Chicago Maroonthe university of ChicagoAn uncharacteristic lack ot wind forced participants in the twice-postponed FOTA paperboat race to supply their own at Botany pond yesterday.Harper Fellows TellOf DiscontentmentI4 vHarper Fellows chat at a reception.By Tom MeigsThe College’s HarperFellows, hired on a short¬term basis to help handleCommon Core teachingduties without increasing of¬ficial faculty size, arebecoming increasinglydissatisfied with their statusin the University.In less austere times,many of the Harper Fellowswould be holding assistantprofessorships at majoruniversities. Most of themare in theirearlythirties andhave had several years ofprevious teaching experience As it is, they holdterminal positions and drawsalaries below that of anassistant professor at theUniversity. Some of themfeel that they have beenmistreated by the Univer¬sity, and the issues theyraise go beyond their par¬ticular situations and extendto the College as a whole.One.source of resentmentamong the Harper Fellow'swas a remark made byPresident Wilson in an in¬terview in the Maroon earlythis year. Mr. Wilsondescribed the HarperFellows as “analagous to aresearch assistant whocomes in to work at the Post-Doctoral level, with a facultymember. You could haveteaching fellows at the samelevels.”That statement made itsound, said one HarperThe Maroon will notpublish Tuesday due to theMemorial Day holiday Mon¬day. The next issue of theMaroon will be next Friday,June 4th Fellow indignantly, “as if wewere brought in here like aresearch fellow in physics isbrought in to work insomebody’s office. I don’tknow what the hocuspocus isupstairs. In every way we’refaculty. I’ve even had to payfaculty rates at the gym.How are we different fromprofessors? Only in thetitle.”Bill Veeder, AssistantProfessor of English anddirector of the HarperFellowship program,carefully explained Mr.Wilson’s remarks. “I thinkthat is the way Mr. Wilsontends to think of the HarperFellows. I don’t think that Ithink of them that way and Idon’t think they think ofthemselves that way.”‘“You get a different viewof the same reality as you godown the bureaucratic lad¬der,” said Mr Veeder “Ifyou ask about the Corvette,the guy who puts the wheels on is going to have a differ¬ent idea about it than thePresident ”The Harper Fellows arefaculty in that they are equalmembers of the staff, ex¬plained Mr. Veeder. Yet, “inthe ultimate sense, they arenot faculty in that they arenot on the tenure track ”They are called HarperFellows rather thanassistant professors, Mr.Veeder explained, so that thethree years they spend atChicago will not count ashalf of the six years offaculty work universitiesallow before making tenuredecisions. Other universitieswill be more likely to hireHarper Fellows after theyleave Chicago knowing theyhave six years to look beforedeciding on tenure Eventhough the University claimsto have acted in the HarperFellows’ best interests, theFellows to 16 Field House FaceliftBegins Next WeekBy John VailOn Thursday, June 3rd, at4:30 pm, the University willbegin spending the firstmoney it has allocated fornew indoor athletic facilitiesin almost forty-five years.At that time, ground willbe broken for the renovationof the Field House. The lasttime the University spentmoney on a new indoorathletic facility was,ironically, when the FieldHouse was built in 1932.The renovation, scheduledto be done in two stages, willcost approximately $5million. Plans for the projectwere announced in October,when an anonymous gift of$1 million from a UniversityTrustee and a “major gift”from the well-known philan¬thropic Crown family ofChicago were disclosed.During the first stage ofthe renovation a new- floorwill be built fourteen feetabove the current clay sur¬face. There will be a Tartantrack and new basketballcourts which will be con¬vertible to tennis courtsNew- squash and handballcourts w ill also be includedAs funds are raised thesecond stage will be im¬plemented, convering thecurrent first floor into officespace and areas forweightlifting, wrestling, fen¬cing, archery, martial arts,and batting practice.President John Wilson,Chairman of the Board ofTrustees Gaylord Donnelley,and Dean of Students Charles O'Connell will allspeak briefly at the ground¬breaking ceremony, when apiece of the current basket¬ball court will be raised tosymbolize the beginning ofconstruction Federal Cir¬cuit Court Judge John Crow nwill speak on behalf of theCrown family.The Crown family hasbeen in the public eye latelyas Lester Crown was gran¬ted immunity from Federalprosecution in return for his testimony in a constructionindustry bribery scandalAthletic Director Walter"Wally’' Hass and Chairmanof the Women’s Division ofPhysical Education MaryJean Mulvaney and twostudents will complete theentourage on the stage forthe ceremony.The ceremony , open to thepublic, will be followed by areception for special guestshosted by President W’ilsonat the Revnolds ClubFerrari Tenure DenialRaises ControversyBy John MilkovichIn a recent interview.University President JohnW’ilson firmly stated that theUniversity will not publicizetenure decisions, themomentous decisions madeby the University to eitherpromote faculty members tolifetime professorships or toterminate their contracts.But however successfulthe University's stance maybe at shrouding the exact cir¬cumstances of tenuredecisions, it does not stopone from wondering aboutthe ‘rightness’ of suchseemingly sacrosanctdecisions. And it certainlydoes not eliminate the con¬troversial cases that at leastmerit close scrutiny. Wit¬ness the case of VirginioFerrari, sculptur, deniedtenure after ten years of ser¬vice for the University.Ferrari speaks un¬selfconsciously of his ownwork Onp piece portrays “the symbolic union of manand woman.” Another piecedepicts “the man of the cityhelplessly straining toescape the mesh of concreteand metal in which he ishopelessly entangled.” Butadept as Virginio Ferrari isat putting his art work intowords, his most tellingmedium of communication is. ultimately, his owm con-ceptualist pieces of sculp¬ture: human limbs em¬bedded in geometricdesigns, the stark, bronzeimage of a wing shapedcreature beating its wings in“Tragic Flight”, rounded,organic forms jutting fromharsh, angular shapesFerrari to6CALENDARFRIDAYFOLKDANCING: All levels, teachingfor one hour, 7:30 pm, Ida NoyesTURE: 4PM Soc Sci 122 by MajidKhadduri on "Property in IslamicLaw: The Free Enterprise Versus theCollectivist Schools of Thought"GARGOYLE COFFEEHOUSE:Pastries & fresh coffee after concerts& movies8:30-Midnite57th & Universi¬tyCHINA DISCUSSION: 8pm CalvertHouse, 5735 University.MICROBIO LECTURE: ThomasPetes on "Structure and Replication ofthe Yeast Genome" CLSC 101 2:30 pm.GEOPHY LECTURE: R BURRIDGEon "Seismic Sources and FractureMechanisms" Hinds Auditorium 3:30HILLEL: Adat Shalom Shabbat din¬ner $2.50, sign up by WednesdaySATURDAYDINNER: $1.50 a plate at CrossroadsStudent Center, 5621 Backstone, 6 00pm. Students welcomeKI-AIKIDO: Practice meditation andaction with the U.C. Ki-Aikido Club,3:00 to 4:00 pm, Bartlett GymSKI TEAM: meets 1 PM Bartlett Gymfor discussion, workout at Stagg FieldPARTY: Dance to the music of theSahara Liquid Refreshments Psi Up-Silon 5639 S. Univ. 9:30DOC: Bedazzled 7:15 and 9 30 Cobb$1.LAMB ROAST: 6PM Ida Noyes Courtyard sponsored by Middle EastCenterCOLLEGIUM MUSICUM: BondChapel 8 30 SUNDAYDOC: The 47 Ronin, Part II, Cobb 7:15and 9:30 $1FOLKDANCING: 8pm general level,teaching l '/t hr, donation 50 cents.BLUEGRASS: Unity Band, 4pm,Hutch Court, FREEROCKEFELLER: 9:45am ChapelUndercroft, E Spencer Parsons, Deanof the Chapel, conducts a BibleReading Seminar; 11 am UniversityReligious Services, Preacher: E Spencer Parsons, Sermon: The Heal¬ing of the Nations'FILM: The Starry Messenger one ofthe Ascent of Man film by Bronowski.8pm Crossroads, 5621 Blackstone.E very one welcomeOUT DOOR PARTY: Barbecue begin¬ning at about 6, live rock 'n roll band,for dancing, City Boyes. Beginningabout 8 pm.COMPUTER CLUB: weekly meetingReynoldsClub N Lounge IpmMONDAYCHESS: U C Chess Club, 7.00 pm, IdaNoyes, everyone welcome.KARATE: U.C. Karate Club meets inIda Noyes, 6:30 pm 8:30pm. LECTURE: Dr Michael Dvorkin: SoLong Chicago, Am I Going to MissYou? Bk 101 4:30pmTUESDAYU.C. QDNCERT BAND: 7 00 pm, 245BelfieldAIKIDO: Coordinate mind 8, bodywith the U.C. Aikido Club, 6:30 to 8:30pm, Bartlett Gym.BIO-PSYCH: Dr Peter Huttenlocheron "Developmental Neurophysiology:Electrophysiology and Histology"8pm Psy, B101GARGOYLE COFFEEHOUSE: freshcoffee, cookies, cakes, calming teasCure the paper writing blues 8:30Midnite 57th & University SEXUAL IDENTITY: discussiongroup meets at 7:30 pm in Ida NoyesSun Parlor. Women and men of all sexual orientations welcome.Wednesday"KARATE: U.C. Karate Club meets inIda Noyes, 6:30 - 8:30pm.COUNTRY DANCERS: Ida Noyes,8:00 pm.DUPLICATE BRIDGE: Game at 7:00pm, Ida Noyes East LoungeOXFAM: Friends of OXFAM willdistribute information on thisorganizations' international aid effortsand receive contributions. ReynoldsClub 9 to 5 MICRBIO LECTURE: Anne Summers, "Plasmid determinedresistance to toxic metal ions."2:30pm CL SC 850THURSDAYKI-AIKIDO: Practice Ki-Aikido from6:30 to 8:30 pm, Bartlett.PING PONG: Table Tennis Clubmeeting, 7:30 pm, 3rd fl. theater, IdaNoyes.HILLEL: 10PM Tikkun Lei Shavout.all night Torah Study Sessions, conservatlve and Orthodox services at dawnRefreshments available at Hillel.DEBATE SOCIETY: meeting at 8 instruction at 7 in Ida NoyesMBSUMmNEEDLEPOINTCREWELEMBROIDERY5210 Harper Ave.Hours: Tue., Thurs.Fri., Sat. 10-4Wed. 12:n-6 p.m.Closed: Sun.-Mon.324-2266We SellRentRepairTYPEWRITERSADDERSELECTRONIC CALCULATORSDICTATORSU. of C Bookstore5750 S. Illls rHours M-F S-5 S 9-1753-3303 DOROTHY SMITHBEAUTY SALON5841 S. BLACKSTONE AVE.HY 3-1069Permanent* that or*manageable short ones - andlong ones. Tints • bleachesstreaks. Hair shaping as youwish it. Children s hair cutsalso. Call for appt. Mondaythrough Fridoy.8 o.m. to 8 p.m.No Saturdays. NOT A BICENTENNIAL SALE, BUT THEQUINDECICENTENNIALBOOK SALECOMMEMORATING THE 1500th ANNIVERSARY OF THE FALL OF ROME20% OFF LISTON EVERY BOOK IN THE STORE(PLUS PATRONAGE REFUND FOR MEMBERS)Mon., May 24 Through Fri., June 11IF INFLATION CAUSED THE FALL OF ROME.IT WASN'T BECAUSE OF PRICES LIKE THESEISEMINARY CO-OP BOOKSTORES, INC,5757 S. UNIVERSITY AVE.Mon.-Fri. 9:30 A.M.-4:00 P.M.(ALL SALES ARE FINAL, A BOOKS SHOULD BE PAIDFOR AT THE TIME OF PURCHASE)MUCH ADO ABOUT NOSHINGAt the last meeting of the "Sunday Morning Bagel and Lox Maven Society", it wasdecided that we should sponsor a "Crooked Contest" concerning Deli puns. Our firstwinner, acclaimed by her single vote, was Much Ado About Noshing, from the economicmind of Walgreen Foundation Researcher Claire Friedland.IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO ENTER OUR CROOKED CONTEST, EITHER SEND IN OR BRING IN YOURDELI-RELATED PUN. EACH WEEK TWO FREE SANDWICHES & 2 FREE DRINKS WILL BE GIVENAWAY TO THE WINNER-. TO INDUCE YOU ENTER OUR "CROOKED CONTEST" AND GIVE YOU APRAYER OF WINNING, WE WILL ALSO HAVE ON SALE1.JOYVA HALVAH $1 Per Lb. 5. KOSHER BOLOGNY $2"perLb.Per Lb. 6. FRENCH SAINT PAULIN ^2" Per Lb.Per Lb. FRENCH MUENSTER *2" Per Lb.Per Lb. 8. WISC. COLBY M49 Per Lb.4. KOSHER PASTRAMI *3RULES:I AM THE SOLE, BIASED BRIBABLE JUDGE, WHOSE OPINON IS CHANGEABLETHE CONTEST WILL LAST UNTIL I'M BORED OF READING PUNSALL ENTRIES WILL BECOME THE PROPERTY OF THE GARBAGEM ANCONTEST OPEN TO ANYONE, WINNERS WILL BE STRICTLY LIMITEDHOURS:M-F 10 A.M.-B P.M.SAT. 10 A.M.-8 P.M.SUN. • A.M.-3 P.M. Tke F£gutg Lax Bax5500 S. CORNELL 241-7050 or 241-7051Page 2-The Chicago Maroon-Fridoy, May 28, 1976NEWS BRIEFS— :Streeter Named Ryerson Lecturer For 1976-77‘ ‘ Proud Valley ’ ’ ShowingRobert E. Streeter, the Ed-ward L. RyersonDistinguished ServiceProfessor of English and aformer Dean of the Collegeand the HumanitiesGraduate Division, has beennamed the Nora and EdwardRyerson Lecturer for the1976-77 year.With that title comes theopportunity to present a lec¬ture in the spring quarter onsome aspect of the appointedlecturer’s major intellectualwork — which, for Mr.Streeter, is Americancultural and literary history,with an emphasis on the pre-Civil War period. Anauthority on rhetoricaltheory and practice, Mr.Streeter is a co-editor ofThe Hyde Park MerchantsAssociation will offer freeautomobile economy andemission checks formotorists June 9 through 11,from 10:30 am to 6:30 pm.A van from the ChicagoDepartment of En¬vironmental Control will belocated in the north end ofthe Hyde Park Shopping Critical Inquiry, a journalpublished by the Universityof Chicago.The Ryerson lecture wasestablished by the Board ofTrustees in 1973, and is spon¬sored by the Center forPolicy Study. Nominationsfor the lectureship aresolicited through a mailingto the entire faculty, and alist is compiled anddiscussed by a committee ofmembers of the Center forPolicy Study, whose recom¬mendation goes to PresidentJohn T. Wilson for approval.“We stress to the facultythat the decision is not apolitical one,” said D.J.R.Bruckner, Director of theCenter for Policy Study andthe University’s Vice-Center’s parking lot. In lessthan five minutes, twovehicles can be checkedsimultaneously forhydrocarbon and carbonmonoxide levels.There are no fines orpenalties involved formotorists whose car fails tomeet standards. The test isopen, free, to all motorists. President for Public Affairs.“The decision is not based onnumbers or anything likethat.” Last year’s Ryersonlecturer was noted lawprofessor Philip B. Kurlandand some professors feelthat Mr. Kurland’s ap¬pointment was made to keephim in the limelight while hewas still a candidate for theUniversity Presidency lastspring.Previous Ryerson lec¬turers also include S. Chan¬drasekhar, the Morton D.Hull Distinguished ServiceProfessor in the Depart¬ments of Astronomy andAstrophysics, and John HopeDebaters from OxfordUniversity will participate ina series of three debates withthe University DebatingSociety beginning next week.The first debate, “Is Therea Place for Monarchy in theModern World?”, will beheld in the Law SchoolAuditorium, Friday, June 4at 9:00 pm. On Sunday, June6 at 5:00 pm, the debaterswill consider “Is the Franklin, the John MatthewsManly Distinguished ServiceProfessor in History.Mr. Streeter came to theUniversity of Chicago in 1947as an Assistant Professorand became a Professor in1958. He was Dean of theCollege from 1954 to 1959,and in 1973 he was named aDistinguished ServiceFTofessor. He received theRyerson Distinguished Ser¬vice appointment in 1974.Edward Ryerson was aTrustee of the University for48 years and Chairman of theBoard of Trustees for fiveyears prior to his death in1971.American Revolution Un¬finished Business’’” at theEnglish Speaking Union,1500 N. Dearborn. The finaldebate in the series, “CanDemocracy Survive?”, willtake place at WoodfieldMall, Monday, June 7 at 6:00pm.The University DebatingSociety is sponsoring theseries. “Proud Valley” starringthe late Paul Robeson will beshown at the UniversityChurch, 5655 S. University,Friday, June 4, at 7 and 9pm.The film was rated by Mr.Robeson as his favorite andbest film, because, as heHitchcock will sponsor aBar-B Q and dance with alive band Sunday, May 30.The City Boys will be thefeatured band.The Bar-B-Q starts at 6pm. The cost is $1 per platefor all you can eat with freeHarry W. Schoenberg hasbeen appointed Professorand Chief of the Section ofUrology in the Departmentof Surgery, effective July 1.Dr. Schoenberg is curren- said, it was one film whichmore than any of his otherfilms that portrayed him “asa real human being, insteadof in racist stereotype.” Heportrays a black coal minerinvolved in a miner’s strikein Wales.beer and punch. Dancingstarts promptly at 8 pm. Theband is free.In case of rain, the eventswill be held in Ida Noyes. Allundergraduate and gradstudents are invited to at¬tend.tly Professor and Chairmanof the Department ofUrology in the St. LouisUniversity School ofMedicine.Vehicle Emissions Testing Chicago, Oxford Debate Hitchcock Party SundaySchoenberg AppointedInternational House Films Presents Saturday, May 297,9:30®, 11:45 Thursday, June 37:15® 9:45RETURN OF THE PINK PANTHER1414 E. 59th Yes, we have popcorn.SPIN-IT RECORDSPresents a storewide sale. Prices arereduced on our entire inventory.Featured is our complete Atlantic Records Catalog and the recentalbums by Yes, Bad Company, The Trammps, Firefall, Rolling Stones,Jean-Luc Ponty, and Genesis.Example of Sale Prices:$798 List Price $479 Sale PriceS698 List Price $419 Sale PriceS398 List Price $239 Sale PriceAll other prices similarly reduced.1414 E. 57th St. Store Hours: Monday - Saturday 10:30 • 7:30MU 4-1505 Sunday - Saturday 12:00 - 5:30AURORA1.LETTERS=Chao Replies To ChargesEditor:In reading an article byMiss Jan Rhodes titled“Students Charge KMTSpying” in the May 21 issueof the Chicago Maroon, Ihave found that certainstatements about me arefalse or inaccurate. For in¬stance:1. My name is Lin Chao,not Chao Lin as Miss Rhodeswrote.2. I got the degree twoyears before the day I had afight with P.J. Hsia. MissRhodes has wrongly con¬nected the two events veryclosely in time.3. I never said anything toHsia like Hsia’s quotation ofmy words appearing in MissRhodes’ article.4. Miss Rhodes wrote thatthe fight between Hsia andme was preceded by anargument about myharassing people in campus.This is not true. Hsia startedthe fight without sayinganything. It was because hethought that the author of anarticle describing him as anopportunist was me.5. Miss Rhodes wrote thatafter the fight “severalstudents later persuaded Mr.Hsia to report the incident tothe Foreign Student Ad¬viser.” This sentence isfollowed by Miss Rhodes’description of the con¬versation between Hsia andthe officers in the office ofthe Foreign Student Adviser.The fact is, that, I, ac¬companied by Mr. C.P.Chao, reported the fight, andthat after the fight, Hsiacalled upon his friends, whothreatened me with physicalharm if I visited U.C. again.I reported this to the ForeignStudent Adviser im¬mediately after the incident.A policeman was called uponand took notes, which, Ibelieve, were kept on file inU.C. Hsia was summoned toForeign Student Adviser’soffice later.6. Miss Rhodes wrote that Iwas once asked to leave thecampus by U.C. security,because I was botheringpeople — as Miss Rhodes im¬plied. Such an incident neveroccurred. On the contrary,the campus security wassupposed to protect me in case I was harassed by Hsiaand his friend. A few days af¬ter the fight, I discussed theincident with a professorwith whom I had an ap¬pointment on the day thefight took place. Theprofessor suggested that Ishould talk to the chair¬man of the Far EasternDepartment. I did that, andthe chairman asked me totalk to the Dean of Students,in whose office I was toldthat I would be able to getprotection from campussecurity whenever I visitedU.C. again.7. Miss Rhodes wrote thatHsia thinks that I must havereported him to my govern¬ment, because Hsia’s familyin Taiwan was detained andquestioned by the police. Asfar as I know, Hsia’syounger brother is alive andfree and has been paid by thegovernment to study in Wan-Pao Military Academy, theWest Point of Taiwan. Hehas already become part ofthe military elite in Taiwan.This indicates that whateverHsia’s political positionmight be, it has nothing to dowith his family’s politicalsituation in Taiwan. In 1970,Hsia wrote an article in theTYT Newsletter charging anofficer in the ChicagoChinese Consulate ofthreatening him. Hsia madehimself known to the govern¬ment. There is no reason toblame me for what is ac¬tually the result of his ownactivity.8. Miss Rhodes wrote that Itold Hsia not to go back toTaiwan. I never said that. Infact, Hsia’s current positionin the United Nations as atranslator in the Chinese sec¬tion required him to forsakehis Rep. of China passportand to acquire a passportfrom Communist China. Hehimself abandoned Rep. ofChina for a job, which is wellknown as one kind of pay-offfor active Maoist students inthe U S. Only the delegationfrom Communist China inthe U.N. has the right torecommend people for sucha job.I regret that Miss Rhodesonly listened to one side ofthe story and did not checkover certain basic facts. Ihope she will go deeper intothe subject, and that theuniversity will form an in¬ vestigation committee tofind out what is going on. Ipredict that they will find,just as Miss Rhodes wrote,“no actual proof thatspecific individuals areguilty of conducting sur¬veillance.” The spy onlyexists in the minds of self-styled victims. However, ifinvestigators would look intothe activities of Chinesestudents objectively, theywould find substantialevidence of a crime on thepart of Maoist Chinesestudents, namely, as MissRhodes wrote, “to be a paidagent of another governmentwithout registering with theFBI.” Here is a clue to startthe inquiry with. The TYTNewsletter of the Chinesestudents in the U.C. haspublished more than 150issues since 1970. Accordingto one of its editors, there are1,000 copies of each issue,and ninety percent thereofare free and distributedamong Chinese students indifferent campuses over theU.S Suppose one copy of theTYT Newsletter only costs 40cents for printing andpostage. Then 1,000 copiesfor each of the 150 issues willcost a total of 60,000 dollars.The TYT Newsletter isnotorious as an instrumentof Maoist propaganda. Canthe small group of MaoistChinese students in the U.C.afford the expense of 10,000dollars each year? I hopeMiss Rhodes will be able toanswer my question in thefuture.Finally I have to say thatyou are not authorized toprint this letter unless youprint it in its entirety. Anychange you wish to makemust receive my written ap¬proval. Thank you.Lin ChaoMs. Rhodes replies: It isobvious from the tenor ofMr. Chao’s letter that hefeels he has something toworry about. He goes togreat lengths to deny orclarify specific details.But there is one thing thatis most interesting to note:Mr. Chao does not — and Isuspect cannot — deny thatsurveillance and “whiteterrorism” go on.Mr. Chao neglects tonotice that the majority ofthe article on KMT spyingwas in quotation marks; ifthere were false statements,they came from the mouthsof those I interviewed. ForMr. Chao to say thesestatements were presentedas undeniable facts is in¬correct.Mr. Chao writes that Mr.Hsia has a passport fromCommunist China. Y’ester-day Mr. Hsia said this ispatently untrue. He said hisTaiwanese passport expiredthree years ago and hecurrently has no passport.The account of the fightbetween Mr. Chao and Mr.Hsia, as the article madeclear, was Mr. Hsia’s ac¬count. Talking with Mr.Chao about the fight beforethe article appeared, he didnot deny Mr. Hsia’s account.When I described the fightto Paul Ausik and ForeignStudents’ Adviser Susan Ret-tig, who knew about it whenit occurred, neither told memy description was in¬correct.Although not naming Mr.Chao, Mr. Ausik also saidthat the person involved in the fight with Mr. Hsia wasonce asked to leave campus.Much of Mr. Chao’s letterboils down to a case of hisword against Mr. Hsia’s. Mr.Hsia said he thinks Mr. Chaoreported him to KMT of¬ficials and Mr. Chao deniesit. But Mr. Chao goes on totalk about Mr. Hsia’sbrother, and this puzzles me.I didn’t know Mr. Hsia had abrother, but I’m glad to hear— as Mr. Hsia probably is —that he is still alive.Mr. Hsia told me that Mr.Chao told him he could nevergo back to Taiwan, and Mr.Chao also denies this.Finally, Mr. Chao’s im¬plication that the students Ispoke to are supporters ofMao is absolutely un¬founded. Mr. Chao’s sim¬plification of the com¬plicated political issue andhis jumping to conclusionsabout my informants in¬dicates, I think, somethingabout Mr. Chao’s frame ofreference, as well as that ofthe Taiwan Consulate.I can only say that theMaroon should be flatteredthat Mr. Chao must havegone out of his way to obtaina copy of last Friday’s paperand take time out of his busyschedule to compose alengthy rejoinder.Who Can Be Trustedto Fight Surveillance?Editor:The University of ChicagoNational Lawyers Guildcommends the Maroon forits extensive coverage of thespy network maintained inthis country by the Kuomin-tang. It is important thatsuch issues be widelypublicized.The probability that theKMT has spies on this cam¬pus raises importantquestions for all members ofthe University community.We must not tolerate thepresence of intelligenceagents, whether theyrepresent the KMT, IndiraGandhi, the Shah of Iran orthe FBI.We express our solidaritywith the Taiwanese studentsfacing surveillance andharassment by KMT spies.We feel, however, thatreliance on the Universityadministration or the StateDepartment is badlymisplaced.Taiwan remains a closeally of this country’s govern¬ment. Opportunistic allian¬ces between the UnitedStates in China in such areasas Angola and the Indiansubcontinent have notchanged this.The State Department cannot, consequently, be ex¬pected to protect dissidentTaiwanese nationalsstudying here. The US gover¬nment is clearly committedto supporting the Chiangregime by almost any meansnecessary. There is noreason to suppose that thiswould not include permittingan extensive spy network tokeep under surveilanceTaiwanese students. Indeed,it is not improbable the KMTnetwork is supplemented byassistance from Americansurveillance agencies.Similarly, the University,dependent on large handoutsfrom the federal govern¬ment, can not be expect to-bite the hand that feeds it. John Wilson has alreadyexpressed the view thatstudents are an unnecessaryelement of the University.Asking Wilson to guaranteefreedom from surveillancefor foreign students is likeasking Daley to count ballotsin a hotly-contested election.Reliance on Wilson, theState Department or both isa mistake. Even assumingthat reassurance wouldbe forthcoming, suchreassurance would bemeaningless. It is in the in¬terest of both Wilson and theState Department to issuesuch reassurance: it is in theinterest of neither to followup these words with ap¬propriate action.It is not entirelyunreasonable to demandthat the University protectmembers of the community.But such demands should bemade with the clear un¬derstanding that the com¬munity must protect itself.John Wilson serves the in¬terests of the Board ofTrustees — the Rockefellersand the Grahams — notthose of the students.We urge all members ofthe University community toaid our Taiwanese sistersand brothers by workingwith them to identify KMTagents on campus, and to in¬sure that these agents not beallowed to intimidate,harass, or spy upon theirfellow nationals.University of ChicagoNational Lawyers GuildAdministration RepliesEditor:On Friday, May 21, and onTuesday, May 25, theMaroon carried stories andletters about on-campuspolitical surveillance ofUniversity of Chicagostudents. We urge anystudent who has directknolwedge of such activityon campus to communicateimmediately with the Deanof Students in the Universityor a member of his staff. Anymember of the faculty orstaff who has directknowledge of such activityshould communicate withthe General Counsel of theUniversity. It is unnecessaryto add, we hope, that theUniversity does not condonepolitical surveillance, andsuch surveillance has neverbeen and will never be con¬ducted on this campus withthe cooperation of theUniversity.Charles D. O’Connell, Jr.Vice President and Dean ofStudents in the UniversityWalter V. LeenGeneral Counsel ofthe UniversityGovernment Interference:What's Policy?Editor:The Harrassment andillegal surveillance to whichforeign students fromseveral countries are sub¬jected must be stopped im¬mediately. Foreign studentsat the University of Chicagoshould be accorded the sameFirst Amendment rights asAmerican students. We, themembers of the StudentGovernment ExecutiveCouncil, feel that the Univer¬sity faculty and ad¬ministration should takeresponsibility for protecting its students from such illegaland threatening situations.Such repression is no lesstolerable when it comesfrom regimes friendly to theU.S. than it is when com¬munist totalitarian govern¬ments practice such op¬pression.We call upon the Univer¬sity to publicly state itspolicy regarding the in¬terference of any govern¬ment, political, or in¬vestigative agency,domestic or foreign, with therights and freedoms of anymember of the Universitycommunity.We commend the acts ofcourage of Taiwanese andother students for riskingtheir safety by bringing theexistence of this deplorablesituation to the attention ofthe community. We alsocommend the efforts of theMaroon for investigatingthis assault on the personalliberties of some members ofour student body.The Executive Council,Student Government.Administration's Callous ToolEditor,In your Tuesday, May 25issue, you quote the newpresident of our StudentGovernment, Margaret Dud-ney, as saying “The Univer¬sity has been systematicallytrying to take power awayfrom SG and giving it togroups such as MAB, FOTA,and FSACCSL. In a very un¬democratic way, they aregiving power to a handpicked group of appointees.”I would like to point outthat FSACCSL is elected atlarge by students, FOTA fillsits board with whoevervolunteers, and no memberof the administration was in¬volved in choosing the MAB.Though I am confused as toMs. Dudney’s meaning ingeneral, I do seem to un¬derstand that she isassailing, or at leastfrowning deeply at, themembers of these groups.I am a committee chair¬man with the Festival of theArts, responsible for coor¬dinating the numeroustheatre events in FOTA, andI am a member of the MajorActivities Board.Throughout this past year Ihave spent between ten andthirty hours each week doingwhat I have naively believedwas in the interest of im¬proving the quality of life atthe University of Chicago.It seems that while I washanging lighting equipment,putting up posters, sweepingup paper streamers,operating sound boards,buying doughnuts, pretzels,potato chips, and EdwardLevi face masks, I wasreally acting as a callous toolof the administration, ac¬cumulating power to which Ihad no right. I guess I simplycannot fully understand thecomplexety of the politicalmaneuvering in which SG isinvolved. I have failed to seemy true role for nearly ayear.Perhaps this is presump¬tuous of rne, but I do sin¬cerely apologize on behalf ofthe thirty or forty studentsletters to 5EditorJohn VailManaging EditorJ. O PetersonAssociate EditorsSports David RieserDarkroom Frank FoxDan NewmanNews Peter CohnMike JonesDan WisePolitics David AxelrodContributing editorsDavid Blum Jan Rhodes Landy 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, ChipForrester, Paul GreenBusiness StaffManager Mike KlingensmithAd sales B.G. YovovichOffice Karol KennedyThe CHICAOO MAROON is thestudent run newspaper serving tn*University of Chicago and HydePark The PUBLICATIONSCHCOULB is twice weekly, onTuesdays and Fridays, during theregular ac tOern c yearOpinions 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, andBAOPLIES— must be submitted tothe paper no later than two daysprior to me next issue, and mutt besigned. .The Maroon reserves the right to edit all submissions forpublicationCORRECTIONS may be broughtto the attention of the editors bywriting care of the Meroon 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 CC437 SUB¬SCRIPTIONS cover the threeregular academic Quarters, and areS9 for me yoar, payable in advanceTELEPHONES of the ChicagoMaroon are: editorial office, 7533744. business office. 753 3244The OFFICE HOURS of me paperAre I 30 1 and 1:30 4:30 weekedaysPage 4-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, May 28, 1976letters from 4who have so innocently beenused by the Administrationby working for FOTA andMAB. I only wish we couldhave learned in time andresigned unanimouslybefore we had done ourdamage.Mostabashedly,Aaron FillerSG: Representative as KKKEditor:I object to the claim madein last Friday’s Maroon thatMargaret Dudney, the newStudent GovernmentPresident, “was clearly thechoice of the people.” Shewas only the choice of theS.G. Assembly, which isabout as representative ofthe people who attend thisuniversity as the Ku KluxKlan.Judging by what I ob¬served at the S.G. meeting atwhich Ms. Dudney was elec¬ted (it was the first I hadever been to), the Assemblyis made up largely of mem¬bers of the New AmericanMovement, whatever that is,and others whose idea of anaffective student govern¬ment is one which makes ex¬treme demands it knows theadministration will dismissas out of hand. Theserepresentatives also feel, forreasons not yet clear to me,that a major function of theUniversity of ChicagoStudent Government is to in¬volve itself in the worldwide,national, statewide, andlocal political scenes.I would like to remindstudents that, while it is easy to write off Student Govern¬ment as a ludicrousorganization no one in hisright mind would waste histime worrying about, S.G.does decide, through COR-SO, how to parcel out amongall the student organizationsapproximately $30,000 ayear. S. G. receives thismoney from the University,and ultimately it comes outof the tuition you pay. Forthis reason, and becauseStudent Government has thepotential to add greatly tothe few worthwhile servicesit presently performs, it isimportant that students takeS.G. seriously and electrepresentatives who aretruly representative, andwho are going to concernthemselves with student, notnational or statewide, gover¬nment.Charles HurstS.G. RepresentativeBlood Donor ShortageEditor:I read with interest theeditorial on the blood donorshortage at the University ofChicago Hospitals’ BloodBank published in theMaroon on Friday, May 21,1976. It is quite disappointingthat on a university campuswith approximately 6,000students and 1,000 facultyi PIZZA !! PLATTER !1460 E. 53rdMl 3-2800FAST DELIVERYAND PICKUP that during 1975 only 30 percent of the hospitals’ bloodneeds were supplied by theuniversity community whilethe remaining 70 per centwere supplied by citizensfrom the rest of the Chicagometropolitan area.Since the vast majority ofthe university communityare conscientious andresponsible people, it ap¬pears that the majordeficiency lies in the func¬tion of proper com¬munication of this blooddonor shortage to the univer¬sity community. Thus, Ipropose that the Marooncould and should perform avital service by com¬municating informationabout this continuing blooddonor shortage byestablishing a small boxspace on the front page of thenewspaper in which wouldbe listed the number of unitsof blood used at the univer¬sity hospital and the numberof units of blood collected atthe university blood bankduring each weekly period.This would serve to remindthe university communitythat the blood donor shor¬tage is a chronic, seriousCARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998fas what you need from a>10 used room size Rug to a'custom carpet. Specializing!|in Remnants & Mill returns at[a fraction of the original]cost.(Decoration Colors andi)ualities Additional 10%)iscount with this ad.FREE DELIVERYLAKE PARK RENTALS6633 S. Cottage GroveRent • TrailersTools • TrucksBuffers CALLDots5™8 667-8700Rototillers ftflll \#Electric Saws UAILYSanders bbefS 7 AM tO 6 PMTile Cutters SUN.Lawn Mowers . " nilWallpaper Steamers o AM |0 O 1 MRYDER TRUCK RENTAL ONE WAYTake advantage of the 10%discount on all one-waysreserved before May 29(1976. With this ad.yourself, low rates one-way. 1 "V“EHNewest auto-shift Chevy* l 1 _other fine trucks. Power lifttailgates, moiling aids, |nationwide road service, in¬surance, credit cards."FOR INFORMATION CALL’’ problem that can bealleviated by donating bloodat the blood bank.Tom McFarlandEditor's reply: We sym¬pathize with the problemsthe blood bank faces, but wedon’t feel that the methodsuggested above would bestalleviate the situation. Wefeel that if the suggestionwas implemented, peoplewould adjust to seeing the in¬formation and it wouldbecome commonplace andbe ignored. We shall con¬tinue to feature informationon blood donations when thesituation becomes critical, amethod we feel bettermotivates donors at crucialtimes.Health Care DiscriminationEditor:I am continually amazedat the contradictions withinthis university that suddenlybecome apparent from timeto time. Perhaps the mostobvious one recently occuredwhen the administration thatboasts one of the bestBusiness Schools in the coun¬try announced that theEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist(S3 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 university budgets were“none of the students’business”.However, the con¬tradiction that has becomeevident to me more recentlyconcerns another aspect ofstudent life. The Universityof Chicago has long said thatit provided the best mentaland physical health carepossible, and at the sametime has appointed a direc¬ tor for Student Health thatwill only provide health careas he defines it, regardless ofthe perceived needs of eitherstudents themselves, ad¬ministrators, or the healthprofession. The universityadministration has lost con¬trol of this position to, ap¬parently, the Billings hierar¬chy.letters to 17Court* Tkeo/rre PresentsAn ExpermeftalFri.Sa+.Sun rUj 28,11,30 ^*50Ike New Theatre 57tk * l/hiversi+vTHE GRADUATE ORDER OF THE “C”would like to take this opportunityto express its gratitude and appreciationtoWALTER L. HASSDirector of Athleticson the occassioii of his retirementand to remind current undergraduateOrder of the “C” membersthat they are invited to theOrder of the “C” Dinnerto be held Thursday. June 3 at 6:30 P.M.The Chicago Maroon-Friday, May 28, 1976-Page 5" v\>\\ s v■•> • r-o.-'c -1/ rr. jwT-pFerrari From 1Virginio Ferrari is the lastof a four generation line ofItalian sculptors who haveleft their chiselled imprintson the buildings of Italy’scountryside for the last hun¬dred years. He has beensculpting for most of his thir¬ty-odd years, getting hisstart in the marble angels hehelped his father sculptwhile still a child in hisnative Verona, Italy. His fir¬st original work was com¬pleted when he was 16. Bythe time he was 25 he held hisfirst one man show inVenice, and by the time hereached 29 he was aprofessor of sculpture at chitecturally “the mostbeautiful in the world.”Harold Haydon, formerly aProfessor in the Art Depart¬ment and currently an artcritic for the Sun-Times,discovered Ferrari's work inChicago’s “RaviniaFestival” in 1964 and offeredhim a position in the Univer¬sity’s art program. The offerwas sufficient to enticeFerrari to leave hishomeland for good andreroot himself in America.Ferrari thrived in his newenviron. He became an artistin residence at the Univer¬sity in 1966; in 1967 he wasappointed as an Instructor inArt, and in 1970 he wasItaly’s Liceo Artistico.But Ferrari, still growingartistically, visited Americain the early ‘60’s seeking newinfluence. He gravitatedtowards New York, which hesays “has been the art cen¬to’ of the world for the last 20or 30 years,” and Chicago,the city that he thinks is ar- - promoted to AssistantProfessor of Art. He set up astudio on the near north sideof Chicago and was awardedseveral major commissionsincluding his currentproject, a life size bronze ofsymphony conductor, GeorgSolti.On Dec. 15th, after¬ working at the University for10 years, Ferrari was “stun¬ned” to hear that the tenuredmembers of the Committeeon Art and Design voted notto award him tenure, ter¬minating his job at the closeof spring quarter.Ferrari, bewildered by theUniversity’s move, said hewas vaguely informed bycommittee members thatthe reason for the decisionwas simply that he “did notfit into the program.” Ac¬cording to Ferrari, his wifeeven asked John Wilson for amore specific justification ofthe decision at a faculty par¬ty. Wilson reportedly ex¬pressed his sympathies butoffered Mrs. Ferrari no ex¬planation.Herbert Kessler, Chair¬man of the Committee on Artand Design, and in¬strumental in the decisionhas said that the criteria fortenure in the art departmentare the instructor’s ability asa teacher, as evidenced incourse and studentevaluations, and by thejudgment of his artisticability rendered by artcritics and “implicit in in¬vitations to international artexhibitions.” Kessler statedthat “no one on the Com¬mittee denied Mr. Ferrari’scompetence as a teacher oran artist”, but that his “com¬petence” was not sufficientto merit the awarding of atenured position.Were those criteria used inFerrari's case? FrankQuinn, for one, thinks not.Quinn, a former student ofFerrari’s and head of the Or¬ders Section of theAcquisition Department inRegenstein Library, suspec¬ts that “the whole tenurehearing was kind of a playthe University put on.”Quinn speculates thatFerrari may have beenshunted aside because it is“cheaper for the Universityto keep getting new people.”He also makes the con¬jecture that the Universitydoes not want tenured peoplefrom the Midway Art Studio.“They don’t want to be per¬manently committed toT..HE SUMMER SOLUTIONfj11 day summer program50th AND 00RCHESTERCourt Theatre Presents maintaining the Studio.” Allspeculation aside, Quinnstates unequivocally that“the decision was not basedon his qualifications or on hisability as an instructor or anartist. I’m really ratherdoubtful that the Universitycan find a better artist toreplace him. The whole thingis an injustice.” Quinn adds, the University. They’reliving in the 19th century.”Haydon went on to say thatartists had never been giventenure at the University andthat they are unjustlytreated because the Univer¬sity is unwilling to admitthat “plastic arts are in¬tellectual pursuits and notjust dabbling with the Taylor, Director of theNational Collection of FineArts of the Smithsonian In¬stitution as well as in¬vitations to prominent in¬ternational art exhibitionsthroughout the Far East,Europe, and America wouldseem to be strong enoughproof of Ferrari’s creativegenius.“Art is not respected at the University.They 're living in the 19th Century. ”“Virginio Ferrari was at thestudio seven days a weeklast year. I don’t think theUniversity will find anyonewho will give that kind ofcommitment.”Harold Haydon also voiceddoubts about the tenuredecision and said that thereasons the Committee gavefor denying Ferrari tenure“seemed like excuses.”Haydon says that Ferrari’sabilities are far fromsuspect, and that he is, in¬deed. “one of the finestsculptors in the nation.” Thereal reason, Haydon says, isthat “art is not respected atTAKCArWABNCHINESE-AiV.ERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY1 1 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS* 12 TO 8:30 P.M.Orders to take out1318 East 83rd MU 4-106211 I ' ’ , ' 1 "Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHair Designers1620 E. 53rd St.288 2900 fingers.” “Its a great loss forthe University,” he con¬cluded.Ruth Duckworth, one ofFerrari’s co-instructors,also expressed her dismay atthe decision. “I wasn’t veryhappy about it. Mr. Ferrariis good at talking, good atmaking.”Filled classrooms givetestimony to what thestudents thought of Ferrari’steaching ability. Favorablerecommondations fromHarold Rosenberg, art criticfor the “New Yorker”,“Daily News” art criticFranz Schulze, and Joshua But Ferrari has resignedhimself to his fate. Uprootedfrom his native country by aUniversity invitation andnow left jobless ten yearslater, Virginio Ferrariquietly searches for newavenues to develop hisunique abilities — and a newjob to support his wife andthree children.The photographs ac¬companying this article are ofworks of Mr. Ferrari's studen¬ts, who have organized a showin his honor at RegensteinLi brary.THE M0RT0N-MURPHY COMMITTEEWe are pleased to announce that applicationand nomination forms are now available forthe Spring Quarter. To be eligible, a studentmust have worked in a leadership capacity,making a significant contribution to extracurricular life at the University in the quarterfor which the award is given.In considering applicants, the committee usesthe following criteria:(1) The extent to which the contribution ex¬ceeds that normally expected of astudent-citizen. This may involve work onone project or in one organization, or abroader contribution to several.(2) The accomplishment(s) of theorganization(s) involved.(3) The student's academic record.(4) The student’s contribution of time,especially if it involves a continuing com¬mitment over more than one academicyear.The Deadline for Applications for SpringQuarter 1976 is Wednesday, June 9. Ap¬plication materials available in Harper 252.The Department of Music presents TheCONTEMPORARYCHAMBER PLAYERSof The University of ChicagoRALPH SHAPEY, Music DirectorPAUL HINDEMITH • FRANK RETZEL • RUTH SHAW WYLIEpercussion soloist: Edward PorembaFRIDAY, MAY 28, 1976 • 8:30 P.M.MANDEL HALL, 57th & University AvenueFree and open to the publicANNUAL DIVINITY SCHOOL 000K SALE:Vz to Vi off list prices!Theology... Church History... PsychologyLiterature... History of Religion... BibleEthics... and much more!May 27-28th (9-4) in Swift CommonsSponsored by: DSA.ENTERTAINING MR.By Joe OrtonMay 28,29,30, June 4,5,6 SLOANE8:30Reynolds Club Theatre’1M 753-3581Page 6-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, May 28, 1976The Chicago Maroon's Weekly Review of Opinion and the ArtsBy Christopher GaukerThe University of Chicago seems sud¬denly to have re awakened to sculpture. Thetransportation of Linnaeus has beenfollowed by the construction of two new"module” sculptures on the lawns of Wood¬ward Court, and the Cochrane-Woods ArtCenter, and by an exhibit of 19 sculptures onthe first floor of Regenstein Library. Eventhe mens' and womens' Salons de Refuse' inthe basement of Cobb Hall at last merit theartistic connotations of that expression.From May 9 through May 26 these Salonsdisplayed the work of MFA candidate HenryAglio, in addition to the permanent collec¬tion. Four of fhe sculptures in Regensteinare also by Aglio.For the most part, the sculptures Agliohas displayed consist of one piece of blockshaped or cylindrical concrete, fitted withone or two pieces of slender, variouslyshaped porcelain. The bulk and coarsenessof the concrete highly accentuate thedelicacy and smoothness of the porcelainappendages. The contrasts focus ouraesthefic attenfion on these qualities; butsuch extreme contrasts as these go further.They are unexpected and certainly it is theunexpectedness that Aglio emphasizes byplacing these sculptures in bathrooms. Fur¬thermore, the imbalance of the positioningof the appendages on concrete is striking.Indeed imbalance is the overwhelminglydominant feature of two of the Regenstein AglioSculpturesAdornCampus sculptures. Surprise and contrived im¬balance, however, seem to detract fromwhat is actually most interesting about'these sculptures.Who has not seen a poster or greeting cardpicturing a flower growing out of a stone?The attempt to stir in us feelings of existen¬tial strength leaves most of us nauseous.Aglio's porcelain appendages, on the otherhand, while often organic in appearance,are at the same time rather grotesque.Some of them are even reminiscent ofhuman bones. Indeed, in some of his sculptures Aglio seems to be advertentlyparodying the clinched flowers from stone.But while this parody is more obvious insome of the sculptures than in others, it hin¬ts at the message we may find in all ofAglio's works.It is usually best not to ask what a piece ofcontemporary artwork has to say, for weare likely to be bored by the answer andsorry that we hadn't spent our time readingthe news. For the most part, to ask for theartist's message is to fail to appreciate hiswork. But if we do not ask for the reificationof the Plight of Man, or a Principia of thePassions, Henry Aglio does indeed seem tobear a message through which we may appredate his sculpture. And students at theUniversity of Chicago are pecularly fit toreceive his message.The appendages Aglio attaches to his conCrete forms are what we never imaginedconcrete to have But if one were to beginimagining that concrete has such appendages, at the University of Chicago onewould imagine them everywhere; for greyconcrete, in blocks, in slabs, molded, or im¬pressed with the grain of wood, is thisUniversity's constant architecturalmedium Now, while U of Cl students livewithin all this concrete and take their livesquite seriously, and while the appendagesAglio attaches to concrete are lifelike, it isimpossible to look upon these sculptureswith the same seriousness with which welook upon our lives. Rather, if in the firstplace we 'ook upon his sculpture with thebenevolence that accepts it as "art," then,in the second place, his sculpture mustamuse us. It is this amusement in a way oflooking at our peculiarly concrete world,and joy in release from our everyday andperhaps overly serious perspectives, thatAglio's sculpture gives.The Chicago Maroon-Friday, May 28, 1976-Page 7t•TheGreyCityJournal U. T. s Festivalof FantasyThe final show of the University Theatre'sFantasy features mimi$t Robert Griffard.Griffard will present his lighthearted im¬pressions at Mandel Hall on June 5th at 11a m. All early risers are invited to ex¬perience Mime, the magical gateway to theworld of make believe, as Griffard performspieces from “The Six Million Dollar Man,"“The Spy," "At the Circus," and "The Gun-fight." Tickets to the show are $1.25. MemorialThe Grey City Journal has received thefollowing letter from the parents of CathyHeifetz:We wish to express our appreciation toMr. Robert Marshall and the Department ofMusic for the beautiful recital held in BondChapel on Sunday, May 16, 1976, in memoryof our beloved daughter, Cathy Heifetz. Itafforded us the opportunity to share withsome of her many friends, and ours, thecommon sorrow of her loss. The music, soably conducted by Jeanne Schaefer, somovingly performed by the UniversityChamber Orchestra and the UniversityString Quartet, was a memorable and fittingtribute to Cathy, whose gentle, generousspirit had long been nourished by herdevoted study and her gifted expression ofthe art, both as pianist and violist. To eachand all of Cathy's fellow musicians, ourdeepest thanks for the unforgettable way inwhich they gave themselves that night. To Rose Subotnik, who had been to Cathy bothteacher and friend, our everlasting affectionand gratitude for the eloquence and insightof her words. She showed us facets of Cathywe had not known. She helped us understandhow profoundly Cathy had touched the livesof others, how deeply she will be missed.Cathy was our only child. It was a tragicdeath that took her from us on February 3,1976. That she was to have graduated thisJune, that she had many hopes and plansnow never to be fulfilled, adds to ourpain.But, in the hushed response of all who filledthe chapel to overflowing, we could not helpbut sense that Cathy's death had left apalpable void not in our hearts alone.Cathy had more love to give than most.And it is comforting, somewhat, to knowthat she evoked so much of what is good andkind in others. That she is remembered,means a lot to us. That she is rememberedwith love, means everything.Her devoted parents,Harriet and Elmer HeifetzSTATEMENT ABOUT "ALLEGATIONCONCERNING TAIWAN STUDENTS”I. Our perception:1. The innocence of most of the students from Taiwan at U. ofChicago is seriously damaged.2. It is highly possible that similar allegations in many othercampuses within these two months originated from the samecoordinated, political-oriented, smear campaign.II. Our actions:1.Withdraw from the Chinese Student Association at U. ofChicago" immediately.2. Try to organize the Free China Student Association at U. ofChicago as soon as possible.A Group of Students from TaiwanMay 26, 1976 BICYCLE REGISTRATIONSIMULTANEOUS REGISTRATIONBYU.C. SECURITYandCHICAGO POLICEENGRAVING&U.C. REGISTRATION DECALWEDNESDAY, JUNE 210 A.M.-2 P.M.HUTCH COURTPoge 8-The Chicago Moroon-Friday, May 28, 1976Campus Fi!mAll films will be shown in Cobb unlessotherwise stated. Admission for each is onedollar.CEF presents: Kaspar Hauser or EveryMan for Himself and God Against All.(1974), directed by Werner Herzog. Her¬zog's fascinating version of the true story ofKaspar Huaser, a man found in Nurembergin 1828 who had spend all his life chained in acellar and isolated from all human contact.The most interesting aspect of the work isthe leading actor, Burno S., who was himselfimmured in prisons and asylums since theage ot three. Although Kaspar Hausersimilar in story to Truftaut's Wild Child,Herzog chose to concentrate on the strangemotional and mental processes of his subjec rather than his educational development. Recommended. Friday at 7:15 and9:30.DOC offers: Bedazzled (1968), directed byStanley Donen. This is DOC's own answer tothe lack ot tradition and annual events oncampus. It there ever is a U of C film, they're trying to make damn sure thatBedazzled is it. Peter Cook and DudleyMoore (of Good Evening and Bevond theFringe) star in their own modern-day comicversion of Faust. Actually, it is quitehysterical the first time round — with linesthat compete with the best of Woody Allen.It's alright the second time, only becausethere are numerous puns and slips of-the-tongue that often are missed on firstviewing. But if you're seen it more than thatyou must be either a diehard traditionalistor a member of DOC films. Saturday at 7:15and9:30.The 47 Ronin, Part II (1942), directed byKenji Mizoguchi. DOC says: "The year is1702, forty seven remaining Samurai areprepared for the final acts of their carefullyplanned revenge. Kenji Mizoguchi, Japan'smaster craftsman and storyteller, brings allhis wit and artistry to bear on this popularJapanese legend. A Chicago premiere."Sunday at 7:15 and 9:30International House offers: The Return ofthe Pink Panther (1975), directed by BlakeEwards, This shoddy third venture in the comic detective series shows clearly thatBlake Edwards and Peter Sellers are bothgetting rather old, a least terms of theirartistry and creavtivity. A once perfectlybumbling and wonderfully idiotic Clouseau,Sellers, now substitutes smart alec retorts(in tradition of Bob Hope) and repi-titi ous slapstick humor. As the theif,Christopher P'ummer doesn't have half of the elegant style or perfect timing thatDavid Niven had. Seller's greatest obstaclein retrieving the pink diamond is his ownOriental houseboy, who continually pops outof refigerators and closets for a playfuldisplay of the martial arts. Two evenings atInternational House. Saturday at 7:00 9:30and 11:45. Thursday at 7:15 and9:45.— Karen Heller 3T(to<1<nfWater Music at MOSIHandel's complete Water Music, per¬formed on the Shores of the South TerraceLagoon at the Musuem of Science & In¬dustry, is a sure sign that summer is here inChicago.Since the inception of the LakesidePromenade Concerts by the Chicago ParkDistrict ten years ago, the annual renditionof Handel's outdoor favorite has been apopular feature of the programming thathas attracted thousands of listeners fromthe neighboring Hyde Park area as well asfrom all parts of the city, the country andfrom abroad. This year's performance at3:30 on May 30, Sunday afternoon is adV mission-free, as in the past, and will bepreceded by four brief pieces of Music fromthe American Revolution Washington'sMarch, Duport's Menuet, BrandywineQuickstep and A Toast to Washington as atribute to the Bicentennial. There is ampleseating - chairs for those who wish them andunlimited seating in the surrounding grassareas, one of the most picturesque locationsfor concerts anywhere. Dieter Kober, whohas also recorded the Water Music with theChicago Chamber Orchestra, will conduct.In case of inclement weather, the concertwill be held in the air-conditionedauditorium.Jrtc/l RED SEALLEVINE - MAHLERSYMPHONY Na4nGCHICAGO SYMPHONY OeCHFSTTr.JUDITH BLEGEN. ..... nc/l 7V\OZ7IRTREDSEALP12NO CONCERTOS*J(J14INf HJT * 44V 'ijf> IN B HIT K45CPCTCR S6RKINENGLISH CH4MBER ORCHESTRAJIEXZNOER SCHNEIDER . EMANUEL AX/ N. Xipaonato and Gionda Poxyw (W*ant• Op 77Nocvw n ft Op 62 Mo I * Vfwio + L Oo V*ftotorar'ontan* Op 61SEAL « Tashi plays MessiaenQuartet (or the End of TimeP*l*f S»r».n mrm F,,a Sh*"»Piano CelloIda Kavatian Richard Stottzma*VmM S Ci»r.n*t♦ RCJI RED SEALSCHUBERTQcimtet m C Oc 163wsmamaLeonara RoseRIO1 k> H* ST S.ALute C oncer 10Double luteConceDoubte t jteConcer.ate Concerto SPIN-IT RECORDSPresents a storewide sale. Prices arereduced on our entire stock.Featured is the Young Sound of RCA Red Seal and the com¬plete RCA catalog.Example of Sale Prices:>798 List Price $479 Sate PriceS6" List Price $419 Pr|coS398 List Price $239 Sale PriceAll other prices similarly reduced.Sale extends May 28 - June 31444 E. 57th St.MU 4-1505Store Hours: Monday - Saturday 10:30 • 7:30Sunday 12:00 5:30SHAPIROS ARE DUEWednesday, June 2Ida Noyes Hall - Room 209 • 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.The Chicago Maroon-Friday, May 28, 1976-Poge 9 Journal-INTERNATIONAL HOUSFILM SOCIETHE SUMY«TrmTmTTmTmTrnTiTiTmTvmT^TnrnTmrr> Hrrm vrrr¥yriimnnnr oThu. June 24 A Clock*Sat. & Thu. June 26 & July 1 Monty PythonLa CSat. & Thu. July 10& 15 Day ofFri. & Thu. July 16& 22 Stavisky-ThSat. & Thu. July 24 & 29 h’a!Fri. & Thu. July 30 & Aug. 5 The FourSat. & Thu. Aug. 7 & 12 GonewiFri. & Thu. Aug. 13 & 19 The WindFri. Aug. 21 What'A.J* UUtUAIAUlU mu AilAUiAlUUUUUUUU * MJLMJLM MJUUUULM, a* * 9 s ^gJUJUti ftJJUUAJUUAll pictures are screened in the InterUniversity of Chicago, and are open toberships, costing $1.50, are availablehis/her first movie for free. All other r753-2270.— - ***-•<. * a ^ - J^lPWBPPage 10-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, May 28, 1976>E TALKING PICTURESETY PRESENTS:MER OF 76rgiroTSTyyryyaryy'a g a a >‘VYirrgTnrTTirrTTTyYTT~fcT'<ra'8TS'~ginrrY~<nrtre a 9g i a graTTTYYTTyTy a a a T^yfranra tttttttIq(kwork Orange 8:00 & 10:30 PMHn and the Holy Grail 8:00 & 10:15 PM lChienne 8:00& 10:15 PM1 for Night 8:00 & 10:15 PMjf the Locust 7:30 & 10:30 PMrhe Fireman's Ball 8:00 PMashville 7:30 & 10:30 PMurMusketeers 8:00& 10:15PMwith the Wind 8:00 PM jid and the Lion 8:00 & 10:15 PM !it's Up Doc? 8:00 & 10:15 PMmu fifi.fl.fJLU ILS^SLJlJLSLSLSISJlSUULS^^ternational House Auditorium, 1414 E. 59th St.,to Film Society members only. Film Society mem-jle at the door and entitle the member to view?r movies are $1.50. For further information, call»«•.-'"W*.... > •’■sThe Chicago Maroon-Friday, May 28, 1976*11r•TheGreyCity Moonchildren:Donald Brearly, Richard Gish, and Suzanne Quinlin in Moonchildren. Culinary TheatreBy John LanahanI keep telling myself that I shouldn't likethe current production of Michael Weller'sMoonchildren at the Leo Lerner TheaterThe play is more a siutation in search of aplot than a play. It has no discernibledramatic structure, and seems a mish-mashof comedy, melodrama, and sentimentaltragedy, whatever that is. It is set in the six¬ties, and is thus another of those works of in¬stant nostalgia that contemplate the welts inflicted by that disillusioning andoutrageous decade, rather than deal withlife in the here and now.And yet, I like it. The show works. Thecurrent Apollo production of Moonchildrengives me the delightfuI opportunity to figureout why I like a work that I think I shouldnot. The play is a set of scripted improvisa-tional scenes, set in the context of eightuniversity students living in an apartment in the mid-sixties. Like most modern im-provisational works, the show is topicalenough to be clever and insightful, and thesituation is believable enough to let thesescenes hang together in some sort ofcoherent whole. The play is really a verytightly worked, neatly compressed sit com,set in the context of the sixties to add asuperficially serious note.But it is a good sit com, tightly directedand ably acted. The director, Robert Falls,achieved an ensemble effect in his companythat felt like eight people who lived together.The scenes were beautifully timed, and theshow had a flow and a rhythm that seemednatural, although on reflection the sceneswere too good and too well coordinated toapproximate reality. Mr. Falls has the abili¬ty to coordinate and focus his actors witheach scene, but I never felt this presence.He is incredibly unobtrusive, and the showjust seemed to happen, an effect that re¬quires both a great deal of talent and a greatdeal of effort to achieve.The cast was generally excellent.Although most of the characters were moreclever caricatures than people, the actorsknew which aspects to emphasize, andthereby let the audience complete forthemselves the unrevealed parts. JasonBrett, as Mike, a cocky and basically likeable smart ass, was excellent. Mr. Brett had apresence that commanded whenever he wason stage, and he manipulated and fooledthe audience even when they should haveknown better. Cynthia Sherman as Ruthwas also fine as his seemingly open and sin¬cerely sensitive girl friend, who had a nastyand ruthless streak of hypocrisy that was allthe more powerful by its apparent im¬possibility. Tom Mula as Norman, theoverly academic grad student in math whobecomes the overly academic "total-actionfreak" after reading Ho Chih Mihn for twodays, was also fine. Mr. Mula made Normanlive, although even he seemed to have diff-culty taking the part seriously a few times. Suzanne Quinlan was also good as Kathy,the seemingly slick bitch who was, in fact,far more sentitive and intelligent than sheseemed. Donald H. Brearly, as Bob Rettie,the sensitive and emotionally remote musicstudent, and the closest thing to the lead ofthe play, had a bemused detachment thatalternated with his numbing alienation.Steve Marmer, as his uncle Murray, had abland good nature and determined fortitudethat was also fine. Jan Hutchison as Shelley,had a sincere freakiness thaf somehowmanaged to be funny but escaped parody. Icould continue with these thumbnail raves,but won't. The cast is large, talented, and avery tight unit of players who have workedout and incorporated a number of bits intothe show, so that what might have seemedcute and overly contrived becomes a enter¬taining evening of theatre.The set is a flexible playing area, and ac¬curately represents a clumpy student apart¬ment. The lighting was unobtrusive andworked well within its own limited objec¬tives. The music, recorded and used bet¬ween scenes, captured the sixties with aselection of Beatles' and Beach Boys' songs.The costuming was occasionally evocativeof the sixties, especially in Kathy'scostumes; but often seemed in¬distinguishable from today's attire—buthave we changed all that much? Not if weinsist on living in the sixties.Brecht once referred with contempt towhat he termed "culinary theatre". If everythere was culinary theatre, Moonchildren isit. It's a sophisticated sit com, wonderfullydirected and well acted. It's a little bit slick,but not sterile. It may not be organic, andalthough a steady diet of this kind of showmight produce the aesthetic runs, a littletheatrical munchies never hurt anyone afterexams. Moonchildren is playing at the LeoLerner Theater, 4520 N. Beacon Street, inChicago, and closes June 6. The show playsFridays-Sundays. Call 271-2436 for ticket in¬formation.CHECK OUR NEWEVERYDAY LOWAAAGIC PRICESSIRLOINTIP 179STEAKS 1 u. SIRLTlKOI1 OINP KRAFTSLICED.<* QCtCHEESE • vDCALIFORNIABING JQ$CHERRIES ... 1ST49Lb. ... 29 Oz. CanDEL MONTE _Rag. 71*PEAR CG$HALVES £’«:STORE HOURSMonday-Wednesday 9 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.Thursday and FridaySaturdaySunday 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.9 a.m. to 7 p.m.9 a.m. to 3 p.m.HYDE PARK CO-OP SUPERMARKET1526 E. 55th STREET 667-1444Paga 12-Tha Chicago Maroon-Friday. Moy 28, 1976Playing Games With BrechtJoni Owens, Nancy Syburg, and Nancy S igworth in The Threepenny Opera.By John LanahanIn his early days as a dramaturge andcritic, Bertolt Brecht continually insistedthat theatre be tun. Untortunately, the vastmajority ot "Brechtian" productions ignorethat simple but vital mandate. Brecht was agenuis, but not, I think, tor the reasonsusually given. He was not an artisticrevolutionary, in that his concept and use ottheatre as an artistic medium was notrevolutionary. The whole epic/lyric theatredechotomy is no ditferent from Aristotle'sdidactic/mimetic distinction, and the Ver-fremdungseffekt is really nothing but anelaboration of the concerns of Ben John¬son's comedy of humors. Brecht, likeShakespeare, Moliere, and Shaw is a greatdramatist not because he created new rules,but that he knew how to manipulate, bend,and break the old ones and never lose hisaudience.When Brecht, however, is approached ona "Brechtian” level, and one attempts toperform his plays on the basis of hisdramatic nomenclature, the result isusually cold, academic, and repellent. This,unfortunately, is the principle alienating ef¬fect of the current production of TheThreepenny Opera at Wisdom Bridge. TheThreepenny Opera is certainly Brecht'smost popular and best-known work, but it isalso one of his most difficult. It is extremelyfragile, and unless it is directed with energyand precision, it fragments into an in¬teresting but adacemic reworking of its in¬teresting but ironic model, John Gay's TheBeggar's Opera. Threepenny Opera differsfrom The Beggar's Opera, in that the genialmisanthropy of Gay's 18th Cen. work is tran-sfromed into a snide fury against social in¬justice by Brecht. This fury, however, mustbe kept within the structure of the play,especially focused on the role of Ginny Jen¬ny, or else the work becomes facile,preachy, and either boring or intimidating.The director, David Beaird, played gameswith Brecht and lost. At the beginning of theshow, when Peachum describes his functionas coordinator and supervisor of all thebeggars in London, Mr. Beaird's rewritingand direction of Brecht's scr ipt approacheda genuinely creative use of bad taste. For afew minutes, I thought I might see Brecht asconceived by Artaud (a real artisticrevolutionary), and that I might be in for avery fascinating evening. Unfortunately,Mr. Beaird moved from making the audien¬ce squirm to making the actors preach, andthe thrill was gone. Mr. Beaird directed theplay as if the audience already knew theplot, and the show lost any kind of flow andfailed to harness the kinetic energy on stageinto anything other than physicalmovement. Mr. Beaird played off of, notwithin, Brecht's work, a dangerous thing todo with Threepenny, without any reasonother than to harp on the theme of social in¬justice. The "alienating effect," when it ismisconceived, has exactly the opposite ef¬fect that Brecht desired. Instead ofproviding a running commentary on theaudience and the play, if the production becomes preachy and intinidaTes theaudience, they view the play and thepreaching as part of one self-contained workof art, and neither enjoy the play nor listento the message. Besides, a brief stroll downWoodlawn from 45th to 51st Streets, or from55th to 64th Streets, will, I'm sure, say muchmore to a contemporary American audienceabout social injustice than would payingmoney to see a bunch of actor's make noiseon stage.The cast had difficulty getting a feelingfor the play, since the show was so fragmen ted and unfocused. Steve Fletcher playedMachealh as a cold, ruthless machine, andhis performance paralleled his charac¬terization. It was disturbing to see such atalented and skilled actor as Mr. Fletcherbecome a technically precise but totallybloodless caricature and automaton JohnGreen as J.J. Peachum, had a reasonablecruelty and cynicism that, at its best, addeda fascinating repulsion to the show; but hefailed to sustain this feeling in the laterscenes. Nancy Syburg as Polly Peachumwas genuinely likeable in the first half of theplay, but her sudden shift into cynical aban don near the end gutted her performance ofpower. Matthew D. Causey as Tiger Brownhad difficulty stepping into his role from themany other smaller ones he playedthroughout the show, and became more aline machine than a character. SydneySutkus as Mrs. Peachum was a caricature,and played the part as well as anyone canplay a piece of cardboard. Joni Owens asLucy Brown was stiff and had difficultyplaying off of anyone else, since they gaveher so little to work with.Nancy Sigworth as Ginny Jenny gave theonly memorable performance of the show.Ms. Sigworth was able to focus Brecht'sfury at injustice and cruelty within hercharacter, and made this emotion workwithin the structure of the play. Her GinnyJenny was both pitiable and loathsome, aninhuman creature made so by very humanreasons. Had everyone else in the castknown their dramatic function as well asMs. Sigworth, instead of confusing theircharacters with hers, this show might haveworked. John C. Silverman, as Hook FingerJacob and a number of other small parts,was simply good, and had an atmosphericpresence that illuminates even the smallestof roles.The music, played on the piano by MaryAnn Krupa, didn't have much to do with theshow. A great deal of Kurt Weill's score andsongs were cut, and what remained addedjust more scraps to this already jumbledproduction. I can appreciate an attempt byMr. Beaird to do a musical as a dramarather than an oratorio; but if he decided tokeep some music, he should have used it forsome other reason than to provide a backdrop of soundThe set, which is the same basic set usedin all Wisdom Bridge productions I haveseen, added more to the chaos of theshow than anything else. The lighting wasflat, unfocused, and inactive, when it mighthave been used to define areas on stage andthus help the audience through thisdramaturgical obstacle course, rather thanignore them.Before I get too stoney with this show, letme say that I too once put on a similarlyfragmented production when I attempted todirect The Rivals the summer before last.For the last few years I have wondered whatwent wrong with my show, and this produc¬tion showed me my mistakes and why myshow did not work I am glad that I saw thisproduction of Threepenny, but J cannotrecommend it as an enjoyable piece oftheatre. For those, however, who go to playsin order to teach themselves what to do andwhat not to do on stage, the Wisdom Bridgeis located at 1559 W. Howard Street inChicago, and The Threepenny Opera closesthere June 13. The show plays Thursdays-Sundays, and call 743-6442 for ticket in¬formation.CORRECTION: Those of you who readfar enough in my review of Camille, whichappeared on May 14, discovered, I am sure,that I confused La Boheme with LaTraviata. I apologize for the errorCourt TheatreOpens Four ProductionsFour plays will be in performance thisFriday, Saturday, and Sunday evenings atthe Court Studio Theatre. One, "Entertaining Mr. Sloane," by Joe Orton will beopening a two week run in the Reynolds ClubTheatre on the first floor.The Orton play is being directed by Geoffrey Shlaes, who, along with half his actorsand most of his technical staff, is formerlyof the Goodman theatre school. The play issomewhat reminiscent of the style of OscarWilde, although the director has requestedthat the plot be withheld.In the New Theatre, the program openswith "Not Enough Rope" written by Elaine May of Second City. Gail Wilson of PierceTower is directing. The show is a fast pacedone act which is a light and carefree treat¬ment ot loneliness, suicide, and death. Thesecond show is "Striptease," a one act bySlawomir Mrozek, a Polish absurdistplaywright. It is a rather eerie commentaryon the nature of political freedom. TimothyMinor is directing a cast of two U. of C.Students, both frequent actors at the CourtTheatre. Mark Gordon is directing the finalshow, "Love Scene," a mime and readingby Coover.Both Mr. Sloane and the experimentalweekend begin at 8:30 p.m. Ticket price is$1.50.The Chicago Maroon-Friday, May 28, 1976-Page 13MM TheGreyCityJournal-TheGreyCityJournal TH€ GR€V CAPCreativity Flourishes(or, Blackfriars UnfrockAcademic Indemnities)A common campus widsom has it that theBlackfriars, this campus' student theatregroup, has declined considerably since a1920's heyday. And it is quite true that theirreputation for excellent, original drama,and especially musicals, has been tarnishedsomewhat in recent years. Blackfriars, asmany other student organizations, has suf¬fered also from a lack of parficipation. Butwith their most recent production, Publishor Perish, the Blackfriars have fraveled along way toward re instating the idea oforiginal campus musicals and drama focredibility.The play itself, directed by Mary Kennedywas a clever, take-off on almosf everyaspect of campus life (only the SYL wasgenuinely insulted), and was beautifullypredictible in the way that only a corny love-morality-musical play can be. And itculminated with a depiction of what must beevery nascent academician's dream: win¬ning the Nobel prize and forcing a faculty,which has always misunderstood you, to"grant" you tenure. The line which drew thebiggest audience reaction was the one inwhich one secretary says, speaking of herheart's desire, to another secretary:"They'll have to give him tenure. After all,all of his students think he's the greatest."The book for the play was developed andauthorized by Steve Kemp and Mark John¬son the former finishing med student andthe latter a linguistics grad studier. It wasthe fruit of their desire to lampoon theUniversity and it s staidness and preten¬tiousness and, as a byproduct, to lampoonthe saccharine world depicted by typicalmusical comedies. This they accomplishedvery admirably. But the most outstanding aspect to theproduction was the music—written by Mr.Kemp, lyricized by Mr. Johnson, and performed by an excellent pit orchestra. Mr.Kemp's music was cliched very appropriately and very cleverly manipulatedto enhance the story line. And Mr. Johnson'slyrics were a very pleasant surprise—awhole quantum leap above, though drawinga lot from, the typical, formula, insulteverybody lyrics heard in many a highschool auditorium and on many a collegefrat night. The cast could not sing the songsvery well, nor was their acting all thatmemorable, but the leads Greqq Garbin,Meridith Stead, Aaron Filler (theubiquitous), Valerie Rauluk, and Ellen Mar¬tin all fit their roles well. And the chorus, thegreat unsung chorus, was excellent,especially in executing the sometimes-complicated choreography. The reason for this item is not so much todiscuss the play itself, nor fhe particulars ofthe people who put it on. But the Black¬friars, through the extraordinary creativetalents of a few individuals, have proven,first of all to themselves, that the idea oforiginal musical comedy remains viable,and secondly, to the campus, that creativestudent organizations can develop and suc¬ceed. It is only a matter of time, and of con¬tinued effort, before that message bears thefruits that are deserved.The End, For NowThis is the final issue of the Grey CityJournal for the present academic year. Theeditor wishes to express his appreciation tothe staff of capable and creative personswho, through unusual effort and concern,have made the Journal a reality—and acreditable aspect of University of Chicagollfe- —W.T. Hobson The JournaleditorPaul 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 is published each Fridayduring the regular academic year as part of theChicago Maroon Inguiries concerning subscriptionsand advertising should be addressed to BusinessManager, 1212 E SVth St., Chicago, III 60637 TheEditor invites commentsHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.Ill the wind, ill the time, uncertain the profit, certain the danger,Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late, and rotten the year;Evil the winter and bitter the sea and grey the sky, grey grey grey.-T.S. Eliot'SH10A 1310VAJH) •ALLTOGETHERAt One LocationTO SAVE YOU MOREXWA6EN* CHEVROLET VOLKSWAGEN .SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESFor ALL STUDENTSAND FACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Members ofthe University of Chicago you are en¬titled to special money savingsDiscounts on Volkswagen & ChevroletParts, accessories and any new orused Volkswagen or Chevrolet youbuy from Volkswagen South Shore orMerit Chevrolet Inc.1310HA3N) • N39VMSM10A 1310RA1H)SALES & SERVICEALL AT ONE 6REAT LOCATIONiirvy MERITCHEVROLETVOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE7234 Stony IslandMmm: 684-0400Opan Daily 9-9 PM. / Sot. 9-5 P.M.Parts Opon Saturday too til 12 rPACER . CHEVROLETPage 14-The Chicago Maroon-Friday May 28, 1976 DONATEYOURBLOODTODAY 9 AM 9 PM 7 Days A WaakHYDE PARK PIPE AND TOBACCO SHO£1552 E. 53rd - under 1C tracksAll students get 10% off^ask for "Big Jim''Pipe*Pipe Tobacco) Imported Cigarette*Cigar*TT71 \ GUITARS, BANJOS,J/ft V MANDOLINS,Tntf V~n RECORDERS.Shop Q\ VIOLINS, AUTO-HARPS ANDV HARMONICAS52to S Harper*irt Harper )NO 7-/040 ALSOBOOKS , INSTRUCTION AND REPAIRSWith This Ad OnlyUsed Desks ... *25 and upUsed Chairs *10 and upNew Chairs *25 and up"cash and carry".EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.BRAND8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30-3:00RE 4-2111 RIP-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:684-5166SPORTSNCAA NationalsContinue At StaggTony Hale of Fisk Univer¬sity met all expectations inwinning the NCAADecathalon Championshipsat Stagg Field Wednesday.What was astounding wasthe force with which he shat¬tered all the records for thegruelling event.Hale’s score of 7537 (out ofa possible 10,000) broke theDivision III mark by 400points and was some 500points better than his ownprevious best. regular high jump com¬petition today.Third was Robert Bakerfrom Principia with 6883.With the Decathalon nowover, the real madnessbegins. Six-hundred athleteswill be spending the next twodays swarming over the lessthan spacious facilities atStagg Field, possibly won¬dering exactly what theNCAA has against the smallcollege Division. However, in the 400 and Mile Relays.To be sure, many of thosetop people are the same per¬son. Joe Franklin was thewinner in the sprints lastyear and has turned in thetop qualifying times in the100 and 200. He is also ex¬pected to participate in the400 and mile relay teams,and could well be the meetsonly four way winner.The meet should also bemarked by some toughAlthough the javelin wasthe only event he wonoutright, he was consistentenough to take seconds injust about everything else,including the pole vault,discus, 110 high hurdles, shotput, and Long Jump. He tookthirds in the 400 and the HighJump.Second in the competitionwas Greg Gorsych of nearbyWheaton College, who puttogether 7067 points. Many ofthese were gained on win inthe High Jump at a heightthat could win him the those who do their talking onthe track should have nocomplaints about the qualityof Stagg’s tartan oval.Southern University ofNew Orleans is the out andout favorite coming into thismeet. They won last yeargoing away and they are notany slower. Their strength isalmost solely in the sprintsbut it is overwhelming - 3 outof the top 5 in the 100, 2 out ofthe top 3 in the 200, 2 out ofthe top 7 in the 400, one topcontender in the 800, andthey turned in the best times rivalries. Jim Howard ofWestmont and GeorgeDupuis are ranked 1-3 in thediscus and 2-1 in the shot.They will be looking foreach other in the finals Oi theweight events. Another goodmatch should be Ed Moses ofMorehouse and AuberyWilson of Fisk in the 400 in¬termediate hurdles, and theOpen 400.The meet will be going ontoday and Saturday, withfinals in most of the eventstomorrow. Admission for theentire day is $1.00. FRIDAY, MAY 28, 19761:00 p.m. Hammer Throw-Trials & Finals2:00 p.m. Triple Jump-Trials& Finals3:00 p.m. Shot Put-Trials &Finals3:00 p.m. High Jump-Finals4:00 p.m. 440 Relay-Semifinals4:30 p.m. Pole Vault-Qualifying4:30 p.m. Discus Throw-Qualifying4:30 p.m. 110 Meter HurdlesSemifinals4:45 p.m. 400 Meter- Semifinals5:00 p.m. 100 Meter-Semifinals5:15 p.m. 800 Meter-Semifinals5:30 p.m. 110 Meter Hurdles-Finals5:45p.m. 100 Meter-Finals6:00 p.m. 400 Meter Hurdles-Semifinals6:15 p.m. 10,000 Meter-Finals6:55 p.m. Mile Relay-SemifinalsSATURDAY, MAY 29,197611:30 a m. Javelin-Trials &Finals11:30 a.m. Long Jump-Trials & Finals1:30p.m. Pole Vault-Finals1:30 p.m. Discus-Trials &Finals1:30 p.m. 3000 MeterSteeplechase-Finals1:45 p.m. 440 Relay-Finals2:00p.m. 1500 Meter-Finals2:15 p.m. 200 Meter-Semifinals2:30 p.m. 400 Meter Hurdles-Finals2:45 p m. 400 Meter-Finals3:00 p. m. 800 Meter-Finals3:15 p.m. 200 Meter-Finals3:30 p. m. 5000 Meter-Finals3:50p.m. Mile Relay-FinalsIntramurals Come To End:Frogs, Food WinnersThe softball playoffs endedthis week with the crowningof the new All-UniversityChampions Frogs ComeHarder with the Penguinstaking the Co-ed Title, andthe perennial power house'sSee Your Food winning theRecreational League.The undergraduate cham¬pionship game betweenShorey and Frogs Come Har¬der was a closely fought bat¬tle that showed that good hit¬ting and fielding. Eventhough missing left fielderLee Hess, the Frogs won 9-6.the big moment coming inthe 7th when MikeMastricola insured victorywith a booming 2 run blastinto deep center.In the graduate cham¬pionship game Too. Too, Toototally demolished a haplessand inexperiencedHublesburg Hotel team Too,Too, Too led by the sparklingplay of Rich Sterner, showeda tremendous defense andhitting prowess whichreminded many of the SeeYour Food teams of the past.The All University Cham¬pionship Game was a disap¬pointment. as Frogs Come Harder won on a forfeit overToo. Too. Too. because of thefact that most of ITT'splayers were in a conferenceat San Francisco.In the recreational leagueSee Your Food reignedchampions again. They quitesoundly defeated theMegabytes led by Arlin Lar¬son.In the Co-ed championshipgame, Salisbury, led by thesparkling all around play ofMike Mordan.werebeaten bya strong Penguin AG team21-12. Although the gamewas marked by good hittingon both sides the big factorwas the pitching asSalisbury walked a tremen¬dous amount of ball playersThis week has seen thefinal spate of intramural ac¬tion of the academic year. Intable tennis Divisionalchamp Hodges Beat un¬dergrad winner Frier for thetop crown. In doubles hand¬ball, all-star Lee Hess healedhis self in time to join In¬dependent partner MartySelzerix in beating the un¬dergrad residence team ofFrankl/Mayers for the over¬ all title In singles hor¬seshoes Mike Ligner beatNayden for the undergradtitle but will have to face Ed-brooke. This is no small taskas Edbrooke is so strong thathe has been known to throwhorseshoes that still had thehorse attached. In the Co-edthrowing, undergrad titlistsDagen/Paxman beatdivisional winners Jar-min/Edbrooke for the All-Uhonors.In doubles tennis un¬dergrad residence champsLeighton/Delahorne face in¬dependent forfeit winnersEder/Glaser for the honor oflosing to divisional kingsKim Williams and TerryLichtor They were the firsttwo singles on the Chicagovarsity last year and theywill be very, very hard tobeat.The intramural point win¬ners have also been an¬nounced. Henderson won inthe men’s scoring with 2605points while Shorey took theCo-ed with 1159 points, bothtitle subject to change pen¬ding the outcome of hormoneexaminationsGoodbye, Wally! The Maroon Salutes Walter L. Hass,Retiring After 20 Years as Coach and Athletic DirectorThe Chicago Moroon-Friday, May 28, 1976-Page 15Fellows Cite Danger To College’s ReputationFellows From 1simple matter of their titleand what it represents is asore point with some ofthem.One idea that several Har¬per Fellows seem to share isthat they are being exploitedby the University as a“cheap labor force,” andthat in the long run theUniversity will sufferbecause of it.“It’s dangerous,” said oneHarper Fellow. “It was astop-gap measure allowingthe University to keep onclaiming it never had gradstudents teaching un¬dergraduates. As long asthat was important theyneeded to hire a lot of laborcheap. Imagine doing it forabout ten years. It seems tome that there’s a danger ofthe teaching reputation slip¬ping.”“You can’t look a gift hor¬se in the mouth,” anotherHarper Fellow said. “But Ido think the whole idea of theHarper Fellows may be anunfortunate one. The wholeidea of getting more laborfor less money — there’s atendency to proletariatethe faculty, and it could havesome extremely deleteriouseffects in the long run. ’ ’By pumping theHumanities and SocialSciences common cores upwith Harper Fellows in placeof junior faculty, one HarperFellow suggested, theUniversity undercuts thejunior faculty’s influence inthe College by replacingthem with Harper Fellowswho have little influence atall. “This trend is extremely unfortunate,” he said.“Senior faculty membersare not nearly as inventiveas junior faculty, and thepeople who are HarperFellows for three years havefar less motivation to planmajor research. In the longrun the University will suf¬fer.”Mr. Veeder disagreed withthis assessment. “It’s not acattle-car thing,” he said.“I’m not sure the reputationof the University is being af¬fected one way or the other.What has been done hasassured the kind of un¬dergraduate teaching theUniversity wanted to have.It’s obviously not a good ideato have a permanent groupof two levels of peopleteaching the same course.But what are the alter¬natives given the direeconomic situation thatthere is?”Despite the imperativenature of its creation, theHarper Fellowship programis viewed by those in chargeof it as a positive ex¬periment. Dean of theCollege Charles Oxnardcalled it a case “where wetake adversity and use it tocreate something good.” TheHarper Fellows are, ideally,free of the responsibilitieswhich bind regular facultymembers, and can devotetheir full time to teachingand scholarship. It washoped that their arrivalwould inject new ideas andnew spirit into the commoncore.But in a sense the HarperFellows represent a greatdrift away from the idea of aMEMBERSOf TheSTUDENT SCHOOL'SCOMMITTEEPlease stop by the Admission'sOffice in order to leave yoursummer addressROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and Woodlawn AvenueSunday • May 30 • 11:00 A.M.E. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the Chapel"THE HEALING OF THE NATIONS”Sunday Seminar — Chapel Undercroft9:45 to 10:50 A.M.E. Spencer Parsons conducts a BibleReading Seminar.Page 16-The Chicago Mproon-Friday, May 28, 1976 common education as per¬ceived by Robert Hutchins.Staying with the Universityfor just a few years, it ischarged that they haveneither the time nor the in¬centive to develop anycohesive attitudes aboutwhat the common coreshould be. And so the corecould lose its commonness.In recent years tenure hasbeen granted in the Collegeonly alongside tenure in thegraduate divisions. “TheUniversity used to have anotion of a College faculty,”mused one Harper Fellow.“There was a time whentenure in the College waswhat one wanted most. Overthe years that notion seemsto have disappeared.”“Hutchins’ system workedso badly that it is the reasonwe have the system we havenow,” said Dean Oxnard.“Once the enthusiasm ofHutchins died away, therewas a period when.... the ideaof the College faculty assecond-class citizens wasnever expressed, but thatidea was not allowed todevelop. The notion of aWriting Wrongly?Graduate student withtraining in Englishlanguage and literaturewill proofread yourpapers (essays, theses,or whatever) andsuggest improvementsin grammar and style.DAVID 26B-OV35 College faculty hasn’t disap¬peared. Its definition haschanged. We are movingtoward a College that is in-tercolated in the Univer¬sity.”No one seems to knowwhat role the HarperTUNE INThe Latest Musicand NewsFROM ISRAEL!?nrx m1AIFOH EILAT?* 'f• J!•I * XL j\\THE YOUNG SOUNDOF ISRAELSTARTING WED.,JUNE2, 7-8P.M.NEWWXFM 106 FMIt's Something You'veNever Heard Before!(A Smulson Production)"MEET THE AUTHORS"GREGORY H. HEMINGWAY, author ofPAPA: A PERSONAL MEMOIR(on Ernest Hemingway)ANDMICHAEL BRAUDE, author ofTHE FIRST 30 ODD YEARSat ONE ILLINOIS CENTER(WACXER EAST OF MICHIGAN)THURSDAY, JUNE 3 5:30-7:00 P.M.Interviewer: Marvin Mirsky, Asst. Prof, of Humanities,University of ChicagoBooks for Sale Parking Fellows will play in thatCollege. But at present theUniversity is committed tothe program. When the current Harper Fellowsleave in two years, said BillVeeder, “I assume new oneswill be brought in...”mtmmcuii'LIVE EVTERTAINMEKT*C. BROVn UNDERGROUND‘SUPER SANDWICHESNightly: 7 PM.-4 AM.337-100626 WEST DIVISION BRANOEIS USEDBOOK SALE200,000 books: June 5-13Edens Plaza, Wilmette, III.-Opening Night $2.50: June5, 6-10 P.M. Juna 6-11 FREE:10-10, close June 11,5 P.M.-Bargain Weekend, FREE:Sat. June 12, 6-10 P.M.; Sun.June 13, 10-10.For Warm Days Ahead:Earth'Shoes.Style 900$29.50Style 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.{earthIshoeCHICAGO/LINCOLN PARK: 2112 N. Clark St.Free parking at 203G N. Clark St. (31 2) 528 8510.CHICAGO/HYDE PARK: 5210 S. Harper Ct.MOff street parking in city lot. (312) 3634088.Open 7 days. Matter Charge accepted. Gift Certificates available.Please present Jhis advertisement for a free tin of Tana LeatherProtector &Conditioner with purchase of any style Eartf^ shoes.How to geta paid vacation betweenschool and career:Call Task Force.It’s a way to pay the bills. But, more than that, working as a ‘ temp”givesyou achancetoget practical insights into a variety of businessandprofessional careers. From the inside. We furnish temporaryand vacation help to a variety of companies all around theworld . Even if you plan to move around for a while, talk tous. We've got offices all around, too. id«*kiorct*a division ofadia services, meGet into temporary work. Temporarily.467-9191An Equal Opportunity EmployerTHE STUDENT-FACULTY COMMITTEEfor the Physical Sciences DivisionpresentsThe Filth Lecture In the Series* * *SCIENCE AND SCIENTISTS IN INDUSTRYDr. Phillip WhiteAssistant Administrator for Fossil EnergyEnergy Research & Development AdministrationTHE CHALLENGE OF THE ENERGY PROBLEMFRIDAY, MAY 28Lecture: 2:00 - 3:00 p m in KENT 103Reception: 3:00 • 4:00 p m in KENT 109Reception replete withFree Beer A PretzelsAll students, faculty and staff are cordially invited.THE COLLEGIUM MUSICUMpresentsCONCERTS OF MUSICFROMFIVE CENTURIESFriday A Saturday May 28-29A Concert in Honor ofProfessor Edward E. LowinskyJoaquinMontonRoseGesualdoand othersAll concert will be inBOND CHAPELand will commence at 8*° p.m.FREE1i*2°° 64 Oz. Pitcher *(WITH COUPON) JNO LIMIT jAlso ■Super Sunday iBrunch **3*° |CAFE ENRICO J1411 E 53rd tHY 3-5300JHAVMOT iitni ?« mwmwTHv*SD*Y JUNE 3, lO'OO PM ONTU.DAWN - ALL NIGHT TORAH STUDYSESSIONS B>W.e ^midra&h.thlpioo ,r»mTiasH ,mt.SERVICES WILL BE HaD TUNES and HBEERBEERBEER letters from 5For me, the most glaringexample of this is theStudent Gynecology Clinic.Besides the fact that theClinic doesn’t have enoughtime to schedule one ten-minute appointment a yearfor each female student, cer¬tainly basic health care foranyone, or that the directorof Student Health thinks it isreasonable to expect at leasta five-week wait to see a doc¬tor about anything, therealso exists a cleardiscrimination problem.Males with infections willget treated at least the sameday at Student Health.Females with infectionsmust go to Student Gyne,and are expected to complywith the five-week or longerwaiting period to see a doc¬tor, or, to me even worse, ex¬pected to be obnoxious andextremely persistent in theirThere is anAlternativeHelp put theSocialist Partyon the Ballotby petition.Earn IIP a name.Call 488-5257or writeISP 1819 Maple,Northbrook, III. 60062WOULD YOU LIKETO TAKE ACRUISEFOR 7 DAYS, fDEPARTINO ■AUG. 21PRICES START AT$605,INCLUDINGR/T AIR FARE, MEALS& ACCOM. ABOARDS/S AMERIKANISCALLSANDY ATMIDWAYTRAVEL753-2301A $100 DEPOSIT WILLBE DUE IMMEDIATELYPORTS OF CALL:CaracasGrenadaGuadeloupeSt. ThomasSan JuanCuracao demand for personalemergency treatment toachieve an appointmentwithin a week. As a hint,rumor has it that the most ef¬ficient way to get emergencycare is to see Ivy An-namunthodo in StudentHealth personally.Not only are long-term in¬fections umpleasant, I don’tsee how they can bemedically justified. I alsodon’t see how the presentfacilities at this universityfor women can be consideredadequate health care. Ofcourse, excuses will befound, and some of them areeven plausible, but this doesnot affect either the healthcare or the contradiction inthe university’s program. Ifthey are unable or unwillingto provide this service,perhaps they should say so.And this perhapshighlights the most im¬portant contradiction of allin this university, how acollection of the best andbrightest students of theworld can also be soapathetic to their own socialand physical environment.R. Elizabeth BairdFormosan, Not ChineseEditor:After reading the May 21starticles and the May 25 let¬ters in Maroon concerningthe KMT spies on this cam¬pus, we wish to clarify threepoints for American readers. By recognizing the need ofhaving an independent clubseparated from the ChineseStudent Association and thusminimizing the chance ofbeing spied upon by KMT orChinese communist agents,Formosan students formedthe Formosan Club of UC (aregistered studentorganization on the campus)six years ago.Most of the current mem¬bers of the “FormosanClub” were born in Taiwanand have parents and/orrelatives still living inTaiwan. Most members ofthe ‘‘Chinese StudentAssociation” are Chinesefrom Hong-Kong, Americanborn Chinese, or studentswhose parents escaped frommainland China in 1949.We hope the universityauthority can start to in¬vestigate the problem andexpel those who are hereprimarily as the agents orspies of foreign governmentsto supress the freedom ofTaiwanese students on thiscampus.A Group of NativeTaiwanesein theUC Formosan Club.Editor:Taiwan Reply Four in thelast issue of the Maroon is anexcellent demonstration ofwhite terrorism as practicedOAK FURNITURE-ANTIQUESRCFINISHIO + AS IS1649 E. 55th647-43401-6:00 PMTUES.-S AT. DesksTobiasChairsDrossorsBookcasesMuchMoraa Also DoRefinishlngFLEA rMKETSaturday, May 29 10 amIda Noyes HallStudents: If you havo Items to sell,call 753-3593 to reserve space. in its more subtle form onthis campus.The main thrust of that let¬ter is to label any attempt toexpose political surveillance -and harassment as Com¬munist or Maoist plots. Ms.Jan Rhodes had alreadyreported in her article that,“The Taiwan students whofee! victimized don’t claim tobe of a single persuasion;they only claim that theirfreedoms are being in¬fringed upon by the presentgovernment.”It is a common KMT prac¬tice to label any dissentingvoice, no matter what itscontents are as-“Maoist/Communist” or“Bandit”. Such categoriesare then either shot or im¬prisoned in Taiwan. This isthe meaning of ‘‘whiteterrorism.” The veryexistence of surveillancereport forms is revealing initself.By publicly indicating thatthe letter was written by aKMT member on campus, itachieves the effect of ser¬ving as a warning to anydissenter and to those whohave dared to speak outagainst political sur¬veillance and harassment.One only has to take noteof the number of studentsthat welcomed Ms. Rhodesarticle in the letter denotedTaiwan Reply Two, to ap¬preciate what the majorityof the students think of thisissue.Students from Taiwan(—\be thejudge...The Court Housepleads guilty toserving tasty lunches,delectable dinners,righteous drinks, anda bountiful Sundaybrunch...Try usTHECOURTHOUSERESTAURANT5211 South Harper 667-4008The Chlcogo Moroon-Friday, May 28, 1976-Pogc 17=CLASS!FIEDADS= vFOLKDANCEcontinues with U of C Folkdancers,through Mon Jun 7 in Ida Noyes 7:30Fri & 8 pm Mon beginning level andSun general level; 50 cents. Starting21 June each Mon & Fri 8pm in IdaNoyes parking lot, or Ida Noyes westporch, if rain. Except no dancing May3LCOFFEEHOUSEFresh ground coffees, teas anddelicious cookies and cakes—Tues.thru Fri. 8:30-midnite Gargoyle Cotfeehouse. 57th & University-Thurs.music. The Medici Delivers from 10 pmweekdays, 5-11 Saturday, 667 7394Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourself.CONVOCATIONTICKETSNeed a ticket for graduation! 3:00 pmconvocation June 11. Will pay almostanything. Call 241-6952or 493 3584 afterMay 30 Keep trying if no answer atfirst.SS for tickets 6/11 3pm: call Roger at241-6561 or 324 5181.WILL PAY $5 For Each ConvocationTicket, June 11, 2PM Dave 4935536CAMPING EQUIPRental tents, sleeping bags, stoves,lanterns, pads Hickory 324 1499.WOMENS ASSER¬TIONSix week group Sunday evenings June6-July 18 7-9:30 p.m. Fee 50 00Materials included. For informationcall Jill Carpenter or MargaretWerner at Chicago Counselling Center684 1800SAT/ GRE/ LSATMATH REVIEW COURSE this summer. Call 643 7847 or 241 7283 for info:T.M. LECTURESWednesdaysatl2:30and7:30pm, Sun¬days at 3 pm, 1638 E 55th St. All arewelcome (phone: 467-5570.)NORTH CAROLINAAnyone interested in sharing rentedvan to eastern North Carolina orsomewhere on the way at end of thequarter? Lenny, 667-7279.PARTY!!BOOGIE AT PS I U to the music ofSahara. Saturday, May 29, at 5639 S.University. Free admission w/UC ID. GAY LIBERATIONGAY MEN'S AND WOMEN'S COF¬FEEHOUSE, Saturday, June 5,8:00 12:00, at the Blue Gargoyle. Cometo our last Spring Fling!CHICAGOAUDIOWe're celebrating our first anniversary as the least expensive stereostore in the city. We still sell the bestequipment, shipped in factory sealedcartons, with full warranties and a 30day exchanged period. Ask for a quoteon any of our 100 plus lines Gage241 5752MAB POSITIONSApplications are being accepted forappointments to the proposed 76-77Major Activities Board. Bring to IdaNoyes rm 209 For info, call AaronFiller 3-3444 or 3-3593 WANTED: June 12 ConvocationTickets Please call 363 5447 even-ngs!!!CONVOCATION TICKETS WANTED.If you are graudating 6/11 (3pm) butnot using all your tickets, please call241 6098 WILLING TOPAY.ONE convocation ticket needed forcollege convocation. Please call TomBodenbetat288 9870.CONVOCATION TICKETS for Fri 6/11PM. Will pay R. Bernstein 33847,3243624PERSONALSCongratulations, UC volleyball club,on winning the Illinois Class A Cham¬pionshipWelcome back, Susan!VHtSAIU.ES9254 S. Oorch«tt#rWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGATTtACTIV! 1 V> AND2 Vi tOOM STUDIOSnMNtSMCO or UNFUNNISHKO$138.. $225‘ Short Term”Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities Included *At Campus Bus StopFA 4-0200 Mrs. Groak | HIRE-AN-ARTISTIllustrations, portraits, free lance artwork to your order. Call Noel Price947-0698 eveningsBOOKS BOUGHTBooks bought & sold everyday, everynight9-11, Powells 1501 E . 75th.LITERARY GUIDANCEBy Piblisliing AuthorPersanl attaatioa—NOT a Mot SceneI’ll help m THESIS. ARTICLES STORIESWhere »d How to SELLUolHhited CriticismFRANK MARKS—MU 4-3124 Alligator Bait. Getcha hands offa mywoman and I'll cuttho throat. SomeUgly Child.FIJI'S ON CAMPUS: Phi GammaDelta's Chi Upsilon Chapter invitesyou to its Norris Pig Dinner on Satur¬day June 5, 1976 Call 955 9643 fordetails.Bear is enthusiastic. On to $.P, + P!EUROPE1/2 fare_ .off ee 800-325-4867@ Uiv.Travel Charters Want student discounts on museums,plays, transportation on your tripoverseas? Get Int'l student ID, Stu¬dent Activities, Ida Noyes 209,753 3591.Smash the International SPAM cartel.Hi yourself, Ex Breezer Biker! You'reOK guy. Want a ride? The OwnerWRITERS' WORKSHOP (PL2 8377)Pregnant? Need help? Call 233 030510AM 1PMM For 7-9 PMM&ThPREGNANCY TESTS: 10 a m., 2p.m.Saturdays Southside Women's HealthServices. Augustana Church, 5500 S.Woodlawn Bring 1st morning urninesample. $1.50 donationSUBLETSublet sunny spacious 2'/jrm apt. 5704Harper. June 15-Sept 15. 955-2861.Large and charming apt for summersublet, room for four but rentnegotiable. 53 & Dorchester, securebldg, minibus, near shops. Call241 5096, 493-4623.Summer sublet will sub part or all of 3bedroom apt to 1,2,3 people 3 blocksfrom library 241 69421 br turn to sublet in Hyde Park in Ju¬ly, Aug Call nights 947-0976Summer Sublet-Airconditioned "LittlePierce," 57th 8. Dorchester Call Bruno753-2249, Rm 2210SUBLET Lvgrm, bdrm, bath, kit.Water & Gas. 24hr security, A/C. 5thfir w/view. $245/mo. 16 Jun-31 Aug.Avlb for lease Sept l. Call 324 7080after 658 & Kenwood area, Ig. apt. w/porch,safe quiet, avail, summer, possible fallopt female pref, call 241-7228 eves1 Bedroom-3 Room Apt for Single $310Month Incl Util Rich 363-9289Two rooms for summer sublet inspacious apr near campus $75 montheach $130 together 752 2520FLIGHT TRAININGFAA - WRITTEN - GUARANTEEDLearn to Fly on Your Spare TimeCALL 284-0820 Nicely turn 1-br sublet avail 6/8 Securebldg-5316 Dorch. Huge livngrm w/pictwindows. Din rm adjns kitch Big brdbl bed. $165/mo inc all. Pert for coupie. Call Jim 3 8699 or 3-00571 bdrm Univ Apts 1401 E 55th. Aircond, 24 hr security, W blk from coopshping entr. Avail 6/12 to 9/9 $235 Call324 8891 or 3742272 (3) Near publictransportationSummer room in sunny convenientapartment, 57th & Kimbark. June 15-Oct. 1. $75-t-utiI. Nonsmoker. Call684 5498 or 753 3593.SUBLET an elegant highrise cornerapt. E Hyde Park sum 76 to fall 77 2bedrooms, furnishes, lake-city viewair-cond 752 2086.Summer sublet 6 room +bath condosuitable for 2 or 3 5716 S Kenwood forinformation call 955-17961 BR furnished apt. 53rd 8, KenwoodPvt. sunporch, secure. Available6/1-9/15. $175/mo. + util. Dave 324 9130or Sam 288 5166, aft. 7pm.One bedroom of a two bedroom apt.only two blocks from Regenstein fullyfurnished June 12 to Sept 24 Call493-5473 day or night (willing to tradeapt. in NYC)Sublet June-Sept 2 bedrm apt possiblefall option 363 7615eves4 room apart. Newly renovated. 5125 S.University $175 call Jon 753 3773.Large 6 room apartment 6/15-9/15 2bdrm 2 baths near Lake & museum240/month call 955-1621.OWNROOM in Beautiful/Sunny/Spacious? Sec 3 Bdrm Apt/'withPlants Wood Floors. LARGERm/DRm/Kn/Nicety Furn/High CeilEtc/ 8. 2 Grad Stdnts who like to shareGood Times/Cooking/Music As WellAs Quiet & Reading. Privacy whenwanted Too exent Loc. NEAR Campus, Bus, Parks + Shops At 53 &Drchstr/From 6/15-10/1 Maybe AutQtr also $88/mo CALL Eves/241 6997Harper Square 22nd Floor Air Condtgon campus bus routes $80/month924 6340Beautiful 3 bedroom apt. Behind Coop$75 each. Call Harry Segall at 3 2261eves leave message.Summer sublet: two bedrms, furnished Lake view. Dorchester & E.Hyde Park. $200/mo. incl. utilitiesparking 493-4302 Spacious So. Shore apt. 3 bdrms, kitchdin, 2 baths, air cond. Near lake, ctryclub, 1C, bus 6/1-9/17 $105/mo. inclutil. Rooms avail indiv Dan 752 4645.Need female for own room in 3 bdrmapt $77/mon. On UC bus route 241-7256Avail immed.LOOKING FORHOUSING?If so, why not make it easy on yourselfand get a weekly Student GovernmentHousing list. For more info., call753-3273 or visit our office; 218 IdaNoyes.SPACESummer Housing available at Psi U.Half block from Regen at 5639 S.University includes cookingfacilities/utilities 753 2058 or 288-9870Rogers Park Sublet for 1 in 3 Bdrm AptFurn own Bath 80/mo. 338-0051Summer sblt. 1 blk. from RegensteinFairly cheap. Own room w/possiblefall option Quiet person desired324-30603-rm, furn apt; 1 person. 5405 S.Woodlawn. 643 2760 or 667-5746, MrsGreen3 bdrm apt available Sept 15. 7th fl„new bldg at 48th and Lake Pk. Large,lots of lights, view of Loop and lake.$357. 924 2744, PM best.6 rm house/campus. July & Aug cpIpref $250/mo. + Util. 947-0358 evesCouple wanted, summer sublet, 2bdrm apt, 50th & Cornell, fall option266-2405 days, 536 3248 or 866 7820 evening or weekend; $250SOUTH SHORE 5 deluxe rooms, 2baths newest luxury air cond. 6 apt.bldg. Adults only. Must see to appredate Now, July, Sept. $325 up.684 5544 .EXCEPTIONAL attractive 8. spaciousbedroom with separate walnut/study,kitchen 8, Idry priv. in classic S. Shorebldg near lake, park, univ & CTA bus,A/c, cptd 8. all utilities, neat & quietonly. June 1, 221 66063 bedroom apart available 5218 S.Woodlawn $210-t- utilities. Call Steve orKen 288 8734Roomates wanted to share rent $58and utilities of six room apartment at54th and Woodlawn. Contact David at324 3863 Beginning about June 15MAROON CLASSIFIED/ *DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: UC PEOPLE50e per line40* per line to repeat NON-UC PEOPLE75c per line60c 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 (15 spaces) costs $1.00 (75* to repeat) per line.HEADING.»Grad Stdt trnshd hsing avail sum qtrat Chicago Theol Sem adjacent UCcampus. Married stdnt apts avail entire sum qtr $.471; sngle dorm rms6/19-7/15. $27 pr wk. CTS Stdnt ServOtt 5757 S Univ 752 5757 x43. Apl alsoaccptd for 76 66 ac yr.3'/2rm Apt. $165. Near the court. 6/76324-0248 aft. 5.Modern apt 90/mo fem nonsmokersummer 8. next yr w/3 others 955-6723Male roommate wanted starting fallfor modern 3 bedroom apt. $70/monthcall Art or John at 548 2426HYDE Pk nr. U of C. 1, 2Vi rm. apts.Well kept bldg. Adults. Nr. 1C, bus,park, lake. Reas. BU8-0718PRIVATE 8. PLEASANT 1 bdrm apt.Separate liv. rm., compact kitch. Inoutstanding bldg of classic architecture on S. Shore dr near beach, 1C,Univ & CTA bus. Ideal for stud, prof orretiree. Ldry, S. Shore July 1, $125221 6606 AM best.Luxury lakeview apt for sub or newlease, 3 bdrm, huge liv/din rm, centair, 2 baths, parq fl, dishw, 24 hr drm,free pkg lot, valet shop, laundry, call791-1151.Apartment to share room available inapartment at 54th and Woodlawn. Call955 2568So. Shore Coach House, 4 rm, garage.Near lake, 1C, UC bus All student bldg$180. 799 6641.SPACE WANTEDTwo UC undergrads wish to rent onebedroom apt in Parkshore Apts, 1765E. 55th St. Beginning Autumn Qtr. Wewill takeover your lease, or pay $25forinfo leading to switch from current tenant. Call Sander Davidson, 753-2261,rm 334, or leave message at switchboard.$50 finders' fee for your 4 BR APT.must become available Sept. 1 ContactRichard, 947 9373.Energetic physician (M) and writer(F) (couple age 26) semi-vegetarian,music politics oriented, looking for living space to share with others havingsimilar interests 328 5782.One responsible student seeks place tolive for Fall qtr only. Can be studio orone bdrm apt, or rm in larger apt orhouse. Call 324 7874 PROFESSORS, stud, seeks house torrent 76/77 year Steve 753 2233 <1122.SPACE FOR SALEFor sale spacious sunny 3 bdrm lakefront coop apt 5050 East End $185.00mo assesmt $291 incl taxes and all utilsquite secure building. Call 753 8389 or324-0461 pm only.PEOPLE WANTEDLearn how to earn money. My trainingmakes steady income possible. Easymethod starts you earning quickly.Phone 887 0918 after six p.m.CARPTR, ARCHIT, plbr, elect. Jim4777803Going abroad this summer? Be sureyou have your Int'l. student ID Student Activities, Ida Noyes 209,753 3591.Research Subjects Needed 21 45 yrsold with no personal or family historyof mental illness or alcoholism. Subjects will receive $100 for bloodsamples and skeletal muscle biopsy.Call Donna at Billings 947 6477 for info/interview.Ride needed to Charlottesville orWashington DC area June 3 Allisonand Sarach can help with driving andgas. Call FA4 6100 x 309,SUMM E R 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 2922The Student Advisory Committee ofthe Humanities Collegiate Division iscurrently seking student members forthe next academic year. If you are in¬terested in participating in the committee's activities (curricular review,teaching evaluation, etc.) please leaveyour name in Gates Blake 117 or call753 2698DRIVER wanted to WASHINGTOND C. we are moving by truck 8. needsomeone to drive std shift Pinto aboutJune 5 Call Rex at 548 6684PEOPLE FOR SALETyping 378-5774 Tutoring for French Reading ExamCall 536 6586Violin, piano lessons. Empathetic withkids. Amazing results! Call ThomasRobertson, 684 7438 evenings.AUTO RECONDITIONING American& Foreign auto body work. CHEAP436-7150 S. Racine.Learn Russian. Private lessons, highlyqualified and recommended nativeteacher Reasonable. Trial lesson free,nooblig. Call 472 1420.Private guitar lessons $3.50 Folk,classic & basic music. Ph 493 3949MOVING. Inexpensive, reliable. CallRob Stone Movers. 538 7520, 955 6609For exp piano teacher call 947 9746WRITING WRONGLY? English Gradwill proofread papers & essays for errors in grammar and style. David268 0935.SCENESCastaneda readers social thought 311will explore Don Juan's realities thissummer 753 3137Looking for an alternative to StudentHealth? Visit the Hyde Park KenwoodCommunity Health Center, 1515 E52nd PI., for health care for the entirefamily. For appointments, call643 0650FOR SALE2 years old. Sony AM FM cassette new$450 now $200 Must sell 363-1519Compact refrigerator 20x20x20 v. goodcondition $70 contact Dick Hackett,753 2261.Yamaha FG 110 guitar excellent condition $90 new $132 for more detailscall Jane 955 2441Furniture: velvet couch 8. chair,lamp, desk, & sml table Aureli643 7421Air cond (24,OOOBTU) humidifier,worktable (desk) desk and tablelamps, single bed couch with pillowsdining room table, rug, Ig. steel deskdesk chairs call: 752-7763.SOFA with Slipcovers Call Jim241 5576SCM TYPEWTR man exc $55 Jim477 7803 73 Vega, silver, auto, AM, 2bl carb,new tires/brakes $1,400 7 5480,955-6409APARTMENT SALE: Furniture,books, records, plants, kitchenwareEverything must go Saturday, May29 , 9 5 5417 S. Woodlawn, Apt 28493 754669 VW convertible $1000 Ken 493 1466SCM electric typewriter $125 CallBarbara at 324 3227 or 744 30261930's style large wooden deskw/glass Also Singer sewing machine8. other misc 935 3763 or 238 8038Entertainment center walnut:cabinet section w/shelves space forrecords 8, speakers, used 1 month:$40.00 PL2-9815, BurnsQueensize bed evenings cal! 493 5525PASSPORT PHOTOSColor, 2 for $9 00MODEL CAMERA1342 E 55th St 493 6700Used Wurlitzer Piano Call 493 9871After 6 p.mVan: 66 Dodge A 100 van Many newparts but needs generator, rear axleseals Best offer 947 8361.4 pair avocado green fiberglassdrapes, like new $7 each, $20 the set.955 7691 5 9p mLEARN TO FLYTwo months (4 lessons per week) isaverage time to a private pilotliscense personal instruction by a U ofC grad student who is an Adv GroundInstructor, a Commercial Pilot (singleand Multi engine) and a CertifiedFlight Instructor Start after exams.Total cost is about one thousanddollars. Call now to schedule Gary241 7588GERMAN EXAMSpecialized tutoring available forstudents in art history theology bynative German PhD Call 7 30 to 9 30AM and 11 to 1 PM 493-8127WANTEDWe are looking for a hard-working in¬dividual thinking of staying in theChicago area this summer in need of apart-time job For details call 3-3597ask for Phil.Sofa bed call 643 0394 Need cheap 3 or 4 drawer file cabinet.Call Bob 753 3265FOODGrowing to feed the hungry will be theresult of your contribution *o OXFAM9 to 5 Wed Reynolds ClubAPARTMENTFURNISHINGSFor sale, cheap Call 684 1721LOSTLost at the Uncostume Ball: one redand white checked shirt. Please contact me as 753-1523 if you found this.Thank youDenim Jacket with MORGAN patchover left pocket Means a lot If foundplease return to Jack Bossom Hitchcock 121 or call 753 2233FOUNDGiveaway gentle, friendly, healthyshepherd mix, male, free!! to goodhome call 955 3776 eveningsGray and white kitten at Blackstoneand Hyde Park cal! Peggy 288 6033Watch & ring found at 56th &Blackstone 241-5183HUNGER REMAINSA reality in much of the world Friendsof OXFAM will take contributionswhich will assist in financing SELFHELP farming projects 9 to 5 WedJune 2 Reynolds Club'TWEEN YER LEGSMy 73Vi HONDA CL350 5500 mi, Hi-way bars, luggage rack Very clean,runs well. The perfect CampusCruiser $650/best Lee 288 6241RIDESRIDER/DRIVER to WASHINGTOND C June 4-6 Drive alone or sharedriving of std shift Pinto Call Rex at548-6684Leaving 5-31 Chgo to Phoenix need se¬cond driver RE7 9166Riders wanted to Denver June 23-ishshare expenses, driving 752 5205 RIDE WANTEDto Buffalo N.Y. for large plaster cast53VS"x25".2VS" thick Will pay $50Call 32MM54HILLELBRUNCHThere will be no more brunches untilthe Fall quarterARTCONSERVATIONTrained at the Art Institute Paintings,Sculptures Cleaned or RepairedFrames gilded 4937218 evesPRIMAVERA IIPrimavera $2 is on sale in ail HydePark bookstores & at Bob's NewsstandCREATIVESERVICESCreative Sabbath Services every Fri.night at Hillel, 5715 Woodlawn at 7 30p.m For more infocali 752-5655HEBREW 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 AffiliatesTeacher Mr. Milla Othel. If you are in¬terested, you must register at Hillel byTuesday, June 7. Deposit of $10 re¬quired Hillel, 5715 S Woodlawn,752-1127What betterWay ThanwithMAROONClassified*^©001)camtw1342 E 55 SI Chicego IL 60615^ 493-67QQ jRIDES AND SUBLETSIf you're still looking for that rider to Silt, Colorado or for someone to sublet your16 room apartment, be warned. The Maroon has only one more issue. It will comeout next Friday, June 4. All classified ads will have to be received at the Maroonoffices no later than 4:30 P.M. Wednesday, June 2. The office will be closedMemorial Day, Monday, May 31. The Maroon will come out Tuesdays during thesummer starting Tuesday, June 22. The deadlines for that issue will be Friday,June 18 for classifieds and Monday, June 21 for display ads. The remainder of thesummer schedule is as follows:JUNE 29JULY 13JULY 20 JULY 27AUG. 3AUG. 10MAROON ADVERTISERSThe Chicago Maroon-Friday, May 28, 1976-Poae 19NO LIMIT BEER SPECIALSCHUTZMILLER HIGH LIFEBECKS (Made in GermanySold in 140 countries) $]39$949$299 6 Pack12 Pack6 PackRC DIET RITEPEPSI7 UP POP 89*$11989*For *6 Red, WhiteAnd RoseCHEESE SPECIALSCheese prices are for one pound minimum purchaseGOURMANDISECHRISTIAN IXJARLSBERGMOZZARELLAHOLLAND EDAMBRIE Danish Caraway and Cummin $199I Per Lb$p$*J 79$j49$J99$2|49 Per Lb.Per Lb.Per LbPer Lb.Per Lb.Complete Party Service from2427 East 72nd StreetBA 1-9210 Appetizers to ZinfandelDaily: 10 AJVL-9 P.M. Sunday: Noon-6 P.M. Deposit8 pack 16 oz. Bottles6 pack cansDeposit8 pack 16 oz. BottlesHALF BOTTLES FRENCH WINEPage 20-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, May 28, 1976