Chicago^MaroonVOL. 85 NO. 59 fTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO FRIDAY, May 14, 1976Atom Captured On FilmBy Aaron Filler“Heisenberg, make upyour mind!” proclaims thegrafitto on an obscure wallat the University of Chicago.In room 164 of the EnricoFermi Research Institute, ateam under the aegis ofAlbert V. Crewe, Dean of thePhysical Sciences Division,has accepted this famed Un¬certainty Principle and put itto work; one recent productis the first motion picture ofa single atom.The Heisenberg Un¬certainty Principle is anequation of great im¬portance in quantummechanics; a major im¬plication of the principle isthat one can know theangular momentum (speed,direction, and mass) of avery tiny particle or one canknow where it is, but one ab¬solutely cannot know bothpieces of information at thesame time. When one istrying to use a stream ofelectrons to make a motionpicture of an atom, needlessto say, Heisenberg is an ex¬tremely difficult person tohave around.Professor Crewe is somewhat ambivalenttowards all of the attentionbeing given to the motionpictures recently producedby Michael Isaacson andhimself. He has spent thelast ten or fifteen yearsredesigning the electronmicroscope to outsmartHeisenberg and hasproduced remarkably cer¬tain results. The movies areimportant, but incidental.The most important aspectof his research, Mr. Creweasserts, is the developmentof new tools for researchers.Crewe’stansmission scanningelectronmicroscope (STEM)produced the firstphotograph of an atom shor¬tly after its completion in1970. The exact nature of hisachievement may besomewhat difficult to com-peletely understand formany non-physics majors.The resolution of the STEMis about the same as thediameter of the larger atomssuch as Uranium, roughlythree Angstroms (AnAngstrom is 10-8cm). Thereare many standard electronmicroscopes at the Univer¬ sity with resolutions of twoand three angstroms, butnone of these can photographatoms. Heisenberg does notpermit it.In a standard electronmicroscope, a filament isheated to the point at whichit emits a broadside of elec¬trons. A magnetic lens getsthe electrons movingparallel to each other towar¬ds a target. The electronsthat do not hit the specimencontinue past it to strike aplate which floresceswherever it is hit. The“shadow” of the object for¬ms the image. Ths is fine forexamining viruses or othervery small organicspecimens, but as the size ofthe object gets smaller andsmaller, the Heisenberg Un¬certainty Principle begins tointerfere. It is aninescapable fact of quantummechanics that since themotion of the electrons in thescope is very exactly known,the position of the objects ob-served becomes in¬determinable. They cannotappear in a photograph.Theoretically, even it youCrewe To 7 Images of uranium atoms (bright spots) are magnified 7.5 million times by a microscopedesigned by Albert Crewe, who has now used the instrument to make the first motion pic¬tures of atoms.Wilson Discusses Campus IssuesBy David J. BlumJohn Wilson told four cam¬pus interviewers last weekthat the University “does notneed to increase the staff” ofthe Office of Admissions toattract minority studentsSG (Almost) Elects New AssemblyBy Martha CongerThe biggest question in thenon-dormitory elections forthe 1976-77 Student Govern¬ment Assembly (SGA) is,did David E. WTiittaker votefor himself?The newly-elected SocialSciences Administrationrepresentative, Mr. Whit¬taker received one vote outof one ballot cast, anabysmal turnout challengedby the three ballots cast inthe Medical School electionsfor four candidates, andthree ballots cast inBiological Sciences for onecandidate.Six seats in BiologicalSciences and three seats inSSA are vacant. In thePhysical Sciences Division,eighteen candidates with onevote each are tied for twoseats.Overall voter turnoutduring the three days ofballoting totalled 464 ballotscast, a 7.2 participation rate.Law School and OtherCollege elections drew 20 oftheir constituencies, an ex¬cellent response comparedto past SG elections.In the new 1976-77 Assem¬bly, 101 seats are filled, nineare vacant, and five are tied.Run-off elections for tiedseats will be held at thereception for new SG mem¬bers Wednesday, May 19th,at 6:00 pm in the third-floorIda Noyes Sun Parlor. Can¬didates for contested seatsshould attend.The first SG meeting for1976-77 representatives will be held in Harper 130 at 7:00pm, following the reception.In other races, three LawSchool write-in candidates(Richard Chandler, ScottMandelup, and MichaelMandell) received morevotes than either of theballoted choices.A member of this year’sSG. Mr. Mandelup declinedto accept his nomination fornext year.Ellen Clements, top write-in candidate for OtherCollege at 46 votes, alsofinished ahead of two can¬didates on the ballot, CliffordEnnist (44 votes) and SandorJohn (42).Results of separate elec¬tions for the 28 College Houseseats were unavailable atpress-time.Six and six-tenths percentof the University, or 420students, voted on thereferendum to amend the SGConstitution’s ban on givingfunds to “political, quasi¬academic, or religiousgroups.” Referendumresults are unavailable untilCollege House votes arecounted.Candidates who have lostby less than 15 votes maypetition the Election andRules Committee for arecount.Other write-in votes in¬cluded two for “the winner ofthe wet T-shirt contest atLCB” (the LasciviousCostume Ball, held May 8),and one each for UniversityPresident John T. Wilsonand for ex-PresidentRichard M. Nixon. ELECTION RESULTS 1976LIBRARY SCIENCE(7 ballots cast)Mary KazimerMarySSA(1 ballot cast)David E Whittaker(3 vacancies)DIVINITY(7 ballots cast)J Mark ThomasR Thomas JonesBUSINESS(19 ballots cast)Thomas BodenbergRobert GabelGreg KriegerNikoMoksinyadisRichard BergerSaul RosenAndrew KrakauerJohn RedmondBIOLOGICAL SCIENCES(3 ballots cast)Kevin Finnegan(6 vacancies)PHYSICAL SCIENCES(8 ballots cast)Kathleen EdwardsRobert Bruner18 WAYTIE FOR TWOSEATSJoseph DelisaAndrew KatzRobert WellingtonRichard NilesJohn SmillieIshmael IrvingDavid KeysMary MorleyCharles WeibeiNathan JacobsonJohn ClemensPatricia KurtzPaul RhemusJohn SansCatherine LeitchEmi I toRobert ChaseSou men BasakMEDICAL SCHOOL(3 ballots cast)Jim NachbarGeorge SunRobert Tomchik «Aidan IpLAW SCHOOL(101 ballots cast) ,Richard ChandlerMichael MandellElizabethC GreenPaul BigmanMichael Miller (Scott Mendelup, who received 64votes, withdrew)SOCIAL SCIENCES(43 ballots cast)Christopher RudeJames GreerRick FogelsongCarol NackenottGeorge KnoxMarc GouldLeonard WinogoraBradford LyauLarry WornianStan MerrillPeter Mensch3 WAYTIE FOR TWOSEATSCarrie MilesSteven OlsenMary StovallHUMANITIES DIVISION(34 ballots cast)Jeffrey BedrickPamela PentaleriJoshua GuttmanPeter Burkol8 WAYTIE FOR THREE SEATSPeter B GillisJoe BundaAlexis Manaster RauserBarbara PastorickCaro! WalkerSanford StevenThomas ChoicWoodford BeachRichard MillerUNDERGRADUATEFRATERNITY(28 ballots cast)1 Roger Deschner 19111 Marily RedmanOTHER COLLEGE 1411 097 ballots cast)Jeffrey Gould 861 Lauren Fursf 791 John Grossman 781 Kim Kalkowski 781 Philip Grew 751 Margaret Dudney 72Steve Askin 71Jean Scott 59Steve Thomas 482 Ellen Clements 461 Clifford Ennist 441 Sandor John 421 Rachel Kronenberg 31Jessica Landman 30Sharon Pollack 2876 Alan Leineman 2773 Dan Wise 2445 Matt Greenberg 2240 Philip Epstein 2C6 Cynthia Joyce 20 from poor urban areas.In his quarterly press con¬ference with campus repor¬ters, Mr. Wilson noted the“unbelievably impressive”job of the Student SchoolsCommittee, a group ofstudents involved in recruit¬ment, in attracting studentsto campus However, hemade no specific referenceto minority recruitment inhis praise of current Ad¬missions Office efforts.“I think the competitionfor the caliber of studentwere after is more theproblem than the staff.” MrWilson said. He cited the in¬volvement of faculty in un¬dergraduate education as asignificant factor in fherecruitment effort.“1 understand wc re tryingto add one or possibly twomore people , but I don’tthink it has to be twice thepresent size. I would say byan order of magnitude that it(the admissions depart¬ment ) does not have to be ex¬panded,” Mr. Wilson said.Mr Wilson's commentswere in reference to a reportof the Student GovernmentCommittee on Admissionsand Curriculum, whichcharged the University withnegligence in the recruit¬ment of minority students.However. Mr. Wilson agreedthat money was a majorsource of the recruitmentproblem.“It is factual that moneyhas been a problem, and this year the budget is terriblytight...but there is no issuewith the fact that we need torecruit good students andmore of them,” Mr. Wilsonsaid.Canteen ProblemMr Wilson, empowered tomake the final decisionregarding the fate of theRegenstein Library Can¬teen, praised the Committeeon the Quality of Life inRegenstein for a thoroughexamination of alternativesto the present canteen. Inrecent weeks the issue offood containment hasbecome a major concern tolibrary users, and has led tothe use of library monitors toprevent food from beingtaken out of the canteenarea.“I think lots of peopledidn't realize the problemsuntil the CQLR report calledit to their attention, and Ibelieve many have modifiedtheir behavior accordingly,”Mr. Wilson said. “If it ispossible to gain these endswithout inspections or ex¬penditure of funds, thatwould be the happiersolution ”However, Mr Wilson saidhe would wait for the recom¬mendations of the LibraryBoard, the policy-makingpanel for RegensteinLibrary, before making afinal decision on the solutionto the food containmentWilson To6The Maroon is pleased toannounce a new policy inregard to classified ad¬vertising Effective im¬mediately, the Maroon willaccept personal classifiedswithout charge, on a trialbasis. To avoid abuses of thepolicy, the Maroon reservesthe right to selectively with¬draw this offer at any time.Get your imaginationsrolling...Were you confused when you saw yourself pictured onpage 1 of Tuesday’s Maroonand read that you werewaiting on line for an apart¬ment when you know fullwell that you were waitingfor an appointment? We’resorry for any confusion wemay have caused by in¬correctly identifying studen¬ts queing for annualregistration appointments asbeing seekers of Universityapartments.# Out of Storage — And the World was|| Never the Same! ,i ' .Sleazier than Midnight Special!^ 3* ^.r-nV-v - mi L|i: ■ . -a continental menu, * K iff >1 ■> * i £? >■ * ~ "J■■. ■- ; . . : ' .>01 am.-12 pmaaily■A Back Room Productionbacks! QUAKE before the Biggest Collection ofTrash EVER! STARRING THE COOP’S USUALNOCENT VICTIMS!Reynolds Club Basement. M-F 9:30-5:45; S 10-4Where in Chicago can you get a genuine Dr. Brown's soda, areal New York Egg Cream made with real, U-Bet ChocolateSyrup, or even a 2< Plain (for 20 ). The FLYING LOX BOX alsohas 4 great phosphates. This week, to introduce Egg Creamsto Chicago, we are also offering:HOT PASTRAMI SANDWICH FORSWISS EMMENTAL. JARLSBERG PER LBPER LB<-9!MEDIUM CHUBS PER LBREG.OR NQVA LOX..MATJES HERRING.....................P.S. W® ar« looking for some help PER LB; ' ■ .'HOURS:M-F 10 A.M.-8 P.M.SAT. 10 A.M. BP.M.SUN. • A.M.-3 P.M. 5500 Sr CORNE2-The Chlcogo Maroon-Friday, May 14. 1976 • •. • • • • •.« • i:■. > : . ' ■ f ■MAB ApplicationsThe Major ctivities Board(MAB) is now accepting ap¬plications for appointment tothe proposed ‘76-77 board.This year’s board operatedon a one year experimentalgrant of $20,000. A continuedMAB would depend onpassage of a referendumcalling for a $4.00 per quar¬ter activities fee in theCollege.Any University student iseligible for membership onthe board. A committeemade up of three presentMAB members, onerepresentative from FSAC-CSL, one from CORSO, andthe Director of Student Ac¬tivities will review the ap¬plications and conduct in¬ terviews.The eight students ap¬pointed would fill thepositions of Chairperson,Secretary, Treasurer, andheads of Popular Music,Social Events, General En¬tertainments, PerformingArts, and Staging &Technical Arts & com¬mittees. Applicants are ex¬pected to be able to demon¬strate experience in morethan one area as well assome particular expertise.The proposed MAB by-lawswhich detail responsibilitiesfor the various offices will beavailable in the Student Ac¬tivities Office, Ida Noyes 209.Applications, including aresume, should be brought tothis office.Law Career PanelThe Office of Career Coun¬seling and Placement ispresenting a paneldiscussion on “Careers inLaw” this afternoon at 3:00pm in the library of IdaNoyes Hall.The panel members, fromdiverse fields of law, willtalk about their experiencesin their respective areas ofthe legal profession.Panel members includePhillip Kurland, UC Law professor; Carol Knuti,Trust Counsel for the HarrisBank; Sally Elson, attorneyfor the Legal AssistanceFoundation of Chicago; Mar¬tin Samber, Chief Counsel ofthe Chicago office of the U.S.Energy Research andDevelopment Ad¬ministration; and AllisonDavis, a partner in theprivate firm of Davis, Minerand Barnhill. NEWS BRIEFS:Pub ConcertLive entertainment re¬turns to the Pub thisSaturday night.Hyde Park’s hippesthangout, located in thebasement of Ida Noyes, willhost The Cook County Do DaBoys, described as “the U ofC’s newest jazz and bluesband” for two shows, at 8:30and 10:00.Admission is free.ERA RallyOver 15,000 people, in¬cluding Illinois GovernorDan Walker and entertainerLily Tomlin, are expected toattend a two-day EqualRights Amendment (ERA)rally in Springfield, Illinoisthis weekend.On Saturday, May 15th,ERA advocates will direct astatewide campaign forpetition signatures in favorof the amendment. Rallyparticipants will march tothe doorsteps of the statecapitol on Sunday, the 16th.Campus women's groups are providing transportationto Sunday’s march, with two40-seat, buses scheduled toleave from the BlueGargoyle at 7:00 am Sundayand return at 8:00 pm thesame day. Persons in¬terested in riding buses tothe rally can purchase theirtickets in Mandel Hall onFriday between 11:30 a m.and 1:00 pm The tickets cost$5.The rally, which is spon¬sored by a coalition headedby the National Organizationfor Womenand the Coalitionof Labor Union Women, ispart of a nationwide move togarner support for the ERAThe ERA must be passed in38 states to become nationallaw, and its supporters arehoping state legislators willmake Illinois the 35th stateto lend its support to theamendment. StateRepresentatives are ex¬pected to make the finaldecision this spring.Rizzer RallyGerald Rizzer. slated togive a solo recital at MandelHall next Thursday, May 20at 8:30 pm, has announced his program for the evening.The concert, a FOTAevent, will feature a varietyof music. Mr. Rizzer willperform a selection of piecesranging from Bach to Bar-tok, including Beethoven,Debussy and Brahms.FOTAEventsUpcoming FOTA eventswill be:Saturday, May 15, 8:30 Ed¬die Jefferson & The VonFreeman Quartet CloisterClub, Ida Noyes Hall Ad¬mission: $3.59, $2 00 forstudents.Monday, May 17, 8:00 PMSecond City Mandel Hall Ad¬mission: $3.50, $2.00 forstudents.CLASSIFIEDSare the wayto move itj In the woods...or on the street,Help keepAmericalooking neat!Give ahoot!Don’tpollute!To get your free color poster,ante to Woodsy Owl.Forest Service. USD A .Washington. D C 20250SAVEGASOLINEANDCLEAN UPTHE AIR!The gas you can save by letting us time your engine will more than payfor the cost of the tune-up. And you're also protecting your own health byhelping keep our air clean.ENGINE s39,sTUNE-UP ‘44,s CYLINDERSIXCYLINDEREIGHTFor the price above we will:• Install new spark plugs• Install New Points & Condenser (If Breaker-Type Ignition)• Install New Rotor• Check and/or Set Timing & Dwell• Check Fuel Mixture Ana/Or Adjust Carburetor• Check and Adjust Idle Speed• Install New Air Filter(ADDITIONAL PARTS EXTRA IF NEEDED)KEEP YOUR CAR RUNNING AT ITS BEST.MAKE A DATE TODAY)BRIGHTON AUTO SERVICE3967 S. Archer523-1200International House Films Present THIS WEEK FEATURING:MacKay's History of Freemasonry19th Century Science BooksPsychologyPhysicsThe life span of a text is about four years. If you don't thinkyou'll use that required text again, sell it while it is still incurrent edition.We pay cash for used books, including texts and coursebooks.POWELL'S1020 S. Wabash8th Floor341-07489-5 Mon.-Sat.WE ARE STILL EAGERLY BUYING YOUR BOOKS ATPOWELLS1501 E. 57th955-7780 9 A.M.-l1 P.M. EverydayCRIES AND WHISPERS1414 I. 59th Street Saturday, May 157:15 & 9:30Yes, we have popcornThe thlcago MarobtvFcidoy May-14>'1916-8'EDITORIALS LETTERSIssues raised by the Student government Admissions com¬mittee report may become obscured by the protracted natureof the debate surrounding its release.The facts are not disputed: enrollments of women in theCollege and minority students in the College and the Univer¬sity have significantly delcined since the beginning of thedecade. The committee and the Administration differ in theirrecommendations for reversing the trend, though neither hasoffered any persuasive explanations for its existence.The committee demands that the University establishedspecial programs designed to attract and to serve minoritystudents. That demand is made within the context of Ad¬ministration avowals of commitment to equal education op¬portunity and to easing the “special pains which handicapmany black Americans.” The committee argues thatbecause women and minority group members havehistorically been denied access to higher education, it is theduty of the University to take positive actions to assure thatsuch denial does not persist.The Administration, sensitive to its prior commitments,contends that it is difficult to attract qualified minority ap¬plicants because the University must compete for them withother prestigious institutions. It cites a recent trend towardthe acceptance of women on the part of previously all-male,highly regarded colleges and universities on the East Coastas a special problem in recruiting women.We think, with particular regard to potential minority ap¬plicants, an important issue has been neglected. Special ef¬forts are required not to attract blacks or Latinos or women,but to attract persons who, perhaps but not necessarilybecause they are black, Latine, or female, have felt thoseaforementioned special pains.The University should emphasize recruitment of un¬derprivileged persons, persons who, for one reason oranother, have not had and do not have access to informationwhich is available more easily to persons whosesocioeconomic status is higher. Ethnicity is only an un¬dependable indicator of such lack of privelege.If the goal is, indeed, equal educational opportunity for all,one must look beyond the deceptive percentages of women orethnic groups in the University to find the more revealingdata on socioeconomic status to find those who have trulybeen deprived.There are several ways in which the University can reachthis goal. Recruiting in depressed inner city areas can be in¬creased. We are aware that the University recruits heavily inNew York; what we question is how much of this recruitmenttakes place between 60th Street and 85th street and how muchoccurs in Harlem.Rural poverty areas are easily identified, and the Univer¬sity should contact high shcools in those areas to makequalified students in them aware that the University exists.The Grass Roots Talent Search (GRTS) program does thistangentially, but initial contact must be accompanied by aneffort to inform such students that they will not be deniedquality higher education because of financial need.That information should not be given without a firm com¬mitment to its truth. An intense effort should be made by theDevelopment Office to attract funds for student aid ingeneral and funds restricted to use for aid to underprivilegedstudents.These actions are necessary if the University is to pursueits stated goals. To do less is to be open to charges of lack ofintegrity and elitism in its ugliest sense.chicaoSMaroonEditorJohn VailManaging EditorJ D PetersonAssociate EditorsSports David RieserDarkroom Frank FoxDan NewmanNews Peter CohnMike JonesDan WisePolitics David AxelrodContributing editorsDavid Blum Jan Rhodes StaffLandy Carien, Andrea Holliday,John Milkovich, Tom Meigs, MarthaConger, Aarun Filler, Scott Ziemba.Michael Dvorkin, Jim Kaplan, jDavid Johnsen, Mike Sherberg, Libby Morse, Ed Conner, CliffordKrauss, Miriam Schuchman,Kathleen Bauersfeld, ChipForresterBusiness StaffManager Mike KlingensmithAdsales 8 G. YovovichOffice Karol Kennedyj The CHICAGO MAROON is theStudent run newspaper serving the] University of Chicago and HydePark The PUBLICATIONSCHEDULE is twice weekly, onj Tuesdays and Fridays, during the, regular academic year[ Opinions expressed in the ChicagoMaroon are not necessarily those ofi the University of Chicago students,j faculty or administrationEDITORIALS state the policy of thepaper, and unless otherwise nuied,represent t&e positions of theeditors All dessenting opinion —LETTERS, COMMENTARY, andGADFLIES— most oe siA>mit*ed tothe paper no later than two daysprior to the next issue, and must be- Stfded. ,TJ)e M«rpon reserves »he right to edit all submissions torpublicationCORRECTIONS may be broughtto the attention ot the editors bywriting care of the Maroon office, orby calling the news office Allcorrections will appear in thesoonest issue after the error isbrought to lightThe OFFICES of the ChicagoMaroon are located at 1212 E 59thSt . Chicago Illinois CC637 SUBSCRtPTiQNS cover the threeregular academic quarters, and areVi tor the year, payable in advanceTELEPHONES of the ChicagoMaroon are editorial office, 7533?A4. business office, 753 326*The OFFICE HOURS of the paperare • 30 l and 1:30 4 30 weekedays O'Connell CorrectedEditor:Dean Charles D. O’Con¬nell’s response to the reportof the SG Committee onCurriculum and Admissions(Maroon, May 5) containsseveral factual errors, and anumber of examples ofmisleading selective use ofstatistics.The most important taskfor those of us who feel U of Chas not done enough toprovide equal opportunityfor minority and womenstudents is to join in a searchfor ways to improve Univer¬sity policy. For that reason, Iwould prefer discussing theproblem with Mr. O’Connell(or any other ad¬ministrator), to challenginghim in print. But it is essen¬tial to get the facts straightbefore a sensible discussioncan begin.I won’t try to answereverything Mr. O’Connellsaid. What follows is a list ofthe factual errors and a fewof the most misleading usesof numbers found in hisstatement. They are listed inorder of appearance in hisstatement, rather than orderof importance. So that otherscan verify my statements, Ihave included references toour report and to officialpublications from which weobtained our data. Anyonewho wants to do furtherchecking can contact me at288-6657 for a copy of ourreport or other sources. Thereport should also beavailable from the StudentGovernment office, 2nd floorIda Noyes.1) The chairperson of ourcommittee is a currentstudent, Jeff Gould, not analumnus.2) By giving enrollmentfigures for only 2 years, 1968and 1975, O’Connell makes itappear as if blackenrollment in the Universityhas increased steadily. Aswe clearly stated in ourreport, black enrollmentdropped sharply in the 1970s,after rising in the 1960s. Bycarefully selecting hisstatistics, O’Connell skipsover the fact that blackenrollment dropped from 7per cent of the student body(1971-72) to 4.8 per cent(1975-76). (See ChicagoReporter, June 1975, and SGreport, P.6)3. Dean O’Connell saystotal minority enrollment inthe college was 10.8 per centin 1970-71. According to anofficial federal report, basedon statistics supplied by theUniversity, the figure wasactually 11.1 per cent. Byreducing the percentage ofminority students in 1970,O’Connell’s statementmakes t subsequent droplook smaller than it actuallywas.Also, O’Connell has hereagain dropped some of thefigures a reader would needto make an independentjudgment. While it is truethat minority enrollment inthe College has decreasedonly slightly, other minorityfigures have dropped muchmore sharply. Changes fromthe peaks earlier in thedecade are as follows:minority enrollment in theUniversity from 10.2 per centbody i mi. down to 8 per cent (1975-76);black enrollment in theCollege, from 7.5 per cent(1972-3) down to 5.5 per cent(1975-76); black enrollmentUniversity-wide, - see (2)above. (Sources: “Racialand Ethnic Enrollment Datafrom Institutions of HigherEducation,” Dept, of Health,Education and Welfare, 1970& 1972; SG Report 5-6.)4) The University shareswith the federal governmentresponsibility for reductionsin financial aid. O’Connellsays the University has in¬creased aid spending, butthe University of Chicagofinancial reports for the past4 years state that aid spen¬ding from unrestricted fundshas been sometimes beenreduced, sometimes held,steady. (SeeSG Report, p.12,and University of ChicagoFinancial Reports, 1972-75.)5) O’Connell very clearlyis not right when he saysthere have been no cuts inrecruitment of, or specialprograms for, minoritystudents in the College. Thereport carefully documentsreductions of minorityrecruiting staff and cuts inspecific programs. The sour¬ces can easily be double-checked by anyone. (See SGReport 7-8, and appendix B.)Finally, readers shouldknow that the report hasultimately been adopted byStudent Government, on avote of 39 to 5. Sincerely,Steve AskinResearcher, StudentGovernment Committeeon Curriculum andAdmissionsNuclear Safety AndJournalistic ResponsibilityEditor:In the Tuesday, May 11th,issue of Maroon, a story wasrun on page one under theheadline: GOVERNMENTINSPECTS RADIATIONLEAK. Upon reading the ar¬ticle, I was somewhat sur¬prised, as no doubt wereother readers, to find thatthere was no “radiationleak” being reported.While I am willing to ac¬cept that this misuse of aheadline can be ascribed tomore editorial oversight, itserves as an example of alarger problem. Even innominally “objective”coverage of the increasinglyimportant issue of nuclearsafety, the press too oftensacrifices information of thepublic for sensationalism. Amore accurate capsulizationof your May 11th articlemight have been “GOVERN¬MENT SEEKS TO ENSURERADIATION SAFETY”, anadmittedly less tantalizingheadline.Not too long ago thenational press carried somestories under headlines tothe effect that GOVERN¬MENT ORDERS NUCLEARPLANTS SHUTDOWN DUETO RADIATION LEAKS.The facts, as it turned out,were that one plant haddiscovered a very small leakof cadiQactive.watet from its. primary system. Theleakage had been completelycontained within the severalbarriers constructed for thepurpose, and the plant waspromptly and properly shut¬down by its operators tocorrect the problem andprevent the possible spreadof radioactive con¬tamination. Other plantswith similar systems wereordered shutdown to conducttests and inspection to en¬sure that similar leaks wouldnot occur elsewhere.Having been closelyassociated with operationalnuclear power reactors forsome five years, I am awareof the real and presentdangers or risks involvedwith them. I am also in favorof the widest and fullestpublic debate on the issue ofnuclear development,regulation, and safety. Myfear, however, is that thepress’s handling of the issuetoo often takes on an alar¬mist tone, and the public is ifnot misinformed, at leastpoorly informed.The unfortunate result willbe policy decisions based noton the well-considered an¬swers to difficult questions,but on emotions and reac¬tions to sensational half-truths. Dave DeiningerEthical WastelandEditor:Upon entering Regensteintoday, I was outraged to begreeted by full color, 8-10poster-mounted glossiesdepicting various“atrocities” committed bydepraved library abusers.They were presumably setup by some ultra-anal mem¬bers of the CQLR. Such kin¬dergarten tactics no morebefit the dignity of Univer¬sity library patrons than sothe compost heaps thatmushroom in the readingareas with especial abun¬dance during finals week. Iagree that the problem hasintensified over the last twoyears, but as a “non-abuser”I can tolerate a threat of“Remedial Action” no moreeasily than the usual varietyof trash.I very much resentthe idea of having my handslapped and my mouth tapedby a group whose originalobjective was, I am certain,something loftier than sim¬ply to humiliate the“naughty children”.I find it pathetic that suchas issue commands frontpage billing in the Maroon.Far too much has been madeof this problem, and BigBrother is a repugnant an¬swer to it. The imposition ofa so-called “trial period ofgood behavior” smacks of agrammar-school mentality.Once the proposed stop-and-. search. policy goes, into* eL.. feet, we can no doubt expectto see a similar posterdisplaying soiled un¬derwear.Administration As ExxonEditor:I’m afraid it looks asthough Mr. Andrulos’delightfully wacky paranoia(’’Grease Pot Dome”, Let¬ters, May 11) may havesomething real behind it thatwe shouldn’t stand for. LikeExxon ads, the Ad¬ministration press releasesso often featured on yourfront page repay scanning -by noting where they try towheedle down your “con¬sumer resistance” you canguess something of what thecorporate manipulatorshave in mind.The latest (’’Changes inReynolds Club...”, May 11)betrays, tucked in at the endof a long list of neededchanges, just what Mr. An-drulos divined. The C-shop isto undergo alterations to “at¬tract” (accommodate?)more students. A new rush ofbusiness, one supposes, justhappens to be on Mr.Turkington’s mind as theCQLR is about to succeed inpreventing students frombringing lunch with them in¬to Regenstein. What a boon!Since Mr. Turkington ap¬parently can’t make a go ofthe C-shop even under sub¬sidized near-monopoly con¬ditions (remember lastyear’s familiar ploy: raiseprices, cut portion size,package in plastic,redecorate, and advertizethe “reforms”?) he seems tohave decided to emulate BoCallaway and go through of¬ficial channels.Students should not standfor it. Such huge numjbers ofus are having to makeRegenstein the center of ourlives (and bring our lijnches)because we are forced (bythe fast-buck condospeculation the Universitycondones) to live in dirty,noisy tenements and derelicthotels scarcely in hikingdistance of campus, Nowwe’re to be pushed intopaying inflated prices tosave an operation that can’tearn our patronage.There is no legitimatereason to ban lunches fromRegenstein. It’s perfectlyappropriate to confine theireating to the canteen area(the rigor of the new proc¬tors shows how easy it is),but what is the eating areabeing expanded for if wecan’t bring lunch? If thistransparent ploy succeeds, Istrongly suggest an angryboycott of the C-shop andloud protest from themanipulated student con¬sumers without whosetuition (pace somebody orother) we wouldn’t have auniversity..RobertMcK&y.MUSTACHE CONTESTSponsored by Reynolds Club BarbershopEnter Now 2 PrizesLongest HandlebarBest of ShowCoffee & Cookies for allJudging is May 26at 1 PMNorth Lounge of Reynolds Club LAKE PARK RENTALS6633 S. Cottage GroveRentToolsBuffersChain SawsDolliesRototillersElectric SawsRug ScrubbersSandersTile CuttersLawn MowersWallpaper SteamersRYDER TRUCK RENTAL - ONE WAYRents trucks to move ityourself. Low rates one-way.Newest auto-shift Chevys &other fine trucks. Power-lifttailgates, moving aids,nationwide road service, in¬surance, credit cards.FOR INFORMATION CALL Trailers• TrucksCALL667-8700DAILY7 AM to 6 PMSUN.8 AM to 3 PMTake advantage of the 10%discount on all one-waysreserved before May 29,1976. With this ad.BE 7\ BLQQD BQH0R.VOLUNTEER BLOOD DONOR PLEDGE CARDBlood Bank, Rm. M134The University of Chicago Hospitals & Clinics950 East 59th Street • Chicago, Illinois 60637J donatedAGE WEIGHTBLOOD TYPE RH FACTOR(if Known) (if known)Have completed a pledge card before Z yes Z noNameLocal AddressCity StateOccupationBusiness Address City StateI can be reached by phone best atThat phone number is (please check onei Call 947-5579I pledge to donate a unit of bloodif called upon, my medical his¬tory and the state of my healthpermitting.can □ can t make a donationduring business hours.Zip Local PhoneEmployed By Normal Business HoursZip Business Phoneo clock.Written Signature Date Normal Business daysAsk for Parking Information.Social Security NumberThis space fordates drawnIjelp Qs to Ijelp You.1-tU: ■ rU. ■WiyVAVAVticago Moroon-Fridoy. May 14, 1976 3Food Policy Crowds Canteen A New Taste OfLegal PhilosophyNew signs in Regenstein are as unequivocal in their annooncementof food containment policy as are monitors in itsenforcement. (Photo by Dan Wise)Wilson Cites Budget CrunchBy Peter CohnAfter several weeks of of¬ficial deliberation and aweek of advance pictorialpublicity at the main en¬trance to Regenstein, librarymonitors have begun tocrack down on people eatingor talking in areas outside ofthe A-level canteen and stafflounge.Most conspicuously, amonitor has been stationedin the area between theelevators and the stairway,and the once crowdedglassed-in area in front ofthe stairs on A-level has beenplaced off limits for coffeebreak socializing.On Wednesday night at8:30, both the staff loungeand the canteen had crowdedup, but not to the point of ab¬solute discomfort. An hourlater, the area had gottensomewhat more congested,with a large overflow ofpeople sitting in the longhallway adjoining theloungeStudent comments reflec¬ted a general acceptance ofthe new containment policy.“I agree with the no-foodupstairs policy but I thinkthey ought to let the room infront of the stairs stay open.The lounge is going to be toocongested,” said onestudent. Other students in¬terviewed on A-level agreedwith the restriction on food,but found the presentfacilities inadequate.“I think it’s a good policy.You have to restrict foodfrom being brought upstairs.It's a problem of facilitiesand not of people with amalicious intent to destroy/*a student said.“Restrictions are only ac¬ceptable if you have anadequate canteen for thecapacity of the budding/’someone else commented.A number erf the studentsinterviewed expresseddispleasure with the librarymonitors patrolling thereading rooms to controlloud conversations. Severalincidents between libraryusers and monitors havebeen reported.The library has hired 24new monitors for the newpolicy Three or fow are onduty at a time. They arebeing paid slightly less thanthree dollars an hourMembers of the library ad¬ministration are pleasedwith the results of the newpolicy.“I was surprised at bowuneventful the first threedays have been.” saidHoward Dillon, AssistantDirector for Public Servicesat the library. Wilson From 1problem He said he hoped toavoid the use of inspectionsat the library’s entrance, oneof the CQLR’s recom¬mendations. “I would ratherdepend." he said, “wi thefact that students can act inan adult wav if they wishto/’Alleged QuoteMr Wilson refuted for thefirst tune the philosophy that“you could have a Univer¬sity without students, butyou couldn't have a Univer¬sity without an ad¬ministration/’ The Maroonreported that statement inan article summarizing ameeting between SGrepresentatives and then-acling President Wilson lastNovember. At the time, Mr. Wilson refused to commenton either the substance of thequotation or whether or nothe made the statement at¬tributed to him by two par¬ticipants in the meeting.“Well, obviously I don’tbelieve that,” Mr. Wilsonsaid last week, when askedfor his view on thatstatement of attitude. Heagain refused to say whetherhe had made the allegedstatement, but said thatDean of Students Charles D.O’Connell’s letter to theMaroon denying the quote’saccuracy “did no good.”“When you say how vir¬tuous you are, nobodybelieves you, really,” Mr.Wilson said.Student ActivitiesMr. Wilson said thepossibility of an increased Morton J. Horwitz,Professor of Law at HarvardUniversity, offered Wed¬nesday a taste of a legalphilosophy seldom voiced atthe University of ChicagoLaw School.Mr. Horwitz delivered apaper entitled “The Legacyof 1776: The RelationshipBetween Legal Theory andEconomic Policy.” Mr. Hor¬witz concluded that legaltheory can no longer returnto the halcyon days of anegalitarian free marketstudent activities budgetdepends on the results of thereferendum on a student ac¬tivities fee. “I try to stretchthe budget as far as possiblein student activities... butmoney has been awfullytight,” Mr. Wilson saidHe said he preferred an in¬direct method of fundingthrough the Campaign forChicago, such as the con¬struction of buildings thatwould be accessible tostudents. He noted that plan¬ned theater and musicbuildings will significantlyenhance the quality ofstudent life.“We would like an um¬brella concept that wouldallow for club activities of agreat variety if we can af-Wilson to 16 economy and a strictlyprocedural interpretation oflaw. As it became clear atthe end of the 19th centurythat the market economydeveloped into a situationthat was not egalitarian, hesaid, legal theorists werefaced with the problem ofdeveloping a new legalphilosophy.“Once the monopolisticstructure of the marketcould no longer be seen asequality of opportunity,”Mr. Horwitz said, “it was nolonger possible to avoid thequestion of the fairness ofconsequences.”Mr. Horwitz said that ittook the first hundred yearsof our history before the ideaof economic inequality waslinked to the idea of social in¬justice. It has taken anotherhundred for jurisprudence toput that concept into prac¬tice.“After 200 years,” MrHorwitz concluded, “wehave finally begun to un¬derstand that there can be nolaw without justice and nojustice without law.”In his short lecture toabout 200 people in the LawSchool auditorium, Mr. Hor¬witz said that the“revolutionary ideals” of theFounding Fathers have un¬dergone a transformationsince the Revolution.Those men, Mr Horwitzexplained, were opposed toHorwitz To 15ATTENTION ALL JUNE GRADUATES!!!The E.R. Moore Co. will be on campus Wednesday,May 19 and Thursday, May 20th. from 8 A.M. to 5P.M., 2nd. floor of the Bookstore to measure andaccept orders for cap and gowns for the Junegraduation.PLEASE PLACE YOUR RENTAL ORDERS ON THESE DATES6-Tho Chicago Maroon-Frkfcry, May 14,1976The Chicago Maroon's Weekly Review of Opinion and the ArtsRenaissance Exhibit:'ideas on Paper"Michael Singer Rituai Series 1975By Russell BowmanWith its current exhibition “Ideas onPaper: 1970-1976," the Renaissance Societycontinues its policy of showing significantcontemporary art with a limited exhibitionhistory in Chicago. Organized by Director ofExhibitions Susanne Ghez, the showincludes drawings by twenty-six New Yorkartists, many of whom have national orinternational reputations, and attempts tosurvey the various approaches to drawingtoday.As the title of the show suggests, recentdrawing often represents theexternalization of ideas. Such anunderstanding is hardly new. Since theRenaissance, drawing has been admired asthe first physical manifestation of theartist's concept. In 1607 Federico Zuccariformularized this view in his theoryof desegno. He distinguished between twoaspects of desegno or design; desegno in¬ferno was the idea extant in the mind anddesegno externo was its visual representation. For Zuccari, desgno inferno wasprimary since the idea engendered in themind through divine inspiration mustprecede its external expression. TheRenaissance also recognized and admired arather different aspect of drawing, itsautographic quality. Many sixteenth andseventeenth century writers on artpostulated that the “touch" of an artist wasmost clearly recognizable in his most in¬timate works, his drawings and sketches.This view led to the acceptance of drawingsas independent works of art, and by theeighteenth century drawings were collectedand displayed in much the same manner aswere paintings and sculpture. The con-noisseurship of drawings has centered onthe evidence of touch from the eighteenthcentury down to the present day. In reactionto the view drawing as indicative of in¬dividual hands, many contemporary artistsdeliberately play down the evidence of touchand even the visual interest of their drawingin an effort to return to the concept ofdesegno inferno; that is, that art lies not inthe manner of representation, but in the for¬mulation of ideas.Given their ideational tendency, theartists included in “Ideas on Paper" canperhaps be most meaningfully evaluated interms of their conceptions about whatconstitutes a work of art. The artistsrepresented all into groups which recall themultiplicity of movements in Americanart during the last decade: primarystructures, geometric abstraction, systemsconceptualism, linguistic conceptualism,anti formalism, and new realism.The artists in the exhibition most clearlyconcerned with primary or non-re'ationalstructures are Judd, Flavin, and Smithson.Judd's plan drawing for a box-like piecefitted against the three sides of a roomsuggests a seif contained "primary 'structure acting on its surrounding space.Flavin is represented by diagramatic piandrawings for neon pieces consisting of eithera single tube or a systematic group of tubeswhich are non-relational in that no one carris emphasized more than any ether.Flavin's works, like Judd's, interact withthe surrounding space, but through lightrather than through scale. Smithson'sproject drawing for an earthworkcalled 4 Jetties in Circular Lake is similiarto primary structures in that its four jettiesrelate equally to each other and to the areaof the lake. Further,- Smithson's earthworkwas never executed and the drawing nowremains as its only record. Somewhat related to primary structuresare the geometric abstractions of Mar den,Mangold, Humphrey and Bcice Like theprimary structures artists whose objects of¬ten have geometric shapes, the abstrac¬tionists accept qepmetry as one of thesimplest, most direct ways of organizing acanvas. Also like the primary structureswho eliminate illusionism through thecreation of three dimensional objects, thegeometric abstractionists call attention tothe surfaces of their drawings and paintingsin order to emphasize their nature as twodimensional objects. Marden organizes hisdrawing on one of the simplest geometricstructures, the grid. He overla/s this gridwith dense markings in graphite and waxwhich not only emphasize the surface butalso create an extreme richness. It is theI « I • * f « • play between austere organization and sen¬suous surface which makes this drawing oneof the strongest in the show. The drawingsby Mangold, Humphrey and Boice retain ob¬ject flatness but are relational in structure.In Mangold's works the relationships bet¬ween geometric parts are amnipulated tocreate certain tense balance while in theworks of Humphrey and Boice the in¬terrelationships of parts are rather morestable.Of the conceptual works derived fromsystems, the most explicit is that of LeWitt.His two drawings consist of vari- coloredgeometric forms whose overlappinglocations on the sheet are determined by aninter related system of measurement whichhe carefully notes in writing within eachform. His drawing, then, is clearly derived from a preconceived set of rules. The rules,the idea, make the art. The physicaldrawing is only a result. Less direct exam¬ples of systems based art are the variationson a pentagon by Bochner, the overlappingletter patterns of Miller, and theelaborations on the Golden Section byRabinowitch.Just as line and their combinations are thebasic symboliization of visual experience,so letters, words, and language are basicsymbols of verbal experience Con-ceptualists such as Nauman, Huebler,Barry, and Wegman use language ratherthan line in their drawings in order to makeclear that it is concepts which they arepresenting not visual information. This in¬tention could not be clearer than inHuebler's empty field over the caption,"This surface represents a drawing that willbe completed after its percipient has:Looked at it/Breathed towards it/Readthese words/Forgotten them."Barry also presents an empty field inwhich the viewer can project his own mentaldrawing. Nauman is content with Ducham-pian anagrams while Wegman indulges asomewhat adolescent whimsey.Anti-formalism focuses on the process ofmaking and the intrinsic qualities ofmaterials. Morris, a leader of themovement after his involvement withminimal sculpture, is represented by adrawing which is a good example of aprocess oriented art. As an investigation ofthe nature of the brain's control overmotion, Morris took a sheet of paper andsimultaneously made straight marks withone hand and circular marks with the other.His drawing, Blind Time XXIV, is therecord of this process. Hafif's drawing com¬posed of marks which eventually fill thesheet is similarly the record of process Ac-conci, in an interesting transposition of'#iden like effects into drawing, makes clearreference to a process evolving throughtime Tuttle reduces his drawings to such anextremely simple level that the viewer sen¬ses the direct application of materials in¬volved in the process of making a mark. Thedrawing action and a certain faithfulness tomaterials in apparent too in the work ofSinger Both the process of making and thenature of materiajs are particularly evidentin Sierra's modulated paintstik drawing andRockburne's folded and torn papers. Le Vais represented by a diagram of an anti-formal installation piece and Shapiro by adrawing recording his search for a form ap¬propriate to his sculpture.Finally, Close and Leslie represen* theopposite poles of the new realism with theformer working from pnctocraphs and thelatter from the model Close is chieflyinterestec in establishing depth throughfocus. In Cathy he chose a photograph inwhich the focus of the nose gave a sense ofthe face being pehina a surface plane Closegrided his photograph ana then reproducedit section by section so as not to applycorrections inadvertently. The finisheddrawings, like the photograph it reproduces,leaves the head in depth but through focus,not perspective Interestingly, the “realist"Close shares with the systemsconceptualists a preconceived set of ruleswhich determine the result, and with theanti-formal artists the emphasis on process.In complexity of conception and quality ofexecution the Close is unmatched in theRenaissance Society selection. ThoughLeslie seems the traditionalist in thecompany, one has only to note his emphasis(continued on pace 4)/// in i The Chicago Maroon-Fririoy. Mgy 1 4, ] 976 7/// />'/**,!.«.♦>< . *. ****** ' * ' ? ft? ? i fit*-? U t «\ «S‘>CM C-fcC . -iV• M2-TheGreyCityJournal FLIGHT TRAININGFAA - WRITTEN - GUARANTEEDLearr to Fly on Your Spare Time ]CALL 284-0820BSC Special U1995With this Ad!Includes Flash!1342 E. 55th St.493-6700PASSPORTPHOTOSWhile you wait!••mi^fcogoAtarcioo J/idoy, Moy,U. 1976Yoube thejudge...The Court Housepleads guilty toserving tasty lunches,delectable dinners,righteous drinks, anda bountiful Sundaybrunch....Try usCOURTHOUSERESTAURANT5211 South -4QG8 IPut a pair of Levi’son your feet.Ljour feet have been waiting -for the-day theycould have a pair of Levi's a l tv themseives.NewLevLs heavy leathers with rugged soles...h rivets.. !n little oranr'J riguys,get into Levi's. ..-forclevis for feet4Dynamic,Contemporary DanceArtistic Director Kathryn Posin and Associate Artistic Director Lance Westergard, otthe Posin Dance Foundation. On Tuesday, AAay 18, Kathryn Posin andLance Westergard of the New York-basedKathryn Posin Dance Company will presenta duet concert as part of the 1976 Festival ofthe Arts. The performance will take place inMandel Hall at 8:00 p.m. and will include apremiere performance of a piece entitled"Broken Sentence,” by Lance Westergard.Other features of the evening's program are"Fusion," a rock-pop glittery satire;"Days," Ms. Posin's dramatic signaturepiece; and excerpts from the delightfullylyrical "Bach Pieces," currently beingfilmed for national distribution by AffiliateArtists. Portions of Posin's beautifulaquatic piece, "Waves," which is also per¬formed by the Eliot Feld Ballet, will befeatured that evening. The event promisesto be an outstanding evening of dynamic,contemporary dance, and will be a raretreat for University of Chicago.Ms. Posin received her B.A. in dance fromBenningtorCollege,and has performed withthe companies of Anna Sokolow, ValerieBettis, the American Dance Theatre at Lin¬coln Center and the New York ShakespeareFestival, among others. Her works have ap¬peared in the repertories of numerous dancegroups, and she choreographed themovement for the off-Broadwaymusical Salvation, and the off-Broadwaydrama, A Dream Out of Time. Her work hasbeen described by Don McDonough of theNew York Times as "...an extraordinary'mixture of classical restraint and romanticintimations ... beautifully trained andresponsive.”Mr. Westergard trained at the JuilliardSchool, studying with Antony Tudor, AlfredoCorvino. Mary Chudick, and Anna Sokolow,among others. He has worked with a num¬ber of companies, among them the Metropolitan Opera Ballet and Eliot Feld’sAmerican Ballet Company. For the past twoyears, he has been a member of the dancefaculty of Connecticut College and theAmerican Dance Festival.Anna Kisselgoff of the New YorkTimes has described Ms. Posin's and Mr.Westergard's work together in this way:"Both Miss Posin and Mr. Westergard putthe image across with a grace — not a meregracefulness." Members of the Universitycommunity will have their opportunity toobserve the reality of this statement onTuesday, May 18 at 8.00 pm in Mandel Hall.Ticket prices are $3.00, $1.50 for studentswith U.C. I D.\Free OrganThere are few things more beautifulthan the tones of an organ reverberatingthrough a chapel, especially when theorganist is Tom Weisflog. For a few momen¬ts of rare, yet readily appreciated solitarybliss, come to Rockefeller Chapel onTuesday, May 18th at 8.00 pm. Weisflog willperform works by Bach, Widor, Alain,Durufle, and Krebs. Admission is free.yThe University of Chicago Court Theatre presents CHARLES LUOLAM and t-AstThe HidigulousTheatrical GojapanySTAGE BLOODMay 15 8:30 P.M.in Mandel Hall57th & Univarsity CAMILLEMay 14Ludltm i STAGE BLOOD is Himltt with ahappy anding. which ta. of cooraa ridiculousMai Guaaow N Y Timas CAMILLE is out of tha moat hilarious andunbuttonad camp avamnga in Naw YorkCbva Barnaa N Y Timas$5.90 gaatul adaissioa $4.00 U. of C. staff aid otter stidonto $2.30 l). of C. studentsLAST TWO PERFORMANCESTHE FILMS OF VINCENT MINNELLI. PART III /\£N/ 0 FPrefer TasteU AllEFFER50WCloisterClub1212 E.5H5at. Aa/ 15$2.00 STUDENT$3.50 REG.REEMNQuartetFOTA 766:308:3010:30QUANTRELL AUDITORIUM THE BAD AND THE BEAUTIFULBAND WAGONCOBWEBM # M I f / » /. ■ MONDAY. MAY 17SI PCS EVENING—ThVehico^Moroon-frid.iy, Moy 14, IV76-9 TheGreyCityJournal3T’ETHnorTIoTa^aMlTCare of the Cow, a mainstay Chicago folkgroup, will be in Hyde Park next weekend.The band has been called the American ver¬sion of Steeleye Span, and is known for theirphilosophical approach to their work. This isbound to be popular with UC audiences, so ifyou have an ear for meta physical guitars,mandolins, recorders, clarinets, con¬certinos, and psaltries, in various electricaland acoustic combinations, come to the San¬ctuary, 5655 University Ave., on Friday,May 21 at 8:00 p.m.And when you're through wondering whya duck? and you're stuck on why a cow?, theanswer is, in one fatalistic carnivore's wor¬ds; "the ancient Chinese text, the I Ching,advises us to take care of the cow, a symbol Gargoyleto HoldMoo-Inof nourishment and sustenance." Ticketsare on sale in advance at The Fret Shop inHarper Court. Tickets are $2.00.V.Ideas on Paper(continued from page 1)on contour line and heightened modeling torealize that Leslie is stating that traditionalconventions of draftsmanship are no lessconceptual than the work of LeWitt orHuebler."Ideas on Paper" is convincing in itsemphasis on the ideational quality of muchrecent art, includes a number of strongworks, and is attractively presented in aninstallation by Ms. Ghez and Richard Born.One could wish for a more inclusive show,touching on attitudes to drawing on the Westcoast and in Chicago, but what the showmight have gained in vitality it might havelost in focus. As it is, the show offers anopportunity to sample a wide variety ofideas about how to make art today, and littlemore could be asked of an exhibition. Theshow continues through June 6, 1976. Hours:Monday Saturday 11:00-4:00; at theRenaissance Society, 108 Goodspeed Hall,1010 E . 59th St.Thec!*vvJournQleditorPaul M. Millerassociate editorsKaren HellerBarry J. KaplovitzC.J. MeyersDean ValentinestaffMiles Archer Carl LavinGwendolen Cates Suzanne ListerW.T. Hobson Jonathan MeyersohnJohn Lanahan Harold RichardsMike SingerThe Grey City Journal published each Fridayduring the regular academic year as part ot theChicago Maroon, inquiries concerning subscriptionsand advertising snonld be addressed to BusinessManaqer. 1217 E Sv n St , Chicaqo, Ml 60437 TheEditor myites commentsV I / \MemorialConcertThe music department is presenting arecital in memory of Cathy Heifetz, whosetragic death on February 3, 1976 took one ofits brightest and ablest students. The recitalwill be given in Bond Chapel by the Cham¬ber Orchestra on Sunday May 16 at 8:30 P.M. Students and faculty who knew andremember her are invited to attend.Mr. and Mrs. Heifetz have expressed thestrong desire to meet and talk with Cathy'sfriends after the recital. Those who wish tocontact the parents may reach them at thisaddress and telephone number: Mr. andMrs. Elmer M. Heifetz, 835 Mosley Road,Highland Park, III. 60035, 432 8350.V /10-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, May 14, 1976 Vienna *4752 Flights on Pan American•Price* listed above ire lowest rotmmum roundtrip prices Frankfurt fares are between $355 00 A $425 00. london rates between $2^6 00 ASi*806 /unch rated between $359 06 4 $198 00, depending on the season Rates can increase to a maximum of 20** Should increase exceed20e • flight must be cancelled You have to be notified at least 45 days before departure Service charges from $56 39 to $112 0? are included, taxesbetween $3 00 and $7 00 have to be added Reservation request can only be accepted until fcS days prior to fftght departureA CHARTER TRAVEL CORPORATION TGC PROGRAMFOR RESERVATIONS AND BROCHURES CONTACTStudent Representative. Barbara LongerPhone: 643-4980Frankfurt *355°°104 Flights on Condor and Pan AmericanZurich *359°°50 Flights on Balair Optional Tours;London *298°°TO Flights on Overseas National Airways"Bridge" is a Provocative Piece of TheatreAnnabell Armour, Gerald Castillo, Mark Hutter, Norm Tobin,and Carole Goldman, in a scene from a View From the Bridge.By Mike SingerArthur Miller's A View From the Bridge,currently being revived by the St. NicholasTheatre, falls short of being the classicAmerican drama the posters advertise it as.But, the production the play receives at St.Nicholas is superb. By far, it is the best-directed and most provocative of theatrework I've seen this year.The play, set along the waterfront in anItalian neighborhood of Brooklyn, revolvesaround longshoremen Eddie Carbone's in¬cestuous desire for his niece. His desireleads to crime and family disintegration.Miller, not content to let his simple,human drama rest upon its own tale, at¬tempts to elevate it to the level of tragedyvia the contrived, philosophical speeches ofAlfieri, the neighborhood lawyer. Acting asa one-man chorus, Alfieri asks us to forgiveEddie for his incestuous love because he's aman who allowed himself to be "whollyknown." Somehow, Eddie is perverselypure. What's difficult to apprehend,however, is how this perverse purity ab¬solves Eddie of his guilt or raises him to thelevel of the tragic hero Miller envisioned.Very wisely, Director Schachter hasdownplayed the philosophical overtones ofthe play, and concentrated on its im-mediately-sensual qualities. The bitter¬sweet music by Alaric Jones and thetwilight lighting by David Emmons im¬mediately sets a sensual mood to the piece.The set, also designed by David Emmons, isa happy mixture of an impressionistic citypanorama in the background, and a realisticdepiction of Carbone's home in theforeground. The chorus of city dwellersmove on and off the stage at various in¬tervals, bringing with them the playful andtense interactions of the Italian ghetto. Thesmall theater allows the audience to in¬timately respond to all these sensualqualities in the work.The acting, hoever, is what is mostengaging. All of Schachter's players work together as a close-knit ensemble; eachplayer knows what he's doing and why he'sdoing it at any given moment in the play.The actors' internal emotive states arebeautifully and subtly expressed in all oftheir gestures and facial expressions. WhenMarco, Eddie's cousin, is seated at the tablewatching some coffee being poured, his eyesgrow wide with anxiousness and the audien¬ce knows, without the aid of dialogue, exac¬tly how he feels. When Eddie watches hisniece dance with her cousin, his hand movesto his crotch, an unobtrusive, symbolicgesture of his inwardly felt sexual rejection.In building a scene between Eddie and his wife Bea, Director Schachter allows for therhythmic growth of tension, rushing neitherthe dialogue nor the action.All of the individual performances areuniformly excellent. Gerald Castil¬lo, playinq Eddie, gives a detached,yet tense portrayal of his character in an un¬derstated style reminiscent of Brando.Carole Goldman, playing his wife Beatrice,is much more visceral; her final scene isshattering in its intensity.Catherine and Rodolpho, the young loversin the play, are enacted by Annabel Armourand Mark Hutter with tender pathos. NormTobin, playing Eddie's cousin, Marco, un¬ dergoes a plausible shitt in the play betweenliking Eddie and despising him. He, in manyways, mirrors the audience's attitude toMiller's protagonist. John Stars, in the roleof Alfieri, partially subdues the contrivednature of his philosophical speeches bybringing them down to the level of streetwisdom.In short, "A View From the Bridge" is adazzling sight from every angle, and isworth the investment of both your time andmoney. It will be playing on weekendsthrough May 30. For reservations and information, contact the box office at 750 0211.Second CityReturn with us now to the days before ur¬ban renewal, when America's second citywas also Chicago's funniest comedy group.Though high rises and cement fantasieshave replaced the bars and walk-ups,Second City lives on. The folks who gave usMike Nichols, Elaine May, Alan Arkin, andDom Deluise are coming home to HydePark. What better way to celebrate springin Chicago than to indulge in some im-porvisatory humor, and at the same timediscover (or rediscover) one of this city'scultural landmarks? Though somewhat in¬consistent, Second City is always en¬tertaining. The show is at Mandel Hall, Mon¬day, May 17th at 8:00 pm. Tickets are $3.50,$2 for students, and are available now at theReynolds Club desk.The Office of Career Counseling and PlacementAnnounces a Panel PresentationCAREERS IN LAWThe Lawyer in AcademiaThe Lawyer in BusinessThe Lawyer in GovernmentThe Lawyer in Private PracticeThe Lawyer in Public Interest Law Philip Kurland, ProfessorThe University of ChicagoCarol Knuti, Trust CounselHarris Trust and Savings BankMartin Samber, Chief CounselU.S. Energy Research and DevelopmentAdministration Chicago Operations OfficeAllison Davis, PartnerDavis, Miner and BarnhillSally Elson. AttorneyLegal Assistance Foundation of ChicagoFollowed by refreshments and informal discussionFriday, May 14 3-5 p.m.Ida Noyes Library HELP STAMP OUT 3rd QUARTER BLAHS.SING WITH THE UNIVERSITYORCHESTRA AND CHORUS IN"PROLOGUE & CORONATIONSCENE” FROMBORIS GUD0N0VCONCERT: THURS., MAY 27,8:30 P.M. - MANDEL HALLDRESS REHEARSAL: WED., MAY 26, 7:00 P.M. - MANDELCHORUS REHEARSAL: TUES., MAY 18, 7:30 P.M. - LEXINGTON0RCH. & CHORUS: SUNDAY, MAY 23,7:00 P.M. - MANDELMusic Available at Lexington HallALL ARE WELCOME TO SINGTHE SUMMER SOLUTIONFull day summer program(7 a. m. to 6 p. m.) +Your child (3yrs. to 8yrs. ) +Professiorially trained staffPlus moderate cost =Parents’ headache free summerCall 538-8325 | LL IISOJOURNER TRUTH CHILD CARE CENTER50th AND DORCHESTERThe Chicago Maroon-Friday May 14, 1976-11>i oreyCityJournaloTheGreyCitySunday, Aety lb, 11% Aa.nJ.el hall15 • 30 f-™-- ~ SAs lltin'e.rsJyie>12-The Chicago Moroon-Fridoy, Moyr 14, 1976c By John Lanahana The publicity for the Ridiculousjo Theatrical Company's production of StageBlood describes the play as Hamlet with ahappy ending, which is, of course,ridiculous.” That statement ismisleading. Stage Blood is not somesophomoric rewriting and emasculation ofHamlet. It is, instead, a very clever andtacky mystery melodrama about a thirdrate touring company, in which a murderseemingly occurs while they are producingHamlet. Stage Blood is yet another playabout plays, acting, and theatre. It is betterthan most, however, since it never breaksthe illusion of a play, unlike RobertPatrick's Play By Play; but, instead, usesthe conventions, in this case melodrama andcommedia dell'arte slapstick, to examinehow plays work.The director and author of Stage Blood isthe outrageous Charles Ludlam, guidinglight and secret storm of the RidiculousTheatrical company. Mr. Ludlam hasdiscovered an approach which is the besttheatrical vehicle for conceptual drama:parody. Peter Handke and Tom Stoppardmay be very much the current rage, withHandke's deadly seriousphilosophical/dramaturgical dilemmas,and Stoppard's ontological wisecracks, but IStage BloodThe University of Chicago £ horns *The Hyde VarK Chamber Orchestra^James At&c h y Conductorl&trtftfL Tbtersen, SopnxnoiOi&yte. Jtc CeCC&uq /j, 4 (toJames di hereto > Theatre of the Ridiculoushave ever seen. Lola Pashalinski, as HelgaVain, Carleton Jr's mother and Gertrude inthe Hamlet show, is a first-rate actress. Shehad a power and an intensity that refused tobe demolished by Mr. Ludlam's continualefforts to undercut their scenes. The combination was beautiful, since Mr. Ludlamexposed the illusion, while Ms. Pashalinskikept it from blushing. Ethyl Eichelbergerwas a clever caricature of the hammywashed-up actor, Carleton Stone, and hismalicious brother, Gilbert Fey. Black-eyedSusan paid her rent as the stage-struck kid,Elfie Rey, and gave a very intelligent performance in the rip-off of Chekov's SeaGull in the beginning of the third act. BillVehr was arch and snotty as Edmund Dundreary, the envious bit player; and John D.Brockmeyer displayed his lack of talentwell as Jenkins, the bitter, overworked, butloyal stagehand and aspiring playwright.The set, by Bobjack Callejo, was func¬tional, stark, and silly. It played well in thelarge and cavernously campy Mandel Hall,and had a kind of comic-book realism thatavoided abstraction, but commented on theaudience's acceptance of it as reality. Thelighting, by Richard Currie, was competent,and established different zones of feelingthroughout the stage. The costumes, by Ar¬thur Brady, were excellent, in the mostridiculous tradition. Mr. Ludlam's costumeas Hamlet was a wonderful put down ofthose productions of Shakespeare that treathis works as Elizabethan period playsxwithMr. Ludlam looking like Phyllis Diller in aLittle Lord Fontneroy suit.The show is not deathless drama. Forthose of you seeking monuments tounageing intellect, my advice is to move toanother century.Stage Blood is campy,tacky, outrageous, hilarious, and very in¬telligent theatre. Charles Ludlam viewstheatre as a machine, and uses Stage Bloodto take a play, disassemble it, analyze it,and reassemble it in an absurd but in¬ structive manner. It is conceptual drama atits most successful. Stage Blood will be per¬formed again this Saturday night, May 15,at 8:30 in Mandel Hall. Call 753-3582 forticket information.★ * ★Camille, a Tearjerker, is the second halfof the Ridiculous Theatrical Company'sdouble bill. The production is a parody of L*Dame Aux Camelias by Dumas, fils, the plotof which later provided the dramatic struc¬ture of LaBoheme. Dumas's play is alreadysynonymous with the trashy, artificial,"well-made," and extremely theatricalmelodramas of the nineteenth century. Andso, what better vehicle for the RidiculousTheatrical Company to use for anexamination of the mechanics of theatricalillusions. The show is an attempt by Mr.Ludlam and the company to weave betweenserious and outrageous theatre. Three offive women's parts are played by men, notonly to tickle the sexual proclivities of somemembers of the company and audience, butalso to underscore the basic unreality oftheatre. Camile reduces the actors tomarionettes and the play to a machine. It isan intellectual exercise, buoyed by the out¬dated motives of the characters, campydouble entendres, and the incongruous sightof Marguerite Gautier with a hairy chest,amid whips, dildoes, helium balloons, andmelodrama.The production has a number of problems,most of which stem from putting on theshow in Mandel Hall. I saw the sameproduction in New York in the summer of1974 at the Evergreen Theatre, and it playedwell. In Mandel Hall, however, the showloses most of the in-joke intimacy necessaryin order to prevent it from becoming just aslap stick drag-show. Mr. Ludlam as direc¬tor insists on stepping in and out of the play,sometimes ridiculing it, other times playing(continued on page 7)media and slapstick is brilliant, but evena commedia plot, no matter how idiotic,has to move occasionally. The first scene of-Hamlet ended the act beautifully, however,and gave me the rare pleasure of almostfalling out of my seat with laughter. Thesecond act gets into the melodrama of theplay, and it moves, somewhat sporadically,to the melodramatic and "well-made"anagnorisis at the end, when everyone ispaired-off in a self-conscious parody of happy endings. The ghost in the last scene haddramaturgical implications too heavy forme to figure out—which, I guess, was thepoint.It is difficult to discuss Charles Ludlam asa direcor without discussing him as an actorand a dramaturge. He played CarletonStone, Jr., the lead of the play, if there wasone. Mr. Ludlam is very supple, clever, andhas mastered a number of actingtechniques, but he can never take himselfseriously. As soon as he is able to generateany kind of "theatrical illusion," he insistsT.APPALL THOMPSONThe Peaceable KincjdamJ.S.BACHBrick Jem, liunfriaen thin BralCUri&l lag 17i TaJeshanJen Cxniai^ 4Camillefind their plays tiresome and boring. Mr.Ludlam's play, however, is hilarious. Heknows what theatre is, and does not try toperplex his audience by showing them whatit is not. On the surface, Mr. Ludlam's showappears to be pure slapstick; yet, he has thecritical intelligence to separate the com¬ment on every element of his productionwithout destroying its life.Even so, the play often elaborates and-belabors points that are funny in fiveminuses, but shallow after twenty. The firstact is too long, and needs to be focused. Theblocking became boring, and did notdisguise the fact that most of the first actwas forty-five minutes of campy exposition.I'll admit that Mr. Ludlam's use of com- on parodying it, undercutting his per¬formance, and forcing the audience to seethat this is a play. I had the feeling that Mr.Ludlam is too intellectually honest to con¬vince himself that he is playing more than arole. It means that the play is oftenfragmented, held together only by the struc¬ture of the melodramatic plot, and pushedalong by Ludlam's slapstick.The group never becomes an ensemble,since the production views drama as amachine, to be taken apart and analyzedthrough laughter, rather than an organic en¬tity that lives by the power of its illusion.Some of the individual performances wereastounding. Mr. Ludlam exercised agreater variety of technique than anyone ISUMMER JOBSInteresting, challenging jobs for college students and teachers with anyoffice experience are available this summer. You can work the days ofyour choice in the loop or your neighborhood. Top wages. Write, call orgo in to register as soon as possible at the office most convenient to you.ELAINE REVELL, INC.CHICAGOLoop 230 N. Michigan Avenue ST 2-2325Northslde 2316 W. Lawrence Ave. LO 1-4508Hydo Park 1525 E. 53rd St. 684-7000OAK PARK 944 Lake Street AU 7-6888DES PLAINES 2510 Dempster St. 774-9625SCHAUMBURG 870 E. Higgins, Suite 136 882-1055The Prestige Temporary Office Servicef1Ridiculom(continued from page 6)it seriously. In a small house, that worked;in a big house, it does not. The show lackedfocus and often diffused whatever energy ithad, especially in scenes involving a groupof people.Charles Ludlam played MargueriteGautier, the lead. Again, Mr. Ludlamdemonstrated his masterful ability toassume different acting styles. In thisproduction, he often succeeded in parodyingan acting style which he was also able to ex¬ploit for its theatrical power. He did morethan a Garbo imitation; he took what Gar¬bo's acting style was meant to do and madeit live — something, I think, Garbo seldomdid. Mr. Ludlam's performance was afascinating study of the power of illusion.Few people could less fit the physical type ofMarguerite Gautier than Charles Ludlam;yet, I often found myself taking the produc¬tion seriously, and really believing that Mr.Ludlam was the lady of the camelias. Thesize of the theater, however, made it almostimpossible for Mr. Ludlam to control theillusion, since the physical distance betweenhim and the audience made it very difficultfor anyone to see him as anything else but ashort, stocky man playing Garbo. As an ac¬ting exercise, his performance wasbrilliant, but it was not effective theatre.Bill Vehr was wooden yet enterprising asMarguerite's lover, Armand Duval. Mr.Vehr's performance served little else but asa foil for Mr. Ludlam's thespian fireworks.The size of the stage made it all the more obvious that Mr. Vehr was playing adramaturgical backboard and not a person.Lola Pashalinski had the boorish energynecessary for Prudence Duvernoy, one ofMarguerite's less respectable friends.Black-eyed Susan worked as the tartishOlympe de Taverney, but she suffered from having the part of Gaston Roue, her admirerand occasional lover, cut from the play.Richard Currie as Duval Sr., Armand's con¬cerned and rigidly hypocritical father, added one of the few serious notes in this cam¬py free-for-all. His scene with Marguerite inAct 11 had a power and a focus that made theaudience in Mandel Hall stop laughing andtake the play seriously. Ethyl Eichelbergerwas funny as Nanine, Marguerite's dotingand maternal maid; and George Ostermanas Nichette, Marguerite's too good confidante, gave what was probably the bestperformance by a transvestite that this cityhas ever seen. John D. Brockmeyer onceagain used his meager acting talents ef¬fectively, parodying the Baron de Varvilleas a pathetic, perverse, and loathsomesuger-daddy of Marguerite's.The set did not fit Mandel Hall, and wasthe main reason why the show was so cold.For the production to have worked in Man-del, a hall well suited for melodrama, the setshould have been larger, and far moremeticulously realistic, in the tradition ofthe great nineteenth century sets. Had theplay been put on in Reynolds Club, however,Bobjack Callejo s set would have workedbeautifully. The lighting illuminated, butdid little to convey any feeling except in thefinal scene. The costumes, by Mary Brecht,were once again outrageous, especiallyMarguerite's costume in the country. Themusic for the show was trashy and recor¬ded, which fit the general purpose of dissec¬tion and parody.Camille should be seen either as a verycompetent drag show, or as a very in¬tellectual exercise in the problems andpowers of theatre. The show has areas oftechnical brilliance, but it does not tran¬splant well from a small house in New Yorkto a huge one in Chicago. If you see theshow, see it either very straight or verywasted. Camille plays this Friday night at8:30, and call 753 3852 for ticket information.DO YOUR BOOK BUYINGAT THESEMINARY COOP BOOKSTORE, INC.AND SAVEMEMBERS RECEIVE REBATESON PURCHASES5757 S. Univ.752-43819:30 - 4 M-F EUROPEBy* 1/2t i t< t * * ' i.K M K,fare^ - 800-325-4867VS9 Uir.Travel Charters- v.-41Ml -Tvf \ i < 1 *s 1 i »;frmy art Srtria?. May 14-15, 1578.Eiflisli a* Frttcl aasic if tka 17H 81W CartriK. Byrt, Laws, Parcell. Hat-titma. BoisaorsttirThe Department of Music presentsa Recital in memory of Cathy Heifetzgiven byUniversity Chamber Orchestra• Jeanne Schaefer, conductorandUniversity Symphony String QuartetSunday, May 16, 1976Bond Chapel 8:30 P.M.All are cordially invited to attend without ticket andwithout charge. There will be an opportunity after therecital to meet family and friends. Medieval Play at RockefellerA medieval mystery play — the ChesterNoah — will be presented at RockefellerMemorial Chapel Saturday, May 15, at 8p.m. and Sunday, May 16, at 4 p.m.This "Noah," which was performed inChester, England, is one of a body ofEnglish medieval mysteries known as theCorpus Christi plays. Origins and authors ofthe cycles are unknown, but the plays wereperformed as part of the Corpus ChristiCelebration in late spring and appear tohave reached full development in the lastquarter of the 14th century.There is evidence that cycles of thesedramas were performed in all parts of ur¬banized England until they were suppressedat the time of the Reformation — well intothe 16th century.A complete cycle might encompass theentire narrative of the Bible from theCreation to the Last Judgment, divided into30 or 40 separate plays and performed overa period of days.Each play was the responsibility of an in¬dividual local craft guild whose members mounted and performed it, and apparently took great pride in the authenticityand elegance of their production.For example, the Chester play of Noahbelonged to the Water-Leaders and theDrawers of the River Dee They broughttheir detailed knowledge of boat building tothe description of the art and addedtraditional embellishments of character andevent to the story without departing fromthe matter or meaning of the Biblicaloriginal. These plays' survival is testimonyto the depth and variety of the Englishdramatic tradition.As in the original play, participants in thisrevival are members of the local community. However, this production will usechildren to portray the animals; there is noevidence that this was done in the originals.There is a cast of 10 adults and 20 children,and a trio of singers.The Chancel production is directed by An¬nette Fern. The two performances arewithout ticket and without charge.NOW PLAYING AT THESESELECTED THEATRES:GCC m4rMcCLURG COURT FORD CITY GOLF MILL OLD ORCHARDChicago Chicago Niles Skotti< ‘mir GCCEVERGREEN CROSSROADSEvergreen ParkTKe Chicago ^Aaroon-Friday, May 14, 1976-131 v v k\ i m ' 'go JAcfExtra Added Hard Rock Comedy^P^^^with: CHEECH & CHONG’S short subject:“BASKETBAU. JONES”Laugh or get off the pot.The funniest film of I98S.A WORLD WIDE FILMS RELEASEV /' ''CHEVY CHASE • PHIL PROCTOR. • RICK HURST • LARRAINE NEWMAN • HOWARD HESSEMAN • ROGER BOWEN as Henry Kissmge*Musk by LAMBERT & POTTER • Wnu«n by MICHAEL MISLOVE and NEIL ISRAEL • Executive Producer WOODPECKER MUSIC INCProduced by JOE ROTH • Directed b» BRAD SWIRNOEF & NEIL ISRAEL m, D stnbuted by WORLD WIDE FILMS jj RESTlMCfFD ''Distributed by MID-AMERICA RELEASING. INC. ~ . . . TheGreyCityJournal-7, ns-. « ~' ■■•-.•'■ r’-> * •* . VSS5f- I? • icjtDt, *&+ •*}*•■ " —... «**...ICampus Film9 USk«i.o<u All films will be shown in Cobb unlessjf otherwise stated. Admission is one dollar for~ each filmCEF Offers: Distant Thunder (1973),directed by Satyajit Ray. CEF says: "Ray'sdescription of the Bengal famine of the earlyForties views the wartime crisis in whichover five million people perished, on a stric¬tly local basis. The film is set in a turpidBengali village. Soumitra Chatterji, Ray'sone-man stock company, who played thepasionate Apu in The World of Apu, is castas a newly arrived Brahmin, the onlyeducated man for miles around. "You arethe jewel in our crown," the ignorantvillagers tell him, and he agrees. But thefaraway World War causes the price of riceto soar, the traditions that bind the com¬munity are eroded, and the condescendingBrahmin is no longer treated as a jewel. Afilm full of feeling, it is shot in brilliantcolor, with a fine sense of psychologicalnuance charting the moral awakening of avillage chieftain, and a lyrical grasp ofnatural beauty in the midst of the imminentapocalypse. "Highly Recommended.Friday at 7:15 and 9:30.Nights of Cabiria (1957), directed byFederico Fellini. Like La Strada andseveral other of the post-war Italian neo-realistic films, this one is aimed moresurely toward the development of a themethan a plot. Guilietta Masina (Fellini's for¬mer wife) stars as a young optomisticprostitute who awaits the prospect of rescuefrom her lonely life. It is a touchingrealization of the harshness of life towardthose who are cast by unhappy cir¬cumstances into tragic roles. The film is fullof little details that illuminate the pathos oflife's ironies. With Francois Perier andAmedeo Nazzani. Sunday at 7:15 and 9:30.DOC offers: Love and Death (1975),directed by Woody Allen. After having tosuffer through two films by Mel Brooks thisquarter, finally you can treat yourself to afilm that is really worth laughing about.This is Allen's most coherent and cohesivefilm to date. In an all out effort to prove thatnothing is sacred anymore, the filmparodies Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, T.S. Eliot,Ingmar Bergman and many others. Allenstars as a Russian who first dreams of beinga great lover, then wants to assasinateNapoleon, later embarks on the quest fortruth, happiness and reality, ending with adance with Death to a spirited Prokofiev.Diane Keaton is marvelous as Sonya.Recommended. Saturday at 6:30, 8:45 and11:00.Invitation to the Dance (1956), directedby Gene Kelly. The film is divided into threeparts, each consiting of a dancechoregraphed and performed by Gene Kelly and without dialogue.The first is a semi-classical ballet called "Circus", in whichKelly plays a clown who is in love with anacrobat. The second of the numbers is amodern, satiric, theatrical dance called"Ring around the Rosy" which follows thecourse of a bracelet from a doting husbandto a faithless wife to a fickle lover and soforth to a prostitute and back to the husbandagain. The last number, "Sinbad the Sailor"has Gene Kelly and a young boy dancing"live-action" within the frame of ananimated cartoon of a mouse that looks verymuch like Jerry of "Tom and Jerry" fame.With music by Jaques Ibert, Andre Previn,and Rimsky Korsakoff. In Social Sciences122. Sunday at 7:15 and 9:30.The Ten Commandments (1956), directedby Cecil B. DeMille. This is it-Cecil B.DeMille's longest, largest and mostexpenisve film ever and the one that startedCharlton Heston on the road to portrayingevery Bibilical character in The Book andput money into the pockets of scores ofHollywood extras. To the fundamental storyof Moses, as told in the Old Testament andreflected in other ancient writings consultedby DeMille, he and his corps of screenplaywrights have added some frankapocrypha which, while they may not betraceable in history (or even in legend),make for a robust tale. With Anne Baxter asNefretiri, Yul Brynner as Ramses, CecilHardwicke portrays the Pharoah, EdwardG. Robinson as a treacherous overlord,Yvonne de Carlo as the Midianiteshepardess to whom Moses is wed andmany, very many, more. Featuring theparting of the Red Seas, the striking of theTen Commandments by lightening boltsand, incedently, DeMille's own voice as thenarrator and, appropriately, the voice ofGod. Wednesday at 7:30.Letter from an Unknown Woman (1948),directed by Max Ophuls. A young womanfall head-over-heels in love with dashingyoung concert pianist. Through girlhood,maidenhood and modeling for a slim butrespectable livelihood, she worships theground this glamorous fellow melodicallytreads upon. Even when he he deserts herafter a night of mechanical bliss, shecontinues to feel most kindly toward himand happily bears his child. And finally,when married and wealthy, she meets himin a crowd and gladly forgets herconsiderate husband, and goes chasing afterher dream. As the lady of deathlessadoration, Joan Fontaine virtually wringsherself dry, and as the darling but fickleconcert pianist, Louis Jourdan saturates theair with charm. Together they make apleasant unit for conditioning the romanticatmosphere. Wednesday at 7:30.What they doto her inJacksonCounty Jaiiis a crime!The cops ere thereto protect he* . Butwho will protect herfrom the cops7JACKSON COUNTY JAIL...YVETTE MIMIEUXA NEW WORLD PICTURE METROCOLOROPENING FRIDAY, MAY 14thAT THESE CHICAGO THEATRES:Adelphi Monroe PatioMontclair Davis TiffinParkway AlexSee your local directory for a complete listingof suburban theatres near your home. International House offers: Cries andWhispers (1972), di reefed by IngmarBergman. One of the finest films ever made,this is Bergman and his troop of actors attheir very best. The film focuses on a dyingreclusive woman and those who who wereonce close to her in happier times, her twosisters and nurse. Divided into parts, itprobes deeply into the varied complexpersonalities of each of the four women.Dreams, nightmares, and jaded, distortedviews of life are interspersed with reality,with only a very thin line drawn between thedifferent states of awareness. Shot in vivid,passionate shades of red, Sven Nykvist'scinematography has never been of such anexcellent caliber. The cast, is led by HarrietAnderson, Ingrid Thulin, Liv Ullman andErland Josephson, is stupendous. A greatfilm for those that don't normally likeBergman films. Highly Recommended. Twoevenings at International House. Saturdayat 7:15 and 9:30. Thursday at 9:30.FOTA presents: Three films in theirVicente Minnelli tribute. The films will beshown Monday in Cobb. Admission for allthree is one dollar.The Bad and the Beautiful (1952),directed by Vincente Minelli. The widelycirculated notion that there were monstersin Hollywood, aside and apart from thephantoms of the Frankenstein varity isgiven unqualified endorsement with noreservations in this film. The hero of thisrelentless saga is a Hollywood producer whois a heel, a perfect scoundrel. First heblandly doublecrosses a director who hashelped him through his struggling years;then he drags and romances a sad youngactress to glittering triumph and then cansher. Finally he baits a young author toHollywood, then throws the man's wife to awofish actor just so he'll be free to work on ascript. Kirk Douglas is wonderfully visciousand ruthless as the producer. Lana Turneris no more convincing as the drunken extrathan she is as the star. Walter Pidgeionplays the veteran producer, Barry Sullivanis the blackmailed director, Dick Powell isthe misuesed novelist, and Lio G. Caroll iswonderful as a British director. Monday at6:30. Band Wagon (1953;, directed byVincente Minelli. Written by Betty Comdenand Adolph Green, Band Wagon is by farMinnelli's best musical and perhaps is thefinest movie musical ever made alongsideKelly's Singin' on the Rain. Fred Astairestars as a washed-up movie idol who returnsto Broadway to appear in a musical writtenby his old friends, Oscar Levant andNanette Fabray. Trouble comes when JackBuchanan, as a terrifically flamboyant"serious director" decides to produce their carefree item as a modern day version ofFaust. Cyd Charisse, as the prima dancer,decides that Astaire is too old. Astaire getsthe notion that she is decidely too tall. And ofcourse, everything is resolved in the end.Best of all the musical numbers is "GirlHunt," a take-off on the literary works ofhard-boiled detective-fiction writers likeMichey Spillane. Highly Recommended.Monday at 8:30.Cobweb (1955), directed by VincenteMinelli. Set in a rustic psychiatiric clinic,the film is fitfully engrossing but oddlysuperficial and melodramatic. The majorproblem in Minnelli's work is not the twoadulterous daliances of the two headdoctors, which consumes most of thefootage. Nor is it the poisonous therapeuticatmosphere which is excellently portrayed.No the overriding problem is simply this;who gets to choose the new library drapes?In the only two really sympathetic roles,Richard Widmark is excellent and LaurenBacall shrewdly underplays. Lillian Gish isan abominably tempered spinster auditor.Gloria Grahame plays Widmark's retlesswife, who develops a hysterical drapefixation. Charles Boyer is a weak-willedstaff member. Oscar Levant plays adrooling Oedipus-bent patient. With JohnKerr, Susan Strasberg and Fay Wray. Mon¬day at 10:30.John Kerr, Susan Strasberg and Fay Wray.Monday at 10:30.— Karen HellerMore PoetryThose hardy souls who didn't get enoughpoetry during last week's FOTA "poetryfestival" can hear a joint reading byCharles Simic and Russell Edson at theMuseum of Contemporary Art tonight at 8p.m. The reading is the seventh and lastevent scheduled at the Poetry Center at themuseum for this season. Other events spon¬sored during 1975-6 have included readingsby Canadian poet Margret Atwood, PulitzerPrize winning novelist Saul Bellow andPulitzer Prize winning poet Maxine Kumin.The museum is located at 237 E. Ontario andadmission to the reading is $2.50 for stu¬dents. Call Sally Ruth Rau at 348-2623 formore information.RECYCLEtrash into caS'tHF, VjmarketSATURDAY MAY 29 IDA NOYES HALLWan no table 9(Selling limned to U.C students )Call *3593 now, to reservetable and or spoce GUITARS, BANJOS,MANDOLINS,S2/0 S Harper*tn Harptr Court"H07-/040 VIOLINS, AUTO¬HARPS ANDHARMONICASALSOBOOKS, INSTRUCTION AND REPAIRSWith This Ad Onlyand upUsed Chairs *10a»dUPNew Chairs »25 andup'cash and carry"^EQUIPMENTBRAND “’SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Op*n Mon.-Sat. 8:30-3:00RE 4-2111Legal Theory: No Longer In Halcyon DaysHorwitz From 6the redistribution of wealth,which they considered to be“tyranny of the majority.”Rather than equality of con¬dition, they espousedequality of opportunity.“The market was the mostpowerful expression of theideal of equality of op¬portunity,” Mr. Horwitzsaid.As part of a world-widereaction to state-regulatedmercantilism, as well asfeudalism, individualisticfreedom individualisticAmerica. “In America,liberalism was able to ex¬press its noble and idealisticface,” he said.The Constitution naturallyembodied this outlook, andconsequently, egalitarianredistribution of wealth wasalmost contrary to the ideaof law. Legal theory was con¬cerned with process ratherthan substance, the endsrather than the means. Mr.Horwitz said this “legalistmentality” was expected tobe neutral and apolitical.The Constitution also em¬bodied the idea of vestedCARPET CITY J6740 STONY ISLAND*324-7998 !jHas what you need from a*►$10 used room size Rug to a►custom carpet. Specializing(Jin Remnants & Mill returns at|Jo froction of the original*Jcost.►Decoration Colors and]►Qualities Additional 10%jDiscount with this ad I'FREE DELIVERY ! property rights, stemmingfrom John Locke’s con¬ception of property prior tothe creation of the state.Gradually, Mr. Horwitz ex¬plained, the Supreme Courtauthorized the redefinition ofproperty rights as rightsgranted and regulated by thestate.“The natural rightsframework was eroded inthe face of a result-orientedjurisprudence designed topromote economic growth.Thus, the very definition ofproperty was changedjudicially to promote theeconomic cause,” Mr. Hor¬witz added.As the country developedeconomically — as the fron¬tier was closed and in¬dustrialization progressed —the egalitarian reality uponwhich the American ideal ofsocial justice rested was sub¬verted, Mr. Horwitz said.Rather than being evenlydistributed, wealthaggregated into the hands ofa few. The judiciary,dedicated to the “paramountlegitimacy of process,” wasJAMESSCHULTZCLEANERSCUSTOM OUALITYCLEANING10%studant discount1363 E. 53rd St.751-6933FOR ALL STUDENTS & FACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification card.As Students or Faculty Members ofthe University of Chicago you are en¬titled to special money savingdiscount prices on all materials usedon Volkswogen Service Work, allVolkswagen Parts, Accessories andany new or used Volkswogen you buyfrom Volkswagen South Shore.SOUTH SHC7234 s. Stony MoodOpon Doily 2 A M. to 9 PJA.m Saturday Solos -9 A M. 5PMParts 9 A.M. 12 Noon^ Phono 288 4900 faced with a problem — thequestion of the fairness ofthe outcome of the process.According to Mr. Horwitz,in light of these thoughts, thelegalist mentality can hardlybe strictly maintained.“It is far too late in the dayfor that,” he concluded.R.H. Coase, Professor ofEconomics in the LawSchool here, offered a fewconcluding remarks, wrap¬ping up the final lecture ofthe nine-lecture series whichwas called “1776: TheRevolution in SocialThought.” As a subscriber to the views prevalent at theLaw School, Mr. Coasejokingly informed theaudience that he was notgoing to seize the op¬portunity to reply to Mr.Horwitz’s arguments.“I was brought up in asociety where self-restraintwas a virtue,” he said, “andI am going to exercise thatvirtue now.”Mr. Coase said all nine lec¬tures of the Law School’sbicentennial lecture serieswill be published in the Oc¬tober issue of the Journal ofLaw and Economics.Crewe From 1lose track of the angularmomentum of your electrons, but still know a greatdeal about where they arecoming from, you are stillable to make a photograph.All of this may be difficult toconceive, but there is amachine at the University ofChicago that does just that.The positively chargedprotons in the nucleus of anatom are held together bystrong forces which create afield about the nucleus. Anatom such as uranium with alarge number of protons hasa relatively substantial field.In the STEM, a fine electronbeam bounces off this fieldand is sprayed over a widearea. The photographicEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 image is constructed by acomputer that knows exactlywhere the beam is pointingwhen a spray indicates thatit has hit something. Theangular momentum of thosereflected electrons is com¬pletely unpredictable, butthe position of the beamwhen the electrons getsprayed about the chamberis quite definite. Heisen¬berg’s hands are tiedPhotographs can be made.With all this theory laiddown, the real technicalproblem is how to get a veryintense, highly focused beamof electrons to go exactlywhere you want it to goThere are other scanningelectron microscopes, butonly Crewe’s can produce aDOROTHY SMITHBEAUTY SALON5641 S. BLACXSTONE AVE.HY 3 1069Permanants that or*manageable short onas - andlong ones. Tints • bleaches •streaks. Hair shaping as youwish it. Children s hair cutsalso. Call for oppt. Mondaythrough Fridoy.8 asn. to 8 p.m.No Saturdays.OAK FURNITURE-ANTIQUESRCFINISHED f AS IS1649 E. 35th667-43401-6:00 PMTUES.-SAT DesksTablesChairsDressersBookcasesMuchMoree Also DoRefinishing******JM<*****************£: GOLD CITY INN |given * * * * |by the Maroon $New Hours: Open Daily |From 11:30 a.m. *| to 9:00 p.m. *■"A Gold Mine Of Good Food 6[ Student Discount: £f 10% for table service^ 5% for take homei Hyde Park's Best Cantonese Foodl 5228 Harper 493-2559| (near Harper Court){ Eat more for less. 6*6666*6iry our convemem+&&********************* Albert Crewe, the man who outwitted Heisenbergbeam just three angstromsin diameter with anywherenear sufficient intensity Thecore of the system is a veryfine tungsten wire drawn outto a diameter of otiK onethousand Angstroms This isan amsotropae crystal inwhich particular axes arefavored for the emission ofelectrons under certain con¬ditions. The terminal end ofthe wire is a sphere of aboutten angstroms diameter.30.000 volts are drives acrossthe tip and a very sharplydefined field enusswm ss in¬duced. Tins beam is furtherrefined by a senes ofmagnetic lensesIn 1S79. Vernon Beckbegan work on a new STEM[ pizza :PLATTER1460 E. 53rdMl 3-2800FAST DELIVERY jAND PICKUP:I in Crewe’s lab tn its mostrecent incarceia .on. Beckhas added ac oc-tapolequadrapole correctinglens which removes a greatdeal of spherical aberration(an optical distortion). ThisSTEM, whch has just recent¬ly begun test operation, hasa resolution of one angstromA great many scientistsare fascinated by the poten¬tial applications of Crewe’sbrainchild and they come tohim constantly with requeststo use the device. Themovies now availablebecause Crewe’s team cameup with the idea of taking asenes of pictures of the sameUranium atoms and showingthem as a motion picture arecertainly to be impressiveitems for “show and tell” aswell as for research. It mayvery well be. however, thatno application that anyonecould possibly conceive forthe STEM will be quite soremarkable as Crewe’s Her¬culean feat of tying Heisen¬berg down and forcing himto make up his mind.9 AM-91 7 Days A WeekHYDE PARK PIPE AND TOBACCO SHO£1C tracks yy1552 E. 53rd - underAR iHidkntv get 10%ask for "Big Jim. mpOi I VOCigert‘‘COe UVnt 0u«. Acnjftt1YUOTCDOft SCUlPTUIKD *'TUi WLS' &Sfe£HT^fne FRONT OF QUR HCGP'lk.luftcsGtfiftLCbmniiM-hospitalAMNOiNClS AMART CONTESTm cCMBwwnaraV tuaimw. j)3trrw.^uCa£h mMSX ran WlNNlCJCW'SfS:scam **HAM SCADULT 5KC X>CUC£ TUKD PUCfwait pcmiI £.5.00 3 CAMSvVOO tSi»130.00 50jM10O0O $400anaa fccim ma» r. £3,9* (cv^Jt.- 5M0 S*NP I90B- C«3 ft.IsraymrynsMaroon Sweeps FOTA QuizzesTeams from the Maroonbattered all opposition tosweep the two team com¬petitions and qualify for the“Know Everything’’ quiz inthe FOTA noontime seriesquiz week competition.The quizzes were con¬ducted in a “College Bowl”format.The Maroon team ofManaging Editor J.D. Peter¬son, Sports Editor DavidRieser and Editor John Vailtrounced a motley bunch ofadministrators and buried ahaggard group from theStudent School’s Committeein Tuesday’s “Know YourUniversity” quiz.While their opponentsstumbled over such puffquestions as “Name the fivecollegiate divisions,” theMaroon trio cooly handledblockbuster questions on thehistory and geography of theUniversity Avenue’s priorname—Lexington—but Mr.Vail caused mediator MikeZelenty’s chin to dropseveral feet below its normalposition by correctlypronouncing the height ofRockefeller Chapel infeet —207.A stir was gained from thecrowd when the Maroonteam added the historicalfootnote that since thechapel is the last buildingknown to have been con¬structed by John DRockefeller, it has beenknown as “Big John’s LastErection.”Perhaps the highlight ofthe day was the Photo Iden¬tification competition, whereslides of obscure ornamentson campus buildings wereshown and contestants were required to identify thebuilding which the or¬naments adorn. Mr. Rieserdisplayed such an intimateknowledge of campusgargoyles and griffins that itwas rumored the Ad¬ministration team wouldlaunch an investigation intohis Saturday night activities.Going into the final roundwhere a team could wagerup to fifty points on oneultimate question, theMaroon team was assuredvictory by virtue of a fifty-five point lead. Making aculinary wager on the query and answering the questioncorrectly put the finalMaroon score at263.14159265, causing the.runner-up administrators toeat pi.Maroon opponents in Wed¬nesday’s “Sports Quiz”fared no better. FormerSports Editor and nowBusiness Manager MikeKlingensmith, Grey CityJournal Associate EditorBarry “Beantown Bomber”Kaplovitz, and Stan Foxdisplaned an awesomeknowledge of athletic triviato best inherently inferior te^ms from Phi GammaDelta and the audience. Thethree immediately claimedto be the most trivial spor¬tsters on campus.All six Maroon winners areeligible to compete in the“Know Everything” quiz atnoon today in QuantrellAuditorium. The winner ofthat quiz will be crowned“The Smartest Person in theUniversity” and will beawarded a $20 gift certificateto the Woodlawn Tap, where$20 can kill several braincells.recycle yourmaroonTenure: Still Off The RecordWilson From 6ford it,” Mr. Wilson said.“But often these get greatlyvaried.”TenureMr. Wilson reaffirmed theUniversity’s belief that bothtenure deliberations anddecisions should not be amatter of public record.Reiterating the principles ofWilliam Rainey Harper,which guide the University’s tenure policy, Mr. Wilsonsaid that “investigation isprimary and teaching issecondary.”He agreed that studentshave a right to know whichprofessors will be teachingat the University in the fall,but said that such in¬formation is available in theTime Schedules. He said he“found it bothersome” whendepartments list “staff” in¬stead of the instructor’sname when decisions areFRIDAY/AAT Hq:00 PMAThillel5>ISuoodda^nRESEARCH SUBJECTS!HUMAI PATIENTS phot.ISRAELDLOIAMCaivl "sciences pending, but offered no alter¬native method to inform theUniversity community oftenure decisions.“If a person wishes a pieceof information made publicabout himself, he is the oneto do so, not the University.That would be an invasion ofhis prerogative,” said Mr.Wilson.ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and Woodlawn AvenueSunday • May 16 • 11:00 A.M.ELLIS RIVKINAdolph S. Ochs Professor ofJewish History, Hebrew Union College“FORWARD TO GENESIS"SUNDAY SEMINAR—CHAPEL UNDERCROFT*45 to 10:50 AM.E. Spencer Parsons, Dean of the Chapel,conducts a Btble Reading Seminar.Saturday, May 15, at 8 PJA.Sunday, May 16, at 4 PM.THE CHESTER NOWMedieval Mystery PlayAnnette Fern, DirectorWithout ticket and without charge)£-Tha Chico#) Maroon-Friday, May 14, 1976 * y. t MOVE ITWITHMAROON CLASSIFIEDS75' per 35 space line60* per line for repeat insertions50' per line to all U of C people40' per line repeat for U of C peopleHelp Woodsyspread the word!On the slope... (^)PSCIor on the sand,Help keep Americalooking grand!Give a hoot! Don’t pollute!For Warm Days Ahead:Earth Shoes.Style 900$28.50Style 170$27.00They’re cool, they’re comfortable, they'relight, they’re perfect for spring and summer.They’re the Earth® brand shoe, the shoe thatstarted it all, the shoethat’s so unique, it’spatented.earthshoeCHICAGO/LINCOLN PARK: 2112 N.Gark St.Free parking at 2036 N. Clark St. (312) 528 8510.CHICAGO/HYDE PARK: 5210 S. Harper Ct.Off street parking in city lot. 1312)363-4088. MOpen 7days. MasterCharge accepted. Gift Certificates available.Please present Jhis advertisement for a free tin of Tana LeathProtector & Conditioner with purchase of any style Earth* shorr.r Pi /MAROON CLASSIFIEDDATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: UC PEOPLE NON-UC PEOPLE50c per line 75c per line40c per line to repeat 60c per line to repeatThere are 35 spaces per line, including all letters spaces, and punctuation marks. Circleall letters to be capitalized.ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCEHEADINGS:There is no charge for regular headings (ie. , For Sale, Space, People Wanted, etc.).Your own heading (1 5 spaces) costs $1.00 (75c to repeat) per line.HEADING11 “jTAK4MA&NCHINESE AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCAKTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 8:30 PM.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Orders to take out1318 East 63rd MU 4-1062 SellWe RentRepairTYPEWRITERSADDERSELECTRONIC CALCULATORSDICTATORSU. of C. Bookstore5730 S. EllisHours: M-F 8 5 $9 1753-3303FOTA ’76SECONDCITYo"Oc TICKETS AVAILABLE NOWAT REYNOLDS CLUB DESK17 8:00PM$3. 50; students. $2Ufandel Hall BRENT HOUSEEcumenical Campus Ministry5540 South WoodlawnSunday May 165:00 House Church6:00 Supper ($1.25)7:00 Readings: MHope, Joy, And/or the Future” BRASSSOCIETYCOAX'ERTLUTHERAN SCHOOL OF THEOLOGYAudi torimFRI. MAY 218 00 pm FREEBYE BYEBRAVERMAN ■*,Se*.tur« Svlrwproduced * D\rect£o £>■» SiDNEt LUA5ETstarr*ao, c\eorc^ ^e&a\ ( warden ,Coaiter ^phyllis neojroac,sat my is s=oo pmAT HI.LLEL 5YIS u>oodtamuryJ /. • a m 7 r f /. S& err R SThe Chicago Maroon-Friday. May 14, 1976-17It?1Maroons Beat Wheaton 5-4By Robert AckleyThe Maroon varsitybaseball team improvedtheir season record to 10-8Wednesday as they outlasteda visiting Wheaton Collegenine 5-4 in 11 innings.Chicago drew first blood inthe third inning when thirdbaseman Mike Giblinsingled home center-fielderDennis McNamara. TheMaroons added two more inthe 6th when left-fielder CarlHerzog and catcher PaulSwiontkowski scored on Mc¬Namara’s bases-loadeddouble.Meanwhile, starting pit¬cher Paul Kawalek wasproving that his 1-0 victoryover Wheaton earlier in theyear was no fluke as he heldthem to two hits over the first six innings. But withChicago leading 3-0 in theseventh, Wheaton got toKawalek for three runs andit was a new ballgame.When the tiring Kawalekwalked the first two battersin the 8th, Coach Angeluscalled on Ed Conner to putout the fire. Conner hadtrouble at first, walking oneto load the bases after whicha run came in on a Maroonerror. With no outs and thebases still loaded, it lookedas if the one-run Wheatonlead might soon expand. ButConner rose to the challenge,striking out two batters andgetting the third out himselfon a force play at the plate.With the Maroons trailing4-3 in their half of the 8th, Wheaton starter Bob John¬ston walked two batters andwas relieved by Ben Mizell.Mizell retired the side butnot before right-fielder IsaacBridges had slid home safelyon an infield roller to tie thescore at 4 a piece.Both teams failed to scorein the 9th and 10th innings asMizell and Conner struggledto hold their opponentsscoreless. Chicago got theirbreak in the 11th when left-fielder Carl Herzog made adiving catch of a Wheatonline drive which appeareddestined for extra bases.Mizell was not so lucky inthe Maroon half of the 11thinning. With two outs, EdConner walked and Dennis 'll-' ■ •r *'•; /Ed Conner turns to throw out the runner at first as ChuckWoods looks on. (photo by David Rieser)SPORTSFull Court PressAn absolutely beautifulday saw the UniversityWomen’s tennis team getracked in their own UC In¬vitational Tourney.None of Chicago’s playersmade it out of the first roundin the tourney that even¬tually ended with a tie be¬tween Lake Forest andWheaton. DePaul andChicago tied for last in theeight team elimination withzero points apiece.This is the last week of oneof Chicago’s worst netseasons in years. Maroonnetters have a 1-5 record butplayed very well againstConcordia last Thursday.They lost 6-3 but they weremissing their top twoplayers. Still, all the mat¬ches were close. Elise Bloommoved from fourth to firstsingles for the day and tookher match to 3 sets beforefinally losing. Carol Fultonwon in three and LisaMcKean won in two. The fir¬st doubles team of ElixeBUom and Kathy Franklinwon their match.The team won’t improvetheir record this week either.They will play tough squadsfrom Weaton and North¬western on Tuesday andThursday. After that theirseason will, mercifully, beover. Usually when a coachterms a season “learningand rebuilding’’ it’s anexcuse for why they haven’twon a match yet. But thevarsity Men’s tennis teamhad such a year with a 6-5record. And they would havewon three more had nottheir easiest matches beenrained out.Coach Scott had rathergamely predicted the win¬ning tally at the beginning ofthe year. He was missing histop two singles players fromlast season but he expected alot of wins from the middle ofthe line-up.His prediction turned outto be accurate. RodgerLewis, Tim Lorello, and KenKohl all turned in strong per¬formances even thoughmany of them were in theirfirst season of Chicago ten¬nis.Still the team was not hur¬ting in the top positions.Howard Gershenfeld rosefrom sixth to third to firstsingles and managed a win¬ning 6-2 season all the wayup.The women’s track teamwent down to the state tour¬ney and came back with asolid goose-egg. Absolutelyno points. But there is only somuch a Maroon team of fivecan do against a state schoolCarl Herzog swung a mean bat and had a game winning cat¬ch against Wheaton. (photo by David Reiser)18-Tha Chicago Mdroon-Frtdoy, May }976f McNamara singled. Secondbaseman Chuck Woods hitthe first pitch through adrawn-in Wheaton infieldand Steve Rocniak, runningfor Conner, scored fromsecond with the winning run.Both teams displayed gooddefense, but particularlyvaluable to the Maroons wasteam of 30.There were some good per¬formances. Sprinter PamHaynes qualified for thesemi-finals in the 100 and the200 with personal bests at11.8 and 26.5. Mo Brown tur¬ned in a season’s best in the880 with a 2:32.7 and MaryLogan ran a 68.6 in the 440.Cathy Vanderloos didn’t getpsyched up in time andnever even made it to thefinals in the shot or thediscus.Fortunately next yearthere will be a small collegemeet where schools likeChicago should be morecompetitive. Coach Larkincommented that this meetwas good because it let theteam see what good means.That’s still small consolation from 50 yards back.The team finishes up itsseason this Saturday with ahome meet against North¬western. The Wildkats arein the midst of a very strongbuilding program but theywill not yet be out of reachfor the Maroon thinclads.The meet starts at 1:00 atStagg Field and should be agood one.The women’s crew willrace this Saturday in LincolnPark and Minneapolis, Min¬nesota. The Boats racing inChicago will be competingagainst the MilwaukeeRowing Club at 10:00. Theboat going to Minneapoliswill race against the Univer¬sity of Minnesota and theMinnesota Rowing Club.Chuck Woods slides into third a long time ahead of the throw,(photoby David Rieser) the fielding of shortstop JeffLarson, first baseman Nor-val Brown, and secondbaseman Woods. Conner’sfour innings of shutout reliefearned him credit for the winand brought his season record to 6-1.The Maroons will wind uptheir season this Saturday asthey tangle with ConcordiaCollege in a doubleheaderscheduled to begin at 12:30PM at Stagg Field.Men’s Track EndsWinning SeasonBy Frank AAerriwellThe men’s track team willfinish a winning season thisSaturday at the Elmhurst In¬vitational in Elmhurst,Illinois.The dual season endedwhen the Maroon thincladstrashed a scrappy 8 mansquad from Lewis Univer¬sity 116-29. The meet, held atLockport, produced some ofthe worst times in years dueto a fierce backstretch wind.The team went on to takeeighth in the Beloit Relays atBeloit College. Last yearChicago had place second inthe event and had come backwith the biggest load ofhardware seen on this cam¬pus for a long time. Hopeshad been high for a repeatperformance.Unfortunately, the com¬bination of a slower teamand much better competitiondenied the Maroons anotherday of such glory. The timesat the meet were, without ex¬ception, much faster thanpreviously and better thanChicago could hope to run.The only Maroon first wasMike Karluc’s javelin toss of181’. This culminated a suc¬cessful season for Karlucwho started out the year with an Central AAU cham¬pionship in the shot and hasbeen a consistent winner inall the outdoor weight even¬ts.The distance medley teamof Rieser, DeFrancis, Brownand Smith took third whichwas the highest placing by ateam. The two mile relayteam of Hart, Thvedt,DeFrancis and Bastian tookfourth as did the sprintmedley team of Hor-sthempke, Jacobson,Childress and Savit, until itwas discovered that they hadbeen disqualified. JohnSchuster ran a gutsy mile,spending most of the racefighting for first place.However, two weeks of acold and the three menbehind him all caught up inthe last stretch and he had tosettle for fourth.The Elmhurst Invitationalthis Saturday doesn’t quiteend the regular season forthe thinclads. There will beother meets such as theStagg Relays coming up, butno one plans to do anythingmore than watch when theNCAA Division III Nationalscome to Stagg Field at theend of May.UC VARSITY SCOREBOARDBaseball:Maroons 5 Wheaton 4(11 innings)Softball:Maroons 13 Northwestern 0Maroons 10 College of DuPage 3TennisWheaton 6 UC Women 3UPCOMING EVENTSBaseball:UC vs Concordia, Sat. May 15, 12:30 Stagg Field, doubleheaderTrack:UC Women vs Northwestern, Sat. May 15,1.00, Stagg FieldUC Men at the Elmhurst Invitational, Sat. May 15, Elmhurst,Ili.CLASSIFIED ADSSUBLETSummer Sublet w/possible fall opt.57th & Drexel low rent: $63/month CallKent 324-8719. A great location.Large 4 1/2 rm newly remod Ibr SShore 1/2 blk UC bus, 1 blk UC, CTA.Near lake & park. Secure, laundry rm.Yours from 12 June 4 Sept, for $450 incutilities. Perfect for summer schoolCall Steve 955 6811 after 6 pmSummer sublet 15 June 3 blocks fromlibrary 3-1/2 rm apf Call 667 81421134Furnished Summer Sublet lovely aptnear campus not expensive June 1stpreferred Call Beth 33850 or 2416048Summer sub let in Little Pierce, AC 2rooms open for women 955 3842.Female roommate needed for summer. 5423 S Dorchester $83/month, call753 3541 apt 43. Leave name & phone.SUMMER sublet space avail in Irg apt5100 Kimbark 752 5835.2 BDRM Apt for sub 6/20/9/1 PrairieShore, full furn, piano. Free shuttle toHyde Park or use my car. $240 per mo.(orneg.) 225 8578Sublet Avail. 6/15. Cptd. studio w/sep.ktchn. 54th & Cornell. $145/mo. incl.util. 324 4292Summer sublet 4rms 2 bdrms furnnear trans, shpg ctr. Fall opt. 241 7493.Price negotiable.Harper Square, 2nd floor, air condtg.On campus bus routes. $80/month Call924 6340 after 6:00.SPACESpacious Kenwood faculty home 2rooms, kitchenette & bath for coupleor single student 373 2625 eveningsSpacious 2 bedroom basement apt forsublet with lease option for fall$135/month including electricity, 53rdand Harper. Available June 15 Call947 9596 after 5pm.Wanted, person to share 2 bdrm, 2 bathfurn, air-cond apt in bldg middle of55th St $135 sublet considered Callbefore noon, after 7 pm 363 2955.Summer sublet, $84/mnth, incl. util.Own frnsh rm. 2 rms Available. 57 &Drexel No roaches Call 241 53382 roommates wanted in 3 bedroomapart with dog Near Kimbark Plaza$67 +utilities Call Stc ze 288-8734.Looking for 2 roommates to move intoour sunny East Hyde Park apt thissummer. For more details call 2417589Roommate for two bedroom apt. CallJohn 493 2863or 637 5151 Hyde Pk.Summer Sublet Modern 2 bedroom aptin "University Apartments" 55 8. DorChester. Good security in bldg gradstudent preferred Fall option$160/month Air Conditioned 241 7588One bedroom furnished apt availablefrom June 15 near univ. Lease expiresSept 1st. Call 947 9616 after 5.So Shore 5 rms. newest luxury 6 aptbldg, now July or Sept. $325. Must beseen, adults only 684 5544HYDE PK. nr. U. of C. 1-4 5 rm. apts.Well kept bldg. Adults. Nr. 1C, bus,park, lake, reas. BU8-071855 HP flat 1000000 2 condos Ml 3 90862 bdrm cedar home for rent Jun-Jul.Located near South Haven, Mich. 2hrs. from Chicago. Private woods,beach on Lake Mich. All modern 947-6451 or 684 6549CAPE COD. Small 2 Bedroom cottageavailable for July by month or weekCall Carafoli 324 4180 or 644 5237.Close to transportation 3 or 4 roomsnewly dec large kitchen all utilit, inc.in rent. Right price to responsible party. 721 8420.VERSAILLES5254 S. OorchMttrWEIL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGATTtACTIVK 1 V, AND2 '/* DOOM STUDIOSPUDNtSMKD or UNFUftNISHfD$138,. $221ftosod on AvailabilityAil Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus StopFA 441100 Mr* Grooh 1, 2, 3 & 4 room apt 4805 Drexel blvd$105 to $165. Call 624 5799SPACE WANTEDPostdoctoral student M, BehavioralSci. seeks quiet room for June 15-Sept1. Prefer close to campus. Can pay upto $100/mo. Call Ed 241-6128 after 7 pmor before 8:30amHARVARD LAW STUDENT wkg inLaSalle St. law firm looking for nearbyhse or apt to sit or apt to sublet 6/14 to8/20. Write E.W. Robinson, 281 Harvard St„ Cambridge, MA 02139Wanted a 2 bedroom apt close toLibrary $50 reward for informationleading to signing lease. Summersublet also welcome Kris 947-6435 days8.955 2268 eves 8, weekendsReliable faculty couple wants to subletor house sit in Hyde Park July 1-31.Ms. Wilson 753-3137.PROFESSORS, stud seeks house forrent 76/77 year. Steve 753 2233 #122.SPACE FOR SALEHyde Park modern 4 bdrm townhouse,corner lot, immaculate cond. D/D,A/C, rec room, patio-gas grill. Centralplay area. Walk to univ., 1C, Co-op.$58,000. 363 5454PEOPLE WANTEDFormer Montessori teacher, nowgraduate student in education, seeksfull time babysitter from June toAugust. Phone 241 6896 LeaLive in for summer, care for two boys38.5, mother works part-time $50/wk,own room, Louisville. Mrs. Henrion6930 Wythe Hill Circle, Prospect Ky40059 (502) 228 3861.Ray School Store Clk hrs 11:45 am-12 30pm M F at 2.50/dy Call T Fry or241 6788 or E. Goodman 493 7046Part time office person for Hyde Parkchild care center. Must have flexiblehrs. telephone reception some typingsome clerical $2.50 hr Call HelgaSinaiko 538 8325 days or 493 2981 eves.The Student Advisory Committee orthe Social Sciences Collegiate Divisionis currently seeking student membersfor next academic year. If you are interested in participating in the committee's activities (curricular review,teaching evaluation, etc.) Pleaseleave your name in Gates Blake 103 orcall 753-2727.Student wanted aft babysitting 8. someIt housekeeping Beginning summerschool & during next year if possibleSalary good Zonis 753-2729 or pmSalenger 548 4196We need a good carpenter to build agate and do repairs around houseZonis 753 2729 PM Salenger 548 4196Where else can you get free applejuice, insurance, a smile 8. help yourfellow human beings? Billings BloodBank! Call forappt. 947 5579.MEDICAL SCHOOLS in Coahulla andMorelos. Mexico now acceptingqualified applicants for September1976 term Contact R W Cary 4324Kilcher Court, Carmichael, CA 95608(916) 483 4587 or 487 5816PEOPLE FOR SALEPrivate guitar lessons $3.50. Folk,classic 8, basic music. Ph 493 3949MOVING. Inexpensive, reliable CallRob Stone Movers 538 7520, 955 6609IBM Selectric typing Call 378 5774Thesis, dissertations, term papers,gen office corres typed on latest IBMcorrecting Selectric II typewriterRates reasonable. Call Mrs Ross 2394257.Graduate student with a good physand Behav. Sciences background willtranslate articles from Russian,Polish and other Slavic languagesCall Andrew 363 7146For exp. piano teacher call 947-9746WRITING WRONGLY? English Gradwill proofread papers 8. essays forerrors in grammer and style David268 0935SCENESVincent Minnelli Film Series, Part III:The Bad and the Beautiful, 6 30, BandWagon, 8 30; Cobweb, 10 30 $1 per evein Quantrell, Mon May 17.Eddie Jefferson and the Van FreemanQuartet, Cloister Club, 8 30 pm, SatMay 15. $2, students w/UCID. $3 50,others. FOTA.Kathryn Posin and Lance Westergard.‘ rtuxfcrh dance MAY I*. Mandat Hdtlf § • pm. $1.50, students w/UCID; $3.00others. Sponsored by FOTAUNLIMITED fruit, pastry and entreebuffet. $3.95 per person—9:30 to noonSaturday mornings at the Court HouseRestaurant.WINNIE THE POOH Bazaar/WhiteElephant Sale. Clothes, books, plants,food, children's games. For Co op Nursery School. United Church, 53rd atBlackstone, May 14,10 4.NUDIST TRAVEL CLUB for singles,families and couples, Send $25 for a 2year membership MYW CLUB, POBox 1342, Aurora, II 60504FOR SALETeletype Mach's, models 28, 19 8, 15$25+ Goodman 752-1000 phoneanytimeMaytag apt size portable washingmachine $30 Also, 6 ft. couch greenupholstering. $35 Call 684 4842Olivetti portable typewriter excellentcondition 667-2257 evesPASSPORT PHOTOSColor, 2 for $9.00MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th St. 493 6700Photo ID's and applications photosalso availableDodge Dart '71 6 cyl 35,000 mi. $800 947-9583Excellent Flexstell Hide a Bed $150, 2Antique Chests of drawers, Inexpensive Oriental type rugs, 2 Antiquechairs. Outstanding old Della Robbiareproduction in full relief Plusmiscellaneous, silver, books, records,etc. CALL 321 0454.RIDESRide needed to or near EL PASO about6/7. Call 348-7403 PM only.PETSFree kitten-extremely cute, grey andwhite, six weeks old; 947-0239PSI U PARTY!Join us for another great party Saturday might at PSI U 9 30 ? 5639 S.University Ave. UCID ReqMINNELLI FILMSThe Bad and the Beautiful, 6 30, BandWagon, 8 30; Cobweb, 10.30 in Quantrell. Sponsored by FOTA $1 perevening, on Mon May 17.KATHRYN POSINDANCE FOUN¬DATIONPosin and Westergard dance in Mandel, 8 pm, Tues May 18 $1.50 forstudents w/UCID, $3 others. FOTAJAZZEddie Jefferson and the Von FreemanQuartet, 8:30 pm. Cloister Club, May15. $2, students w/UCID, $3 50 othersFOTACARE OF THE COWAn udder delight! At the Sanctuary(Gargoyle) May 21 with June Shellenetickets at the Fret Shop 8 00 pmCOMINGSOON!Samuel Beckett's All That Fall, a playfor radio, in a special production forWHPK 88 3 FM Watch the classifieds for air date and time.Ml NELLI!End your Monday on a happy note SeeThe Bad and the Beautiful, 6:30 BandWagon, 8:30, Cobweb, 10:30, in Quantrell, Mon, May 17.$1 per eve5529 SOUTHBLACKSTONEOne bedroom, restored elegant 4 roomapt. Refinished oak floors, wood burning fireplace, completely new kitchenwith ail new appliances Privatevegatable garden, wood working shopavailable. Inquire at office 1-6 dailyand weekends. $350 per month.DANCEKathryn Posin and Lance Westergardin Mandel Hall at8pm on Tues. May 18Sponsored by FOTACOACHHOUSESo Shore 4rm garage near Lake 1C UCbus. All student bldg $180 799 6641LAKE COTTAGECottage Stevensville Mich 70 mi inwoods private assoc & beach. July $600call 538 8325 days 493 2981 eveEDDIE JEFFERSONCome with me if you wanna go to Kansas City. 8:30 pm, Sat May 15 inCloister ClubPARTYRelax and forget the pressures andworries of Spring quarter at PDT'sSpring Party Boogie to the rock soundof "Roll Your Own", from 9 to 1 thisSat. at 5625 University. Bring your UCIDCONVOCATIONTICKETSJune 11 CONVOCATION If you are attending but not using all 3 of yourtickets, please call Alan 752 3367.ROOMATESWANTEDTo share rent |$58) and utilities of sixroom apartment at 54th andWoodlawn. Contact David at 324 3863Beginning about June 15FREE ALBUMS!WHPK's "Spring Housecleaning’' continues all weekend long Just call in towin copies of some of the best rock,jazz, and R&B albums released in thelast few months WHPK FM 88 3.CAMPING EQUIPRental tents, sleeping bags, stoves,lanterns, pads Hickory 324 1499WAITRESSandCASHIERWANTEDFull or Part TimaCallAGORA 947-8309HP-OFFAUTO REPAIRFOREIGN CAR SPECIALISTSSERVICE ON VW & AUDIWe Offer Top-Quality Mechanical ServiceTune-Ups # Electrical * Brake SystemExhaust System # Other RepairsConveniently Located at5508 S. Lake Park(Gateway Garage Bldg.-Downstairs)Monday-Saturday, 9am 9pmCALL:684-5166FOTA '762nd CITY8:00 P.M. Monday, May 17Mandell Hall$3.50; Students, $2.00 PETSFree kitten female 8 weeks 378 3880WHPK's WEEKENDTonight, bluegrass music from 6 9 PM,folk from 9 to midnight, and rock starting at midnight and going ail nightlong Saturday, its R&B from 10AM to3PM, jazz from 3 to 6, and rock allnight long, starting at 6PM Sunday,R&B from 9AM to 7PM, and jazz allnight starting at 7. Hear good musicand win free albums all weekend longon WHPK FM 88 3 STEP TUTORINGinterested in helping neighborhoodchildren? The Students TutoringElementary Project needs volunteerstutor students in school work, such asrading or math, or the help in specialprojects such as art, music, or scienceFor more information call Ron Schwartz924 2664 or Rod Wing 753 3541STUDENTSHaving trouble with a paper or dissertation? Free help developing ideas9 0L PM Sun Blue GargoyleCREATIVESERVICESCreative Sabbath Services every Fri.night at Hillei, 5715 Woodlawn at 7 30p.m. For more info call 752 5655WOMEN'SMAGAZINEPrimavera, the women's literarymagazine is on sale in all Hyde ParkbookstoresCHICAGO AUDIOWe're celebrating our first anniversary as the least expensive stereostore in the city We still sell the bestequipment, shipped in factorysealed cartons, with fql.l warrantiesand'a 30 day exchange period Ask fora quote on any of our 100 plus linesGage 241 5752.MAB POSITIONSApplications are being acceptedfor appointments to the propsed 76-77Major Activities Board Bring to IdaNoyes rm209 For info call AaronFiller 3 3444 or 3 3593HI RE-AN-ARTISTIllustrations, portraits, free lance artwork to your order Call Noel Price947 0698 eveningsBOOKS BOUGHTBooks bought & sold everyday, everynight, 9 11, Powells 1501 E 75th.PAN PIZZADELIVERYThe Medici Delivers from 10 pm weekdays, 5-11 Saturday. 667-7394 Save 60cents if you pick it up yourself PERSONALSMaroon personal personals are nowFREE! (We reserve the right to edit,delete, and make up personals)PLACE YOURS TODAY!Where are you? We are waitinganxiously for you to come over toBillings Gift Shop to see the greatdenim stuff Our jeans and jackets arethe best! Certain campus personshave discovered this fun place andthey meet here often but we are stilllooking for you!J Raymond returns to give the 1stKJW Lecture: What Will a DegreeFrom the U of C be Worth in the Year2001?Two beer taps were taken by celebrants at Walpurgisnacht April 30 Asidefrom the three kegs of beer we wereunable to serve to others, replacingthese will be surprisingly expensiveWe pushed our budget to the limit tomake the best party we could: Believeit or not, we'll have embarassing difficulties with our bills because of thatprank, Getting money to do this sort ofthing isn't the easiest thing in theworld and you're making it that muchmore difficult Please leave them atthe Ida Noyes desk NO QUESTIONSASKEDWRITERS WORKSHOP (PL2-8377)PREGNANCY TESTS. 10 a.m., 2 p.m.Saturdays Southside Women's HealthServices Augustana Church 5500 SWoodlawn Bring 1st morning urinesample $1 50 donationWANTEDDrama. Art, and Music tans andfreaks; Poets, Photographers. Artists,and Writers of criticism, fiction orsatire, to write for the Grey City Journal next year Also, if you have layoutor graphics background and want tohelp Contact Jon Meyersohn at theMaroon office or 363 3402LITERARY GUIDANCEBy Publishing AuthorPersonal atteotw-NOT a Mot SceneI’ll help oi THESIS. ARTICLES STORKSWhere ms How to SELttaimitrt CnticisaiFRANK MARKS—MU 4-3124• Eye Exaaiubois• Contact lenses (Soft l Hard)• Prescriptions FilledDR. MORTON R. MASLOV0PT08ETRISTHyde Part Shopping Center1510 E. 55th363-8383 “'‘Sod;carreM1342 E 55 St Chicago IL 60615493-6700Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHair Designersl 620 E. 53rd St288 2900A GENERATION OF IMMIGRANTSTHE JEWISH EXPERIENCEVIDEOTAPE INTERVIEWS WITH CHICAGOJEWISH IMMIGRANTStuesday may is 7 oopm at « s-*isDISCUSSION POLLOLJING CO SPONSOR ECBY COMMUNICATIONS FOR CMAN6EOTY-Ult*. INSTITUTE. OF THE JJRILLEL HOUSE3EUSH COUNCIL for theELDERLY IN HYDE PARK % «uDoo<dlaujrv* CHICAGOThe Chicago Maraon-Pridoy. May 14, 1976-19SPRINGTIME IS GERMANMAY WINE TIMEGERMANY’S FINEST MAYWINE Regular $3.98 Each 2 ™ s398GERMANY'S SWEETHEART MAY WINE *2"UEBFRAUENBERGMOSELBLUMCHEN 1 279 EACH FIFTH 2 $cooFOR «JPORTUGESE ROSE 1991 EACH FIFTH 2 ran $355(Compare this to Mateus)FINE IMPORTED CHEESE SPECIAPORT WINE CHEDDAR $^39 LbSTRONG FLAVORS REG. SALE PRICEGORGONZOLA *2" Per lb.HAVARTI GRAND TOAST $229 1" PerU,DENMARK CAYENNA PEPPER $339 279 Per Lb.VERY MILD FLAVORSEDAM $249 1" Per Lb.NORWEIGAN TILSIT $169 1" Per Lb.SWEDISH FONTINA $189 I" Per Lb.SWISS EMMENTHALER $015 179 Per Lb.BRIE $279 249 Per Lb.Cheese prices are for one pound minimum purchase.Daily: lOam-llpm Sunday: Noon, 6 pm20-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, Mcy 14, 1976