The Chicago MaroonVolume 84 Number 33 The University of Chicago Tuesday, February 4, 1975College gets summer tuition breakThe College of theUniversity will reducetuition rates next summerCourse rates for certainstudents attending thesummer quarter at theUniversity, which begins onJune 23. 1975. will be* 70percent of the normalcharge.These reduced rate's willapply to all students ol theundergraduate College of theCniversity and to non degreestudents taking summersession courses for self-improvement of creditransfer to another in¬stitution The special rate'swill not apply to students inthe graduate divisions orprofessional schools.The reduced rates rangefrom $175 for one half of anacademic credit to $910 forfour credits A full-timeundergraduate studentusually takes three credits per school quarter. Underthe summer 1975. rateschedule, tuition for suchwork will cost $700According to CharlesO’Connell dean ofUniversity students “Weho|K* that the re duced tuitionrates for the summer willenable undergraduates toapproach their remainingyears in the College withgreater flexibility Somestudents mav wish to ac¬celerate their programs;others may wish to substitute another quarter out ofresidence for the traditionalsummer quarter.“A greatly increased of¬fering of courses attractiveto undergraduates will beavailable this summer — ingreat measure because thefaculty can now have someconfidence that there will bemore students to take themWhat is in effect a 30 percent tuition scholarship, nowavailable in the summer toall students in the College,should ensure a largerstudent body and a liveliercampus.”Last year, approximately3.<hhi students graduate,undergraduate, and non-degree — attended thesummer quarter.The University will alsoadmit a small number of newdegree candidates into theCollege for the summer.1975. quarter Traditionally,the University has onlyadmitted new un¬dergraduate students duringthe fall quarter. Studentsinterested in entering theCollege of the Universitynext summer should submittheir applications now Non¬degree summer studentsneed not spply untilregistration on June 23.WOHLHUTER; The U.C.T.C. star has been lauded as thealhelefe of 1974. world’s foremost amateurInside this issue:Debate p. 3Old Maroons ip. 3Bookstore Layoffs'! ? . ‘"."cj '• ’« v.v • v • p. 5 AH!; Although the summer will still be hot, the lowering of tuition for manycollege students will make it seem less long.Wohlhuter proclaimedLeadingamatuer athleteRick Whlhuter has won theJames D Sullivan award forthe most outstandingamateur of 1974 given by theAmatuer Athletic Union<AAU). The University ofChicago Track Club t UCTC)standout is the world record-holder in the 880 yd and 100meter races and is un¬defeated in his last 17 ap¬pearancesWohlhuter is the 45threcipient of the SullivanAward, which is chosen eachyear by 1.200 members of thenews media and the AAU Board of Governors. Thew inner is chosen not only forathletic excellence, but alsofor how well he exemplifiesthe AAU athletic creedWohlhuter w as cited by theAAU as the most consistentfigure m amateur sports in1974. when he did not lose asingle race A spokesman forthe AAU stated that “We aresure he could have left theamateur ranks long ago if itwere not for his high ideals ofamateurism.'’The Central AmateurAthletic Union voted unanimously for Wohlhuter,praising his sportsmanship,character leadership, andpersonality Wohiuhuter wasjust recently named theoutstanding world's toptrack athlete of 197-i byTrack and f ield magazineIn the Sullivan Awardvoting. Wohlutet tallied 2.643votes In second place wasswimmer Shirley Rabashoffwith 2.267 followed by NorthCarolina State basketballstar David Thompson with1.836Levi gains committee supportBy TIM RUDYThe Senate JudiciaryCommittee votedunanimously yesterday toconfirm Edward Levi as thenext attorney general.The committee'srecommendation now goes tothe Senate A committeestaff member. BarbaraMarion, told the Maroonyesterday she expected thefull Senate to vote on theissue today. An editor at theChicago Tribune said theirinformation was that a votewould be* taken WednesdayThe committee' conductedtwo and a half days ofhearings last week on thenomination President Fordnominated Levi on January14. If confirmed, he wulireplace Willaim Saxbe whohas been donfirmed am¬bassador to India Sf »e> rmlfTHE CHILF Procedures to confirm Fdword lex; 3% U.S.Attorney General are expected to take less ♦Kan omonth.World of small mags in Hyde ParkBy DAVID BLUMGulliver’s Periodicals,Ltd., a new magazine storeat 5309 S. Kimbark Ave.,calls itself “the big name inlittle magazines.”It is the biggest of its kindin the world. Offering aselection of over 1000periodicals in eightlanguages, its owner. BobKatzman, seeks to provideHyde Park with a selectionof magazines unavailableanywhere else in the UnitedStates.Only 24 years old. Katz¬man has ow ned and operated“Bob’s Newsstand” at 51stStreet and Lake Park Blvd.for the past nine years. UpThe League of BlackWomen called on Chicagowomen Saturday to reportall cases of rape and to en¬courage the prosecution ofall rape suspects. Theleague, part of a CommunityAwareness Program, w'aspromoting its Rape CrisisLine, which is set up to helprape victims “through themaze of the legal system ”.The Rape Crisis Line willoperate from 8 am to 8 pm.Its phone number is 667-4010.The league also urgedStates Attorney Bernard until now it has been thelargest magazine store inChicago.The newsstand will con-tunue to sell newspapers anda limited selection ofmagazines. Its location,however, made it difficult toattract a large enoughmarket for the wide selectionof magazines carried.“Gulliver’s Periodicals”will focus on a select numberof topics and will emphasizea foreign selection that in¬cludes magazines not sold inNew York or other majoroutlets. “I make no idleclaims.” Katzman says withconviction.The magazines will covera wide variety of topics andCarey to “put an immediateend to hasty, callous, racist,and oppressive decisionsthat are being made by theFelony Review Board(w'hich reviews rapecases)”.The league called uponpolice superintendent JamesRochford to instruct cops to“stop hiding facts of rapeand altering statistics” byurging victims not to reportrapes, and reducing manyrape charges to assault androbbery for lack of evidence come from severalEuropean countries, in¬cluding France, Germany,England, Switzerland, Italyand Spain. Some magazineswill be from the U S S R, andthe Peoples Republic ofChina. This variety, Katz¬man expects, will bevaluable to the internationalacademic community at theUniversity.Pravda and Izvestia , thetwo daily newspapers of theU S S.R., are available at thestore tw o days late. The NewYork Times is on sale everymorning at 7:30 includingSundays. Katzman is quickto point out that on Sundaymorning his store is theclosest New York Timesoutlet to the campus.Another unique feature is arack containing all the backissues of the Mother EarthNews. Katzman expects tosell a large number of cook¬books. both American andforeign He says that cook¬books count for 20% of all ofthe books sold in the UnitedStates.Katzman has a particularinterest in the small poetryand literary magazines thatare rarely sold in com-merical outlets. “Usually theperson who wrote poetry forthe magazine and hisrelatives all get copies Therest of the world ignoresthem.” He expects to sell alarge number of these smallreviews now' that he is in alocation closer to the University community.By spring Katzman hopesto begin the operation of anational distribution com¬pany that would attempt tostimulate the slaes ofseveral magazines on theverge of collapse. Herecently approached thepublishers with his ideathrough the small pressreview trade journal,Margins:“I can understand thefrustrations of littlemagazine writers...Publishers who select mewill have the assurance ofdetermined, aggresivesalesmanship with a young,open point of view.”Katzman plans to puttogether a catalog of allsmall press reviewscurrently available by April.He views this project as amuch more important onethan the new store.“The idea for ‘Gulliver’sPeriodicals’ came when 1rented this place to run thedistribution company out of.There was enough space todo both in so I decided toopen another store.” As soonas everything is on theshelves Katzman will devotehs time to the distributioncompany.Katzman also plans tohave weekly poetry readingsin the store at night begin¬ning in April. Offering freecoffee along with local poetsreading their works, hehopes to stimulate more awareness and appreciationfor local poetry talent.“Everybody has somepoetry they’ve alwayswanted somebody toread or listen to,” he says.Katzman so far refuses tosell the National Enquirerin the new store, even thoughhe admits it is the largestselling newspaper in theUnited States. There will notbe any detective or mystery-magazines on sale.“I want to be able tocontrol the environment ofthe customer. I’m organizingthe store so that it will makecoming here a happy ex¬perience. It’s not a questionTw o pairs representing theUniversity bridge clubplaced first and third in theregional intercollegiatebridge tournament held atLacrosse, Wisconsin, lastweekend.William Mendez, agraduate student inbiochemistry, and EdwardFriedman, a graduatestudent in biophysics, placedfirst overall in the threesession event.Turgay Kaya, a businessstudent, and B.L.Ramakrishna. a graduate inchemistry, placed third, a of ego, it’s one of economy —I want to feel secure.”The announcement ofStuart Brent’s takeover asmanager of the Universitybookstore came as a supriseto Katzman, and he hopesthat no one thinks he ischallenging Brent forsupremacy in Hyde Park.“I don’t know what he’splanning to do there yet. butI’m hoing to keep on goingexactly as I have been. Ihave a lot of respect forBrent. I really liked his book.I’m glad he’s going to be inHyde Park.”continued on page 6few points behind the entryfrom the Uni’ersity ofWisconsin at Madison. Otherteams entered in the eventincluded Northwestern,Illinois Institute ofTechnology. Illinois MedicalCenter, and the University ofWisconsin at Lacrosse, fromthe region which includesNorthern Illinois, Mighigan.Wisconsin, and Saskat¬chewan.The winners now receivean all expense paid trip tothe national intercollegiatefinals in Chicago in AprilRape victims demandmore from police Bridge Club capturesfirst, third at regionalHEWLETT fajjPACKARD$395.00 buys Hewlett-Packard'snew HP-55 ProgrammableScientific at our place.Here s what you get1 49 Step User Memorv You can program theHP 55 yourself ro vJve your repetitive problemsautomatically. Without *.)ftwnrc Without knowinga computer language2 Full Editing Capability You can add delete orchange any program srep anytime3 branching -.1041 C onditional Test Capability TheHP-55 performs direct branches or conditional testsbased on iogie comparison!;.%6-Prc Programmed Functions anti Operation^r spanded trig and star capabilities True metreconversion capahikfv More prc-progi.unn'.ed♦unctions tli,in any other preset calculatora 20-Addre-ssable Memory Registers Ynuc-.indoregister arithmetic .m:he first P*t> Digital Tinier A unique feature A KO hour timermeasures in bexii s minutes seconds tenths andhundredths lets yt u store up to 10 splits in thefirst 10 Addressable Memorv Rcg'.teis •HP’s efficient kPN kigit system with 4 MemoryStack You srJvc all problems oik wav You cutkeystrokes time end chances r. »r ci ror* HP quality craftsmanship. Oik reason Niohe!Laureates nstoirwiuts. conquerors of Everest uni oversOO.tXJM txher pr'ifessitnvals own HP calculators.Gome test the new I IP 55 todav See how natchperformance 5'MS.MI can lxt\H i WLCTI PA C* A a! • HEWLETT-PACKARD SALEFebruary 4 through February 28,1975on the 6 models listed belowModel Regular Price Sale PriceHP 35 $225.00 168.75HP 46 815.00 715.00HP 45 325.00 299.00HP 70 275.00 253.00HP 80 395.00 363.00HP 65 795.00 731.00The Special Sale on the 6 HP models, applies toStudents, Faculty, and Employees of the Universityof Chicago.The Hewlett-Packard Representative will be in thestore to demonstrate ali the HP models plus thenew HP 55- Demo Time: 10 A.M.-2:00 P.M.Thursday, Feb. 6,1975UNIVERSITY Of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5750 5. ELLIS AVENUECHICAGO, ILLINOIS 00637Hours: Monday thru Fri. 8:00 to 5:00Saturday 9:00tol:002—Th<rf>.icope M*Jtoor»~ Tuesday. February 4. 1975Old Maroons fade away;Saving funds hard to come byBy M. CRAWFORD SCOTT/Bound copies of oldMaroons are headed for dustwith no means of preservingtheir contents because thespecial collections depart¬ment of Regenstein docs nothave the funds formicrofilming themSome of the copies, whichgo back to the 1900’s issues ofthe Daily Maroon, arealready beginning to fallapart. The paper has turnedbrown, brittle, and on somepages has begun to breakaway Bob Allison, assistantcurator for the specialcollections department saidthat they were keeping usageof the bad issues as low aspossible “But we don’t liketo do this.” he said, “becauseit is the exact opposite ofwhat an archives is supposed to be doing ’’People wanting to use oldcopies are allov ed to look atthem but are warned againstrough handling Particularlybad issues are not allowed tobe xeroxed Oddly, veryearly copies those from1900 to 1916—are in muchbetter shape than laterissues, including issues up tothe mid-60's The earlyissues are printed on betterpaper which is less acidicand does not decompose asquickly.The department has forsome time planned onmicrofilming the issues buthas been unable to fund theproject. “The price is notexorbitant’’, said Allison,“but we don’t even have $10for it.” He said, as a veryrough estimate, themicrofilming would costabout $40 $50 per year.Allison said that most ofthe funding w ould come from the library. The money isthen used according to whatthe Department feels is fngreatest need The old copiesof the Maroon are just oneamong many other pub¬lications which the department would like, insome way or another, topreserve. Because the paperwhich the Maroon is printedon is of such poor quality, theonly means of preserving thecontent is by microfilmingthe issues. Most othernewspapers are preserver! inthe same manner.Allison said that the oldcopies are depended onheavily for obtaining ahistory of the University.Other publications, such asthe University Record,which are still in goodcondition, give importantadministrative facts but donot detail the “real life of theplace.” said Allison.Harootunian opposes modernizingof Japanese History and cultureBy MARK GRUENBERY“Modernization has beenperpetrated by its advocateswith an excess of in¬consistency” when it comesto analyzing Japanesehistorv.Attacking those moderninterpretations was thetheme of a speech Tuesdayby Harry Harootunian. MaxPalevsky professor ofhistorv and civilizations inthe College. Harootunian’sspeech, attended by anoverflow crowd of 100 peoplein Harper 130. marked theofficial inauguration of thePalevsky chair to which hehad been named last year.Harootunian, whosespecialty is Japanese historyand culture, blasted theadvocates of “modern¬ization” as an explanationof Japanese history.“Modernization” had beenadvanced with rawlypolitical motives in mind,and it attempted to fitJapanese history topreconceived theories.“Japan seemed attractedbecause policymakers, withCommunist China as analternative’ in 1951. neededto find a counterpart to replace the now-discreditedChaing Kai-Shek as arepresentative of capitalistdevelopment — and as a‘showcase’ for Asiandemocracy.” Thus, saidHarootunian. they attemptedto rewrite Japanese historyin an attempt to fit theirtheories of gradualdemocratization andmodernization‘‘Nowhere in thisliterature.” Harootuniancommented, ‘ was ther^ anawareness of the human,economic and social costsJapanese Marxists, led bythe renowned historianTovoma. denounced it asboth political necessity and awrong view of Japanesehistory — failing to em¬phasize the differences inJapanese capitalistdevelopment” before andafter World War II.“Tovoma said it hinted atdeliberate distortion,’’Harootunian added.Harootunian announcedthat he agreed with thecriticisms, but felt that theydid not go far enough. He feltthat Toyoma and othersshould have criticized boththe modernization theory asa theory and the assump¬ tions lying behind it.“Modernization nowbecomes not a theory ofsocial change, but acategorization of names andstructures. It is like arailroad switchman’smanual’’ committed toshowing “a universalachievement pattern.’’Calling such atheory a “taxonomy,”Harootunian charged “Ittosses out social problems,too. like throwing the babyout with the bath water "“This type of classificationbegs the question: do welearn anything new*’” Hisanswer was negative.“Studies involving itrepresent story lines con¬figuring Japanese historv totheir specific audiences andpreconceptions.”Harootunian gave as aprime example the MeijiRestoration. Therestoration, which occurredin the years after 1868, hasbeen acknowledged to be thecatalyst for forces seeking toindustrialize Japan andmake it a workd power.“The Meiji Restorationhas been a key casualty ofcontintued on page 5THE PUBLIC AFFAIRS DEPARTMENT OF WHPK RADIO PRESENTS:“POLITICS 1975”TUIS.. FEB. 4TH. 6:30PM—ROSS LATHROP; ALDERMAN 1C CANDIDATE INTHE 3TH WARDTUES.. FEB. 11TH. 6:30 PM—AL RABY; ALDERMANIC CANDIDATE IN THE3TH WARDTUES.. FEB. 1BTH. 6:30 PM—BROADCAST OF 5TH WARD ALDERMANICFORUM WITH ALL FOUR CANDIDATES. MODERATOR. LEON DESPRES.TAPED FEB. 6TH AT THE LUTHERAN SCHOOL OF THEOLOGYWED.. FEB. 19TH. 6:30PM-RICHARD NEWHOUSE; MAYORALCANDIDATETHURS.. FIB. 20TH. 6:30PM—EDWARD HANRAHAN; MAYORALCANDIDATEFRI.. FEB. 21ST. 6:30PM—WILLIAM SINGER; MAYORAL CANDIDATEA SPECIAL SERIES PROVIDED AS A SERVICE TO THE COMMUNITY BYWHPK RADIO.PRODUCED BY: JUDSON HIXSONWHPK-88.3 FM ON YOUR RADIO DIAL , Vot Vi 2Pbe JBailp iHaroonpr** j rrot. t/NivEfbrrY or Chicago. Friday September i y iw Member UnitedUNIVERSITY STUDY°R0GRAM OFFERSAIDE FREEDOM St (ideal Group- PlanVonetjr of ActirifiMm Fretfunea Sdteduir DAILY MAROONPROVIDES UNITEDPRESS SERVICERljcci Re$*nct*on *• • ** r. • Association to Furnishon S tRjte • CcynpJer* Foreignof Progress —■*- ■ wni «*•»■* CoverageAHm «<wk tW of inUMf. Pretideot Weko»e»Student* iatenag <n5tll New PW ClaoiT. TW f •>«*• Ifdanta University Head GreetsFreshmen September 25 .Orientation Program BeiHORIZONSr <S* TU B* D>*nGet AfoftehoF>iaAm Uwul Entering StudentsFirst AssemblyMonde! Hoi!OfivnfAtMX ex* •4tw»t(«iCOUNSELOR SYSTEMAIDS NEW STUDENTSIN FACING PROBLEMSftr ritN f frAVUPhoto by Urg«s SprudztRATIONAL DISCOURSE: U.C. students, S.G., and Mayor Daley will get a chance tohear the candidates for the office of Mayor of Chicago.Candidate DebateAll of the declared can¬didates for the mayoral racein Chicago, except for in¬cumbent Richard J. Daley,are scheduled to appear oncampus tonight in a forumsponsored by the StudentGovernment (SG).Democrats Bill Singer. Edward Hanrahan. andRichard Newhouse,Republican John Hoellen.and Independent Willie MaeReid are to be at a publicreception in the BusinessEast lounge at 7 pm. whereeveryone will have the op¬portunity to meet the can¬didates The entourage will thenmove to Kent 107 for a forumchaired bv SG presidentStuart Sweet The programallows for a 15 minutepresentation and a fiveminute question-and-answerperiod for each candidate.An open question-and-answer period will follow.'Future of Belief closes seriesLeslie Dewart, author ofThe Future of Belief, willspeak on Thursday at theBrent House TheologicalForum on “The Spirit andTruth”.“The Future of Belief,”published in 1966. wasdescribed in “Com¬ monweal" as “The mostimportant Christian essay tobe published in many ayear.” Bernard Lonergansaid “This book will beepoch-making in the sensethat it will contrubute for¬cefully to the removal fromtheology of the many{ MINESTRONE CONCERT {Thursday, Feb. 6-NoonReynolds Club—SouthRONDI CHARLSTONSings Folk, Blues, & JazzBring your lunchlFree I limitations of Hellenism.”and “The Critic” describedit as “An endeavor to recastbelief, to make the transitionfrom belief in the SupremeBeing of the medieval worldto belief in the hidden god ofthe modem world ”Dewart was born in Spain,raised in Cuba, emigrated toCanada earning his doc¬torate in philosophy at theUniversity of Toronto wherehe now teachesHis books includeChristianity and Revolution.The Foundations of Belief,and Religion. I.aguage andcontinued on page 6Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHdir Designers1 620 E. 53rd S*-288 2900Tuesday, February 4, 1975—The Chicago Maroon—3University is tool of ruling classThe approaching ap¬pointment of Universitypresident Edward Levi asU.S. attorney general hasraised important questionsabout the relation betweenthe University and society asa whole, as well as thenarrower issue of the natureof the decision-makingprocess in the Universityitself.The Ford administration,unelected and decreasinglyacceptable to the victims ofits austerity programs,seeks a figurehead torefurbish the image ofAmerican capitalism’srepressive apparatus, tosupervise the return of‘'clean” bourgeois law andorder after the “loss ofconfidence” of Watergate'saftermathThe Justice Department isto be “depoliticized” i.e. it isto keep its hands off respec¬table politicians and confineits activities to the businessas usual of dispensing class“justice" and defending the“national interest" againstreds, blacks and the labormovementEdward Levi the liberalwho presided over the ex¬pulsion of student demon¬strators in 1969, theUniversity's real-estatemachinations, the breakingof the library union, cut¬backs. layoffs and the defeatof ths fall's buildings andgrounds stricke - is tograduate to the big time andwill preside over thecapitalists’ cops, courts andjails. It is only natural that thehead of a prestigiousuniversity should be chosenfor the job. The higher onegoes in the universitysystem, the more intimatethe links with the highestGADFLYcircles of monopoly capitaland its government. (It isnot accidental that Mr.Levi’s future Cabinet part¬ner. the current miracle manof American imperialistdiplomacy. Henry Kissinger,was once a Harvardprofessor.) The university-system as a whole functionsnot to provide the benefits ofeducation and culture for themajority, but to provide theruling minority with thetechnicians, administratorsand ideological prizefightersit needs for the maintenanceof its class ruleThe connection betweenthe University and thebourgeoisie - more ac¬curately. the subordinationof the former to the interestsof the latter - is mediatedmost directly through thetrustees. The board oftrustees, composed almostentirely of industrialista andfinanciers, of “society" (i.e.bourgeois interest); andwith the voice of authority. as it makes the most basicdecisions, being juridicallyand functionally the ownerof the University.The interests of thetrustees and of the capitalistclass as a whole, however,not only differ from those ofthe teachers, students andcampus workers who makeup the University; they arefundamentally opposed tothe needs of society’sworking majority. Theongoing wave of cutbacks throughout the alreadymiserably inadequateeducational system, in¬cluding the exclusiveprestige universities, offersimmediate testimony to this.The University trusteeshave begun the process ofselecting a new universitypresident. No only does theircommittee include facultymembers, but they havemagnanimously welcomedstudent advice. The Maroon(1/31/75) holds that “a student member should beadded to the selectioncommittee.” It is entirelypossible that the trustees willaccept this harmlesssuggestion; it will remainclear that any real powerbelongs to them.So the installation of a newUniversity president willproceed along the lines of thetrustees’ “statutoryobligation.’’ Should theretiring president be the nextattorney general of the United States? Forrevolutionaries this is ameaningless question Theessential function of the legaland police apparatus is theprotection of capitalistproperty and the repressionof the workers and the poor.Socialists do not recognizethe right of the bourgeoisstate to exist. The workersmust take power and themselves administer the societywhose wheels they turn.continued on page 6Photo by Eric Bu*th*rBEfcR NUTS; More pleasant faces are hoepfully expected athe the PUB.Pub stuns basketball, skellar worldBrent House Theological ForumTHE EMERGENT SPIRITThursday, Feb. 6LESLIE OEWARTProfessor, Institute of Christian Ti.ought, St.Michael s College Univ. of Toronto“The Spirit and Truth"NOTE: THIS FINAL SESSION IS ON THURSDAY)7:30 p.m. 5540 Woodla wnBRANDEIS UNIVERSITYHIATT INSTITUTE-ISRAELYear Program or Fall Term only/Also open toqualified students for the Spring Term only.Juniors and Seniors eligibleEarn 16 credits per semesterFinancial Aid AvailableApplication Deadlines:March 1 5 for FaH and YearNovember 1st for SpringFor information write:The Jacob Fliatt InstituteBrandeis UniversityWaltham, Massachusetts 02154 One free beer will be givenaway at the Pub in Ida Noyesto everyone who attends awinning varsity basketballhome game, effective im¬mediately. In a movedesigned to promote at¬tendance at men's and women’s basketball games,and to bring more people intothe Pub. all Pub memberswill be given a ticket stub atthe gate.Anyone presenting a stubfrom a winning game willreceive one free beer of theirIN CONCERT, ONE NIGHT ONLY“Father of the British Blues'John MayallplusApril Wine \ Dog SoldierFRIDAY. FEBRUARY 7TH 8:00 PM.Arie Crown TheatreMcCormick PlaceTickets $5 50. $b 50. $7 50Available at all Ticketron OutletsandArie Crown Box Office choice The next home gameis Friday, when the men takeon Lake Forest.This action by the Pub wasinspired by a series ofsimilar deals offered byMcDonald’s Hamburgers in Bloomington. Indiana If theBig Ten Universitybasketball team holds theiropponents to less than fiftypoints in a game, all ticketholders are awarded a freehamburger and Frenchfries.SPECIALDISCOUNTPRICESFOR ALL STUDENTS& FACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofCh'vjago Identification card.As Students or Faculty Members ofthe University of Chicaqo you ore en¬titled to special money savingdiscount prices on all materials usedon Volkswagen Service Work, allVolkswagen Parts, Accessories andany new or used Volkswagen you buyfrom Volkswagen South Shore.Authorized VOLKSWAGENVOD^:qen SOUTH SHOREDeoler 7234 S Stony tilondOpen Doily 9AM.to9PMOpen Saturday Sales 9 A.M.-5 PM.Paris-9 AM-12 NoonPhone 288 49:4 The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 4, 1975Facelifting hits BookstoreFive part-time studentemployees of the bookstorehave been fired as a result ofStuart Brent taking over thegeneral books section of thebookstore.These students, accordingto Laurence Arthur, generalmanager of the Universitybookstores, “each workabout ten hours a week ”They are responsible forpurchasing and selection of books in particular subjectareas “Brent will do most ofthe buying himself so thewhole job concept haschanged.” said ArthurBrent is taking overgeneral books “because hethought he could improveselection and services,” headded.Asked if the general bookssection had been losing money, Arthur replied. “It’svery hard to say if the sec¬tion was losing money or not.It has lost money in thepast.”Brent, who is under con¬tract to run general books, isnot taking over otherdepartments of the storebecause they “lie outside thescope of his interest andexperience,” according toArthur. He declined to say^ THOF chica&o,r X)b- when the contract expires.Jean Myrus, studentemployment counsellor atthe office of career coun¬seling and placement saidthat her office is trying tofind new positions for thefired students. She said thejob situation “is tight. Thereare many more peoplelooking for jobs than jobscoming in. This quarterthere’s not much turnover.”T TrtJL>-wC SfYtWftUEU-, ^ \ s _ LCt 'fousf C-FT Photo by St«vc AofciLAYOFFS: The action took place in thebookstore this week, but with the intention to alterthe operation.Harootunian lectures;m \Wl- GEE, U)HY DIDN'T YA LET .^ AbOOT TuATguy!! conti ued from page 3modernization theory.” hecharged “It has been eigherreduced to squabble amongthe ruling classes, a mildevolution of previous pat¬terns. or it has been ignoredcompletely. It is like keepingan eye on the hole, not on thedoughnut.”Harootunian said thatother explanations ofJapanese history must befound in order to liberate itfrom the “voluntary grid ofmodernity” which “can-nabalizes” it. Describing aproject he and other members of the Far FasternDepartment are working onas one example — “we lookat what people say and howthey say it” — he suggestedthese other approaches arevital to a total understandingof history“Our concerns need nolonger be continuity andstructures, but the discon¬tinuities. eruptions andchanges in structure Wemust find a direct mediativeagent, not a second-handstory line designed to fillhistorical gaps the wav wewant to.”DOMINOSUGARc $243Lb.ForLAMB SHOULDERCHOPSjrlb.HILLS BROTHERSCOFFEE9 *199rnm Lb.for X FRESHSPARERIBS89* Lb.FRESH GRADE AURGE EGGS69* 1 DozenDEL MONTEPINEAPPLEJUICE46 Oz. Can1226 E. 53rd(KIMBARK PLAZA)8:30-94)0 Mon.-Sat. Sun. 9-5 Chicago Review Speakers Serieswith the William Vaughn Moody Committeeand the Roy Gutmann Memorial Fund presentsTED BERRIGANread-" t\■nghispoetry-OT/'\ C.■ Au oj83-0 „m mmMpmTUESDAYFEB. (tejfkV4free! in reynolds club northTuesday, February 4, 1975—The Chicago Maroon—5kU.C. women halt in nationalNOTICEAll staff members of the party at the editor’sMaroon. Grey City Journal, residence this Fridayand the Literary Review are evening. Feb. 7.cordially invited to a staffWill give flexibility'continued from page 3Truth.Mr. Dewart is the con¬cluding speaker in the BrentHouse Theological Forum onthe general theme of “TheEmergent Spirit’’. DavidTracy. Joseph Sittler andcontinued from page 2Katzman modestlyassessed his achievementsso far and what he expects inthe future.“Magazines have been myexistence. It’s like a flow ofelectricity through me, andusually I can feel what’s Robert Grant of theUniversity of Chicago wereother speakers in the seriesMr. Dewart’s lecture willhe at 7:30 p m Thursday.Feb. 6. at Brent House at5540 Woodlawn, and is opento the public.right Now there arepossibilities that are like agleaming cherry that’swaiting to be pickedHopefully I’ll be a success.But I won’t feel happy untilI’m secure. I guess being thelargest store around willhelp some.” continued from page 8aspects of the tourney wasthe large turnout of Maroonfans at Friday ’s game. Theyincluded the parents andfamilies of Jeanne Dufort.Robin Drain,.Vadis Cothranand. Marguerite Kelly, Deanand Mr. Strauss. Joan Huebiand Sherry Stone of admissions, and celebratedMaroon alumni MarkBriekell and Tom CampbellIn addition, Mr. and MrsBarrett, parents of Maroonmen’s center Tony Barrett.Adelina Diamond and MikeKrauss of the Office ofPublic Information,Margaret Prince of theDevelopment office, andother alumni and prospec¬tive students cheered for theMaroon causeThere was general disguston the part of the Maroonenthusiasts for the work ofthe game’s referees. Aconsistently quick threesecond call prompted lastyear’s Student Governmentpresident Briekell to com¬ment, “the refs have Browneves.” But Coach Pat Kirbyrefused to place an> of theblame on the officiating,commenting, “we hadtrouble shooting, and Brownoutplayed us. We’re lookingforward to tomorrow and anew game and we expect tocorrect some of the thingsthat went wrong tonight.”That wasn't to be the caseeither, as it turned out. MITedged Chicago 43-35 in theconsolation game onSaturday evening.Cothran again led Chicagowith 11 points and wasnamed to the all-tournamentteam.A reception at the MITstudent center for Alumni,prospectives, and friends ofthe University was heldfollowing Friday’s game.Saturdays post-gamereception was for theplayers, coaches, and fans ofthe four teams, and afraternity party followed forthe team members.As could be expected withthe first year of any tour¬nament. there were a fewproblems News coverage interfered with the practicesessions and the teams wereforced to stay on the courtuntil 4:30 on the afternoonsbefore 6:30 games. Also,officiating was uniformlypoorer than it should havebeen for an importanttournamentMaroon guard HelenHarrison suffered an eyeinjury in a practice gamestaged for channel 7 newscameras. It made news forthe station, but hurt theMaroons in their preparationfor the openerOverall, however, thetournament and the fourdays in Cambridge were atremendous success.Naturally the players werebitterly disappointed bytheir performance, and thisdid dampen, to some extent,the enjoyment they derivedfrom their stay.Chicago Athletic DirectorMary Jean Mulvaney hasinvited all three teams backto Chicago for the tour¬nament next year and it willbe held at Radcliffe in 1977The tournament ex¬ perience will undoubtedlyprove invaluable to the teamfor the remainder of theseason, which is less thanhalfway over. Rockwell(’age was filled to capacityon Friday night and the teamhad to feel tremendouspressure with the advancepublicity and the pre-tourneyrole ot co-favorites Theexperience oi playing withthis pressure should help ttvsquad later this season in theIllinois state AIAW tournamentThe MIT Tournament didprove one thing. Women'sbasketball is an establishedprogram at this Universityand has now come a longway toward attaining thestatus that it deserves.Moreover, at universitiesacross the country, it isbeginning to enjoy thepopularity that it alreadyenjoys here.ED. NOTE: Help welcomethe Maroon team back homeon Thursday night, whenthey take on LewisUniversity in a 7 00 contestat Ida Noyes Gymnasium.Store to host readingsUniversities change CALENDARcontinued from page 4Well. then, who should bethe next president of theUniversity of Chicago0Another worthless questionThe administration is thetrustees' creature. TheUniversity must not remainin the hands of theRockefellers. Cyrus Eatonand the McCormick B!airsIt must be run by those whowork and study here: it mustbe nationalized andA Man ForOthers—A ForeignMissionaryPriestThat s what a Columban Fatheris He s a man who cares anda man who shares a man whoreaches out to missions m Asiaand Latin America to share theGood News that Jesus trulycares tor them Me s a man whocommits his life totally to othersso they can live their lives asGod intended Being aCOLUMBAN FATHERis a lough challenge but it youthink you have what it takes andare a Catholic young man. 17 to26 write today tor ourFREE 16-Page BookletCotumban Fathers c,I St Cotumbans. NEM056 lI I am interested in becoming a| Catholic Missionary Priest} Please send me your bookletI N.m.ICityZipvcoit*e« governed by the electedrepresentatives of thestudents, teachers andcampus workers. The administration and board oftrustees must be abolished!The education system as awhole must be transformedto serve the masses of Tuesday, February 4ON CAMPUSANTHRO WOMEN 4 00 p m., Ida NoyesORGAN RECITAL: Edward Mondello. 12:15. Rockefeller Chape'DOC: "Phantom Lady," 7 .TO p.m., Cobb Hall, $1.LECTURE Israel Goldiamond, A Constructional Approach to Sooai andPersonal Problems," 8 30 p m., Woodward CourtCEE: a "titles" meeting, 8 00, call Fred Wasser or Robert FineWHPK: "Op Board" meeting, 7:00. WHPK studio.DEBATE Five of the six candidates for mayor of Chicago debate the issues, 7 30p.m , Kent 107working people This canoccur only in the context ofthe all-sided aDDropriation ofthe productive and culturalresources by the workingclass, in the interest of allmankind: that is. the contextof the socialist revolution.Submitted by the Spar-tacus Youth League. OFF CAMPUSWILDERNESS ROAD: Satso S, 2464 N LincolnART: Phyllis MacDonald and Sandra Perlow show their works at the ArtemisiaGallery, 226 E Ontario, 5 8 p.mWednesday, February 5ON CAMPUSCARILLON RECITAL: Robert Lodine, 1215 p m., Rockefeller ChapelCOUNTRY DANCERS: 8 00 pm., Ida NoyesBRIDGE: 7 00 p.m., Ida Noyes HallUC WRESTLING: vs Valparaiso, 4 00 p.m , BartlettDOC: "Monte Carlo," 7 30 p.m., "C.luny Brown," 9 00 p m , Cobb SI.DISCUSSION: "The Kibbutz Faces the Future," with Israeli journalist DovBarnir, 12 00 noon, Hillel.Dorothy Smith Beauty SalonHY 3-10695841 S. Biackstoae Aw.Specializing in Tints,Bleaches. Frosting. Hair Con¬ditioning. Shaping, SoftManageable Permanents.Open Monday throngti FridayEarly Morning-late EveningClosed SaturdayCall for AppointmentStudy inGuadalajara. MexicoThe GUADALAJARA SUMMERSCHOOL a fully accredited UN!VERSITY OF ARIZONA programwill offer June 30 to August 9anthropology a:t.education folklore geography, history government. language and literatureTuition and fees.$190. board androom 6'th Mexican family $245Write to GUADALAJ ARA SUMME RSCHOOL. 413 New PsychologyUniversity of Arizona TucsonArizona 85721 LIBRARY EXHIBITS 'The Good Naturd Man Oti.er Goldsmith aBicentennial Celebration" and "The Charles Merriam Papers," 8 30 5 00 p m ,Mon Frl. 1st Floor special collectionsSEMINAR : Oavid Herne*, Quantum Numbers ter c H Scattering Resonances."4:00 p m Kent 103LECTURE. Pappachar. Kolattukudv. "Enzymatic Control of Straight Cham andMulti Branched Fatty Acids in Sebaceous Glands," * 00 pm. Cummings LifeScience CenterLECTURE "Excavations at Stop!. Yugoslavia by Elizabeth Gebhard 8 00p m , Regenstein, room A ll)OFF-CAMPUSV TATUM: art exhibit "Black Esthetics" at the Museum of Science andIndustry, Feb 5-17FREE JANE KENNEDY• Kevin Clark leads a panel discussion, 12 00 noon, LoopCenter YWCA. 37 S WabashREDWOOO LANDING Wise Fool s Pub. 2270 N LincolnThursday, February 6ON-CAMPUSWOMEN'S PMYS ED: 5 6pm, Ida NoyesTABLE TENNIS: 6 00 p m„ Ida NoyesDEBATE: 7 00 p m., Ida NoyesOBS: Organization of Black Students, 7 30 p.m., Ida NoyesGAY LIB: 7 30 p.m , Ida NoyesRELAYS: Frosh/ Soph Junior College Relays, 4:00 pm, fieldhouseUC WOMEN'S BASKETBALL: vs Lewis, 7 00p m., Ida NoyesCEF: "The Mother and the Whore," first of three complete show.ngs. 8 00 p.m ,Cobb Hall. St"OLD TIMES": 8 30 Reynolds Club Theatre, SI 50ISRAELI OANCING: 8 00 pm. MilletSEMINAR "The Hindu' (and Buddhist') Movements in the West A Study of(Phoney?) Ernies" with Agehananda Bharati, 4 10 p.m., Foster LoungeOFF-CAMPUSFAY STENDER: Soledad Brothers, Angela Davis, California Prison Cases of1970 75," Fay Stender, counsel for George Jackson, speaks at 8 00 p.m . RosaryCollege the Recital Hall. 7900 W Division St River Forest FreeCONCERT: Chicago Symphony Orchestra, 8 15 p.m.. Orchestra Hall.TRAVEL LIGHT THEATRE CO.: "Striptease" and "Rats," 8 30 p m at the BlueGargoyle5TH WARD ALOERMANIC FORUM; 7:30 p.m , Lutheran School of Theologyentfdfletnenl & wedumtf rliiatCUSTOM OISIONED ORIOINAIS A LIMITED EDITIONSBARBARA CCCRCOLD r RON J 4 0 SILVER f RON $ 15 4/1-1322If you like, youmay choosefrom a finecollectiondiamonds andotherCEF PRESENTS $1.00 ADMISSION COBB HALLTHE MOTHER & THE WHORETHURS. FEB. 6 SAT. FEB. B SUN. FEB. 9Each Evening of t P.M. Complete Showing ■i6—The Chicogo Maroon—Tuesday, February 4, 1975MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEAvail Feb9 Lge Bdrm In Sunny 81/ 2rm apt. Only *55 plus util a mth. Quietfem preferred Call Robin/ Lynda 2416256Large 2 bdrm apt available excellentcondition. Children pets oh. Din rmsunporcb March 1st 57th 8 Klmberh95S 3891House to share. 3 bdrm, fireplace,garage, mostly turn, NW Evanston,*120 mo plus 1/ 3 util. Doug 492 9775 or263 4892CHICAGO BEACH HOTELBEAUTIFUL FURNISHEDAPARTMENTS Near beach, parks,loop, UC and 1C trains, 11 mins, to loopbusses, door Modest, daily, weekly,monthly rates 24 hr desk Completehotel services 5100 5. Cornell DO 32400 Miss Smith.Two rooms for rent One single, onecan be single or double S5th 8 Ellis.Furnished Quiet. For info call Chuckor Denise at 753 1112 Revise your priorities to include U of CFolkdancers at 8 PM in Ida Noyes.Mon beginning and Sun general levelwith teaching, donation S0« Frlgeneral level, no teaching, freeExplore your understanding andincrease your awareness of sexualroles and relationships Fefc 14 16.Logos institute. Cost 160/person.*100/ couple. For more informationtel 752 5757 ext 36 or 324 6361SELF DEFENSE Streetfighting forwomen Tuesdays 4 5 30or 6 7 30 *25 8weeks in Gargoyle Call 327 0851.DINNER FOR 2 for Under *10 M ThDinner Specials The COURT HOUSEin Harper CourtPEOPLE WANTEDSCENESTHE PIRATES IS COMING, with aModern Maior General. 8 unhappypolicemen, 17 daughters (most ofwhom are beauties) and a fullorchestra Gilbert 8 Sullivan s Piratesof Penzance comes to Mandel Hall forthree performances this weekendTickets on sale now at Reynolds Clubdesk: *4 00 8. *2 50Blue Gargoyle: New expanded menuhomemade yoghurt, granola,brownies. Lunch 11:30 2:00WOMEN OFF OUR BACKS, anational women's news journal fromWashington DC is starting a sistercollective in Chicago If you would liketo be part of this process, call 465 1567 Perhaps you have not yet considered acareer in ACTUARIAL SCIENCEPlease read on think about it end ifyou are interested, call our PersonnelDepartment to discuss this careeropportunity. United InsuranceCompany has several, full timeopenings available at the ActuarialStudent level Our students receiveintensive training which allows themto attain professional status whileworking in a stimulating job We dorequire a strong math background, abachelors degree, and a desire tocomplete the series of ActuarialExaminations, in addition to the usualCompany benefits, we offer paid studytime and automatic raises upon thesuccessful completion of each examUNITED INSURANCE COMPANYOF AMERICA 329 1000. ext. 275Recorder player wants to learn fluteCan you otter lessons or flute to buy ingood condition? Please contact Hillaryat 753 2233 irm 4131TF's GRADS PROF s EARN *2000 ormore & Free 5 8 weeks in Europe,Africa, Asia Nationwide educational organization needs qualified leadersfor H $ and college groups Sendname, address, phone, school, resume,leadership experience to Center forForeign Study, PO Box 606, Ann ArborMl 48107Spend an exciting summer in Englanddoing volunteer social work Excellentexperience if you think you'reinterested In this field Applicationdeadline soon, contact the placementoffice or call 624 5772 for more infoBabysitter part time flexible hrs Myhome, campus bus rt Call 373 7149.WANTED: PART TIME CASHIER.11:30 to 3 PM Mon Fri DOWNTOWNhotel Call 346 7100 Mon Fri. 9 5 MsRickard or Mr Cemes.Part time tax work simple returnsOffice located nr. the universityEstablished 33 yrs Phone ST3 6681Mr CassnerPORTRAITS 4 for *4 and up MaynardStudios. 1459 E 53 St 2nd Floor 6434083Edgar Cayce Group now forming inHyde Park. For informationweekdays. Judy Rettich 236 0570. Or,PL 2 0839 evesPEOPLE FOR SALEFor experienced piano teacher of aillevels for group or private methodCall 947 9746 .Piano tuning, reasonable rates Days,evenings, weekends Call 752 7167, 6 10PMQuality carpentry and cabinetry atreasonable rates call Don 955T1525ASTROLOGY NATAL CHARTS 8Interpretation *10 Call 363 7370 Keeptrying. MILES ARCHER MOVERSReasonable prices ExperiencedPersonnel. Call 947 0698 or 752 6910 forinformationExpert manuscript typing IBMselectric. 947 6353 955 4195 aft 5 30At last! An intelligent and literatetypist who can also spell. CallSuzanne's Secretarial Service (nearNorth Side) 871 0565 leave messageanytimeALL typing, exp sec , IBM carbonribbon One copy FREE 684 0949Robert Stone movers. 324 6225Exp cello teacher will take all ages324 2144CREATIVE WRITING Workshop bywriter columnist, help on thesis, etc.MU4 3134.FOR SALEDunham suede hiking boots worn 1day Size 10 M *17 A *30 value 241-6987,Twin bed Excel cond Box Mattressand frame Only *60 Call Chip 3633602Furniture for sale Cheap Call 3636828 after 5CALCULATORS Intermediates. 1438 E 57th St. Forinformation call 288 3500WANTEDWe buy used photographic equipMODEL CAMERA 493 6700STUD WANTEDNeed stud service of AKC registeredpoodle, white black point, 10 to 12inches tall Feb or Mar Phone after 6evening.PAN PIZZADELIVERYThe Medici Delivers from 5 10 30 p mweekdays. 5 11 pm Saturday. 6677394 Save 60 cents if you pick it upyourselfJOURNALISTSWriters interested in working for TheChicago Maroon contact the NewsEditor, 753 3265BOOKS BOUGHTSave on Tex Instru Calculators Shopwith Deal Rep on Campus Far belowDept Store prices All Models Call753 2240 Rm 1518, 241 5496 evesNEW MODERNStarting February tlth at the LehnhotfScnooi of Music and Dance ForAdults and teen agers Jazz ModernChoreography: Beginners and Cash for used books Powells 1503 E57th St 995 7780STEP TUTORINGInterested in helping neighborhoodchildren? Student TutoringElementary Project needs volunteersto tutor students bi weekly in schoolwork or with special projects Formore information call Jay Sugarmanat 947 8804 or Mary Lou Gebka. *438266CLASSIFIED AD FORMDATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: UC PEOPLE50* per line40* per line to repeat NON-UC PEOPLE75* per line60* per line to repeatThere are 35 spaces per line, including all letters,spaces, and punctuation marks. Circle all lettersto be capitalized.All Ads Paid in AdvanceHEADINGS: There is no charge for regular headings (i.e., For sale,Space, People Wanted, etc.). Your own heading (15 spaces)costs $1.00 (75* to repeat) per line.HEADING- REFRIGERATORRENTALMint frige. Pennies a day. Freedelivery Call Swan Rental 721 4400,WOMEN'S MAGAZINEPRIMAVERA, the women'* literarymagazine, is on sale tor *1 50 at the IdaNoyes information desk and theReynolds ClubTENNIS LESSONSProfessional Tennis lessons ages 1 to18 Cheap Hyde Park Y M C ATennis Lessons tor Adults Only *10 for14 hours Jim Smith TE4 7230CONDO SALE55.000 Madison Pk 624 5499 3 baths, 4bdrm w/ wall to wall carp L vrm,firepl. dishwasher, self cln ovenWasn. dryer, drapesWANTEDInking device for Gestetnermimeograph *360 Call 241 5438WILD ONIONSJanuary issue now on sale in Cobbfoyer, Reynolds Club, and at IdaNoyes desk Entries for May issue nowbeing taken Deadline May 2LOST “ 3ZTLost gold signet ring initials ACWsentimental value Lge reward 2886479.CLASSIFIEDSMaroon Classifieds are charged by theime. 35 spaces per line 50< per line forUC people. 40< per line to repeat 75«per line tor non UC people, 6G< torepeat Ads must be submitted inperson or mailed to the Maroon, 1212E 59th St . Chicago 60637 No ads willbe taken over the phone The ads mustBe paid in advance Deadline torTuesday's paper is Friday at 3:30,deadline for Friday's paper isWednesday at 3 30 For furtherinformation calf 753 3265PERSONALScose your lunchtime blues at theGargoyle Daily 11 30 to 2 00Witnesses to accident occurringFriday. Jan 24, 1975 at 57th 8Biackstone about 5 PM, where elderlylady was struck by auto, please callner daughter. Paf Bradley, at 288 1799Sec y needs daily r,de from LansingYorks 8 30 5 x 3 2824PREGNANCY TESTING10 AM 2 PM Saturday 81 50 donationAugustana Church at 55th 8Woodiawn.By the South SideWomen's Health ServicesSouth Side Rape Crisis Line 667 4014.A referral and moral supportcommunity service We can help!WRITERS WORKSHOP (PL 2 8377)Writing HELP by professionals forthesis, report, speech, etc. MU 4-3124Where are my gallant ships?VERSAILLES5254 S. Dorch*st»rWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGATTRACTIVE 1 % AND2% ROOM STUDIOSTURN ISMKDor UNTURN ISHKD$117,o $209Based or AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus StopFA 4-0200 Mrs. GroakMENi-WOMENlJOBS ON SHIPS' Noraqui'od. E*calloni pay Woridw.dafrovei Perfoc, »ummor tob or corawSand $3 00 for information SEAFAXDap, FI4 PO Be. 2049 Por,An gala* Wo*h<ng,on 98362PHILOSOPHYsex. ASTROLOGY.rrciMPkfU IvCArSOOV You nama iha <*#giaa a»d •< » yours Ml dagraat «'« cuetom-mada to' you and ara hand Im.ahadin old angnah ecnp, on gonutno parch-man, papa' compiaw aitti a fold aaalSatisfaction (vartmaae * Decree* aal fanauMOnty *8 *5 (Shipped bi • teeWn« tube.)*14.86 (Mandaomary iraawd raatfy io hang.)Ptaaaa alio* ) *aoka tor doiraory Toordor aand your naano. aha' you vent yourdagrar in. and a choc* o* money ordor tommn mu p * *■ «**. m*. a. ***•7i»**<4qy F*fcf.JQrv 4 !9?s TKa Chkogo Motoort—7iChicago women lose two at MITBrown over Radcliftein championshipTourney at Chicago next yearThe University’s women'sbasketball program came ofage this weekend in Cam¬bridge, Massachusettsduring the first MIT In¬vitational Tournament andthe festivities surrounding it.The tournament was anexciting experience for themembers of the basketball team and those associatedwith it. In fact, the only thinglacking at its conclusion wasa victory by the Chicagosquad. Recognized as amilestone in women's sports,the Boston press accorded agreat deal of attention to thetourne\.Two of the three BostonDRAIN: Battling for rebound are Maroons Robin Drain(V213) and laura Silvieus. networks did film featureson the tourney with the focuson the Chicago teamMaroon guards PatriciaGray and Jeanne Dufortwere both interviewed andWBZ reported. “MIT. whilenot in Chicago’s class, hasgreat enthusiasm for theirprogram.”T he MIT campusnewspaper. The Tech,previewed, “On paper, atleast. Friday’s second game(Chicago-B rown) cou!d befor the championship.Chicago.has threescholarship athletes on theteam...and can probably beconsidered the favorite towin the MIT event.”While that was not to bethe case, the Brown teamwhich defeated Chicago 59-38. on Friday, did run awaywith the tournament clippingRadcliffe 67-37 for thechampionship.A tough full court trappress proved to be theMaroon’s undoing in the firstgame. Brown repeatedlyforced the Chicago team intocostly turnovers which theyoften converted into baskets.The Maroons trailed only8-7 at the 14 minute mark ofthe first half, but at thatpoint the Brown press andsome cold Chicago shootingled to a string of 12 con¬secutive Bruin points and a20-7 lead for the Providencesquad.Behind Vadis Cothran anda substitute guard MelindaFord. Chicago cut thehalftime deficit to 6 at 25-19.Cothran scored theopening bucket of the secondhalf and the Maroons wereback in the game, trailing byonly four. Shortly thereafter,however, the 5T1” Marooncenter drew her fourth fouland had to bide her time onthe benchMeanwhile. Brown wasable- to string together 8points and pull to a 33-21advantage after which UCwas never in the game.Cothran fouled out wnth11:24 remaining, leadingChicago with 11 points and 9rebounds. Emily Townes,5’9” Chicago forward, pulleddown 8 rebounds in the gameand played very wellThe Maroons managed toshoot only 22.4% for thecontest, compared to 30.9% SILVIEUS: Maroon sophomore guardMarguerite Kelly positions for rebound. laura Silvieus releases jump shot asPhoto by Don De Hoinou*. courtesty WIT TFCHNIQUtTOWNES: Chicago forward Emily Townes goes up for two as Brown defenderpressures from Dehind. Watching (from I to r) are Kelly, Helen Harrison, andClaire Orner.for BrownChicago was outrebounded65-54. but was annihilated onthe offensive boards 33-17.The combination of theBrum's ability to get thesecond and third shot bycontrolling their boards, andthe numerous UC turnoversgave Brown 82 shots in thegame to Chicago’s 58.One of the most interestingcontinued on page 6drop third gome in rowMenThe Maroon men’sbasketball team was thevictim of two hot-shootingguards Saturday night atNiles College and the resultwas a 71-56 Chicago defeat,their first ever at the handsof the Lions.Freshman guard PatMcHugh of Chicago’sQuigley South High shot 6 foi7 from the field in the firsthalf of his backcourtteammate Mike Mullins hit 8of 9 to lead Niles to a 46 35halftime advantage. The twoguards combined for 33 firsthalf points on their 87.5%shooting. Center Dick Kloakadded 12 more in the openinghaif, as 43 of the Niles 46points came from threeplayers.At the outset if appeared8—The Chicago Maroon— that Chicago was going torun away to a big lead as theMaroon front line of TonyBarrett. Darryl Bradley aridCarey Hines was devastatingin the opening minutes.Chicago opened to a 6-0 leadwith each of the threefrontcourters getting abasket Bradley and Barrettadded two more apiece asthe Maroons pulled to a 14-10advantage.The game was close untilthe last five minutes of thefirst half at w hich point Nilesscored thirteen unansweredpoints to pull to a 43-27 lead.The Maroons opened thesecond half as impressivelyas they opened the first,outscoring the Lions 7-2 topull back within 6 at 48-42.Good work on the offensiveTuesday, February 4, 1975 boards by Barrett enabledChicago to pull that closeThe Maroons weren’t ableto work their offense ef¬fectively. however and withNiles’ Kloak pulling down Itsecond half rebounds, theLions were able to stretchthe finai margin to 15. Nilesshowed excellent patiencelate in the game, working theball for stretches of twominutes against the Chicagopressure defense and win¬ding up with good shots.Kloak gathered 18rebounds in the contest, themost for any Maroon op¬ponent this season. MikeMullen wound up with 25points for the game whileMcHugh added i9 althoughsitting out most of the secondhalf with four personal fouls. Chicago was led in scoringby Hines with 12 followedclosely by Barrett with 11Barrett added l! rebounds tolead the teamThe Maroons next gamewill be Friday evening athome against a tough squadfrom Lake Forest College.The Foresters clippedChicago 73-51 last week atLake Forest so the Maroonswill have to regroup fromtheir three consecutivelosses and put together agood effort to get back in thewin column Their unofficialrecord on the season is 8-4 (6-4 officially with the NCAA).Friday's game is at 7:30 inthe Fieldhouse, 56th andUniversity , , IM Basketball top tenIM BASKETBALL TOP 101. The Zephyrs 6-0(6)2. The Billikens 7-03. Coulter House #17-04. Psi Upsilon 5-05. Alpha Delta Phi 6-06. The Business School 5-17. The Klingons6-08. TWNN (Team with no name) 6-19. Phi Gamma Delta 6-010. Hill #244 5-1Others receiving votes: Dodd Mead, EPOD, IHouse #1, Linn House, Upper Fiint, Salisbury,Last Chance, Vincent.HOW TOP TEN FAREDZephyrs by forfeit over Wide Open ClassroomB School 66 Second Balcony 20B School 54 Wide Open Classroom 38Zephyrs 67 Maryland 36’ers 38B School 71 Maryland 56’ers 3?Zephyrs 33 Common Law Seals 38Phi Gamm 38 Upper Flint 28Phi Gamm 26 Lower Rickert 18Klingons 55 Hill #244 39Coulter #1 70 Linn House 17TWNN 85 Penguins 21Coulter #1 59 Basket Cases 23TWNN 86 Linn House 18Psi Upsilon 61 Hitchcock West 12Psi Upsilon 38 Vincent 32Alpha Delta Phi 49 Upper Rickert 18'• ' ■' • ' 1 * - •- =: - I,, . . ■I