utilities included. Atcampus bus stop.Mrs. GroakFA-&020G CHI SCHOOL OF JU00 8 KARATE• Judo • Karate• Yoga • Self-Defense • Kung Fuy Master InstructorJEON H. CHI^ i Visitors Welcome Learn Oriental Way ofself-defense from Oriental master% ^ Private Classes Group classesUHL \ m Open Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.• Male, you an .xp.rt In self-defense• Got you In top physical shop.Beginning to Advanced * Provld* con,ld*nt* °"d «>“"»«• *h«»Male and Femil will last a lifetime® • H.lp you lot. or gain weightAll Ages • Reduce tension, increase mental alertnessHYDE PARK 5118 BLACKSTONE 684-9158FREE DEMONSTRATIONS 825-0478RUN FOR OFFICErunrunAll S.G. seats are up for election; Undergradsfrom houses, frats, and 1'other-col lege"; gradsfrom Division or School. Pick up forms in Ida NoyesS.G. office or Student Activities Office.10 signatures puts YOU on the ballot IElection: April 19f 20.Also, selection of NSA delegatesand a REFERENDUM on:Popular Election of S.G. OfficersPopular Election of CORSODisassociation from NSA.Tuesday, April 10, 1973-The Chicago Maroon-11CHARGErecordT HYDE PARK1444 E. 57thMU 4-1505OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 512-The Chicago Maroon-Tuesday, April 10, 1973