New SG president accused of ticket-scalpingBRICKELL: SG president Mark Bricked, shown here with Tom Campbell, stands ac¬cused of ticket scalping at FOTA concert. Photo by Robert Newcombe. By TIM RUDYMark Brickell, newly elected SG president,does not believe he did anything questionableor illegal when he sold standing room onlytickets at a FOTA concert last May. Brickellmaintained he was not guilty of scalping, buthad merely been “selling a different good fora different price.”He also maintained that he would havedone the same thing regardless of whether$70 had been stolen earlier that sameafternoon. On the afternoon of May 20,Brickell explained that an envelopecontaining the seventy dollars wasbackstage when someone stole it Brickell issure of this since he remembers using someof the money to buy cokes for the stage crew.When asked if it was legal to use thesefunds for refreshments for FOTA staffmembers, Brickell said he was sure it wasillegal, but that these individuals had workedhard for quite some time.That evening a large number of peopleshowed up at Mandel Hall for the BillQuateman concert. Brickell mentioned asone example of the crowding that membersof the city press were bringing in extrapeople. The president, who is also chairman(or was) of FOTA decided to make moremoney off the concert. He told the Maroonthat FOTA was in debt $15,000. This allegation was denied by Student Activitiesofficials.Brickell contacted the three fire marshallspresent in Mandel Hall and told them theremight be a few extra people above theallowed seating capacity consistent with fireregulations He asked if they would object tothe extra people. After the fire marshallstold Brickell they would not object, thepresident grabbed a handful of fifty or sixtytickets that had already beenpurchased and proceeded to reself them for$2. These same tickets had earlier been soldat the general admission price of $1.75.There were later complaints that thosewho had bought general admission seatscould not be seated because others were intheir places After all had been seatedBrickell told the Maroon he tipped the firemarshalls, out would not disclose theamount.The SG president maintained his actionsdid not come under the legal definition ofscalping and that he was not resellingtickets, but “selling another good." He alsoadmitted disobeying the wishes of a StudentActivities official who. at one point, toldBrickell not to go ahead with his plans.According to Student Activities, however.Brickell had denied to them that he wasscalping tickets.Protests erupt over library dismissalsBy GAGE ANDREWSThe library budget for the 1973-74 fiscalyear will be an increase of only one percentover the 1972-3 budget. Accompanying therelease of this information was theannouncement of the immediate dismissal ofsix professional librarians, and severepersonnel and budgetary cutbacks in manydepartments.Mr Stanley McElderry, director of theLibrary, presented the new budget lastFriday afternoon, in a meeting open to alllibrary personnel. Mr McElderry explainedthat despite a $300,000 increase in thelibrary’s allotment from the university, thelibrary suffered from the completewithdrawal of federal funding. In addition,more than half of the funds available fromvarious university departments during 1972-3were no longer available, leaving only$75,000 in support from that area.The total budget for the library in 1973-4 is$4.46 million, as opposed to $4.4 million in1972 3 An increase of at least eight percentover the 1972-3 figure had been projected asnecessary to “maintain the current positionof this library among the nation’s leadinglibraries”. Almost all of this amount wasallocated to keeping up with inflation, both inthe cost of living increases for staff salaries,and the rising cost of books. Even if this levelof funding had been achieved, the librarywould be nowhere near regaining theproportional level of acquisitions (the samepercentage of new releases) that the libraryhad in 1970.The library’s priorities dictated thedisbursement of what funds are available forthe coming year. Following a philosophy that“quality of service always depends of the thequality of the library collection”, MrMcElderry stated that the funding level forthe preservation of the existing collectionwould remain the same. This is in terms ofamount spent, though the number ofacquisitions is expected to fall about tenpercent due to the effects of inflation.The library has also stated its intention ofbeing able to meet the inflalionary cost ofliving by giving the staff salary increases.However, “cost of living increases for thestaff can be provided only by furtherreduction in staff size.” Immediateincreases were announced for MrMcElderry; for Mr Stanley Gwynn, who continues as administrative officer in chargeof the Collection Department, with addedresponsibilities for several of Regenstein’slevels’ collections; and an increase was alsoprovided for Mr Robert Miller, whoseposition as assistant director for GeneralStudies includes responsibility for alldepartmental libraries, for Regensteinreserve, and for Regenstein circulation.Salary increases for other staff membersawait the university discretion and approval.The taking on of added responsibilities byMr Gwynn and Mr Miller was necessitatedby the consolidation or elimination of severalpreviously existing positions. Several drasticmeasures had to be taken to financemaintaining the current acquisitions level offunding, and to meet the salary increases ofthose employees remaining after personnelcuts, library staffing, especially in publicservices, will be greatly reduced.Seventeen clerical positions will have to beeliminated, probably by not filling vacanciesthat occur through natural departures.Though there was an increase in theallocation for professional positions, somepositions which had been formerly funded bygrants have become part of the professionalbudget; six professional librarians weredismissed.The dismissals were extremely abrupt.Each librarian was notified less than a half-hour before the public announcement of theirdismissal. Each librarian received a copy ofa form letter, as written notification of theirdismissal, with the exception of one librarianwho was on vacation in Mexico and wasnotified by cable. Each librarian’s dismissalwas to take effect immediately; all wereurged not to report to work the followingMonday, and to not attend the public meetingat which their dismissals would beannounced.The dismissed librarians are: Mr RonNaylor, coordinator for public services inRegenstein; Mr Harvey Arnold,bibliographer for Religion and Philosophy;Mr Robert Moran, reference librarian in theSocial Sciences reading room, Mr DavidGreen, education librarian; Ms SharonIrvine, circulation and reserve librarian, andMs Patricia Coatsworth, documentslibrarian (the documents department wasabolished.)Each librarian will receive threemonths full salary, with benefits maintained,anu win receive a iump sum lor accrued vacation at the end of the three months.Mr McElderry continued the meeting byobserving that both Special Collections, andalmost the entire effort to computerize thelibrary, are funded by outside sources andthus had no effect on the budget. The meetingwas closed without opening the floor toquestions.Among library employees, reaction to lastFriday’s announcement was vigorously andalmost ununimously unfavorable. Much ofthe turmoil was centered upon the strugglinglibrary union; four of the six employeesdismissed - Ms Irvine, Mr Green, MsCoatsworth, and Mr Arnold - had been highlyvisible in efforts to organize the union, andhad testified against the library before theNational Labor Relations Board duringrecent hearings. There was widespread feeling among employees that theadministration was making use of thebudgetary situation of the library toeliminate not only “the positions not needed,but also the people not wanted .”During a meeting last Monday, the fourfired union members strongly seconded thatinterpretation. “Using the excuse of thebudget cut is really shaky.” said Ms Irvine“If the library was really hurting financiallythey would have let us work out the threemonths notice, instead of losing a combinedeighteen months of professional serviceswhich they are paying for anyway.”In response to an assertion made duringFriday’s meeting that there are presently nopositons available in the library for whichthey are qualified. Mr Green remarked thatcontinued on page twoLIBRARY: Demonstrators picket the library to protest firings. Photo by ElizabethRj;so.Union directors see progress madeLIBRARY: Three of the fired supervisors are Harvey Arnold,Pat Coatsworthand Sharon Irvine, left to right. Photo by Elizabeth Russo.continued from page oneit was “a matter of attitude” rather thantechnical qualifications which preventedthere being positions available for them.They all felt that the haste with which theywere released was an indication that it wastheir opinions, rather than their libraryskills, which are not wanted in the library.Asked why the firing should come at thisparticular point, they pointed out that theuniversity has always been afraid of alibrary union; ptrhaps because they fear itwould eventually lead to a faculty union. MsCoatsworth felt that the library union wasgetting close to winning its struggle forrecognition: they expect a dicision to behanded down very soon by the NLRB, andthey expect the decision to be favorable tothe union.Their dismissals were not quite a completesurprise to the union members. Each personhad anticipated some such action inretribution for their union activity. MsCoatsworth in particular had an earlyintimation of the impending dismissals whenher inquiry about the possibility of a year'sleave of absence in 1974 was brushed off. Theunion paper. Jackdaw, had predicted cuts inthe staff several weeks prior to theannouncement last Friday; at the time ofpublication, these predictions were termed“misinformed-’ by the libraryadministration.Action protesting the libraryadministration's decision continues. Leafletsexplaining the library actions, and theunion’s position, are being distributed infront of Regenstein. The library was picketed for an hour on Tuesday, with morethan a hundred library employees joining thepicket lines protesting the library actionFollowing the Tuesday picketing, MsCoatsworth. Mr Green, Mr Arnold, and MsIrvine went downtown to file an amendmentto an existing complaint against the librarybefore the NLRB. The initial charge of unfairlabor practices was filed by Curt Bochanyin,Bob McLaughlin, and Ruth Murray. A massrally was planned in front of the library on Wednesday, as part of the campus protesthowever it did not come off.Elsewhere in the library, response to theadministration decision was very negative.The firings were characterized in a leafletdistributed in front of Regenstein as beingmade without regard to merit or seniorityOther people have expressed the opinion thatthey were also made without regard forloyalty or disloyalty to the administration. Itwas remarked that what passes as tenure in the library - a Without Limit Of Time(WLOT) contract - was violated in the firingsof several of the employees.Perhaps the most widespread emotionswere fear and disgust. People were afraid toprotest, afraid for their own jobs. Otherswere afraid that it all would pass and beforgotten, that no action would be taken inprotest. Sharon Irvine felt that the firingswere not likely to be forgotten; the issuewould come up again, because “this is onlythe beginning of the cuts.”Members of the Design Group, acommittee established to discover andanticipate the needs of the library(especially of personnel), felt stunned Noneof the library (especially of personrv : , eltstunned. None of the members had : * /rivedany sort of advance notice i theadministration decision, though h riearlyaffected their work. They felt that theirefforts towards reconciling the library, thestaff, and the patrons had been seriouslyundercut. One person expressed it by saying“We have been made complete fools of.”Despite the adverse conditions, feelingsamong the four dismissed union memberswere optimistic. They felt that the union hadprompted worthwhile actions in the library:open job postings, job evaluations, gettingstudents onto the clerical pay scales. “Wecan walk with a sense of dignity. We haven’tput our tails between our legs and runfrightened,” said Ms Coatsworth. “The staffknows about the union, about what thelibrary is trying to do. If the legal situationwere clarified, and there was an electiontomorrow, the union would win.”There IS a doctor in the houseeditor’s note: the following article,reprinted with the permission of theeditor of “The Progressive” magazine, isa ‘view’ of the University under thereign of Robert Maynard Hutchins.By MILTON MAYER, P.P.Pa hustled his paper box samples on andoff the street cars for thirty years tn keepbody and body together. Anything left over,nickels, dimes, an occasional quarter, wentinto the sock to buy a coliege education forhis little boy. With a college education, hislittle boy would be better off-not better, butbetter off--than he had been.Helas! the little boy never got the collegeeducationThe nickels, dimes and quarters went tothe University of Chicago, which offered, butdid not require, the education. Exploiting thedistinction, the little boy flung roses aroundthe campus for a few years and was thenplaced on Permanent Probation for conductunbecoming a junior.Ten years later the little boy was back oncampus as Toady to the President. One daythe President, whom we shall call Robert MHutchins, said to him, “We ought toregularize your employment so that I can answer people who keep asking me what youdo around here. If I could tell them that youwere a professor, they would keep quiet.Nobody ever asks what a professor does.”I pointed out that I was still on PermanentProbation for conduct unbecoming a junior.“I'll tell you what I ll do,” said thePresident. “After I have done everythingelse I can think of around here to antagonizeeverybody, I’ll confer the P.P. degree onyou.”He never did. (He never ran out of things todo to antagonize everybody.)Nobody has ever called me “Doctor”(except the President whom we shall callHutchins, and in his case it was the secondmost contemptuous thing he could think of tocall anybody; the most was “Professor.”).I never got the contemptible degree, andnobody ever called me “Doctor”.A couple of months ago Windham Collegein Vermont informed me that it wasconferring a Doctorate upon me honoriscausa (ie, like everything else I have evergot, unearned).I have always supposed that I would notwant an honorary degree from any collegethat was willing to give a fourflushers likeme an honorary degree. But Windham is aliberal arts institution that keeps the faith and keeps the faith alive, the last best hope ofeducation going.President Winslow of Windham asked meif I had any preference among doctoraldesignations.Well, there was DD, which could be Doctorof Divinity or Dishonorable Discharge--alittle too close to PP for comfort. DWt, forDead Weight, was a possibility, as was DOAfor Dead on Arrival. Pa would have settledfor DF for me, little knowing that it means,in addition to Damn Fool, Dean of Facultyand Defensor Fidei. Now DBA—“DoingBusiness As”—pretty near encapsulated mycareer. Not bad.But this would be a serious occasion, and Imust be a serious man, especially if, after Igot my Doctorate, I was going to stroll intothe operating room somewhere and performa heart transplant or two. There was LitD, butI remembered enough of my EnglewoodHigh School Latin to know what meansDoctor of Literature while LittD meansDoctor of Letters.That reminded me that 1 am a great handwith a postcard; but DCV, or Doctor ChartaeVecturae was not in the book.I settled for LittD—I have doctored a fewletters in my time—and borrowed a robefrom a colleague who had done his doctoral dissertation on (and I quote), “TheBacteriological Content of the CottonUndershirt.”Myself the Dokteh.But I’m still on Permanent Probation forconduct unbecoming a junior.Franklin honoredHistory scholar John Hope Franklin, JohnManly distinguished service professor ofhistory, has been elected to membership inthe American Philosophical Society.He was one of 21 American and six foreignresidents elected.His election brings to 19 the number ofUniversity faculty members who belong tothe Society, the nation’s oldest learnedorganization.The Society’s members are selected fortheir scholarly accomplishments andrepresent all fields of learning as well aseminence in public affairs.The Society was founded by BenjaminFranklin in 1743 “for the promotion of usefulknowledge among the British plantations inAmerica” and for the companionship of“sensible, virtuous, and elegant minds.” Itsheadquarters are in Philadelphia.yfw 0UtupwUCORNER OF HYDE PARK BLVD.A LAKE PARK AVE.IN THE VIUAGE CENTER(NEXT TO THE AAP)SERVING THE WORLD'SFINEST PANCAKESAll batter made from quality ingredients blended into au¬thentic recipes that have been carefully collected anded from the very best of each country or area of origin.PANCAKES FROM THE WORLD OVERHOURS: 7:00 AM TO 9:00 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK1517 E. Hyde Park Blvd. ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELSUNDAY 11:00A.M.June 24,1973EARL A. ABELuntil recently associate Professor ofTheology and Preaching, Northern BaptistTheological Seminary, Oak Brook, Illinois.“THE TWO SIDES OF LOVE”July 1,1973E. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the Chapel“THE LORD OF THE CHURCHAND THE NATIONS”CARILLON RECITALSThursday, June 28 at 7:30 p.m.Guest Carillonneur Leen ’t Hart. CityCarillonneur of Rotterdam, Leiden andDelft, Holland; Director of the NetherlandsCarillon School in Amersfoort, Holland. Bring iton home,Visit theColonelYou can pick up Col. Sanders’ Kentucky Fried Chicken at-1513 E. HYDE PARK BLVD.2 - The Chicago Maroon - Thursday, June 21, 1973Calliope, bluegrass, ragtime at summer concertsOne of the pleasures in living in HydePark, over the summer will be the outdoorconcerts scheduled for most Wednesdaynights, about 7 pm, in the HitchcockQuadrangle (in the, excuse the expression,“northwestern” corner of the main quads).In past summers the concerts have includedsuch groups as Mason Profit* and the MonroeDoctrine Bluegrass Band The concerts aresponsored by Student Activities.Heading up the summer series is an eventreferred to as an “ice cream social”, to beheld next Wednesday evening. June 27According to Richard Scotch, head of theSummer on the Quadrangles Program, it isan opportunity for those people who are here during the summer to find out who else isaroundProviding entertainment will be twomusical acts, Ralph Geer, playing theDarwin Shoger steam calliope, and a NorthSide bluegrass group When pressed on thesubject of the steam calliope, Scotchadmitted that it was electrically operated.“If anyone is willing to contribute asufficient quantity of steam, however, wewill try to work something out,” he said.A second concert now scheduled is RufusKrisp, a bluegrass group making theirsecond appearance on the campus. Theirappearance may coincide with the opening inChicago theaters of “The Brothers O’Toole”,Quantrell awards givento four faculty membersFour University professors were namedrecipients of Quantrell awards for excellencein undergraduate teaching in 1972-73.The four, Edward Anders, John Hubby,Norman Maclean and Susanne Rudolph,received their awards at the undergraduateconvocation at Rockefeller chapel on June 9.Anders, a professor in the department ofChemistry and in the College, commented,“At first I wanted to tell you not to believein it, but it is true. I’m very touched. Iunderstand that the nominations areinitiated by students, and I am glad somestudents liked my teaching, such as it is. Ifelt that there are others in the College justas qualified as I.”Hubby, a professor of biology, and amember of the committee on genetics andevolutionary biology as well as a professor inthe College, added, “I’m delighted. I havealways gotten a kick out of teaching thebeginning biology course and I suspect thatis what this is for.”Maclean, the William Rainey Harperprofessor in the College and a professor in the English department and Rudolph, anassociate professor in the political sciencedepartment and the College, wereunavailable for comment.The Quantrell awards were established bythe University in 1938. Four teachersannually are given the prize, honoringoutstanding undergraduate teaching. Theteachers are nominated by the students, andselected by a process which involves several steps.First, the students submit nominations tothe office of the Dean of Students. Thenominations are then considered by acommittee composed of Dean of StudentsCharles O’Connell, Dean of the College- Roger Hildebrand and College Dean ofStudents Lorna Straus. This committeesends its recommendations to John Wilson,provost of the University. According toJonathan Kleinbart, administrative as¬sistant to president Levi, “The prize¬winners are designated by the Presidenton the recommendation of the Dean ofthe College and the provost.” a film in which they make an appearance.Students who saw them during theappearance earlier this year may rememberthe star Rufus Krisp, who goes by the nameof “Earthquake”. By his own account, he isthe inter national “spoons” champion, aswell as playing such instruments as theacoustic oalloon.On July 18. there will be an outdoor concertof Dixieland featuring the Salty Dogs. A wellknown Chicago ragtime group, the SaltyDogs have performed all over the country,including a recent appearance in St Louis atthe St Louis Ragtime Festival.On July 25, there will be a concert byGeorge and Gerry Armstrong, and theirfamily. Although George Armstrong is bestknown on campus for his bagpipes, withwhich he introduces the annual FolkFestival, George, Gerry, and their familyare all accomplished musicians playing avariety of instruments, and this will be theirsecond year as part of the Summer on the Quadrangles program.There will also be a number of concerts inAugust, although the schedule is not yet firmOn August 8. the performers will be theNational Recovery Act. ari old timey duocomprised of David Prine and Tyler WilsonThey are regulars at Kingston Mines, andhave also performed at various festivals. OnAugust 15, by special arrangement with theChicago Musicians Union, there will be awoodwind concert.Although there will be no concert on July 4.Summer on the Quadrangles is planning anoutdoor dance for July 5.Of course, plans could change at anyminute. The contract each group signs withStudent Activities says, “The performersshall not be liable if it is impossible toperform the contract due to sickness,accident, accident by means oftransportation, riots, strikes, epidemics,acts of God or any other legitimate conditionbeyond the control of the performers.”CALENDARThursday, June 21TOUR: the Botany greenhouse! 5628 S Ingleside, 10 am.Sign up at INH 209COLLOQUIUM: "Mannesidosis," Dr Reuben Matalon,Wyler C 400, noon.Friday, June 22FILM: "The Great Northfield Minnesota Raid," Quantrell,Summer on the Quads, 7:15 and 9:15 pm.Saturday, June 23WORKSHOP: Film workshop at the Hall branch of theChicago Public Library, 4801 S Michigan, exploring theimage of blacks in film, conducted by film consultantBarbara Bryannt, 11 am.Sunday, June 24JAZZ: Jamaican iazz pianist Monty Alexander opens at theLondon House. $3 Tuesday Sunday, S4 Friday and Saturday For reservations and info call AN 3 6920. Through July8.EXHIBITION: Chinese martial arts, Reynolds Club lounge,6:30 pm.Tuesday, June 26FILM: "Great Catherine," Quantrell, 715 pm Wednesday, June 27MEETING: The Outing Club, Reynolds Club south lounge,8:30 pm.OPENING: Grand opening of the Ravinia Music Festival inHighland Park Scheduled for the opening Concert is theChicago Symphony Orchestra and chorus performingBeethoven's Missa Solemnis, conducted by James Levine;call Ravinia for information, 782 9696JAZZ: Art Farmer at Joe Segal's Jazz Showcase, 901 NRush, 10 pm, 12 pm and 2 pm, through July 2 Call DE 7 1000for information.Thursday, June 28DISCUSSION: Gay lib discussion group, Ida Noyes, 7 30pm.Friday, June 29RAVINIA: Chicago Symphony conducted by James Levine,with soloist Maria Ewing and pianist Byron Janis.Sunday, July 1RAVINIA: Art exhibit opens at Ravinia.EXHIBITION: Chinese martial arts, Reynolds Club, 6 3Cpm.Tuesday, July 3FILM: "Night of the Hunter," Quantrell, 7:15 pmThought there was no real “action"this summer, huh? Come to ourICE CREAM SOCIAL!Calliope Concert!with Ralph GeerBluegrass Music!Wednesday, June 27th, 7:00 p.m.Hitchcock Quadrangle(northwest corner of quads)another free event by Summer On The Quadssee our ads elsewhere in this paperThursday, June 21, 1973 - The Chicago Maroon - 3EDITORIALSLibrary dismissalsThe decisions concerning the library budget, and the actions taken implementingthose decisions, should be deeply disturbing for the University community. Theannouncements to the library personnel, and the report of the Library Committeewhich was distributed to the faculty, constitute public acknowledgement of twodeplorable library policies: the library’s cavalier attitude toward personnel, and thelibrary’s understanding of its own priorities.The circumstances of last Friday’s dismissal of six professional librarians reflectthe lack of the library administration’s concern for its employees. The employeeswere notified by form letter only 15 minutes before their dismissals were to bepublicly announced. The fact that the dismissals were to be effective immediatelycould only increase the shock the employees received.The sense of outrage increases when the union associations of four of the releasedemployees are considered. It is much too great a coincidence that half of the originallibrary union organizing committee was dismissed en masse. Their union tiescannot help but be viewed as seeming to be a primary reason for their dismissals; itis the most blatant attempt the library has yet made to break up the fledging union.The effects of last Friday’s dismissals upon the rest of the library employees havebeen very bad. Regardless of union affiliation, the dismissals have been seen as athreat by intimidation to both the organization and the free voice of all the em¬ployees. Perhaps more ominous is the admission by the administration that theyconsider the highest priority of the library to be maintenance of its collections.The university has already acknowledged, in the report of the library committee,that the level of acquisitions which the library maintained even three years ago isnow hopelessly beyond reach. Our national ranking among research libraries hasdropped markedly. It is time for the library to reconcile itself to the fact that thequality of a research library cannot be measured in terms of the quantity of books itcontains. The statement that it is necessary to continue funding the present level ofacquisitions, at the expense of other services, rings falsely.The first and foremost priority of a university research library, which is the wayour library describes itself, should be to meet the research needs of its faculty andits students, as expediently and as efficiently as possible. Stories are already legendabout the deficiencies of the existing collection, and the difficulty of gettingadequate and intelligent access to what we already presumably possess. A fullutilization of existing facilities, using the services of the already employed staff,should be combined with a more selective and limited funding as the best solution tothe current crisis. Acquisitions can be resumed when the funding that the libraryanticipates materializes.We believe the best course is to reinstate the released library employees. Thequestion of the library union should be disentangled from its current knots, and anelection should be held as soon as possible to finally resolve the :ssue, and removethe shock and fears of the library employees. Only then can the library become asmoothly functioning unit, and only then is there hope for the library to resume itsfunction as a service to the community.RegistrationRegistration is here upon us again, even if it is summer quarter.What we mean is that registration, with all its attendant problems, lines, waits,inefficiency, grousing and all the rest figured not to happen at the beginning ofSummer Quarter, on the completely plausible theory that there are less studentshere during the summer. Yet the scene at the Registrar’s office Monday andTuesday was just as bad as it is during the regular school year.The lines form, the wait is long, bewildered students are shuttled from room toroom and building to building and back again. The advisors—or in this case, advisor(singular)—do a mass-production business in putting together people’s schedules.The situation, in short, is intolerable.The reason we bring up the subject now is that the University still has time afterthis fiasco to learn from it, and to correct the errors before the really mad rushwhich will occur during Orientation week in September. It is in that week when thescene in Room 101 of the Ad building reaches its most chaotic and frustating point.Therefore, any improvements in the registration process that can be made after thelessons of the summer can be applied to the frenzy of the fall.The first and most obvious improvement that the University could make in theregistration process is to relieve the biggest bottleneck. That is the lines which formto register and pay tuition (in the summer) to Mrs Green and Mrs Montag. Peoplewere observed waiting in those two lines to register for upwards of an hour, andchafing every moment of the way. If they had a class Monday or Tuesday that theywere registering for and the length of the line made them late, well, tough luck,buddy.The infuriating part of this situation is that Mrs Green and Mrs Montag are in noway responsible for it. They are not inefficient and they try to process each student’sforms with both speed and accuracy. Yet there is a certain amount of time that hasto be spent on each application if only because there are certain procedures the twoladies have to follow with each.The plain and simple fact, and it was shown on Monday and Tuesday, is that MrsGreen and Mrs Montag are overburdened. There are too many students for twopeople to sanely and sensibly handle, especially when the bursar’s office still staysopen only until three o’clock each day. At the same time there are a number of brightand efficient students working in the bursar’s office, and there are two other win¬dows which potentially could be used for registration. Would it not make at least amodicum of sense to station two students at the two unused windows, and have themperform the same chores as Mrs Green and Mrs Montag?The second inefficient part of the situation concerns validating the ID cards. If itmakes little sense to have only Mrs Green and Mrs Montag process registration-cards, it makes even less sense to have to go to two separate lines to get your ID4 * Th« Chicago Maroon - Thursday, Juno 21,1973 validated. It seems as if it could save both the students and the University time andtrouble if Mrs Green and Mrs Montag could validate ID cards, or at least give outthe receipt for the ID’s and then send the students to a line conveniently put atcashier’s wicket number eight, on the other side of the room, lessening the con¬fusion.Finallv, there is the little matter of the Blue Cross-Blue Shield waivers. The wholeplan has its deficiencies, but that is a topic for another time. For now, let it suffice tosay that it must have irked those people who were waiting in the Green or Montagline (however patiently or impatiently) to see someone suddenly fight his waythrough the crowds, breeze his way around the lines, butt his way in at the front, andpresent his card, complete with medical waiver, to Mrs Green or Mrs Montag. Yetthere was a way that the whole process, trie butting in line and the walk back andforth from student health, could have been completely eliminated.According to the woman who was processing the waiver applications at studenthealth, the advisors had instructions that if a student had ever taken the exemptionfrom the Blue Cross-Blue Shield plan at any time during the year, he was not beassessed the $15 for summer coverage. Either the advisors did not get the message,or. more likely, were too harried and rushed in the process of registration to mind it.So thev put the $15 on every registration card as a matter of course, and those whodid not want to partieipate'had to go through the rigamarole described above. Sincethese same people presumably knew whether or not they wanted to participate in theUniversity’s Blue Cross-Blue Shield plan, it would have been both simpler and lessaggravating to everyone concerned had the advisors been told not to worry about theBlue Cross-Blue Shield plan, and let Mrs Green and Mrs Montag, or the cashierswhere one paid tuition, worry about whether the student wanted to be included ornot.In short, registration was a chaotic mess, and the procedure desperately needschanges now. It probably needs even more than we suggested, but the principle isimportant. Unless the process becomes more orderly, unless the process becomesmore efficient, come September the massive confusion we envision will make thescenes of Monday and Tuesday look like a polite tea party.LETTERS TO THE EDITORWasiolek replyThe attack on me by an anonymous writerin the June 1 issue of The Maroon was basedon one point: that I called Barbara Monterincompetent. The anonymous writer eithercannot read or does not want to readaccurately. I did not call Mrs Monterincompetent and the May 4 issue of TheMaroon did not report that I had called herincompetent. What The Maroon reportedwas an assessment of Mrs Monter asincompetent by a colleague, which Ipresumably conveyed in a conversation witha Maroon reporter. I was responding to aquestion by the reporter as to why MrsMonter’s contract had not been renewed, andwhat I actually said was that a whole rangeof assessments had been made of MrsMonter, from praise to severe criticism,among which was the remark aboutincompetence. I also pointed out to thereporter that Mrs Monter had beenconsidered for reappointment according tothe regular procedures of the University, andthat the recommendation of the Departmentof Slavic Languages and Literatures hadbeen approved by the governing committeeof the Humanities collegiate division of theCollege and by the policy committee of thedivision of Humanities. The procedures usedin arriving at the recommendation weresubsequently reviewed by the Committee onUniversity Women and the Committee onAppointment Inequities and both committeesfound the procedures used in arriving at therecommendation to be in keeping withUniversity and divisional practice. TheMaroon reporter conveniently neglected tomention these points.Edward WasiolekSecurityRecent confrontations with Universityofficials regarding security in universityhousing show an unwillingness of the part ofthese officials to admit that any securityproblem exists. If they did admit that aproblem exists, they would have to morallyaccept part of the blame for rapings,muggings and murder attempts onuniversity property for their refusal to takemeasures, that are easily within their powerand the university’s assets, to prevent thesecrimes.At the present, it is easier to hire anothersecurity guard to protect the books atRpgpnstpin from the students In not Healingmore activelv to prevent security problems, the university administration shows that itvalues the books in Regenstein more than itsstudents...a murdered student is areplaceable commodity—there are plentymore where he came from. Until theuniversity administration learns to value thelives of the students more than any book, it isan accomplice to the crimes committed onits property.I suggest the university begin by replacingthe security guard who checks IDs atRegenstein by a student. This guard couldthen be stationed at one of the dormitories. Ido not suggest that the guard who roamsthrough the library periodically beprevented from doing so...in addition tobooks, there are students in the library.Paul Nemeth ’74Matlaw opinionIt Jis time the Maroon evaluated itseditorial policies. Biased and distortedarticles must cease; slanderous andanonymous letters should not be published.The Maroon’s handling of the Monter case isjust one example of its editorialmismanagement which has resulted indistorted public accounts of Universityissued. The University community is entitledto objective, factual, and responsiblepresentations of important issues—perhapsif the Maroon revises its policies suchpresentations will be realized.Karen MatlawThe Chicago MaroonSummer editionMark Gruenbergeditor-in<hiefElizabeth Russoarts and entertainment editorRichard Bakerbusiness managerGage Andrews. Toby Hofslund.Henry Post, Andrew Segolstaff-4The (UC) President goes to ChinaEdward Levi, president of the University, ac¬companied by his wife were among the first peoplefrom an American university to travel to the People’sRepublic of China since the re-establishment ofnormal relations.The Levis and 18 other people returned at thebeginning of June from a tour sponsored by theWomen’s Board of the University. They had touredPeking, Canton, Hangchow and Shanghai. The tourwas scheduled to visit, among other things, the For¬bidden City in Peking, former seat of the Chineseempire and various universities in China. Levireported on his trip on the NBC Today Show duringthe break between spring and summer quarters.While in China, Levi and his group met with officialsof the various universities. Among those they met wasChow Pei-Yuan. now vice-rector of Peking University,the chief university in China. Chow Pei-Yuan is also agraduate of the University of Chicago, havingreceived his Master of Science degree here in 1926.The tour was arranged by Mrs George Ranney,chairman of the Women's Board, and Mrs J HarrisWard, the founder of the board. They were assisted byPing Ti-Ho, the James Westfall Thompson professorof history, who, during his trip to the People’sRepublic in 1971, made advance arrangements for theWomen’s Board tour.The other 18 participants in the tour includedUniversity trustees Philip Block, Charles Brown,George Ranney and their wives. Also included werelife trustee Earle Ludgin and trustee Mrs LyleSpencer. Heading the delegation along with presidentLevi was J Harris Ward, the vice-chairman of theUniversity’s Board of Trustees, and his wife.LEVI IN CHINA: University president Edward Levi (left) meets Chow Pei Yuan, vice rector of Peking University and an alumnus of the University of Chicago (right). Inthe center is a picture of the group from the University which toured the People s Republic of China this spring. Photos courtesy the New China News Agency.Coming Events• Outdoor dance with Dynamite Duck (to be announced)• Rufus Krisp (7/11)• The Salty Dogs (7/18)• George and Gerry Armstrong family (7/25)• The National Recovery Act (8/8)• The Chicago Woodwind Consort (8/15)All on Wednesdays (7 p.m.)All outdoors in Hitchcock CourtAll FreeAlso scheduled areTrips to Ravinia (7/7, 7/21,7/16, 8/18)Zero Mostel films (6/26, 6/29)picnic trips to state parks (6/30, 7/15)The Great Northfield Minnesota Raid (6/22)Exploring the University (various dates)Noon concert series (to be announced)Bergman's "The Magician'' (7/13)Adventure film series (6/22, 7/17, 7/24, 7/27, 8/3,8/7, 8/14, 8/17)Fellini's "Nights of Cabiria" (8/10)and many other gala summer activitiesFor details, look for our poster and Maroon ads - or call753-3597 to get put on our mailing list.SUMMER ON THE QUADRANGLESThursday, June 21, 1973 The Chicago Maroon - 5CLASSIC 6UITAR FORUMTo be conducted byMR. JACK CECCHINIJuly 22 - Aug. 5At George Williams College CampLake Geneva, WisconsinFor registration and information call939-4557JAMESWAYPETERSONMOVING & STORAGECall 646£411 forV/d" 646-1234 free estimatesCompletePre-Planned Moving ServiceLocal • Long Distance • Packing • CratingImport-Export• Ar Containerized StorageFormerly al General Office55th & Fills 12655 5o. DotyChicago. III. 60633* ,/ f 4 if tj«i *■+ *- *•. *** 1r asu* s'SU *'re'aucx&°»SPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESFOR ALLSTUDENTS &FACULTY MEMBERSmAs Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago youare entitled to special moneysaving discount prices on allVolkswagen Service Work, allVolkswagen Parts, Accessoriesand any new or used Volkswagenyou buy from Volkswagen SouthShore.Upon presentation of your Univer¬sity of Chicago Identification card,our employees will show youregular price and your specialdiscount price of whatever youbuy.Remember, Volkswagen SouthShore is the closest factoryauthorized full service dealer inyour area. Our Parts Departmentis open Saturday 9 AM to 12noon.We re near the 1C or can offer youShuttle Bus Service.(^VOLKSWAGEN')SOUTH SHOREAuthorized 7234 $ STONY ISLANDVolkswagen 0p#n Dolly 9 AM to 9 PMDealer Sales, Parts and Service DepartmentsOpen Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM. 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Devon(312) 764-5151TAl-SAM-\3WfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M.TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.CLOSED MONDAYSOrders to take out1318 East 63rd MU 4-1062TRAVEL FORSTUDENTS AND YOUTH• Int’l Student ID• AYH Hostel Pass• st udent and youthrailpasses dis¬counts on carlease/purchaseplans• tax free bikes• special discountson ships• trains and planes to,within and beyondturope and Israel• Safiara expeditions• mountain treks• bicycle touring• domestic travelUS st udent hotels• canoe, camping, skitrips; river runs....(we help faculty, too1)Come see us at 22 WestMonroe, Chicago 60603...or call 726 6836 Records spotlightBy ELIZABETH RUSSOAtlantic records took over the near NorthSide townhouse of Gallery magazinepublisher Ronald Fenton one Saturday nightin June to introduce the Chicago press to therebirth of jazz. This month, Atlantic is bothcelebrating its twenty-fifth anniversary andlaunching a new campaign to give its jazzartists the exposure they deserve. PromoterJoe Segal, who has singlehandedly donemore than anyone else to keep jazz alive inChicago, was there beaming, as wereAtlantic recording artists Eddie Harris andRobin Kenyatta. who provided liveentertainment.The atmosphere was reminiscent of theintimate rapport between artist andaudience that exists in Segal s club, TheModern Jazz Showcase, at 901 North RushStreet. Harris and Kenyatta and theircomboes were easy-going and relaxed duringboth sets. In addition, Harris wasparticularly delighted to have theopportunity to voice his opinions on jazz andto demonstrate them in musical form.He comes down hard on those dilettanteswho consider themselves jazz musiciansbecause they play Cole Porter. Porter, hecontends, is of the pop music ilk. A truejazzman, on the other hand, improvises whathe plays; it’s different every time and hedoesn't know where his music is going untilhe gets there.Harris offered an example of theory inaction with his rendition of “Stella byStarlight ”. Using only the bare framework ofthe tune, he worked through severalmodulations so that the only similaritybetween the original and Harris'interpretation was the name. Rather thantaking a popular song and jazzing it up, hewas being truly creative, which was the mainpoint that he was trying to get across to theaudience.Devotees of the Harris style were notdisappointed. A belief in diligent practiceand careful attention to essentials anddetails makes his tenor saxophone playingwarm, smooth and highly personal. Histheory of music is simple: “the better youknow your instrument technically, the betteryou can learn to express yourselfemotionally ““You can do anything with an electronicinstrument,” he continued, “if you've gotsoul and imagination". He demonstratedwhat he meant with a slow, relativelymelodious piece. By humming into themouthpiece of his saxophone, Harriscombines the ohms per second that it HARRIS: Jazz Musician Eddie Harris.generates with his own intonations to createa sound similar to a woman’s voice and aseffective in its own way as Billie Holliday.But innovation is nothing new to EddieHarris. Much of his rise to fame, beginningwith his days at Hyde Park High, may bepartially attributed to his constant study ofmusic and its instruments. In his never-ending search for new and different sounds,he has been playing his trumpet with a reedmouth piece, and has developed severalelectronic gadgets for the tenor sax. He usesthe Echo-Plex in tandem, Gibson's biggestAmp, and the Maestro Sound System forwood-winds. Not all electronic instrumentsare meant to be out in front to Harris,however. Commenting on the electronic-piano that was used at the Atlantic concert,he said that it felt comfortable to the touch,but was best used for a background, ratherthan a lead, sound.Harris is well qualified to discuss thevirtues of keyboard instruments, since hefirst trained as a pianist. After high school,he went on to college, first at the Universityof Illinois and then to Roosevelt where hemajored in music. In those days, Eddieplayed jobs around Chicago on piano withsuch artists as Warded Gray, Sonny Stitt,Gene (“Jug") Ammons, and Stan Getz.Later, in the service he played in the SeventhArmy Symphony Orchestra, out of Stuttgart,"Boss" is charmin,By HENRY POSTTake the culture business, thin headeddirection, music, dancing and writing Mix itall together and the result-Boss, the currentmusical “hit" at the Forum Theatre basedon Mike Royko's book on Daley's rise topower.In this case, “hit" means lines of happilychirping suburbanites clammering fortickets to fill the Peanut Gallery for thispolitical Howdy Doody. They twitter andgiggle, stomp and belch delight at whatmight have been a sharp political statementbut is actually just a tired show-biz packageof pasteled delights, musical parfaits andcute production numbers. And as is the fateof all such musical meals Boss leaves behindthat little bit of warm residue we wipe awaywith charmin tissue.“How," you ask, “could anything be thatbad?” Easily. Just picture Daley (played byDick O’Neill) bouncing into the candy-coatedversion of the Chicago skyline and saying.“Chicago is the greatest town in the world."And then, if you can, force yourself toimagine an entire audience bursting intouncontrollable applause.Had they paid those people to come andclap like that? Was the whole thing a set-up'’Certainly this must have been a plot of DrStrangelove proportion. It vas strange andanything but lovely to sit t.irough the pompom delights and cheerleader smiles thatsang and danced out the story of the rise ol“Our Mayor, God bless his soul.”But then a lesson was learned. People willpay to hear what they want to hear. It’s mucheasier to transform the uncomfortablerealities of Chicago ghettos, poverty andcorruption into a Phyllis Diller potpourriwith iust a $6 ticket to fantasv land, a land where cops as brutes become entertainingand the destruction of Little Italy becomes ajoke.While I refuse to discuss the fact that thisproduction is immoral, politicallydestructive and banally abhorrent, 1 cantake total pleasure in reporting thatartistically this production was the verybottom. It was the pits!Number one: Will the director please standup! William Pullinsi, as producer/directoryou should take a powder. The inventor ofthat American phenomenon — the dinner-theatre — you have come up with aningenious financial scheme. But as JosephPapp learned very early, producers shouldstay in their place. Once they assume that6 - The Chicago Maroon - Thursday, June 21, 1973Kenyatta, HarrisKENYATTA: Fellow jazz musician RobinKenyatta.West Germany. After he left the armedforces, he became one of the featured soloistsin Woody Herman’s band, and from then on,it was roses.Harris was signed to play piano for Vee¬jay Records, but through the efforts ofChicago disc jockey Sid McCoy, then aproducer for the record company, he wasable to play tenor saxophone on his first date.The result was “Exodus” which sold morethan a million copies as a single and gaveEddie Harris his first wide exposure to thejazz public. Harris recorded several morebig-selling albums on Vee-Jay, includingJazz For Breakfast at Tiffany’s and Half andHalf.In 1964, Harris signed with ColumbiaRecords, but that contract was supersededby one with Atlantic in 1965. Since then hisalbums have included The In Sound, MeanGreens, The Tender Storm, The ElectrifyingEddie Harris, dug Me In, Silver Cycles,High Voltage, Swiss Movement, (recordedwith Les McCann at the Montreux JazzFestival), and The Best of Eddie Harris.Come On Down was released in the spring of1970.Harris had a chance to show off his diversemusical capabilities, playing piano, clarinet,trumpet and sax as the evening progressedWhile he concedes that the electric sax maybe gimmicky, he appreciates its sound and isbut not like competent enough to alter it in several ways.He was backed up by Calvin Barnes onpercussion, Rufus Reid on bass. Billy Jameson drums, Durf on bongoes. and RonaldMuldrow on guitar and organ. All were quitecompetent, although traditionally oriented inkeeping, perhaps, with their backgroundfunction for Harris. Only Muldrow exhibitedthe same creatively dynamic tendencies asthe man he was showcasingAnd then there was Robin Kenyatta. Aninternationally recognized saxophonist, heproved himself a serious, dedicatedmusician throughout the evening, althoughthe night clearly belonged to Harris.Kenyatta is somewhat younger than Harrisand lacks his early musical training It wasnot until he was in his teens that Robinbecame interested in jazz as anything morethan a spectator. At that time he tried to getinto his high school band in New York City,but was turned down. A year later there wasan opening in the band for a trombonist andhe took it. He soon moved to baritone sax andthen to his original goal, alto sax.Like Harris, Kenyatta continued to playduring his tour of duty with the US Army inGermany, and stayed on in Munich to studywith Russ Garcia. Since he left the Army, hehas been a migrant musician, joining thejazz scene in New York, London, and Paris,wherever and whenever there was work for asax man.Kenyatta is known as one of the more vocalcritics of the contemporary jazz scene,particularly in the economic sense, pointingout that an extremely difficult financialburden is put on the jazz musician. Theproblem is not news, and dedicated jazzlovers such as Joe Segal are doing all theycan to change it.Kenyatta is also quite outspoken about thequality of producers for jazz records in theUS. Commenting in the British press, he hascharged that US jazz producers keep tryingto get “the same old thing.” Robin foundsomething approaching a remedy in MichaelCuscuna, a young staff producer at AtlanticRecords.Cuscuna held the sessions for Kenvatta’sfirst solo Atlantic album from Septemberthrough November 1972 at the Hit Factory inNew' York. The album, Gypsy Man,containing the Kenyatta version of “LastTango in Paris,” was recently released, andmay be the beginning of a long run of hits forthe musician. Unfortunately, copies of thealbum were not available for the press onSaturday night, and Kenyatta, relegated tosecond billing, did not have much of a chanceto show' the musical stuff he is made of.the bookpackaging is directing, then we areguaranteed artistic shallowness. Money canbuy a lot, even five Jefferson Awardnominations, but money can not assurequality. And until, you, William Pullinsi.have the guts to hand over some of thedirection of your shows to men of talent, theForum Theatre will remain an aestheticembarrassment.Number two: Now for the adaptor of anexcellent Royko book How', Mr FrankGalati, could you turn the work of one ofAmerica’s most insightful political reportersinto a cotten candy show biz script? Was itjust for money that you w'rote, “You could bethe mayor, it would be so thrilling, if the godswere willing?” Really, your adaptation sounds more like the script for the pro-Daleysewer workers who filled the gallery of theDemocratic Convention in 1968.Number three: With a lump in my throat,the word ‘choreographer’ emerges. LouConte, credited with the dances and musicalnumbers, has added to the overall thinnesswith his plastic smile and simplisticproduction numbers which reduce the cast torobot-like, candy cane puppets. If Mr. Contiintended to make the cast so bad that theybecame their own joke, he didn’t succeed.There was nothing funny in the mediocrity ofthe dancing. Pathetic is the proper adjective.Number four: The settings and lighting,while professional enough and well executed,were misguided at best. Anthony D’Angeloand his staff are technically perfect butunthinking. How can all those pinks andpastel shades be anything else but sugary-sickening, no matter how well executed? Inwhose dream world is Chicago a Monet-likedelight9 Where were the cold grays, the dirtybrowns and the soot-covered stone colors?Boss will continue to pull them in, I’m sure.It is a “hit”. But anyone who is involved withthis show is making a serious moral andaesthetic mistake. It’s one thing to-make aquick buck off the escapist drive in humannature. But it’s another thing to make a buckby turning serious human problems into amoney making scheme. And in the case ofBoss one’s reactions can be either extremenausea or a reach for the charmin(Note: In conversation with Mike Royko, Iasked, “What did you think of Boss?" Hisreply: “It was entertaining. Of course it hadnothing to do with my book.” “Well, did youfind it immoral that serious Chicagoproblems had been turned into a moneymaking scheme?” Silence.) Court TheatreMedea Tango A MidsummerJuly 6- July 27- Night’s DreamJuly 22 August 12 August 17-September 2EuripidesDirected andtranslated byNic holas Rudall Mro/ekDirected byLuc ille Strauss ShakespeareDirected by Nicholas RudallCourt Theatre Studio ProductionsAll Tickets $1.50Running simultaneously with Court Theatre productions in ReynoldsClub adjacent to Court.What The Butler Saw Joe OrtonJuly b 22Fingernails Blue As Flowers . .Ronald RibmanBirdbath . . .Leonard MelfiJuly 27 Aug 1 2. . . Henrik IbsenAug 1 7 Sept 2Ghosts (staged reading)Series Tickets:ST.00 lor .ill I href plav*valid al amperformance nt c,u h plavSingle Tickets:SJ.~'> Thursday and SundavS i.00 I rida\ St-”> SaturdayCall 7TM581tor ReservationsAll Performames 6:10 PM■>'()(> S. Universitv\ student dis< ounl <>t ilk isuttered cm single tic kets torall performance* exceptSaturdax*. Group rate*available on request. Vt.nlorders ac c epted.Thursday, June 21, I 973 - The Chit-uyo Mar uun - 7ABOUT THE MIDWAYConvocationThe University awarded four honorarydegrees, four Rosenberger Medals, fourQuantrell awards, and 1,499 academicdegrees at its 344th convocation.The convocation was held in three sessionsFriday, June 8, and Saturday, June 9, inRockefeller Memorial Chapel.Scheduled to be present to receivehonorary degrees were:—Norman Ashton, director of thedepartment of Pathology in the institute ofophthalmology at the University of London.Doctor of Science;— Fredson Thayer Bowers, the LindenKent professor of English at the Universityof Virginia. Doctor of Humane Letters;—Maria Dluska, Professor of disciplinesauxiliary to the history of literature at theJagiellonian University of Crakow. Poland.Doctor of Humane Letters, and—Frank Henry Westheimer, the Loebprofessor of chemistry at Harvarduniversity. Doctor of Science.Scheduled to be present to receiveRosenberger Medals were:—Miss Carol Fox, founder and currentgeneral .manager of the Lyric Opera ofChicago;—Paul Fromm, founder of the FrommMusic Foundation;—Gerald Piel, editor and publisher of“Scientific American.” and—Joseph Randall Shapiro, president of theMuseum of Contemporary Art in Chicago.Edward H Levi, president of theUniversity, presided at all three sessions ofthe convocation. Roger H Hildebrand,professor of Physics and dean of the Collegewas principal speaker.At the undergraduate session, threemembers of the graduating class also spoke.They were Amy K Hilsman, Steven MMencher, and Richard K ScotchFollowing the Saturday session was anoutdoor picnic for graduating seniors in theCollege and their parents held on theUniversity’s main Quadrangle.Walking toursThis should be a good summer for peoplewho enjoy going places and seeing things.The students activity office has scheduled aseries of tours and trips, both o;i and off thecampus as part of the Summer on theQuadrangles program For the most part,the bus trips take place on Saturdays andSundays, and are simply for the day. Thefirst bus trip will be to the Indiana Dunes,June 30. There will be a trip to Starved RockState Park on July 15, and one to BrookfieldZoo on July 29, and to Yerkes Observatory onAugust 4. In addition, four buses have beenarranged for four concerts at Ravinia: AMahler concert on July 7: a Mozart, Brahms,and Beethoven concert on July 21; a popularmusic concert on August 16, and a Mendels¬sohn concert on August 18. Sign-ups for allthe bus trips will be in Cobb Coffee Shop,which is open between 9 am and 2 pm onweekdays. For further information, call 753-3591While the bus trips are a continuation ofwhat has been done in past years, a newfeature this summer is the series called“Exploring the University.” For somereason or another, most students at theUniversity are here for several years beforethey visit some of the University’s mostinteresting places. It is not unusual, in fact,for students to receive tours of the campus only when they come back to visit as alumni.For this reason, student activities havestarted the program, which is specifically toshow students to some of the fascinatingresources of the institution around them.Tours will include visits to the OrientalInstitute, the Ben May Laboratories, the“tornado room”, the Special Collectionsdepartment at Regenstein, the Universitygreenhouse, Robie House, Mitchell towerand the Hydrodynamics lab.One unusual feature of the tour is a visit tothe home of Arthur Laffer, associateprofessor in the school of business. Mr.Laffer has an unusual collection of turtleslarge and small. Students will visit his home,and meet the turtles; Mr. Laffer will talkabout them and how he happened to becomeinterested in the subject. Priority for tourswill be given to the University students, but ifspace is available they will also be open tostaff and faculty. Sign-up for these tours is inIda Noyes 209.Canoe trips plannedUniversity wrestling coach John Schaelhas announced that there will be two canoetrips available during this summer to sons ofUniversity faculty or staff.The first trip will be from July 14 to July 21.while the second will take place after theclose of the summer quarter, lasting fromAugust 18-25. Both trips will be throughSuperior National Forest outside Ely,Minnesota. Eligible are sons of Universityfaculty or staff members from the ages of 13to 17.The cost of the trip is $195, and Schael hasnot stated a limit on the number who mayapply. The price includes transportation,insurance, food, and laundry money for whatSchael described as “seven full, man¬making days.” For further informationcontact Schael at Bartlett gym or phone himat 753-4689.Summer volunteersThe University hospitals and clinicssummer volunteer service program forstudents seeking health care careerexperience will open June 23.College students and teachers interested inhealth fields such as medicine, nursing,social service, and in assignments asmedical laboratory assistants should contactthe University Hospitals’ Volunteer Office for details.According to Agnes McDermott, directorof the Hospitals' volunteer office, the popularprogram attracts a wide variety of people.“Hospital volunteers expand thedimensions of our personal human concern.Volunteering is an active way of helpingothers.“Volunteer service is also valuableexperience for those who are interested infuture careers in health care. After summervolunteer service in medical laboratories; inemergency room, as nursing, clerical, oradministrative assistants; in socialservices; in gift shop merchandising, orother hospital work situations, manydiscover new opportunities they did not knowexisted.After orientation and training—scheduledJune 23 and July 9—volunteers are assignedduties in accordance with interests andskills. Work days and hours are flexible.Preliminary interviews are now beingscheduled by calling The University ofChicago Hospitals and Clinics VolunteerOffice at 947-5252.Ocean huntersIn search of an ancient ocean, a group ofUniversity students and their instructor, intwo campers, will bump through the wilds ofNewfoundland this summer.Before the 6,000-mile junket ends, thestudents will travel through Cape Cod, NovaScotia, Newfoundland and New Brunswick,and along the St. Lawrence Estuary. Thepurpose is hunting up the sedimentary andvolcanic record of the Proto-Atlantic. Thetrip will be from August 30 to September 26.Alfred M Ziegler, who’s leading the trip,explains the quest: “This ancient ocean wasdestroyed when the continents on either sidecollided in the Devonian Period (350 millionyears ago) and the present Atlantic openedalong a slightly different line. This left partsof Europe—Nova Scotia and SoutheastNewfoundland—with North America andparts of North America—Scotland—withEurope.”Ziegler, associate professor in thedepartment of the Geophysical Sciences, theCollege, and the committee on EvolutionaryBiology, assembles such an expedition attwo-year intervals.Geologists already know that back in the time known as the Pangea Period (280 to 230million years ago), a giant land mass theycall Pangea huddled south of the equator onone side of the glove. Pangea, which latercame apart to form our present continents,had itself been formed when other, evenolder continental plates began to slidetogether during the Silurian Period (420million years ago).When this movement was completed, thePalaeozoic oceans were closed, and theProto-Atlantic disappeared between thegrinding edges of the two primevalcontinents: the Canadian plate and the Balticplate.“The Appalachian Mountains and theCaledonian Mountains of Northwest Europeare the results of this collision, and containthe folded and faulted remnants of the olderocean floor,” adds Ziegler. When this ancientocean was pushed closed, the two parts ofmodern Newfoundland were shovedtogether. Ziegler’s group will, in essence,examine traces of the seam.The North American part of the Proto-Atlantic extended south-westward toMassachusetts before spilling into a giantocean geologists now name the Phoibic.Faunal similarities from that age show ananimal interchange between Nova Scotia,Newfoundland, Wales, and the Balticcountries.Once these plates ground into each other,the animals became general residents. In theTriassic or Jurassic Period (180 to 140million years ago), after these plates hadexisted as the continent Pangea, they thenbroke apart and began their snail’s race intothe Northern Hemisphere where they arepresently.Ziegler and his group concentrate not onlyon the Proto-Atlantic, but on the historicalmovement of all the continental plates. To dothis, they have constructed an unusual worldglobe, about four feet in diameter, wherecurved plates made of transparent plasticcan be moved about the surface, testing anddemonstrating the constant creepting of thecontinents.Bertolt Brecht poems“Dangerous Teachings (songs of exile andrevolution),” a rock cantata setting of poemsby Bertolt Brecht composed by BillWilliams, opened at the Free Theater. 3257North Sheffield Avenue, Sunday, June 17. Itwill be performed at 7 pm and 9 pm Sundaysand at 8 pm Mondays, through Monday,September 3.“Dangerous Teachings ” is the second offour productions premiering in the FreeTheater’s “Festival of New Music,” asummer-long series of performances of firstworks by young American composers. Thereis no admission fee.The rock cantata, is an attempt to dealmusically with the issues that Brecht’spoems speak of: human needs versuspolitical needs, love of country in conflictwith cultural alienation, the desire forhuman rights conflicting with the desire forpersonal comfort. The music runs a gamut ofstyles, often deliberately derivative, fromKurt Weill to the Jefferson Airplane, withsongs in rock, gospel, blues and cabaret jazzidioms. The work is envisioned as a cabaretrock concert, performers singing, playingand moving in an intimate environment.DR. A. ZIMBLERDR. M. MASLOV |Optometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theHyde ParkNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363authorized sales & service312-mi 3-3113foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.* ^*^5424 south kimbark avenue • Chicago 60615 FAWAZ TURKIborn Haifa, 1940raised refugee camp Beirutwill speak on"Israelis & Palestinians"Wednesday, June 27, at 8:00 p.m.Hillel House 5715Woodlawn ( CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998has what you need from a $10used 9x12 Rug, to a customcarpet. Specializing in Rem¬nants 4 Mill returns at a.Taction of the original cost.Decoration Colors and Qualities.Additional 10% Discount withthis Ad.FREE DELIVERYCoffee, Cookies, Rolls, Sandwiches - 9 a.m.-2 p.m.Cobb Coffee Shopo - Ine Chicago Maroon - Thursday, June 21, 1973ft.ABOUT THE MIDWAYAppointmentsLynn H Throckmorton has been appointedChairman of the committee on EvolutionaryBiology at the University.The three-year appointment, effective July1, 1973, was made upon the recommendationof provost John T Wilson, and Dr Leon 0Jacobson. Dean of the Division of thebiological sciences and the Prtizker school ofmedicineThrockmorton, 45, a specialist in thebiochemical evolution and classification oforganisms, joined the University in 1961. Heis currently a Professor in the department ofBiology, the committee on Genetics, thecommittee on Evolutionary Biology, and inthe College He is also associate master ir;the Biological Sciences Collegiate division.Also J Alan Thomas, Dean of the graduateschool of education at the University hasbeen named the William Claude Reavisprofessor of educational administration.Thomas is also professor and chairman ofthe department of education. An authority onschool finance, he has served as consultant tovarious federal and state agencies oneducational matters.Levi also announced appointment of JohnA Simpson as director of the Enrico Fermiinstitute. His appointment becomes effectiveJuly 1.Simpson, the Edward L Ryersondistinguished service professor in thedepartment of physics, the Enrico Fermiinstitute, and the College, is currentlyinvolved with the University’s cosmic rayexperiments on board the Pioneer 10 and 11spacecrafts, now on their way to Jupiter.Simpson came to the University in 1943 asscientific group leader with theMetallurgical Laboratory. The MetallurgicalLaboratory was the code name for theproject to build the first self-sustainingatomic pile. This was achieved on December2, 1942, by Enrico Fermi and his associates.At the conclusion of World War II, many ofthe leading scientists who had participated inthis work turned back to fundamentalresearch by forming the initial faculty of theInstitute for Nuclear Studies within theUniversity. They included Harold Urey,Edward Teller, Maria and Joseph Mayer,Willard Libby, Samuel Allison, and EnricoFermi.The University renamed the institute theEnrico Fermi institute for nuclear studies to honor the Nobel prize winning physicist afterhis death in 1954. Simpson was one of thegroup of young scientists who joined theinstitute in 1945.Richard G Klein has been named associateprofessor of anthropology at the Universityaccording to provost John Wilson. Klein willaugment the department's program instudies of early man.Klein, 32, will come to Chicago from theUniversity of Washington in Seattle, wherehe has been an associate professor ofanthropology since 1969He has also taught at NorthwesternUniversity and the University of WisconsinMilwaukee.Klein s principal anthropological interestsare in paleoanthropology—the study <;? earlyman in his environmentFrom June. 1973, until October, 1974, Klein,in collaboration with Karl W Butzer,professor in the departments of anthropologyand geography, will seek new information onhuman life during and immediatelyfollowing the Middle Stone Age (35.000 to30,000 years ago) in inland areas of theSouthern Cape Province of South Africa.Alumni reunionMartin D Kamen, professor ofbiochemistry at the University of California-La Jolla and a co-discoverer of carbon-14,heads a list of 15 alumni honored by theUniversity on Saturday, June 2.Kamen received the Alumni Medal, thealumni association's highest honor, at a 1 pmluncheon. The medal is awarded annually inrecognition of “extraordinary distinction inone’s field of specialization and service tosociety.’’The alumni association’s 33rd annualawards assembly in Hutchinson Commons,also gave citations for public service,professional achievement awards, and theHowell Murray awards. The Murray awardshonor graduating students for “outstandingcontributions to the University’s extracurriculum.’’Kamen, a native of Toronto, received hisSB and PhD degrees from the University in1933 and 1936. His contributions to scienceextend from nuclear physics to biochemistryand microbiology. His co-discovery of thelong-lived radio isotope carbon-14 has madeIntramural final standingsTotal TotalMen's intramurals Points Intramural Points1 Henderson 1826 22 Boucher 1362. Thompson North 1809 23 Blackstone 1023 Upper Rickert 1704 24. Phi Delta Theta 04 Hitchcock East 1521 25 Delta Upsilon 05. Dodd/Mead 1477 Coed intramurals6. Lower Rickert 14357. Thompson South 1432 1 Shorey 12728. Shorey 1412 2 Dodd/Meod 6409. Vincent 1380 3. Tufts 60310. Psi Upsilon 1132 4 Breckinridge 59811. Breckinridge 1 104 5. Rickert/Wollace 54412. Salisbury 1003 6. Salisbury 49413 Chamberlin 977 7. Upper Flint 33214. Hitchcock West 921 8. Alpha Delta Phi 32315. Alpha Delta Phi 920 9 Vincent 15516. Upper Flint 911 10. Hitchcock/Snell 15417. Tufts 737 11. Henderson 13718. LowerFlint 677 12. Lower Flint 133 .19. Phi Comma Delta 331 13 Lower Rickert 12420. Greenwood 190 14. Chamberlin 12221. ZBT/Phi Sigma Delta 189 15. Boucher 83HAVILL’SRADIO, TELEVISION& HIGH FIDELITYSALES SERVICE & ACCESSORIES/enilh — I'anasonicMnxieruurk — kl.ll1368 E. 53rd, Chicago 60615 • PL 2-780045 Years Serving Hyde Park BEAUTY SALON5841 S. BlackstoneHY 3-1069Open Monday throughFriday from 7:15 a.m. until8:00 p.m. No SaturdaysSpecializing In Tinting-Soft naturalpermanents-New hair shapes.DOROTHY SMITH possible a large portion of the research inbiochemistry during the past 25 years.Seven alumni received citations for publicservice which honor those who havecontributed “creative citizenship andexemplary leadership in community servicewhich has benefited society and reflectedcredit upon the University.’’Some recipients were: Alfreda B. Duster,(PhB, 1924), cited for having been “activefor many years in civic and communityimprovement groups, particularly in herhome neighborhood of Woodiawn(Chicago).” And Augusta Sara Hewlett SB1925) for “exceptional concern andsensitivity towards the problems of urbanliving which tend to overwhelm theimpoverished families in that neighborhood.(Uptown)’’. Her abiding interest in theUptown area led her to move there afterbeginning work in itAlso Howard B Miller (JD, 1960), a lawyerand participant in PublicBroadcasting/ National EducationalTelevision series, “The Advocates,” willreceive an award while Lillian SteichenSandburg (Mrs Carl) (B Ph, 1904), formerteacher and widow of the famous poet, willbe cited for her wo.k in “politicalcampaigns, the strengthening of the UnitedNations, raising funds for training moreNegro doctors, and the local Easter SealDrive of which she has been chairman forseveral years.”Ecologist Paul B Sears (PhD, 1922), aProfessor Emeritus at Yale universitywill be honored for “his work withconservation organizations and for hiscareer which has been dedicated to researchand teaching in ecology,” and John GStewart (MA, 1959. PhD, 1968), formerDirector of Communications for theDemocratic National Party and a long-timechurchman and public servant, will be citedtor his “contributions to social justice andcitizen’s rights.’’Operationidentification burglarized before joining the program. Inone of the burglaries, the item taken was oflittle value and had not been engraved. In theother, the stolen item was engraved but hasnot yet been found or returnedOperation ID works like this: high speedelectric pencil engravers and instructions onusing them are available at a nominal rentalcharge from the University Bank Personsrenting them engrave a driver’s license orother identification on valuable items. At thesame time, they receive a registration formon which to list and describe items whichhave been engraved.Along with the engraving pencil andregistration form, participants receivestickers suitable for placing on the front andrear entrances to homes or apartments.The sticker read: “All items of value onthese premises have been marked for readyidentification by law enforcement agencies.”Persons wishing to participate inOperation ID may rent an engraving pencilfrom the University National Bank between 9am and 3 pm Mondays, Tuesdays, andThursdays, 9 am to 6 pm Fridays, and 9 amto 1 pm Saturdays.A $1 fee covers the cost of using theengraving tool for two days, instruction ontool use. property registration forms, anddoor stickers. A deposit on the engravingtool, which will be refunded upon return ofthe tool, is required. A 50 cent fee will becharged each day tne tool is kept beyond twodays.Stagg awardWilliam C Petryk of White Bear Lake.Minnesota, was awarded the University’shighest varsity athletic honor.Petryk, a senior who graduated June 9,received the Amos Alonzo Stagg Medal.The Medal is awarded annually to aUniversity athlete “in recognition' of iiisexceptional qualities of character and hisoutstanding record in scholarship andathletics.’’Petryk, a chemistry major, was captain ofthe varsity soccer team at the University thisyear. In four years of soccer competition atthe University, he saw action in 48 games,missing only three due to illness, scored 18goals out of 94 attempts, and had credit forsix assists.A recent survey conducted by EugeneKrell, Operation Identification task forcecoordinator, seems to indicate that theprogram serves as a strong deterrent toburglaries. 500 homes using the burglarydeterrent were surveyed.Operation Identification is co-sponsored bythe Hyde Park-Kenwood CommunityConference (HPKCC) and the UniversityNational Bank, 1354 E. 55th St.Of the 65 persons returning questionnaires,only two had been burglarized since joiningOperation ID. Ten, however, had been SanctuaryA new place for music will be happening inHyde Park, starting Friday, June 22. It isSANCTUARY (in the Gargoyle). Opening at8 pm will be Brian Bowers, “the world’sgreatest autoharpist”. All the posters say8:30 but don’t believe it-Brian has to go on at8 due to another gig later.Joe Mapes, one of the best folk-singers inChicago (nay, the world) is on next and thencontinued on page tenELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 EPISCOPALCHURCH SERVICESSUNDAYS: 9 A.M.Church of St. Paul andthe Redeemer50th and DorchesterTHURSDAYS: 12 NOONBond ChapelBRENT HOUSE5540 WoodlawnSundays5 p.m."Underground Church6 p.m.Student Suppers $1.00ALL WELCOME RESEARCH ASS'T5Masters degree inecology, biology orzoology plus minimum 3yrs. teachers ex¬perience at elementaryor junior high level.Writing ability. Ex¬perience developingcurriculum material.Call personnel. 9-3.Mon.-Fri.922-9410FIELD MUSEUMSOQ presents Friday, June 22THE GREAT NORTHFIELDMINNESOTA RAIDCobb Hall $100 7:1589:15Thursday, June 21,1973 - The Chicago Maroon - 9Magruder describes Mitchell role in scandalBy MARKGRUENBERGUniversity graduate Jeb Stuart Magruderdid a nasty thing when he testified lastThursday before Senator Sam Ervin's SelectCommittee to Investigate PresidentialCampaign Practices.He hung' John Mitchell.The testimony of Magruder, a 1963graduate of the business school, implicatedMitchell, former Attorney General andformer director of the Committee to Re-electthe President, in both the planning of theabortive raid on the offices of theDemocratic National Committee just over ayear ago. and in the subsequent attemptedcoverup of those in back of the raidMagruder also testified that he, personally,invented the cover-up story.“Mr Mitchell was responsible for thecampaign from May 1971 on,” Magrudernoted. “1 reported directly to him Haldemanwas our liaison with the White House viaGordon Strachan.” Magruder also statedthat Mitchell approved the original hiring ofespionage planner G Gordon Liddy. “Liddywould have an opportunity to present a planfor operations to Attorney GeneralMitchell,” Magruder added.“The first meeting was on January 27, 1972in Mitchell's office at the JusticeDepartment,” said Magruder. Participantswere himself. Mitchell, White House counselJohn Dean and Liddy.“Liddy brought a series of sixprofessionally done charts, each headed by a codeword. The budget total for the activitiesplanned was $1 million,” he noted.“Liddy had a plan” Magruder continued,“for abducting radical leaders, taking themto Mexico and keeping them there, thenreturning them here after the RepublicanConvention” to prevent what he saw' as theirplans to disrupt the convention “He also hada plan to use women as agents, renting a‘bugged’ yacht, infiltrating the officials ofthe Democratic National Committee withcall girls and luring them onto the yacht toget information.”All this, related Magruder, was in additionto tapping the telephones at the DemocraticNational Committee headquarters inWashington, the headquarters of whomeverthe Democratic presidential candidate wouldbe and the Democratic conventionheadquarters at the Fontainebleu Hotel inMiami BeachMitchell, said Magruder, disapproved ofthe plans as too much “and indicated...Liddy should return to the drawing boards towork on a more reasonable plan.” Magruderalso added that passed on reports of all themeetings, including several he had withDean and Liddy, to Gordon Strachan.On February 4, there was a secondmeeting in Mitchell’s office, where a reducedplan was presented by Liddy, costing$500,000. This involved the planned buggings.“Mitchell did not like this plan, but Liddywas encouraged to continue planning,”Magruder said.In a final meeting on March 30, Liddy’s plan to bug the Watergate was approved.“There was not a great acceptance of theplan, but we (Mitchell and Magruder) feltthat the information could be useful, and that$250,000 u'as a good amount. Mitchell justsigned off, saying ‘OK, let’s give him $250,000and see what he can do ’ ”Magruder also added one very interestingpoint about why such a plan w'as approved bymen the President trusted. “We knew it wasillegal and probably inappropriate.. I wasnot overwhelmed with the program (nor wasMitchell' but we thought we could getinformation, and because of what I knew ofthe atmosphere at the White House, I w'as notas concerned about its illegality as 1should've beenWhen the burglars were arrested.Magruder continued. Liddv called him in apanic, and later Haldeman called, askedbriefly what happened, and orderedMagruder to return to Washington “to cleanup the mess” public relations-wise.“Cover-up planning began the Saturday ofthe break-in (June 17, 1972),” Magrudertestified. “There was never any discussionthat there would not be a cover-up.”Magruder testified that he invented acoverup story involving the $250,000 paid toLiddy for “intelligence purposes” andobtained the assurances of Mitchell andDean that they would support whatever storyhe would tell the grand jury. Everythingwent as agreed upon until December when,as Magruder said, “Dean started to lose his memory concerning the meetings we had” towork out the details of the coverup.Following this loss of memory, Magrudernoted that he went to Haldeman in Januaryof this year. “The conversation was beforethe trial and before the inauguration" andduring the conversation Magruder toldHaldeman the details of both the coverup andof the true story. “In my January meetingwith him, Haldeman indicated he did nothave any prior knowledge of the coverup,”Magruder said.In March, Magruder flew to New York tomeet with Mitchell and then both met withHaldeman on the 28th “Mitchell indicatedeverything would be taken care of when 1asKed what I should doWe discussed the same things withHaldeman. He indicated he would help me asa friend but could make no assurances fromthe President. The problem was that Deanwas not standing by the false story we agreedupon. John Mitchell agreed to go along andJohn Dean did not.”After that series of meetings, Magruderwent to Watergate prosecuting attorney EarlJ Silbert and told him “W’hat I have told youthis morning,” blowing the cover off thecoverup. But throughout his wholetestimony, Magruder answered in thenegative the one question everybody wasthinking of.“To my knowledge,” he told Hawaii'sDaniel Inouye, “The President had no directknowledge of the coverup ”ABOUT THE MIDWAYcontinued from page nineDwain Story, who does obscene things to hiscat while yodeling in 3-part harmony.Jim Glover (who used to sing withsomeone named Jean) is on after Dwain,singing and playing such all-time great hitsas “Bluetail Fly”, “New America”, and“Grand Hotel”...which happen to be the onlysongs he knows but that’s okay-what morecan you expect from a kid from an Ohio stateschool?After Jim, there may be even moresurprises for all-who knows wh?.t mayhappen or who may play? Tickets are $1.50and can be obtained at the Gargoyle office,Coolie’s Corner, and Fret Shop, and at allOne Octave Higher stores. The Gargoyle andSANCTUARY are located at 5655 University.AbortionSince recent discoveries aboutprostaglandins (body substances importantin fertility), Dr Frederick P Zuspan, directorof Obstetrics and Gynecology at Billingshospital, sees the day when a woman couldpurchase at her corner drug store a safe,simple kit to terminate a pregnancy in itsearliest weeks. “The whole problem ofabortion would be solved.”He upholds a woman’s right to decide theoutcome of a pregnancy. He also feels thatpublic interest and scientific progress canrealize his “simple kit” suggestions.Dr Zuspan agrees with E Spencer Parsons,dean of Rockefeller chapel and also head ofChicago’s Clergy Consultation Service onProblem Pregnancies. Parsons has statedthat the rate of demand for pregnancyterminations, or abortions, will soon equalthe number of live births in the United States.In light of this prediction, Dr Zuspanemphasizes the need for women to know thefacts about abortion before making thedecision to terminate a pregnancy.“First, a woman should be sure that she ispregnant,” Dr Zuspan advises, but not withtongue in cheek. He explains that 20 percentof the women who seek abortions are notpregnant.A pregnancy test based on immunologicalmethods can now be done that is about 97percent effective. A morning specimen ofurine is used, because in the morning theurine contains the highest levels ofgonadotropins, or sex hormones. A positivepregnancy test depends on the levels of thesehormones.For practical purposes abortionscompleted in the first trimester of pregnancyare safe, he states. Such abortions arestatistically safer than having a baby.Zuspan concluded, “You say, ‘Are oralcontraceptives hazardous?’ My answer isyes. But you ask, ‘Compared to what?Nothing.””“I say, ‘Yes, but you can not comparethem to nothing. Compared to pregnancy,they are very safe.’“The same is true of early abortions.”Summer films“Chicago is a summer film festival!” saidRichard Scotch, sipping a carbonated drinkin Paradise Lost. “That’s another way ofsaying that although we have a lot of goodfilms for the summer, there is no participleof selection.”According to Scotch, present plans for“Summer on the Quads” call for some seventeen films, to be shown on Tuesday andFriday evenings, beginning June 22nd andending August 17th. Titles will range fromcurrent favorites such as “The GreatNorthfield Minnesota Raid,” and“Cromwell” to more frivolous selectionssuch as “Bullitt” and “When Eight BellsToll.” While there is no theme that runsthrough the titles, the second week of thequarter will be devoted to Zero Mostelfilms; “Great Catherine,” on Tuesday, and“A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to theForum” on Friday.Another feature will be two lesser knownfilms be well known directors: IngmarBergman’s “The Magician,” on July 13th,and Frederico Fellini’s “The Nights ofCabiria.” A special feature should be the 1934musical “Murder at the Vanities,” beingshown August 14th. In addition to being avery enjoyable film, it features a productionnumber by Gertrude Michael entitled“Marijuana” which has reputedly made itquite popular at colleges and universities.Summer films will be part of the Summeron the Quadrangles program being plannedby the Student Activities Office. Alsoincluded will be a series of outdoor concertson Wednesday noons and evenings, bus trips,and a program entitled “Exploring theUniversity.” Two highlights will be an “IceCream Social” and a concert by Rufus Krisp.SoftballThe summer softball leagues are nowbeing started, with some 17 teams scheduledto begin play-with various degrees of skill(?)--next week. The male and most of thecoed teams are having no trouble recruitingdraft choices, otherwise known as players, but one coed team, known as FCN, is stillsearching.Both men and women are needed by andfor FCN, which will be playing against bothmen s and coed competition. If you areinterested in playing,call 753-3591, and leaveyour name and telephone number.Former professor diesLawrence M Graves, professor emeritus inthe Department of Mathematics at theUniversity, died in LaGrange, Illinois May 25of complications of old age.Graves, 76, made classic contributions tothe calculus variations. He was one of thearchitects of the modern subject known asfunctional analysis. Twenty-two students inthe department took their doctoral degreesunder him.A memorial service will be held in BondChapel on the University’s campus at a timeto be announced.A native of Kansas and a graduate ofWashburn College in Topeka, Gravesreceived his AM and PhD degrees in 1920 and1924 from the University. He came to theUniversity in 1926 as assistant professor,becoming associate professor in 1930, andprofessor in 1939. He retired in 1961.Graves was the author of research articlesin mathematics journals and wrote “TheTheory of Functions of Real Variables”(1946).He is survived by two sons, Robert LGraves, professor of applied mathematicsand associate dean in the Graduate School ofBusiness at the University,-and John LGraves, professor of chemistry at theUniversity of North Carolina; and adaughter, Mrs Anne Gahn.SOQ presents Saturday, June 30a bus trip to theINDIANA DUNES9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. info at 753-3591 or inIda Noyes 209sign up in Cobb Coffee Shop 8:30-2:30 by Monday, June 2510 - The Chicago Maroon - Tfiur suuy, June 21 1973MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSSUMMER OFFICE HOURS1:00-5:00 Monday, Tues. and Thurs. 9:00-5:00 Wednesday.Advertising deadline is 5:00 Tuesday before theThursday issue. (N.B. Due to the 4th of July holiday,the deadline for the July 5th issue will be Mondayat 5:00 p.m.)SCENESFawaz Turki, born Haifa 1940, wasraised in refugeecamp Beirut, to speakon'Israelis & Palestinians" next Wed 6/27at Hillel House at 8 p.m.SPACE1 Wanted: One efficiency apartment southI of 55th St. and west of the 1C tracks, rent? up to $140/mo. Occupancy in September.| If you have what I want call the MaroonI office and leave a message for Mark| Gruenberg x3 3265.1 French graduate student (F) seeks for1 early July, room with family or apart3 ment to share with other girls. Willing to3 babysit or help otherwise. Call 753 8642;1 :0 fill 6.00 or 568 1584 eveningsI Augustine LehmannJ For Rent 1 1/2 rm. apt East H P. conv.] ioc. elev bldg. Kitchen, Idry, mgr. on3 premises SI35. sublet, then rent. 3241 6637 after 5. Roommate wanted to share clean 6 roomapt. with 2 men. Own room, bath rent568/mo. Call 752 6151 eves.3 rm coach house 49th 8, Woodlawn. Jly 1$135 & utils. 924 6098Summer rooms with kitchen privilegesCall 753 2160 in eve. for info.Heart of Hyde Pk. newly constructeddeluxe 1 bdrm. and efficiencies from$165/mo. New kitchen appls. cptng. thruout, A/C and htd. 5515 S. Cornell. CallTom at 363 6200FALL HOUSE SIT Responsibleresearch assoc 8. wife will house sitHyde Park house or apt for Fall. CallTony 753 8152 days, 241 7082 evenings.S. Shore apt avail July 8 Aug.$55/'mo/person. Priv. rm. Women. Willrent by the week 978 34665540 S. EVERETTAPT. 104 - CHARMING3 Vi RMS. NEWLYDECORATED. AIR-CON¬DITIONED. TO SEE THISDELIGHTFUL APART -MENT CALL DO 3-6200MON. THRU FRI. 8:30A.M. TO 4:30 P.M.McKEY &P0AGUE, INC.1525 E. 53rd St ^^^^*T'^for saleJ d<n*teM "?C<ni4tJ 1645 E.55TH STREET „j* CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 JC Phene: FA 4-1651 J************* Straight male to share 4 room apt. withsame near 53rd 8. Kenwood $77. Call 3241237Stanford MBA student interested inrenting apt. in Chicago June Sept.Contact M K Bourke 732 8995Twnhse for sale 2 bdrm. 1 1/2 bath.Washer, dryer, dishwasher. Large extraroom. Offstreet pking. Large park withplayground. Yard Near univ. Call 9550447 eveningsPEOPLE WANTEDLIKE TO COOK? Family of 3 needssomeone to cook dinner 3 times/wk, tobegin next fall. Please call ONLY btw 510 eves. 363 7976TEACHERS needed for Chicagosuburban 8, downstate school systemMcLaughlin Employment Service, Box435, St Charles, III.PEOPLE FOR SALETYPIST exp call 752 8119 eves.Portraits 4 for $4 00 and up. MaynardStudio, 1459 E 53, 2nd floor. 643 4083.UC coach John Schael and UC coach BillHorgan will lead 20 adventurous sons ofUC staff up into Superior NationalForest on a Wilderness Canoe Adventurefor 7 full days for $195. Once in July.Once in August Phone 753 4692 or 9734703 Apt Sale, Kit. Set 4 chrs; File Cab; Dinset, 2 chrs; Desk, Antique SewingMachine, His/Hers Armchairs; Call aft4 PM 363 4939Steinway upright piano $325; diningtable $55; H Murphy 753 273768 FORD Cortina Sta Wag bought new 69auto trans pwr brakes, gd tires, mileagecond 36,000m 363 7.919 $800Party goods, novelties, gifts, auto accessories For free catalog write D 8 DDistributors, P O Box 47, Lansing, III60438BOOKS! I!!!! 140% OFF at Chicago'smost interesting old bookstore. Goingout of business Oct. 31. 20,000 boundbooks. 40% off. Also thousands ofpaperbacks and long play records. BillNewman's Al Bookstore, 1112 N State,Daily 2 30 9.30 p.m. Sat. and Sun/ 1 306 00.CHINESEMARTIAL ARTSKing Fu (6:30 7:30) ($20, 10 lessons) &Tai Chi (7:30 9:00) ($25) every Sun,Reynolds Club Lounge 57th 8 UnivSPEECHPERCEPTIONEXPERIMENTSPolaroid Land camera; 5 yrs old onlyused 3 or 4 times full attachments, bestoffer. Contact Lisa c/o 'he Maroon office, INH rm 304.VW Bug '67 $425 Call Tony 753 8152 daysor 241 7082 eveningsMGB '70 Overdrive, Blaupunkt, Ziebart3 3643 Students and staff: Participate in experiments on speech perception. $2.00per hour. Probably one two hour sessionrequired Call 3 4714 for info and appointment STORAGE SPACEGoing to India for 14 months on foreignarea fellowship; Need to store books,TV, etc. Witt pay rent or bring giftsfrom India. Call 684 8078 eves.PANPIZZADELIVERYThe Medici delivers 5 p m. to 10:30 p mSun thru Thurs. 5 p.m. to 11:30 p m. Fri.and Sat 667 7394 Save 60 cents delivery,if you pick it up yourself at 1450 E 57thSLGAY LIBERATIONCONSCIOUSNESS GROUP ONSEXUAL IDENTITY will meet everyThurs. at 7:30 pm during the SummerQuarter in Ida Noyes. Gays, straights,bisexuals and undecideds are welcomeGAY LIB OFFICE WILL BE OPENDURING THE SUMMER QUARTER onMon., Wed , and Thurs., between 7 and9 30 p.m, in Ida Noyes 301; 753 3274.CAM PINGEQUIPMENTRENTAL sleeping bags, tents, stoves,lanterns, packs. HICKORY 324 1499PLAY TENNIS6 indoor courts, 3 outdoor courts, Private8 group lessons available South SideRaquet Club, 1401 E. Sibley, VI 9 1235PERSONALSWEAVERS Interested in gettingtogether with other weavers9 Call 9557192 or 288 3472WRITER'S WORKSHOP (PL 2 8377) CLASSIFIEDSClassified deadline is 5:00Tuesday before Thursdayedition. 50‘/line for UCpeople; 75c/line for non-UCpeople. All ads paid in ad¬vance so bring them to our of¬fice, Rm. 304 INH, 1-5 M-Th.or mail them with a check.Call 3-3266 for further in¬formation.The Record Shop THE VERSAILLESis alive and well 5254 S. Dorchesterin the basementofReynolds Club.We are open andordering ail summer Short term leasesavailable. Well main¬tained secure building.Attractive 1'A and 2 Viroom studios, furnishedand unfurnished. $ 127-$172 utilities included.At campus bus stop.long. FA 4-020010-6 M-F Mrs. Groak DO YOU HAVE ASTATION WAGON.VAN, OR TRUCK?If so the Maroon has the perfect summer job foryou. Deliver our next four summer issues aroundcampus and Hyde Park. Good pay. light work, withpossible fall option. Interested? Call Rich at 753-3266 weekday afternoons.AN INVITATIONTo JoinTHE FLAMINGO CABANA CLUB5500 South Shore DriveFun at the pool in country club surroundings.For Information Call 752-3800 Mrs. Adelman John Schael5640 UniversityChicago. Illinois60037 Ave.Phone No. 753-4692Home No. 973-4703SUMMER ONTHE QUADSThursday, June 21-Thursdayf July 5Friday, June 22SOQ films The Great Northfield Min¬nesota Raid Cliff Robertson as JesseJames in the story of robbery of thebiggest bank west of the Mississippi.Cobb Hall. 7:15 and 9:15. $1.00Monday, June 25Last day for signup for bus trip on Satur¬day, June 30 to the Indiana Dunes.Students $1.00. Others $1.50. Come tothe Cobb Coffee Shop in the basement ofCobb Hall between 8:30 and 2:30. For in¬fo, call 753-3591.Tuesday, June 26SOQ films Great Catherine, Zero Mostel,Jeanne Moreau, and Peter O'Toole in anexpose of Catherine the Great which ishilarious, but doesn't horse around.Cobb Hall 7:15 only $1.00 Walking Tour of Ben May Lab for CancerResearch. Signup in Ida Noyes 209 orcall 753-3591. 1 1:00 A.MWendesday, June 27Ice Cream Social. Ralph Geer and hiscalliope and a north side bluegrassgroup will be featured in this first of aseries of Wednesday concerts. Freerefreshments and ieftover snowballsfrom Winter Carnival Hitchcock Court7:00 p.m. "FREE Raindate; Thursday,June 28.Friday, June 29SOQ Films A Funny Thing Happened onthe Way to the Forum Zero Mostel, PhilSilvers, Buster Keaton and Jack Gilfordin one of Richard Lester's best films. Areel laff riot! Cobb Hall 7:15 & 9:15.$1.00 Saturday, June 30Indiana Dunes Bus Trip. Bus leaves IdaNoyes parking lot at 9:00 sharp. Signupin Cobb basement Coffee Shop 8:20-2:30by June 25. Rain Date Sunday, July 8.Tuesday, July 3Walking Tour of Oriental Institute 2:30p.m. Signup in Ida Noyes 209 or call 753-3591. 'Wednesday, July 4Happy birthday, U.S.A.SOQ films The Night of the Hunter.Charles Laughton directs from a screen¬play by James Agee, the chilling story akiller's pursuit of two children. Cobb Hall7:15 only. $1.00Thursday, June 21, 1973 - The Chicago Maroon - 11THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO CAMPUS BUS SERVICESUMMER 1973 (Effective June 11, 1973 through September 14, 1973)Buses are clearly identified by a sign reading "CAMPUS BUS." Upon signal from a patron, Buses will operate as stcted below, Monday through Friday, except on official University holidays,buses will stop to take on or discharge passengers at any intersection or University Building. Schedules are subject to change without notice.Because of legal restrictions, use of this transportation service islimited to members of the University faculty, staff, and students.Passengers will be admitted to the vehicle upon surrendering aticket to the driver except on the MINI BUS where Universityidentification must be presented. The driver will not be permittedto accept cash or to sell tickets. Identification as a student, facultymember, or employee will be required when purchasing tickets.One-ride tickets at 15 cents each and Monthly Commutation WHO MAY RIDEtickets at $4.50 each for the "N" & "E" routes and at 25 centseach ride or Monthly Commutation rate of $7.50 each for the"S" route are sold at the following Locations:Bursar's Office (5801 Ellis Avenue)Billings Hospital, Cashier's Office (950 E. 59th St.)University Bookstore (5750 Ellis Avenue)Blaine Hall, Room 105 (1362 E. 59th St.) International House, Information Desk (1414 E. 59th St.)Reynolds Club, Attendant's Desk (5706 University Ave.)Law School, Receptionist's Desk (1121 E. 60th St.)Maps and Schedules available at the above locations.(NO refunds on lost or unused commutation tickets. "S" routetickets are accepted on all routes).NOTE: The MINI BUS. See separate maps for MINI BUS Services.(S) SOUTH SHORE-SOUTHCAMPUS(25 cent tickets)Approximately 45 minutes round trip under normal driv¬ing conditions.Monday through Friday except on University HolidaysStops at all intersections upon signal.ROUTEThe A.M. bus starts at 67th and Jeffery and proceedsSouth on JefFery to 76th; East on 76th to Coles; NorthWest on Coles to 73rd; West on 73rd to Luella; Northon Luella through 71st onto Crandon, then North onCrandon to 68th; West on 68th to Stony Island; Northon Stony Island through Jackson Park Drive to 59th andStony Island, the P.M. starting point; West on 59th toUniversity Ave.; North on University to 57th St., West on57th to Ellis Ave., South on Ellis to 60th; East on 60thto Stony Island; South on Stony to 63rd, the ElevatedStation; then the bus proceeds East on 63rd throughJackson Park to 67th and JefFery where the Normalroute is again resumed.SCHEDULEA M. S-l A.M. S-27:05 Starts at 67th & Jeffrey7:50 7:518:35 (Ends at 60th & Stony Island about 9:15 A.M.)MID-DAY S 312:45 P.M. Starts at 59th & Kimbark (This Run willbe made from June 25 through August3 only.)P.M. P.M.S-4 S-5 |4:30 Starts at 59th & Stony Island5:15 5:05 |6:00 (Ends at 68th & Stony Island about 6:40 P.M.) ROUTES AND SCHEDULES(N) NORTH-SOUTH(15 cent tickets)Approximately 30 minutes round tripMonday through Friday except onUniversity HolidaysUpon signal from patron, Buses will stop to take on ordischarge passengers at any intersection or UniversityBuilding on the route.ROUTEThe A. M. bus starts at 48th and Greenwood, proceedsEast on 48th to Dorchester; South on Dorchester to 53rd;East on 53rd to Harper; South on Harper to 54th Place;West on 54th Place to Dorchester; South on Dorchesterto 56th St ; East on 56th to Lake Park; South on LakePark to 57th St.; West on 57th to Dorchester; South to58th; West to Kimbark; South to 59th & Kimbark (TheP.M. Starting Point), then West on 59th to Ellis,■ South onEllis to 60th; East on 60th to Woodlawn; North onWoodlawn to Westbound Midway Drive; West to Ellis;North to 57th; East to University; North to East HydePark Blvd.; East to Woodlawn; North to 49th; West toGreenwood; and North to 48th St., the A.M. StartingPoint.NOTE: P.M. Buses start at 59th between Kenwood andKimbark but run the same route.SCHEDULEA M. Starts at 48th & Greenwood7:308:008:309 00 (Last trip ends at 57th & University about 9:25A.M.)MID-DAY (June 25 thru August 3 only.)12:10 Starts at 59th & Kimbark12:401:10 (Ends at 57th & Dorchester about 1:35 P.M.)P.M. Starts at 59th & Kimbark4:00 5:004:30 5:30 (Ends at 57th & Dorchester about 5:55P.M.) (E) EAST-WEST-BROADVIEW(15 cent tickets)Approximately 30 minutes round tripMonday through Friday except onUniversity HolidaysUpon signal from patron, Buses will stop to take on ordischarge passengers at any intersection or UniversityBuilding on the route.ROUTEStarting at 59th and Stony, bus proceeds West to Cot¬tage Grove; North to 57th St.; East to Stony Island;] North to 56th St.; East to Cornell; North to East HydePark Boulevard; East to South Hyde Park Boulevard;i South to 57th Park Drive; West on 57th Park Drive toStony Island; South on Stony Island to 59th St.; theStarting Point.SCHEDULEA.M. E-lj 6:15 Starts at 59th & Stony IslandI 6:45| 7:15! 7:458:158:45 (Ends at 59th & Ellis about 9.15 A.M.)P.M. E-34:05 Starts at 59th & Stony Island4:355:055:35 (Ends at Broadview about 5:55 P.M.)The University of Chicago"FREE"EVENING MINI BUS SERVICESummer 1973Effective date—June 11, 1973Three routes—A, B & C, each requiring ap¬proximately 15 minutes for a round trip. Allthree routes START and end on the 57th Streetside of the Regenstein Library.Except for University Holidays, MINI BUSESwill operate five days per week over the routesshown below from 6 p.m. to 12:15 a.m. OnHolidays, Saturdays and Sundays, one bus willcover all three routes.The MINI BUSES are clearly identified by anilluminated sign reading U of C MINI BUS (A), (B) or (C). Upon signal drivers will stop at anyUniversity Building to take on passengers.This service is provided FREE OF CHARGEto Faculty, Staff and Students of the Universityof Chicago upon presentation of UniversityIdentification.Pick up your MINI BUS route maps at theBursar's dTfice, BiTTings Cashier's Office, Book¬store, Blaine 105, International House Informa¬tion Desk, Reynolds Club Desk and the LawSchool Receptionist's Desk."A" ROUTE "B" ROUTE ► "C" ROUTE ►Starts at Regenstein LibraryWest to EllisSouth to 59thWest to Maryland (Billings)North around Wyler & Emergency Entrance to 57thWest on 57th to Cottage (Interns Res.)North on Cottage to 56thEast on 56th to MarylandSouth on Maryland to 58thWest on 58th to Cottage (Nurses Res.)South on Cottage to 60thEast on 60th to DrexelSouth on Drexel to 61st (Nurses Res.)East on 61st to InglesideNorth on Ingleside to 60th (Faculty Housing)East to Stony (Burton Judson)North to 59th (Plaisance)West to Woodlawn (Breckinridge, Ida Noyes& Int'l. House)North to 58th (Woodward Court)West to CircleSouth around Harper CourtEast to UniversityNorth to 57thWest to Regenstein Starts at RegensteinWest to EllisSouth to 59thEast to University (Harper)North to 53rd (Pierce)West to GreeqwoodSouth to 55th (5400 Greenwood)West to InglesideNorth to 51st (Boucher)East to DorchesterSouth to 53rdWest to WoodlawnSouth to 57thWest to RegensteinFurther Information may be obtained from the Plant Department, 960 East 58th Street, Mr. A. Herbster, 753-3082. Starts at RegensteinWest to EllisNorth to 55th (5518 Ellis)East to KenwoodNorth to 54th StEast to HarperSouth to 54th Place (Harper Surf)West to DorchesterSouth to 55thEast to CornellNorth to E Hyde Park BlvdEast to S. Hyde Park BlvdSouth to 56th (Broadview)West to StonySouth to 59thWest to BlackstoneNorth to 57th (Blackstone Hall)West to Regenstein (5700 Dorchester)E. L MILLER, Director, Plant Operations12 - The Chicago Maroon - Thursday, June 21, 1973