The Chicago MaroonVolume 84, Number 37 The University of Chicago Tuesday, February 18, 1975Wilson names new veepsJohn Wilson, provost andacting president of theUniversity, has appointed D.Gale Johnson vice-presidentand dean of faculties, andChauncy Harris as vice- president for academicresources.The appointments wereapproved by the board oftrustees on February 13.The position of vice- president and dean offaculties has not been filledsince the late 1960’s whenWilson held the post.Johnson will have directresponsibility for Universitylibraries and thecomputation center. Theseduties were part of Wilson’sjob as provost. Johnson willcontinue to direct theUniversity economic studiesthat he has organized overthe past three years. Otherduties may be assigned toJohnson in the future.As vice-president foracademic resources Harriswill work with the faculty onprograms in support of theUniversity’s major funddrive and on similarprograms involving trusteesand other supporters of theUniversity.Since July 1973, Harris hasbeen special assistant to thepresident, co-ordinatingplans and programs foracademic development inconnection with fund raisingefforts. Johnson received a BSdegree from Iowa StateCollege in 1938 and an MSfrom the University ofWisconsin in 1939 In 1944 hebecame a research associateat Chicago and ten yearslater was made a professorIn 1960, Johnson wasappointed dean of the socialsciences division, a post heheld for ten years. He wasnamed the Eliakim HastingsMoore distinguished serviceprofessor in 1973.Harris received his PhDfrom the University in 1940and joined the faculty here in1943. He served as dean ofsocial sciences division from1955 to 1960. Harris iscurrently director of thecenter for internationalstudies. He was chairman ofthe department of geographyfrom 1967-69Harris specializes in thestudy of Soviet urban andeconomic geography and ispresently secretary-generalof the InternationalGeographical Union.HARRISVicepresident for academic resources.Search group rejects LSA pleaBy M. CRAWFORD SCOTTA request passed'unanimously February 6 bythe Law Student Association(LSA) asking that a studentbe accepted to the deanselection committee hasbeen unanimously rejectedby the committee. Thecommittee, citing a statute,felt that student membershipon the committee or a non¬voting student memberwould be against the spirit ofthe statute.The decision waspresented to Chuck Wolf,president of LSA, by WalterBlum, chairman of the deanselection committee, lastTuesday. Blum told Wolfthat a ruling by the actingpresident and board oftrustees would be required topermit the appointment of astudent member.The committee is sear¬ching fo a dean to replacePhil Neal who will resign atthe end of this academicyear.The LSA request statedthat LSA is “committed tothe view that student in¬terests weigh heavily in thesearch for Dean Neal’ssuccessor,” that LSA hasresolved that the committeeshould “immediately takesteps to assure studentparticipation in this im¬portant decision,” and that,therefore, LSA requests thatthe committee accept onestudent member, to be ap¬pointed by LSA. LSA is composed of fiverepresentatives from eachclass, plus one presidentchosen by the entire studentbody of the law school.The cited statute, enactedby the board of trustees,states that “When the Deanof a division, school, orCollege is to be appointed,the faculty shall elect acommittee whose duty shallbe to confer with thepresident or the provost, toascertain the suggestionsand preferences of facultymembers and to make a listof candidates...”In an interview with theMaroon, Wolf said he feltthat the results would havebeen the same if there hadbeen no statute. “I think thatif you read the words of thestatute it is not at all clear that the committee must bemade up exclusively offaculty members, so I don’tthink the statute is a suf¬ficient answer. But I believethat the law faculty,probably like the rest of thefaculty of the University,feels that this sort of decisionand most importantdecisions are facultydecisions and that thestudents should not haveanything to say about it.”Commenting on this,Stanley Katz, one of thecommittee members, saidthat the committee did notdiscuss whether studentsshould or should not be on thecommittee, but if they couldaccording to Universityregulations. “We were justdoing what Universityregulations required us to do.”Wolf, although he more orless expected the refusal,was disappointed. “I thinkthat the unexpressed ideawas that the faculty does notfeel that the students arecompetent to participate inthis decision and I almostwish that they’d saidthat—we could be even moreindignant.”Wolf wasn't sure what LSAwould do next. He said hewould be willing to take it tothe trustees but ispessimistic about the result.“I think the faculty andtrustees at this Universityreally have their headstogether. They know whatthey want, it’s not what Iwant, and that’s it".Blum had no comment onthe decision.Inside this issue:Hitchcock hailed p.2Mellon munificent p. 3Varsity victorious p. 8 JOHNSON Vice president and dean of faculties.Aldermanic candidatesgather at Blue GargoyleBy STEVE DURBINAldermanic candidateSquire Lance charged fellow-fifth ward candidates A1Ftaby and Ross Lathrop. at apublic forum Sundayevening, with trying to“buy” regular Democraticprecinct workers.Lance told the small crowdof about 35 people at the BlueGargoyle that MarshallKorshak. fifth wardDemocratic committeemenand kingpin in localDemocratic politics, haddecided not to endorse any ofthe four aldermaniccandidates, thus freeing allof the precinct captains towork for the candidate oftheir choice.Raby and Lathrop deniedthe charge.Sidney Ervin Williams, thefourth man in the race,accused “the press and themass media” with “doing itsbest to mislead the public”by not reporting on all of thecandidates’ activities.Williams charged A1 Rabywith going to the North Sideand to Springfield to raisemoney. Williams revealed aposter which advertised afundraising party for Ftabyin Springfield, the poster,entitled “Mr Ftaby Goes toTown; the Making of aChicago Alderman,” waspaid for by the Citizens forFtaby with a post-office boxin Springfield, Ill.By bringing up hisSpringfield connections,Williams accused Ftaby ofbeing “a Walker man”, acharge which Ftaby has beentrying to shake throughoutthe campaign. Rabyresigned recently as directorof the Illinois HousingDevelopment Authority, a post he held under GovernorWalkerWilliams further chargedLathrop and Lance withdistributing campaignliterature at polling placeson the registration day, apractice which violatesIllinois voting laws. Bothcandidates denied thecharges.In his presentation, Rabyexplained his recent decisionto endorse Bill Singer formayor. “There was a timewhen I was doubtful that he(Singer) could run a suc¬cessful campaign.. However,sometimes it is only a ver>small difference betweenwinning and losing,” andRaby offered hisendorsement in case it couldmake such a difference.Lathrop created acontroversy when hesuggested some kind of“identification of repeatedshoplifters for thebusinessmen on 71st St,’’ as away of preventing crime. Healso suggested that “it istime to organise realtors,create standards for theirbusiness, and hold themaccountable to thosestandards.”After suffering through abungled introduction,Williams described his plansto create a ward council withelected representatives fromeach precinct. He wouldconsult with the council onthe issues which he wouldhave to vote on in the citycouncil.“I don’t want to be aleader, because leaders inthis country get their brainsblown out. I’d rather be aspokesman for thecommunity, and vote forwhat the community wants.”Hitchcock becomes "historical place"By ROBIN PRINCEHitchcock Hall, theUniversity dormitorylocated at 1009 East 57th St.,has been placed on theNational Register ofHistorical Places.“The reason Hitchcockwas selected has to do withDon’t miss the currentUniversity Theatreproduction of Feydeau’sFrench bedroom farce, AFLEA IN HER EAR. Theset is done in the art nouveaustyle of F'evdeau’s con¬temporary, AlphonseMucha Performances will its architect, DwightPerkins,” said director ofstudent housing EdwardTurkington. The dormitory,built in 1902, displays somefeatures characteristic of the“Prairie” school of ar¬chitecture, of which FrankLloyd Wright was a primemover.be Feb. 20-24. for oneweekend only. Times are8:30 each evening with a 3p.m. matinee on Sunday,Feb. 23. Tickets are $3 or $2for students and seniorcitizens, and they will beavailable at the door. The dormitory, whichhouses 104 male students,includes between 35 and 40single rooms. It is dividedinto five four-story sections,which are joined by a foyer¬like cloister at the front ofthe building, and a hallwayin the basement.Interior renovations weremade over a period ending in1972, and were accomplished“with very few changes tothe building.” according toTurkington.“The major things werethat we moved section oneand the section five stair¬well,” said Turkington.Mr. and Mrs. PeterDembowski, residentmasters of Hitchcock andSnell, an adjoining dor¬mitory. were pleased with the idea that historicalpreservation might be ex¬tended to the buildingthrough its inclusion in theNational Registry.“Buildings 70 years old aredestroyed so often,” saidMrs Dembowski, “They aretorn down—like nothing!”They both pointed out thatsome of the dormitory’smore outstanding featuresare the large suites andfireplaces in the building, aswell as the elaborate carvingin the main lounge and on theexterior facade.“But that carving in thelounge is not plaster,”stressed Dembowski.In a description of thePrairie school features of thebuilding, a prairie flowerpattern on the beams of the main lounge had beendescribed as carved out ofplaster, the resident mastersnoted.“Those designs are carvedwood.”Mrs. Dembowski said thata previous superintendant,some years past, had ap¬parently had the carvingspainted over, concealing thenatural wood finish.“In a way, you can ac¬tually see the designs better,in more detail,” as a result ofthe painting, according toMrs. Dembowski.The interior division of thebuilding into sections isreminiscent of thetraditional “house system”found in some older Englishand American universitydormitories. Each section constitutes a separate unit.Noting that the system isnot really practical, in someways the Dembowskis wenton to say that never the less,most students residing inHitchcock seemed to like it.However, if the sectionsystem had been a casualtyof the renovations, theoriginal interior structurewould have been drasticallyaltered.The plan was to havehalls,” said Mrs. Dem¬bowski. “Turkington, havinglived here, appreciated theidea of sections. It was onlythrough the concern ofTurkington that the sectionsremain.”Originally, though, unlikecontinued on page 6UT plays this weekendAUDITIONSforUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOCHAMBER ORCHESTRAwill be heldThurs., Feb 20-9a.m. - 12:30p.m.Fri., Feb. 21 -10 a m. - 12:30 p.m.atLFXINCTON HALLcall 373-7342eveningsfor appointments PURIM PARTYHILLEL HOUSE571 5 S. WoodlawnFEB. 24-8 P.M.LIVE MUSIC-FOLK DANCING-PURIM SPIEL-ENTERTAINMENT-PLENTY OF FOOD & DRINK! MINESTRONE CONCERTThurs., Teb. 20, NoonReynolds Club—SouthRochelle BernsteinContemporary Folk MusicBring your lunch!Free! 1( VU.S.D.A. CHOICEP0RTERH0USSTEAK*12 CAMPBELL'SE Jt. CHICKEN00DLIw Cans n gasoup ipChickene a Noodle4 Ifor AU.S.D.A. CHOICE ^SS" $ "$139 V 3 FTNING$i»Lb.Can AWHITE CLOUD U.SBATHROOM GR0UTISSUE2 Roll Pack 2 For 85* .D.A. CHOICEND ROUND$119JL Per Lb.1226 E. 53rd(KIMBARK PLAZA)8:30-9:00 Mon.-Sat. Sun. 9-5 TOWARDA REAL BOOKSTOREIt will take a while to create theambience we have in mind.Meantime, we welcome your orderfor any book in print. ChargeAccounts will gladly be arranged forU. of C. students, faculty, and staffwho qualify.STUART BRENTMANAGER2 The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, February 18, 1975“u| D» WILLOW1! COWUATLtAT^LETTERS TO THE EDITOR CtM 'iO1* AffwWlWllT TO *r-T"^pfESflOtf 0F™f uN"lf rr Musr Be » ‘»e.t Ht"°*M w> t» 8f 10 7* fwsnw* ^KTDOWO THIN*OF IT??GalloThis Wednesday,February 19, a represen¬tative of the Gallo winecompany will be recruitingat the business school. Thecontinued prosperity of sucha large enterprise dependson its ability to attract talentproduced at institutions likethe University of Chicago;but more important, it hasdepended on the exploitationof the farmworkers who tendErnest and Julio’svineyards.To improve their harshconditions and low wages,Gallo employees forced thecompany to recognize theirunion, the United Farm¬workers, and to sign con¬tracts with the UFW Thesecontracts, gained in 1970,meant an immediate im¬provement in their lives;union hiring halls replaced ahated labor contractorsystem, sanitary facilitiesreplaced inhuman drinkingand restroom conditions, andwages leapt upward forworkers in the lowest paideconomic sector in thecountry.In 1973, Gallo broke thesecontracts and replaced themwith much inferior ones,negotiated with Teamsterofficials without the consentof the farmworkers. Sincethen, the UFW has promoteda nation-wide boycott ofGallo products, as Gallo has increased its advertisingbudget by 2-3 times pushedfalse counter-propaganda.The boycott has recentlybeen escalated in theChicago area; at this point,all the major liquor retailersin Hyde Park,- with the ex¬ception of Walgreens, haveagreed to remove or coverup Gallo wines. Meanwhile,the boycott of non-uniongrapes and lettuce con¬tinues.The UFW has called for apicket of Wednesday’s visitby the Gallo recruiter. Weask all the supporters of thefarmworkers’ cause to joinus at Haskell Hall from12:15-12:45. If we canrecapture some of the en¬thusiasm of the anti-warmovement of a few yearsago. when representatives offirms like Dow ChemicalCorporation became hesitantto show their faces oncampuses, then we canaccelerate the success of thefarmworkers’ struggle fortheir rights and welfarePeter DraperRichard GrossmanUC Farmworker SupportCommittee OF wfSSSf/GrL- ■ ■h’jptzisCSou -ItwTtlU\w w \[L V*Vfilk 45*=N0WTV*'*'01 ^ fCif*M>r Mf „ ,'.j-OfcrriiMueller supportsfaculty studies at fees forRegensteinLithuaniaTen years ahead of itstime, the EncyclopediaBritannica now seams tohave embraced 1984standards. In a trulycontinued on page 4 I have recently receivedfrom a distinguished facultycolleague, friend, andneighbor a request to sign astatement to the libraryboard, the faculty committeewhich, is a sense unclear tome, “runs” the University ofChicago Libraries. Thestatement asks for theIMPORTANTSTRATEGY MEETINGFOR PRE-MEDSThursday, February 20 5:00 P.M.Harper 130Mrs. Sheila Putzel, Pre-med Adviser willpreside. The do's and don'ts of applying tomedical school will be discussed. All studen¬ts who plan to apply this year are urged toattend. abolition of fees currentlycharged for faculty studiesin Regenstein Library. Myfirst inclination was toignore the request’ mysecond was to write a letterto the board expressing mysupport for the idea of suchfees. However, the more Iconsidered the matter themore it seemed to me toinvolve issues of generalimportance in theUniversity, particularly inthe light of the recent changein library charges forstudents. The issues seemsufficiently important towarrant a public discussionof them.Since I was not in Chicagowhen the fees for faculty-studies were imposed, I amnot certain of the motivationfor them. Originally Ithought it had to do with thedesire to cut financial lossesat the libraries exactly as theincreases in student feeswere intended to do. Somepeople have tbld me,however, that the purpose ofthe fees was to eliminate theexcess demand for studies; it was reasoned that theimposition of moderate fees$10-$20 a quarters) wouldreduce the number of facultymembers seeking studiesIf such was the reasoning,it apparently proved correct.GADFLYI gather that the waiting listfor studies has vanished andthat there are a number ofunoccupied studies availablefor immediate rental.The statement I was askedto sign suggests two“reasons” FOR THEABOLITION OF THE FEESThe first is a straightforwardmoral claim given withoutsupport. ‘‘The University-should not charge fees forfaculty members to use amajor facility to theresearch library which isMellon gives 1.4 millionfor young humanistsThe Andrew W. MellonFoundation of New Y’ork hasawarded the University $1.4million for the support ofyoung, non-tenured scholarsin the humanities.The grant provides theUniversity with $400,000 inspendable resources for thenext three to five years and$1 million as an endowment.“This is one of the finestkinds of grants a universitycan receive,” John T.Wilson, provost and actingpresident of the Universitysaid, “and it will help sustaina flow of young facultymembers into thisUniversity.”Nathan Pusey. foundationpresident, wrote to the University: “The award ..issimply to enable you to havea few additional posts—teaching positions or post¬doctoral fellowships—avail¬able for appointment . Weshould be especially happyto see young humanists...assisted to be kept alive asscholars by being given op¬portunities again to enjoythe stimulation of workingwith colleagues in the kindof major academic communi¬ty you provide.”Humanities is one of thefour major divisions at theUniversity. More than 200faculty members teach thedivision’s 24 programs ofstudy. essential to their work at theUniversity.” I have talkedwith faculty members whobelieve this claim, but I havebeen unable to find out whythey do Perhaps I am notsensitive to the moralsubtleties involved. In anycase the studies would seemto me more a conveniencethan a facility, if a facility issomething other than aconvenience.Most faculty membershave offices within fiveminutes of the library, andmost researchedsuccessfully before librarystudies came into existenceat Chicago with RegensteinLibrary. So far as I know, theadvent of these studies hasnot greatly affected ihequality or quantity ofresearch done by the faculty.In saying these things I donot mean to denigrate thevalue of Regenstein studies.They provide the bestconditions for academicwork I have ever knownconditions which I for oneam willing to pay forBefore leaving the moralclaim. I would like to pointout the contrast between itand current library policyfor students. The studentsmost adversely affected bythis policy are people writingPh D. dissertations whohave paid for 27 courses andhence no longer need toregister. These studentshave to pay a fee of $50 aquarter, not for a convenientplace to work, but to be ableto borrow books from thelibrary. Since referenceprivileges are free suchstudents, the ability toborrow books might beconstructed as a mereconvenienceThe correctness of such aconstrual would depend onthe precise specification ofreference privilegesHowever, it is hard toimagine anyone arguing thatlibrary studies are moreimportant for research thancontinued on poge 4Tuesday, February 18, 1975 - The Chicago Maroon—3acao LETTERS TO THE EDITORcontinued from page 3Orwellian fashion, the newedition has rewritten thehistory of Lithuaniaaccording to Sovietspecifications.Although neither theUnited States nor GreatBritain accepts the forceableincorporation of Lithuaniainto the Soviet Union, this“sovereign” encyclopediahas also granted diplomaticrecognition to the“Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic”.This new LSSR article isnot just a new version - it is aperversion of historical fact.It does not mention theLithuanian Declaration ofIndependence of Feb. 16,1918. It does not mention thatthis country was invaded bythe Soviet Army in 1940,which then established the‘Soviet Socialist Republic”.It does not mention thepresent struggles of theLithuanian people forcultural identity, religious freedom and political self-determination. Ittransliterates Lithuaniannames, titles and locales intonon-Cyrillic Russian.Lithuanians know thepernicious power of thepervasive lie all too well. Ourcousins in Lithuania wouldbe surprised to learn thatMarconi invented thetelegraph, AlexanderGraham Bell the telephoneand the Wright brothers theairplane. After all, their SSRcontinued on page 6Graduate students' feescontinued from page 3borrowing privileges. Thus,whatever the force of theclaim that the Universityshould not charge facultymembers for studies. I fail tosee how it can be compatiblewith the claim that it maycharge unregistered “paidup” graduate studentsworking on disserations forborrowing privileges.The statement to theLibrary board continues,“These fees are especiallyunfortunate in their effectupon younger facultymembers who are beingasked to return a portion oftheir beginning salaries inorder to do the researchdemanded of them” I am unable to judge the effect ofthe fees on younger facultymembers.M y salary is relativelylow ($15,500), but my wifeearns an equal amount, sothat $15 a quarter for theconvenience of a study ishardly burdensome. It alsohappens that the mostviolent complaints about thefees which I have heard havecome from senior faculty. Inany case if the charges areinequitable (and I amconvinced they are), the feeschedule can obviously bechanged. Again what strikesme is the contrast with thestudents. Whateverbeginning slaries are, I amsure that many of ourstudents would feel prosperous if they had halfas much income.What are the generallessons to be drawn from thissituation? The first which Iwish to draw concerns afragment of the politicalstructure of this university.It is often said that thefaculty run the Universityof Chicago. The statementto the library board,which I have describedin full, is a petition fromfaculty members tofaculty members asking thata financial charge imposedon faculty members berescinded.I have no idea how manywill sign the petition nor thereasons they will have fordoing so, but in general petitions seeking toeliminate a financial chargedo fairly well among peopleon whom the charge isimposed. My sense of theway the University runs isthat if a fair number ofpeople, including some of the“right” people, sign thepetition, it will not only begiven a serious hearing butprobably the petition will begranted, if only in the form ofa temporary rescinding ofthe fees pendingreconsideration of the policy.Why does it seem soimpossible for students togain the same kind of serioushearing?In conclusion I would liketo make a remark which isprobably of more directYOU ALWAYS WANTEDTO START AT THE TORRIGHT?Next to being president, thebest thing is to sit across thedesk from the1 president onequal terms. And that's whatwe have in mind for you.A career that will be challeng¬ing. because you'll be dealingwith top management. A careerthat will be rewarding, becauseyou'll be helping companies de¬velop programs to benefit theiremployees by the thousands.The field we re talking about issophisticated. It will call on allthe expertise you've acquiredin college, and a great deal more —whichwe ll provide. It will demand constantgrowth and continuous learning from you.It means a salaried career that has highincome; and management potential. Still with us? Then you’reprobably the; kind of personwe’d like to talk to. Ourcareer representative willbe on your campus sometimesoon, to discuss several oppor¬tunities in our Group Marketingdivision — the division thatdevelops, sells and servicespension and profit sharing plans,group life, health and dentalinsurance, and other importantbenefit plans. We're one of theleading insurers in North Amer¬ica with over $21 billion ofinsurance in force, protecting over 2 millionpeople. Arrange an appointment nowby seeing your Campus Career PlacementDirector. Let’s discuss how each of usmeasures up.THEGreat-West LifeASSURANCE COMPANYSUITE 1300-QNE PARK CENTRAL.1515 ARAPAHOE STREET.DENVER. COLORADO 80202An equal opportunity employer$ The Chicago Maroon -TuosHoy February 18, 1975 inequitableconcern to faculty than tostudents. Regenstein libraryis one of the great glories notonly of the University ofChicago but of the academicworld. My persona 1impression is that its qualityas a research library hasdeclined steadily since it wasbuilt; collections have notbeen maintained at theiroriginal high level.The reason for the declineis almost certainly financial;it is impossible to buy thenecessary books andjournals. I do not believe theUniversity of Chicago owesme Regenstein library orany feature of it. Rather Iconsider myself lucky to txat an institution with such alibrary and obligated by the great benefits I receive fromthe library to support it inevery way I can, includingfinancially. I hope that someother faculty members feelthe same way. On the otherhand, at a time whenstudents are being asked topay more and more for theireducation here although thelikelihood of their getting ajob in which they can usetheir education becomes lessand less, it seems to mesimply wrong to ask them tobear an increased burden ofsupport for a library whichthey use tor a few years onlybut which faculty membersuse throughout theirscholarly lives.Ian MuellerDepartment of PhilosophyBuild yourSALES/MARKETINGMANAGEMENTCAREERwith Hilti, the leading world¬wide manufacturer of fasteningsystems for construction.If you are receiving a degree (MBA desired) and have at least one year ofbusiness (sales experience extremelyhelpful) or military experience and areanxious to grow, an exceptional futurecould await you in line sales management, at our corporate headquarters or atone of our many regional offices throughthe U S.We require an aggressive, successoriented and extremely versatileindividual with the ability to excel ineither a line sales or a staff positionOur intensive field sales training program,which lasts up to one year, leads directlyto an assignment in one of the followingareas■ District Sales Manager with supervisoryresponsibility for 4 to 8 salesmen.■ Market Planning Manager with respon¬sibility for an entire Sales Region.Compensation while you are training can be in the mid to upperteens depending upon your qualifications and locationWe are a young, tough, hard driving organization with the fastest growthrate in the industry We have doubled in size during the last three years.If you are prepared to meetthis challenging opportunity,contact your Placement Officeand sign up for an interviewOur representative will be oncampus February 19FASTENING SYSTEMS FOR CONSTRUCTIONONE CUMMINGS POINT ROADSTAMFORD, CONN 06904An equal opoortumty employer M/ FCALENDAR College offers Englishscholarship to seniorsTuesday February 18ON-CAMPUSANTHRO WOMEN: 4 00 pm Ida NoyesORGAN RECITAL Edward Mondello 12:15 pm Rockefeller ChapelUC WOMEN'S B BALL: vs Circle 7 00p m Ida NoyesUC MEN'S B BALL: vs M» Senario 7 30pm Field HouseDOC: "A Kiss Before Dying" at 7 30 p m and "Hitler's Madman" at 9 00 p mCobb $1FIRESIDE CONCERT: The Music Society Recorders 8 00 pm Brent House 5540S Wood lawnWOODWARD CT LECTURE: John Hope Franklin "The Moral Legacy of theFounding Fathers" 8 30 p m Woodward CourtMEETING: mandatory meeting for all members of WHPK 7 00 p m ReynoldsClubHOT TIPS: Burton Joseph "Hot Tips on Illicit Acts" 7 30 p m Ida Noyes TheaterOFF CAMPUSROD STEWART: 7 30 pm AmphitheatreWILDERNESS ROAD: Ratso's 2464 N LincolnSONGWRITERS: Intro to songwriting Old Town School of Folk Music 909 WArmitage call 525 7472Wednesday February 19ON CAMPUSCARILLON RECITAL Robert Lodme 12 15 pm Rockefeller ChapelCOUNTRY DANCERS 8 00 p m Ida NoyesBRIDGE: 7 00 p m Ida NoyesGAY LIB: 7 30 p m Ida NoyesLUNCHTIME LECTURE: Uriel Reichman, "The Holy Places of Jerusalem,Claims. Rights, and Compromise," noon HillelSIMS: second introductory lecture noon and 7 30 pm Ida NoyesDOC: "Diary of a Chambermaid " 7 15 and 9 30pm CobbHallSlLECTURE Wolde Michael Akalou "The African Market Town and RuralDevelopment" 3 30 p m Pick 218OWE WCCKENP OtaY! LECTURE: BEH Maden "Molecular Biology of 455 RNA NucleotideSequences in Eukaryotic Ribosomal RNA" 4 00 p m CLSC room 101ORCHESTRA REHEARSAORCHESTRA REHEARSAL: 7 30 Mahler, 9 00 Schubert Lexington HallLECTURE Wayne Kerstefter of the I Bl on "Lawyers Role in Law Enforcement"12 30 p m Law School Room IV.OFF CAMPUSBENEFIT; for Sidney Williams "Visions of Unity" with Oscar Brown Jr , KeithUchima, "The Weapons of Peace, "The Joseph Holmes Dance Troup, and JamesWesley Jackson as the m.c , also Vernon Jarrett will speak oriefly 8 00 p mLutheran School of Theology auditoriumJETHRO TULL: tonight and tomorrow 8 00 p m StadiumRANDY NEWMAN AND RY COODER: at the Amazingrace 845 Chicago AveEvanstonZOOT SIMS AND EDOIE LOCKJAW' DAVIS: Jazz Medium 901 N RushSTUDENT FILMS: 1 00 p m Art InstituteThursday February 20ON CAMPUSWOMEN'S PHYS ED: 5 00 pm Ida NoyesTABLE TENNIS: 6 00 p m Ida Noyes HallDEBATE 7 00 p m Ida Noyes HallOBS: Organization of Black Students 7 30 p m Ida NoyesUT: "A Flea in Her Ear,"8 30pm Man del HallFILM "The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders 7 00 and 9 15pm Cobb SIISRAELI DANCING: 7 00 p m HillelOFF-CAMPUS The University hasdevised competition amonghigh school students toencourage them in learninghow to use the Englishlanguage.The College of theUniversity will award onefull tuition scholarship($3,200) and two $1,000scholarships to 1975 highschool graduates who werecommended in 1974 by theNational Council of Teachersof English for outstandingperformance in writing.These awards, available tostudents entering the Collegein 1975, are renewable fortheir undergraduate yearsprovided the essay scholarsmaintain an average of B orbetter.Charles Oxnard, dean ofthe College explained, “We are interested in goodwriting and believe that ithas a fundamental place inan undergraduate education.The students ar e asked tosubmit expository essays nolater than March 1 to bejudged by a committee ofUniversity professors. Thesubject is to be selected bythe contestants from theirrange of academic andintellectual interests.The winners of theUniversity essay award willbe announced no later thanApril 15. Prior to that date, anumber of finalists will beinvited to spend a day or twoon campus to meet with thedean, the masters, and otherfaculty. A finalist s inabilityto accept this invitation willnot affect his standing in thecompetition.MARIA ALBA: Spanish dancer at Columbia College 4730 N Sheridan call 2717804TRAVEL LITE THEATRE at the Blue Gargoyle 8 30COMMON SENSE Theatre company in "Bidermann and The Firebugs" 8 30p m Barry Street Free Theatre 656 W BarryFOR ALL STUDENTS& FACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification card.As Students or Faculty Members ofthe University of Chicago you are 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.^'VOLKSWAGENVolkswagenDealer SOUTH SHORE7234 S. Stony islandOpen Daily 9 A M. to 9 P.MOpan Saturday Saie*-9 AM 5 P M.Ports- 9 AM.-12 NoonPhone 288 49( ennaflement 9k weddinfi rinflsCUSTOM OfSIONIO ORIGINALS * UMITCD COITIONSlALf iLA CCCrCOLD HON {40 SILVER FROM S15 411- t illIf you like, youmay choosefrom a finecol rtion ofdiamonds andother gemsCOME PLAY WITH OSIThis is giveaway week at the University Bridge Club.So besides friendly, competitive bridge, we’re alsoproviding free decks of cards to all entering pairs. Asa special attraction, the overall winner of this Wed¬nesday’s competition will receive a free entry intothe Regional Tournament to be held this weekend inChicago. So come to Ida Noyes Hail this Wednesdayat 7:00 P.M. and forgei your midwinter-midterm-slush /snow-grey city blues. For those who havenever played duplicate bridge, there will be a briefintroductory lecture at 6:15 P.M.JUST OUT-the only completeguide to the psychic world!ALL the latestpaperback' 't) > ikStc r. v • F ■aura and o„t- ‘and ps,chi( s •! mi "Si m,I Si ‘ hard-to-fmd mtormation in one giantt f'ic ' r.j mu-iti irs pcriodtea's bo >kc; i<; o* l,‘. tnd < smic inhuences • The: !. i‘»por:rnros • Divmati-m mediumsSpirit., )! healing • Time and the multi-• Plants and p,r imids PLUS over 350illustrations addresses of publishersONLY S5 00 it , >uf b *store r * r orderfrom G P PUTNAM S SONS.200 f.'id'son A.e New York N Y 10016Tuesday, February 18, 1975 - The Chicago Maroon—5Illinois cites dorm LETTERS TO THE EDITORcontinued from page 2today, the basement hallwaywas not to have been used byresidents, and the mainmeans of access to eachsection would have been viathe separate doors.According to a letter fromWilliam Farrar, director ofthe Illinois HistoricalLandmark Survey, thedesignation does offer someprotection to the building.A paragraph entitled“Protections” contained inan explanatory paper issuedby the National Register ofHistorical Places reads in part, “Properties included inthe Register may be af¬forded some protectionfrom adverse effects ofany federally funded orlicensed project...Norestriction is placedupon a state or localgovernment acting with¬out federal involvement.”“In practical terms, all itseems to mean is that if wewanted to tear the buildingdown, we couldn’t do it withfederal funds,” jokedTurkington.There are about 6000 en¬tries in the NationalRegister. continued from page 4encyclopedia claims thesewere all Russian inventions.Similarly, EncyclopediaBritannica has brought usthat much closer to 1984 withthis misleading presentationof a nation which has beenbound and gagged. Theeditors have not respondedto American-Lithuanianinquiries. The Britannica ispublished with the editorialadvice of the faculties of the University of Chicago. Thusthe U. of C. Baltic Clubreinterates (sic) the reguestor an explanation fromthose responsible.On this 57th anniversary ofthe Feb. 16th proclamationof Lithuania’s independence,the UC Baltic Club assertsthat until this article ischanged, the EncyclopediaBritannica can no longer beconsidered an authentic andauthoritative source forinformation about Lithuania. If it is not changed by 1976,American Lithuanians willhave no recourse but forcefulprotest. In the spirit of ourAmerican Bicentennial, andwith all due ceremony, thisnew edition of Britannicawill be dumped into thewaves of Boston Harbour.Our motto might be: “NoPublication withoutRepresentation!”Sincerely yours,Linas SidrysPresident UC Baltic ClubHewlett-Packard introducesa smaller uncompromisingcalculator: the HP*21Scientific.$125,001—X- ;.cn 3 *-■ :• •: '1 7 2 ic- DE'.iVx SIM»* '" ‘ail. V ■ COS TAN ■xsy r*- r ex stoL N ~ UM RCL7m*-*ENTER ♦ CHS EEX___ CLXOt «B H U 1mr__h u H—H EM mm isaI fum MHMi —- .nNow $125.00 buys:More power than our HP-35. 32 pre-pro¬grammed functions and operations vs. 22 forour HP-35. The HP-21 performs all log andtrig functions, the latter in radians or degrees.It’s our only calculator short of the I IP-45 thatlets you:• convert polar to rectangular coordinates, andback again (->P, ->R);• do full register arithmetic (M-f, M—, Mx,M-s-) ;• calculate a common antilog (10X) with asingle keystroke.The HP-21 also performs all basic datamanipulations (1/x, yx, Vx~, ~) and executesall pre-programmed functions in one second orless. In sum, it’s designed to solve tomorrow’sproblems as well as today’s.Smaller size. 6 ounces vs. 9 ounces for ourHP-35.Full display formatting. The display key (DSP)lets you choose between fixed decimal andscientific notation and lets you control the num¬ ber of places displayed. (The HP-21 alwaysuses all 10 digits internally.)If a number is too large or small for fixeddecimal display, the I IP-21 switches automati¬cally to scientific. It never confuses a smallernumber with zero.Finally, if you give the I IP-21 an impossibleinstruction, the Display spells E-r-r-o-r.RPN logic system. I lere’s what this uniquelogic system means for you:• You can evaluate any expression withoutcopying parentheses, worrying about hierar¬chies or re-structuring beforehand.• You can solve all problems your way—theway you now use when you use a slide rule.• You solve all problems—no matter how com¬plex—one step at a time. You never workwith more than two numbers at once.• You see all intermediate answers immediately.The HP-21 executes each function immedi¬ately after you press the function key.• You can easily backtrack when you err. TheHP-21 performs all operations sequentially.6—The Chicago Maroon -tuesday, February 18, 1975 • You can re-use numbers without re-enteringthem. The I IP-21 becomes your scratch pad.H P quality craftsmanship. One reason NobelPrize winners, astronauts, conquerors of Ever¬est, America’s Cup navigators and over 500,000other professionals own H-P calculators.Your bookstore will give you a demonstra¬tion today. Challenge our new HP-21 withyo(tr problems. See for yourself how much per¬formance $125.00* can buy. If your bookstoredoesn’t have the HP-21 yet, call us at 800-538-7922 (in Calif. 800-662-9862) for thename of a dealer who does.HEWLETT PACKARDSales and service from 177 offices in 65 countries.Dept 658, I'l.flO Prunerkliic Avenue, Cupertino, CA 95014•Sujjiscstctl retail prise excluding applicable state and local taxes—Continental U S A , Alaska ft 1 lawaii. A 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 Newt that Jesut trulycaret for them He t a man whocommits his life totally to othersso they can live their livet asGod intended Being aCOLUMBAN FATHERis a tough challenge but if youthink you have what it takes andare a Catholic young man. 17 to26 write today for ourFREE 16-Pago BookletColumban Fathers r.I St. Columbine, NEMOS* iI l am interested in becoming a || Catholic Missionary Priest jj Please send me your bookletl \I Nam* Il l| Addratt ,I City Slat* |Coiiaga PhonaClaa* ru c'a'.p'h was hung up on Sue Ann,yJA.a chtarigadgr 'isl _,!?ut S\.« Ann was heavy or Cheeringand becking henceRalph VCosmic forces Raj*. s^e how')cutfj NemandKirnm fiviivsn tati«r to study ana review ,iNow Su«Anr, 'haer* CLIIfS,©ak*s ’-he gcap.e wuhRa.phhas time to cstch a tewjpuogua When you need> maK« tunc and r«a.)y'ANN,*!!darstand y»vr a«i*r.-8|P\\ments ga'CLUTfIfor .ittraturt andUYKrtt PIVIfW#Hot other subjectsCVALDENBOOKSE vri <ji eenShoppingCt'lllHICluc.tgoMAROON CLASSIFIED ADSSPACESingle room & priv bath in Privatehome $85/ mo 3 blks from campusCall 374 4481 avail March ILarge sunny newly decorated roomavailable in huge luxurious apartmentcall 363 1769 KathyMrs Polyak's apartment on 56th 6,Univ. has 1 room available forSPRING QTR Sublease May choose 2more roommates after spring CallPedro, 667 1260Sunny room in apt with showeravailable immed in Blackstone HallMales only No meal contract 241 5794evesFor rent Furnished reception room,business office and consulting office orfor mental health practice, three tofour days per week ground floormedical building near 1CEfficiency $110 month Kitchen, privbath Occupancy Date negot 363 3873Large sunny newly decorated roomavailable in huge luxuriousapartment $87 00 363 1769 Kathy orSteveHigh fashion coach house nearuniversity, one large studio bedroom,priv yard Immed occup $325 2415545WHY PAY RENT Buy a coop apt54th PI & Wdlawn, 4 big rms, modernbath & kitchen in beautiful older bldg$86 Monthly asses $10,800 955 3927Room available in Little Pierce aptfrom Spring Quarter onwards Rent$84 per month Females only Phone363 5767 evenings 1400 E 57th StCHICAGO 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 S Cornell D03 2400Miss SmithSCENESU of C Christian Fellowship invites youto hear Gerry McDermott talk on "ForMe, To Live is Christ." Wed at 7 30 PM at Clavert Hse 5635 UniversityAlso worship & FellowshipPURIM PARTY, HILLEL, FEB 24 8PM Live Music, Israeli Folk Dancing,Entertainment ft. plenty of FOOD &DRINKSRI'S INDIAN MEAL AT 6, THEGARGOYLE Tamarind rice, masalavada papapd AND homemade yogurtOh boy! TuesdaytreatLIBERTINE FILMS presents "TheAmorous Adventures of MollFlanders," $1 Cobb, Thurs, Feb 20,8.9 15 PMWed , Feb 19, Uriel Reichman, U ofC Law School, speaking on The LegalStatus of the Holy Places inJerusalem, Sack Lunch, Hillel, 5715Woodlawn. 12 noon to 1 PMBurton Joseph, Playboy Foundation,executive directory speaks on "BigBrother in your Bedroom" at 7 30 PMFeb 18 in Ida Noyes TheaterJudy says, "You deserve a breaktoday" with lunch at the BlueGargoyle II 30 7 00 PM dailyDINNER FOR 2 for Under $10 M ThDinner Specials The COURT HOUSEin Harper CourtMOTHER RIGHT is coming out toHyde Park, Sat Feb 22 at the BlueGargoyle, 8 30 12 00 Tickets are 7S<in advance at the Reynolds Club desk,$1 25 at the door Buy now. play later1!PEOPLE WANTEDAuthor needs part time assistant,effective typing Work periodsnegotiable 643 8295Wanted1 Campus rep to handlepromotion of chartered trips for springbreak If interested in making someextra money call Linn Corfield at 8876890PORTRAITS 4 for $4 and up MaynardStudios. 1459 E 53 St 2nd Floor 6434083PEOPLE FOR SALEExp cello teacher will take all ages324 2144M0DEL0CAMERA1342 E. 55th St.-493-6700"25 Years in Hyde Park ”SOUND MOVIESPECTACULAR!Come in andlet us showyGU how easysound moviesreally are!S3 Super 8 Sound Movie CameraAmong its many features:• Chinon Reflex Zoom lensf/1.7 f-7.5-60Thru the Lens Reflex ViewingAutomatic ASA speed range 25-1601Variable speed power zoom. with manual controlAutomatic thru-the-lensCDS exposure controlwith manual override Student Movers Light moving in aDodge van Guaranteed low rates 24hr serv 548 0045 9 5 924 6928 or 9246967 6 PMTAX RETURNS Prepared byexperienced accountant Reasonable684 1930MILES ARCHER MOVERSReasonable prices ExperiencedPersonnel Call 947 0698 or 752 4910 forinformationCREATIVE WRITING Workshop bywriter columnist, help on thesis, etc.MU 4 3124Robert Stone Movers 324 6225FOR SALEFor sale A) '68 Saab 96 Excel condNew radial tires, trans mam FM, discbrakes, Frt wheel dr , '73 Honda 125SL Knobby 6 trials tires. $350 CallFred 947 8650 or 947 6264DELUXE SOUTH SHORE DRIVECO OP Large lux apartmentExcellent buy Tiles baths/kitchappliances, Board approval Eves 6 8PM 978 3415TELETYPE & ELECTRONIC equipof all kinds Goodman 752 1000 ext 5161966 Dodge Coronet 500 . 62000 milesgood running condition, body dented$200 947 9649Sable Color Englarger $259 95MODEL CAMERA 493 6700WANTEDWe buy used photographic equipMODEL CAMERA 49 3 6700WHPKWould you like a show on WHPK’ Ifyou want to be on the air springquarter, fill out a program requestform available at whpk's officesMitchell Tower in Reynolds Club(This applies to people currentlybroadcasting, too!) Direct the form toJane Ginsburg. program directorDeadline Monday, Feb 24 NOTEWHPK needs staff in new and publicaffairs FOUNDA scarf m a Cobb stairwell identify it& it's yours 721 6933Art work by artist Patric found inRosenwald Call ext 3632 to identifyA pair of brown glasses w/ a chainFound Sat 15, on Woodlawn 363 7025LOSTDOG LOST, Black Labrador, mixed,F Front right paw hurt, vie.Washington Pk Reg 14. $25 rew 9470755RABBIT SPEAKSPlayboy Foundation ExecutiveDirector Burton Joseph speaks on"Big Brother in Your Bedroom" Feb18 , 7 30 PM in Ida Noyes TheaterDIPLOMACYPLAYERSDiplomacy treaks seek fellow freaksCall 32150 room 707 or 735FOR RENTRapid Ram Rent a Van Rent a DodgeMaxi van only $20 00 per day Freemileage 24 hr service 548 0045 9 6.9246867 or 924 6928 after 6JOURNALISTSWriters interested in working for TheChicago Maroon contact the NewsEditor, 753 3265PETSPlease give my cat a home Spayedfemale, 4 yrs old, pretty & loving I'mallergic to her fur Call Mary 955 7087,753 8424PUREBRED BURMESE KITTENSable brown, gold eves 12wks old Allpapers shots $100 664 2325 FOLKDANCE"Dance is a fitting recreation even fora phiisopher" Socrates Especially inChicago with U of C folkdancers Sungeneral level 8. Mon beginning levelwith teaching, do 50«, and Fri generallevel no teaching, free Always IdaNoyes, 8 PMAnd l House Fotkdancers at I Houseon Tues 50«ISRAELI FOLKDANCINGThurs evenings 8 00 at Hillel 5715Woodlawn FREEPLAYBOYExecutive Director Burton Joseph ofthe Playboy Foundation speaks on"Big Brother >n Your Bedroom" Feb18 , 7 30 PM m Ida Noyes TheaterTENNIS LESSONSALL AGES AND SEXDIRT CHEAP PRO667-4038 BET 7 & 9PAN PIZZADELIVERYThe Medici Delivers from S 10 30 p mweekdays. 5 11 pm Saturday, 6677394 Save 60 cents if you pick it upyourselfBOOKS BOUGHTCash for used books Powells 1503 E57th St 995 7780STEP TUTORINGInterested in helping neighborhoodchildren? Student TutoringElementary Proiect needs volunteersto tutor students bi weekly in schoolwork or with special projects For more information call Jay Sugarmanat 947 8804 or Mary Lou Gebka. 6438266REFRIGERATORRENTAL‘Mini frige Pennies a day Freedelivery Call Swan Rental 721 4400WOMEN'SMAGAZINEPRIMAVERA. the women’s literarymagazine, is on sale for $1 50 at the IdaNoyes information desk and theReynolds ClubCLASSIFIEDSMaroon classifieds are charged by theIme. 35 spaces per line 50 cents perline for UC people, 40 cents per line torepeat 75 cents per Ime for non UCpeople, 60 cents to repeat Ads must besubmitted in person or mailed to theMaroon 1212 E 59th St , Chicago60637 No ads will be taken over thephone The ads must be paid Inadvance Deadline for Tuesday'spaper ,s Friday at 3 30 deadline forFriday s paper is Wednesday at 3 30For further information call 753 3265CONDO SALE55.000 Mad.son Pk 624 5499 3 baths. 4bdrm w/ wall to wail carp Livrm.,firepl, dishwasher, self cln overWash, dryer, drapesPERSONALSTHE AMOROUS ADVENTURESofM'LL FLANDERSThurs 2/ 207.9 15PMCOBB $1Give your rommafe a Pubmembership for 19th Birthday-Jt—l L FIRESIDECONCERTTues., Feb. 18Music Society Recorders: classicalrecorder & guitar. Brent House.5540 Woodlawn.Dorothy Smith Beauty SalonHY 3-10695841 S. Blackstone Ave.Specializing in Tints,Bleaches, Frosting. Hair Con¬ditioning. Shaping. SoftManageable Permanents.Open Monday through FridayEarly Morning-Late EveningClosed SaturdayCall tor Appointment VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGATTRACTIVE TV, AND2Vi ROOM STUDIOSFURNISHIDor UNFURNISHED$117,„ $209Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus StopFA 4-0200 Mrs. GroakCALCULATORPRICE CUTS10 Models to choosefrom including modelsby Litronix, Colex, T.l.and H-P.Current Specials:King's Point SC-40 $149.95 Retail $99.95King s Point KP 200 $69.95 Retail $ 44.95Colex Memory $49,95 Retail $29.95Colex Full Scientific $109.95 Retail $ 59.95We Guaranty* Lowest Prices AnywhereMidwest Co-opNIso Abuaf • UC Seles RepresentativeInternational House - 1414 E. 59th St.263-3404 24 Hour Answering ServiceTuesday 7:00 8:30 PM Thursday 7:00-8:00 PMWednesday 3:00-5:00 PM Or coll when you wish GROMEK,VERY MUCHGROMEK PREGNANCY TESTING10 AM 2 PM Saturday $1 50 donationAugusfana Church at 55th A.WoodlawnBy The South SideWomen's Health ServicesSouth Side Rape Crisis Line 667 4014A referral and moral supportcommunity service We can help'WRlTFRS WORKSHOP (PL 2 8377)Writing HELP by professionals farthesis, reports speech, etc MU 4 3124Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONoHair Designers1620 E 53rd Sv288-2900THIS WEEK FEATURINGChildren’s BooksCrafts BooksSigned, Limited,andillustrated EditionsRussian Language BooksPsychology BooksAutomotive Repair Manuals75,000 New & Used BooksBooks for:The ScholarThe BrowserThe CollectorPOWELL'S BOOKSHOP1503 I. 37th 9 A.M. to 11 P.M. EverydayTuesday, Tebt uui y 18, 9175 - The Chicago Maroon—.7rMaroons put out torches, 68-46Close home seasontonight vs Senario~. —-■ — ■*" tPhoto by Frank FoxBARRETT: Senior Tony Barrett releases jump shot overoutstretched arms of IIT's Tim Ryan.By PETER GALLANISRoosevelt University.Chicago’s biggest basketballopponent of the season,ended up falling the hardest;the Torchbearers took a 68-46dive Saturday afternoon atthe Field House.The Loop school did notlack height; at times theyplayed with a 6-8 forwardand a 6-9 center who musthave weighed 260 pounds.They also had one of thebetter one-on-one playersthat the Maroons have seenthis year in their 6-3 forwardSam HallUnfortunately for them,the Roosevelt five had notfigured out the first twolessons of Basketball 101.that size must be used to bean asset, and that basketballis a team game.The UC squad ignoredneither of those cardinalprinciples; as a result, theyran Roosevelt off the floor.Working against a con¬siderable height advantage,the Maroons’ Greg Retzingerrebounded in double figuresfor the third straight game.Carey Hines alsomanhandled the opposition,sweeping the boards at leasta dozen times and scoring 12points. Luther Rollins sur¬faced as the outside shootingthreat the team has lackedall year, and Tony Barrettscored ten second-halfpoints.The Maroons enjoyed avacation, playing against a team that was just too shorton the fundamentals of thegame to ever be in con¬tention. With five minutesleft in the first half.Chicago’s Daryl Bradleyscored on the front end of afast break to open a 30-9 lead.Even after Coach Angelushad cleared the bench, theTorches were unable tonarrow the gap.Rollins led all scorers with18 points, while his runningmate at guard. SteveShapiro, had eight reboundsand five assists. Hall,shooting from Des Moinesmost of the afternoon, ledRoosevelt with 16 points and11 rebounds.Last week was not entirelya vacation for the men’sbasketball team. On Mondaynight they hosted an IITteam that had beaten themearlier this season on theircourt. The home court didnot make much difference inthe second matchup, as IITworked for a 70-62 victory.Unlike Roosevelt. IIT is abig team that does know howthe game should be played.Hot shooting by their two tallguards, Willie Williams andShane Boyle, gave theScarlet Hawks an early 13point lead.Capitalizing on that ad¬vantage. IIT collapsed insideon Hines for most of thegame, forcing Chicago totry to catch up by bombingfrom outside. It was just not inthe cards; the shots wouldnot fall, and the Maroons were never able to drawcloser than seven points inthe second half.The games last week leftthe team’s record at 8-5.They still have a chance to close the season with aflourish. Mt. Senario collegevisits tonight in the Maroons’last home appearance; a tripto Grinnell Sunday will closethe ledger for this year.Yes Virginia, there is a SlimsDear Editor,1 am 8 years old. Some ofmy friends say that womencan’t play tennis. Papa saysif you see in in The Maroonit's true. Please tell me thetruth, is there a women’stennis circuit?VirginiaVirginia, your little friends are wrong. They do notbelieve even when they see.But some 26,000 Chicagoanswitnessed the magic in therackets of Court, Evert, andcompany just last week.Yes, Virginia, there reallyis a Slims. It exLts ascertainly as the USLTA andthe WCT exist, and you knowthat they endure givingVIRGINIA: Yes, Virginia, you can rest at ease.Margaret Court defeated Martina Navrotilova in thefinals of the Chicago Slims.8—The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, February 18, 1975 prizes of great value to maletennis stars. Alas, howdreary would be the worldfor tennis fans if there wereno Slims.The smooth perfection inChris Evert’s groundstrokes, the ruthlessauthority of MargaretCourt’s net game, thebounciness that MartinaNavratilova brings to thecourt, the playful antics ofJulie Heldman ... yes, tenniswould, indeed, be a drearysport without thesemarvelous athletes.Not believe in the Slims?Why you might as well notbelieve in the Suffragettes!You might get your doctorsto rattle off statistics on thefrailty of the female body,and your psychologists to tellof the uncertain mentalstamina of women, and youraccountants to recount thepoor drawing ability ofwomen’s sports, but thatwould not make the successof the Slims any less real.Ask about the weakerground strokes thatsupposedly characterize thewomen’s game — and thenthink of the doubles matchbetween Sue Stapp-Nancy Richey Gunter and MargaretCourt-Olga Morozova thatwas marked by so many fine(and lengthy) rallies.Ask if the players drop outof sight when they getmarried - and then look atMargaret Court, fighting herway back to the top of thecircuit after her secondmaternity leave.Ask about the stamina andthe stress that accompaniesprolonged competition - andturn to Chris Evert who,playing for the fifth straightweek, reached the singlessemi-finals and won thedoubles.Despite the skeptics whothpught that tennis could notbe run by the athletes, andwho believed that womendon’t earn equal prizemoney, and who thought thatthe Slims was just anotherpassing fad, the Slims isflourishing with no end insight.No Slims: Thank God itexists, and will continue toexist as long as peoplebelieve, providing fine sportand sportsmanship to makeglad the hearts of all tennisbuffs.By JEANNE DUFORT Stampf to behonored for 200 winsBy MIKE KLINGENSMITHVarsity basketball coachJoseph Stampf, currently inhis 18th year at the helm ofthe Chicago Maroons, will behonored tonight at halftimeof the Mt. Senario contest forhis 20()th career victory.Coach Stampf, who hasbeen forced to watch the lastfive Chicago games from thesidelines due to a bloodcondition, picked up his 200thwin in the Maroons’ 71-47triumph over NorthwesternCollege at Watertown,Wisconsin on January 11th.His career record nowstands at 204-115. In the last15 seasons, Stampf’s collegeteams have been rankednationally in the top five,defensively, 11 times. Theywere number one in 1966and again in 1971. Lastseason’s squad finished 19-4and went to the NCAA GreatLakes RegionalTournament.Coach Stampf played hiscollege ball at Chicago. Hewas named to All Big Tenteams in 1940, and as captainin 1941, he led the Big Ten inscoring and was named tonumerous All-Americanteams.Tonight’s game with Mt.Senario should be a closebattle. Acting Coach JohnAngelus has won two and lostthree while at the controls,including an upset win overLake Forest in one of thefinest games in recent years.Mt. Senario is currently inthe throws of a basketballrejuvenation program whichhas already included anintensive recruiting effortand the hiring of assistantcoach Bill Novak whopreviously was assistant atMinnesota under Bill Musselman.The college, which islocated in Ladysmith,Wisconsin and has anenrollment of only 250,awarded 27 athleticscholarships for 1974-75. Thebasketball team is currently7-14 with eight gamesremaining in their 29 gameschedule. The Maroons areplaying only 15 NCAA gamesthis season and are now 8-5.Coach Stampf will assistcoach Angelus tonight on thebench as he did duringSaturday’s 68-46 victory overRoosevelt. Angelus hasconducted the practices forthe past three weeks withassistance from Bill Horgan,assistant football andbaseball coach.Stampf has always seenparticipation in collegiatevarsity athletics as one partof the total educationalprocess. He has said, “Wetry to integrate the role ofbasketball into the academiccareers of these young men,but we feel that it is mostimportant that they enjoythemselves in the process.”Coach Stampf’s teamshave generally had excellentsuccess on the court, as hiscareer record indicates. Hehas always believed that,“Above all else, we’re hereto enjoy ourselves. If wedon’t enjoy ourselves, thenwe’re doing somethingwrong.”But coach Stampf’sathletic philosophy involvesmore than simply scoringmore points than the otherguy, for he believes, “Awinner is an individual whoemerges a better personthrough the experience ofcompetition. All of myplayers are winners in thisrespect.”STAMPF: Varsity basketball coach Joe Stampf hascareer mark of 204-115l