VOL. 85 NO. 60 chicaglMaroon■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ffTHE university of Chicago MHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH TUESDAY, May 18, 1976•ECIRCUS-3What this campus needs isa good five-cent circus.What it will get is even bet¬ter : a circus for free.As part of the Festival ofthe Arts (FOTA) noontimeseries, The Circus Kingdomwill perform in HutchinsonCourt between 11:30 and 1:30tomorrow.More than just an ordinarycircus, The Circus Kingdomprofesses to be a travelling“community ofbrotherhood”. A not-for-profit venture of the CapitolHill United MethodistChurch in Washington, D C.,the group receives supportfrom the National En¬dowment for the arts.The 44 member troupe is amixture of professionals wholend their talents for a sum¬mer tour and talentedamateurs who aspire per¬manent positions under thebig top.In the event of rain, theperformance will take placein Mandel Hall. Admissions Report ShowsWomen Up, Minorities DownBy Dan WisePreliminary figures con¬cerning the composition ofnext year’s entering Collegeclass show that femalerepresentation has in¬creased while minorityenrollment has dropped.The figures released byFred Brooks, Director ofCollege Admissions and Aid,and Lorna Straus, Dean ofCollege Admissions and ofStudents in the College, com¬pare the number of ap¬plicants who have mailed indeposits to reserve a place inthe class of 1980 with thefinal enrollment figures forlast September’s enteringclass.A total of 31 minority ap¬plicants have maileddeposits for next year,making up 4.5 percent of the690 students who have, as ofMay-12, accepted admission.Final admission figures forlast fall showed thatminority students composed6.5 percent of the 659 stu¬dents that ultimately cameto UC.Christopher Smith, theUniversity’s minority ad¬missions specialist, claimedthat minority admissionsfigures traditionally lagbehind regular admissions.Mr. Smith believes that,despite the drop in totalminority admission, theCollege is ahead in the num¬ bers of black admissionscompared to the same timeone year ago.“I’m sure that it was inJune and July that we pickedup the largest increase” ofminority students acceptingadmission, he said. Thecollege has extended thereply date for severalstudents and is awaitingcompleted applications froma number of other minorityapplicants.Women in the class,according to the data,have increased from 30 per¬cent of last year’s class to 32percent of next year’s first-year class. Mr. Brooks in¬dicated that he expects theoverall size of the class to belarger next year. A total of690 students have reservedspace, compared to roughly625 acceptances at the sametime last year. Final figuresfor the class of 1979. boostedby late acceptances by highschool juniors under an earlyadmissions program and bysome minority students,brought the size of last fall’sclass up to a final figure of659 students.According to Mr Brooks,because of the larger num¬ber of acceptances so far thisyear, there will be less lateacceptances by the Collegeand he expects the size ofnext September’s enteringclass to be between 675 and 700 depending upon theamount of shrinkage of thosealready paying deposits andanticipating the addition ofthose students for whomreply dates have been ex¬tended.Over 2400 applicationswere received, 69 percentfrom men and 31 percentfrom women and “between1400-1500” students were of¬fered admission by theCollege, said Mr BrooksMr Brooks also claimedthat his office does not an¬ticipate a “significantchange” from last year tothis in the number of stu¬dents on financial aid. Nextyear's projection is 60 per¬cent of the class receivingaid in the form of giftsana/or loans.Mr Brooks expresseddisappointment at theCollege's failure to “breakthrough” on minority ad¬missions but he laudedPresident Wilson for his ef¬forts on behalf of Collegerecruitment. Mr. Wilson hashosted receptions for par¬ents of prospective stu¬dents and has paid particu¬lar attention to recruitmentwhile traveling. Mr Brooksalso praised the students“who have served so ably onthe Student Schools Com¬mittee.”ANALYSISWhy Did All Hell Break Loose?“Honest disagreement on substantive issuespropelled the course of events, but politicalbickering and infighting obscured thereal problems as the slugfests intensified. ”Kariborz Maissami, former SO president, resigned inJanuary. (Photoby Jonathan Kopp)By Peter CohnLeaders of campus studentorganizations have not had acomfortable year. SinceJanuary, a stampede of im¬peachments and resigna¬tions has trampled theorganizationl stability offour of the largest and mostinfluential student organiza¬tions at the University.Personalities, emo¬tionalism, and partisanship* reigned supreme. Honestdisagreement on substantiveissues propelled the courseof events, but politicalbickering and infightigobsecured the real problemsas the slugfests intensified.All hell broke loose atonce. In the winter quarter,heads began to roll left andright. When the bloodlettingstopped, the leaders of thefour organizations had eitherresigned, been impeached,or come very close to im¬peachment. And in the elec¬tions for next year’s leaders,the insurgent wing of each ofthe organizations took con¬trol.It seems like an amazing coincidence. But coin¬cidences don’t happen likethat. Institutional and en¬vironmental characteristicsallowed it all to happen.Number one is apathy, thecatch-all explanation foreverything depressing aboutcollege students in the seven¬ties. If more people cared,student organizations at theU of C might not be such ajoke.Beyond that, there aresome very specific organiza¬tional problems that hinderthe success of studentorganizations on this cam¬pus, and provide the powderfor political explosions likethe ones that happened thisyear.Internal upheavals havebeen going on in studentorganizations at the U of Cfor a long time. W’HPK has often gone through severalProgramming Directors ii\one year. SG, when it hasmanaged to exist at all, hasnever been known as a pillarof stability.But politics really muckedthings up this year and it’stime to think hard and findout why.Student Government (SG)was the first group to ex¬perience political turbulencewhen Fariborz Maissamiresigned in ‘January. The'next week four of the leadingmembers of the DebatingSociety came close to im¬peachment. A majority ofthe Society voted to impeachChancellor Joe Morris justshort of the needed two thir¬ds majority.Later in the winterquarter, Maroon EditorGage Andrews came close to impeachment. Although hesurvived the impeachmentefforts, he resigned in April.He probably would not haveresigned if he had enjoyedthe personal and politicalsupport of the staff.At the beginning of the spr¬ing quarter, the membershipof WHPK voted to recall Sta¬tion Manager Bill Diskin.Jane Ginsburg, Programm¬ing Director of the station,subsequently resigned.Dissatisfaction with the sta¬tion management had beengrowing since the beginningof the year.It is tempting to attributethe awesome series of eventsto the effects of ManhattanProject radiation quietlyemanating from the founda¬tion of Regenstein. Inter*views with the Caesars andBrutuses of the year have helped to reveal asystematic, perhaps even asocial scientific, explanationfor why all hell broke looseon campus in 1975-76.In each case, the leader¬ship had developed a vision of organizational directionwith which a substantial pro¬portion of the membershipfound fault Generally, thisdivergence in viewpoints m-LEADERS TO 84NEWS BRIEFSWater Safety InstructorsA special retraining cour¬se for Water Safety In¬structors will be offered atthe Ida Noyes pool on Wed¬nesday evenings from 7:00-10:00 p.m. beginning Sep¬tember 29 and continuing forfour weeks through October20.Registration will be at IdaNoyes, Room 201, from May17 through May 28. In-SG MeetingThe first meeting of thenew Student GovernmentAssembly will be at 7 pm inHarper 130, Wednesday,May 19. There will be a,reception for new and oldmembers before the meetingstarting at 6 pm on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes.The meeting will be im-*AlcoholismA free seminar onalcoholism is offered as apublic service everyTuesday night at 7:30 pm atthe Illinois Central Com¬munity Hospital. Ayone whois interested is invited to at-PrimaveraPrimavera, the women’sliterary magazine, willconduct a poetry readingSaturday May 22 at 7:30p.m.in the library of Ida NoyesHall. The reading will structors are required topurchase two new textbooksat registration and to showproof of their former W.S.I.training. The course is opento all Instructirs who com¬pleted their original trainingbetween 1968-1975 and islimited to 20 people.After May 28, registrationmust be made at Red Crossheadquarters, 43 E. Ohio St.portant because the officerswill be elected. There willalso be run-off elections forundecided seats.Graduate students fromSSA or the Biology Divisonwishing to apply for thevacant seats in those con¬stituencies should come tothe meeting.tend. Friends and familymembers of persons who suf¬fer the disease are also en¬couraged to attend.Further information maybe obtained by calling thehospital at 643-9200.celebrate the publication ofVolume II of Primavera,which is now available inmost Hyde Park bookstores.There is no admission costfor the reading, and there will be free refreshments.Wendy Stevens will be inHyde Park on Monday, May24 to read her poetry from 4to 6 p.m. in the East Loungeof Ida Noyes Hall. Thereading is sponsored byPrimavera. Ms. Stevens ispoetry editor of Off OurBacks, a feminist newspaperbased in Washington, D C.Primavera is stillaccepting manuscripts forissues III and IV. Sendliterature and graphics toPrimavera/Ida NoyesHall/University ofChicago/Chicago 60637 oruse faculty exchange. Pleaseinclude a stamped and self-addressed return envelope.Dance GroupKathryn Posin and LanceWestergard of the New Yorkbased Kathryn Posin DanceCompany will present aduet concert as part ofFOTA. The performance willtake place in Mandel Hall,Tuesday, May 18 at 8pm.Tickets are available atthe Reynolds Club desk.Prices are $1.50 for studentsand $3.00 for non-students.ISDCk^thryn P The Internation StudentDefense Committee will holda public forum on the themeof “Students FightRepression.”The forum, to be heldThursday, May 20 at 7:30 DmFOTA 76OSm andlance westergardmay 182 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday - May 18, 1976 in Reynolds Club NorthLounge, will featurespeakers from variousnationalities. There will bereports on current situationsin lean, Greece, Eritrea,Latin America, Puerto Ricoand India. In addition, arepresentative of theNational Lawyers Guild willdiscuss Senate Bill One, theproposed federal criminalcode revision under firefrom labor, poor, minorityand civil liberties groups.Organ RecitalTom Weisflog will presentan organ recital at Rockef-feler Memorial ChapelTuesday, May 18 at 8 pm. Heis a frequent guest organistat the Chapel’s Tuesday12:15 recitals, and lias beenan organist at the St.Thomas Apostle CatholicChurch since 1974. Stipends of $250 for playersin major roles will beavailable.Lobi LectureKakrada-Lobi, a nativenusician and dancer fromjhana, will present a lec-:ure-demonstration of nativeAfrican art on Thursday,May 20 at 4 pm in Soc Sci 122.The event is being spon¬sored by the Committee onAfrican and Black AmericanHumanities and the AfricanStudies Committee.AuditionsOpen auditions for Univer¬sity Court theater summerproductions will be held thisweekend.Actors and actresses whowish to audition for ‘‘TwoGentlemen of Verona”,directed by Libby Appel andproduced July 9-25 and‘‘Romoe and Juliet”, underthe direction of NicholasRudall, to be producedAugust 20 through Sep¬tember 5, should call 3-3581to set up an appointment. There will be a staffmeeting of the Maroon at7:30 tonight in the Maroon of¬fices. Any staff member whomisses the meeting withoutcontacting the Editor inwriting at the Maroon officewill not be eligible to receiveMay staff awards.DWTREADTHISAD In the city...or in the woods,Help keepAmericalooking good!Give ahoot!Don’tpollute!PSC‘MBOL -£RwiC£ COUNCACanonDEMOMAY 21st10-4at theU of C BOOKSTORE5750 S. ELLIS753-3317i PRE DEMO SPECIALST1i (Limited Quantities) Special *112188 FL 135mm f 3.5 sggso112195 FL 200mm f3.5 *105“Ex Auto/50mm fl. 8* Prices good till May 22 >89“WE ALSO HAVE IN STOCK:CanonFtlaBYour passport tofine photography.• Selective central area spot metering• All metering information visiblein finder• Shutter speeds from 1-1/1 OOO secplus B• Accepts Canon Auto Tuning (CAT)system tor foolproof auto flash• Breech lock lens mount• Qt Quick loading mechanism CanonCononetSE3T7Theprotessionarsfun camera• Fully automatic exposure control viaelectronic eye• Completely automatic flashoperation when used with Canolite D• Bullt-m self timer• Manual override of auto exposuresystem possible• Exclusive Canon QL duick-loadirigmechanism CanonProfessional precisionand versatility.• Over 40 lenses and ?00 accessories• Central area spot metering• Shutter speeds to 1/2 OOO second• Breech lock lens mount• Ultra-sophisticated filmtransport system• Rugged smooth construction• Superior handlingJGould Offers Politics As Reason For Keynes’ Popularity —calendar—By Robert GoldenthalPolitics, not economics, isthe main force which shapesAmerican economic policy,John P. Gould, Professor inthe Graduate School ofBusiness, told an audience ata Woodward Court lecturelast Tuesday.Mr. Gould, a formerSpecial Assistant forEconomic Affairs in theLabor Department and inthe Office of Managementand the Budget, delivered atalk entitled “NationalEconomic Policy in the‘70’s.”Beginning with a briefhistory of modern economicthought, he asserted thatclassical economic theorywas mainly descriptive in itsobjectives. To this he coun¬terpoised Keynesianeconomics, a prescriptivescience.Classical economists sawthe economy as a self-stabilizing system “thatassured levels of output andemployment consistent withwhat society desired...in thelong run,’’he said.In the classical scheme, hecontinued, the government’sroll is “necessarily in-terestitial.” It providespublic goods, such as de¬ fence, and enforces propertyrights. It creates money, af¬fecting only the nominalprice level. Throughtaxation the government in¬fluences how the economicpie is divided, but does littleto change its size.Economic theory has littleor no impact on nationaleconomic policy until theearly part of the 20th cen¬tury, observed Mr. Gould.Programs, such asPresident Hoover’s agendaof public works implementedat that time with theblessings of many con¬temporary economists, wereinconsistent with classicaleconomics.Mr. Gould then jumpedover 40 years to the recentpast and described the“Fiscal Revolution.”“The essence of thatrevolution,” he said, “ is thatthe fiscal policy of today isbased on the principle ofcompensatory finance whichsays first that an increase ingovernment spendingcoupled with a reduction intaxes will stimulateeconomic activity in an un¬deremployed economy.”“The second aspect of thedoctrine,” he suggests, “isthat in some situations ex¬penditure increases and tax reductions are the only wayto solve the problem ofunemployment.”This doctrine was at¬tributed to John MaynardKeynes who, is his GeneralTheory in 1936, argued thatbecause the tacit assump¬tions of classical economicsare “seldom or never”satisfied, classical economictheory “cannot solve theproblems of the actualworld.”Thus, according toKeynes, “The state will haveto exercise a guiding in¬fluence on the propensity toconsume partly through itsscheme of taxation, partlyby fixing the rate of interest,and partly, perhaps, in otherways” in order to assure fullemployment.Mr. Gould showed that vir¬tually no empirical evidencewas presented by Keynes tosupport the statement thatthe tacit assumptions ofclassical economics are“seldom or never” met.Today, Mr. Gould continued,even with new masses of em¬pirical data, it is still unclearwhether compensatoryfinance such “firmly en¬trenched parts of bothpolitical and economic or¬thodoxy?” The answer, hethinks, is to be found in the political marketplace whereelected representatives findpolitical advantages intaxing less and spendingmore.Evliiating Keynesian con¬trols, Mr. Gould looked to thelast ten years, a time duringwhich, he asserted, theyhave been in full use. It is im¬possible to argue, he said,that our economy has beenmore stable in this time thanit had been previously. Sincethe advent of full-fledgedcompensatory finance,unemployment has risen andthere have been threerecessions, the last being theworst since WWII, he noted.Why then, he asked, arefiscal activism and com¬pensatory finance such “fir¬mly entrenched parts of bothpolitical and economic or¬thodoxy9” The answer, hethinks, is too be found in thepolitical marketplace whereelected representatives findpolitical advantages intaxing less and spendingmore.Mr. Gould looked to thefuture and projected someconsequences of continuedKeynesian economic policy:*** A growth in the size ofgovernment as a percentage of the economy because ofthe “essential assymetry”contained in Keynesianeconomics.*** A possible decline in thefuture productive capacityof the nation. If spendingmore and taxing less is usedat a time of full employment,consumption increases atthe expense of investment.This means less capital for¬mation and less futureproductive capacity.*** A greater likelihood of in¬flation. Running deficitsmeans that the governmentmust either print moremoney or issue bonds. “If itborrows it displaces currentcapital accumulation andraises the implicit tax bur¬den for the future.” If it prin¬ts money, as it must if itwants to balance its budget,it creates inflation.Historical data confirmthis...Mr. Gould completed hisspeech by implying thatKeynesian practitioners ofcompensatory finance arenot at the level of dentistsyet, as Keynes believed theyshould be. but rather more atthe level of witch doctors TUESDAYORGAN RECITAL RockefellerChapel, 8 pm, Tom Weisflog, works byAlaim, Bach, Durufle, Krebs andWidor FreeORGAN RECITAL Edward Mondello, 12:15 pm, Rockefeller Chapel,FreeSEXUAL IDENTITY Discussiongroup meets af 7:30 pm in Ida NoyesSun Parlor Women and men of allsexual orientations welcomeSOUTHEAST ASIA SEMINAR WardKeeler, "Music and Language inJava,” Pick 118af 4pmLECTURE Prof James Miller,Mcardle Laboratory .for CancerResearch, 4 pm, C SC 101HAM RADIO UC Amateur WirelessSociety offers FCC Amateur RadioLicensing classes Beginner's in Cobb104, Advanced in Cobb 102 Both at 7pmLINGUISTICS SEMINAR James DMcCawley will speak on the syntaxand semantics of restictive relatives 4pm, Classics 10WEDNESDAYKARATE U.C. Karate Club meets inIda Noyes, 6:30 8 30pmCOUNTRY DANCERS Ida Noyes,8 00 pmDUPLICATE BRIDGE Game at 7 00pm, Ida Noyes East LoungeWOMENS DISCUSSION GROUP 7 309 pm, Calvert House 5735 S. University.CIRCUS KINGDOM quadrangles,11:30 amUNIVERSITY CHORUS MandellHall, 3:30 pm "Letters From anUnknown Woman": 7 30 pm, CobbQuantrell Hall SITHURSDAYCOPUS Chapter Formed Here On CampusA University of Chicagochapter of the Coalition of In¬dependent College andUniversity Students(COPUS) is being formed.COPUS is a nationwidelobbying group concernedwith aid to education. ButAnthony Mansueto, a cam¬pus organizer for the groupindicated that the local chap¬ ter will have little in com¬mon with the nationalorganization.“What we’ll be doing inhere is substantially dif¬ferent from their approach,”Mr. Mansueto said. “We’regoing to concentrate on localthings, the kind of approachthat takes into account allTHIS WEEKMEL BROOKS’COMIC MASTERPIECE!’-Hollis Alpert SATURDAY REVIEW the problems that exist,rather than just ask formoney.”Mr. Mansueto’sdisagreement with thenational COPUSorganization stems fromwhat he sees as their short¬sighted interest in in¬creasing aid to educationprograms withoutexamining the goals behindthose programs.“I see no particular pointin funding college educationsfor people who don’t wantthem,” he said. “The presentreflecf a certain type ofthinking about what kind ofplaces colleges and univer¬sities should be.” Programswhich were intended to workas “equal opportunitydevides” have instead“created a variety of im¬ balances and problems,”said Mr Mansueto.Keeping this idea in mind,Mr. Mansueto’sorganization, which atpresent includes only twoother members, is doingresearch into problems ofeducation on a local(Chicago) level. The resultsof a study on the housingshortage in the Hyde Parkarea are awaitingpublication, pending an ap¬peal to CORSO for funding.The organization willpublish a journal called “Ex¬cursus,” which Mr Man¬sueto explained is amedeival Latin wordmeaning an exposition on aspecific topic. The group’soffices are in Mr. Man¬sueto’s apartment at 5202South Dorchester.Organ Recital Tuesday, May 188 P.M.Tom WeisflogWorks of Alain, Bach, Durufle, Krebs, WidorRockefeller ChapelFREE KI-AIKIDO Practice KiAidido from6 30 to8 30pm, Bartlett.PING PONG Table Tennis Clubmeeting, 7:30 pm, 3rd fl theater, IdaNoyesBASIC CATHOLICISM 7:30 to 9 pmCalvert House 5735 S University.BLUE GARGOYLE COFFEEHOUSE Freshly ground coffee andpastries 8 30 to midnight. Live music.DEBATE SOCIETY Meeting at 8 pm,instruction at 7:30 pm Ida NoyesRUSSIAN CHORUS Cobb 402 , 4pmNo knowledge of Russian requiredFolk songs and lifurgica! music.MOVE ITWITHMAROON CLASSIFIEDS75* per 35 space line60c per line for repeat insertions50* per line to all U of C people40* per line repeat for U of C peopleMay 20 FOTA 76GERALD RIZZERPIANOWorks by Beethoven, Debussy, Bach,Bartok and BrahmsMANDEL HALL8:30 PM FREENATIONAL HOUSESAT.MAY 227:15 ®> 9:30 Thursday, May 20thCRIES and WHISPERS7:15 AND 9:30International House . 1414 £. 59th St $1 Friday, May 21stLENNY7, 9:30 11:45 P.M.Yes, We Have PopcornThe Chicago Moroon . Tuesday - May 18, 1976 3■I\\I► COMMENTBy Tim Phalanand Dennis MorrissyABORTION 1976Over three years havepassed since the momentousSupreme Court decisionswhich allowed abortion-on-demand in the United States.It is perhaps fitting to reflecton some of the aspects ofcurrent attitudes towardsabortion.Only women experienceabortion directly. Yet, thisdoes not mean that it is of noconcern to society at large.On the contrary, this is oneof the most crucial andsignificant issues of ourtime.Controversy often stemsfrom a lack of scientificknowledge about earlyhuman development.However, the question is notover whether the embryoand fetus are at early stagesof human biological develop¬ment. Rather, the con¬troversy is over what valuethey have as such, and con¬sequently over what rightsthey should have, possiblyas some function of theirstate of development.At the cellular level, theembryo ^and fetus areunquestionably alive andhuman as a consequence oftheir consisting of func¬tioning cells with humanorigin and destiny, as well ashuman genetic charac¬teristics. Unlike a whiteblood cell which also hasthese properties, however,the human embryo has agenetic constitution differentto that of the mother or of thefather, and so constitutes anew. unique entity. In ad¬dition, there is a barrier bet¬ween the mother and the em¬bryo, localizing andseparating this newcreation. We know that wewere not picked from cab¬bage leaves or flown in bystorks - each of us began hislife as a tiny embryo. Thereare certainly great dif¬ferences between an embryoand a newborn baby, asthere are between an infantand an adult. But which ofthese differences can beused to determine at which stage an individual deservessocietal protection is aquestion science alone cannever answer.The human embryodevelops rapidly: a heart¬beat has been detected asearly as eighteen days afterconception and electricalbrain impulses as early asforty-three days. At nineweeks the embryo is termeda fetus, this change in termsreflecting the attainment ofa significant level ofdevelopment: all the organsof the body have beenestablished and the in¬dividual is quite human inform with all the parts of ahuman body well defined.The fetal period is one prin¬cipally of growth andrefinement of structuresformed during the first eightweeks.A few people are alivetoday who were “aborted”,but very few. W’ith rare ex¬ception. abortions kill. Thefetus is torn to pieces in onetype of abortion and isburned by saline solution inanother. The fetus respondsto sensory stimuli such asneedle puncture and eventhe sound of voices; yet,animals are often killed inmore humane ways thanthose used in abortionbecause we place a premiumon avoiding cruelty to them.The abuses of designatinga class of humans as “non¬persons” are well known.This was the device used toexclude slaves in Americaand Jews in Germany fromthe protection of the law.Slaves, Jews and unbornchildren have been treatedas property and, like proper¬ty, could be disposed at thewish of their “owners”.Everything in us cries outagainst the injustice of selec¬tive application of the lawbased upon arbitrary dis¬tinctions such as sex, race,creed. Is not age anothersuch arbitrary classifi¬cation?The medical andpsychological dangers to thewoman involved are notalways openly and fullydiscussed. These are,however, considerable.Chicago MaroonEditorJohn 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, Aaron Filler, Scott Ziemba,Michael Dvorkin, Jim Kaplan,David Johnsen, Mike Sherberg, Libby Morse, Ed Conner, CliffordKrauss, Miriam Schuchman,Kathleen Bauersfeld, ChipForresterBusiness StaffManager Mike KlingensmithAd sales B G YovovichOffice Karol KennedyTne CHICAGO MAROON is thestudent run newspaper serving theUniversity of Chicago and HydePark The PUBLICATIONSCHEDULE is twice weekly, onTuesdays and Fridays, during theregular acidenvc >earOpinions expressed in the ChicagoMaroon are not necessarily those ofthe University of Chicago students,faculty or administrationEDITORIALS state the policy of thepaper, and unless otherwise noted,represent t^e positions of theeditors All dessenting opinion —LETTERS, COMMENTARY, andGAOFLIES— must be submitted tothe paper no later than two daysprior fo the next ssue. and must besrimed. ,T.he Maroon reserves *he right fo edit alt submissions forpublicationCORRECTIONS may be broughtto the attention of 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 SUBSCRIPTIONS cover the threeregular academic quarters, and areS9 for the year, payable in advanceTELEPHONES of the ChicagoMaroon are editorial office, 7533264, business office. 753 32MThe OFFICE HOURS of the paperare 8 30 1 and 1 30 4 30 weekedaysThe Chicago Maroon - Tuesday * May 18, 1976 Especially noteworthy arecomplications in futurepregnancies and evensterility. Many abortionclinics which run simply forprofit take inadequate careto inform their clientele ofthese dangers.The Supreme Courtdecisions have made womenmore free than previously infacing abortion choices.There are weighty factors oneach side of every choice,but we believe that thebalance should swing a-gainst abortion. We do,nonetheless, respect the in¬tegrity, sincerity and agonyinvolved in the decisionsmade by many women tohave abortions. We address ourselves to futuredecisions.Economic reasons such asloss of job or inability to sup¬port a child, social stigma at¬tached to “illegitimate”birth, marital troubles, orany of a number of difficult¬ies persuade women to seekaDortions. Frequently theseproblems enter into the pic¬ture simply from the wayour society operates, but in¬stead of seeking to eliminatethese problems, presentabortion practice seeks toeliminate the pregnancy.Sensitive, idealistic peoplesee abortion as a way ofhelping women with“problem” pregnancies, butis abortion the best that can be done for these women andtheir unborn children? Is thefetus the enemy? What canwe do to eradicate the socialproblems and the humanmisery, the lack of com¬passionate concern?Abortion should not be con¬sidered as a form of birthcontrol in the usual sense ofthat term, i.e., as a form ofcontraception. Con¬traception prevents a newlife from forming; abortionkills a new life. Populationproblems are very complexand concern all of us, and thetemptation is great to em¬ploy abortion as a partialsolution. Here again, caremust be taken so that indealing with some problems of life we seek to eliminateproblems, not life. Abortiondoes not increase foodproduction’; it does notpromote a more responsibleattitude towards reproduc¬tion; it kills.In this country alone, legalabortions are being per¬formed at an annual rate ofabout one million. Thismakes abortion one of thevery common surgicalprocedures in the UnitedStates. That datum is arather gruesome symptomof social ills which arewidespread and stubborn.Life is an uncovenanted gift.Common effort is required topreserve and enhance it.LETTERSEditor:I'm struck by the con¬tradictory demands in thelatest caper of our campusleftists — the report of theCommittee on Curriculumand Admissions These goodsouls call at once for lowertuitions and greater finan¬cial assistance, especially tominorities, citing North¬western’s program in thelast regard, a school withnotably higher tuition thanour own. Where do these kin¬dly dullards suppose themoney will come from? Onecan only wonder whetherAristotle has so disappearedfrom the curriculum as to have resulted in a lostfamiliarity with the notion ofcontradiction, or whether itis not simply that suchrational niceties are out ofplace in the heat of hortatoryindulgence. Roger Pilon,Philosophy Dept.University support isgrowing for Mario Munoz,the Chilean mineworkers’leader whose life is en¬dangered by a “shoot onsight” order of the Argentinejunta. Student Governmenthas endorsed the Committeeto Save Mario Munoz, ashave professors Ira Katz-nelson, Adam Przeworski,Phillippe Schmitter, Marvin Zonis, Terry Turner and IanMueller. The Committee hasalso been endorsed by theInternational StudentDefense Committee at UC,the Committee AgainstFriedman-HarbergerCollaboration with theChilean Junta, the SpartacusYouth League and UC/HydePark New AmericanMovement.On Saturday, April 17, theMunoz committee called ademonstration which at¬tracted about 150 people infront of the Argentine con¬sulate at 105 W. Adams. Thecommittee urges people to send telegrams toCongresspeople calling onthem to telegraph theArgentine government todemand the witch-hunt becalled off and safe conductout of the country beguaranteed Munoz. Copies ofthe telegrams should also besent to the committee. Fundsare urgently needed, com¬mittee spokesmen say, andshould be made payable tothe Partisan DefenseCommittee, Box 633, CanalStreet Station, New York,NY 10013 and earmarked“Committee to Save MarioMunoz.” For more in¬formation, call PaulColeman at 427-0003.Help Woodsyspread the word!In the snow...Or on the beach.In the woods... Or in the street.Help keep America looking neat! PSCGive a hoot! Don’t pollute!To get your free color poster, write to Woodsy Owl, Forest Service, U S D A , Washington, D C. 20250LFull Court Press IM TOPTEN1 Hubelsberg Hotel2 Last Coming of Dartos3 Your Mother4 Shorey5 Too, Too, Too6 B-Schooi Bombers7 Big Med Machine8 Frogs Come Harder9 Phi Gamma Delta10 Legla EaglesAlso receiving votes: Wild Bunch,Psi Upsilon, Blackstone, HitchcockEastIntramuralsThe golf team traveled to thefirst Midwest Conferencecompetition ever for aMaroon team and got whip¬ped, placing so far back thatthey weren’t even listed inthe scores.This was due not toespecially bad play onChicago’s part. They weremerly playing against golfteams that actually practicedaily.Scott Ziemba shot the bestoverall for Chicago, havinghis best round of the year onthe hard Iowa course.Gary Milnis shot the best forthe first day of play whileMike Birelli had the bestround for the second. PaulKomniak and Nick Arnoldalso made the trip.Coach Wally Hass, never oneto worry about details likescores, said he felt goodabout the meet. “The teamenjoyed it and the otherteams were pleased to seethe Chicago golfers outthere.”The meet ended a seasonwhich, of course, Coach Hasswas happy with. For the firsttime in years the team hadenough people to field fullteams at the matches. Theteam had no seniors so theentire squad should be backnext year and ready forsome improvement. The women’s crew wasplagued by no-show com¬petition this weekend astheir two opponents in twodifferent cities failed to ap¬pear for their races.The Milwaukee rowingclub was scheduled to racethe Maroon oarswomen atLincoln Park Saturday butwere presumably scared offby the weather. The fact thatChicago had swept them intheir last meeting might alsohave had something to dowith the decision.In Minneapolis thewomen’s four drove tenhours only to have the hostteam, the Minnesota four,forfeit the match race. Theorganizers of the meet,though unable to arrange arace, asked the four to rowover the course for an of¬ficial time. The four-cox’sSue Hill and rowers BarbHornung, Susan Urbas,Laurie Moses and LinaGould, came in with an of¬ficial time of 3:27. Officialssaid the time was the best fora women’s four ever recor¬ded for the 1000 meter cour¬se.Next weekend, thewomen’s crew will go themajor event of the season,the Midwest regionals, atMinneapolis. This is the racethat coaches use to decide whether or not to take a boatto Nationals in June.After weeks of searchingthe final Stagg scholar hasbeen chosen. William Greenis the only single sport manin the bunch, a 6’3”, 175 lb.forward from Newton,Massachusetts. Leadingscorer and team captain hemay just be the hotshotguard that the team willneed next year.Chicago Men’s Crewrowed to three second-placefinishes at the MinneapolisInvitational Regatta heldlast Saturday on theMississippi River near Min¬neapolis, Minnesota.The varisty eight race wasslowed when the Min¬neapolis Boat Club crewswerved into the Chicagolane at the start, enablingthe College of St. Thomas togain an early lead. Chicagorecovered from the collisionto leave Minneapolis in theirwake, but were unable tomake up the lead gained bySt. Thomas.The varisty four per¬formed well over their2000m. race bv overcoming aslow start to beat St. Thomasby over a length. TheChicago four was closing onMinneapolis, as the crewscrossed the finish line. The JV eight race gave anumber of Chicago oarsmentheir first taste of com¬petition ; they placed secondto Minneapolis.Coach Ron Wiand waspleased with the progressmade by the varsity eightduring the last few weeks.While the Minneapolis crewhad been close competitionat the Midwest Cham-this regatta found the Min¬neapolis crew well behindthe Chicago boat.Men’s Crew has one moreregatta scheduled thisSpring. May 22nd marks theWayne State InvitationalRegatta to be held in GrandRapids, Mich., where the UCoarsmen will face MichiganState, Wayne State, andGrand Valley College.Due to an errorsomewhere between the of¬fice and shop some in¬formation in last week'sFCP was lost. In the men’stennis section it should havebeen mentioned along withHoward Gershenfeld. PeterBender had a winning yearwith a 6-3 record. JeffZekauskas who started atfirst singles and played thereagain when Gershenfeld wasinjured, did not do as well,finishing with a 1-9 tally. By Frank MerriwellAlthough this was sup¬posed to be the week ofChicago’s own championshipseason in IM softball, badweather and bad luck havekept divisional titles un¬decided by press time.There are still four gamesto go before the DivisionalGreen race can be decidedwhile there is a four-way tiein the undergrad residenceRed division.Still, some titles have beenset. Shorey won the un¬dergrad W’hite easily, whilePhi Gamma Delta camethrough to take the un¬dergrad Blue Frogs ComeHarder somehow managedto clinch the Independenttitle. Hubelsberg Hotel tookthe Divisional White, whilethe Divisional Blue divisionwas creamed by the LastComing of Dartos.Other IM contests are inthe final rounds In theHandball Doubles, the team of Will Rojik of UpperRickert is PlayingFrankl/Mayers of Shorey forthe ^undergraduate title. Thewinner of this match willplay Independent champsHess/Selzer for the Univer¬sity title.In mixed doubles TableTennis the team of Tram-busti/ Silvieus beat Proham¬mer/Howard for the Un¬dergrad title whileBrogan/Van Wyk bestedKubiak/ Lewitt for theDivisional Crown Therewere no Independents sothese two teams will meet todecide the UniversityChamps.In men s table tennis Frierbeat Robinson and will goagainst the winner of theRynning-Mitzman match forthe Undergrad crownVidaver will play Glaser forthe Independent title whileHodges has the Divisionaltitle all to himself.SPORTSATTENTION 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 DATESThe Chicago Maroon * Tuesday May 18, 1976—5Bill Diskin: "Any effective administrator is going to be put ina position where he has to make an unpopular decision"(Photo by David John«;en)LEADERS FROM 8cooperative, saying "moststudents get involved withSG because of specific self-interests and ideologicalmotivations.”In retrospect, Mr.Maissami pointed to the lackof executive effectiveness asone of the major weaknessesof the assembly. "Trustmust be given to the presi¬dent as a leader,” he said."The SG assembly has torealize that there are peoplewho spend enough time todeal with the problems, butconstitutional obstaclesmake the management ofthe assembly very difficult.”"We shouldn’t have anSG,” he said. "We are not agovernment, we don’t haveany real power,” he said. Hedenounced SG as an egogame. "There is a great no¬tion of ego in SG. It createspsychol ogica 1 disturbances. ’ ’He said that "it is just agame among people unless itwas something to do with aperson’s group or ideology --there is no unity or conformi¬ty ”Now that the struggles ofthis year have come to anend. two major political pro¬blems are evident.On a constitutional and in¬stitutional level, most of thethe major problemsinvolved disputes over therelationship between the ex¬ecutive authority of theorganizations and the rankand file membership. If thecase of the Debating Societyand WHPK, the conflict tookthe traditional form of astrong administration battl¬ing against democratic fac¬tions which perceivedthemselves as striking outagainst excessive executivecontrol and the misuse of ad¬ministrative power.Strong executive egosplayed an important part instoking the fires of unrest.Mr. Diskin and Ms Ginsburghad a very distinctive ad¬ministrative style, and theirs.curt and single-minded ap¬proach towards the station,which in some cases ledthem to take actions ofdubious constitutionality.Similarly, the Anglicansmugness of the DebatingSociety leadership rubbedthe membership the wrongway, and the development ofthe special relationship withthe alumni created apolitically ambiguous situa¬tion which allowed Mr. Mor¬ris to make a dangerousdecision which led to theupheaval on his return fromLondonGage Andrews andFariborz Maissami didn’t have the administrative orpersonal wherewithal to dealwith their intensely drivenand highly factionalized con¬stituencies. At the Maroon, agroup of senior reportersvented their frustrations onan Editor under whom* thepaper had fallen into an em¬barrassing state of jour¬nalistic shallowness,technical unreliability, andmanagerial chaos. Mr.Maissami never had a chan¬ce to control the disruptiveand vocal representatives inthe assembly, or to lead SGinto orderly and constructiveefforts to exercise thepolitical voice of students oncampus.Politics and personalitieswere the volatile anddestructive chemistry whichacted to destabilize the com¬position of the studentorganizations. But the un¬predictable influence ofthese forces came about asthe almost inevitable resultof the pathetic structuraland institutional weakness ofthis campus’s studentorganizations.Student apathy at theUniversity, which comesabout largely from thelibidinal drain of intenselycompetitive and demandingacademic life, has led toscanty participation and in¬terest in the studentorganizations which canhave a truly significant im¬pact on the course of affairshere.In the recent SG election,voter turnout was a measlyseven per cent. Nine of theSG seats were left vacant,and many of the represen¬tatives secured election withonly one or two votes. Giventhis lack of participation, SGinevitably gets filled up witha bunch of single-mindedideologues, whose concernsand interests bear little rela¬tionship to those of thestudents at large.The Maroon also suffersthe effects of participatoryparalysis. Students whospend their few moments ofpolitical consciousnesssalivating over the ac¬complishments of Woodwardand Bernstein never think ofdevoting some time to theircampus paper, convenientlydismissing it as The Moron.Who, one might ask, are themorons? The people who em¬barrass themselves workinghard to put the paper outtwice a week?Student apathy has not hadquite so disastrous an effecton WHPK and the DebatingSociety. The radio stationhas over a hundredmembers, many more than6—The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday - May 18, 1976 "The most persistent, and often the most egotistical,end up running the operation. Their peers havelittle real respect for the leadership,and in turn, the leadership has little realrespect for them. ”can actually go on the air.The Debating Society alsohas a large membership,and opportunities to debateare sought competitively.Even so, members of boththe station and Society aregoing against the U of Cmentality.Bewailing the mood of theseventies can only go so far.Members of studentorganizations have to take arealistic view of their statusat the University. There arenumerous institutionalreforms that could at leastmake student organizationswork more effectively andperhaps allow the organiza¬tions to significantlyenhance the quality of theiroutput.Incoming freshmen tradi¬tionally swell the ranks ofthe organizations at thebeginning of every year. AtWHPK and the Maroon, newstaff members find that it iseasy to move into a positionof responsibility. The lack ofparticipation from most ofthe University makes thispossible.Inexperienced and am¬bitious students can quicklytake control of the organiza¬tions. Many of this year’sembattled leaders admitthat their rise to power camevery easily. Ms. Ginsburgsaid "that you rise to the topnot because youdemonstrated any capabilitybut because you did justwhat you should have done.”Mr. Andrews commentedthat "much of what hap¬pened at the Maroon hap¬pened because there were somany freshmen, and not awell-oriented,knowledgeable group of peo¬ple.”At the Debate Society, newmembers acted as a volatile political force, who, ac¬cording to Mr. DeStefano,were "venting their protestagainst the way decisionshad been made in the past.”Ms. Ginsburg called this at¬titude "a virulent know-nothingism” which she sawas the major aspect of "thelack of a sense of history”she found to be the majorproblem at the station.The most driven and com¬mitted members of theorganizations become theleaders, and most of theother new recruits leave.The leadership does not haveto go through any process ofpolitical compromise, - anddoes not have the op¬portunity to learn the fine artof dealing with people or togain experience in makingdifficult administrativedecisions.In the understaffed stu¬dent organizations, senioritycounts for very little. Newmembers get put into impor¬tant positions without train¬ing. The most persistent, andoften the most egotistical,end up running the opera¬tion. Their peers often havelittle real respect for theirleadership and, in turn, theleadership has little realrespect for them.To make studentorganizations work, theleadership has to changethings from the bottom up.Emphasis has to be placedon training and profes¬sionalism. Leaders andsenior members have to puttheir egotism aside andplace an emphasis on profes-sionlism and quality.Perhaps if political consen¬sus and standards of ex¬cellence can be established,progress can be made in in¬creasing general levels of in¬terest and participation onCourt* Tk eatre PresentsAn. Experirrerffixl Wc«^ campus.Such a proposal smacks ofwishful thinking. Studentleaders at the U of C willalways find themselves indifficult and thankless jobs.Understaffed and under¬funded, the organizationshave to fight to hold togetherin even the most marginalway.Organization member¬ships on campus did theirbest to overthrow theestablished leadership. Per¬sonalities didn’t mesh andbickering and political in¬fighting resulted. Leadersmade some drasticmistakes, and often received. At the same time,dissidents lost all touch withthe fine art of political com¬promise. We all lost in theend.Student organizationshave to take advantage ofthe summer respite to lookinward. Important institu¬tional changes can be made.Goals must be clearly andrealistically redifined.As unlikely as it maysound, a good Maroon, aforceful student govern¬ment, a flexible radio sta¬tion, and a quiescentdebating society all liewithin the realms ofJane Ginsburg, former Programming Director of WHPK,resigned after Station Manager Bill Diskin was recalledearlier this quarter. (Photo by David Johnsen)Fully automatic, ex¬posure with or withoutflash!Special l119wWith this Ad!Includes Flash!1342 E. 55th S*.493-6700PASSPORTPHOTOSWhile you wait! —There IS a Vdifference!!! :MCATDATLSATGREGMATOCATCPATVATSATFLEXCFMG <*•» IS f«mtNmcciii■kuM (tenet■■ •Cowi*i |h*t *f* '*cooitonlhr ««4lt*4 J■ •t*9« I*CiMi«1 I of •l**W »l (Mil *Miiaai H l« It* **1 vuw**in*«1*i-| *"»*(rfi»4iitv#» m*l*ti*(iM*k« u#l I OfMfltrt Mi lootnat'lmedbds :NAT'LDENT BDSIMost clams start 8 waaksprior to ExamSpring 8t Fall compactsCHICAGO CENTER2060 W Devon Ava.Chicago, III. 60645(3121 764-5151■—CLASSIFIED ADS—SUBLETSummer sub 1 bdrm turn; nearminibus, shpg ctr, 55th Blackstone.Avail 6/1 Call Bev 493 8605 eves1 br turn apt w/dishes & cookwareAvail 6/6-9/12 Rent $185/mo is neg.R Resch 955 9319 or 3-3574Summer Sublet w/possible fall opt,57th 8. 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 Steve955-6811 after 6 pm.Furnished 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 3842Female roommate needed for sum¬mer 5423 Dorchester $83/month, call753 3541 apt 43. Leave name & phoneSublet-Avail. 6/15. Cptd. studio w/sepktchn. 54th & Cornell. $145/mo. Incl.util. 324 4292.Summer sublet Arms 2 bdrms turnnear trans, shpg ctr. Fall opt 241 7493.Price negotiable.SPACERoomates Wanted $50 or $80. Summerwith fall option 363-0661.FOR RENT Secluded family cottagein Indiana dunes, June 27 to Aug 7,$600 Or three weeks, $350 One hr. toH P Eve. 643 259956th and Univ., 2 bdrm apt summersubletfor one F. Begin June 1. Call 9478928To share rent ($58) and utilities of sixroom apartment at 54th andWoodlawn. Contact David at 324 3863Beginning about June 15.HYDE PK. nr. U of C. 1 rm. apts. Wellkept bldg. Adults. Nr. 1C, bus, park,lake reas BU8 0718Spacious 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 5 pmSummer sublet, $84/mnth, incl. util.Own frnsh rm. 2 rms. Available 57 &Drexel. No roaches Call 241 53382 roommates wanted in 3 bedroomapart with -•jog. Near Kimbark Plaza.$67 plus utilities. Call Steve 288 8734Looking for 2 roommates to move intoour sunny East Hyde Park apt thissummer. For more details call 2417589Roommate for two bedroom apt. CallJohn 493 2863 or 637 5151 Hyde PkSummer Sublet Modern 2 bedroom aptin "University Apartments" 55 & 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.SPACE WANTEDSeeking nice reas 3 bed apt reas closeto campus Lease starting now or AutPlease call or Ive message Ronnie 32240(1308)Postdoctoral 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 8:30 amHARVARD LAW STUDENT wkg inLaSalle St. law firm looking for nearbyVERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGATTRACTIVI 1V* AND2 Vs ROOM STUDIOSrURMISMIDor UNFURMISHCDS138$221Based on AvaiiaointyAll Utilities IncludedAt Campus Bus StopFA 4-0200 Mrs. Groak hse or apt to sit or apt to sublet 6/14 to8/20. Write E.W.Robinson, 281 Harvard St., Cambridge, MA02139.Wanted a 2 bedroom apt close toLibrary $50 reward for informationleading to signing lease Summersublet also welcome Kris 947 6435 days& 955 2268 eves & weekendsPROFESSORS, stud, seeks house forrent 76/77 year. Steve 753-2233 #122.SPACE FOR SALECond 6rm 2br 2 bth 24xl51r nat frplc drcust ktch-den new bttm frzz frig crptdlake park vw $23500 752-1724PEOPLE WANTEDSUMMER JOBS—IF YOU STILLTHINK YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE Work for an improvedjudicial system, reinvestment bybanks in older neighborhoods, andtenants rights. Advancement andcareer development provided. Allpositions are salaried. Call CAP for aninterview. Jobs available both inChicago and DuPage County. CitizensAction Program, 2202 N Lincoln Ave.929 2922Tennis teacher wanted for brothersaged 10 8. 13, several hours a weekJune 14 July 2. Eve. 643 2599People wanted to listen to ALL THATFall, a radio play by Samuel BeckettSunday at 7pm, on WHPK 88 3 on theFM dial.Live-in for summer, care for two boys38.5, mother works part-time. S50/wk,own room, Louisville Mrs. Henrion6930 Wythe Hill Circle, Prospect Ky40059 ( 502 ) 228 3861Part 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 evesStudent wanted aft babysitting & someIt housekeeping. Beginning summerschool & during next year if possibleSalary good Zonis 753 2729 or pmSalenger 548 4196.We 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 & help yourfellow human beings? Billings BloodBank! Call for appt 947 5579MEDICAL 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 & basic music Ph 493 3949.MOVING. Inexpensive, reliable CallRob Stone Movers, 538 7520, 955 6609Thesis, dissertations, term papers,gen office corres typed on latest IBMcorrecting Selectric II typewriterRates reasonable. Call Mrs Ross 2394257WRITING WRONGLY? English Gradwill proofread papers & essays forerrors in grammar and style David268 0935SCENESLITERARY CUIOANCEBy Publishing AuthorPersaul attain* - NOT a Mod SceneI’ll help on TMESIS. ARTICLES. STORIESWhere end How ti SELLUilMitarf CriticiseFRANK MARKS—MU 4-3124FLIGHT TRAININGFM-WRITTEN- GUARANTEEDLearn to Fly on Your Spare TimeCALL 284-0820EUROPEv<* 1 ./W1^ 800-325-4867VS) UmTrovel Charters "Platonic Tradition in Theosophy"—!1/2 Day Seminar May 21 & 22 at TheTheosophical Society, 1926 N MainWheaton, IL—For Info Call 668 1571Free Lecture on "Plato and EasternThought" on Sun, May 23, 2:30p.m. also available PETSLooking for an alternative to StudentHealth? Visit the Hyde Park KenwoodCommunicyt Health Center, 1515 E52nd PI., for health care for the entirefamily. For appointments, call 6430650The Chicago Women's LiberationUnion presents "Union Maids" a filmabout women labor organizers in the30's. Directed by Julia Reichert &James Klein, Fri 5/21 at HermannHall I IT 3241 S. Federal 8pm. Sun 5/23at Circle Campus A 1 Lecture Hall2pm $2 in advance $2.50 at doorALL THAT FALL, a radio play bySamuel Beckett, will be aired on WH¬PK 88.3 FM, in a special UC producfTon, this Sunday, May 23, at 7 pmRenaissance Musician's Guild Con¬cert, 2nd Unitarian Church, 656 WBarry, Sun May 23, 11am Free willdonation.Kathryn Posin and Lance Westergard,modern dance, May 18, Mandat Hall, 8pm. $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.NUDIST TRAVEL CLUB for singles,families and couples, Send $25 for a 2year membership MYW CLUB, POBox 1342, Aurora, II 60504FOR SALE2 years old. Sony AM FM cassette new$450 now $200 Must sell 363-15191963 Chevy Bel Air. Excellent condition. Cheap Call 288 8924Karmann Ghia; 1970, red Runs greatradio, clock heater work! White walls,incl. snows. Asking $1300 241-6907evenings9 drawer dresser with removablemirror and legs; could function as butfet, $20 4-pair avocado green drapes,good condition, $7 each or all 4 pairsfor $20 955 7691 evesTeletype Mach's, models 28, 19 8.15 $25plus. Goodman 752-1000 phone anytimePASSPORT PHOTOSColor, 2 for $9 00MODELCAMERA1342 E 55th St 493 6700Photo I D's and applications photos EUROPE FREEBy introducing friends to discounttravel, travel free Massive springsummer programs Benefits galorePresentation by student representative at Blue Gargoyle (57th-Univ)Wed 7PM sharp Rm 35 Open to all.HEBREW ATHILLELTHIS SUMMERIf sufficient people register there willbe both a beginners and an intermediate Modern ConversationalHebrew class for the 10 weeks of summer quarter. Registration fee: $30 forHillel Affiliates, $50 for non-Atfiliates.Teacher Mr Milla Ohel. If you are in¬terested, you must register at Hillel byTuesday, June 7. Desposit of $10required Hillel, 5715 S Woodlawn, 7521127.CLASSICAL PIANOGerald Tizzer performs works ofBeethoven, Debussy, Bach, Bartokand Brahms May 20 8 30pm at MandelHall FREEWANTEDLow mileage, one owner 5 yr old carCall Jim 445 6000ext 650Need cheap 3 or 4 drawer file cabinetCall Bob 753-3265INTER-GENERA¬TIONAL PROGRAMATHILLELTuesday, 7 00 P M Free. Videotapeinterviews with Chicago Jewish Im¬migrants on: A GENERATION OFIMMIGRANTS THE JEWIS EXPERIENCE Discussion followingCALCULATOR's-CB'sFOR BEST PRICES ONCALCULATORS (H P., T.I., ROCKWELL, NOVUS, CORVUS, plus manyothers) and CITIZEN'S BANDRADIOS CALL Jeff Guterman 753 2249rm 3311. Leave messageORGANTom Weisflog plays in RockefellerChapel 8 pm May 18 FREE“MEL BROOKS' COMIC MASTERPIECE”- Hotlit A»p#rt SATUROAV REVlC*ynilttftmm*C»> fo. INTERNATIONAL HOUSE A-MAY 22 7:13 and 9:30 ®1--May 18 FOTA 76TOM WEISFLOGORGANROCKEFELLER CHAPEL8 PM FREEHR ASSSOCIETYCOAT E RTLUTHERAN SCHOOL OF THEOLOGYAuditorim •ERI. MAY Zt HELP! The U of C if forcing me to giveup my beautiful. Shy (but atfectionate) all white cat. Cobweb is 4years old, box trained, neutered, anddec I a wed Free to a good home 9556760 or 753 8699 (ask for Danny.)Leave a message if I'm not thereFree kitten extremely cute, grey andwhite, six weeks old; 947 0239Free kitten female 8 weeks 378 3880MOVING SALEAlmost everything goes 955 3132REWARDGenerous Reward for the return ofmy Fiorelli 10-speed bike, taken fromschool of Wed , May 12 It is black, hassew up tires, no fenders, and one newgold colored gear on rear clusterPlease call David at 624 3363, or leavemessage at 753 3195FREE CONCERTWHPK FM 88.3 presents violinistElaine Skeredin, violist Harold Klatz,and flutist Jean Berkenstock in aprogram of music by Mozart andBeethoven, tonight at 9PMRIDESRide needed to or near EL PASO about6/7 Call 348 7403 PM only.KATHRYN POSINDANCE FOUN¬DATIONPosin and Westergard dance in Mandel. 8 pm, Tues May 18 $1.50 forstudents w/UCID, $3others FOTACARE OF THE COWAn udder delight! At the Sanctuary(Gargoyle) May 21 with June Shellenetickets at the Fret Shop 8 00 pmCHICAGO AUDIOWe're celebrating our first an niversary as the least expensive stereostore in the city We still sell the bestequipment, shipped in factory sealedcartons, with full warranties and a 30day exchange period Ask for a quoteon any of our 100 plus lines Gage 2415752MAB POSITIONSApplications are being accepted forappointments to the proposed 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 yourselfDANCEKathryn Posin and Lance Westergardin Mandel Hall at 8pm on Tues May 18Sponsored by FOTACOACH HOUSESo 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 evePERSONALS.4L*-'V c\vr v'r m; rlv» i \ l v I Mi KSatarlay, bf 2, tfTSSwtilw Mkx * to itt t 150 mInM * !fc Eliutoflai (Mona it In Tvt djcrera mew Una a a « a * rmm■■Wn it Tte Ehzftrtui (Mona will a *aiMtft run Ksm m mtumj a» mm F» ftOar iMruM aatxt ft ftaarl I Iran i toHmtWi it Mac InfMI) Bebes You are NEAT BoobieI am a young South African bachelor(32) living in London and very interested in the theatre, cinema, music,literature and philosophy I would beglad to hear from students at yourUniversity, for the purpose of exchanging idea Johannes Van Vuren29 Witley Court, Coram Street LondorWCl EnglandDoesn't anyone want to get personal’WRITERS WORKSHOP (PL2 8377)games1342 E 55 St Chicago IL 60615493 67008 00 pm FREE Management positionsavailable for college gradswho want to lead.As a college graduate, you face somecrucial decisions. Because what youdo now can determine whether you IIbe a trainee for a long time. Or moveimmediately into a managementposition.Navy Officer Candidate School existsfor men and women who want tomove immediately toward respon¬sibility. In 19 weeks of intensiveleadership training, OCS prepares youfor an assignment that puts you incommand as a manager of people,money, and equipment.Navy OCS is not for everyone. Find outif it s right for you. To apply, contact:Lt. Phil Dabney657-2169What you do now determines whetheryou’ll follow or whether you’ll lead.The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday - May 18, 1976—7<s 1 LEADERS FROM 1volved the leadership’sassessment of executiveresponsibility and of thestrength of the ad¬ministrative prerogative.Personal and ideological fac¬tors soon came to over¬shadow the initial context ofpolitical and constitutionaldifferences.Insurgents in the DebatingSociety and in WHPK basedtheir actions on charges thatthe leadership had assumedexcessive executive authori¬ty in the administration oftheir respective organiza¬tions.When the leadership of theDebating Society returnedfrom a ten day debating tripto England, they found theii*membership up in arms.Leaders of the impeachmentforces charged the leaderswith taking society funds topay for the trip without in¬forming the membership ofin advance, thus preventingother debaters from com¬peting for the opportunity togo on the trip.Several complicating fac¬tors obscure the DebateSociety problem. The trip toEngland resulted from aspecial arrangement bet¬ween the Societv and theUniversity Alumni Associa¬tion which dates from thesummer of 1975. JulianJackson of the AlumniAssociation had offered tohelp sponsor a debate for theSociety at Woodfield Mall inthe Fall and debating trips toEngland later in the year.Joseph Morris, Chancellorof the Society and DonaldBingle, the Master of theSociety, dealt directly withMr. Jackson in arrangingthe special tournaments.Members of the societymaintained that Mr. Glassfailed to contact all themembers of the society overthe summer to inform themof the special program ar¬ranged with alumni support.When the opportunity to goto England suddenly aroseduring exam week of fallquarter, Mr. Morris and MrBingle did not call a meetingof the Society to inform themembership of the Englishtournament. Mr. Bingleclaims that given the situa¬tion, it was impossible to callthe meeting.Mr Jackson chose Mr.Morris and Mr. Bingle, and,embarrasingly enough, theregular partners of the twosociety leaders, Leon Bron-fin and Tom Distefano to goon the trip. A special alumnidonation paid for the hotelexpenses of the four, whopaid for their air fare out oftheir own pockets. Mr.Distefano admits that thesituation now “looks likepure, hand-pickednepotism.”Most members of thesociety view the dispute as ablack and white case. Eitherthe four who went to the tour¬nament deserve, as onedissident member of thesociety put it, to be “morallyand ethically indicted”, orthey were working onlegitimate and constitutionalgrounds.Mr Distefano, who nowtakes the position of a repen¬tant sinner, offers asomewhat more perceptiveinterpretation of the dispute.He described the situation as“a fundamental difference “Interviews with the Caesar's and Brutuses of the yearmhave helped to reveal a systematic, perhapseven asocial scientific, explanation forin perception.”“We were mistaken in theway we felt the members ofthe organization would seeit,” he said.“In Joe’s mind everythinghe had done was completelyright. There was a percpe-tion by the leadership of ab¬solute power in certainthings because they felt theirintentions were right. Butmembers of the Society feltthat powers were beingtaken away from them.”At WHPK, a similar gapbetween the political percep¬tions of the leadership andthe political perceptions ofthe membership led to thedownfall of Bill Diskin andJaneGinsburg.Simmerings of discontentbegan in September. Theproblem was basically one ofthe interplay of strong per¬sonalities. The personalityclash took its first tangibleform in January when Sta¬tion Manager Steve Pedutoresigned, stating “Thereare some people at the sta¬tion who make life thereunbearable.”The political disintegra¬tion began with the govern¬ing board election of winter'quarter. Station dissisentd-claim that Mr. Diskin, whosucceeded Mr. Peduto asStation Manager, had“deceptively” chosen to runMr. Peduto for the position all hell brokeon the Board. At the electionmeeting, station memberswho were later to direct themove to recall Mr. Diskinnominated Arno Rothbartfor the governing board posi¬tion.Mr. Rothbart won, aidedsignificantly in his electionbid by embarrassing ques¬tions which stationmembers, who were later tojoin the dissident element,asked Mr. Peduto.Mr. Diskin’s critics claimthat the Station Managerand Mr. Peduto went into afit of rage after the election.The next day, Mr. Diskinfired Peter Mensch, amember of the music depart¬ment. Mr. Mensch had beeninvolved in perssonal andpolicy conflict with the sta¬tion management since thefall.At a meeting of the sta¬tion’s Operating Board twoweeks later, members of thestation presented Mr. Diskinwith a petition calling for thereinstatement of Mr.Mensch, claiming that theStation Manager did nothave the constitutionalauthority to fire individualsfrom the regular stationmembership. Mr. Diskin re¬jected the petition, and thatnight he fired four membersof the station’s OperatingBoard.After the firings, station loose in 1975-76.members initiated the effortto recall Mr. Diskin. Ac¬cording to the dissidents,Ms. Ginsburg unconstitu¬tionally resisted their effortsto convene a recall meetingfor the rest of the quarter.In the third week of thespring quarter, EdwardRosenheim, faculty adviserto the station, called an openmeeting which turned out tobe the meeting at which Mr.Diskin was recalled.Mr. Rosenheim and Deanof Students Charles O’Con¬nell spoke at the meeting.Station members generallyinterpreted their commentsas being directed againstrecall. In spite of bolsteringfrom the administration, Mr.Diskin was recalled, and Ms.Ginsburg, a close friend ofMr. Diskin’s, subsequentlyresigned.In a recent interview, bothMr. Diskin and Ms. Ginsburgsaid that the problems at thestation were the result of “alack of a sense of history”which led, according to Mr.Diskin, to “a desire to cir¬cumvent well proven pro¬cedures.”“It’s a question of whereyou think the responsibilityof running the stationbelonged,” said Ms.Ginsburg. Mr. Diskin addedthat “any effective ad¬ministrator is going to put ina position where he has to 5 ?make unpopular decisions. ’ ’Most observers of WHPKlook at the station’s problemlargely as a clash of per¬sonalities. One senior stationmember commented “twovery strong persons becameinvolved in a conflict, andthe conflict became largerthan they were.”Mr. Rosenheim offered asimlar point of view. “Kidswho are very bright,energetic, devoted, and com¬mitted, are also very oftenclosed-minded and shorttempered.”“Bill and Jane did an as¬tounding job, but in thecourse of exercising their ex¬cellence flipped their lids.”At both the Maroon andSG, the problem was not oneof a strong willed ad¬ministration attempting toassert executiveprerogative over theorganizational membership.Instead the editor of thepaper and the president ofSG faced difficult problemsand had failed to deal withthem effectively.By the beginning of thewinter quarter, a significantproportion of the Maroonstaff had concluded that thepaper had not lived up totheir original expectations.The staff had begun the yearwith hopes for vigorous in¬vestigative reporting and thedevelopment of an“The leadership does not have to go through anyprocess of political compromise and does not have theopportunity to learn the fine art of dealingwith people or to gain experience inmaking difficult decisions. ”Members of the Debating Society do not spend all their time Morris, Dennis Navarra, Leon Bronfin, Master Donaldat impeachment proceedings. Attending an honorary Bingle, Mayor Daley, and Paul Hudson. (Photo by Johnreception in the mayor's office were (from left) Dean of Vail)Students Charles O'Connell, Society Chancellor Joseph8—The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday - May 18, 1976 aggressive approach towar¬ds the problems of theUniversity.Continuing technical er¬rors, weak layout, and inter¬nal friction contributedsignificantly to a loss of con¬fidence in Gage Andrews.Several of the staff memberscriticized Mr. Andrews formaitaining close ties withthe administration and fortaking an unannouncedleave of absence from hiseditorial responsibilities. Astensions mounted, staffmeetings became increas¬ingly vocal and an impeach¬ment petition was circulatedamong the staff. Mr. An¬drew’s maintained a quietattitude towards the im¬peachment, and some staffmembers accused him of“stonewalling.” His tacticssucceeded, however, and theimpeachment movementdied.In the period following theimpeachment effort, thepaper showed littlenoticeable improvement andthe size of the active staffcontinued to shrink.Criticism by the disaffectedelements of the staff per¬sisted, making for anunpleasantly tense at¬mosphere in the paper’snewsroom.The resignations ofAssociate Editor Chip For¬rester and Layout EditorSally Peterson precipitatedMr. Andrew’s resignation.Mr. Andrews attributedthe Maroon’s problems to“the lack of a controlideology” and to differences“in attitude towards the ad¬ministration.He also said “I am not adecisive administrator.”“I thought it would be atbest a building year for thepaper, what I personallycould accomplish was thelong-term things,” he said.Fariborz Maissami* wasup against impossible oddsfrom the very beginning. Hecame into office calling forcooperation and non-partisanship in the SGassembly. He didn’t realizethat one of SG’s major func¬tions is to serve as the plat¬form for campus radicalorganizations, who comprisea dozen out of the 45 workingSG representatives. He alsodidn’t realize that SG has lit¬tle power to get anythingdone, at least he didn’t findout until his attempts to gainstudent representation onthe presidential search com¬mittee were met with apatronizing snub from theadministration and theBoard of Trustees.Mr. Maissami did not havethe parliamentary ex¬perience, the personal force,or the powers of persistentendurance to cope with themiasma of SG politics. Theclique of power happygraduate students who hadtalked Mr. Maissami intorunning in the first placewere not at Mr. Maissami’sside when the going gotrough.He announced his resigna¬tion at the beginning ofwinter quarter, calling forthe immediate abolition ofSG and for a complete refor¬mulation of the body to makeit more reflective of thestudents at large. He calledthe assembly “disunited,fractionated, and un-LEADERS T06