hicogl MaroonVOL. 85 NO 2: THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1975Wilson Meets Campus Press; DiscussesBudget, College, Faculty AppointmentsFormer University affiliate William B. Cannon is returninghere the beginning of next year to assume the position of VicePresident for Business and Finance.Cannon To ReplaceAllard January 1President Wilson met with members of the campus press lastWednesday afternoon.By Sally PetersonFormer Universityadministrator William B.Cannon is returning inJanuary to succeed JeanAllard as Vice President ofBusiness and Finance.Mr. Cannon, presently theDean of the LBJ School forPublic Affairs at theUniversity of Texas, willassume the position whenMrs. Allard returns toprivate law practice.The appointment wasannounced by PresidentJohn T. Wilson, whocommented, “At differentperiods he has been at theUniversity, as a staffmember, and then as anofficer, and his service herewas outstanding, it issimply great for us that he iscoming back ”Mr Cannon received hismasters degree in politicalscience from the UniversityBy John VailA University alumnus andPhD candidate, has beenarrested in Chile and facespossible execution forallegedly harboring themost-wanted leaders of anti¬government forces there.A New York Times articlereported that Father GeraldWhelan was arrested inSantiago on or aboutNovember 4th.Father Gerald Whelan, amember of the Order of HolyCross, is currently beingdetained by the Chileangovernment while formalcharges are prepared.Officials of the Congregationin the United States have notbeen able to contact FatherWhelan but believe that he isbeing held for “providingmedical attention tomembers of theunderground.”The Times reported thatMartin Vargas, allegedly thenumber three person in theanti-government forces, wasfound hiding in FatherWhelan’s residence at thetime of Father Whelans in 1949Mr. Cannon was VicePresident for Programs andProjects from 1968 to 1974.He has also served the U.S.government in numerouscapacities. He hasprincipally worked with theBureau of the Budget. In 1957he was named director ofOperational Coordinationand Policy Research for theBureau, studying problemsof federal programs'coordination in localcommunities and startingresearch on major nationalpolicy problems.President Lorene Rogersof the University of Texas,commenting on Mr.Cannon’s leaving, stated:“Dean Cannon has trulybeen an asset to thisinstitution, and while weunderstand his reasons forleaving, we regret hisdecision to do so. We wishhim well in his new'assignment.”arrest.Father Whelan receivedan AM in education from theUniversity in 1967. Hisdoctoral dissertationproposal was approvedbefore he left for Chile inAutumn, 1969.The arrest coincided withthe release of a governmentreport which allegesextensive collaborationamong clerics of differentorders and nationalities toharbor members of the anti¬government forcesLaura Allende, wife of thelate Chilean leader SalvadorAllende, has praised FatherWhelan for giving aid to herson, Andres Pascal Allende,the leader of the anti¬government forces in ChileSpeaking Wednesday nightat Old St. Mary's church, 23W Van Buren, Ms Allenderelated how her son, tired,wounded, and on the runfrom government forces,had sought refuge withFather Whelan.Mr Allende was a studentof Father Whelan’s at StGeorge's College inSantiago, a school run by the Earlier this week, ActingPresident Wilson gave theState of the Universityaddress in which heexpressed concern over thebudget in relation to theacademic standing of theUniversity.Among the issues whichMr. Wilson’s addressconcerned were theappointment of Mr. WilliamB. Cannon as Vice Presidentfor Business and Finance,replacing Mrs. Jean Allardwho is returning to privatelaw practice; and the sizeand type of faculty positionsin regard to tenureIn the State of theUniversity address, Mr.Wilson affirmed the teachingresponsibilities of professorsin the College, saying thatthe Graduate divisions havebeen misunderstanding theirresponsibilities, especially tothe structure of the CommonCore. Regarding theacquisition of the Shorelandand Windermere Hotels, MrWilson stated that this waspart of the University’seffort to stabilize the HydePark community.This past Monday. MrWilson also issued a memoconcerning theestablishment of a“Commission of Inquiry” byStudent Governmentreferring to his initialreaction to it as “part of theHalloween season.” Hestrongly felt that theCommission threatened therights and freedom ofindividual students andfaculty.”Congregation. She praisedFather Whelan as “a nobleman" and alleged that hislife was in danger because ofa government dictum whichallows the execution ofanyone convicted ofharboring anti-governmentpersonnelA spokesperson for theCongregation denied thatBy David BlumThe resignation of William0 Douglas from theSupreme Court has left mostfaculty experts here in basicagreement — PresidentFord faces a difficult task infinding an adequatereplacement for thedistinguished juristPhilip Kurland, notedexpert on the Supreme Courtand the editor of theSupreme Court Review, saidthat “with the exception ofthe late Justice Hugo Blackand perhaps John Marshall,no justice has had as much Wednesday afternoon,President Wilson met for aone hour press conferencewith the campus media —WHPK and the Maroon — todiscuss the State of theUniversity address, MrCannon's appointment andthe Commission of Inquirymemo. Those present wereMr D.J.R. Bruckner. GageAndrews, John Vail, DavidBlum, Bill Diskin andPresident Wilson.Question: In your addressyesterday, you talked aboutthe key to the “fiscaldrama ’ being the academicdistinction of the University.I was wondering whatcriteria you used to measurethe academic distinction ofthe University.Wilson: You mean interms of overall? Orindividual'’Q: Overall.W: Well. I suppose I couldreply by saying that there isthe Carter report. It seemsthat the Carter report is aperiodic evaluation of theDepartments of theUniversity. They areinteresting and I supposethey are useful. They areusually a little out of date,but people involved with,say, academic and scienceprograms have an ideawhere the good people are.know what’s coming out ofcertain places in terms ofupper vocations anddiscoveries, and what thecompetition has. I knowwhat it’s trying to get out andwhat departments are beingsought after by other placesthere were any politicalmotivations for FatherWhelan’s actions, sayingthat Father Whelan had donenothing but render medicalassistance.“Even under the rules ofwar you must give medicalassistance to the enemy,” heWHELAN TO 2influence on constitutionaldoctrine as Douglas.”“His influence has beenextraordinary, and you can’tunderestimate it,” Kurlandadded, noting JusticeDouglas' record length ofjudicial service “Thequestion is whether you thinkhis influence has been good,bad or indifferent, and whyHistory will have to judgethe answer "Mr Kurland said thatJustice Douglas’constitutional doctrinetended to relegate too muchauthority to the judiciary,and Mr Kurland noted that And in a sense it's a little bitlike we ought to heve awaiver list and eacfi yearsend around the name of 25people to see who wouldclaim them That's a sort ofcrass idea for an institutionBut do you get a feel forand a knowledge of wherepeople in the field look forthe kinds of things Imentioned or wheregraduate students want tocome For some people youcan even go to such lengthsas looking at publications tosee to whom references aremade in other publications.There are a variety of waysof doing this. I don'tknow the paper thatGeorge Stigler wrote and theBoard of Trustees did Iagree with George’s paper,George’s thesis that it isdifficult for any universitythese days to be good in allfields because first of allthere are not that many goodpeople and second there isnot that much money. So thatGeorge was setting astandard of saying having adozen distinguisheddepartments and disciplinesmany issues might havebeen better left to thelegislative branchThe Warren/ Douglascourt was characterizedlargely by decisions in areaspreviously left to Congressand state legislatures, mostnotably in civil rights casesIn an article published inthe Arizona State UniversityUiw Journal in 1972, on “TheAppointment andDisappointment of SupremeCourt Justices,” MrKurland said that “priorjudicial experience should beneither a qualification or adisqualification” for that he would consider to bebasic What would be basic isa different thing to differentpeople And then attemptingto get a really high level ofrespectability in all theothers. Like I said. I don'tthink we've reached thepoint where not everyonecan make his ownjudgement But I think youhave to administer auniversity out of that kind ofreference because I don’tthink you can be good in alldepartmentsQ. Mr Wilson, given thosecriteria, especially thecomplications (W : teaching0Don't underestimate thepeople teaching' In yourcapacity as president of theUniversity, I was wonderinghow you could justify yourmemo which stated thatinvestigations could be felt tothreaten the “academicdistinctions of theUniversity” would be “Apolicy foreign to thetraditions of the UniversityW I don't think we aretalking about the same thingQ: Well we are TO 5appointment to the court.\nd. though Mr Kurlandrefused to comment on thenames mentioned thus tar aspotential candidates tosucceed Justice Douglas, heis known to support hisformer colleague EdwardIa*vi w ho has never servedas judge — tor the postSources say Mr Km landcould make use of variouscontacts on Capitol Hill topush the Attornex General asan acceptable candida'e toboth sides of the Sena’t aisle.11 Mr Ford nominates theDOUGLAS TO 2UCPhD Candidate Faces Execution In ChileFaculty Flails Douglas7 Achievements4.The following are the keypoints of Mr. Wilson’s Stateof the University address.; delivered before the FacultyiSenate on Tuesday,! November 12:IBUDGET♦ ♦♦♦♦characterizes as a“fiscal drama," centering on“the attainment andmaintenance of academicdistinction."FACULTY♦♦♦♦♦asks “what size faculty,which will meet the highestpossible academic stan¬dards, can be sustained withpotential resourcesavailable?"j ♦♦♦♦♦urges forma{jon 0fcommittees to examine thepossibility of 1) deferring allj tenure until the rank of fullj professor; 2) utilizing partj time faculty in the medschool, with alternatives totenure being given; and 3)-changing retirementguidelines.♦♦♦♦♦cjtjes ‘deduced influxI of young faculty into variousacademic units."*****cites willingness ofDeans to deal with“debilitated academicareas,:;STUDENTS♦♦♦♦♦announces accepfanceof transfer students at thebeginning of each quarter.: ♦♦♦♦♦criticizes Federalgovernment programs for“devastating effect of thedrop of support of graduate students."*****seeks renewal of thefunctions of student-facultycommittees in academicareas.UNDERGRADUATE IN¬STRUCTION♦ ♦♦♦♦recognizes “somedifficulties in meetingrequirements for un¬dergraduate instruction,especially in the Coresequences."♦♦♦♦♦refers to a “rigidity inthe Core sequences ... thatcould profitably be re¬examined."♦♦♦♦♦cites a tendency to“assume a benefit that theCollege derives from itsassociation with a greatUniversity, meaning ofcourse the graduatedivisions, with too littleappreciation of the sub¬stantial benefits that derivein the other direction."♦♦♦♦♦e.xpresses concern overthe fact that 11% of collegecourses have 35 or morestudents, and that themedian size of Collegecourses in twice that of thegraduate divisions.♦♦♦♦♦cajjs for examination of“the proliferation of courseofferings and thedeployment of facultyresources with the variousacademic units."SELECTED ACADEMICACTIVITIES*****cjtes NationalHumanities Institute.Stevenson Institute, per¬ formance on the Putnamexam, and the celebration ofMedieval Heritage asevidence of the “intellectualrichness of this University.”BIO-MEDICAL AREA♦ ♦♦♦♦calls for “re¬assessment of theeducational pre-requisites jfor clinical medicine."♦♦♦♦♦discusses complicatedchanges in focus of con¬temporary medicine, shif- jting towards general, public !medicine ; government!support shifting away from jresearch support,♦♦♦♦♦sees researchthreatened and calls for“some concept, clearly;focused ... against whichplanning can be done..."NEIGHBORHOOD♦♦♦♦♦cites a $30 million in¬vestment in the neigh¬borhood, exclusive ofsecurity, lighting, bus ser-|vice and other institutional1expenses."*****said the Windermere!and Shoreland Hotels were;purchased in order to!"preserve the stability of jEast Hyde Park."*****expects to complete inithe months ahead the!acquisition of the SouthCampus as “a land bank for |academic and related in¬stitutional uses."PHYSICAL PLANT♦****cited being "painfully jaware of the continuing needfor funds for new and,renovated facilities."( ^ ^ ^ ‘dr ^(Jj ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ * %******&#******#*****************************#*#* JK §pecial Merv Griffiri §howwith Maharishi Mahesh Ybgi, the founder of the world wideTranscendental Meditation program, and special guestsClint Eastwood, Mary Tykr Moore,Congressman Richard Nolan and Dr. Bernard GhmckMERV GRIFFIN SHOWFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14thCHANNEL 328:00 P.M.SPECIAL TM LECTURESFOLLOWING THE SHOW:SAT. & SUN. NOV. 15th & 16thCENTER FOR CONTINUING EDUCATIONUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO1307 E. 60th ST.2:30 P.M. & 7:30 P.M.FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT THE HYDE PARK CENTERFOR TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION1638 E. 55th ST. 667-0050 *************************************************** Douglas Praised By LawyersDOUGLAS FROM 1former University ofChicago president, Kurlandis expected to be a majorlobbying force in theconfirmation effort.Mr. Kurland vehementlydenied that he was activelylobbying for the Leviappointment on Capitol Hill,and said that “my onlycontact there is Sam Ervin.”Mr. Ervin retired from theSenate last year, havingserved for many years aschairman of the SenateJudiciary Committee. “Iwould be delighted to seeEdward Levi nominated, butthat's as far as I willcomment," he added.Stanley Katz. Professor ofLaw and Associate Dean ofthe Law School, saidyesterday that JusticeDouglas was “a mostimportant force in keepingthe Court involved in issuesof social change,’’ butargued that Justice Douglaswas "probably on the Courttoo long."“He seemed bored with itall in the last few years,”Mr. Katz said, noting thatJustice Douglas would oftenchoose to write an angrydissent rather than to workto forge a majority of voteson the Court. “Mr. Douglasjust didn't pull his weighteffectively," he said.Mr. Katz criticized JusticeDouglas for being a “sloppytechnician,’’ but added:"Douglas had a sense ofwhat was right with social justice. I’m a great admirerof the Warren Court andsocial activism, and ofcourse he was effective. Buthe never made the impactthat he might have."Mr Katz would not predictJustice Douglas’ successor,but it was likely thatPresident Ford will aim to•satisfy the conservatives inselecting someone quite farfrom the liberal doctrineassociated with Mr. Douglas.Ira Kipnis, AssociateProfessor in the SocialSciences and a constitutionallaw expert, expressedsupport for former Law-Professor Soia Mentschikoff,now Dean of the Universityof Miami Law School, whohas been discussed as apossible first womannominee to the bench. TheNew York Times reportedThursday that Betty Ford ispressuring her husband to choose a woman for JusticeDouglas’ post.“Mentschikoff is one of thefinest lawyers around," Mr.Kipnis commented. “I thinkshe would be an excellentchoice.Mr. Kipnis said thatJustice Douglas had been a“highly important” memberof the court, acting with“great courage and helpingto bring the court back tosanity.”“Many of his earlydissensions later becamelaw under Earl Warren, andhis impact has beensignificant merely by hisamazing longevity on thecourt," Mr. Kipnis said.Assessing the variouspeople mentioned assuccessors to Douglas,Kipnis said that “Ford willlook for someone who cannotbe attacked as anincompoop."Jesuit Saves Allende’s SonWHELAN FROM 1said. “There must be adistinction made betweenpolitical activities andChristian responsibilities."Sheila Brady, a classmateof Father Whelan’s,described him as “notterribly political. He was amoderate man, not anestremist. He was a quietperson, kindly andextremely professionallyconcerned with education."Both Ms. Allende and theCongregation agreed that St.George's College is unpopular with the Chileangovernment. The school,founded in the beginning ofthis century, is dedicated tobi-lingual education, toeducation of the poor, and toteaching programs of socialjustice.According to theCongregation, thegovernment tried to takeover the school inSeptember, 1973, afterPinochet came to power. Itwas dissuaded after severalmeetings with Congregationleaders.BUGGEDBY CAR REPAIRS!Switch toBRIGHTON FOREIGN AUTO SERVICE3967 s0 Archer "For in Service" coll(2 blocks east of California Ava.) 927-8000mil SPECIALS!TUNE-UP SPECIALSVOLKSWAGEN 1200, 1300, 1500, & 1600 Type 1 &2... $32.00VOLKSWAGEN ,500.,600Typ. 3 34.00TOYOTA 3KC, 2TC, 8 RC. 18 RC engines 38.50(oil filter and air filter elements included)DATSUN 1200 1200, 510, 610, 240z from $32.50 to 42.50(oil filter and air filter elements included)VOLVO 142, 144, 144E, 145, 164, & P1800 from 38.50 to 44.50Air Filter ExtraPINTO (air filter and oil filter included 38.50CAPRI (oil filter included 38.50COMPLETE LINE OF FOREIGN CARSNOWTIRES AVAILABLESet of 4 56Gx 15 TiresBlackwalls 7400Whitewalls 84002-The Chicago Maroon - Friday, November 14, 1975 Plus $1.61 F.E.T. EachLow cost Installation availableSG Assembly Fails To Settle CORSO Budget IssueBy Deborah HarroldThe budget recom¬mendations of the Com¬mittee on RecognizedStudent Activities (CORSO)for 1975-1976 remain unap¬proved after the thirdmeeting of the StudentGovernment (SG) GeneralAssembly, Tuesday,November 11. No funds canbe appropriated until theAssembly approves thebudget.The Assembly had to beadjourned Tuesday nightbecause there were notenough members present toconstitute the necessaryquorum, two-thirds of theAssembly, before a votecould be taken.CORSO Chairman ZalmayKhalilzad presented thebudget proposals at 9:00 pm,as specified on the agenda.He noted that the amount ofmoney that CORSO recivesfrom the Administration hasremained constant for fiveyears, despite rising costs and an increasing number oforganizations requestingfunds. CORSO was alsodisadvantaged by itsreliance on a possible $8,000from last year; the sumproved to be only $2,530.Despite the inclusion ofthree Administration-appointed faculty memberson the recently formedSpeakers’ Committee, theAdministration refused toprovide a matching grant tothe $4,000 originally ap¬propriated by CORSO. As ofnow CORSO has no moremoney, and about $4,000 innew budget requests havebeen received. Attempts tosecure more money from theAdministration throughDean O'connell have metwith failure. CORSO hadbudgeted a large defecit.approximately $2,000, anddistributed several loansinstead of grants.As (he Assembly waspreparing to accept allpreviously approved budgetrecommendations a quorum call was urged. ManyAssembly members had leftjust before the CORSObudget was presented andthere were no longer enoughmembers present. TheCORSO budget will bepresented again for approvalat the next meeting of theAssembly, Monday,November 24, QuantrellAuditorium, 7:00 pm.Before the lack of aquorum brought an end tothe meeting, the Assemblydiscussed the Friedman-Harberger Inquiry andelected two representativeso the Studen Faculty Ad¬ministration (SFA) Court.Garrett Brown, of the SearchCommittee for the Com¬mission of Inquiry to in¬vestigate the nature andimplications of ProfessorsFriedman and Harberger’sassociation with the junta inChile, reported to theAssembly on the Com¬mittee’s progress in itssearch for members of theCommission. A public6,000ART BOOKS40-60% DISCOUNTFor the student; the gift giveror for the fun of it.AncientModernPaintingSculptureArchitecturePhotographyCrafts GermanFrenchSpanishRussianItalianOrientalIndian300,000 volumes on all academicsubjects in all modern European languagesPOWELL’S1020 S. Wabash 341-07488th Floor9-5 Mon.-Sat.1501 E. 57th 955-77809-11 Every day meeting, held Wednesday,November 5, was attendedby twelve people and yieldedfour faculty nominees. Aletter of information wassent to department heads toclarify the purpose of theCommission and encouragefaculty participation.Garrett Brown specifiedcriteria for selection offaculty to include highstanding in the University,diversity of politicalorientation, andrepresenation of differentareas of academic interest.Of particular interest to theCommittee are faculty inEconomics, Business, Law,Latin American Affairs, hesaid.In selecting studentmembers of the Com¬mission, preference is givento representatives of StudentGovernment, the Maroon .WHPK, women, and LatinAmerican students. As thereare a large number of willingand capable students and ashorter supply of willingTHE faculty, Mr. Brown statedthat the three studentmembers of the Commissionwould be chosen after thethree faculty members hadbeen confirmed. Thestudents are expected toprovide political balance.Poor public un¬derstanding, abysmalcoverage in the Maroon andAdministrative hostilitywere cited by Mr. Brown asimpediments to the successof the Search Committee andin the future to the success ofthe Commission of Inquiry.He stated that many peoplethought the Commission wasto be some sort of “open-ended Inquisition” andblamed poor publicity,especially the Maroon, forthis false conception.Mickey Eder was electedChief Justice of the Student-F acuity-Adm inistrationCourt and Katy O’Brien waselected to a one year term onthe Court at the meetingTuesday. Katy O’Briendefeated Norman LangleyNEWHYDE PARK THEATREpresentsPeter CushinginBEYOND THE GRAVE...Where death is fust thebeginningANDGeorge SegalinRUSSIAN ROULETTEKIDDIE SHOWSat., Nov. 15th only 1 P.M. MatineeANCONA SCHOOLpresentsYELLOW SUBMARINE **stStSt5StStSt$2 adults$1.50 kidsTake Advantage ofU.C. STUDENT AND STAFFDISCOUNTS$1 Mon.-Thurs. eves, Sat. 1-6$1.50 Fri., Sat., Sun.and coming next week"LENNY”and"LASTTANGO IN PARIS” and Roger Deschner. bothcandidates for the sameposition at the last meetingof October 24. whichremained unresolved untilTuesday.Motions from theAssembly to drop the lowestpolling candidates werecontested by Assemblymembers Steve Mandelupand Bill Diskin as irregularand undemocratic. AtAssembly member JeffFogelsong’s request Mr.O'Brien and Mr. Deschnerwere allowed to demonstratetheir judicial expertise byshowing the Assembly howto break the electoraldeadlock. Mr. Deschnerattributed the proceduraldifficulties and lack ofconsensus in the Assemblyover the candidates to“inadequacies of the StudentGovernment Constitution.”Ms. O'Brien disputed thenecessity of “adversaryrelations” in the election andurged a “spirit of con¬ciliation to facilitate” theelection. After a motion topostpone the election wasdefeated Mr Deschner with¬drew and advised that acommittee be set up to avoidsuch electoral problems inthe future.In the elections for ChiefJustice. Katy O'Brien, whowas Chief Justice on the SFACourt last year, was apposedby Micky Edwr. who wasneither a member of theAssembly nor a previousmember of SFA Court. TheAssembly decided that theChief Justice would bedetermined by a pluralityinstead of a two-thirds voteand Mr. Eder defeated Ms.O’Brien bv a vote of 34 to 22.KENT 107Students 50' FREEDOM RAILWAYFelix Green's documentary about theTan. Zam. Railway. Also on China Red Flag Canal.SATURDAY 8 P.M.SPONSORED BY STUDENT GOVERNMENT NOVEMBER 15Others sl00Friday, November 14, 1975 - The Chicago Maroon-3EDITORIALS LETTERSThe resignation of William 0. Douglas from theSupreme Court leaves the cause of civil libertieswithout its leading proponent, and the task of findingan adequate replacement is a goal that may never befully realized.Mr. Douglas served for 36 years as a champion ofthe rights of the individual, and was active in theWarren Court’s efforts to expand the role of thejudiciary in more active social reforms.As Supreme Court scholar Philip Kurland has noted.Mr. Douglas focused his efforts in particular on theexpansion of first amendment rights for individualsand his dedication lasted far longer than his physicalcapability.His sacrifice in that regard was a tribute to hisconcern for the court and the American people. Forthis untiring devotion. wTe owe Mr. Douglas ourgratitude and wishes for improved health.An Issue For Public DebateThe Friedman-Harberger controversey has becomethe cause celebre of the autumn quarter. The con¬troversey in its present stage is best understood byaddressing one particular question, and reasoningfrom the answer. That question is “Do members ofthis University have the right to censure fellowmembers of the community?”This University has a reputation for excellence inscholarship and influence in academic affairs: thisreputation has been created by the efforts of in¬numerable hours devoted to the pursuit of knowledge.The University’s status and respectability with thenon-campus community is based primarily upon thisreputation for academic distinction. The name“Chicago” adds influence and identification to astatement by a University member.If a member of the University acts in such a waythat the University’s reputation may suffer, we hold itto be not only the right, but the duty, of the othermembers of the community to act in a way whichguards that reputation. In this capacity, the entireUniversity community has the responsibility ofdiscussing the issues involved. While all individualshave a right to personal privacy, including thefreedom of speech and belief, an involvement in acommunity or institution makes the individual alsoresponsible for his role in the institution or com¬munity. An individual’s beliefs are rightly his own: hisactions affect his community.In the University’s case, the individual reputationsof the faculty and the reputations of the University asa whole are parallel. A faculty member who has apersonal international reputation brings thatreputation to the University also. The University, asan aggregate of individual reputations, has aresponsibility to take an interest in the individualreputations upon which the institution is based.The personal reputations of Professors FYiedmanand Harberger may be said to have suffered fromtheir role with the Chilean government, as those rolesare presently understood. The University communityhas the responsibility to request an explanation ofthose roles, for a serious damage to the reputations oftwo University professors would damage thereputation of the University.However, we do not feel that Student Government’sCommission of Inquiry is the proper methodologicalapproach to fulfilling the community’s responsibility;a private inquiry impinges too closely upon the privatebeliefs of the individuals concerned. Similarly, we donot feel that Acting President Wilson’s memo inreaction to the Commission of Inquiry was ap¬propriate; Mr. Wilson, by acting in his capacity asofficial spokesperson for the University, has dignifiedby his mere recognizance, a group which deserves nosuch stature.President Wilson is guilty of an error of judgementin his overkill tactic against the Commission ofInquiry. On the other hand, the Commission shouldhave already realized that the courses of idealism andpragmatism are ill served by their presentorganization.The issue of personal rights and reputations, asopposed to those of the University, is a major, highlysensitive one. We believe that open, public discussionsare the only proper locations for resolving such anissue, and strongly urge that all further debate andinformation acquiring take place in the most widelyencompassing manner possible.,4-The Chicagcy-Marooo'-frkfay', November 14, 1975 .La • «a.aa» •«•*■ •• • ■ • 1V V-.1 Editor:Last Saturday, Novemberfirst, the Pub celebrated itsfirst birthday. There weredoorprize drawings severaltimes each hour, and atabout seven p.m. I won apair of tickets to theAmerican Ballet. At leastmy doorprize number wasdrawn. Marie Hauville,Di rector of StudentActivities, refused to giveme my prize! She said that,as I was a Pub employee, Iwas ineligible for thedoorprizes. She said she andCindy Boydston, Manager ofthe Pub. had so decidedI denied I was anemployee, and a few minuteslater Cindy Boydston backedup my claim. In spite of myefforts Ms. Hauvilleexercised her petty authorityand the prize was drawnover! What is particularlyirritating is that I happenedto be at the Pub celebrationat the suggestion of theRosenbergs, Managers ofthe Frog and the Peach. Ipaid for a Pub membership,something Pub employees donot have to do. and I amfrankly amazed at Ms.Hauville’s irresponsibleaction While it is true I havebeen behind the Pub countervoluntarily on threeoccasions, I get no pay. nordo I use a timecard I am notnow, nor have l ever been aPub employee! When Ms.Hauville had heard all myprotests she replied that, atleast my face was associatedwith the Pub! Little wonder,but I am more often on thedrinking side of the bar. Ijoined the Pub last year andthis Marie Hauville owes mean apology, at very least,and two tickets to theAmerican Ballet!Richard D. DreiserEditor,I found the reply to Ms.Sparee’s letter (Maroon, Oct. 31, 1975) on the use of A-level study areas inRegenstein Library an in¬teresting example of“tempting fate”. As anemployee of library publicservice departments for thelast four years I have ex¬perienced on a fairly regularbasis reports from studentswho have had theirpossessions stolen while theyhave left them in a carel oron a table somewhere in thebuilding. “Missing” itemshave included wallets,purses, calculators, tape-recorders, textbooks, andlibrary materials alreadycharged to that person. If the“community” on A-level hasnot yet experienced this theyare to be congratulated—butthey should also be warned.This quarter I have beeninformed of items beingstolen in the ReserveDepartment where I amcurrently employed To myknowledge, this is the firstquarter this has occurred inthat department. Personsusing any of the public areasof the library should takeprecautions against thepossibility of theft-s—otherwise they willprobably occur even in such“communities” as A-level. Iwould advise all libraryusers not to leave any per¬sonal belongs or librarymaterials charged to themunattended at any time.WarnerS. Bloomberg IIIEditor:Maroon readers werealmost certainly misled bysome of the false and self-serving statementsattributed to South EastChicago Commissionexecutive director JulianLevi in an article (Oct. 31) onthat group’s particiaation inan effort to ‘unfreeze’Chicago’s revenue sharingfunds.Readers who want tounderstand the SECC suit and thediscrimination/ revenuesharing controversy shouldknow the following:1. Julian Levi is wrongwhen he suggests Chicago isbeing penalized “before thecase has been decided.”Revenue sharing funds werewithheld only AFTER U.S.District Court JudgePrentice Marshall ruled lastNovember that the policedepartment is guilty of raceand sex discrimination inhiring and promotion.Federal funds were then cutoff — by courtorder—because it is illegalfor a local government to userevenue sharing money tofinance an agency thatdiscriminates. In Chicago,most revenue sharing moneyhad been spent by the policedepartment.The police discriminationsuit is a complex legal actionand not all the issues weredecided last November. Buttwo federal judges haveruled that the biasedpractices already unmaskedin court disqualify the cityfrom eligibility for revenuesharing maney.2. The Daleyadministration did notaccidentally or innocentlylose federal funding becauseof some technical error orminor omission The JusticeDept. — Afro-AmericanPatrolmen’s League —NAACP anti-bias suitwas filed in 1972, so thecity has been on notice atleast three years that itshiring practices would bescrutinized in court.The city is not the victim ofone capricious judge.Discrimination has closedmany paths to federalfunding for Chicago. LastDecember, our city lostseveral million in federalLaw EnforcementAssistance Administration(LEAA) funds administeredby the Illinois LawEnforcement Commission (ILEC) after Mayor Daleyand Police Supt. Rochfordfailed to even responddirectly to an ILEC requestthat they agree to obey theanti-siscrimination rules forLEAA grantees. In January,two agencies dominated bymembers of Daley’s RegularDemocratic Organization,the Cook County CircuitCourt and the publicdefender’s office, rejectedfederal anti-crime funds forwhich they would have hadto sign non-discriminationagreements.3.Mr. Levi, as quoted,falsely magnifies the impactof the loss of federal funds onthe city budget. He saysrevenue sharing funds lostby the city are “equal to 12per cent of its corporatebudget.” The currentbudget, approved by the citycouncil last December 13,totals about $1,098 billion. Ayear's allotment of revenuesharing money is about $76million, slightly under sevenper cent of that budget.4 The Maroon confusesthe issues when it links thefederal funds cut-off to theproblem of violent streetcrime. Chicago received j|revenue sharing money formost of 1974, none in 1975, yetthe pace of crime increasehas slowed in 1975, and thehomicide rate has actually tdropped I'm not going to saythese facts prove the city isbetter off without federalmoney—but they do suggestthat the relationship betweencrime and police dollars is ,less direct than was assumedby the Maroon.Of course, one class ofillegal activity clearly willbe effected by the outcome ofthis case: race and sexdiscrimination. It should beobvious by now that nothingshort of the harshest legalaction will be enough tomake the Daleyadministration obey the law .Steve AskinCALENDARAny campus event, meeting ordeadline can be listed in the Marooncalendar Put the necessaryinformation in writing and bring it tothe Maroon office by 5 p.m for theFriday calendar, and 5 p m Friday forthe Tuesday calendar If you send alisting via FAC EX, be sure to leave atleast two days for transit We're sorry,but no listings for the calendar can beaccepted by phoneAll listings for the Arts calendarshould be addressed to the attention ofthe Grey City Journal editor, at theMaroon officeFRIDAYFOLKDANCING All levels, teachingfor one hour, 7 30 pm, Ida NoyesHILLEL HOUSE Shabbat Worshipservices, Orthodox at 4 05 pm andCreative at 7 30 pm, Adat Shalomdinner, 6 00 pmSIP AND SHARE Brent HouseSherry Hour, 5540 Woodlawn, 4 00 to6 00 pmCOMPUTER ENTHUSIASTS: Meet at7 00 pm in South Reynolds ClubLounge for a discussion of the basiccomputer languageSLIDE DOCUMENTARY: South-Africa and multi national corporations, Crossroads Student Center,7.30 to 9 00 pmU C THEATRE; Presents "Who'sAfraid of Virginia Woolf?" atReynolds Club Theatre, 8 00 pm,reservations necessary Call 753 3581KUNDALINI YOGA At the BlueGargoyle from 12 00 to I 00 pm Call788 7235 for info BLACKFRIARS: Beggar's Opera at8 30 pm, Ida Noyes $1 50 students,$2 50 othersHILLEL LECTURE: "How Real isAmerican Anti Semitism?" by Mr AAbbot Rosen, Midwest Dir AntiDefamation League at 8 30 pm.SATURDAYDINNER SI 50 a plate at CrossroadsStudent Center, 5621 Blakcstone, 6 00pm, Students welcomeKl AIKIDO Practice meditation andaction with the U C Ki Aikido Club,3 00 to 4 00 pm, Bartlett GymHILLEL HOUSE: Shabbat WorshipServices, Yavneh, 9 15 am, UpstairsMinyan, 9 30 amDOC FILM "Alice m Wonderland" at6 00 , 7 30 , 9 00 and 11 00 pm, Cobb,SI 00JOSHUA RIFKIN Plays the music ofScott Joplin at 8 30 pm, Mandel HallAdmission $5 50HILLEL FILMS "Rendezvous withFreedom," "The Uprooted" and "TheImmigrant" at 8 30 pmTHE FESTIVAL OF FANTASY "TheRansom of Red Chief" performed by"The Truck" at 11:00 am, MandelHall Adm SI 75UC THEATRE Presents "Who'sAfraid of Virginia Woolf?" atReynolds Club Theatre, 8 00 pm Call753 3581 for reservationsOpera" at 8 30 pm, Ida NoyesDANCE To music from around theworld at Crossroads Student Centerfrom 8 30 pm to 1 00 am SI 00 at thedoor MINCHA H11 lei House, 4 00 pmBOND CHAPEL: Program of Adventand Christmas music, 8 00 pm FreeREYNOLDS CLUB Now open onSaturdays from 1 00 to 5:00 pm Comeplay pool and footballSUNDAYFOLKDANCING: General Level,teaching for 1 1/ 2 hours, 8 00 pm, IdaNoyes, S 50BRIDGE: Beginner class, 2 00 pm,Duplicate, 3 00 pm, CrossroadsStudent Center, 5621 BlackstoneHILLEL HOUSE Lox and BagelBrunch, 11 00 am, SI 75, JewishWomen's Group, 7 30 pmCEF "Alexander Nevsky" (Eisenstein) at 7 15 and 9 30 pm, Cobb, SI 00WOODWARD CT LECTURE"Development Strategies in China" byNorton S Ginsburg, Prof , Dept ofGeography. 8 30 pm, ResidentMasters AptU.C THEATRE: "Who's Afraid ofVirginia Woolf’" at Reynolds ClubTheatre, 8 00 pm Call 753 3581 forreservationsBLACKFRIARS: "Beggar's Opera”at 8 30 pm, Ida NoyesROCKEFELLER CHAPEL: 9 45 am,discussion of Mahatma Gandhi 11 00am, Bernard O Brown preaches on"The Light that Lightens Everyman "Vesper Service at 4 00 pmCHANGES: "Listening Beyond Whatis Said, A Skill for Helping andRelating" at 7 00 pm at the BlueGar goyleAFRICAN HI LIFE & CALYPSO: Music from west and South Africa !|from 7 00 to 9 00 pm on WHPK 88 3 FFMSUNDAY SUPPER 6 00 pm, Brent IHouse, 5540 Woodlawn, $1 25LECTURE "Christians for a Socialist tAlternative" at 7 00 pm, Brent House IZANU: Sarudzai Churucheminziva ispeaks on "African Women in the IGuerilla Army " at 7 30 pm, University fChurch, 5655 S UniversitySHADOW PLAY THEATRE OF \BALI: 3 00 pm, Mandel Hall, $2 00MONDAYCHESS: U.C. Chess Club, 7:00 pm, IdaNoyes, everyone welcomeHILLEL HOUSE. Beginners' Yiddish, (7 00 pm. Beginners' Conversational IHebrew, 8 30 pm. Advanced Reading tin Yiddish, 8 30 pm.KARATE U C Karate Club meets in IIda Noyes, 6 30 pm 8 30 pmCRISIS IN THE BANKING SYSREMWorkshop of the Union for Radical >.Political Economics, 7 30 pm, Ida >Noyes, 3rd flCLASSICAL Music by Verdi and jWagner (Toscanini) on WHPK 88,3 jFM from II 00 am to 2 00 pmTHE BAROQUE MASTERS from j6 00 to 10:00 pm on WHPK 88 3 FMRADIO DRAMA OrganizationalMeeting at 7:30 pm, Reynolds Club jNorth Lounge WHPK 88 3 FM needs Jactors, technicians, publicity persons,script writers, directors & producersContact John Hallowitz at 753 3588Wilson Press Conference ContinuedFROM 1W: Are you talking aboutmy memo on Friedman? Idon’t think investigatingpeople is the same thing asinvestigating the worth orproductivity of scholarshipat all. See, I am confused bythe Student Governmentresolution. If the StudentGovernment wished todiscuss the substantiveissues involved; the businessthey are talking about is onething, investigating peopleand what they say and write,gee, I think some of ourstudents must have missed agreat deal of their educationfor if there is anything thisplace stands for it is freedomof speech, of expression, ofwriting. Then the judgementof the substance of what W: I don’t know how to getat that. The reputation of theUniversity.Q. Do you think thatfreedom would apply to allaspects of the Universityfaculty and administrationalike?WiIson: "Are youtalking about mymemo on Friedman? Idon't think i n -vestigating people isthe same thing as theworth or productivityor scholarship at all..."W: The administration hassome responsibility becausethe administration has a'•anyone says can be made byanyone who wishes to makeit. You don’t shut them upyou don’t threaten them. Nordo I feel threatened byanything anybody says nors h o u ! d a n y b o d y h ethreatened bv anything I responsibility to all its (? > asset by the Board of Trustees.There are policy limitationsset in a ... fashion. Studentsand faculty have free spirithere.Q: How did that becomepart of your demands asFriedman, l was writing theChairmen. Deans, andfaculty to point out myeffect of the reputation of theUniversity by the actions othese menr~~mLLanA WINDOWGIGANTIC CLEARANCE SALEDrapery Rods - Shower CurtainsFabric Samples - BedSpread SwatchesWall Paper Remnants - Book Patchwork Scraps♦1.00 Ea. - or LessREMNANT FABRICS$1.00 yard (and up)PAINT MISTAKES50^ Quart $2.00 GallonSome Furniture Some RugsSome Bedspreads, Shades,& DraperiesATRIDICULOUS PRICESSTARTINGSUNDAY NOV. 16th12:00 NOON 6:00 P.M.5211 Harper Court 493-5220 concept of the view that aninquisition is foreign to thisinstitution. I was suggestingmy view...Q: Isn’t your view a littledifferent since you are alsothe President of theUniversity?W: Well, I suppose I haveresponsibility to give myview of the history of thepolicy for this institution.Q: And along those lines, isit no contrary to what youare saying thai this kind ofinquiry is working againstone freedom to the exerciseof another?W: I don’t think aninquisition is an exercise infreedom.Q: I don’t think the StudentGovernment has proposedthat.W: If there is aCommission of Inquiry, aninquisition follows prettyquickly If you are going tohave someone sitting in thechair grilling people abouttheir thoughts or beliefs oractions that seems to me tobe pretty close to aninquisition. I don’t think Ihave to answer to anybody,including me.Q: That makes allCongressional and Senatehearings inquisitions?W: ...I think that indeedthe Committee on Un-American Activities wasindeed an inquisition, and 1was opposed to it.Q: How do you make thedistinctions? What is aninquiry and what is aninquisition^W: I tried to suggest that ifthe Student Governmentwants to hold a series ofdiscussions on substantiveissues, that it is not aninquisition. If it wishes tocall into session or otherwisegrill Mr. X, Y or Z for hisactions and beliefs, that is aninquisition. There seems tobe a gross difference andEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESm. KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 speech or whether you aregoing to ask me whether didI say something at a certaintime or hour, there is adifference in those things.Q: Mr. Wilson, would it bea fair restatement of yourremarks to say thatmembers of the Universitycommunity in their privateactions are not accountableto the University even ifthose actions...W: I think you can stopright there (Q: I want toqualify that) W. Period.Q: Even if those actionsreflect on the academicdistinction of the University?W: I don’t see how that ispossible. I think everybodyshould be free to makewhatever statements hewishes to make. TheUniversity is, you know, notall that bad when it comes toopen freedom of speech.I...where to you stop whenyou start something likethis? Who can’t grillanybody on anything?Q: Well, the proposal inStudent Government wasnot...W: No, no, I understandwhat you are saying. Whydoesn’t that allow say, acouncil to say it is going tohave an inquiry intowhat the students havedone ...Or might that reflecton the University in somefashion? I would resent that,you know, and say it’s just asmuch outside the policies ofthis University.Q: Outside the policies of auniversity that has factfinding committees onstudents actions which mayhave put the University in abad light9W: No. it wouldn’t Becareful what you are sayingnow. Watch what you aresaying. 1 don’t think we haveever had an inquiry aboutstudents that put theVhs£AM-’Y8iWs 8CHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M.TO 6:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS1210 6:30 P.M.Orders to take out1318 East 63rd MU 4-1062The University of Chicago Theatre presentsEDW ARD ALBEE SOpeningFri., Nov. 14for4 weekendsFri., Sat. & Sun. 9DIRECTED BYCHARLES JENKINSREYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE57th & UNIVERSITYADMISSION $2.50 STUDENTS $ 1.50Limited Seating-Call 753-3581for reservations W: It’s not a freeinvestigation of facts.Q: The power of subpoenaor any power that Congressmay have are not there.There is only the power to goto the library and read all thematerials on what these menhave done and my question isif that is all the power theyhave, why would you feelthat you...W: Because I think in anysituation, wherever it is,whenever it arises, there isan incipient negative valuethat is foreign to an opensociety. There isharrassment in it to beginwith. But, even allowingthat, I think the very notionthat such a think can becarried on is an insult and anaffront to this society.Q: Mr. Wilson, what do youconsider the “debilitatedacademic areas of theUniversity?”W: Well, what 1 wasreferring to was somethingthat was also covered in theShils Report, in which Shils’committee talked about theDepartments that werelanguishing in quality. Howdo you get at that kind of aproblem in a university whena department somehow,either gets bogged down orgets tired or the qua lit v is not departments to makerecommendations, to bringin new Chairman orsomething like that whichwould nowr get the thinglifted out of the rut it was in.That’s all; I don’t think it’s ingood taste to mentionindividual Departments.Q: If you won’t mention aspecific name for adepartmentW: Well. I don’t thinkanything could be gained byit.Q: I can see yourWilson: "I tried tosuggest that if the SGwants to hold a seriesdiscussions on sub¬stantive issues that isnot an inquisition. If itwishes to call intosession or otherwisegrill Mr. X, Y, Z for hisactions or beliefs, thatis an inquisition."viewpoint, but I’d like tocontinue on the line ofquestioning somewhatfurther into a mention youmade of some not very dearcommunication between thegraduate divisions and theCollege as to theresponsibility for teaching inth )se instances where a de¬partment’s having problemsover the past five years inmy experience as Provostand Acting President, theDeans have been willing totake a look at those and I think there is aproblem in the sense thathistorically — see, in someinstitutions you have amonolithic Arts and SciencesTC 15HERMES 1RESTAURANTLOUNGE AND BANQUET HALLGREEK AND AMERICANCUISINEIncluding MousakaPastitsioGyrosShishkabobAnd Also PizzasLIVE ENTERTAINMENTFRI., SAT., & SUN.withGREGORY JAMES EDITION(Recorded on Brunswick Records)Tela: 684-4900 Hours: 11:30 a.m. - 2:00 a.m.56th & Lake Shore DriveFriday, November 14, 1975 - The Chicago Maroon-5—— Mmamammmmm mm BBSSSPORTSThe coach rallies the team from a halftime deficit asSpiller (53) and Kovacs (71) listen.OYou can sometimes control thedirection of the ball by where ithits your paddle. If it hits thecenter it will go straight.If it hits the right edge,it will go right,etc. Flicking thepaddle to get a spinmight work butis less controlled. •FRL_ _T"“ 1Shots down the middle are bor¬ing and slow. However, late inthe rally after the ball has speed¬ed up, a middle shot canbe a killer if used de¬liberately to surpriseyour opponent.AND THEN .PRACTICEUP WHEREYOU SEETHIS SIGNAvoid the sharp angle shots sincethey tend to slow the ball andare easy to return. The most ef¬fective angle shots are those that reboundclosest to your opponent, the deadliest be¬ing the shot that rebounds just as it hitshis lineof play.6-The Chicago Maroon - Friday, November 14, 1975 IM Football, Wrestling PlayoffsWell, once again it's timefor the IM football playoffson the University campus.This year, eight of themeanest and roughest teamsin IM history will be going atit legally and illegally on theplaying fields.On the undergraduate sideof these playoffs, the firstgame (Fri. Nov. 14. M5,3:30) will pit Greenwood,winners of the Blue Division,against Blackstone, winnersof the White. The Greenwoodteam, led by quarterback EdConnor and wide receiverJeff Larson, is looking torepeat as undergraduatechampion Their team isquick and fast and they havetotally outplayed all theteams they have faced. Butthis does not faze Blackstonein the least. They are alsocoming off an undefeatedseason and are just as quickas Greenwood. The winner ofthis game will play the Reddivision champions,Hitchcock East.Hitchcock has gone through some personnelrevamping and has puttogether another fine team.Led by Steve Kroeter at widereceiver, they boast a finelytuned offense and a defensethat has not been scoredupon in 7 games. This gamewill determine theUndergraduate ResidentChampion, who will thenplay B1in d f a i t h , theIndependent Champion.Blindfaith, led by teamcaptain Mike Dvorkin, RayDiaz, and wide receiver LeeHess, is a definite threat totake the undergraduatecrown. They are “a rough,tough team and, to quotedefensive captain PaulSwiontkowski, “If we can’tbeat them, we’re going tohurt them.”Turning towards thegraduates, an interestingplay-off is developing. Fromthe Graduate GreenDivision, the Wild Bunch isas strong as ever They willface the Obscene Prophets, ateam coming off a protestvictory over the QuarterThe long-awaited novelby the author ofTHE RECOGNITIONS726 pages. $15 hardcover . $5.95 paperbackJust published by Knopf pr<i Pounders.In the other play-offbracket, Jolly’s GreenGiar s face The Golden Sonsof I- ;p II on Saturday at11:0' A M.Tiie Wild Bunch looks likethe team to beat in thegraduate division. The All-University Championshipwill be played at M-l onTues., Nov. *18, at 3:30 P.M.T h e I M wrestlingtournament was also heldthis week. The event waswell-attended, as monstersof the midway wrestled headto head for up to 6 agonizingnimutes.In the 132 class, JimScanlon showed smoothnessand agility as he pinnedJacobson from Shorey Housein the final. In the 140 class,Stevenson from Upper Rickert wrestled to a 3ruovertime decision overEldrige from Lower Rickert.At 149 Jones of HitchcockWest demonstrated goodtechniques as he defeated anunexperienced Mark Bauerin the final. The 159 weightclass saw Dennis Corgilloverpower Dave Rudis towin the undergraduate title.Mankowski of Greenwoodpinned Murdock of ShoreyHouse to become the 169pound champion. At 79, itwas a Thompson South finalas Montgomery pinned Fine.Finally at heavyweight,Dennis Thatcher trouncedDexter of Thompson South tobecome an I.M. champion.This concludes anotherweek of I.M. sports. The restis history.Maroons Seek A WinTomorrow’s contestagainst Marquette will bethe last game for the Chicagofootball Maroons. It will alsobe the last game for fourseniors who have played allfour years, and for onecoach, who’s been playingfor a long time.The four four-year mentaking the field for the lastWANTED:INSTRUCTORSINLANGUAGES(Hebrew, French,Spanish, Yiddish)JEWISH MYSTICISM,HISTORYPHILOSOPHYSPEED READINGSHORTHANDBUSINESS SKILLSMUSIC SKILLS(CHOIRINSTRUMENTS)HANDICRAFTS &BASK REPAIRSCONTACT:AVRUM WEISSHYDE PARK JCC363-2770 time are Curt -Spiller, co¬captains Dick Kovacs andJack LeVan and star endDenny Christen. Last yearKovacs led the team intackles while Christen’s fouryear totals include 70 passescaught for 720 yards. Otherseniors putting on theMaroon for the last timeinclude end Dick O’Brien,safety Jerry Lum, punterand halfback Steve Moore,fullback Dennis McNamara,back Brian O’Shaughnessy,safety Jeff Rasley, andkicker Mike Cook, who hasbeen 7 for 7 for points aftertouchdowns.This is also the last gamefor head coach Wally Hass,ending a 42 year coachingcareer. He started out asfreshmen coach inMinnesota in 1933. While thelast couple of years haveprobably lowered hiswinning average somewhat,he is indisputably a grandold man of football.This game should be anopportunity for the Maroonsto finish the season and theCoach's career with a win.ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELSUNDAY e NOVEMBER 16 © 11 A.M.BERNARD O. BROWNAssistant Dean of the Chapel“THE LIGHT THAT LIGHTENS EVERYMAN”SUNDAY SHNUNARR f| 9:45 to 10:45 A.M. Chope! Undercroft Lawrence1 M. Bouldin, United Methodist Chaplain, leads adiscussion of MAHATMA GA,NDHL His relevance |2 for our time.Sunday Afternoon at the Chape!4 O CIockA DIALOGUE SERMON“LIBERATION AND THE CHURCH"JAMES M. REED, United Methodist Pastor ofWashington, D. C., and Lawrence M. Bouldin -Thomas Weisflog, Guest OrganistBlackfriars To Open -]Beggar’s Opera’TonightBy Lyn GroupeThis weekend, Nov. 14, 15, and 16, at 8:30p.m. Blackfriars presents its fall production"The Beggar's Opera." The plot involvesCaptain Mac Heath, a highwayman, and histwo women, Polly Peachum, the daughter ofa fence and informer, and Lucy Lockit, thedaughter of the keeper of Newgate Prison.Peachum and his wife discover thatdaughter Polly is married to MacHeath, andfear that he will turn them over to theauthorities so that Polly can inherit. Theymake arrangements to turn him in instead. Mac Heath is betrayed by Jenny Diver andSuky Tawdry, two of the local whores, andfinds himself in Newgate Prison. He persuades Lucy Lockit, who is bearing hischild, to steal her father's keys and help himto escape, and the chase is on."The Beggar's Opera" was written in 1727by John Gay. Gay's patron, the Duke ofQueensberry, read it and said, "This is avery odd thing, Gay. I am satisfied that it iseither a very good thing, or a very badthing." William Congreve said that it"would either take greatly, or be damnedDarlene Williams as Polly and Ellen MartijD as Lucy in The Beggar's Opera.Bob Heinrikson as MacHeath confoundedly, and Alexander Pope saidthat it would make "a great noise whetherclaps or hisses, I know not."The play was rejected by the manager ofthe Drury Lane Theatre, but was somewhatreluctantly accepted by John Rich,manager of the Theatre Royal. The showopened in late January of 1728 and madeEnglish drama history by running an un¬precedented sixty-two performances on itsfirst run. The play was revived every year inthe eighteenth century, and ran in Scotland,Wales, Dublin, New York, and Hamburg,as well as London and smaller Englishtowns. It has enjoyed considerable successup to the present day, and Bertholt Brechtand Kurt Weil updated it to produce their famous "The Three Penny Opera."John Gay was a close friend of JonathanSwift, and he shared with him a superbtalent for stinging satire. "The Beggar'sOpera" lampoons the Italian opera, sen¬timental comedy, the gentry, the lowerclasses, lawyers and Horace Walpole.Although some of this must be lost on themodern audience, the main theme, like allgood social satire, remains topical today. Itis expressed in the Beggar's line "...it isdifficult to determine whether ... the finegentlemen imitate the gentlemen of theroad, or the gentlemen of the road the finegentlemen ... the lower sort of people havetheir vices in a degree as well as the rich-And they are punish'd for them."Guarneri: More Energeticand Intense Than EverBy C.J. MeyersTo Chicagoans inundated with the soundsof the Vermeer and the Fine Arts Quartetsover the past few years, the intelligent,energetic playing of the Guarneri Quartet inMandel Hall on Oct. 31 could not help butcome as an exciting and welcome change.Yet to those of us who have not heard theGuarneri players in several years, theconcert also came as a bit of a surprise. Forwhile most quartets become more elegantand sedate as they grow older, the GuarneriQuartet has become, if anything, moreenergetic and more intense. The qualify ofstrong rhythmic tension, which in the pastseemed to be a product of their youthful good apirits, has remained even though theyouthful spirits have given way to a kind ofmiddle aged seriousness. And this combination of seriousness and intensity provedto be quite effective in a program includingsuch works as Beethoven's "Serioso"Quartet and Schubert's "Death and theMaiden."In the first work, Beethoven's "Serioso"quartet in F minor, op 95, the Guarneriplayers looked not merely serious, theyseemed downright unhappy. Perhaps thiswas meant only to set the mood for theaudience. In any case, they did not let theirmood drag down the work, for the tautenergy with which they began the quartetnever slackened. Yet the Guarneri's energywas not alwavs expressed in quick tempos.It often seemed to lie as much in their biting entrances and slight rhythmic anticipations.As a result, the slower second movementsounded as tight and intense as the fastouter movements. Only in the thirdmovement did this method have any adverse effect, for the intense playing overwhelmed the lilting qualities of the maintheme.In the Beethoven Quartet op 18, no. 3, theGuarneri's style seemed to work evenbetter. The Andante was beautifullyphrased and sustained, and the Presto was'given exactly the right light touch. Mr.Steinhardt's playing was especially finehere, for he managed to project a full tone inthe midst of the most rapid passages. Andhis intonation—as well as that of the entireensemble—never faltered.The Schubert Quartet in D minor, no. 14, which concluded the program, was certainlythe most dramatic performance of theevening The Guarneri's "bite" and rhyth¬mic drive were ideal for the first movement,and their fast ensemble playing in the lastmovement was a real delight. The onlyproblem came in the slow movement: theGuarneri played the early variations with somuch emotional intensity that they hadnowhere to go later on, resulting in a seriouslack of impact at the end of the movement.But one must remember that suchcriticism is made on the highest level ofquartet playing. For in all, this was a trulyfine evening of professional chamber musicperformance, and one can only hope that theGuarneri and other tirst-rate quartets willfind their way to our Chamber Music seriesin future years.Friday, November 14, 1975 - The Chicago Maroon-7TheGreyCity.inurnol Nature 6 Cultureon Campus8-The Chicago Maroon - Friday, November 14, 1975 VNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. BLACKFRIARS.THREE NIGHTSof George Wafhington's favourite COMEDNf,call'dTHENATURE AND CULTURE IN THE ILIADThe Tragedy of HectorJames RedfieldThis fresh reading of the Iliad entails a detailed analysisof many structural themes of Homeric culture—the role ofthe warrior and of women, the relations between human¬ity and the gods, the power of institutions and ceremon¬ies, of games, assemblies, and funerals. James Red-field’s argument is also founded on an extensive discus¬sion of the human meaning of narrative art. He analyzesthe Greek idea of poetry as it developed from Homer toAristotle and proposes a number of new interpretations ofkey passages from Aristotle’s Poetics.1975 2 72 pages Cloth $14.50ON ECONOMICS AND SOCIETYSelected EssaysHarry G. Johnson“Harry G. Johnson is a brilliant economist. Anyonedoubting that merely needs to read the present collectionof essays The exposition is outstandingly clear, thestyle simple but pointed, the knowledge of the subjectand of related matters almost unequalled in the profes¬sion. He shows us in particular how powerful a controver-sionalist he can be and what a devastating critic. At thesame time—for example, in discussing the significanceof human capital formation—he shows he is a creativethinker ."—THE ECONOMIST1975 464 pages Cloth $15.00The University of Chicago PressThe University of Chicago BookstoreThree Distinguished TitlesbyUniversity of Chicago ProfessorsTRILOBITESA Photographic AtlasRiccardo Levi Setti“Just published is a pictorial record of some of the mostremarkable animals ever to inhabit our planet—the trilo-bites The importance of Levi Setti’s atlas is that itmakes accessible a wide range of superbly preservedspecimens for systematic examination. The major part ofthe work is a 132 page portrait gallery of the nine mainorders of the Trilobites The diversity of the trilobiteform has long provided stratigraphers with valuable mark¬ers for the Palaeozoic rocks. They and their acolytes willfind Levi-Setti’s book an inspiration.”—NEW SCIENTIST1975 260pages Ulus. Cloth $27.50Available at the Campus Bookstore Peachwn . . . Mr. Swan tonLockit Mr. JohnsonMac Heath Mr. HeinriksonFilch Mr. Meehan Mrs. Feach uniMiss WagnerPolly Miss WilliamsLucy Miss MortonMrs. Trapes Miss OsmundMembers of t he gang,women of the town, conftable and drawer byTHE COMPANYwill be prefented. onFri. Sat. Sun.I4th,15th,& 16th NovmbrIDA NOYES HALL1212 E. 5 9th StreetPerform'd at 8130 in the eveningGen'i ADMISSION' $259STUDENTS- $T.o501 Rebate for purchase in advance# tWomen in Art: Five Exhibitions OpenBy Carl LavinLast Friday, Nov. 7, marked thesimultaneous openings at three galleries otworks by five women artists. Two of thegalleries, A.R.C. and Artemisia, each awomen's artist cooperative, share the topfloor of the 226 E. Ontario Street buildingwhich also contains other galleries. One ofthese, the Deson-Zak gallery, is displayingpaintings by New York-based May Stevens.A.R.C. is featuring paintings by Jan Millerand the sculpture of one of its foundingmembers, Frances Schoenwetter. TheArtemisia Gallery is exhibiting line worksby one of their newest members, Rory HedinLeonard, and sculpture by Alice Shaddle.A.R.C., Artists, Residents of Chicago, andArtemisia have gained national attention;as cooperative showcases of women's artdevoted to quality, and also as resourcecenters devoted to learning. Both galleriessponsor a series of lectures, discussions,performances, and workshops related to thespecific needs of women artists in thevarious stages of their development, theeconomic structure of the art world, andother practical or philisophical problems anartist might find herself dealing with. Thereare also public lectures being offered: onDec. 4, Jane Allen, critic and editor, andRoland Ginzel, Chicago artist, will lectureon the "History of Abstract Art in Chicago"at 7:30 in Artemisia Gallery.At the beginning of the month May Stevens offered a two day mini-seminar,also at the Artemisia Gallery. Of the fivewomen showing at 226 E. Ontario St., herworks are the most political. Interestingly,her's is the only show not at an exclusivelywomen's gallery. Stevens creates flat,representational, soft-toned paintings, allfeaturing the same image-Big Daddy—whois represented in a variety of in¬terchangeable roles. Big Daddy is a bald,pink, middle aged figure with rolls of fat andbeads of perspiration; sort of a cross bet¬ween Richard Daley and Archie Bunker. Asimilarly shaped bulldog is his only com¬panion, the American flag his only clothing.In Big Daddy Paper Doll he does take onother uniforms, that of a policeman, asoldier, and the blood-stained coveralls of ageneral laborer. In Big Daddy, May Stevenshas portrayed an obese figure who goldsmany roles all demanding blind obedienceto authority—he typifies the supportingfoundations of the American white malepower structure. She is definitely using herart to make a feminist, political statement.The closest think to this type of statementmade by any of the other four women was aquote by Alice Shaddel, at Artemisia,relating her abstract sculptural forms,which resemble giant flowers covered inbits of paper and cloth, to women's bodies."Women's dresses clothe imperceptiblegymnasts performing over a playground inARE YOU REALLY INFORMEDABOUT WORLD EVENTS?ARE THE LOCAL PAPERS ANDTHE TUBE ENOUGH?"...one of the leading newspapers ofthe English-speaking world”The Christian Science Moniter (BenBagdjikan, Columbia JournalismReview) is as near as your mailbox.If you would like to know more abouttheSPECIAL DISCOUNTforSTUDENTS/FACULTYjust call Hy3-1044or drop in at1448 E. 57th StreetThe Christian Science Reading Room(next to the Medici) the disordered world of the dream. As in thedream again these sculptures shift intooversized flowers and finally disappear intohundreds of pieces of paper." This con¬nection between Shaddel's sculpture and herfemininity is difficult to perceive for theviewer who has not read this poeticstatement. Shaddel's works are amusingwithout the connection but she needs herstatement to invlove the viewer fully intowhat she is doing.Rory Leonard, who is showing her linedrawings and sculpture with Alice Shaddel,summed up the feelings of many womentowards their art: "I am an artist first, thena person, and afterwards a woman." Thisviewpoint is shared by Jan Miller and FranSchoenwetter, both at the A.R.C. gallery.These three women do not use tneir art tomake political statements, as does MayStevens, or even to increase their ownawarness of their femaleness, as does AliceShaddel.Rory Leonard does both two and threedimensional work involving lines. She isvery much concerned with the relationshipsbetween the subdued tones and subtle colorchanges of her works and the environmentthey appear in. She is a young artist, full ofideas but without the creative capacity forexpressing them. Her works lack depthwhich she attempts to explain away byfaulting the perceptual talents of the viewer.This is the type of aesthetic statement whichwould easily lead to stagnation or detach¬ment on the part of the artist.Jan Miller, on the other hand, is verymuch aware of the viewers perceptualtalents since they closely parallel her own.She paints in an increasingly popular,larger than-life, realist manner. Her mainconcerns now are composition, light, andreflection. Miller is a very prolific painter;her show is entirely made up of work done inthe last six months. She uses commonhousehold objects, with interesting curves,shapes or reflective qualities, as her subjectmatter: silver pitchers, eggs, finely finishedceramic mugs, bottles and vases. Theseobject give the content to her self imposedstructural composition ot light and form.Miller is a master of her technique...she usesit to make a truly timeless aestheticstatement.Fran Schoenwetter's sculpture- also onview at the A.R.C. gallery, which relates tothe unconscious mind and the different parts of the body, curiously de-emphasizes theconnection between sexuality and the body.She, also, is concerned with composition andthe problems of form, while she discountsthe importance of a particular subjectmatter. One of her more successful pieces,titled Bouquet, consists of four plaster armsall growing out of a central base. Shownwetter is making a statement about formalinteractions, but also about the crosscultural vastness of man's sub conscience;using the parts of the body as the most basicshapes.The five women who are also artists, orartists who are also women, are eachmaking a statement through their works.The emphasis of their artistic statementruns from feminist to political to the classicproblems of composition. Chicago is one ofthe first cities in which women artists havebeen able to establish their own showcase.This month Deson-Zak has combined withthe two women's art cooperatives in thesame building, A.R.C. and Artemisia, topresent Chicagoans with a view of the widerange of concerns held by women in thearts..ThiXMoumoleditorPaul M. MillerstaffMiles ArcherGwendolen CatesEden ClorfeneKaren HellerW.T. HobsonBarry J. KaplovitzSandra KatzCarl Lavin Suzanne ListerC.J. MeyersJonathan MeyersohnAnne MontagueJohn PrunskisHarold RichardsMike SingerDean ValentineThe Grey C'ty Journal -s published each Frdayduring »he regular academic year as part of theChicago Maroon inquiries concerning subscriptionsand advertising should be addressed to BusinessManaqer. 1212 E 59th st Chicago III 60637 TheEditor myites comments JHitchcock Films Presents ALAN BATES inTHE KING OF HEARTSFriday Nov. 146:30 8:30 10:30 COBBS 1 00ww 1 mm m* iFriday, November 1 4 1975- The Chicago Maroon-9 wTheGreyCityJournalTheGreyCityJournal A RARE OPPORTUNITYto reflect with six distinguished psychoanalysts on themeaning of their life's work in the context of human valuesA special lecture series:"REFLECTIONS ON A HUMANISTIC PSYCHOLOGY"Nov. 19, 1975 E. James Anthony, M.D., Ittelson Professor ofChild Psychiatry, Washington University Sch. ofMedicine The Self-regarding Self: Odyssey of aConceptJan. 14, 1976 John P. Spiegel; M.D., Professor of SocialPsychiatry, Brandeis University. Cultural Strainand Family Dynamics of Aggression"Feb. 25, 1976 Rudolf Ekstein, Ph.D., Director Qf ChildhoodPsychosis Project, Reiss-Davis Child Study Cen¬ter, Los Angeles Emmanuel Kant s The Strife ofthe Faculties (1798) Revisited by aPsychoanalyst"Mar. 3, 1976 Therese Benedek, M.D., Senior Supervisor andTraining Analyst, Chicago Institute ofPsychoanalysis (Paper will be read by HelenBeiser, M.D.) The Polarity of the Sexes and ItsDeclineApr. 7, 1976 Roy R. Grinker, Sr., M.D., Director, Institute forPsychosomatic and Psychiatric Research andTraining, Michael Reese Hospital Humanisticand Other Approaches to SchizophreniaMay 5, 1976 Bruno Bettelheim, Ph.D., Stella M. RowleyEducation, Psychology, and Psychiatry; Or¬thogenic School, University of Chicago. "TheMeaning of Fairy TalesWednesdays, 7:30 PM - Law School AuditoriumFor information, call 753-3137Sponsored by University of Chicago Extension, in cooperation withThe Chicago Institute for PsychoanalysisThe Chicago Opera Studio Production of KAFFENIO RESTAURANTPhone 643-2240 7 -11 Every Day 1550 east 55 streetGOOD FOOD AT REASONABLE PRICESGYROS $1.50-— SOUVLAKI $3.00 GREEK STYLE BURGERS $1.45GREEK SALADS $ 1.30 GREEK PASTRIES $ 60 AND MOREPHOTOGRAPY EXIBITION BY JIM REEDSPIN - ITRECORDSOpera byMozart(sung in English)Tickets:Students S3.00Faculty & Staff S5.00General S6.00AT THEREYNOLDSCLUBDESK ONLYFriday Nov. 218:00 pmMandel Hall57th & UniversityU.OFC.EXTENSIONDIVISION Presents another in its series of pre-HolidaySales. This week, the Solti-Chicago Symphony 9record box set of the complete Beethovan sym¬phonies is at the special low price of 29.95Also remember our newly reduced prices onall records in the store and our ever expandingselection of budget priced LPs.Most recording artists have new releases outfor the holiday season. Come to SPIN-IT, whichboasts one of the city's most extensive selectionsin all categories of music, for your holiday needs.Hours: Mon. - Sat. 10:30 - 7:30Sun. 12:00 - 5:30ON SALE MONDAY MU4-15051444 E. 57th ST.10-The Chicago Maroon - Friday, November 14, 1975r‘Caretaker’ Is Rich and PerceptiveIn a scene from Harold Pinter's The Caretaker are William J. Norris as Davies andMichael A. Saad as Mick.Bv Carolyn SaperA kindly ex mental patient, a degenerateold Welshman, and an erratic young manwith a macho image to maintain brilliantlycome together in The Caretaker, nowplaying at the Victory Gardens Theatre.Despite some minor technical flaws in theproduction, director Dennis Zacek has madehis characters rich and clear in theirpresentations-an accomplishment whichassures the success of Harold Pinter'sfascinating drama/ comedy.Mick, Aston and Davies form a complexunit whose little world is filled with cruelty,sentiment, plans, plots, illogic and laughtera world where the mechanisms of thesethree people hum and crackle, sometimesblancing each other in low-keyedinteraction, but more otter existing aloneand apart from their fellows. Pinter's playsare his characters, and the well drawnqualities of brother, brother and caretakermake this staging both funny and, at thesame time, thougtful. These characterscompliment each other by creatingnetworks of interdependence amongthemselves, yet, forever trapped in theirprivate oblivions, they must still alwaystear down whatever potential there may bein making these bonds permanent. Mick,Aston, and Davies do live separately, butthey break out of their shells long enough,and significantly enough to affect each otheremotionally-they reach out, lash out, andshield, and Zacek, in communicating allthese nuances, makes his production work.Special kudos must go to Frank Galati'spreceptive interpretation of the quietlygentle Aston. A veteran Chicago actor,Galati in his very strong performance is thekey to the play's excellence, as his calmmanner and features wonderfully offset thecharged atmosphere generated by the otheractors. Galati makes his Aston the moralinverse of his house guest, Davies, bypresenting a man who is in touch with thesensitive realitiesof being human. WhereasDavies has a fairly good grasp of thepractical-grovel when one must, take whatone can get-Aston relies on his instincts totrust and give, and this is what defines hislife. Falati has good timing in portraying hisdetatched, complacent Aston (e.g., after aDavies tirade, Galati perfectly delivers theline: "I don't think we're hitting it off"). Therole is a sensitive combination of humor and pathos, and Galati glides through his partwith a beauty and ease that can overwhelm.Aston's long, moving speech at the close ofAct 11 could not be better. In it, Galati drawsupon all the tenderness and simplicity thathe has created in his role. Aston is no foolhere, and fhe clear sighted, objectiverelation of his past, describing, withouthatred or bitterness, the horrors inflictedupon him, becomes an honest attempt byhim to build some sort of communion withhis new friend, Davies. It is more, too,because through this monologue we knowthat Aston is not a simpleton or goodnatured idiot, and the humanity he demonstrates in the rest of the play must beviewed in light of this personal revelation.And so it is. Galati handles this interlude ashe handles all of Aston-superbly.Michael A. Saad, as Mick, is a goodmiddle man in Pinter's drama. He shiftssmoothly and believable back and forthbetween the demonic, superior tough-guythat Davies responds to, and the protective,loving brother of an innocent. Hi abrupttransitions are credible largely becauseSaad has interpreted Mick's outbursts, notmerely as "games" (which he does love toindulge in a part of his biting, crueler self),but primarily as a cover for defending his own great feeling for Aston. His machismoemerges as an overcompensation for theweaknesses, as he sees them, which are inhis brother. These two sides can be a trickyproblem in Mick's role, but as long as that ^essential emotion shows itself, even briefly,the character becomes real and not aschizophrenic gimmic.The best development of these facets isduring the final scene between Mick andDavies. The conversation starts with Mick'ssardonic ridicule of the unnoticing Davies("Tch, tch, tch...You don't stink...If youstank, I'd be the first one to tell you"),grown into suppressed anger and then to apowerful (hilarious) condemnation of a veryconfused Davies. ("You're nothing else buta wild animal a barbarian. And to put theold tin lid on it, you stink from your arsehole to breakfast time"). The violent, yetstill humorous, shouting match suddenlyturns the verbal assault into a destructivephysical action when Mick breaks Aston'sBuddah-and this jolts the audience out of itsremoved perspective. Now the games aren'tfunny any more and witty Mick is no longertorturing a deserving Davies. Somethinghas punctured his shell and a slow broodingvoice breaks into a sob. At first, a realemotion seems out of place, but the solidframework of Saad's Mick has given us theunderstanding that we have witnessed theenormous frictions in Mick's personality.Present in his mind here are his concern forAston, his resentment toward Aston, and apurging of his immediate anger at theworld's (Davies') judgement on them both.The next moment may be the finest mementin production: Aston enters and the twobrothers (pausing), smile at each other.The part of old Davies, the caretaker, isdifficult; one that must present a ratherdespicable character, yet one that mustcontain a great deal of ridiculous andsharply pathefic qualities. William J. Norrissucceeds in bringing out the enormoushumor inherent in Davies' ludicroushatreds, but doesn't quite paly his bantamcock pomposity up to its full potential.Like Mick, his attitudes fluctuate, but he isat the other end of the scale-opposite ofAston. Davies counters Aston's generositywith unforgivable ingratitude, and the morehis complaints are tolerated, the further heworms his way into a cushy set up. He never(continued on page 8)this week in thg dimCampus FilmCEF offers: Alexander Nevsky (1938)directed by Sergei Einsenstein. Thebeautiful, historical epic depicting theinvasion of Russia in 1242 by the hordes ofthe Order of the Teutonic Knights. Thebattle scene on the ice is especiallyfamous. A highly recommended movie,Sunday at 7:15 and 9:30.DOC Offers: Alice in Wonderland (1951),Walt Disney. A spectacular film one of thebest in the chain of Disney full-lengthanimations. But the real question is: can aU.C. film audience, with it's phonysophistication, sit through the showingwithout a lot of stupid comments beingmade aloud? Saturday at 6:00, 7:30, 9:00,and 11:00.The Devel's Doorway (1950) and SideStreet (1949), directed by Anthony Mann.The former is the story of a Shoshone chiefwho returns home from the civil war toface problems among his people; a ternporary mailman steals an envelope containing $30,000, only to find the money wasintended for a blackmail gang, in thelatter. Tuesday at 7:30 and 9:00.Two for the Road (1967), directed byStanley Donen. Albert Finney is an ex DCstudent near the brink of divorce fromAudrey Hepburn. He thinks she's a bitch,and she thinks he's a bastard. Wednesdayat 7:30.At I House: On the Waterfront, withMarlon Brando. Wednesday at 8:00. WHPKThis Sunday, November 16, from 7 to 9p.m WHPK 88.3 FM will be presenting aspecial program of African hi-life andcalypso. The program will feature varioustypes of music from west and south Africa.The program will be hosted by graduatestudent Victor Owolabi.Rhymin' SimonPreceded by the best Simon and Gar-funkel single ever, "My little Town," PaulSimon arrives in Chicago to perform aconcert at the Auditorium Theatre at 8p.m. tonight, minus his old partner. Simonis probably the best inventor, interpreter,and synthesizer of folk and pop cliches inAmerican music, and unlike so many of hisformer peers, he and his music havematured and become more affecting as hehas grown older.Luther Allison is one of the very best ofthe new breed of young blues singers, andhe's an excifing and savvy guitar player,too. He's from Detroif City, so need we sayany more than that he is appearing atAmazingrace tonight through Sunday?Yes, shows are at 8 and 11 p.m. Paul Simon sporting parka.Leonard Cohen will be at the QuietKnight for two evenigs and four shows,Monday and Tuesday, November 16 and17. "Suzzanne" was his Sixties FM hit, butmany other performers made names andcareers for themselves by covering it. Thisman is truly an enigma in pop music—wellknown but rarely heard.Friday, November 1 4, 1975 - The Chicago Maroon-1 1 TheGreyCityJournal6—TheGreyCityJournal Singular':is Too Nice A Word'PersonAbsurdBy John LanahanAlan Ayckbourn, author of the currentproduction at the Shubert Theatre,AbsurdPerson Singular, has been described as ''theBritish Neil Simon." Whether that wasmeant as an insult or a compliment 1 don’tknow, but it is at least indicative of Mr.Ayckbourn's ability to write popular plays.Last spring, another of his piays.My PatFriend, was at the Blackstone. That playwas competently, if archaically, structuredand pleasantly insubstantial. Absurd PersonSingular, however, is a genuinely hatefulpiece of shallow and irritating trash. I hadthe feeling that the playwright was trying tosay something "important," but the showended up sounding only shrill and morbid. The overall structure of the play ismelodramatic, although each act isbasically farcicial. The piece reflects theplaywright's inability to decide whether theplay would be a catty free for ail or somelarger work dealing with a vaguely definedsocial malaise.The director, Eric Thompson, directed theplay devoid of any warmth, the absence ofwhich made the play all the moremechanical and obnoxious. Everything wastechnically precise, but lacked focus, eitherin the acting ensemble or the work as awhole. The production was pointed, itseemed to me, as an insult to the generallymiddle-class audience. The audience, inturn, often misinterpreted the petty disdainof the playwright and director as some profound general comment on humanity.To call the characters cardboard wouldgive an undue illusion of depth. The stellarcast was extremely competent with whatthey were given, but it was a shame to seesuch a colossal waste of talent. PatrickMacnee, as Ronald, a stuffy but generallyamiable British "old boy," was good in thepart; but after seeing him as John Steed foryears one couldn't help but compare hisperformance with what he could have donewith a really good role. Shiela MacRae, asMarion, his wife, played the part as a broad,boozy bitch, which added life to the show notonly by her energetic performance, but alsobecause hers was the only non-stereotypedcharacterization of the show. Paul Shyrewas irritating as the obnoxious and pushybusinessman, Sidney, since Mr. Shyre in¬sisted on playing the role absent anysubtlety. Judy Carne, as Jane, his wife, was so mousey and spinelessly prim that hervery professional performance only rrademe impatient and angry. Betsy von Furstenburg, as the despondent and suicidalEva, was also equally competent andcardboard. She had more depth in the thirdact, when Eva has painfully reconstructedher own mental health; but Ms. von Fur-stenburg undercut any liking for hercharacter by making her only a shade lesscruel than the others. David Watson, as herarchitect and bed-hopping husband,Geoffrey, was of the same two-dimensionalcruelty.The set was adequate, as were the lightingand costumes. The show had a lifetessnessand indifference that some may confusewith art. It is an assembly-line piece oftheatre, which insults its audience for accepting it. It isn't even fun to watch thestars.A Spirited 6Dignity 9The William Vaughn Moody Com¬mittee regrets that Jerzy Kosinski willbe unable to appear as scheduled andthe lecture in the Law SchoolAuditorium is consequently cancelledon Tuesday, November 1 8, 1 975.BUMS, LWOU.—MICHAEL TORERICHARD ATTENBOROUGHTREVOR HOWARDSTACY REACHCHRISTOPHER PLUMMERSUSANNAH YORKCONDONOW PLAYINGEXCLUSIVELY AT THESE THEATRESCINEMA HILLSIDE( liica^o at \1irtufain HiIFmPEVANSTON I ^«,'•*> - «• » i2-The Chicago Maraon - Friday, November 14, 1975 By Suzanne ListerDavid Beaird's Dignity, although billed asa comedy, is perhaps more accuratelydescribed as a spirited, thought-provokingdrama with comic overtones. The play,which opened last Friday at the WisdomBridge Theatre, concerns the offenses, thetrial and the execution of Socrates.The philosopher is portrayed as anendearing, but stubborn, old eccentric whois--by fits and starts--a genius and a buffoon,a prophet and a clown. He boasts of hishumility and insists that he is an ignoramusas he proves himself the contrary. The dirtyold sage introduces himself to the audienceas "The Father of Philosophy," but claimsnot to know the identity of the mother,unless she be a travelling sales womanknown as Ignorance.The most comic scene of the play is aparody of Socratic dialogue in which thephilosopher debates with Meletus thedefinition of vanity. However, the comedy--although lively enough--is an accessory tothe serious thematic concerns of the scene,and indeed of the play as a whole: theinextricable tangles of wisdom and ignorance, suicide and martyrdom, vanityare Dignity,The character of a tost aviator appears atintervals in the play and apparentlyprovides a foil to Socrates. However, I feel lmust, in the true Socratic spirit, confess myown ignorance of the exact nature of therelationship. I can only surmise that theaviator--who has flown over Mount Olympusen route from St. Louis to L.A.--has, likeSocrates, found that wisdom lies inignorance.Perhaps the most innovative andsuccessful aspect of the play is the functionof the audience as the jury which convictsSocrates. When the verdict is returned <48%for; 52% against), one realizes that itreflects perfectly the feelings towardSocrates which the play is calculated toproduce in the audience. We realize that heis indeed "The Father of Philosophy," andyet we realize equally that we could not havetolerated his insolence were we hiscontemporaries.The production has all the charm andenthusiasm, but little of the ineptness, of(continued on page 8)mu NEPALPERUMEXICOBORNEOKURISTANSAHARANIGERHINDU KUSHEAST AFRICANATURE - MAKE IT AN ADVENTURE,groups we go on EXPEDITIONS over l<through deserts, penetrate jungles, dTAINEERING and CLIMBING, and SAIL cAtlantic. Meet different people andother world. Interested? You must cnow for 1976. EARTH EXPLORERS (InSandburg Terrace, Chicago, II. 6061(787-5290. In smalland, TREKo MOUN-icross thediscoverontact usc.), 1560). Phone:$33,500,000UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPSOver $33,500,000 unclaimed scholarships, grants, aids, andfellowships ranging from $50 to $10,000. Current list of thesesources researched and compiled as of September 5. 1975.UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS369 Allen Avenue, Portland, Maine 04103□ I am enclosing $12.95 plus $1.00 for postage and handling,(Check or money order — no cash, please.)t you wish to use your cHarge card,jlease tilt out appropriate Uo*es belowE*pir*fioo DateMonth/V*#,Master ChargeIrVUrfcank NoCredit fCetd No I, ,Name PLEASE RUSH YOURCURRENT LIST OFUNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPSSOURCES TO:| AddressI City . _m1 StateMaine residents please add 5% safes tax. Zip UNIVERSITYORCHESTRALiszt, Les PreludesMozart, "Paris" SymphonyProkofiev, Romeo & JulietSaturday, November 22 — 8:30 P.M.Mandei HaltAdmission Free0CD6RICQ(\) J6CJISE3C\f£ OCX) PI LOOSOT. ooov 15 AT 01LCGC210 P CO 5*15 AsooduetuvjRENDEZVOUS WITHFREEDOM 'THE.UPROOTED //THE' IMMIGRANT c***i,ieCKAPMAvDownbeat Awards on SoundstageBy Chip ForresterThroughout the 60's, the rise and fall ofrock groups seemed to be a predictablenecessity. The buying public demandeddisbanding and forming of groups to satisfyconfinually changing tastes. Yet, in theworld of Jazz an almosf incesfuous schesiontranspires from musician to musician. Therise can be much slower than in rock butjazz musicians can reach the top as manyare now discovering and with good feelingsabout the changes that have occurred.Last Wednesday, "Downbeat" magazinebrought together the contemporary greats,the "heavies" of jazz, in a tribute to Julian Trombone; McCoy Tyner, Piano; ChickCorea, Electric Keyboards; Billy Cobham,Drums; Airto Moreira, Percussion, andSonny Rollins, Alto Sax.Not all of fhe winners were presenf for thetaping and their places were filled byGeorge Benson on guitar, Lenny Whitesitting behind the drums for every set,Freddie Hubbard with a smile on trumpetand Rahsaan Roland Kirk stunning theaudience in tuexdo, top hat and his normalmultiple entourage of instruments.M. C. Quincy Jones, the graduate ofBerklee Music School and jazzarranger/ composer, held the mike only toHubert Laws on flute, Chick Corea on keyboards, Quincy Jones as emcee.Freddie Hubbard"Cannonball" Adderley who died thissummer in Gary, indiana.The musicians, winners and runner-up'sfrom this year's Downbeat Readers' Pollplayed together, separately, and in variouscombinations for the taping of Channel It's"Soundstage" to be aired early next year.The winners, to be announced in an earlyDecember Downbeat issue, were:Cannonball Adderley, Hall of Fame;Weather Report, Jazz Group; Miles Davis,Trumpet; Joe Pass, Guita; Hubert Laws,Flute; Ron Carter, Acoustic Bass; StanleyClarke, Electric Bass; Bill Watrous, "sweetest" number of the evening did "In aSentimental Mood," an old Duke Ellingtonsong. In the Parker tradition, Sonny, one ofttie most luxuriant of the tenorsaxophonist's, took this quiet melody anddelighted in varying his attack with a metricpulse and an occassional calculated slience.McCoy, sustaining the clear tone of thepurist, filled each silence, amking it golden.The real character of the evening wasundoubtedly Rahsaan Roland Kirk, whodelighted the audience by playing hisclarinet and sax together, to the back-up ofStanley Clarke and Lenny White. He eventually abandonned them as he soaredinto his cerebral celebrations, an "audiciousvoyage into the inner spaces of the mind,"as described by Downbeat. Few musiciansever master one instrument as well asKirk—let alone the entire wind family—andcertainly none other can play more than oneat the same time as if he were two separatemusicians!Hubert Laws, Freddie Hubbard, and BillWatrous (the only newcomer to the scene),wailed on their brass to the vibrant rhythmsof Airto and Lenny White. Each musician(continued on page 8)announce each number before themusicians swerved off into strong deliberateruns.To the untrained eye, the diversity wouldbe amazing. But these people have been at ittogether for years. The tribute to Can¬nonball was not so much young men payingtheir respects, but rather, people who knewthe style and talent of this great alto-saxman personally.Through all the diversity, however, it wasstill possible to identify the aspects of eachmusician that distinguished him from anyother. Sonny Rollins and McCoy Tyner in the Sonny Rollins.BRENT HOUSEEcumenical Campus Ministry5540 WoodiawnSunday, Nov. 167 p.m."CHRISTIANS FOR ASOCIALIST ALTERNATIVE"James M. Reed5 p.m. - Underground Church6 p.m. - Supper ($1.25)■■■HOW REAL IS AMERICANANThSEMITISAA ?MR A. ABBOT ROSEN, midwest directoranti defamation league ,bnaj bntk■frtda*^ , novenr\\s«jr IM , 8 lo ,a+ hillel5"7I5 utOodlaUXN autigan or von. — \ational ObserverRICHARD \\ FREE!Iht \ A year's supply of strings7rd W with each new guitar pur¬chase in November.Shop Q \5110 S Harper-*lf) Harper Court" Many new and used\ instruments in stock) plus books, repairs,NOl-robo lessons.HawklineMonsterA GOTHIC WESTERNNow availableat S2.9.> SPECIALDISCOUNTPRICESFOR ALL STUDENTS& FACULTY MEMBERSofSimon ami S*lm*«lrr/A iourlwlimr ItnoL 7\K Just present your UniversityChicago Identification cardAs Students or Faculty Members ofthe University of Chicago you are en¬titled to speciol money savingdiscount prices on all materials usedon Volkswagen Service Work, allVolkswagen Parts, Accessories andany new or used Volkswagen you buyfrom Volkswagen South Shore.Authorized VOLKSWAGENVolkswagen SOUTH SHOREDealer 7234 s. Stony *slo«dOpen Dotty 9AM to 9 PM.Open Saturday Sat«s-9 AM-5 P.M.Porn- 9 AM.-1 2 NoonPhone 288Friday, November 14, 1975 - The Chicago IAaroon-13 The^GreyCityJournnlTheGreyCityocDownbeat(continued from page 7)broke away for a solo stint and then blendedback into the powerful force of the group asone. Hubert, the most delicate, sang out with| his flute behind the shrill of the highly00 charged Hubbard and Watrous. Hubbard,the formidible technician, with his linearsolo was the living example of spontaneouscreation at its best!Throughout it all, though, it was ChickCorea who offered the occassionalnecessary comic relief as he chewed hisgum. It was evident during the wholeevening that Chick, Lenny, and Stanleywere old hands at this as they exchangedsmiles and instrumental runs through"Spain" and every other number. StanClarke, the versatile and perhaps greatestbassist since Charlie Mingus or Paul Cham¬bers, moved from an accoustical bass to hisdynamic electrical instrument throughoutthe evening, depending upon what mood thenumber called for. Lenny, a non-stopdrummer, stood three hours of gruelingrhythm only to walk away with a smile.During the evening, winners from theother catagories in the "Poll" were announced even though they were not present.Miles Davis, one of the greatest trumpetplayers the jazz world had ever knowm, has,as noted by a jzzz critic, "manifestlychanged the entire course of an art formthree or four times in 25 years—an accomplishment that no other jazz musiciancan claim." Davis has shaped a generationof creative musicians and, while DizzyGillespie's trumpet solos are asrecognizable in 1975 as they were in 1945,Miles' playing has changed radicallythroughout the years. Weather Report understandably receivedthe best group award, based on their newestalbum Tailspinnin" . Joe Zawinul, thekeyboard virtuoso from Vienna, has madehis rounds with the greats. He spent nineyears with Adderley and also wrote anumber of important songs for Davis'salbum, Bitches Brew . Wayne Shorter, thesax man for the Report, did his time withArt Blakey and has recently moved out onhis own with a teriffic solo album. NativeDancer , featuring Herbie Hancock andAirto. Many rock fans will rememberdrummer Chester Thompson who playedwith Frank Zappa, and Alphonse Johnson onbass has appeared with Chuck Mangione.This show not on;y exemplified thestability, strength, and constant evolution ofjazz, but also the diverse directions eachperformer is now taking with his in¬strument. An event as fantastic as thiscollection of all-star musicians could havepossibly been maneuvered to show offtalent, or to stage a gala event along thelines of a sports spectacle. The final impression, however, must be that thecollective talents of these musicians blendtogether perfectly, not merely because ofeach's virtuosity, but because of a deepsense of musicianship that has developedover many years of playing separately andtogether.Jazz is a musical medium designedprimarily for interaction. By truly understanding its intensity, the performerlearns when to improvise, when to accompany, when to play passively, and whento wail away. As exhibited last week, thesemusicians are at the top of their field, notbecause they necessarily play better licksthan any one else, but because they playthem with an innate and yet practiced senseof musical unity. Most evident in the performance was a long sought after respectfor the intricacies of jazz that comes onlyafter years of playing as sidemen with thegreats they have now become.IATEX PAINT$1M Per GALLONi $ L.75 automotive enamelper gallon3-99 Latex Ext. 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MlYOUR ORDE "FORM* ~ ^TODear Sira >If your paint »s as geed asyou say it it, send us tnefollowing gallons and -dors.3a 11 c ns Cclcr price Mail Order Paint Co. Dep£-33783 Fifth StreetGretna, La. 7OO53Enclosed find $ forGallons of your paint.Nam«.(Pieaae punt)Address.* tai a«ir. „r.t $( If ycu "an. a'farr tere• , tape . sna; 1 t i pscr sampler cf '-e.crs ycu•art . ■•» understand all yourpamt is ’a'led •, » ICO*ad.us'nent guarantee. City.State Zip(All shipments F.O.B. New Orleans)14-The Chicago Maroon - Friday, November 14, 1975 ‘Caretaker(continued from page 5)responds to Aston's friendship, but onlymocks or misconstrues any attempts atgood talk. Conversely, Mick's callousworldliness is more in Davies' realm, andthe vicious Mick is the only dimension thatprovides Davies with human exchange andunderstanding. Ironically, Davies isoutrageously oblivious in some ways to thisvery facet in Mick- that is, he is just aslikely to be as blind to Mick's taunts as he isto Aston's kindness. Norris does have hismoments, however, and his tearful,emotional outburst (of course, againstAston) of "I'll stink you" pops that guardedbubble that so sparates each of these men.Meaningful interpretations aside, "TheCaretaker" is a very funny play and thisThe direction is not at all heavy-handed,and Zacek permits the wry laughter to filterinto the comic scenes despite the underlyingterror that usually accompanies them. Thebest examples are the suitcase andelectrolux games. The first is a lovelysynthesis of various attitudes in thecharacters where Mick, full of spite,snatches a bag of Davies' who is waveringbetween fear and rage, while Aston, calmand unjudging, recovers it from a then‘Dignity’(continued from page 6)amateur theatre. The acting is uniformlygood. John Green exploits all the warmthand wit that the role of Socrates affords.Steve Fletcher displays a remarkableversatility in the roles of Meletus,Alcibiades, and the aviator. NancySigworth, who plays Anytus, Lycon,Xanthippe, and Myrta is especially notablefor the fluidity of the mime and moderndance segments of her performance.Dignity is by no means a perfect play. It isflawed by sometimes self-consciousobscurity of thought, metaphor andsequence. The intentional incongruities andparadoxes of character and mood are only/ submissive Mick, only to lose it again. Thelatter is a frightening mind trick played onDavies, where Mick feeds upon the oldman's silly horrors but before we realizethis, we perceive a grown man brandishinga whirring vacuum cleaner in the darkamidst the screams of a foolish, boastful oldgeezer. Other scenes are just as well done,but these two are outstanding.Unfortunately, I must devote a briefparagraph to the play's few weak points.There were awkward moments, forexample, when Norris several timesstumbledover his lines while trying to put onan articulate argument, and it was just plainconfusing when all attention was directedtoward the ceiling at a bucket whosesignificant drip was inaudible. The mostdisturbing to me, however, was the feelingthat Pinter's famous pauses tended to berushed and therefore, we the audience werenever made really uncomfortable for quitelong enough. But these points are ultimatelyminor and this production of TheCaretaker still deserves resounding praisefor its rich characterizations and perceptivedirection.Victory Gardens Theatre, 3730 NorthClark, is a cooperative theatre founded byeight Chicago area writers, actors anddirectors, that provides facilities, financing,and support for creating original andinnovative theatre. "The Caretaker" isplaying now through December 21, thesecond of eight plays in the 75-76 season.sometimes effective. Socrates and Meletusare little more than caricatures, and thecharacter of Xanthippe, Socrates' wife, isneither consistent nor credible. However, inspite of its problems, the play seemedgenerally to please all segments of a veryheterogeneous audience. Dignity probablycomes off as well as it does because of theobvious enthusiasm of the cast, and the factthat the play is produced and directed by theplaywright, who is incidentally the founderof the theatre. It is somewhat unlikely thatthe play would be as successful if performedby any other company.Dignity is, all in all, worth seeing. It willrun through December 7 and tickets may bereserved by calling the Wisdom Bridge boxoffice. Student discount rates are availableon Thursday, Friday and Sunday evenings.\Parklane is the "source"forDanskin Leotardsand TightsDanskms are for everywhere and everyoneFor partying and playing, exercising anddancing, and for just plain wearing aroundMade of 100% easy care nylonAvailable in a rainbow of colors anda multitude of stylesat these Parklane Stores.NEUMODE HOSIERYHYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER•JWSXl 'y■VAt,Wilson Press Conference ContinuedFROM 5faculty which handles bothundergraduate andgraduates in eachdepartment. We don’t havethat. The question that I wasgetting at last year, in theWinter and Spring quarter,when there were discussions,was “How do we handle theproblem as the faculty getssmaller, and there is atendency to slow down theinflux of young faculty? Howdo you look ahead to man theundergraduate teachingcurriculum?” I was trying toget the Departments and theCollege Masters in theCollegiate Divisionstogether, so that we wouldn’tsuddenly end up with classeshave to be dropped becausethere wasn’t anybody aroundw'ho had thought ahead farenough to get that thingcovered in the curriculumand make the teachingassignments. Now, when youdo that, the problem centerson the Core. Sequences ofWilson: "...I think thestudent villageprogram was scrapedbecause there wasn'tmoney for it..."course sequences havehistorically been staffed bymany people in the graduatedivisions who don’t like theconcept of staff-taughtcourses. So, people in theCore management of thestaff think that you can’thave part of the Core taughtby an individual who has toconform to some ideas of theCore. I was not brought up inthat. I have no degrees fromChicago, so I don’t havethese limitations. I vvasraising a question in thesediscussions. Does a Corehave to be as some stafferdefined it? If, for example,you get a very distinguishedprofessor, as was the case in,DOROTHY SMITHBEAUTY SALON5641 S. BLACKSTONE AVEHY 3-1063Permanents that aremanageable short ones — andlong ones. Tints — bleaches —streaks. Hair shaping as youwish it. Children's hair cutsalso. Call for appt. Mondaythrough Friday.8 a.m. to 8 p.m.No Saturdays. say, Fermi’s day (Fermitaught undergraduatephysics). What if someonewants to teach a section ofWestern Civ and wants toteach something that isn’tjust decidely in that Core asthey have define it? What,my God, you know you’re notgoing to tell him, “no, wedon’t want you,” are you? Sothere was a problem and as Itried to indicate in thediscussions it got a littleweak at times, but I thinklooking at it from anoutsider’s point of view, andi’m an outsider in the sensethat I didn’t grow up here, itseemed to me that theremight be some advantage inreducing the rigidity in howCore sequences are defined.Maybe, you know, if astudent’s starting Coresequences in the middle, ifhe’s a bright kid, he’s goingto learn something. Hedoesn't have to go back thereand start at “A” all the time.You might even bring in astudent during the Summerquarter, but there wasalways this argument thatwe've got to get him startedin the Core sequence at acertain point. It did seem tome that there was a little bitof rigidity on both sides ofthe table in the discussionthat I held and I think wedented a little bit of the lackof perception as somepersons understood it.There’s room forimprovement in theperceptions.Q: Let me ask one finalfollow-up question. Younoted in your speech that themedian class size in theCollege was twice themedian class size in theGraduate Divisions. I waswondering if you say this asan area of concern?W: Well, not as obvious asthat might make it indicate.There are some, we’ll say inastronomy, you're not goingto have as many students asyou might want, so class sizein astronomy will always bevery small. I was reallytrying to get across the point| PIZZA || PLATTER1460 E. 53rdMl 3-2300 II FAST DELIVERY jAND PICKUPI . iOAIC FURNITURE-ANTIQUESRSFIM1SHSD + AS IST647E. 53th667-45001 -6:00 PMTUfc~.-$A7. DesksTchlesChcfirsDressersBookcasesAlso DoRefinhhing5 AM - 9 PM 7 DaV* A kHYDE PARK PIPE AND TOBACCO SHQ£1552 E. 53rd - under 1C tracksAil students get 10% off^ask for “Big Jim''Pipe*Pipe Tobacco* Imported Cigarette*Cigar* that it does worry me that, Iforgot the percentage I said.(Editor’s Note: 11%) thathad more than 35 students inthem. I think that if we’regoing to have the kind ofCollege we're talkingabout...I do worry about theclasses getting too big. Thestudents really complainabout that to me. I reallydon’t know if they were rightor whether I was gettinginformation from a sourcethat wasn’t worth anything.So I just had a study done tofind out. It’s always good to you look at the history of thePresidents, they’re not allwhat you’d call greatscholars, but academics,certainly, with distinctionsin some area of scholarship.For the moment, we’retalking of someone reallyhigh-flying, I suppose Iwould say. of someone ofhigh tolerance of ambiguity.It's a place that’s slightlycontrolled chaos, and youhve to have an ability toattract someone to take careof the fiscal, budgetarymatters because we’re notnave some dataQ: How have you beeninvolved in the deliberationsof the Presidential SearchCommittee.W: Well, I really shouldclarify that point. Ihave been invited to sit in onthe meetings as more or lessa resource person.I wasn’t an elected memberof either part of thatcommittee, so there’s been alittle confusion about that.I’m not there as a member.I’m there as a guest.Q: Perhaps you could talkbriefly about it. If you’resitting in as a resourseperson, I’m sure you havemany ideas about either whoor what type of successor...W: Certainly not who.that’s not my perrogative.Q: Right. Perhaps, youcould just tell briefly howyou view criteria for thesuccessor, and then thecommittee.W: You asked me aboutcriterion. Well, we talked, asa matter of fact, jotted downmy criteria and they arerather obvious things. ThisUniversity has always hadan academic type ofPresident. Certainly,someone who has academicstature of some kind, and itcan be of a great variety. Ife [yj Exsalsstsss© Coatact lesscs (Soft l Hsri)© Presents Filledm. MORTON R. MASLOVorara$T$Kyfe Par* Getter1310 E. 55t!i3S3-883 quite out of the woods yet,and someone with youth andvigor and a great deal ofstamina. As the saying goes,the days are long and many.But he has to be a person whois acceptable to the Board ofTrustees, etc., be able tounderstand each other andget along with each other,and have some feel for whatit means to have the care andfeeding of geniuses.Q: How much longer to youexpect to be here, asPresident9W: Oh, I don’t have theslightest idea. I presumenow that it would be difficultfor someone to leave anotherplace before October. Ipresume that. Unless it wassomeone from inside theUniversity; they could haveit tomorrow. (Laughter)Unless he were teaching aclass tomorrow I’m reallynot in a very good position totalk about this problem,because it isn't my province,it's the Board's, it’s thecommittee’s problem. Andas I said. I've been aresource person for theboard I might correctsomething which I read inthe .Maroon: 1 don’t think Iever tried to persuade PhilKurland to take the job. Idon’t know where they gotthat idea; nobody ever askedme about it.A: In your addressyesterday, you mentionedthat the University hasinvested more than $30million dollars in theneighborhood.JTX§€ESJL7Z iCLEANERS;CUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10%student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933 }I J W: That’s since the early50’s period.Q: Excluding securitylighting, bus service, andother institutional expenses.What was this money spentupon, if not for the thingswhich you mentioned?W: There was during theperiod a great deal ofpurchasing of propertieswmch later became housing,and that sort of thing duringthe period. I wasn't herewhen it was all spent, so Ican’t answer your questionin great detail.Q: Regarding moreprograms, you mentionedthe stabilization of EastHyde Park, specifically thepurchases of theWindermere and theShoreland What about anystabilization programs forany other areas of HydePark. Could you also definestabilization, please9W: Let me explain first ofall that the neighborhoodprogram is a boardcommittee, it’s a board runprogram. It is not anadministration administeredprogram. Actually, therewas deterioration in both thehotels and what we wereafraid of w’as that they wouldcontinue to go down. Theywould then either be torndown, leaving vacant lots, orused for the purposes notparticularly pleasing to theUniversity. In the back of mymind u’as the problem thatwe actually used theShoreland for Some of thosethings just don’t happen, butif we were successful instudent recruitment, then wewere going to be faced withthe problem of studenthousing. I had that in theback of my mind. In terms oftheShoreland.I think that hasbeen a very good solution tothe problem We couldn’tpossibly build a dormitoryWilson: "At Harvard,tenure is reached atfull professor; there isno tenure at rank lessthan full professor, atHarvard, so there iscase where it has beeninstituted..."for what the Shoreland costus I don’t know exactly whatit cost us, but we couldn'tbuild a dormitory for it.Q: Is that why the studentvillage plan was eventaullyscapped9Q: Is that why the studentvillage plan was eventuallyscrapped?W: No, I think the studentvillage plan was scrappedbecause money wasn'tavailable. Maybe that was astroke of luck; sometimesyou're lucky. I wasn’t herewhen the student village wasplanned, I go back abouteight years. I don’t know howit would have worked out ifstudent village had been completed. I have oftenspeculated about that: Hadstudent village been built,and then we got in the periodof difficulties with students, Idon’t know that studentswould have been interestedin living in student village ornot. A lot of places aroundthe country had emptydormitories, so we may havebeen lucky.Q: How is moneyallocation determined; let’ssay to invest millions ofdollars in the “land bank” inSouth Campus yet not tobuild the student village?W: There wasn’t muchmoney invested in SouthCampus to begin with.Q: Do you have specificfigures?W: Well, I think the lastacquisition I recall wassomewhere in theneighborhood of $600,000.Q: These are boarddecisions?W: Those are BoardDecisions, yes. That is whatthe Board of Trustees is for.Q: To go back to thedecisions that you said werefiscal and that in terms ofmoney not being available:You refer to the stabilizationideas and the money that hasbeen available for these...W: Well, when you are in atight money situation like wehave been for the last fiveyears, you're making avariety of decisions oninsufficient funds and — nowI'm quite serious — from mypoint of view, as well as, Iguess, the Board’s, you takea look at all the things thatare confronting you and youtry to set some priorities interms of both short rangeand long range and youdistribute the amount ofmoney that you have intowhat you hope is the wisestpossible allocation. Younever have enough to do allyou want to do in any one ofthe categories of activities,but you're trying to keepthem close together, tryingto keep any one of them fromdeteriorating completelywhile you're dealing with thesituation. So that yourquestion relates to how youhappen to meet that whenthere is a need over here.Well, there is a needeverywhere, so that youcould spend all the moneythat you have on onecategory or thing. But youtry to keep the whole frontmoving along a little bit andhope that you're making theright judgments. That's myjudgment of how a Boardreally should operate and theway an administrationshould also. So that if you goaround our own physicalplant I could show you howyou could spend $50 million.If you don’t have that $50million, you patch the roofsso that the water doesn'tcome in and ruin what isdownstairs. But you may not» wwiiWe | Kent\ RepairTYPEWRITERSADDERSELECTRONIC CALCULATORSDICTATORSU. of C Bookstore3750 S. 1111*Hours: M-f 8-5 S 9-T753-3303 CARPET CITY f6740 STONY ISLAND f324-79*8Has what you need from a'S10 used room size Rug to a,‘custom carpet. Specializingl in Remnants & Mill returns at Ila fraction of the original!cost.Decoration Colors ond(Qualities Additional 10%i Discount with this od.FREE DELIVERYFriday, November 14, 1975 - The Chicago Maroon-15that the EEOC guidelineswere entitled to extremedeference, i.e., had the forceof the law. I was curious as towhether the University iscurrently in compliance withthose guidelines.W: I looked at somethingjust this morning. Are youtalking about affirmativeaction plans?Q: Yes.W: I'm glad you asked thatquestion. I just read acommunication this morningfrom the Washington officeof whatever it is, I can't keepstraight what one it is, but itwas written to someone inthe state of Michigan whohad been inquiring intoapproved affirmative actionplans, so that Michigan couldgo look at some of them. Andthis letter essentially said. ITO 17Wilson Press Conference ContinuedFROM 15do something with the FieldHouse - but all Universitiesand Colleges, certainly - younever have enough to do allthe things that can be done,or should be done for thatmatter, and that meanssalaries or students aid. orthe plant, or anything at all,ever since Harper's days thisplace has survived on very,very limited resourcescompared to theaccomplishments Mr. Leviused to say that we’re anoverachiever, and that iscertainly true compared tothe resources that were ought to go back and read thearchives on that. I made areference to a plan almost asold as the University itself,and I think it was Burton orJudson, I’ve forgotten which,and Rockefeller, boughtsome land down there. Ithink that you ought to readthe archives on that; I did,and was convinced. I thinkthe original purchase on theSouth Campus was aRockefeller purchase. I’mnot as much of a historian ofthe place as Don (Buckner)is because he has beenreading the archives have a building to house theservices of the University,the general services. Rightnow, they are in the middleof campus. That’s a veryexpensive piece of campusland. I don’t think there’sany problem on what couldgo there. You have ampleadditional things like the BarAssociation, where therewould be academic type ofassociations, but I wouldmuch rather think in termsof Law School expansion or aPress building...none of thatis what I’d call planned inany sense.’t think there’s any problemon what could go there. You Wilson: "I don't un¬derstand why you saythat SECC is popular inCity Hall."have ample additional thingslike the Bar Association,where there would beacademic type ofassociations, but I wouldmuch rather think in termsof Law School expansion or aPress building...none of thatis what I’d call planned inany sense.Q: You mentioned thatthroughout theQ: You mentioned that though the SECC steps arebeing taken to remedy “themore flagrant defects wehave encountered in localjudicial procedures.’’W: What I had in mindspecifically, w-as at themoment there is anoperation planned, if I un¬derstand it correctly, tocomputerize past offenses sothat the judge can punch acomputer button with thename and find out what therecord of a man is. That’s thekind of thing we’re trying todeal with.Q: Is the University usingits resources to aid theSECC?W: We pay our dues to theSECC. That’s the idea of theSECC.Q: Further along, with thejudiciary, the SupremeCourt ruled four years agoassiduously, but I went backand I did read a lot of theState of the UniversityAddresses, and I wasdumbfounded to find. I thinkit was in Burton’s, that hewas going to build collegesover there, a whole set ofcolleges over there. He ranout of money, or didn't getthe money.Q: What is planned fordown there now?W: The Law .School wouldlike to expand. When you savplanned ..means and ends isbetter than planned. I'veoften ♦bought it would be niceavailable. And Harper set apattern of always runningjust a little ahead, theresources in trail...he got by,and I think that’s the bestway to do it. in terms ofpromotion. I don't know ofany University that's verycomfortable these daysexcept Harvard. AndHarvard, God knows, has itsreasonable problems. Wemust have all worried.Q: It’s t 1 charged thatthe University • has acquiredthe South Cu npus area toserve as a buffer zoneb e t w e v self andWood lav -WFIFtt ci mm il* **MARK VONNEGUTIn 1969, Mark Vonnegut graduatedfrom Swarthmore College. Bored withEast Coast academia, suspicious ofhis father's literary notoriety, anddetermined to stay true to theprinciples of hippiedom, heheaded for British Columbiato start a commune. Twoyears later, he was com¬mitted to a psychiatric hos¬pital— diagnosed severelyschizophrenic.THE EDEN EXPRESS isabout the inconsistencies ofthe youth movement of the'60s, American myths andhuman relationships, and thepain and stigma of mentalillness. But most importantly,it is about Mark's struggle tostay alive and significant.PRAEGER PUBLISHERS111 Fourth Ave., N.Y. 10003A FRANK$8.95 E TAYLOR BOOK6-The Chicogo Maroon - Friday, November 14, 1975 SAVIMGS WITH OURMIGHT COACH FARESit's never too late to save. 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So, to save big, standby for late night flights between selected cities.The Proud Bird with the Golden Tail.Wilson Press Conference ContinuedFROM 16am attaching thoseUniversities whose af¬firmative action plans havebeen approved. TheUniversity of Chicago was onthe list. I must say. that's thefirst time I’d known that. Wehaven’t gotten any directconfirmation ourselves, but Iwas pleased to see that.Q: There are a number ofcases currently in litigationconcerning the compliancewith the EEOC sexdiscrimination guidelines onhealth insurance programs.I was curious whether theUniversity is in compliancewith regards to health in¬surance for faculty and staff.Q: You talked in yourspeech about the problem oftoo many faculty.W: The Ford plan is agreat bench mark At thistime, if projections are right,and I don’t say that they areright. I think plans arefruitful. I think the growth offaculty curve surpassed thegrowth of student curve ifyou go back and look at theprojections I was pointing to.and went through the hoopaagain. The second point 1was making is that I don'tthink we are going to haveenough resources tomaintain a faculty of thatsize. I would think we wouldstabilize...the student bodyat somewhere between 8200and 8500 and fluctuatebetween those two figuresfor the next ten years. Iwould think that would bevery good. I don’t think weneed a faculty of over athousand for that That ’s justa round figureQ: What I was going to askyou was how you plan toreduce the faculty; there area variety of ways of doingthis.W: We have tried to let itdrop by attritionQ: Two questions is one:do you expect that it mightnot work out by attrition..W: It can. I thinkQ: Is there a date by whichyou might have that beyondyou’’W: No. it would get downto that over the next two orthree years. I would say.Q: And also, the variousproposals you havesuggested along the lines oftenure...W: 1 was suggesting thatthe committee is going tolook into it. I purposelydidn’t suggest anything.Q: Can you project intohow some of those proposalsWANTEDPhysical EducationINSTRUCTORS* Ice Skating* Fencing* Roller Skating* Gymnastics& Trampoline* Sr. Lifeguards& W.S.I.’s* Pre School Gym* Backpackingpart-time: male/femaleContact: Joe DotlichHyde Park JCC363-2770 might be reacted to9 Couldany of them conceivably beinstituted, given policies ofother institutions which arecounter?W: At Harvard tenure isreached at full professor;there is no tenure at rankless than full professor atHarvard, so there is a casewhere it’s been instituted.The point I’m trying to makeis this: the history of tenureat the associate professorlevel assumed an appoimentfor a four year period andtwo appointments asassistant professor for atotal of six. so that the totalof that time was ten.Q: 1 find implicit in yourremarks that you feel thatthe University, given itstraditions, would want toretain those traditions.W: I would hope so. I'm agreat traditionalist, whenthey are great traditions.Q: Have there been anylong range plans made nowfor funding the medicalschool9W. To me, long rangeplans are two years, thesedays. Anybody running abudget, if he’s trying toproject more than two, youget suspicious.0: Aside from tuitionincreases, then9W: Now, don’t hit ;ne toohard on that, because reallyI’ve tried to keep the tuitionincreases below what onecould imagine as beingjustifiable and were stillbelow the Eastern schools.We will be below them nextyear, too, I think. I've donemy best to keep that as lowas possible, but when you saylong range, the medicalschool is part of the(Campaign for ChicagoFund) Drive. They will getconsiderable money fromthe Drive, and that’s a fiveyear projection, so that’s aslong as you can really dothese days. I don't know howyou project more than twoyears, thoughQ Will it have to be theprivate sector, then, whichsupports the medical school9W . I don’t know, but in themedical area we have beendoing very well, with respectto the Federal Government,in terms of our researchprograms. I really missedmy own prediction; I wasworried in this period, mygeneral budget strategy hasbeen to try to increaserestricted funds in variousforms to take up the slack onunrestricted, and to hope and pray that government fundswould go down slowly. Well,they haven’t gone down;they have varied in differentparts of the University, butacross the street (the medschool) has done very well.And I was terribly worriedover there, and as I said,even the training grantsstipend, we have done betterthan anybody had predicted,so we have come out prettywell over there. The cancerwork is well funded, that’s agood one. so we have comeout better than I thought wewould Physical sciences. Ithink, is a tough area.Q: I’d like to follow upanother comment you madeabout the faculty. You saidthat the committee would beinvestigating alternatives tomandatory retirement.W: Variations onretirement. At the moment,we have retirement,deferred retirement, orforced retirement with anappointment The differenceis if you retire, you areretired: you start drawingretirement funds, and you dowhatever you want to do.Deferred retirement keeps aperson on just as if nothinghad happened , he goes on tillhe's 88 or 69 Or else youretire with funds off thebudget to an appointmentwhere you continue to doresearch or somehing likethat Now, the kinds of thingsthat I had in mind, at least, isthat I. for example, wouldhave liked very much tohave considered next yearthe possibility of a half-timeappointment, because I thinkthat at 62 one could take ahalf-time appointment anddo some other things that hehasn’t had time to do. So itseems to me that our facultycould, upon reaching agesixty, say, well I don’t reallywant a full-time, I want ahalf-time appointment. It’sanother way of approachingthe retirement. Or, maybe itwas George Stigler who saidwe ought to maximize thesalaries at age 55 or 60. andtaper salaries down towards65. Or somebody else wassuggesting the possibility oflonger term sabbaticalThere are some variationswhich I think haven't reallybeen tried, and they might bevery fruitful. I don’t know.All I wanted to do was openup the question.0: Mr Wilson. I'd like togo back to the neighborhoodand your comments on the SECC. You mention that wepay our dues to the SECC.What does it mean to pay ourdues to the SECC?W . The SECC ispresumably the South EastChicago Commission, fundedby contributions from theUniversity and from otherelements from Hyde Park,and it's independent of theUniversity in the sense thatWilson: "The peoplewho haven't taughtcollege students arethe ones who grousemost. I have asuspicion that theymay grouse becausethe college studentsare bright enough topush them."we don’t harbor it We try tokeep it at arm’s length, ifpossible. If it is unpopularwith some elements Isuppose that they wouldwithdraw from it If it getsunpopular with theUniversity, I suppose wecould withdraw from it. Thatwas the theory of itQ: Do you know whatproportion of the funding ofthe SECC comes from theUniversity?W: No, I don’t know. Idon’t know who would,maybe Jon 'Kleinbard). Idon’t because I don’t reviewhis areasQ: In your address, youmentioned that studentfaculty committees arefunctioning at a low level.W. I get the impressionfrom talking to students thatthey are not very active, andthat’s maybe where I gotthat impression Maybe it'sthe wrong concept at thisparticular time, maybethere's a better idea All Iwas trying to suggest wasthat 1 do think that in theacademic areas, it's a goodthing to keep in touch withthe students, because l founddiscussion with themenlightening. stimulating,and interesting I think oneof the easy things to do is tolet that go I don’t think itshould be let go.g: On whom would youplace the burden for buildinga structure for eitherreinstituting this idea, offinding some other idea9W: The Deans andChairmen I was trying tothrow the responsibility to the Deans. I think that'swhere it lies And with theMasters in the College. If itdoesn’t work at that level,it's not going to work Youcan't light fires from uphere. A very wise thing wasonce said to me; John, youremember you don'trepresent the fifth floor It’sout there, and if it doesn’twork out there, you can'tmake it workQ: You referred to theCollege as giving substantialbenefits to the graduatedivisions and the University.W. I find the college full ofvery bright students, and Ithink they’re a wonderfulgroup to have around One cfthe things I got out of thesediscussions was the sort of. Idon’t want to say toleranceof the College (by theadministration). That isn’tthe sort of thing I meant Youtalk to someone like RogerHildebrand, he’s justenthusiastic as all get outabout college students, hashad them in his classes andloves them The people whohaven't taught collegestudents are the ones whogrouse most. I have asuspicion they may grousebecause the college studentsare bright enough to pushthem; I have to be fair, I findthat good I said it. I thinkthere is a general feeling,and I think less on the part ofthe professional schoolsbecause the professionaloptions around here havemade the professional schoolfaculties very, very fond ofcollege students. You go overto the business school, orSSA. or the law school, thecollege students get a lothigher grades than some ofthe graduate students.0: Do you envision aprofessional option programinto the medical sciences9W: There was a programtalked about a couple ofyears ago. and we went aftersome money to put it intoeffect and didn’t get it. Now Iunderstand that there arediscussions going on withCommonwealth in thatregard, so again I said inthere, back in the reportwhere I was talking aboutthe medical area, somebodyhas to look at pre¬ professional curriculum formedical school curriculum. Iwould welcome it, but I don'thave much to do with it, itwould be the faculty thereand the college faculty. So Idon’t know how to answeryour question yew or no, Idon't have any feel for itright now. except for the factthat we did try it a couple ofyears ago. It didn't come offbecause we didn’t haveenough money for i t.PerhapsQ You talked about thebright students in thecollege The bright studentsall over the University are asinterested in the art ofinquiry as the faculty. Howwould you propose thatstudents who are concernedabout the participation of thefaculty...W: I would open it up onthe substantive issues andhave discussions.Q. Specifically, throughwhat method9 A committeeof inquiry9W: I wouldn’t call it acommittee of inquiry, thatmakes me nervousQ: Is it the name whichdisturbs you9W: I would just say that wewere going to have a seriesof open forums.Q: Isn't that the samething9W: No, I don't think that’sthe same thing, because anopen forum is an open forumAn inquiry is an inquiryQ Do you intend to do...W: I don't intend to doanything about it. because Idon’t view it quite the sameway. apparently, as studentgovernment But I don'tthink inquisitions serve apurposeQ: Would you feel thesame way regarding facultyparticipation were it an openforum9W: They are free toparticipate or not.Q: Do you recommendnon-cooperation9W. On open forum dis¬cussions are open forumdiscussions. It I don't want togo, I don't think anyoneshould be able to make mego If 1 want to go. no oneshould be able to keep mefrom going And that's thedifference EssentiallyGOING HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS?Now is the time to make your travel arrangements! Because it has provenimpractical in the past for us to organize group flights for Christmas, wewould like to advise you that if you can get together you own groups of 10or moreto travel on the same flight to any of the following cities:NEW YORKWASHINGTONBOSTONBUFFALOPITTSBURGHPHILADELPHIAWe can arrange group fare tickets at substantial reductions. If yourdestination is the West coast, contact us now concerning excursion farereservations. Special Note: If you are going to Florida, we will try to get youindividual flights to meet your schedule, but many have long been sold out;please do not wait till the last minute!Contact us for all your air travel needsMIDWAY TRAVEL. IN THE ADMINISTRATION BUILDING753-2301 RESEARCH PAPERSTHOUSANDS ON FILESend tor your up-to-date, 160-page, mail order catalog of5.500 topics. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage and handlingCOLLEGIATE RESEARCH1720 PONTIUS AVE . SUITE 201LOS ANGELES. CALIF 90025Name _AddressCityState Zip. . /jTLcJ<?y,r..N9v3rnker 14, 1975 - The Chicago Maroon-17?<•?' tf i-rr Vi*. * iVrY.'.;*:. fTEAR OUT PAGE AND USE FOR REFERENCE "A' ROUTEThe University of Chicago"Free"Evening Mini Bus ServiceFall 1975 • Effective date—September 15, 1975 through |une 11, 1976REVISED 11/3/75There are three routes—A, B & C, each requir¬ing approximately 3? minutes for a round trip.All three routes START and end on the 57thStreet side of the Regenstein Library.Except for University Holidays, MINI BUSESwill operate seven days per week over theroutes shown below from 6 p.m. to 1:00 a.m.On Holidays, one bus will cover all threeroutes. Service starts at 5 p.m. on Saturdays.The MINI BUSES are clearly identified by anilluminated sign reading U of C MINI BUS (A), (B) or (C). Upon signal drivers will stop at anyUniversity Building to take on passengers.This service is provided FREE OF CHARGEto Faculty, Staff and Students of the Universityof Chicago upon presentation of UniversityIdentification.Pick up your MINI BUS route maps at theBursar's Office, Billings Cashier's Office,Bookstore, Blaine 105, International House In¬formation Desk, Reynolds Club De$k and theLaw School Receptionist's Desk. Starts at Regenstein Library%West to Ellis'South to 59thWest to Maryland (Billings)North around Wyler to 57th & DrexelWest on 57th to Cottage (Interns Res.)North on Cottage to 56thEast on 56th to MarylandSouth on Maryland to 5HthWest on 58th to Cottage (Nurses Res.)South on Cottage to 60thEast on 60th to DrexelSouth on Drexel to 61st (Nurses Res.)East on 61st to InglesideNorth on Ingleside to 60th (Faculty Housing)East to Stony (Burton-)udson & Plaisance)North to 59thWest to Blackstone (Breckinridge, & Int'l. House)North to 57th (Blackstone Hall)West to Kimbark (5700 Dorchester)South to 59th (Woodward Court)West to Wood I awn (Ida Noyes)North to 58thWest to UniversityNorth to 57thWest to Regenstein£North to 55th frontageWest to InglesideNorth to 53rd (Boucher)West to DrexelSo. to 55th frontageE. to Ellis"B" ROUTEStarts at RegensteinWest to EllisSouth to 59thEast to University (Harper)North to 53rd (Pierce)West to GreenwcxxlSouth to 54th (5400 Greenwood)East to UniversityNorth to 51stEast to Lake ParkNorth to 48thWest to Dorchester^^North to Parking LotI^South to 53 rd; West to Woodlawn\ South to 57th; West to Regensteinly South to 48thWest to KimbarkSouth to 49thEast to Dorchester"C" floor*Starts at RegensteinWest to EllisNorth to 55th (5518 Ellis)East to KenwoodNorth to 54th St.East to BlackstoneNorth to 53rdEast to HarperSouth to 54th Place (Harper Surt)West to BlackstoneSouth to 55thWest to DorchesterEast to CornellNorth to E. Hyde Park Blvd.East to S. Hyde Park Blvd.South to 54thEast to South Shore DriveSouth to 55th (Shoreland)West to S. Hyde Park Blvd.South to 56th (Broadview)West to Lake ParkSouth to 57thWest to Regenstein (5700 Dorchester)further information may be obtained from the Plant Department, 960 East 58th Street, Mr. A. Herbster, 753-3082. E. L. MILLER, Director, Plant Operations18-The Chicago Maroon - Friday, November 14, 1975■CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEAPARTMENT TO SHARE, roomavailable in large flat on 54th andWoodlawn Call 955 6739, early or late. economic situation, and you are readyto listen to a new idea, call 978 6325 Noobligation, no info, over the phoneCall, let's have coffee and talkSublet apartment for winter quarter 21/ 2 rooms, 1 bedroom, wooden floors,furnished From Dec. 14 March 19,$168 a month 5313 Kimbark Apt 2A,#3241057For Rent: 3 room (1 brm), FurnishedApt. $189/mo. Utilities inc. 5220 S.Kenwood, PH 493 9068 (MarriedStudent Housing)Large Furn rooms, use of kit$20 00/ week, 6138 University 667 5740.Private Bedroom in Deluxe 5 roomApt now to Male or Female MusicLover. $92.50/ mo & util at 5340Woodlawn. Nov. Occ. Harry: 288 4884CHICAGO BEACH BEAUTIFULFURNISHED APARTMENTS. Nearbeach, parks, loop, UC and 1C trains;11 mins, to loop buses, door. Modestdaily, weekly, monthly rates 24 hr.desk, complete hotel services, 5100 SCornell DO 3 2400 Miss Smith.SPACE WANTEDUC grad student (m) needs room nearcampus Jan March Call 324 6000x639SPACE FOR SALE6 rm condo. East Hyde Park by appt.only after 6 p.m 955 9322Lovely CONDO in Kenwood (57th), 2bedroom, spacious living room, diningroom and newly furnished kitchen. Airconditioned Freshly decorated, fullycarpeted including bath & kitchenOwner asking $35,000, moving westlater this year. 374 .i828, Iv messagePEOPLE WANTEDOVERSEAS JOBS temporary orpermanent Europe. Australia, S.America. Africa, etc. All fields $500$1 200 monthly. Expenses paidsightseeing, Free info Write international Job Center Dept C 7 Box4J90. Berkeley, Ca 94704l ke children7 Have free time? Needextra money? Chiid Care Task ForceReferral needs sitters for full and parttime, permanent and temporary carerequests Call 288 8391 to interviewNeed replacement to feed rats inBillings during Xmas break 10 to 15hrs wek $3.57 hr Eleanor 241 6256Business Opportunity no experiencenec H you can't cope with your Author needs part time assistant,effective typing, work periodsnegotiable 643 8295Learn some psychology and earn $2 anhour Subjects needed for experimentsin cognitive psychology, psychology oflanguage, and visual perception. Forinformation call Mary Stockman 7534710Where else can you get free applejuice, insurance, a smile & help yourfellow human beings? Billings BloodBank! Call tor appt 947 5579Portraits, 4 for $5 and up MaynardStudio 1459 E 63rd, 2nd floor, 643 4083.ILLUSTRATIONSDone to your order. Call Noel Price947 0698, eveningsPEOPLE FOR SALETypist, effective, experienced,inexpensive You write it, I'll type it.Julie . 324 4198 or 947 8652Learn Russian the best possible way:private lessons by native, experiencedteacher Very reasonable. Trial lessonfree no obligation Gregory Rocah472 1420.QUILTING CLASSESday and eveningfor information call 643 3368.CLASSIC GUITAR493 3949 INSTRUCTIONVERSAILLES5254 S. Dorchosf®rWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGATTRACTIVE 1 % AND2 % ROOM STUDIOSFURNISHED or UNFURNISHED$!2f«o$209Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus StopFA 4-0200 Mrs. Grook For exp piano teacher call 947 9746.Need a math tutor? Call Mike at 9555932 for experienced help.Thesis, disertations, term papers, genoffice corres typed on late IBMcorrective typewriters Ratesreasonable Phone 239 4257, Mrs Ross.MILES ARCHER MOVERSReasonable prices. Call 241 5830 or 9470698 or 752 4910 for information.YOGA Nervous? Hard to concentrate?Or meditate? Can't quickly relax? CallSri Nerode. 88 year old Yogi Masterfor classes NY3 7454 or D03 0155.SCENESWANT TO GET OUT OF CHICAGO7see the OUTING CLUB BULLETINBOARD in Reynolds Club for hiking,bteyeling, climbinq.cavinq, and skiingtripsComputers know a lot about you, whatdo you know about computers7 Tell orask UCCCS Reynolds 7 pm FriCome join U of C folkdancers withdancing of all nations Mon beginninglevei 8. Sun general level, 8 pm, 50cdonation, Fri all levels 7:30, Ida Noyesevery week through finals, (excepttonight, in Reynolds Club)THE CRISIS IN THE BANKINGSYSTEM Union for Radical PoliticalEconomics Monday Night WorkshopNov 17 7 30 PM Ida Noyes 3rd Floor.Holiday festival St. Thomas Apostle5467 Woodlawn Sat Nov. 15 10 am 9pm pottery plants pillows handcraft etraffle tv 100 cash afqhan ham turk10% Discounton pipes withU.C. IDuntil Nov. 30Js pipeKshop1523 ho 53rdin the Hyde Park Bank LobbyImported CigarettesFine TobaccosQuality Pipes LEICADEMOMODEL CAMERAOn Friday November 14th &Saturday November 15th WeWill HavetheLeitz DistrictRepresentative, Steve Smith inOur Store He Will Be on Handto Answer Questions & Demonstrafe This Outstanding Line ofFine Equipment. There WillBe Special Prices on ThisEquipment During the DemoTHANK YOU1342 E 55th ST 493 6700OPEN SUNDAYS 12 4OPEN SUNDAYS 12 4 752 5655 or 752 1127LOST NOTEBOOKTn UC spiral notebook containingtyped paper 2 letters and importantnotes please call 955 1264 after 6 pmreward for returnROSEHIP STRINGBANDFOR SALE See them with Euphoria BlimpworksMemorial Band Sat Nov 22 at 8 00 inthe sanctuary at the Gargoyle tickets$2 00Apartment Sale bookcases, shelves,filing cabinet, bureaus, arm/ deskchairs, vanity, fans, mysteries,science fiction, novels, odds & ends.493 2316or come Sat Nov. 15, 10 am 2pm 1616 E 50th Place, Apt 3DThinking of buying a new Chevrolet7Call Ron Graef grad student andSAVE! 3 2080 morn/ 548 2198 eve 6 8 OPERA6rm. condo East Hyde Park by apptonly atter 6 p.m. 955 9322WHPK STATIONMEETINGThere will be a WHPK station meetingTuesday, November 18, 1975 at 7:00PM in Reynolds Club south lounge Allstation members must attend. Theagenda will include the election ofgoverning members,RADIO DRAMARadio drama is coming back to HydePark on WHPK 88.3 FM! There areopenings in all areas of production,including Acting, Tech., Production,Publicity. There is a special need fororiginal scripts and Directors. Allthose interested in participatingshould attend the organizationalmeeting on Monday, Nov. 17 a* 7:30PM in the North Lounge of ReynoldsClub or contact John Hallowitz at theWHPK studiosSPECIAL"TM"-TV SHOWFriday November 14 — Merv Griffinentertains Maharishi Mahesh Yogifounder of the TranscendentalMeditation Movement — othermedi fating guests include ClintEastwood, Mary Tyler Moore, DrBernard Gluck & CongressmanRichard Nolan. Friday nite Nov 14 8pm Channel 32 The marraige of Figaro by Mozart TheChicago Opera Studio production inMandel Hall Friday Nov. 20 (one showonly) Students $3 Fac & Staff $5General $6 on sale Nov 17 at ReynoldsClub desk UC Extension DivMAIL/STOCK CLERKWork for a national organization onthe University of Chicago campus. Noexperience necessary. Hours: 9:005:00 Mon Fri Salary: $450 month.Call 947 2111ELMER FUDDBob Clampett Cartoon Festival.Veteran Warner Bros animator BobClampett, in person, with many of hisvintage cartoons Beanie &. Cecil,Sylvester c Tweety, Bugs Bunny.Friday Nov. 14, 7 & 10 PM. Coon Aud ,Leverone Hall, Northwestern U..Evanston Admission Si 50EUPHORIAEuphoria where7 In the sanctuary atthe Gargoyle with Rosehip StringBand on Sat Nov. 22, 8:00 tickets at thedoor S2.00TEETH!In this year of the Bicentennial, Blackfriars presents George Washington'sfavorite musical comedy from the oldcountry The Beggar's Opera Comeand see what made George laugh hardenough to drop his teeth Nov 15, 16, 178:30 p.m. Ida Noyes Hall. Tickets,$1 50 Students. $2 50 Others,OMNIATURQUOISEJEWELRYUC student has close contacts withNavajo silversmith in Arizona, isoffermq hand crafted iewelry. Ringschokers, liquid silver, old pawn andcustom work Call 947 9085.FEMINIST MEETINGAn important business meeting for theUniversity Feminists will be held Mor.Nov 17 at 6 pm on the 3rd floor of theBlue Gargoyle. For more info call 6843189 or 752 '655CREATIVE SERVICESCreative Sabbath Services occurevery Friday night at 7 30 at H i I leiHouse, 5715 S Woodlawn For info call International House everything shopCome in and ask about OMNIA's soonto arrive inter nat iona I jewelryMoroccan leather goods, and VerascarvesChokers, bracelets, beads OMNIAHyde Park's best Christmas Cardsand ornaments Coming soon toOMNIASANCTUARYIf you missed their last appearance inHyde Park catch Rosehip String Bandon Nov 22 at 8.00 tickets S2.00AMERICA'S BESTMAGAZINE STOREBOB'S NEWSSTANDYES' 1515 DIFFERENT TITLESEverything from ecology to hangglidinq Science fiction, to eroticaThousands of underground comix.Marvel, C, as well British Press Daily,L ^ ^ 1— -1 - ^ ^ ^ —k .1 j ip ^k ip - t- ^<t*T»*T* *T* m *T* “T* *T» *T* m -T- *T* m m m m -T* -T* m m -T* m m nI GOLD CITY INN* •given * * * *by the Maroon* New Hours: Open DailyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9:00 p.m.A Gold Mine Of G^od Food 'Student Discount:1 0% tor table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559‘near Harper Court)Eat more for less.^(Try our convenient take-out orders.)*^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^***¥r******************** ************************** New York Times Daily, 6 a m. SUN 7a m. Cigarettes, candh, cold pop,lottery tickets A great place to go andvoid reality Building looks like rtbunker corner of 5100 Lake Park MontoFri7am 6p.m Sat. 7 am. 9p.mSun 6 a m 5 p m. Truly a periodicalfreaks garden of earthy delightsWOMEN'S MAGAZINEPrimavera, the women's literarymagazine, is on sale in all Hyde Parkbookstores Rackets furnished 7 strokes & rulesJim Smith TE 4 7230 or 667 4038 by 9p m.ASSISTANTLIBRARIANSTEP TUTORINGInterested in helping neighborhoodchildren? The Student TutoringElementary Project needs volunteersto tutor students in school work, such atreading or math, or to help in specialprojects, such as art, music or science.For more information call Ron Schwartz, 924 2664 or Rod Wing, 753 3541 College degree; Knowledge of Russianessential; some typing Full time,salary $7,700, Hyde Park area CallMr Freitog 955 4545. Equal Opportunify Employer M/ F.CALCULATORSHewlett Packard and Texas Instrument calculators, the best moneycan buy now at the lowest pricesaround 753 2240 Rm 1916 aft 241 5496eves.ALTERATIONSREFRIGERATORRENTALMini fnge, Pennies a day Freedelivery Call Swan Rental 721 4400.PAN PIZZADELIVERYThe Medici Delivers from 5 10 p.m.weekdays, 5 11 Saturday, 667 7394.Save 60 cents it you pick it up yourselfBOOKS BOUGHTBooks bought & sold everyday, everynight 9 11 Powells 1501 E 57thTENNIS LESSONSSeries of 8 at only $1 15 per hourGULLIVERS WAS GREATBUT, NO ONE KNEW IT!!Maybe ID was the God forsakenlocation. My Manager, and Buddy,Norma J. Brown, tried our damdestto make the store a success, but wefailed.It was an oasis filled with funkymusic, brave thoughts, poetry, art,foreign accents, multicolored com¬plexions, radical newspapers andgood intentions.While there certainly is no shamein failure, I'm proud to say I had theguts to give it a try.Anyway, all the really interestingbooks on Zen, film criticism,Judaism, etc., and all the foreignpublications are now at Bob'sNewsstand, 5100 Lake Park. Thatwill bring the total of differentperiodicals there up to over 200C.Norma's tnere, and it really is agroovy place Come see what youmissed at Gulliver’s Periodicals.-Bob Katzman Professional alterations and tailoringof men and women's garments Call493 9579 between 6 9 p.m.LESS THAN RENTSpacious 4 1 2 room condominium inEast Hyde Park Assessments under$100 Ir w/ fireplace betir dr mod kitporch study 1 full bath. Call for appointment Edward Lavelle, KennedyRyan & Monigal. 1461 E 57th St. 6676666LOSTAnth notes Brown file. Call 752 7598SAVE NY S100Roundtrip jet OHare LaGuardia.Fixed price Reserved DepartureGUARANTEED Return anytime (30da). Limited seats minimum tenSecurity $1 47. No refund afterDEADLINE 17 NOV Call 3591 or UTravel (5125 E55i Open Sat 66 7 3900PERSONALSCHICAGO HOT LINE! Recommendedby John Milton, Screw Magazine. Firstcandid sexual guide to Chicaqo. $5TRA 216 W. Jackson Dept C 1 ChicagoIL 60606Gaydates Unlimited! Meet gaymatesthru qaydates! PO Box 11587 Chg, II6061 Join new - extra 2 mos FREEPREGNANCY TESTS 10a.m, 2p.m.Saturdays Southside Women's HealthServices Augustana Church 5500 SWoodlawn Bring 1st morning urinesample $1.50 donation.WRITER S WORKSHOP (PL 2 8377)ffiSOSlCamara1342 E. 55 St Chicago IL 60615493-6700OAK FIREWOOD‘70 A TONIncludes tax, kindling & dump delivery.Also available, birch, cherry, maple &ash.CALL HYDE PARK FIREWOODAT 549-5071 OR 947-0330With This Ad OnlyUsed Desks *25 and upUsed Chairs *10 and upNew Chairs *25 and up"cash and carry"c BRAND yEQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:00RE 4-2111Friday, November 14, 1975 - The Chicago Maroon-19(continued) want the very best qualities of cheese,it is necessary to buy the original product which gavethe type the taste that is the standard of quality.Bel Paese is a unique flavor that is widely copied. Usual¬ly priced at approximately $450 per pound, our price isonly $319 per pound. Another unique cheese is very mildand is also white. This one, Grape Seed is coveredwith sterilized grape seeds. When chewed in thecheese they give a crunchy nutlike character to thetaste. Usually priced at $329, our special price is $225 perpound.For those who want the creamy textures we now havethe latest thing in flavors. Gourmandise now is avail¬able in the following new types: Kirsch with almondsOrange, Kirsch with raisins, as well as the moreWalnut and Cherry, all on sale at $239 a pound.For those protein seekers at low price.PR0V0L0NEHICKORY SMOKED CHEDDARBRANDIED CHEDDAR SPREADGARLIC CHEDDAR SPREADWINE SPECIALSLIEBFRAUMILCH S149 Fifth*3” LIEBFRAUMILCH SPATLESE 3 for s10°“compare the taste of this with some famous advertised brands that sell for $450 and up.YOSEMITE ROAD California Table Wines Red, White, Rose $2" canonCOTEAUX TRICASTAN French Red Rhone Wine1969LATACHE Great Red Burgundy $30°°PEPSI COLA 6 cans 99* Canada DryR.C. COLA 6 cans 89* Full quarts 4 FOR $100$-|59S'] 25$-(25$“|25242? East 72nd Stm*iDaily: 10a.m.-11 p.m. Sunday: Noon-9 p m. ba 1-9210COMPLETE PARTY SERVICE FROMDaily 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Sunday: Noon-9 p.m.20-The Chicago Maroon - Friday, November 14, 1975