£aStids^ua^aoQTo the University community:The Maroon is proud to serve our University readership. We do our best to in¬form and to entertain. We also hope to provide a chance for enthusiastic andtalented people to experience the excitement of working on a newspaper.Anyone interested in writing, on anything from politics to the arts, is welcome toparticipate. Visit us at our office on the third floor of Ida Noyes Hall on studentactivities night or during regular business hours. The first staff meeting of theyear will be held Tuesday, September 28, at 7:30 p.m. All are welcome.The Maroon Staff.SAY, JOAhl, WHAT -SAX WE GOOVER TO /DA NOYES ON .SUNDAY,SEPTEMBER Zt> (1 - <1 PH) FOR AHEVENING OF FUN AND FROUC ATSTUDENTACTIVIT/ES NIGHT!ALL THE RIDS WILL 6E THERE.m'rmk2—Tht Chicago Maroon—Friday/ September 24,1974table of contentsThe Chicago MaroonUNIVERSITYp. 6 A brief history: the struggle for self-understanding by Ellen Clementsp. 6 The unknown tradition by'Barry Karladministrationp. 12 The decision makers by David Blumfacultyp. 13 The Council by David BlumSURVIVALp. 16 Crime in Hyde Park by Dan Wisep. 16 Working by Jan Rhodesp. 17 Day care by Jan RhodesCOMMON COREp. 41 The waning of the Old College by Jan Rhodesp. 43 Core course evaluationsSPORTSp. 53 A year of change? by David Rieserp. 53 Where to do it by David Rieserp. 55 New department by David RieserGrey City Journalp. 19 LeBag’s Keys to Chicago Culture by Lukacs LeBagp. 20 Don’t Stop All that Jazz by P.L. Spacklep. 20 Grey Blues on the South Side by Fergus Barkerp. 21 Chicago — Classic City by Paid Gudelp. 22 High Notes in Low Places by Jonathan Meyersohnp. 23 A Cow Town with Culture by Carl Lavinp. 24 Are You Executive Material? by Jeff Baddeleyp. 26 Dance by Eden Clorfenep. 26 Theater by Esther Joy Schwartzp. 31 Cinema in the Second City by Karen Hellerp. 32 Eating and Drinking in Hyde Park by Jonathan MeyersohnEditor: Peter CohnGrey City Editor: Jonathan MeyersohnFeatures Editor: Jan RhodesNews Editor: Dan WiseSports Editor: David RieserPhoto Editor: Dan NewmanAssociate Editors: David Blum, Landy CarienGrey City Managing Editor: Karen HellerGraphics: Chris PersansBusiness Manager: Niko MaksamiyadasAdvertising Manager: Doug MillerCover photo by Marc PoKempnerhey university neighborsthere's o pocKpge waiting for youat the Hyde Parl^ BanK./ # * •Exclusively for U of C faculty ond staffmembers. We've put together o pack¬age of special bank services just foryou. 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M «The University Search for aninstitutional identityBy Ellen ClementsOne of the great universities of the world...A university that knows itself...Advancing boundaries in the various fieldof knowledge...Attracts those who need to realize and then,serve a standard of excellence...That’s the UC sell, as it appeared in arecent bulletin to prospective students.Last year you read it, and now you arehere.The aspirations those phrases presentare University tradition. Through its 85years, the University has desired to beknown for the independence and brillianceof its scholars, for the groundbreakingquality of its research, and for dedicationto the pursuit of truth. The University hadmade a self-conscious effort to find theacademic form best suited to higherlearning. And the difficulties of definingthe best academic way, as well as theaspiration to find it, have been withChicago from the beginning.Much of the University’s mission wasformulated by its first president WilliamRainey Harper, who held office from 1891until bis death in 1906. Harper’s plans forthe University represented grandaspirations — and such a load of work —that his successors have either never beenable (nr have never seen the need to stepmuch outside his framework for furtherdirection.Harper spun plans at such a feverishrate that The Chicago Tribune of 1890commented on his “expansionist powers.”He had an idea for a school with both un¬dergraduate and graduate divisions,supplemented by professional schools intheology, law, medicine, engineering,education, fine arts, and music. TheUniversity of Chicago would tap into theMidwestern educational establishment byaffiliating itself with surrounding highschools, colleges, and professional schools.A college for adults, a summer quarter, a“student-at-large” status that would open classrooms to non-degree candidates, anda scholarly press would extend the benefitsof Harper’s University to the non-academic world.American education had never seenanything like Harper. There was littlegraduate work in the U.S. at that time.Many American scholars still took theiradvanced degrees at English or Germanuniversities. With the exceptions of JohnsHopkins and Clark Universities, the fewgraduate schools in the States were theresult of a couple centuries’ of academicevolution. Harper proposed to create afull-fledged University in one swift stroke.Not only that, he proposed to locate it farfrom the Eastern academic establishmentin Chicago, a city of “broad shoulders,freight handlers, and hog butchers.” Theproposed site in Hyde Park wassurrounded by farms, an hour’s ride fromthe city on the old blue-bottomed WabashAvenue cable cars. To the east, thebuildings of the Columbian Exposition roseout of “a sea of yellow mud.”The plan for a great university inChicago was a strange mix of innovation,religion, and crude oil. The original ideacame from a group of Chicago Baptistswho felt that the system of 11 MiddleWestern Baptist colleges needed afinancially secure center in Chicago. Thatrole had been filled by the Old Universityof Chicago, founded in 1858 on land donatedby Senator Stephen Douglas at 35th andCottage Grove. But that school wentbankrupt and closed by 1889, and theBaptists felt the need was as acute as ever.The Chicagoans turned with their idea tothe munificence of fellow Baptist JohnRockefeller, who was at the time lookingfor a worthy cause on which to bestowsome of his Standard Oil millions. Theactivities of Ezra Cornell, who founded acollege in upstate New York on thestrength of his Colorado silver mine, and ofMr. and Mrs. Leland Standford, who wereven then busily meddling in the affairs ofAll BEADY FOR JOHN D. SANTA CLAUS AT THE UNIVEB5ITY OF CHICAGO. the California school they had endowedwith $22 million, had already inspiredRockefeller. By May 1889 Chicago fun¬draisers had his pledge for the first milliondollars of the school’s endowment.In Mr. R., Chicago had found a generouspatron, as well as a wise one. Both he, andthe Baptists who made up two-thirds of theboard of trustees until 1923, keptThe plan for a greatuniversity in Chicago was astrange mixture of in¬novation, religion, andcrude oil.scrupulously clear of academic affairs.At the start, Rockefeller and the Bap¬tists wanted to establish an undergraduatecollege in Chicago. But Rockefeller had sethis sights on Harper for its presidency andHarper refused to desert Yale for less thana great University. He had turned down the offer of the presidency of the 01<jUniversity of Chicago, which wabasically a college, teetering on the edge obankruptcy. In order to secure himRockefeller made a down payment of $imillion on graduate study at Chicago.Over the next twenty years, Rockefellerpumped $35 million into his “University ofStandard Oil.” But even this amount, plusthe generosity of Chicago donors, was notenough to fund the Harper plan. Harperbattled attempts to trim the University tothe size of its resources. He gambled -making the enlargements a greatuniversity would require and leaving it tothe future to find money enough to keep theschool out of receivership. The result wasan unedning struggle, through those firstfifteen years, -to find money to coverrunning expenses, to meet the salary in¬creases promised faculty, and to fund theexpansion of libraries and laboratorieswhich were necessary for Chicago to makeits claim of being a “university.” MoreAn unlikelytraditionNt*RR-HO« DOXt LOOK. CHILDREN. AND PERNAPR RANTA CLAIR WILL RRINC II A NICE PRERENT“In Mr. R., Chicago had found a generous patron, as well as a wise one.4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday. Setember 24,1974 By Barry KarlTo prepare a brief history of thetraditions of the University of Chicago isan impossible assignment. In the spirit oforientation week and for the sake of thoseof you just starting out, I will make anattempt. In doing so I may set an exampleby choosing not to deny the reality ofimpossible assignments, a reality many ofyou, I suspect, will soon encounter for thefirst time. Some of you will learn that suchassignments teach special lessons of theirown and some of you will be content toresent them. It is in the interest of theformer rather than the latter that I makethis attempt.The University is its faculty, and thefaculty of this university prides itself on anindependence that keeps collective nounsat bay. “Anarchy” is the term critics use,but it crops up from time to time in theconversation of even the most devotedpartisan. No one, therefore, can speak, ofBehind the fake Gothic andthe transplanted ivy therehas always been a realisticand proud involvement withthe present ... It makes theUniversity a strange AlmaMater, not always easy tolove, but then not alwayswilling to be very lovable.the “traditions of the University” fromany perspective but his own, a fact thateven University presidents havediscovered unexpectedly when, likeRobert Maynard Hutchins, they found thatthere were majorities in the facultycapable of assembling to pppose theirconceptions of those traditions.Intellectual battling over the Univer¬sity’s view of itself is part of the Univer¬sity’s tradition, along with an irrationalconviction that rationality matters, thatsystematic ideas affect the course ofevents. The mysticism most traditionalinstitutions use to sustain themselves hasbecome, at the University of Chicago, thedivinity of intelligence. That this idea maybe a denial of everything social scientiststake tradition to mean has never matteredvery much, even to the social scientists. From the perspective of a historianinterested in the history of Americanhigher education, the University’s historyprovides a unique example of a com¬mitment to the present, another conceptthat runs counter to the concept oftradition, yet is one of this institution’soldest and most important traditions. Thatit denies the past not only in principle butin fact also doesn’t matter much.As perhaps the most striking case inpoint, we celebrate the beginning of theUniversity of Chicago and William RaineyHarper. Between 1990 and 1995 theUniversity will mark a centennial it wasactually entitled to celebrate in 1956 whenthe first University of Chicago reached its100th birthday. The builders of this in¬stitution thought enough of that continuityto imbed one of the stones of that earlierschool in a quadrangle archway, but thatappears to have ended it. No ceremoniesare held there, and the most recent of theUniversity’s histories doesn’t even list thenames of the first officers. OtherAmerican universities eager to trace theirorigins to the earliest possible date havesearched records with archeologicalavidity to establish the most tenuousconnections with the past. This universitymemorializes its youth in a sometimespuzzled recollection of the 29 year oldHutchins named to its presidency. It looksback now with a momentary nostalgia toits renaissance in the recent decadesThe views of individualmembers and, at times, thegroup as a whole, havetranslated into Univeristypolicy — and theirdeliverations often hold thekey to the future of campusprograms and future plans.under Edward H. Levi, and forward un¬doubtedly to another Spring. A centennialis going to be hard to take, one suspects.The University adopted the name of aOldvaseofim,f $1Heryof)lusnotpery toi -eatt tothevasirstiverin-theriesakelore If was Harper's hopeful opinion that if the Chicagostudents lacked the "outward polish" of students ateastern colleges/ they made up for it "in determination0f purpose to win, in readiness to make sacrifices forthe sake of intellectual advancement.jjan once, when the lack of some paltry■urn threatened to lose him the reputationJr had built so painstakingly, Harper•onsidered resignation.Harper was particularly willing tooverextend himself financially in order tojecure a high-caliber faculty. In insistinghat the first faculty be made up of mentom “the leading institutions,” Harperset the tone of Chicago academia whichwould henceforth emphasize the im¬portance of the individual scholar..Moving the ‘‘best men” from their well-gpdowed chairs at older, prestigiousuniversities was no easy task. A fewmonths before the University was to open,Harper could speak only about ‘‘ninehundred and ninety-nine unfinisheddeals.”But in the end, Harper was successful.His notable powers of persuasion wereenhanced by the Rockefeller resources. Hewas able to offer salaries up to $7,000 at atime when professors at the small localBaptist colleges could pay only $1,100 ayear. Perhaps more important than eitherof these was the fact that Harper offered,in the words of one prospective facultymember, the chance of “starting an in¬stitution unshackled by vicious yet time- honored usage.” Professors coming toChicago would have the opportunity tocreate their own departments, and to havea hand in planning a new sort of academicorganization.Harper had stormed Clark University(recently founded on principles not unlikeChicago’s, and at the time in seriousfinancial and administrative trouble) andwalked away with nearly half the faculty.While at Johns Hopkins in the spring of1892, he had turned his powers on notedchemist Ira Remsen, but found It “notaltogether a pleasant task to be lecturingin the University and trying to take away(me of its professors at the same time.”The end result of Harper’s appeal was afirst year faculty of 147 persons: 9 of themformer college presidents, 9 of themwomen.These scholars began the Chicagotradition of ambitious, independentdepartments. The nation’s first sociologydepartment, later to boast George HerbertMead, Robert Park, Ernest Burgress,Louis Wirth, was founded at Chicago.Hyde Park novelists Philip Roth and SaulBellow had predecessors in RobertHerrick, Robert Lovett and WilliamMoody, who migrated to the ChicagoThe mysticism most traditional institutions use tosustain themselves has become/ at the University otChicago/ the divinity of intelligence. That this ideamay be a denial of everything social scientists taketradition to mearvhas never mattered very much/ evento the social scientists.ian:an)ryim-eptofn’shatbutinthe»eythe/astenitsin-lityierlatiesthetheiereirivecal)USityiesold>kstoiesalie/efyrleJS -ity rather than that of a person or a■eligious group as was the practice in thejays of its origins. It is not “Rockefeller”wr is it The Baptist university. TheUniversity IN Chicago would have been aletter name, for the University was in-ended as a national university from theleginning and its relationship withChicago has never been a particularlyeasy one. The University is, in an im-lortant sense, a product of the Progressiveira in American history, and it sharesnuch with that era’s critical sense of thelast, the consciousness of the need for•eform, judicious and protective to beiure, but reform nenetheless.The University is, in animportant sense, a productrf the Progressive era inAmerican history.The traditional town and gown conflictscustomary between older institutions andtheir communities take on a peculiar formhere as the University and its communitystumble over one another in the dark of!>eriodic nights and try in the daylighthours to soothe the resulting bruises.The consciousness of complaint, theefforts at reshaping, the pauses ofexhaustion as both sides wonder if it was■eally worth it are all part of theJniversity’s oldest habits, if tradition ishe wrong word. Such habits built the[Jniversity’s social sciences in the years)efore national professionalism took overand laid the groundwork for the faculty’sinvolvement in national reform. JohnDewey and Thorstein Veblen, GeorgeHerbert Mead and W. L. Thomas ar¬ticulated a range of social criticismdiscomfiting to the University’s largercommunity but profoundly important tothe development of progressive socialthought.— A recent Tribune Magazine article dealswith the University’s Washington con-lection as though it were new, even for-iaJ [hcoming, rather than a recurrent in¬volvement of a faculty back to the HarperJays—and involvement not always to thef a tribune’s liking. Chicago’s politicalscientists were internationalists when the Tribune’s Col. McCormick considered thatmorally wrong, if not downrighttreasonous. The University taughtradicalism and radicals when the NewDeal was considered by in the midwest aleft-wing revolution. Charles E. Merriamin political science and William F. Ogburnin sociology advised Presidents Hooverand Roosevelt without regard for theideological commitments of either one, butrather with a sense that this Universityhad to contribute systematic thought forthe use of a national public, no matter wholed. The traditional separation betweentheory and practice could be blurred bythe needs of responsible citizenship,although disagreements about thedefinition of responsibility would continueto arise. The University’s atomicphysicists worried about the consequencesof what they were doing, conscious of theconsequences of not doing it, and morewilling therefore to be the first in ageneration that would never know releasefrom the moral dimension of public policy.In contemporary terminology, thatfactor—the moral dimension of publicpoliby—is my judgment of the University’shistorical identity. The pursuit ofknowledge, the search for excellence, theprimacy of research all identify the era oftransformation of American institutions ofhigher education between 1870 and 1900,and they are all crucial and important. Buthere behind the fake Gothic and thetransplanted ivy there has always been arealistic and proud involvement with thepresent, a consciousness of the manylevels of community that constitute anational society for this complexly dividedcountry.It’s hard to build a tradition out of suchcomplexity. It's easier to find thecriticisms, the disputes about theknowledge that didn’t work, that had to berevised, relearned, rejected. It makes theUniversity a strange Alma Mater, notalways easy to love, but then not alwaywilling to be very loveable. Reality is likethat, which is why this assignment is, as Isaid at the beginning, impossible.Barry Karl is a professor of Americanhistory and is chairman of the historydepartment. English department from Harvard. Thatdepartment would later compile thedefinitive edition of Chaucer’s worksunder John Matthews Manly and EdithRickert, and under Ronald Crane, spawnthe Chicago school of criticism. In the firstdepartments of natural and physicalscience, the pride of the University duringthe 40’s when Erico Fermi worked onatomic fission underneath old Stagg Field.Nobel Prize winners Michelson andMillikan worked in neighboringlaboratories.» *Even Chicago students were cast in anew mold. The University had createditself, relying on a constructed academicexperiment, rather than on tradition. Itwas hoped that the student body wouldlikewise break old molds in its dedicationto the pursuit of learning. It was Harper’shopeful opinion that if the Chicagostudents lacked the “outward polish” ofstudents at eastern colleges, they made upfor it “in determination of purpose to win,in readiness to make sacrifice for the sakeof intellectual advancement.”The first year’s students came toChicago unsolicited — no money had beenalloted to advertise the opening session.Three quarters of them were from theMidwest. There were both men and womenfrom the beginning. Harper had appointedthe first dean of women in the UnitedStates, Marion Talbot, who insisted that at -the University there would be no “coeds,”no “girls,” but only “women of theUniversity.” A large number of middle-aged people were also in attendance,taking advantage of Dr. Harper’s-philosophy of extended education. From the first students, were en¬couraged to think of themselves as part of“the community of scholars.” The facultywas to be to them, in Harper’s eyes, “olderbrother and fellow student. ” Universal useof the title “Mr.” was adopted inpreference to complicated recognitions ofacademic rank. Ceremony was often used,rather theatrically on Harper’s part, toinstill a sense of the grandness of the en¬terprise. Caps and gowns, different colorsfor each rank, were worn on all Universityoccasions including graduations at the endof each quarter, one of the University’sinnovations.Harper’s plan attempted to keep in¬tellectual endeavor vital by tying it toinvolvement in the non-academic world.Research at the University was charac¬terized by James Breasted’s archaelogicalexcursions, which became world-renowned and prompted the founding ofthe Oriental Institute. Charles Merriam ofthe political science department became aChicago alderman and twice ran forMayor. The University founded a set¬tlement house, on the model of Jane Ad-dams’ Hull House in 1893.But University activism showed up bestin the arrangements that were made forprofessional education at Chicago. Theprofessional schools turned methods of thedisciplines onto the professions. J. L.Laughlin, professor of political economy,thought college preparation “sadly out ofjoint” with “the actual wort of the world”and founded the College of Commerce andAdministration, precursor to the BusinessSchool. Ernst Freund, professor ofpolitical science, attempted to strike asimilar balance in establishing the LawSchool in 1902. At trifc time jurisprudenceHistory to 8Friday, September 24,1974—The Chicago Maroon—7History from 7was taught from casebooks by practicinglawyers. It was Freund’s idea that legaltraining should include work in politicalscience and economy, and in commerce,administration, and sociology. At Chicagolaw, Freund’s approach was balanced withthe case-book technique of Joseph Beale,brought from Harvard Law to helpestablish the Chicago school. In a similarmanner, John Dewey’s department ofpedagogy and its associated laboratory,the University Elementary School, wasbalanced in its theoretical work by af¬filiation with Francis Parker’s teacher¬training School of Education. In medicine,the University linked science, as taught inits biology labs, with the practical trainingoffered by Rush Medical College.While the opening of professional schoolssecured University ties with the businessworld, issues regarding the academicprocess showed up in the handling of theCollege.The place of undergraduate instructionin an institution dedicated to scholarlyinvestigation always has beentroublesome. The founding of the Collegehad been the Baptist’s original goal, but itdid not become a vital part of theUniversity until the twenty years of RobertHutchins’s adventuresome leadership.There has also been a tradition of strongdoubt — sometime outright hostility — tothe idea of a great university’s carrying acollege. During Harry Pratt Judson’stenure as president, 1906-1923, the Collegefell into neglect. Many college courseswere used to support the graduateteaching assistants who taught them.Attention to the College was felt to in¬terfere with the real work of the in¬stitution, research, and Judson himselfspoke of the dangerous tendency to“siphon funds” to the education of thesome 6000 undergrads, away from **thebasic investigative work” of the Univer¬sity. Judson’s successor, Ernest DewittBurton, 1923-1925, renewed attention to theCollege’s activities and arranged ap¬pointments to the College faculty. LikeHarper, however, he planned for a College placed at a site separate from the mainQuads. And, like his successor,mathematician-physicist Max Mason,1926-1928, he justified University interestin the College by casting it as a “scholarlyexperiment.”Even granting that undergraduate in¬struction had a place at Chicago, it wasnecessary to define its position in relationboth to secondary school work andgraduate education. The hapless Collegefloated between these two boundaries foryears, victim of first one and then anothertheory of education.Harper had proposed to divide theCollege into two two-year units. TheAcademic or Junior College was to be anextension of the high school preparationoften found inadequate; the University orSenior College would introduce un¬dergraduates to graduate work, give thema specialization. This division of theCollege reamined in force until 1931,although it was effective little past Har¬per’s term of office.In the ’30’s, a new boy wonder presidenttook up Harper’s blueprints and reworkedthe College into University organization.Robert Maynard Hutchins was 29 years oldwhen he came to Chicago, fresh from thedeanship of the Yale Law School, withcharisma lifted straight from Scott Fit¬zgerald. The twenty years of hispresidency encompass a frenzy of activityregarding the college’s status. Hardly aclass graduated during the Hutchins erathat did not see some major upheaval inundergraduate requirements orcurriculum.Hutchins railed against “the in¬formation disease” which crammed factsor vocational training into college studentswithout teaching them to think. ForHutchins, “a college in a University is aninstitution devoted to discovering what ageneral education ought to be.” Generaleducation meant trying “to master theleading ideas and significant facts in theprincipal fields of knowledge with a viewto the development of intellectual action.”To help achieve this end, Hutchins madethe College an entity entirely separatefrom the departments, with its own facultySP1N-IT RECORDS1444 E. 57th Street684-1505Store hours:Monday-Saturday 10:30 - 8:00Sunday 12:00-6:00WHY SPIN-IT IS A SPECIAL RECORD STORE1. We feature the Best selection of albums in Hyde Park in allcategories of music (classical, jazz, rock, soul, folk,children’s records) and one of the best in the city. And if wedon’t have a record, we’ll be happy to order it.2. Great prices - there are different sales running every week atSpin-lt in addition to a huge selection of cut-outs and budgetpriced records starting at $1.99. Watch the windows of thestore for changing sales every ayc ek.3. As a special get-acquainted offer, the coupon at the bottomof the page will enable you to purchase any $6.98 List Lp for$3.99. Offer good until Oct. 15. Hutchins: “A college in a university is an institution dedicated to discovering whata general education ought to be.”and library. He made scholarshipdependent on individual determination,disdaining the “long tradition of nursing,coddling, and spoonfeeding students whichhas done so much to prolong adolescencein America.” He instituted comprehensiveexams as criteria both for admissions andgraduation. He lifted required class at¬tendance. He abolished football, calling ita “distraction.”In 1932 he made a definitive move toestablish general education byamalgamating the last two years ofUniversity High School with the collegeand by admitting to the College qualifiedpeople who had not yet graduated fromhigh school. This new college granted aB. A. for completion of a general education,as measured by comprehensiveexaminations. The curriculum of thegeneral education course consisted of 14required courses designed along the linesof Stringfellow Barr’s Great Booksprogram.By the time Hutchins finished with theCollege, it no longer fit very well into theAmerican educational system. Hutchinssuccessor, eyeing plummeting enrollments, noted cynically that therewas nothing wrong with the College “that afew thousahd students wouldn’t fix.”Most of Hutchins's innovations in theCollege have not endured. But his andHarper’s inspirational vision still con¬stitute the University’s ethos and color theUniversity’s opinion of itself. Harper sawthe University as a graduate institution,and Hutchins proliferated collegiate folnovations with religious conviction. Thesetwo lines of University philosophy allowand encourage attention to education,especially undergraduate instruction, as aform of academic experimentation. TheUniversity is left with the ideals of itsgreatest leaders. It is Harper’s and Hut¬chins’s ideals, if not their actualorganizations, which still form the basiccontent of education at the University.This is the way the University presentsitself to prospective students, in therhetoric of the informational bulletins. It isthis tradition which still draws them here.Ellen Clements is a fourth year student inthe College and has worked in theUniversity archives.EXTRA LOWSALE PRICE A full-power, adjustable showerwith pulsator, regular orcombination pulsator-spray action.Convenient side lever changeswater action easily, quickly...Exclusive "Body Shaper" design-White with black trim.ANDERSON'S ACE HARDWARE1304 E. 53rd St., Kimbark Plaza- 493-3338t—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 24, 1976Sears3 things that everycollege student should know:2 9 You can SAVE *40 on ourElectric 1 typewriterSALE 99V.,.,,*139.99X* You can SAVE *5 on thisslide-rule calculator• SALE 149L„*19.99a. An 8-digit slide rule calculator can make the differencein the speed and accuracy with which you solve complexproblems. Work square roots, squares, reciprocals in¬stantly. 4-key memory lets you work 2 problems at once.Has percent key, floating decimal and large green digitaldisplay. With case. Huns on batteries (included). Op¬tional adapter available.b. Reg. *24.99 . Full slide-rule calculator with scientific nota¬tion, 4-key memory. Runs on batteries (included). Op¬tional adapter available 19.97Term papers, lab reports, essays—it’s hard to reduce yourtyping load, but you can make yoiir^ob easier with SearsElectric 1 portable. Has wide 12 inch carriage with pre-settab positions for fast column work. With 3 different re¬peat keys, standard pica type. Typewriter cover included.Don’t limit yourself to dorm room furniture. Expandyour storage space with Sears 4-shelf steel shelving unit.Walnut-color unit will accommodate stereo equipment,records, books. Has adjustable shelves, decorative endpanels. Comes unassembled.Ask about Sears Credit Plansale prices in effect through October 2, 1976Handy carry-packwith handle 3 • You can SAVE *4 on Searscarry-pack shelvingSALE 109L*14.99SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Available in larger Sears Retail Stores and Catalog\ Friday. Sapiambar 24,197*—Tha Chicago Maroon—11AdministrationThe DecisionMakersBy David BlumThe elevators to the fifth floor of the Administration building move in a quiet,smooth glide, in contrast to the broad, gothic stairwells in most campus structures.Upon arrival, a visitor to the University’s inner sanctum is met by an imposingsecretary who guards the President’s wing with unusual fervor.Once past her desk, you stand among the men and women pictured below: JohnWilson, the President, DJ.R. Bruckner, William Cannon and the other vice-presidents who, together, administer the day-today operations of the University ofChicago.The pictures and capsule descriptions below must suffice as a simplistic in¬troduction to the University administration, which includes many officials whowork a distance from the Administration building itself. They are accessible, withsome exceptions, to interested students — and can be reached either by campustelephone or an elevator ride to the fifth floor for assistance.JOHN T. WILSONPresident of the UniversityAn able administrator, Wilson is bestknown for balanced budgets and a concernfor the University’s great tradition. Hewas appointed to the Presidency againsthis will, but has filled the post withdedication, if not distinction. A native ofPunxsatawney, Pennsylvania, home of thegroundhog that determines winter’s fate,Wilson served as a special assistant underformer President George W. Beadle and asprovost under former President EdwardH. Levi.WILLIAM B. CANNONVice-President for Business and FinanceThe man who signs the checks. Cannonis a quiet, likeable administrator whosedomain includes overseeing the Univer¬sity’s many land holdings as well as itsother complex budgetary matters. He hasisolated himself from students in his fifth-floor administration building office — andwhile a few understand his mammoth job,his domain is massive and his power great.A Professor in the Department of SocialService Administration, he was on lastyear’s list of candidates for the Univer¬sity’s president.CHARLES D. O’CONNELL ROBERT W. RENEKERIChairman of the Board of TrusteesElected Chairman of the Board in June,Reneker has been an active member of theBoard since he joined it in 1970. He is thefirst chairman of the Board to be analumnus of the College, and served lastyear on the Presidential Search Com¬mittee formed after Edward H. Levi’sresignation. Reneker, 63, is chairman andchief executive officer of Esmark, Inc.D. GALE JOHNSONProvostJohnson, a prominent agriculturaleconomist, holds the Eliakim HastingsMoore Distinguished Service Professor¬ship in Economics as well as chief advisorto the President. He is the administration’stie to the faculty, and has been successfulat helping Wilson through his brief tenureas President. A friendly and outspokenadministrator, Johnson has been andcontinues to be one of the most influentialand important men at Wilson’s side.Dean of StudentsThe Maroon has referred to O’Connell asa.“sympathetic and often misunderstoodadministrator” so many times that by nowbe must be well understood, at least, whilenot unsympathetic. He is accessible andkind-hearted, though often alienatingstudent groups who don’t see eye-to-eyewith him. He oversees all student ac¬tivities, organized and random, and takesan active interest in individual and group-oriented student problems.D.J.R. BRUCKNER LORNAP. STRAUSDean of Students in the CollegeAs O’Connell’s undergraduate coun¬terpart, Straus is also deeply involved inthe admissions and financial aid process ofthe College and thus - has a workingknowledge of many College studentsbefore they even arrive. A Professor ofBiology, Straus works long hours as deanof students of the largest academic unit inthe University — and is generally ac¬cessible to most of them.Vice-President for Public AffairsBruckner was on Nixon’s ememies list,mad today be is on the unwritten enemieslists of countless reporters. Nevertheless,he works day and night to get theUniversity of Chicago’s name in print, andgenerally succeeds. A former reporter forthe Los Angeles Times, be came hereduring Edward Levi’s administration andbecame a close personal associate to theAttorney General. Today he oversees theOffice of Public Information, the Centerfor Policy Study and numerous othercampus activities. CHARLES E. OXNARDDean of the CollegeHis English accent and academic ap¬pearance clearly denote Oxnard’s strongroots at the University of Chicago. Deeplycommitted to undergraduate education,Oxnard has been active in the develop¬ment of new undergraduate programs —such as the new Liberal Arts A Medicineplan — and the maintenance of old ones.This is his last year as Dean, a positionthat rotates among the faculty every fouryeafs.4*, The Chicago Meroonr-FrWay, September 24,1*74 John T. WilsonD. Gale JohnsonD.J.R. BrucknerLorna Robert W. RenekerWilliam B. CannonCharles D. O'ConnellCharles E. OxnardFacultyThe CouncilBy David BlumThe battle for increased student powerin University decision-making hasdiminished since the heyday of studentprotest a decade ago, but faculty at theUniversity of Chicago continue theirstruggle to gain an organized and coherentvoice in the development of University .policy.Lbng known for the power afforded itsfaculty, Chicago possesses a framework ofauthority that provides professors with the“channels” to the administration un¬successfully sought by student activists.The College Council, and the Committee ofthe Council, are. the two faculty,organizations vested with the unoofficialauthority to advise and consent.The Committee of the Council is, as itsname suggests, a seven-memberrepresentative group of the Council of theUniversity Senate, a 51-member bodyelected by the faculty to serve as theirprincipal voice in the administration of theUniversity. That group, in turn, is electedfrom the University Senate, which com¬prises all members of the faculty andmeets once a year in Cobb Hall to hear thePresident’s State of the University Ad¬dress.No specific power has ever been en¬trusted to either the Council or the Com¬mittee of the Council, but both have servedvital advisory functions to past presidents.The views of individual members and, attimes, the group as a whole, have tran¬slated into University policy — and theirdeliberations aften hold the key to thefuture of campus programs and futureplans. In the last five years, the Council has notoften been confronted with crucial con¬cerns or hotly debated issues within thefaculty or administration. The finaldecision to dissolve the department ofeducation rested with the Council, as didthe reorganization of the behavioralscience program, but their agendas mostoften consist of reports from various partsof the University to the president andfaculty representatives.The same is true of the Committee of theCouncil, which meets once every twoweeks and faces a predictable and oftendull agenda. As a result, the Committee —of which the president and provost are ex-officio members — has evolved into a two-way sounding board, where both thepresident and faculty can air questionsand concerns, however minor, relating toUniversity policy.One incidence of faculty-initiateddiscussions over a presidential decisionresulted from John Wilson’s initial refusalto use the legal office of the University toprosecute the demonstrators whodisrupted the speech of Juan CarlosCoaral, the Argentine leftist, at Kent Hallin March of 1975.Several Cuban emigrants, angry withthe Latin American leader’s support forthe Fidel Castro-led government in Cuba,brought the student government-sponsored speech to a violent conclusionafter several minutes of heckling anddisruption.Members of the Committee of theCouncil, meeting with Wilson at one oftheir regular bi-weekly sessions,questioned the validity of his decision They argued that the University — whichprosecuted students who had disrupted theappearance of Edward Banfield, theUniversity of Pennsylvania urbanologist,at the Oriental Institute in March of 1974 —should be as vigorous in prosecuting right-wing protestors as they had been towardsthe leftist movement on campus.As a result of the Committee’sdiscussions, Wilson reversed his earlierdecision and placed the power of theUniversity’s legal office behind theprosecution of several demonstrators.During the late 1960’s, both the Counciland the Committee of the Councilorganized around political philosophies aswell as departmental affiliations. A left-wing segment of the Council — known asthe “Gallery Group” after their firstmeeting in the Bergman Art Gallery on thefourth floor of Cobb Hall — used theCouncil as an implement for radicalreforms.The 1969 student sit-in at the Ad¬ Wilson, more dependent upon the cow:than his own friends for advice,“opened up the process of discussbetween the administration and facuaccording to one Council member. W1the Committee dealt with few substantissues last year — the disciplinprocedure one of them — the effectivenof debate between Wilson and the factrepresentatives has been useful andformative to both sides.The procedure for electing memberthe Council and the Committee — caithe “Hare” system — selects 17 facimembers to serve three-year terms onCouncil. The balloting involves an ordetranking system that allows a worganized faculty group to elect its cfollowers to the Council, but little evideiof such efforts has shown up in recelections, except in the professioschools. There, rumor has it that baliare collected from every faculty memand filled out by another individual“Power plays generally prevail among a small group of prominent scholars..ministration Building brought the Com¬mittee to its feet. Meeting often withPresident Edward Levi, they became atesting ground for Levi’s ideas for aresolution to the crisis. Later, the Com¬mittee and the Council proved in¬strumental in formulating newdisciplinary procedures including theappointment of students to the disciplinarycommittee.Most observers concede that without theCouncil’s decisiveness in the crisis period,Levi would have depended on what oneCommittee member termed his “kitchencabinet” — a band of law school “cronies”with whom he often consulted — to assisthim in the rapid decision-making duringthose few tense weeks. assure the election of a previously chocandidate.Power plays generally prevail amorsmall group of prominent scholars iassert their weight in various level!University decision-making. Such eff<are' largely separate from the organstructure of the Council, yet appear nimportant in the wielding of influence.“I can’t think of one major scholajcampus who isn’t also a politheavyweight,” said one University Coimember. “The administration andtrustees always look to them for adviceThese two avenues for faculty poweone organized, one random — makeChicago faculty a potent political forehe University’s administrative structuRm RecMdStorn214 S. Wabash165 W. MadisonChicago’s Largest Selection ofRecords & Tapescomplete selection of classical, opera, jazz,folk, blues & soundtracksRose Discount Record Stores214 S. Wabash — 939-9*42165 W. Madison — 332-2737 IL 20% OFF 20% OFF 20% OFF20% OFF on a purchasiof $10.00 or more with thiad. This offer lasts untilOctober 31,1976Exclusively: FRENCH, GERMA1ITALIAN & SPANISHBooks, Magazines, Recordsand Greeting CardsMon. -Fri 9:30 a.m. -6:00 p.m.Sat 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.europa bookstore3229 N. 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Great prices - there are different sales running every week at Spin-lt, check the store windows forthe changing sales each week.SPIN-IT BRINGS YOU THE BEST—PULtWTOJSCABotimM'<x%igytxr4'3D What’s Up, Doc?starring Barbra Streisand andRyan O’ Nealdirected by Peter Bogdanovichfriday sept. 24 6:30, 8:30,10:30 p.j. cobb hallfree to entering college students $ 1, othersUSED BOOKSBOUGHT AND SOLDHARDBACK AND PAPERBACKADVENTUREAFRICAANCIENT HISTORYANTHROPOLOGYARCHAEOLOGYARTBALKANSBIOGRAPHYBLACK STUDIESBUSINESSCENTRAL EUROPECOOK BOOKSCRAFTSDRAMAETC. ECONOMICSEDUCATIONFAR EASTFEMINISMFICTIONFRENCH HISTORYGERMAN HISTORYHISTORY: GREATBRITAINITALYJOURNALISMJUDAICAI ARfiRLATIN AMERICAETC. LAW: HISTORY OFLINGUISTICSLITERATURE: ENGLISHAMERICAN, EUROPEAN INTRANSLATIONMATHEMATICSMIDDLE AGESMIDDLE EASTMILITARY HISTORYMOVIESMUSICNATURAL HISTORYPHILOSOPHYPOETRYETC., ETC.JOSEPH O’GARA, BOOKSELLER1311 E. 57th ST.PHONE: 363-0993HOURS*MON. THRU SAT. - 9 AM T010 PMSUN.-NOONT010PMon display at id a noyes hall sept. 28-oct I.distribution friday October I, 4:00 pm-6:00 pm$250 to students and stall with i.d. call 753-359Irental period until Wednesday decernber I. * eeCP purchasePCEIPTS)-THIS LARGE 15"X 17"CANVAS TOTE. IN NATURALCOLOR, STYLED WITH COLORFULLYCONTRASTED ORANGE HANDLES ANDIMPRINT — YOURS FREE j—WITH \SQ. IN PURCHASES (EXCEPT SALE ITEMS)Maes “nitST-com**sr-8AS/S1507 E.53idSt.955-1716Friday, September 54.1974—The Chicago Maroon -15Survivali GrimeBy Dan WiseThe problem of crime in Hyde Parkdoesn’t really exist on the streets.Hyde Park’s crime problem mainlyexists in people’s minds. The problemarises when people abandon the streets oftheir community, leaving them empty atnight, making it lonelier for those who dogo out and discouraging businesses fromstaying open late. The problem exists in| the minds of those who live in fear becausethey do not understand (and don’t want tofind out) the ways of the city around them.Crime does occur in Hyde Park, and itj happens more often thap in the affluentj sanctuaries from which the Universitydraws a sizable portion of its students.Hyde Park, located in the fifth safestpolice district in Chicago, boasts a highlevel of police coverage and active com¬munity groups working on crimeprevention.Crime here is no more serious a problemthan at almost any other major univer¬sity--even those in smaller communities.A 1972 study, comparing index crimes incommunities comparable to Hyde Park inpopulation size, showed similar rates ofcrime in Madison,^Wisconsin; South Bend,Indiana; Ann Arbor, Michigan; as well as,Cambridge, Massachusetts; and NewHaven, Connecticut.While crime is on the increase in manysuburban areas, crime has beendecreasing in Hyde Park in recent years.Last year, the crime rate declined eight percent, and the trend, with fluctuations invarious categories, is continuing this year.Also, the perception of safety here hasbeen improving. Hyde Park is being in¬creasingly viewed as a pleasant place tolive and the growing influx of newresidents settling in Hyde Park has helpedcause the housing shortage.Crime paranoia has beeneuphemistically termed a “high degree ofawareness of the problem.” That higher“awareness” has had both negative andpositive results. It has created a core ofactivists—people who are concernedrather than afraid. They form block clubs,promote crime prevention programs withvarying degrees of success, talk to police,and generally look out for each other.The South East Chicago Commission(SECC), an influential community plan¬ning organization partially supported bythe University, supports a lawyer whoadvises and represents crime victims andwitnesses free of charge, a serviceavailable nowhere else in the city.Hyde Park benefits from an ex¬traordinary level of security coverage.The University security force, over 100men (and women) strong, patrols theHyde Park-Kenwood area, reinforcing thealready intensified coverage which theChicago police (sensitive to the substantialclout that the University commands)provides.The University also runs free minibusservice at night for those wary of dark citystreets. For the brave souls that dare tobOSh• HO£M—Tfco "Thief Mariem Friday, By Jan RhodesEvery fall there is a mad clamor forpart-time jobs in and around theUniversity. Officially, there are two placesfor students to go to find out about suchjobs—the personnel office at Regensteinand the career counseling and placementoffices cm the second floor of Reynold’sClub. Non-students—including student,staff, and faculty spouses—are relegatedto the University’s personnel office inIngleside Hall. Besides those options,there is that vast but ill-defined network ofpersonal friends and acquaintances, andthe happenstance of being in the prover¬bial right place at the right time. Besidesthat, there are all the little restaurants andbusinesses.lining 57th Street or clusteredin the shopping area from 55th down to 51stStreet. Besides that, there is all ofChicago.The personnel office at Regensteinscreens and hires for all the University’slibraries, and all the part-time positionsare reserved for students. The placementoffice in Reynold’s Club does no hiring; theoffice interviews students and refers themto available University* jobs. The officealso collects a loose-leaf notebook of jobofferings in Hyde Park and Chicago, whenemployers notify the office of job Openings,for students to browse through. In theory,all the part-time jobs offered throughoutthe University are reported to theptesement office. In reality, of course, thattshot always the case.14,1974 “Crime paranoia has been euphemistically termed ’a high degree of awareness ofthe problem.'" (photos by Dan Wise)brave the streets at night, over a hundredwhite phones, connected directly toUniversity security, are scatteredthroughout Hyde Park.The Hyde Park-Kenwood CommunityConference (HPKCC) an umbrella groupconsisting of block clubs and other com¬munity groups, established the“Whistlestop” program in 1972. Theprogram advocates the use of whistles as acrime prevention device. The programwas the first of its kind in the country. Sofar, over 16,000 whistles have beendistributed. The HPKCC also provides freeadvice on burglary prevention, andcoordinates a , property identificationprogram.Among students, its hard to maintain ahealthy attitude about the problem whenthe administration acts so touchy about it.University administrators, while nevernotably loquacious about anything exceptfor the merits of the common core orcertain dead scholars, «re implacablysilent on the crime situation. If a sniperwere to begin firing on the quadranglesfrom Harper tower, the, administrationwould probably refuse to acknowledge theincident, for fear that it would create a“distorted” image of snipers at theUniversity of Chicago. Robert Barber, the SECC attorney whocounsels crime victims, suggests that theproblem is caused in part by students whoare unfamiliar with an urban en¬vironment.“Students coming from the country orthe suburbs don’t know what to expect.Somebody says something to them on thestreet and they get easily intimidated—unreasonably I think.”“Students get together in the dorms andbitch about the food, their classes, theirprofessors—and about the neighborhood.They say they’d love to live in LincolnPark but they’s probably discover that thesituation there is no better.”One crime problem that does exist, andwhich gets less attention, is propertycrime. Although street crimes have eitherbeen decreasing or holding steady, thenumber of thefts from autos has risendramatically in the past year.According to police figures, theft fromautos in Hyde Park has increased from 458to 647 from the period of January 1 to’September 8, 1976 as compared to thesame period in 1975. If you are a commuteror a University employee and you parkyour car on the Midway, be warned, thatlocation is a favored hunting ground forthieves. If you have a citizen’s band radio,your car is a sure target.Anita Sandke, director of careercounseling and placement, said that“people are being very good about sendingtheir part-time jobs here. Everyone’scoming around.”But it still doesn’t hurt to have a con¬nection. One student tells the story of herroommate dropping by the lab she workedin to say hello one afternoon. “After sheleft,” the student explained, “theprofessor who operates the lab asked me ifmy roommate would want a job.”To latch onto one of the coveted lab orresearch assistant jobs, sought after byFrantic pre-meds and other assortedbiology and chemistry majors, one almosthas tohave an “in” with a professor.Overall, the part-time employmentpicture is not glaringly bright, but neitheris it grim. The University employs close to2000 students in part-time jobs. Accordingto Sherry Stone, student employmentcounselor, probably everyone who wants ajob can eventually find one.“I think generally we can come up with ajob a person wants to do if they are willingto wait,’’she said.Although the career counseling andplacement office keeps a list of non-University jobs, Anita Sandke has nothingdirectly to do with this list and ha*? no wayof telling how many students find jobs as aresult of her office’s list. Her office doesnot seek out job openings in Hyde Park, ormake specific refereals to these jobs. Sheseldom gets any feedback from eitheremployers or students. “An employer rarely calls us backunless he is swamped by students andwants his name taken out of the list,” shesaid.The office will probably have around 200job listings, ranging from babysitting andhousecleaning to telephone sales anddriving a van for the Chicago Children’sChoir. Sandke has three copies of thenotebook.“If necessary, we’ll make six,” she said.“Last year we had one, and people werestanding on each other’s shoulders to seeit.”Some jobs are harder to come by thanothers. Library jobs are particularlyscarce.“Right now, we have more applicationsthan jobs,” pointed out Dennis Melhouse,the library’s assistant personnel officer.Melhouse said the library system employsslightly over 300 students. He doesn’t knowbow many positions will be open this year.He said there was a low turnover last yearand there is little hope of many jobsopening up during the year.“Generally, students will hang onto a joball year—and sometime* for four or five,”Melhouse laughed.The largest turnover will be in Regen¬stein circulation and reserve, Melhousesaid. He explained that library jobs arefirst offered to the people who held themthe previous year, then to people who badbees employed by the libraries before, andChild careBy Jan RhodesApple and pumpkin picking, painting,and pot luck suppers—all are commonoccurrences in Hyde Park’s wide varietyof child care centers. There are nurseryschools and day schools, places for beforeschool and after school. There are largefacilities which manage 60 preshoolers,some with a dozen, and there are womenwho care for handfuls of children in theirhomes.Although each child care center in HydePark is slightly different, none are simplybabysitting services. They all take a childdevelopmental approach, according toNan Peterson of the Child Care TaskForce, a group which serves as an in¬formational clearing house and refersparents to day care centers and homes.Peterson said, “Even the day-caremothers take very seriously the need forintellectual stimulation, though theirspecific methods would vary.”Peterson urges parents to visit theprivate homes and day care centers beforemaking any decision. “Parents really needto visit the center,” she said. “They are alljust as good, but all a little different.”Some of the centers are traditional half¬day nursery schools; others provide a 4home-like atmosphere for the children allday long while parents are away at work.There is one school, Ancona, based on theMontessori method. Two centers are runas cooperatives, where parents take turnsin taking charge of the classrooms. Manyhave parent councils and parent volun¬teers to supplement the professionaldirection.The Task Force does not place childrenin day care facilities, but informs parentsof various child care options and lets themmake their own choices. They receive over30 calls each week, over half fromUniversity students, staff, or faculty. Thereferral group was established four yearsago, an outgrowth of the Sojourner TruthDay Care Center, which was set up fiveyears ago by the Women’s Rights Com¬mittee of the ubiquitous Hyde Park-finally to students according to date ofapplication. Melhouse said an attempt ismade to match student qualifications andlibrary needs, so if a job opens up in the arthistory library, an art history major has aslight edge. 'Another large single area of studentemployment is the University’s foodservice, which operates the three dormcafeterias, the C-Shop, and HutchinsonCommons. Ellis Norman, food servicemanager, has about 55 jobs to offer.Norman said that in the past, about 40 ofthe student employees return to their jobsafter the summer. Usually, dorm residentsare hired to work in their own dorms. Hesaid that he expects to fill all but “a dozenor so” of the current openings by today,but that dorm jobs are usually available.“Generally the turnover occurs aboutfinal exam time,” Norman observeddryly.Few student jobs of less than 10 hoursper week or of more than 20 hours perweek are available. The hourly wagevaries, but it is never less than the federalminimum wage, which will be increasedfrom $2.20 to $2.30 next January. Usually,students can expect to make about $3.00 antour. Raises are based on merit, but arealso related to time employed.Sandke pointed out that the federalgovernment allows colleges and univer¬sities to pay less than the minimumwage—as little as 85 percent of it— but theUniversity of Chicago chooses not to do so.In fact, the University carefully over- Kenwood Community Conference (HPK-CC). All three organizations—the TaskForce, the HPKCC, and Sojourner Truth-are now independent of each other.One of the roles of the Task Force hasbeen to aid women who wanted to care fortwo to four children in their homes, helpingthem get started and referring children tothem. The Task Force finds that the daycare mothers usually charge about adollar an hour.The cost at the sixteen day care centersin the Hyde Park area for full day carevary between $25 and $40 a week. Annualtuition for the part-day programs rangefrom $300 to $1200, depending on the agegroup and the center. The most expensiveis the University of Chicago NurserySchool. But the tuition is halved for theUniversity’s staff and faculty, and so forthem, the cost of the University NurserySchool is less than that of some of the othercenters.Some of the child care centers, like theHyde Park Neighborhood Club, theChicago Child Care Society, and theChicago Theological School NurserySchool, have sliding tuition scales,depending on the parent’s ability to pay.Scholarships are available at theUnitarian Coop and the Neighborhood Clubqualifies for Head Start and Model Citiesfunding.It comes as no surprise that the majorityof the children at the University’s nurseryschool—75 percent of them—are fromUniversity families. At other centers, thepercentage varies from 10 percent to 60percent. Nan Peterson points out that it isdifficult to imagine a graduate student’sbeing able to afford day care facilities. TheTask Force’s Ruth Woll said that half ofthe home care providers are graduatestudent wives.Enrollment is still open at some of thenursery schools and day care centers. TheUniversity’s nursery school is currentlyfilled, and there is the possibility of someopenings during the school year, but thereis a waiting list. At least Akiba/Scbecter,the Parent Coop, the Theological School,the Child Care Society, Unitariansees the area of student employment in itslibraries, departments, food services, andoffices. The personnel office is anxious togive everyone equal pay for equal work.All part-time jobs are submitted to thepersonnel office to be evaluated, and theoffice suggests the appropriate salary. Ifthe job can be classified, for* instance asclerical or technical, the recommendationis according to a specific wage schedule. Ifthe job is in a unionized area and thestudent job is the same as the union job,the union wage is recommended. But theactual money comes out of the budget ofthe department doing the hiring, so thewage may turn out to be less than therecommendation. The libraries alwayspay the recommended scale.A problem sometimes comes up with thefederally funded work-study jobs. Work-study is a program for students in finan¬cial need, in which federal governmentwill fund the employment of needystudents. Work-study jobs must be newlycreated and the federal funds must onlyaugment what the university usuallyspends on student employment. Thefederal government pays work-studystudents according to their year in college,irrespective of the type of job. Con¬sequently, a student here with a work-study job may be getting less from thefederal government than the University’spersonnel office would recommend if theUniversity were paying In these cases,the personnel office suggests that thedepartment employing the student add to Preschool, Ancona, and the NeighborhoodClub all still have openings in certainclasses. The Jewish Community Center(JCC) still has morning openings, and theUnion School has afternoon openings. Thekindergarten is closed at Sojourner Truth,but there are some other age-groupopenings.The programs at each of the child carecenters vary and some cater to specificgroups or philosophies. The Universitygives priority to faculty and staff. TheHarper Square Day Care Center givespriority to residents of the apartmentbuilding where the center is set up. TheTheological School is run for its ownstudents’ children, and Jane’s House givespriority to McCormick TheologicalSeminary students’ families.The JCC nursery school requiresmembership in the JCC and tries to “givethe children a Jewish background, Jewishidentification,” said a spokesperson.Akiba/Schecter also caters to Jewishethnic background.A number of the centers offer certainunique programs. The JCC and the ParentCoop offer a swimming program forpreschoolers. The Neighborhood Club hasa special program for kindergartenersbefore and after their regular publicthe wages to bring them up to par.Last year there were 262 work-study jobsat the University. Stone said that all un¬dergraduates and most graduates whowere eligible for work-study and whowanted such jobs found them. Thedeadline for applying for a work-study jobis next Wednesday, September 29. Un¬dergraduates should inquire at theCollege’s office of admissions and aid, andgraduates should see the loan counselorsin the Administration Building.Sandke and Stone say that sometimesthey have jobs and can’t find anyone totake them. There are usually clerical jobsavailable, but it is difficult to find studentswith the interests and skills to take thosejobs.“There seems to be a deep prejudiceagainst being a secretary,” Stone ob¬served.Sandke recalled one time when thesnake population in someone’s lab sud¬denly became very fertile. A student wasneeded to nurture the growing snakes, andthe lab called Sandke every day in searchof someone to help.“No one seemed to want to handle abunch of snakes,” Sandke said.Students who want to find jobs should goup to Stone’s office for an interview, keeptheir eyes and ears wide open, search thebulletin boards, pound the streets of HydePark—and possibly eavesdrop at opendoors. If students are not fussy, jobs can befound. If they are particular, they mayhave to wait a while. school kindergarten classes. The ParentCoop is the only year-round program andthe only one that accepts two-year-olds.People who don’t need local child carefacilities, but who would like to volunteertheir time or money helping the child caresituation can be useful at the Child CareTask Force. The Task Force helps to set upday care centers and homes, and helpscoordinate resource material, as well asruns the referral service. The Task Force". . . none are simply babysitting ser¬vices.”has only two full-time staff members andabout 25 working volunteers, dose to 70percent of whom are associated with theUniversity. The Task Force has another 85supporting members — about half linkedto the .University. The Task Force alwaysneed donations, and has set up a fallbenefit party, with dancing, folk music,pretzels, and beer, for next Saturday,October 2.“All the child-care centers are prettymuch alike,” observes Helen Sinaiko,director of Sojourner Truth.Many of the centers’ directors echoedthe sentiment. Some have differentprograms, some are more theory-orientedthan others, some are governed differentlythan others, but all have the developmentand well-being of the child in mind.Friday; ’Saptambsr K ifh—Tin Chimps Harem I?w* r -♦* at .-hh1 *KAFFENOAPPETIZERSZIMI ROLLSchopped ham, swiss cheese, turkey cookedtogether in our own homemade zurrvSAGANAKIkaceri cheese and ouzo flamed right before yourvery eyesSALADSMEDITERRANEAN SALADlettuce, tomato, kalamata olives, feta cheeseHOUSE SALADmixed greens and tomatoesFRESH FRUIT SALAD COLD CRABMEAT TOMATOluscious crabmeat salad stuffed into tomato$1 45 wedges topped with something special SOUPSTHE HOUSE SOUPCheddar cheese soup$1.75THE DAY'S SOUP .95your guess is as good as our’s$1.65 .75$1 95$2.5075$1.25 CHEESE SPINACH PIEcheese and spinach wrapped in filoGEORGE WASHINGTON MEMORIAL SALAD BARa most elaborate array of lettuce, tomatoes, tangerines, strawberries, apples and raisins, beet salad, olives, baby dillpickles, swiss cheese, croutons, mushrooms, chicken salad, cream cheese, sliced peaches, macaroni salad, caviar,pineapples, cauliflower, tri-bean salad, spinach, german potato salad, bananas, cole slaw, hard boiled eggs, mints,cucumber salad, bean sprouts, carrots, radishes, sour cream, melons, green peppers and assorted dressingsLUNCHEON SALAD BARwith luncheona la carte $1.25$2-95MIXTURESFETA CHEESE OMELETTEan omelette rolled around rich white feta cheese,onions, and tomatoes $2 25 LOBSTER BENEDICTmedallions of lobster on a toasted english muffin,topped with a poached egg and bechamel sauce $2.95FRESH FRUITS FRENCH TOASTthick slices of cinnamon-raisin french toast withan array of fresh fruits and whipped cream $2 35 PENIRLIhomemade zumi baked with Cheddar cheesetopped with ham and eggs of your choice $2.95SANDWOserved with fried potatoes and choice of rye bread HESor bun GYROSHAMBURGER $2 10 ground beef and vegetables in pita with ourCHEESEBURGER $2 20 sauce tzatzki $2.10CHEDDARBURGERSWISSBURGER $2 30$2 30 FALAFIL$2.10FETABURGER $2 35 the answer to the vegetarian demandBLUECHEESEBURGER $2 35 SOUVLAKISOURCREAMBURGER $2 35 beef shischkabob and vegetables in pita withOLIVEBURGER $2 35 sauce tzatzki $2 95MUSHROOMBURGERWHISKYBURGER $2 35$2.50 REUBEN $2.50 DINNER SALAD BAR *rwith dinner entreewith sandwicha la carteRING AROUND THE EGGfresh sauteed vegetables and poached eggs on anenglish muffin with bechamel sauceEGGS AND CHICKEN LIVERSsauteed chicken livers served with eggs ofyour choiceHOT TUNAgrilled tuna salad and cheese on ryeFRIED CLAMSCHEESE BUJVJTZESserved with fresh fruits and whipped creamBOMB EXPLODEDany person eating this sandwich without help willbe treated to one of our desserts, we suggest thisENTREESserved only after 4 pmCURRY RICEchicken curry with rice and appropriate garnishes $4 45 CREVETTE BOUILIgiant broiled shrimps served on crushed ice withour rabigot and shrimp sauces, accompanied VEGETABLES EN CROUTEassorted vegetables baked in a crock andsmothered with cheeseSOUVLAKIbeef shischkabob skewed with tomato, pepper,onions, mushrooms, served with rice $3 95 with rice *ICELANDIC COD—broiled, served with buttery mushroom $4.75FILET MIGNON KIEVthe ultimate in tenderness, with a house salad anda baked potatoKOTA SCHARASone-half broiled chicken on a schara $3 75 lemon sauceLIVER SAUTEE $3 75NEW YORK SIRLOIN STEAKserved with sauteed mushrooms, a house saladYOUVERLAKIAgreek meatballs served with rice and toppedwith cream sauce $3 25 tender beef liver sauteed in butter toppedwith mushroomsPOULET BECHAMEL $3.95 and a baked potatoKISTA STEAKserved with sauteed mushrooms, a house salad, one-half broiled chicken covered with bechamelsauce setved with rice $3.85 and a baked potatoDESSERTSthe kaffenio proudly presents a selection of mediterranean delicacies refinedwith our own touch, they are displayed east of the dining area, take a trip andselect from the array for yourself.DESSERT DRINKSSTRAWBERRY CREAMfresh strawberries, whipped cream, and rum . $1.75TEQUILA KAMAKAZItequila, blackberry brandy, orange juice, limejuice, and grenadine $1.75HOT BANANASfresh bananas, creme de cacao & banana liqueur $1.75 PINA COLADApineapple and coconut juices, and rumSTRAWBERRY SLUSHfresh strawberries and creme de cacaoCHOCOLATE MINTchocolate milk and vandermintBEVERAGEScoconut milk $1 OO grapefruit juice 60 iced teapineapple juice $1 OO lemonade 40 milkorange juice 60 pep* 40 teatomato juice .60 diet pepsi 40 coffeebanana juice $1.00 bubble-up 40 sankaaprtcc* nectar $1 OO dad's root beer 40 hot chocolate*N • 5% (Moour* tor our c##h cu»«om#r». c*a cM«om$r». prtotf v 104% o* ih# •*bur>r inowMM re •pons***# for gryids# low or stolon no clocks**# rtght to *#•< Our customers *2 OO rrvrwtvyn p#r p#rson $1.25$2 25$3 50$2.75$2.50$2 00$2.45$2 10$7 75$2 95$7 95$7 50$5 75MOCA CARIDOPITA ~ KOKsavajar, brandy, coffee glaze, peanuts, caramel walnuts, savajar, and ginger $1.45 chocolate, savajar, and custard filling 85and fresh fruits $1.75 •PEACH JELLY SOUR MOSAIK GALATOBOUREKOsavajar, socolata, fruits, and whipped cream $1.45 thin filo dough with custard filling 70savajar, brandy, jelly, whipped cream, peaches.and fresh fruits $1.7p MORRAINE APPLES BAKLAVASOCOLATINA apples baked in brandy served with blueberrybrandy sauce, fresh fruits, and whipped cream $1 95 layers of filo with chopped peanut filling 70socolata, fresh fruits, and whipped creamROLLO $1.50STRUDELfruit rolled in thin filo with whipped cream $1 25jelly, savajar, whipped cream, and fruits $1.45$1 75 RADIOACTIVE LEMONSreal lemons, rum. and sugar $1.75$1 75 PEACH SLUSHpeaches, apricot brandy, and cream $1 75SANTGRIA$1 75 rich red wine, with fresh fruitsglass M 85karafe $3 8540403535.3540!•—Th# Chicago Maroon—Friday, S#pt#mto#r 24, ft74Bag's Keys to Chicago Culture orHow I Learned toliUkacsLeBagsuspect that when the folks who brought you therid Football League get out on parole, they may startZorld Culture League. If only it were possible to getay with charging money for every time people argue)ut the relative merits of what one town’s got andDther hasn’t...imagine the potential. Somebody might; rich. (I can just see Eliot Fremont-Sraith a free^nt, signing a multi-year contract with Houston. Oricago would trade Aaron Gold to Cleveland forrothy Fuldheim and a movie critic to be named later.II the rookies called up from the Reader live up tofir potential?))f course, if they had a World Culture League, they’d/e to build a stadium in Hyde Park. This is where theIs are. Nowhere else are relative cultural merits soportant as in one of the world’s capitals of academicStling. Everybody here is into something, culturally,ettantism or simplism is sinful. When you talk about[sic, you don’t dare say, “Well, ah, gosh, I’m intoIon John” or “I like mostly Beethoven and Mozart.”)tant freeze-out. Invoking Ramones, Palestrina, orcil Taylor might earn you an entree. Might. And mostirybody has been somewhere that’s somewhere (as>osed to nowhere). Until I got here, I never realizedt just being from Cleveland was a crime. People whone into Hyde Park know what’s going on, or wouldb everybody else to think that they know where it’s allWomen, for example, strive to be truly cosmopolitanher than to be into Cosmopolitan. (But I got news forJ, Babe: unshaven legs have already had their day,were declared “out” at the same time Barry[nilow was becoming very “in”.)>o what do a bunch of hipsters do about this city?»stly, they bitch about it. The general feeling is that ifw York is the Big Apple, Chicago is, at most, the Bigtsburgh. Especially after a Sunday with the Newrk Times (plus five minutes on the john with the Sun-bes) one often finds the same reaction as after apday with the Cubs: “What a loser town!” You knowlitany already. What does Chicago have for a Lin-i Center—McCormick Place? New York always leadsmovies-playing derby by two Bergmans, threelude Chabrols, and four Lina Wertmullers (well,►re one for Chicago). As for Chicago’s contributions[the performing and literary arts: well, there’s Saul[low and Nelson Algren and the Chicago Symphonythough Sir Georg didn’t exactly grow up in Humboldtpk). But go beyond them, and you come to Scheckypen. Fran Allison, and Brent Musberger. On StateP®t, that great street.!.well, they don’t do anything on’adway anymore either, but all you can see areftocrat3 marching past Mayor Daley’s permanentiewing stand. (I swear, I saw a parade at nine o’clock last“■sday night—talk about not haveing anything better to Stop Worrying and Love Irv Kupcinetbetter to do.) Once in a while, you do see a man dancewith his wife, but they’re still doing the shing-a-ling justthe same.The only retort Chicagoans have to this image is stufflike this: somebody finally protested that Bob Newhartcan’t ride the Ravenswood el and get to Sheridan Road.They changed it last year—but, in the new film, whydoes he walk all the way from the Water Tower almost amile to the Uptown Federal Building? There are no suchdistortions about Minneapolis on the Mary Tyler MooreShow, I’ll assure you. An underdog complex does bugthis place, Jim Durham, the voice of the Chicago Bulls,came up with a truism (what trusims does Marv Albertplant?)—for the Bulls, and for a lot of people. The Bullswere doing what they do very well-being eliminatedfrom the playoffs by cutting a 25-point deficit into aimpressive three-point loss; in the midst of the futilerally, Durham cried: “ADVERSITY-CHIC AGOLOVES IT!” Such gracious losers, but such losers.Mayor Daley threatens not to let George Halas, a rock-ribbed and successful Chicagoan if there is one, call histeam the Chicago Bears if they move out of their SoldierField dungeon to the suburbs. But the rock groupChicago moves lock, stock, and millions to L.A., andDaley gives them the key to the city.The feeling of being dumped on goes double for the U.of C. student. Being a Maroon student carries the sameprestige in this town as being a Maroon football playercarried in Columbus, Ohio. Nobody cares to be veryimpressed by Hyde Parks enlightened cultural sen¬sibilities.The only propositioning that goes on here is to playchess. You can’t walk into First National Bank with adiploma and land in a management training program.And you can’t just roll up your diploma and smoke iteither, after all the seriousness you’ve been through forfive years. It’s not easy to get down; most people are justplain down. Singly or in pairs, rarely in larger groups.It’s what Dr. LeBag calls the “bronco life” syndrome.Once after my Bulls had lost a particularly brutal game,Dick Motta (pro sports’ only coach with a certifiableNapoleonic complex, and a man with a uniquelyChicagoan knack of snatching defeat from the jaws ofvictory) said in an interview, with a gleam in his eye:“That’s what we call back in Idaho ‘bronco basketball’:grab somebody and hold on.” That’s the show in HydePark, too: just grab somebody and hold on.Chicago, to be sure, is no magic kingdom. En¬chantment doesn’t pour out of every doot*. After all, ifyou want a genuinely collegiate good time, you can getone just up the road in Madison. Yet, out of the Daleygrind, leveled-out, I-got-mine-Jack mentality that most of Chicago fairly reeks of, there comes a redeemingfeature. If Chicago is nowhere else, it is in the realworld; it is definitely part of the United States ofAmerica. Barry Goldwater’s progeny may some dayactually succeed in sawing off New York and Boston andletting them float out to sea. A more likely occurence isthat San Francisco or Los Angeles will one day disap¬pear or secede from the Union. Here, all there is to fearis The Eggplant That Age Chicago (a big hit for Dr.West’s Medicine Show and Junk Band from 1966, but tryto request that on the oldies show and see what you get.)Chicago still is the city of the broad shoulders, the citythat works. It will be here for awhile. Intact. Solvent(maybe.)It’s also big enough that there’s no excuse to feel that*bored, neglected, or left-out. Or feel that everyone inthis place, if they haven’t been bucking for tenure sincethe age of sixteen, is Archie junker. A lot of people domanage to get along here—painters and musicians,eaters and drinkers, talkers and actors, fans andplayers—and they manage with at least some semblenceof style and vitality. Nothing will just come to you—ittakes effort (and courage)-even to go anywhere; andmore effort to get people out of habits and suspicions.But, to get along in the real world, such an effort has tobe made. And, if you take heed of what our Maroonexperts have to say on the following pages, you willassuredly get in the ballgame, culturally speaking, andnot just sit on the sidelines.r \Here is no continuing city, here is noabiding stay,Ill the wind, ill the time, uncertain theprofit, certain the danger.. Oh late late late, late is the time, late toolate, and rotten the year;Evil the winter, and bitter the sea andgrey the sky, grey, grey, grey.• ' T.S. Eliot/Friday, Siplambar 24, Wd-Tha Chicago Maroon-ltOz«yCityJournal*page2iI|t fTlusicDon’t StopAll That JazzBy P.L. SpackleAs a major city Chicago attracts manyjazz musicians as they pass through. Forthis reason there is always good music to beheard, but you have to hunt. Most talentedChicago born' jazz artists travel to the eastor west coasts early in their careers, butseem to be attracted to the city as an oc¬casional place to play. Since Chicago hasalways had a reputation, and a tradition, asa jazz city, there are many musicians here,though no real remaining indigenous“Chicago Jazz style." There are no bigrecording companies in town, which playsan important part in the mass exodus of themajor jazz performers.Chicago is a business conscious, en¬trepreneurial center. This means simplythat if jazz will sell, which it does more andmore, it continues to exist. It is, un¬fortunately, always threatened by such sureselling items as disco bars and singles spots,and for this reason the top Near-North jazzhouses have been trampled by a plat-formheeled horde of budding Hustlers (boththe dancers and the moneyed version). Still,promoters farther north have seen that thelikes of McCoy Tyner and Freddie Hubbarddo bring crowds. So, it seems that jazz ishere to stay for the time being, but as NeilTesser of the Reader warns: “Jazz inChicago is rather like the old shell game inthe hands of a master: now you see it, andnow you don’t."As a rule Chicago Jazz is less academicand cerebral than Boston’s, and less avantgarde, as well as commercial, than NewYork’s. Creed Taylor never seemed to havemade it out this way (for better or worse).Artists like Fred Anderson and MuhalRichard Adams, who have been here foryears continue to play, but Chicago jazz nolonger maintains the influential positionit held in the 20’s, 30’s, and 40’s.Despite its tenuous condition Chicago hasthe best jazz record store in the nation, theJazz Record Mart (7 W. Grand St. 222-1467).Owned by well known Chicago figure BobKoestler, the J.R.M. can supply any jazzrecord you could want. Though the pricesare hardly inexpensive, Koestler, who alsoowns the Delmark record label, is a good manto t*lk to if .you want to know more aboutjazz in Chicago.These are some of the best Jazz clubs intown; for weekly listings check the Reader.The Jazz Showcase and the Jazz Mediumhave combined forces at 961 N. Rush Street(337-1000) to preserve jazz in Chicago afterthey helped almost destroy it. Top artistslike Dizzy Gillespie will be coming in thisfall, and though both places are expensive($6 cover) the music should be all that itpromises. Part of the club has surrenderedto disco, so the atmosphere may be slightlytoo slick and suburban for your taste, but itis the closest northside Jazz spot.Ratao’s (2464 N. Lincoln) has a real clubambiance. The waitresses are nice, the foodis good, and the cover is reasonable ($4).Owner Bob Biggs made Rateo’s respectable,but promoter Ray Townley made itChicago's best small club. It has a verysophisticated atmosphere, and even a goodSunday brunch, if you can stand JudyRoberts. Rateo’s is a first rate club, and theplace people like Tyner, Larry Coryell, andStanley Turrentine play when they’re intown. Hot Tip: don’t miss A1 Jarreau thenext time he’s there; he’s the best young jazzvocalist around.North Lincoln Street seems to havebecome the place to go for jazz in Chicago.Orphans, which is right next to Rateo’s,Wise Fool’s Pub (2270 N. Lincoln), andKingston Minas (2364 N. Lincoln) are ailsolid establishments. They cost about thesame as Ratao’s, where a beer is $1.50, andthey house regular performances by thelikes of Dave Remington and his big band(Monday’s at Wise Fool’s), Bobby Christianand Von Freeman, as well as out of townjazz artists. of town jazz artists.Most other jazz places are farther north,with the exception of Transitions East (8236S. Cottage Grove), which caters to theChicago Jazz scene’s own survival kit: TheAssociation for the Advacement of CreativeMusicians (A.A.C.M.) The organization is aco-operative designed to nurture, as well asfeed, the indigenous Chicago jazzman. Themusic is by far the most experimental to beheard in the city, and Anderson, Abrams,Joseph Janhan, Lester Bowie, AnthonyBraxton, and Roscoe Mitchell set out in 1966to revitalize Chicago’s Golden Jazz Agethrough the choice of a definite musicaldirection. The A.A.C.M. seems to guide andcontrol the musically loose improvisations)style in a somewhat cohesive social andpolitical manner. The reason for this is it’snot that easy to make a living as an ex¬perimental musician in Chicago withoutsome kind of organizational support.For Far-Northside jazz the best places arethe Quiet Knight (953 W. Belmont) andAmazingrace (845 Main St., Evanston).Both places feature rock music, but oftenbring in fine jazz artists. Any smart clubowner these days knows that people willcome to hear Herbie Hancock and KeithJarrett, but of course it’s a question oftaking the initial chance. It’s a good bet,however, that ingelligent rock fans, thosewho would be going to clubs, not footballstadiums to hear crap, will show up for fineprofessional music.Musically adept promoters like the QuietKnight’s Richard Harding took the jazz/rock chance some time ago and got smartlong before they got rich. He booked peoplelike Hancock, Oregon, and Eddie Harriswhen they didn’t seem any more bankablethan Swiss cheese. Hancock blessed theQuiet Knight a good three months beforeHeadhunters blew the jazz and rock worldsapart, and then sewed the first seam of the(somewhat) successful fusion movement.The other distant club, Amazingrace, isworth the trip. As a larger hall (seating 400)it’s a cheap ($2.50 or $3.00) and comfortableway to hear bigger name jazz performers.The acoustics are good, the music is loud,and with performers like Chick Corea, Jean-Luc Ponty, and Keith Jarrett, it can’t betopped. Acts that should definitelybe caught in October are Oregon, from the8th through the 11th, and the Bill EvansTrio, from the 12th through the 15th. Showsare at 8 and 11p.m.Besides these established places jazz canalso be heard occasionally at blues bars,around Hyde Park, and at the Museum ofContemporary Art (237 E. Ontario St.). Theshows, at the Museum particu .arly, areusually exciting and unqiue. Be sure tocatch “Solo Piano. . .And Then Some,"which runs each Sunday through November7th at the Museum. The concerts are from1 - 4 p.m. and will concentrate on therenaissance in modern jazz of a demandingidiom, unaccompanied improvisation.Admission is $1, $.50 for students, and thepianists are Neil Tesser and Bill Traut, withgrand old Chicago jazzman Art Hodesperforming on September 26th.rnddii I Mturd20—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 24,1974>£- ore)/ •* )«?■ » . «*>• Grey Blues on the South SidiBuddy Guy and Junior WeilsBy Fergus BarkerChicago is probably the best blues city inthe country, and the South Side is where it’shappening. Hyde Parkers have a uniqueopportunity; they can travel a mile and ahalf and hear superb blues — in a wayChicago’s only self made sound — for verylittle money (an entire evening shouldn’tcost more than $5). What’s really a shame isthat too few students take advantage of thepossibilities. So, before you get caught inthe Regenstein winter doldrums, check out afar more exciting kind of blues.When planning an evening at a local bluesbar remember first of all that, no, it’s reallynot dangerous. Just don’t be stupid and sing“White Christmas” on the corner of 47thand State. We don’t recommend walking tothe bars, but then it’? too far to anyway. Ifanything, whites will be well appreciated bythe management for their patronage, and bythe clientele and performers for theircuriosity and rugged individualism. IfChicago really is the most “American" ofall cities, and Norman Mailer says it is, youowe it to yourself to discover the most“American" music in the most “American"city. An added extra at some clubs is thefine dancing which easily makes the latestRush Street hustle look like it waschoreographed by Joe Cocker and a BarbieDoll.Chicago blues has a tradition it isaggressively sustaining. It is located in acity that stresses neighborhood above all, acity that is highly segregated. In this newage of ethnic purity, however, this has it’smusical advantages; it allows the con¬tinuation of a mainstay Chicago insti¬tution, the neighborhood bar. Blues barsare essentially such establishments. Theysurvive because they are cheap to maintain;the musicians (who have no where else toplay) like Chicago, charge little and staylate; the patror* are loyal and like tocelebrate; and the beer is inexpensive. Bluesartists, unlike their colleagues in jazz androck, seem willing and able to gain limitedfame, and more limited fortune playing thesame places for 30 years.Two of Chicago’s best, Junior Wells andBuddy Guy, can be seen at the Checker¬board (423 E. 43rd St.) as often as not, andfor a very good reason: Guy runs the club.Well known outside of the Chicago bluesscene , Wells and Guy have been giggingtogether for years, as well as with BonnieRaitt. But no matter where Wells and Guyroam, they always seem to gravitate back toChicago, which is lucky for us. TheCheckerboard also features a jam session onMondays, which, like the rest of the week’sentertainment, is top-notch.Hmcum’s Lounge (4801 S. Indiana Ave.)is the other top blues bar, and is commonlyassociated with the Checkerboard. Guy andWells often play there on weekends, as doother regulars like Bobby King. Mighty JoeYoung, Lonnie Brooks, Fenton (SomebodyLone Me a Dime) Robinson, and blues-•uftarist-extraordinaire Jimmy Johnson. All of these names can be caught elsewhere,but Theresa’s has something special aboutit. Its basement location seems to pressurecook the music, and everyone gets down anddances. At Theresa’s, audience and per¬former alike get caught up in a quin¬tessential meaning of the blues: tangibleintensity and passion.Like the Checkerboard and Theresa’a,admission at the other blues bars is usuallyonly $1. Sweet Queen Bee’s (7401S. ChicagoAve.) is free during the week, and offersa more mellow atmosphere than Theresa's.Stalwart members of the South Side bluesscene often frequent the Queen Bee, as wellas Eddie Shaw’s Place (1815 W. RooseveltAve.), a pleasant club that was long Howlin’Wolfs musical home. Florence’s (5443 S.Shields) has free jams every Sunday, andjust about anyone, or everyone, shows up.One act that definitely should be seen isthe Aces, a fine R&B band that does muchback up work as well. The Aces play at theSouth Park (379 E. 69th St.), where there iano cover charge. The Jazz Set Club (48th &S. Cottage Grove)0 often features JimmyJohnson, as well as other fine artists. Betterknown bluesmen like Albert King andSunnyiand Slim play at the larger places,Stringley (4905 W. Madison) and the HighChaparral (7740 S. Stony Island Ave.) Theseclubs cost more, but it’s an oppor¬tunity to hear some of the finest bluesartists in the country. Think of it; for $5 youcan see the likes of B.B King, and SonnyTerry and Brownie McGhee, and in a smallcomfortable hall. And of course there'salways the thrill of coming home and tellingyour friends in Hyde Park all about itWhile they’re si-ping watery beer in Jimmy’s, or weak coffee at the library, anythin*is bound to impress them.The o«vv JournaleditorJonathan Meyersohnmanaging editorKaren HellerstaffLukacs LeBagFergus BarkerJeff BaddeleyEden Clorfene Paul GudelCarl LavinKaren MolineP.L. SpackleEsther Joy SchwartzThe Grey City Journal is published eachFriday during the regular academic year aspart of the Chicago Maroon Inquiries coocerning subscriptions and advertising shouldbe addressed to: Business Manager, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 40637. The Editor invitescomments.4-n.nmi ^ A A i±3Pud ^9$****& 6qw W V* j^tR*5 ^'awm 5otb> MOfcUru$ cUU» &t-r !**:»»** |~t , 2_! i-tL"., ,^-pifluu ;• t m i^g jreal heavyweights of the current con¬ducting scene, including Colin Davis, .Bernard Haitink, Carlo Maria Giulini andMusic Director Georg Solti led the studentconcerts, offering some substantial andchallenging music. This year, two series of3 concerts each have replaced last year’sfive concert series, but quality seems tohave declined a bit and the prices havegone up. It is still a tremendous bargain,however, since the series also includestickets to any three of the Chicago Sym-phone Chamber Concerts. This is a seriesof chamber music given at Orchestra Hallfeaturing various members of the CSO, invarious combinations. And you can get allthis for as little as nine dollars.The schedule of the student series willinclude, for the ‘A’ series: Georg Solticonducting Shostakovich’s Ninth andBeethoven’s Seventh (Oct. 13); KlauTennstedt doing Beethoven’s Fifth andTchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto, a programof almost creative banality which is giveninterest by the presence of HenrykSzerying as soloist (Dec. 8); and IrwinHoffman conducting the Sibelius ViolinConcerto, with Esther Glazer, and theProkofiev Fifth (Jan. 12). The ‘B’ seriesoffers Henry Mazer doing Mozart’s FifthViolin Concerto, with phenom VladimirSpivakov, and the Sibelius Fifth, (Oct. 27);Daniel Barenboim doing an all-Schumannprogram, the Second and the Third(March 16); and Carlo Maria Giuliniconducting Bach’s Concerti for 2, 3, 4 and389 pianos, plus Stravinsky’s Les Noces(Apr. 13). All in all, the ‘B’ series seemsmore interesting, featuring as it does thefascinating and enigmatic Sibelius FifthSymphony, two of the greatest examples of romantic symphonic music in theSchumann, and a little-heard but veryrewarding Stravinsky piece. Moreover,one should try not to miss the opportunityof hearing the Chicago Symphony play forCarlo Maria Giulini. In fact, one should notmiss hearing the Chicago Symphony,period. As last year, order forms for thestudent series will be distributed oncampus during orientation week. If youmiss them, you can get one by calling orgoing down to Orchestra Hall, 220 S.Michigan Ave.Orchestra Hall is a very small hall,which is fine from an acoustic standpoint,but it makes tickets to the regular CSOconcerts a bit hard to come by. Tickets foreach concert go on sale by mail threeweeks before the date of the concert; Iwould recommend sending in your orderthree weeks plus one day before anyconcert you’d like to hear. These mightinclude Giulini’s performance of Bartok’sViola Concerto and Brahms’ First (Nov.18-19-20), Bruckner’s Ninth (Nov. 24-28-28)and Dvorak’s Ninth (March 31- Apr. 1-2);Claudo Abbado’s and Maurizio Pollini’scollaboration on the Brahms First PianoConcerto (Feb. 24-26); Solti’s performanceof the Missa Solemnis (May 6-6-7); and theBach B minor Mass on January 4, con¬ducted by Margaret Hillis, the director ofthe Chicago Symphont Chorus, who is thereal Antonio Brico. There are also a coupleof oddities on the schedule. Claudio Ab-bado will conduct Bruckner’s SeventhSymphony on Feb. 10 and >1. On Feb. 10,Maurizio Pollini will also play the BartokFirst Piano Concerto. On Feb. 11, he willplay the Bartok Second Piano Concerto.True lovers of Bartok have the unparailed opportunity of hearing Bruckner’s Seventhtwice within 24 hours. Then, thedistinguished Soviet conductor, GennadyRoshdestvensky will visit Chicago toperform Charles Ives’ Fourth Symphony(March 16-11-12), which is hardly everperformed by anybody. I suppose this iswhat they mean by detente. Full schedulesand price lists are again available fromOrchestra Hall.Now to turn to the touchy subject ofthe Chicago Lyric Opera. In all honesty, Ican’t recommend the Lyric except to thoseopera buffs who must have their seasonaldose of high C’s. The Opera House is amusical Carlsbad Caverns, the orchestrais mediocre, the conducting is routine, andthe productions are uneven. Moreover, itsvery short season (ending Dec. 18) insuresthat the Lyric sells out by subscription, sotickets are hard to get and quite expensive.There may be many of you out there forwhom the presence of one or two topvocalists outweighs all these drawbacks.hicago -'lassie City[paulGudel 0Hewcomers to the University of Chicagoi ^ addicted to live classical musicbe glad to know that this is the oneof the arts with which off-campusago is amply supplied. Good film inago may be sparse and hard to get to,I the drama situation would be a source[ivic shame in Fargo, North Dakota, butsical music is present in fair abun-In fact, there may be just the rightat - I’ve always felt that if I had goneol in New York, the temptation to gorerything would have knocked a fullat off my grade point average,lusic in Chicago revolves around thei focii of Orchestra Hall and the OperaAnd of these, center stage isBrvedly occupied by the Chicagoaphony concerts in Orchestra Hall,i is only the second year in which thei is offering a special series of concertsiced prices to students. Previously,Symphony had offered periodiciversity Nights” which always seemedfeature the Rachmaninoff Secondaphony. Last year, the establishment of| Student Subscription Series brought aaendous improvement in the fareavailable to students. 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TheOrientalInstitute.The intel¬lectualandartisticcom¬munity.These are just a few ofthe many things thatgive Hyde Park a styleall its own.And we at ChicagoBeach Towers, with one ofChicago’s newest apartmentbuildings, are proud to bea part of it.We offer you a roomyapartment that includescentral heating and air- .condition. Incredibleviews of the city and thelake. 24-hour security andservice. Indoor heatedparking. And a penthouse hospitality suite.Tlien there are tenniscourts. A sundeck. Bar¬its. And a beachacross the street.All just 12minutes fromthe Loop.Come seewhat it’s like tolive the life oftoday in theChicago of yesterday.Studios from $200.1 bedrooms from $265.2 bedrooms from $300.Visit our furnishedmodels and park free.Open every day.CHICAGO BEACH TOWERS5050-5020 South Lake Shore Drive 288-5050Equal HousingOpportunity Price# subject to availability. High Notesin Low PlacesBy Jonathan MeyeraohnChicago has the best symphony orchestrain the country, and the most respectedconductor in the world. It has a top-notchopera company, fine chamber groups, andstring quartets, as well as auditoriums,wealthy patrons, and avid listeners.Chicago also has three respectable classicalmusic stations, while New York barely hasone. So, with all this and more, going for it,why isn’t Chicago the best classical musiccity in the country?The answer may be that it is, but the cityjust isn’t able to gather its multifariousresources and prove itself. Or more likely, itmay be that Chicago simply isn’t the kind ofa town that will ever be able to assume apremier role: that Chicago basically isn’t aclassical music city. This, however,demands explanation, especially to someonewho is not familiar with Chicago as a con¬cept. This city is primarily a nerve center ofnational business; and culture, particularlyhigh culture, can never be fully accepted.The city is smart enough to buy and breedits superb orchestra, but it's really thepeople outside of Chicago, in the east, whoappreciate the CSO the most. Chicago hasthe ways, and certainly the means, it justdoesn’t have the creative consciousness totake its place at the top of the classicalmusic world.After a recent extended trip to New York,I realized how musically alive Chicago is.Chicago’s musical vibrancy simply appearsin a form different from New York’s.Chicago is more modest and self-deprecating about its art, and thus hasadopted the role of the quiet giant. WhileNew York is dramatic, Chicago is stoic. Itsplodding, business-oriented approach,however frustrating, does allow for a morecovert neighborhood structure in whichclassical music seems to spring up tem¬porarily for short bursts at local collegesand churches, and then vanish as quickly asit appeared. As such, there is a core of ex¬cellent musicians in Chicago who play inorchestras, ensembles, and chamber groups.One of Chicago’s problems is that thissmall number of fine artists must do all thework. There are many chamber groups thatfeature guest performers, and it seems thatthere aren’t enough local musicians to fillthe position available. This means, ofcourse, that people like oboist Ray Still playmany concerts, but if the few greatmusicians are busy filling the quota in or¬chestras and as guest performers, theyrearely have the time, motivation ornecessity to expand beyond traditionalmusical forms. For this reason there is verylittle experimental music in Chicago, andone infrequently gets to hear recent 20thcentury works. In almost every way,Chicago is far from being an avant-gardecity, but musically in particular. Chicagohas taken the best of what the rest of theworld has to offer, and has molded, im¬ported and weeded out the musicians andthe music of the east and Europe. Musically,Chicago is a highly eclectic city. Nothing isits own, but as it only accepts the best,never the rejects, it still may well be the bestand most successful classical music city inthe country.By never experimenting, Chicago is neverin danger of embarrassing itself. By nevertaking risks, Chicago offers only the well-weathered and critically accepted artistswho have been chosen, by New York andBoston, out of the musical masses. In thisChicago gets good music, but misses out onmuch that is fresh, exciting and unique.Though there is little electronic and otherexperimental music in town, one exceptionis the University’s own Easley Blackwood,a fine composer who has found his niche inChicago.Being a city of the very rich and verypoor, Chicago has many fulltime wealthymusical voyeurs. These patrons do allowhungry musicians a chance to work, but thearrangement smacks of feudal overtones.No doubt, Beethoven would never havemade it in Chicago, nor would he have stoodfor it. The many guilt (and gelt} ladenclassical music supporters seem happy tasit, or sleep, through an evening at theSymphony, aa it’s most certainly a worthycause. This msy, however, be why the CSO’s repertoire is so traditionsis by no means stodgy, which alhis love for performing at U.C.students cheer, ask questions,cited about the music without iThat’s the way music shouperienced, not over some ra<which breaks every five minutesads offering $1000 tours of Moclavichord and the shop in whichBeethoven drank their hot chocolHere’s what’s happening on cquarter:*Friday Chamber MusicOct.8 G U A R N E RI jQUARTET (Steinhardt, violDailey, violin; Micviola; David SoyMandel Hall. 8:30 p.iHaydn, Quartet in G1; Bartok, Quartetop. 7 no. 1 Beethovein F, op. 59 no. 1A dm: $6; UC studlimited number ofthe entire Series o!certs are availablegeneral; $15, UCstaff; $9, UC studeiand information iOffice, 5835 Univei60637; 753-2612,SUNDAY JOSHUA RIFKINOct. 10 BACH. (CosponAlumni Assn.) SolStill, oboe; SusanWyner, soDrano;Silins, baritone. Min 8:00 p.m.Cantatas • Mein Iwimmt im Blut, BWgeh’ und suche mitABWV 49; Concertostrings and continuoreconstructed by Jos(the first performancAdm: $6 ($1 discoiAlumni, CMS suFriends of Musiistudent 'with ID;student. Tickets aOffice. 5835 S. Univei60637; 753-2612.Friday MUSIQUE VIV>mru French contempornT^S97ay gr°UP Pre8entin« £Uct. 22-27 concerts and works!of a contribution ofgovernment in celtthe United States BiOct. 22 Concert. MandHall. 8:30 p.m. Oprehearsal at 2:00 p.nOct. 25 Discussion.(Auspices, T1University of ChicaContemporary MutForum) LexingtiHall. 11:00 a.m.Oct. 25 Discussion led IBetsy Jolai(Auspices, T1University of ChicaContemporary MusForum) LexingtiHall. 2:00 P.M.Oct. 26 Concert. MandHall. 8:30 p.m.Sunday E. POWER BIOOct. 24 with Orchestra: 1Vikstrom, coRockefeller ChapelTicket information iHaydn, Mozart, Fand early AmericanFriday COLLEGIUM MSaturday Motet Choir and InNov. 12-13 Group; Howard idirector. Bond Chap58th St. 8:30 p.m. FreSacred choral musicand Monteverdi. Cotby Dowland and Hoi496 -tad [turday[ov. 20 UNIVERSITY SYMPHONYORCHESTRA: BarbaraSchubert, conductor. MandelHall. 8:30 p.m. FreeMendelssohn, Symphony No. 3in A min. (“Scottish”); Hin¬demith, Symphonie Mathis derMaler. FridayDec. 3idayov. 21id |io |for,art'Hay UNIVERSITY CHORUS andHyde Park Chamber Or¬chestra; James L. Mack,director. Mandel Hall. 3:30p.m. FreeC.P.E. Bach, Magnificat;Stravinsky, Mass Chamber Music Series: JAIMELAREDO, violin; SAMUELSANDERS at the piano.Mandel Hall. 8:30 p.m.Stravinsky, Suite Italienne;Beethoven, Sonata in a, op. 47(“Kreutzer”); Brahms, Sonatain A, op. 100; Ravel, SonateAdm:$6 (UC student, S3).SaturdayDec. 4 COLLEGIUM MUSICUM:Howard M. Brown, director.Bond Chapel, 1025 E.*58th St.8:30 p.m. FreeSecular music of 16th centuryFrancelonday[ov. 29 CHICAGO SYMPHONYORCHESTRA: Carlo MariaGuilini, conductor. MandelHall. 7:45 p.m. Information atConcert Office, 5835 UniversityAve.; 753-2612.uesday PAULA ROBISON, flute;rednesday KENNETH COOPER, harp-ov.30ec. 1 sichord; with TIMOTHYEDDY, cello. Mandel Hall. 8:00p.m.Bach Series: The completesonatas for flute and harp¬sichord.Meet the artists after theconcert.icadayiv. 30 EDWARD MONDELLO,University organist.Rockefeller Chapel. 8:00 P.M.Free For information pleasecall 753-3381. Two other musical opportunities thatshould be heard are:The Contemporary Chamber Players ofthe University of Chicago, directed by thetalented and inventive Ralph Shapey,should be at Mandel Hall sometime thisyear, and if you want to hear some verygood, well performed 20th century vocal andensemble works, we urge you to attend.If you like Baroque music which mostslightly monastic, very medieval U.C.people do, Music of the Baroque (Church ofSt. Paul the Redeemer, 4945 S. Dorchester,363-5662) is for you. The music will bring outthe spiritual ivy tower intensity in you, ifthat’s what’s aimed for. Thomas Wilkin’s isthe conductor and musical director, and heknows a good cantata when he sees one. Spwill you.And do be sure to catch the VermeerQuartet if they’re on campus.iel Cow Townkith CultureCarl Lavinfo establish an appreciation of Fine ArtChicago—especially art of jhis century -I6* prime movers of modern art; Picasso,|<for, and Chagall have independentlypted three great works in three grandzas downtown. These monuments to thephetic sensibilities of Chicagoans standPermanent outdoor advertisements[claiming Chicago’s cultural attainments.P daily be legions of loop office workerslarge scale art works have becomeitems on our cityscape. Chagall’stational mural of the four seasons,to soft colors and floating figures hasthe favorite of many, while* abstraction of a horse anda black steel figure remain more. Seeing these works on a dailypa has brought understanding to some.I has acquainted the many who work inI lo°P with the names of three major ar¬ tists, making them tolerent of, if not curiousabout, modern art. For those who have beenin Chicago for a long time and have justbecome curious, and for those who havebeen curious for a long time but have justcome to Chicago, here is a brief guide to thiscity’s numerous showcases for the visualarts divided into three categories: outdoorsculpture, galleries, and museums.Each of these categories is represented inHyde Park. Elsewhere in this issue is anarticle which discusses the wealth of artisticactivity found in the university environs.This guide therefore, will focus on the rest ofChicago. In fact most of the places men¬tioned involve a trip uptown and are greatexcuses for spending an afternoon awayfrom Hyde Park.Outdoor SculptureA good activity on a fine fall day iswalking. The best way to view outdoor art isto find it yourself when you are least ex¬pecting it. There this section of the guidewill be very short leaving most of the legwork to you. While exploring some ofChicago’s more interesting parks and neigh¬borhoods one notices some of the statuesand wall murals, many of which appear inunexpected places, like under I,C. tracks.Chicago is itself a museum of modern ar¬chitecture and has its share of colorfulethnic neighborhoods so even if you missthe giant, oriental-style wave crashing alongthe side of a three story building you canstill enjoy seeing Old Town. Chicago’s quotaof fine fall days is usually used up by Oc-(Continued on page 6) OCTOBER1SRLE1140% OFF ON:TITLE: REG. 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In Chicago they arealso mostly on Ontario Street or onMichigan Avenue near Ontario. Theirtendency to graze in herds makes it easy tohit all three or four on one outing. It ispermissible to visit only one gallery if youare in a hurry or find yourself particularlyinfatuated with tne art exhibited there.One of Chicago’s most progressive andleast presumptuous galleries isn’t on On¬tario Street. The N.A.M.E. galery at 9 W.Hubbard is a cooperative venture of tenChicago artists to display local and in¬ternational talent free from the financialpressures of most commercial galleries. Themembers, who exhibit their own work inonly about one third of the shows, organizethe exhibits and help the artist with theinstalation. The artist whose works arebeing shown has the security of workingwith others who understand the creativeprocess, and the freedom of organizing hisor her own gallery space. N.A.M.E. is one ofthe oldest, most successful co-operatives inthis country. In the past four yearsN.A.M.E. has built a reputation as an openforum for quality art in many mediums. Itcontinues to exist as the only regularscreening sight of experimental film andconceptual art in Chicago.There are two other co-operative galleriesin town, the Artmesia gallery and A.R.C.,which share the top floor of a gallery filledbuilding on the north side of Ontario Street.Both are women’s co-operatives devoted toworks by female artists who are oftenrejected by other galleries. Together theyrepresent about forty artists who take turnsusing the gallery spaces to display their ownworks. Many visiting artists, critics, andwriters often appear at one or the othergallery to lead discussions.In the same building there are five or sixother galleries. Across the street is abuilding with at least three galleries. A littleto the west towards Michigan Avenue arenumerous others. To the north and the south on Michigan are still more, and farther weston Ontario are the Arts Club of Chicago andthe Fairweather Hardin gallery. Going togalleries has several advantages over seeingart in museums, because you see what isbeing produced now, or within the past fewmonths. There is usually someone who will,if you wish, talk to you about the art onexhibit or art in general. Galleries rarelycharge admission. Finally, the art that is onexhibit is not the accepted and wellcredentialed possession of a museum. It isfor sale. It could be yours! Galleries haveone more good point which makes themworth visiting: the opening. Openingsusually occur every four to six weeks in theearly evening. They have crowds of people(sometimes), an open bar (sometimes), afamous artist (sometimes), and provide thefirst glimpse to the (hopefully art buying)public of the latest works by the featuredartists. And anyone can attend.MuseumsSometimes it’s nice to go somewherewhere you know that every#work of art yousee is certifiably good, if not great. The ArtInstitute of Chicago is the place in town tosee art that has already taken and passedthe test of time, where it is not necessary towade through rooms of freshly paintedcanvases that twenty years from now will beput away in closets so that one or two greatworks of art may be seen. The Art Institutehas beautiful Impressionist paintings, fineOriental objects, and a strong collection ofsome of this century’s best art. There is apay-what-you-wish admission, as well aslarge quiet rooms, and generally goodlighting. From now until October 31 there isa special exhibit of Art Nouveau objects andpaintings.The Museum of Contemporary Art, a onestory building on Ontario Street, has verygood exhibits of avant-garde and con¬temporary artists, a film program, dancepresentations, and concerts. I’ve enjoyedvisiting there since, as an eleven year old, Iattended their opening exhibition featuringa computer and kinetic sculpture. Othermuseums in Chicago include the DusableMuseum of African American History, theMaurice Spertus Museum of Judaica, andthe Ukranian Institute of ContemporaryArt.Where can you buy a !4lb. of ground Sirloin,broiled to your taste,complete with cole slaw,pickle, your choice, ofFresh breaded onion ringsor french fries.ANDa stein of ice cold droughtbeer?ALL FORj -r i s j ( ) - ) 1 <v \ r' 1 > 1 > ' •,RESTAURANT T50tfc ON THE LAKE V'V WThe place where you can get awayfrom it all* and still stay in theneighborhood.Open 7:00 A.M. to 1:30 A.M.24—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, 24,177* Are You UniversityExecutive Material?By Jeff BaddeleyHi gang! Are you caught in the dead-endworld of student life? Do you yearn for thefeeling of power over the lives of others?Have you ever marvelled at the smoothmotion of a well-run university? If you’veanswered “You bet, Ralph’’ to any of thesequestions, you may be ideally suited for thelife which awaits those select few destinedfor fame and fortune as presidents of theUniversity of Chicago. Or, a position asdean of rejections—er, admissions—may bejust what you’re looking for. Imagine - you,at sherry parties, meeting Rick Wohlhuter,owning a “piece of the action" in Chicago.That’s the kind of thrill you just don’t findon the assembly line. Recent Universitypresidents have gone on to positions ofresponsiblity in government, banking, andlaw, and have their names on dormitories aswell. To find out if you have what it takes tomake it in the fast-paced world of today’suniversity, complete this simple quiz, andmail it, along with $3200 handling fee, to:Midway ExecuSearch, Ellis Avenue,Chicago, Illinois. Please allow four years forreturn postage. Ready? Let’s begin.PART I: MILTIPLE CHOICE (maximum5 points each)1)You are the administrator of a mid-western university in a time when studentsare demanding a role in determining theircurriculum (this may sound absurd, but thequestion is purely hypothetical).. In a drasticmove, a group of twelve students take overthe administration building and demand ameeting with you (or Phil Kurland, if he’savailable). You: (a) agree to the meeting, but makecertain strict stipulations, includingthat the students provide sandwichesand beer;(b) call in the National Guard to act asmediators in the dispute;(c) refuse to meet with the studentsuntil they leave the administrationbuilding and then throw them out whenthey do leave.2) You discover that the son of thuniversity’s wealthiest alumnus has beenamed a ringleader in several acts of vaidalism, chiefly food fights in the dining halYou:(a) reprimand the student, and punishhim by making him eat seconds oneverything for an entire week;(b) have a long talk with him, remin¬ding him that there are children lessfortunate than he who would be glad toeat his food. Some of them only eatcaviar once a week.(c) give him a private room and caterhis meals, thus separating him from theuncourth riffraff one finds hangingaround dining halls these days.3) The university treasurer informs ycthat several of the school’s investments sjtaking a beating on Wall Street, threateniito force the school to close. You:(a) begin a strict austerity programwith a “no-frills” budget which forbidsthe purchase of any new books for theundergraduate library;(b) instruct the athletic trainer to stopissuing free bandages and tape, and toforce athletes to double up on towels;(continued on pagesUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTOREPHOTO DEPT. (2nd floor)753-3317SERVICES: PROCESSING. RENTALS, REPAIRSPRODUCTS (In Stock):PHOTONIKONCANONPENTAXOLYMPUSPOLAROIDKODAKGAFHONEYWELLVIVITARLEITZMINOX MISCELLANEOUSSLIDE MOUNTSSLIDE FILESTRIPODSFILTERSPHOTO CHEMICALSPHOTO PAPERV.P.D. ALBUMSBATTERIESPICTURE FRAMESCASSETTE TAPESREEL-TO-REEL TAPESSLIDE VIEWERS, PROJECTORMOVIE CAMERAS, PROJECTOR TAPERECORSONYPANASONICCRAIGREGENCYSUPERSCOPFOR ALL YOUR PHOTO AND TAPE RECORDER NEEDS, COME TO THBOOKSTORE PHOTO DEPARTMENT ON THE 2ND FLOOR (PH: 753-33A ALSOi a OCT. 1stPOLAROID DEM011-4PRE-DEMO SPECIAZIPLAND CAMERA $7(Limited quantity)ooiey s corner inc .5211 s harper courthlCago.Illinois 60615.(312) 363 4 4 77lours: M-S10 to 6lunday 12 to 5:30 wSchedule another session this quarter.To celebrate our expanded cookwares department,we are offering creative cooking demonstrationsBy Bob Allard, Hyde Park’s inventive gourmet cook.Sign up now. Special single-session serieson four Sundays, Mondays and Wednesdays; fourSaturdays of free demonstrations and sampling.On Mondays and Wednesdays, you can take anadditional dinner home for $1.25 per serving.Cooley's Co-hhMy Calendar-far Octobers IVI T W. T F s• . 1 6Nortoum1# sIts Ok t/sChi MSt/Cootokfl3 to4-50 pm,get acquaintedvitktiris, ra.30 to noondemonstrationand tastilyi runck-daf) 11MeTzm'5b> 6 pm. 13a/ U. .\ * 16Its On UslOam.tcnoontom topnpansom'frw new c/auvs, fin/pots, cAcpsficfetafcedwur hew to use,a deep'fiyer,wote, blower,Cuisinart; - eroderpeer*jvTtVttSirutck-(a£ 18CrockedfittedCrowdleant touscastcW'Oooto'iru)pot—andtube a dinner 20 hontfertweNorthernCceXiykibleef 26oeach session• 23Its On Usold partyStart.'#sign txpjormvj Kuntterc} Sessions cone, watek,snock,and tnjcybunck-fak 25 heme, Jot two 27Nbtthem 30It's On Usia-b jet f1.25««ch session/ (abJe6*2-5oeach session. ChineseCcoSkqsessionslimited to 6tachVkdnesdty Thin*kitchen!i rmh-iri) 1CrxJeed \ f -* •sessionsImtid to ZD findCrowd .Mch Sunday sessionslimited to 6 •each Monday *» ^ - **je8)3RDOPETHEs7i‘ '£ ** . Friday. Septamtoar 24, If7a—Tha Otcago Maroon—25not itoog*;>UOanTGreyCityJournal-page8 (continued from page 6)(cl call Milton Friedman and arrange tohave Wall Street phased out of thenational financial picture.4) You are accused by a dissident radicalelement (such as the student government) ofhaving made a statement that the universitycan function without students, but notwithout administrators. This untimelyremark is the cause of levity and indignationamong students. To squelch the quote, you:(a) refuse to answer the charges, sayingthat to do so would be like “saying thatI have stopped beating my wife;’’(b) refuse to answer the charges, andhave a lesser administrator say that todo so would be like “saying that he hasstopped beating his wife;’’(c) refuse to answer the charges, andstop beating your wife.PART II: MATCHING (15 pointsmaximum)Match the names in the following list:AEmmanuelPrince of PeaceFather of his countryThe chosen one“Capo de tutti capi” BJohn WilsonJohn WilsonJohn WilsonJohn WilsonJohn WilsonPART III. PERSONAL ESSAY(maximum 20 points)Choose the one response which bestmatches your own preference.1) I came to this university:(a) for the social life.(b) because I was turned down at Harvard(c) to make useful business contacts.2) My personal worth is:(a) reflected by my concern for others.(b) determined by my personality andlooks.(c) chiefly in stocks and bonds.3) I hope that a U of C education will:(a) make me a better person.(b) train me to better serve my fellowman.(c) teach me how to screw the generalpublic.4) The man I most admire is:(a) Horatio Alger(b) Andrew Carnegie(c) P.T. Barnum.Now, we arrive at the moment of truth.Score Part I as follows: (a)- 1 point; (b) - 3points; (c) - 5 points. Score Part II byawarding yourself one point for eachstraight line, subtracting one point for eachline over five. Score Part III as follows: (a) 0points; (b) 0 points; 5 points for each (c). Tofind out where you stand in the competition,add up all your points.If your total is: The quiz has shown:0*15 points You are obviously notU of C material.Perhaps you’d behappier at a tradeschool, such as MIT. DanceBy Eden ClorfeneBallet is one art that is not alive and wellin Chicago. Serious balletgoers coming herefor the first time—especially those fromNew York—will be sorely disappointed bythe limited range of what there is to see.The reasons are plain and simple enough.First, Chicago has never had the goodfortune or the right people to establish adurable resident ballet company. Thismeans there is no repertoire of ballets, asolid nucleus from which to start a solidnucleus from which to grow. Right now,however, there is an organization called theChicago Ballet, which is entering its thirdseason. Its directors are Ruth Page andFrederic Franklin, with some occasionalcoaching from Robert Joffrey. Ruth Pagehas been in Chicago for a long time trying tocreate a company—I believe this is her thirdattempt. I am not aware of the particularadministrative politics that always seems tospell doom for Ms. Page, but nevertheless,the backstage problems cannot excuse theonstage problems of unripe dancers tryingto da their best in second rate choreography.But perhaps things may improve with age.As well as foreign dancers, Chicago alsodoes not see the foreign classical style. Itwas only until after Balanchine, Robbins,and Lucia Chase established America as adancing nation that Europe and Russia losttheir position as the sole domains forcreative output. Today many considerAmerica the flourishing home of dance, but one’s dance education cannot be completewithout an opportunity to see works anddancers trained in the style of Bournonville,or the new works of Frederick Ashton. As itis now, the only way to see them in Chicagois if representative pieces happen to creepinto the repertoire of American companies.There is however one plus; the Bolshoicompany does not ignore Chicago on theirforeign tours.Regarding the tours of American com¬panies Chicago suffers another serious loss,the absence of the New York City Ballet,which is Balanchine’s company. The dan¬cers are trained by him and perform mostlyhis works (another major choreographerbeing Robbins). Granted the NYCBrepertoire does not possess the range ofAmerican Ballet Theatre's, but nowhere elsecan one see “Duo Concertant,” “Jewels,’’or “Goldberg Variations.”Chicago will get to see the Joffrey, therelatively new Pennsylvania Ballet, AlvinAiley, the Dance Theater of Harlem, DennisWayne’s Dancers, ABT, and the onlyforeign troupes I know of so far, theGeorgian Dancers of Israel, as well as theNational Festival Ballet of Spain. It’s a farisampling, but I also wonder what happenedto Eliot Feld and Ballet, companies whichhave come in the past. Here are the datesand places:Pennsylvania Ballet — Nov. 5 and 6, atthe Auditorium.National Ballet Festival of Spain — Dec.1st, at the Auditorium.Dennis Wayne’s Dancers — Jan. 16th, atthe Auditorium.Joffrey Ballet — Feb. 1-13, at theAuditorium.Alvin Ailey — Feb. 28-March 6 at theAuditorium. American Ballet Theatre — someti®March, at the Opera House.Georgian Dancers of Israel — April 30May 1, at the Auditorium.Those who prefer modern dance wi]more satisfied than ballet fans, for Chiis brimming with small, local mo<troupes. These companies are ratherand don’t have endless funds, and man;associated with local colleges. Whatmeans is that, more than full-fl^companies which present extensive seaiof exclusively their own works, these scompanies serve as dance centers, ssoring much dance activity including wof their own resident choreographers. Qdance activity includes mime shichildren.’s shows, guest appearancesestablished modern dancers from New Yand extensive classes (a major sourcerevenue).Here is a list of some of these comp®and dates of performances:Chicago Contemporary Dance Theidirected by Maggie Kast, performing alBody Politic, 2261 Lincoln, 871-5386.Oct. 8 and 9 — Fresh Footprints, a pro*of company works, at 8:30Dec. 3,4,10,11 — regular fall season.Chicago Moving Company Dance Ceia repertory company, 4730 SheridanMoMing Collection, Inc., 1034 W Bs472-9894.Oct. 15-17 — United Mime Workers,29-31 — Laura Dean, from New York, Niand 6 — Wendy Rogers, or Sara Rudicompany; and Nov. 12^, 19, 26 — MoMiregular fall season.Shirley Mordine and Company D;Center, 4730 N. Sheridan, 271-7804; stuperformances, Nancy Hauser, Acmeand a company season in the spring.photo by David Fishma16-30 points31-56 points You are exactly thetype of liberalPollyanna we want tobreak and remold to aproper way ofthinking, a year ofcommon core coursesshould convince youof your utter wor¬thlessness. Welcometo the U of C.Congratulations! Ouraptitude tests haveshown that you areadministrativematerial. There's anopening awaiting youupon graduation — inour secretarial pool.56 points or over You obviously notU. of C. material,because this test hasshown that you can’tadd!* 36—Tho Chtaego Meroon—Friday, September 24, WiBy Esther Joy SchwartzIt is early Friday evening and you arealone in your dormitory room with nothingto do. Doc films over at Cobb is offering itsupteenth showing of “Duck Soup,” andthough you enjoy Marx Brother’s movies,you saw this one only last summer ontelevision. You could go to a party, butmuch to your amazement, Woodward Courtis not throwing one of its usual bashes, andeven though your roommate invited you tocrash a party with her at someone’s two-room apartment over on Dorchester, theidea of smoke, booze, dope, and minglingwith strangers is beyond anything ypu couldpossibly bear this evening.Your eyes shift momentarily to a stack ofbooks on your desk and the syllabi spread indisarray on your bed. This thought,however, vanishes more quickly than itappeared—it is still too early in the quarterto spend a Friday night at RegensteinLibrary—and besides, Plato, Aristotle,Sophocles, Marx, and Engels are hardlyirresistible companions to spend the nightwith.Dinnertime is over now, you leave yourfriends talking in the lounge, and retire toyour room. The bells at Rockefeller Chapelbegin ringing, and like enlightenment fromthe Holy One Himself, visions of sheer#■ -,f ‘ t*S «*, Theaterinspiration parade before you: a play in“The New Theatre,” a Sports Tournamentat Ida Noyes, a concert at Mandel Hall, afolk singer at the Blue Gargoyle. You leapout of your seat and dash through the hallsof the dormitory, knocking on the doors ofyour fellow-inmates inquiring for their copyof the Chicago Maroon fit seems you leftyours on one of the tables of the C-Shopwhere you ducked in to eat around noon¬time to escape the crowded waiting line andhigh-calorie food synonvmous with thedormitory meal contract). A thin girl withcurly hair and glasses from the corner roomgives you her copy. You thank her, smile,and walk away bewildered. Somehow youremember a girl with curly hair and glassesfrom orientation week at the House’s firstpep-talk and sherry hour, but this is the firsttime you’ve seen her since.Back in the room you muddle through thepages of the Maroon for a list of campusactivities. Finding it on page five next to anad for Spin-It Records, you begin scouting the calendar of Events but to no a\FAILURE—hopefully your first and lasthe University. You crumple the Maiinto a compressed sphere and whirl ittwo points into the wastepaper basket,get up from your seat and begin pickingclothes, hanging them up, and tidyingyour desk. An evening of cleaningperhaps some late-night studying is vyou have to look forward to.* • *The best way to avoid a rerun offiasco in weekends to come is to plan alof time with your friends for future outiChicago is a vast center of culture, gaiand talent; it offers limited but most oquality dance performances, a virtisymphony orchestra, art galleries, jazzfolk 'artists in droves, films—bothreleases and revival festivals—andtheater.I am not touting the glitzy high-prislapped-together faded Hollywood glaof the dinner theaters; nor the Broadbound aspirants which need oh so-nwork and rework; nor even the number ttouring company of a hit Broadway muiminus the original director, the Tiwinning stars, and consequently itscessful appeal.The theater I refer to has no proper “i(continued on pageNewThis Year10% Discount to Members(At time of purchase.)Incorporated in 1961 by a group of students and faculty, the Seminary Co-Op now hasover 3,500 shareholders. The store stocks around 12,000 titles in the humanities andsocial sciences, as well as carrying t- xt books for a variety of graduate courses in theUniversity of Chicago and Chicago Theological Seminary.A share of stock in the store costs $10.00 and entitles the shareholders to order throughthe store any book in print, and to charge books if they wish. Charged books must be paidfor by the 15th day of the month following the one in which they were charged.According to the charter under which the store was incorporated, all profits must be dis¬tributed annually to the shareholders in the form of a dividend on stock and a patronagerebate. For the year ending June 30, 1976, the rebate on members’ purchases will bebetween 8 and 10 percent; for the previous year it was 8 percent. As of September 13,1976, the store began to sell all books bought by shareholders at 10% off list at the time ofpurchase.Shareholders may sell their stock back to the store during the last two weeks of any quarterfor the full $10.00.SEMINARY COOPERATIVE BOOKSTORE5757 S. University752-4381 9:30-4:00 M—F i*«*Friday, September 24, ?Ma-Th» Chicago Maroaw VWELCOME to the University of ChicagcBookstore in its new surroundings. Th<decor and the extra space havehelped tremendously. But these woukbe meaningless if it weren’t for the kefact of our existence* to serve yoiand to sell good books.Ours is not an impersonal, self-servicestore where there is no one to speawith but the person at the check-oucounter. We are proud to provide yoiwith personal assistance in obtainingyour selection.Please stop in and see us soon. Wethink vou’ll aaree after browsineyou n agreeamong our amazing variety of bookthat this is what a university bookstore should be.>M»roafr~FrMty, 14. WH ****** /UW. »>0ieed>Y>ueikjt•uga<sk- y#a ewe invited te attend Ike|4th ANNUAL WINE SALE3 DAYS ONLYFriday, October 1stSaturday, October 2ndHours 10 AM to 9 PMSunday, October 3rd Hours12 Noon to 6 PMa %We suggest early attendance in order» » — • / /to acquire the best values and the widest• spossible selection.No discount offered less than 20%and some will be as high as 50%Not all wines will be on saleThe Mali2427 East 72nd StreetBA 1-9210Friday, September 24, 1974—Tha Chicago Maroon—19rosin nashanahCONSERVATIVE ROSH HASHKNA ^ VONN MPPORSERVICES WILL BE HEIO IN THE CLOISTER CLOfe^ST.iSePTAfc\DA Noyes HRU.,taiR C. 5^ HOTEL FURNITUREfrom finest hotelsKing size box springs& mattress sets $99.95Full size box springs& mattress sets $49.95Queen size box springs& mattress sets $59.95Desk chairs $ 5.95Chest of drawers $29.95Lounge chairs ......$10.00Table lamps $ ~3.95Floor lamps $ 9.95AMSTADTER FURNITUREDaily 9-57315 Cottage Grove224-7444 1 azzrecordperhaps youdidn’t know...there are two jazz record marts that regularly have thousands of jazzand blues records .LPs, 45s Ob 78s doubtless some titles youhaven't seen before bargains lor 99* and 1.88 . new and usedrecords for 2.60.. special sales on the finest jazz and blues labels at3.97...and a complete selection of Delmark albums and with outdollar oft special on every second regular discount album, weregenerally lower priced than most two jazz record marts, northcenterChicago ..about two miles up from Lincoln/Fullerton area, and justnorth of the loop/marina city...7 w. grand at the grand/state subwaystop., open Mon. thru Sat., 10:30 till 8. come on in and take a look..jazz record marttin7 W. Grand 4243 N. Lin<Syracuse University’sWORLD OF FOREIGN STUDYFLORENCE Italian, History, Fine Arts, HumanitiPhilosophy, Social ScienceMADRID Spanish, Anthropology, Fine Arts,History, Political Science, Social ScieBusiness/Management, Education,Philosophy, Sociology, TheologySTRASBOURG French, German, History, Fine Arts,Religion, Political Science, Social ScieAMSTERDAM Dutch, Fine Arts, History, Social ScieEconomics, Social Work, HumanDevelopment, AnthropologyLONDON English, History, Fine Arts, PoliticalScience TVR, Newswriting, Drama,/ISRAEL * Hebrew, Management1977 Spring Semester Application deadline: OCTOBERFINANCIAL AID AVAILABLEDivision of International Programs Abroad335 Comstock AvenueSyracuse, New York 13210315-423-3471State StreetandWater Tower Place StoresNow accepting applications torfull and part-timeEmploymentLiberal Merchandise DiscountTo inquire Contact ourPersonnel OfficesWotor Towar Placa Store835 North Michigan Avenue6th floor Personnel Office(10:ooa.m.-5:00 p.m.)Stata Street Store111 North State Street10th floor Personnel Office(9:15 a.m.-5:00 p.m.)30—ThaChtcago Maroon—Friday. September 24. If74Cinema in the Second Cityphoto: Elizabeth Russo)y Rare*1 HellerThis fall brings an abundance of excellentad reasonably priced films to Chicago and[yde Park. With four established campuslm groups, two festivals, a new film everyLeek at the neighborhood theater plusLssorted films presented by dormitoriesLod o^er groups, good evening en-attainment can be found on almost anyLight on campus or in the immediae vicinity.Museums and downtown independent filmSocieties offer rich schedules of vintageLassies and newer European and ex¬perimental films, often with discussion andLuest speakers. Prices for students in HydeLark and at downtown film groups rarelyLZCeed two dollars. As most film groups■don’t have set days and times for theirLhowings, a weekly calendar of campus andLpecial film is offered each Friday in the■Drey City Journal,| People accustomed to New York pre¬mieres and L.A. sneak previews bemoan(he fact that so many new films take monthsEo arrive in Chicago. Foreign language filmsLeem to take forever to get here. When, andIf7they do, they are often badly printed andPoorly dubbed. Bergman’s, Wertmuller’sKind other favorites appear, with subtitles,Kisually around two months after their coastPremieres, though this is not always theCase. For film epicureans and the like whoenjoy more exotic and less vogue auteurs,(he wait is often miserably long, andbometimes never ending. November 5th(through 19th the Chicago Film Festival will(help to whet the film gourmet’s appetite by(offering a rich and spicy selection of films(from around the world. Campus film groups(are very good about showing foreign films,(particularly Japanese works, and often offer(Chicago premieres.I DOC Filina, this year headed by BreckBorcheding, the campus’s most estab¬lished and largest organization, presents(Films three or four times a week.. This(fall quarter, forty-three films and nine[shorts will be shown. Tuesday nights aretrospective of Siodmak and Siegal films(will be offered. Classic and rare silent films[will be shown Wednesdays, featuring worksQikg D.W. Griffith’s Way Down East, Ford’s|3 Bad Men, plus qarly works by Frank[Capra and Ernst Lubitsch. On October 27bwan’s Robin Hood and Manhandled willbe accompanied by the inimitable Hal Pearl,pianist virtuoso of the silent screen. Popular[favorites and more recent works will befehown during the weekends. Highlights this■all are Antonioni's The Passenger, Costabrava’s Special Section, Scorcese’s AliceDoesn’t Live Here Anymore, Kurosawa’s 7Samurai plus a special thanksgivingweekend with Wilder’s Gentlemen PreferBlondes and Hawks’ Bringing Up Baby.All of Doc’s films are shown in QuantrellAuditorium, room 209 in Cobb Hall, unlessOtherwise noted. Admission for each film ispne dollar. Series tickets covering ad¬mission for all fifty fall films are sevenraollars and can be bought at the Doc officelocated in Cobb 309 or in Ida Noye on[Student Activities Night. Only a limitednumber of passes will be sold so it is ad¬visable to purchase a series pass as early aspossible.Contemporary European Films showsfilms Thursdays, Saturdays and Sundays.Headed by NeU Chernoff and Alice Sterkel,CEF will present a fine selection ofEuropean classics and some Americanworks. Starting their fall program with threeseparate evening showings of Altman’sNashville, CEF will follow up with suchPeats as Renoir’s The Grand Illusion,Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange, Welles’ TheMagnificent Ambersons, Bunuel's Belle deJour, Fellini’s Satyricon and Truffaut’sShoot The Piano Player. Admission for eachis one dollar. CEF’s films, and Doc’s aswell, are shown twice. Season passes arefive dollars for admission to all twenty CEFfilms and will be on sale on Student Ac¬tivities Night and at CEF’s showings. FilmsP® usually shown in Quantrell unlessotherwise noted.International House Talking Pictures is aProfit-making group that usually presentsPopular, recent (one or two years old) filmswith a smattering of older works. Films areshown twice in the I House auditorium onThursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, although like CEF and Doc, there are no setdays or times for showings. Films will startfive minutes after the stated showing time.Admission for each film and for the fivedouble features is SI.50 for students, $1.00for I House residents. Series passes sell for$10.00 and are good for the almost twentyfilms in the fall program. Saturday, Sep¬tember 25, I House will present absolutelyfree of charge, Welles’ 1941 classic, CitizenKane at 7:15 and 9:30. The fall scheduleincludes American Grafitti, The Lost Honorof Katrina Blum, Closely Watched Trains,and The Sunshine Boys. Doctor Zhivagowill be shown two separate evenings and aspecial horror flick double feature, TheBody Snatchers and The Haunting are in¬cluded in this quarter’s I House films. ScottMaGill, Manager of I House Talking Pic¬tures, says that the famous I House popcornwill be sold at each performance and that acouple of surprises will be in store.New American Movement (NAM) Filmswill show eight films this fall. NAM filmsattempts to offer the best and most im¬portant political films available—featureand documentary, current and classic, artand propaganda. Their fall schedule is in¬dicative of this desired spectrum. The OtherFrancisco (1975), a Cuban feature-lengthfilm, will be shown Sunday, October 3. Inthe following weeks NAM films will offerSambizanga, a film from Angola and Bloodof the Condor, a fictionalized documentaryfrom Bolivia. American films on labor andon women will be shown in November.Sergei Eisenstein’s Ivan The Terrible, PartsI and II, will be presented two consecutiveevenings. NAM Films’ first presentation,The Other Francisco, will be shown int heoriental Institute. All other films will beshown in quantrell. Showings are at 7:15 and9:30. Admission is $1.50.Two University festivals this fajl in¬clude films. The University of ChicagoExtension’s Festival of Chicago Comedyincludes eight feature-length films andseveral shorts. When Chicago WasHollywood and His New Job, shown onOctober 4, are about film making inChicago. October 5, two films about Chicagojournalism will be shown, Roxie Hart andHis Girl Friday. October 12 through 18 filmsby Chicago comedians Alan Ark in, ElaineMay and Mike Nichols and on recent film-making in Chicago will be shown. All filmswill be in Breasted Hall, Oriental Instituteat 7:30. Admission is $2.The French Contemporary Arts Festival,October 22 through 28, will present eight films in this festival of musique vivante,theater and art. The films for the festival arepresently being selected from a group whichincludes works by Robbe-Grillet, Tati,Rivette, Techine and Tarvenier. AlainRobbe-Grillet, one of the leaders of theNouvel Roman group and scenarist of LastYear at Marienbad, will conduct a group ofinformal discussion October 27 and 28. Allfilms will be shown in Mandel Hall. Ad¬mission for these rare and exceptional filmswill be $1.50 for students with ID, $2.00 forUC faculty and staff, and $3.00 for thegeneral public. Series passes will be $4.00for students, $6.00 for UC faculty and staff,and $8.00 for the general public. More in¬formation can be obtained through theStudent Activities office.Special campus presentations occur fromtime to time during the year. The CollegeOrientation Program will present those twogreat actors Barbra Streisand and RyanO’Neal in Bogdanavich’s What’s Up Doc?,Friday, September 24 in Cobb at 6:30, 8:30and 10:30. Admission is free for all enteringcollege students, and one dollar foreveryone else. A sneak preview of TheFront, Martin Ritt’s serious film aboutblacklisting in the 50’s starring Zero Mosteland Woody Allen, will be held Monday,September 27, at the Hyde Park Theater.Admission is free for all students withtickets which can be obtained on StudentActivities night.The Hyde Park Theater, located at 5238 S.Harper, is the neighborhood cinema.Starting on Fridays, a new film is shownevery week. The type of films shown vary tosuit the varying neighborhood—horror,kiddees' matinees, Roger Corman’s latest,blaxploitation, classics. JD’s Revengestarts September 24. This year's devil-possessing-a-sweet-innocent-kid film, TheOmen will start October 1. Prices vary likethe films but are usually $1.50 and $2.50. Onthe weekends tickets for the first half-hourof showings are cheaper.The Chicago Art Institute's Film Center,located at Columbus Drive and JacksonBlvd., presents films Wednesday, Thursdayand Friday evenings at 5:30 and 7:30. Theentrance to the school is at the East side ofthe Museum facing Grant Park. Films areshown in the auditorium and admission is$1.25 for students. On September 24th Roh¬mer’s La Collectioniste will be shown. OnSeptember 30th Opening Screening will beshown. The Art Institute also offers courseson films and film-making, special lectures. and discussions. For latest film program¬ming information, telephone the FilmCenter at 443-3737.The Museum of Contemporary Art,located at 237 E. Ontario, shows films everyTuesday in the gallery at 6:00 p.m. Ad¬mission for members and students is $1.00and $1.50 for all others. Through the end ofOctober, the Museum is showing excellentfilms on the image of the South in films fromthe 1920’s until the present. September 28th,Ford’s Tobacco Road will be shown. Oc¬tober 5th, Rossen’s All the King’s Men willbe presented. Other films in the series in¬clude Long Hot Summer. The Heart is aLonely Hunter and Payday. The Museum ofContemporary Art will present a series onthe English film in November.Facets Multimedia, Inc., at 555 W. BeldenAve., is currently showing a completeretrospective of tbd*work of Louis Malle,continuing through October 3, the festivalwill include two workshop-seminars with M.Malle and the Chicago premiere of Tour deFrance (1974). Ticket information for suchfilms as Lacomb, Lucien and Murmer of theHeart can be obtained by calling 281-9075.Fall brings the Chicago Film Festival.This year it will be held November 5-19 atthe Uptown (4816 N. Broadway at Lawrence)and the Biograph (2433 N. Lincoln) theaters.Information about the entries andschedules, various tickets prices and seriespasses have not been released yet butshould be available by next week.First run American films arrive inChicago usually a short while afterpreviewing in N.Y. and L.A.. where theytried out for audience response to whetherthe films will actually play in Peoria. Localfilm offices rarely know what films they arereleasing until the last minute. The bestsystem for knowing what new films arecoming to the city is to read the Sunday NewYork Times and then wait three weeks.Whether you wait three weeks, one day, ortwo years for a new release, one thing is forcertain: at downtown and Near Norththeaters you’ll be paying as much for yourseat as you would pay back East or outWest. Tickets are almost always between$3.00 and $4.00. Good deals are rare to comeby, but matinees are often half price. In anycase, it is always a good idea to phone aheadfor ticket price information and times asthey are often misprinted in the dailypapers.Friday, September 24,1974—The Chicago Maroon—31.war .at *artmefqeg raOi^-4 -niv* 'ina.v. *. Y—-ot -!GreyCityJournal-page13GreyCityJournal-page14 \Eating and Drinking in Hyde ParkBy Jonathan MeyersohnEvery once in a while, when dorm foodgets too mysterious and too vile, or yourkitchen at home begins to look like a trashcan, and pork chops again seems too muchtoo bear, you’ll want to go out to eat in HydePark. The first thing to note is that there arefew good, cheap restaurants. There are,however, good restaurants that are oyer-priced, and cheap restaurants at which foodshould be very carefully selected, but oftenproves very satisfying. For instance, Medicipizza every night might prove fatal, butoccasionally it’s a real treat. Man cannotlive by dough alone, nor can he live bv ribs,souvlaki, egg drop soup, and enchiladas.When you have the urge for one of these,however, rest assured it can be obtainedsomewhere in Hyde Park.The Court House (5211 S. Harper Ave., inHarper Court) could be a very goodrestaurant if they didn’t try so hard. Thewaitresses insist on pouring your PaulMasson, and the atmosphere is overly poshand subdued. The food is generally good,though overpriced, and the beef fondue isloads of fun. If you're on a budget, trv theCourt House for lunch, or after 10 p.A.Avoid it the nights they have music.The Efendi (high atop the Hyde ParkBank building the 10th floor at 53rd andLake Park Ave.) is a good place to eat anddrink if you can afford it. The food is exotic,and the ambiance pleasant, but it’s simplytoo expensive. Still, you should go thereonce, at least for the view and the ex¬perience, especially if you like inauthenticTurkish food. Go soon; the restaurant seemsto be going downhill.Mellow Yellow (53rd and Harper Ave.) isanother one of the fairly good, overpricedrestaurants that adorn Hyde Park. It eludesme why a decent restaurant, one whichbadly needs the business of a thousandHyde Park hermits, insists on chargingprices students can rarely afford. The food at Mellow Yellow is passable, but theportions are small. Though it’s a good placefor crepes, if you’ve got the time and energy,head north to the Magic Pan. The menuthere is about the same as Mellow Yellow's,and the food is better.Kaffenio (55th and Lake Park Ave., in theCo-op) used to have very good Greek food at low prices. Since they expanded a year ago,though, the prices have gone up and thequality down. The souvlaki is still a goodbet, the salad bar is a Hyde Park special,and the chicken (Kota Sharas) is tasty.Kaffenio, despite its faults, is one of the bestHyde Park restaurants. —Station JBD (5500 S. Shore Ave., in the Flamingo Hotel) is a good place to escapfor food and drink. The hotel is ancient, ithe waiters often fall asleep beforepatrons, but if you’re ever thirsty at 3 a.ithis is the place.Chances R (in Harper Court) has chbeer and good burgers. It’s a real cannhangout type place, as it’s loud, o,bearing, and entertaining.The Eagle (5311S. Blacksone Ave.) U|a good place to drink, and the sandwicare filling. The fish 'n chips are splenthe service is fast, and the head waitreapleasingly obnoxious.Jimmy’s (55th and Woodla\ ) isUniversity bar, which may say u lot atstudent life here. As much asmay moan and refuse, you’ll end ufJimmy’s sometime. The greasy cheburgers, the beer-bellied, aging Marwho serve as barmen and bouncers,sanitation men who drink in the alnoon, and the Grad students who <come out at night: all are part ofWoodlawn Tap tradition. The beer jcheap, and the bathrooms walls warn oflongevity (rumor has it there are really <twelve pitchers served: it’s the Great Cof Being in Hyde Park drinking), but welse can you watch such university notaas Eric Cochrane and P.B. Mooresoused. If you get a chance, query Jiiabout the bar’s history; it’s a real sagsurvival in the jungle of urban renewal,walls are covered with memories andfrom days past, and though the ambiis hardly cozy, in the words of the 1greatest patrons, the Regenstein Iit’s near and it’s dear (and it’s beer).ryour ID, their proofing policies are aboiconsistent as the bouncer’s imbibe]ratio, and under no circumstances putarms on the table; you’re liable to go lwith a sleeve full of ketchup and stale 1See you there.32—The Chicago Maroorv-Friday, September 24,1974Vv,—not &•*.Valois (1618 E. 63rd) is where you see whatyou eat, which in this case may not be forthe best. It’s a Rood place to get a fast.mealfor little money, and the best deal is onSaturday night.Tai Sam Yon (1318 E. 63rd) is by far thebest Chinese Restaurant in the area. In fact,all others should definitely be avoided. Thefood here i£ very good, even if the location ishardly Oriental. Stuck in the middle ofgutted Woodlawn, it is one of the lastbastions of cultural diversity in what is nowthe University’s demilitarized zone. Therestaurant is an anomaly, and for thisreason, as well as the superior food, itshould be experienced. They serve Can¬tonese food, the chicken with almonds beinga triumph, but the sauces have a slight hintof old dishwater.For breakfast in Hyde Park:The Original Pancake House (1617 E.Hyde Park Blvd. at 51st) has great break¬fasts, especially the German pancakes. Theprices are not the cheapest, but the menu isextensive. The place is so popular you canforget about getting in on Saturday orSunday morning without a twenty minutewait. The Pancake House is good therapyafter you’ve pulled another depressing all-nighter.The Hyde Park Coffee Shop (in the DelPrado - or Del Pravo Hotel. 53rd & HydePark Blvd.) is a good place for insomniacs,weirdos, and budding sociologists. As it’sopen all night, it’s where the cops, pimps,and hookers call a truce and drink the sameweak coffee. Avoid the hamburgers,especially at 4 a.m., and enjoy the pancakesand atmosphere. Situated in a marvelouslybaroque, collapsing building filled withcatatonic old psychotics, the spot has longbeen the methadone center of late nightHyde Park food habits. The waitresses looklike Warbol models, and they all commutefrom Gary. -Cafe Enrico (1411 E. 53rd) has just aboutanything you could want, and sometimesmore. The drinks are cheap, the food issimple and good, and the patrons come in allvariations of male and female. The bestthing about Enrico’s is the Sunday brunch.It’s inexpensive and very filling, featuringeggs, fish, and Bloody Marys. Two restaurants that deserve mention areSurf and Surrey (50th on the Lake) andLarusso (1645 E. 53rd). The former is a funplace, good for a jaunt and a drink. It’sromantic to be near the water, and if you gettoo drunk to walk home there’s a motel rightnext door. The other, Larusso, is an on andoff kind of restaurant: some say it’s good,and some say it’s terrible. The meals arelarge and the prices cheap, but for an Italianrestaurant the meatsauce is horrendous.Heavy food, with a great variety of choices.Don’t forget to take an antacid alongbefore you go on an eating binge down 57th.There are four restaurants there, and everyone of them is preparing right now to greasefry you to death unless you’re careful. Ofall, the Agora (57th and Kenwood Ave.) isthe deadliest. The food is an imitation ofGreek cuisine. At all costs avoid theburgers, especially the ones with things inor on them.In order of health preservation, the nextbest place is The Dove (1321 E. 57th), acullinary hole that’s almost always empty.The food is terrible, but it’s pleasant to sitfor a while and drink coffee. The Dove is thekind of place even a renovation didn’t help,though the walls tables, seats, andwaitresses are now a profound shade ofBergmanesque red. Fade out, and stay awayfrom the spaghetti.Lucita’a (1440 E. 57th) may well be thebest Mexican restaurant in Chicago, butthat’s not saying much. Chicago is noGuadalajara, so while the food may beinexpensive and tasty, watch out for yourstomach. Also be careful with the house dip;it’s guaranteed to make you spend the restof your meal with a glass of water in yourmouth. Of course it may also be there todisguise the taste of the food. Recommendedare the guacomole dip, the enchiladas, andthat you bring your own wine, as theUniversity won’t let them have a liquorlicense. Lucita’a is a good, cheaprestaurant.The Medici (1450 E. 57th) is to campuseating what Jimmy’s is to drinking. TheMedici serves good hamburgers and panpizza, a new addition to the cuisine of anyeasterner. Chicago is the home of deep pan pizza, and you urbanites will soon get usedto it. You have little choice, because the onlythin pizza in Hyde Park (Nicky’s, in Kim-bark plaza) tastes like its been cooked onwet cardboard. It took me a while to get usedto having my tomatoes and cheese cooked ona loaf of bread, but if you start to like theMedici you’ll be right at home in Hyde Park.In fact, Medici pizza is the best barometer Jknow of to measure the success of yourassimilation into University life. If youadjust to it and eat there often (along withall the Lab school adolescents), you’ll have no trouble breezing through long evenings atRegenstein with Aristole and St. Augustine.Grandma’s Cake at the Medici is alsogood, though sometimes it seems likeGrandma hasn’t been around for a while.The restaurant has great chicken salad forlunch, and fresh lemonade for those in¬frequent hot Chicago days. The salad iswatery, as are the waitresses, but you’lllearn to like both. And if you really can’ttake the pizza, head up to NY Style Pizza(5047 N. Lincoln or 2913 N. Broadway),where it’s back to slices.64 Oz. Pitcher of Draft Beer(Old Style) THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOCHAMBER ORCHESTRAannouncesAuditions for new members (primarily strings) the weeks ofSept. 27 and Oct. 6.For information contact Jeanne Schaefer, conductor373-7342 evenings.First rehearsal, Monday October 13.Mon. thru Thurs. in the Dining RoomSUPER Sunday BrunchBuffet Full of Goodies*3.50 .CAFE ENRICO1411 E. 53nlHY 3-5300Entertainment Fri., Sat., X San.$1.00 Cover WELCOMETOCALVERT HOUSECATHOLIC STUDENT CENTER5735 S. UNIVERSITYr 288-2311DAILY MASSES: NOON, 5:00,10:00 P.M.WEEKEND MASSES: SATURDAY 5:00 P.M.SUNDAY: 8:30,11:00 A.M., 5:00,10:00 P.M.EVERYONE WELCOMEFrtdey, September 24, Ifte—The Chicago Meroon—X) GreyCityJournal-page16GrayCityJournal-page16 Drama(continued from pa go 8)or label yet: some Chicago papers classify itunder “community,” “non-professional'\or “experimental” theater. I call it simply“Off” or “Off-Off” Loop Theater, com¬parable to its sister movement in New YorkCity, there is little glamor here, no lightedmarquees, opening night bashes, slickplaybills, women in long evening gowns,champagne served during intermission; theatmosphere is at best cozy, comfortable, andvery very native. It is this last elementwhich the off-Loop theatre groups operateon and attest to, in part, for their success, aswell as an abundance of talent. Monica Fox,the Administrative Assistant at VictoryGardens Theatre remarked that this theaterwas formed for the express purpose ofpromoting and nurturing talented Chicagoactors, playwrights, and directors, whileproviding an appealing atmosphere andsetting for the enthusiastic Chicago theatergoer.Representative of this abundant Chicago-born and Chicago-based talent are theplaywright David Mamet, author ofAmerican Buffalo and the current woff-Broadway hit, Sexual Perversity inChicago; playwright Bruce Hickey whoseAll I Want enjoyed continuous success atVictory Gardens this past summer, directorand producer Stuart Gordon whose“Organic” production of Huckleberry Finnwas the toast of the past theater seasons,and whose nroduction of three Ronald Dahlstories—Switch Blade—wowed and stun¬ned the public and critics alike only thislast month. Other Chicago talent includesplaywrights, lyricists, and composersWarren Casey and Jim Jacobs of Grease(fame found their early roots in thesesmaller theatres before abounding to greaterfame and fortune in the Big Apple); actressand active member of the Board of Directorsat Victory Gardens, Roberta MacGuire, whowill best be remembered for her stunningportrayal in last season’s Three Women atthe Goodman’s Stage 1 Project; director and actor Mike Nussbaum, who has charmedChicago audiences for years in numerousdramatic and comedic roles; and foundingfather of the St. Nicholas Theatre Company,director Stuart Schacter, who reached“star” status only this last year with hisgripping production of Arthur Miller’s AView from the Bridge.These gifted prominents (to name a merehandful) make Off-Loop theater an ever¬growing thrust in Chicago’s entertainmentscene. With the additional talents and ex¬pertise of its own Equity actors, lightingtechnicians, set and costume designers,the quality of performance and productionis unlimited. Failures and flops aretolerated, but successes—commercially andartistically—seem to quickly follow.Along with the Victory Gardens Theatre;the Jane Addams Center, the DramaShelter, The Body Politic, Jim Sheedy’sPub, the Leo Lerner Theatre, Orphans,Kingston Mines, the Barry Street Loft, theArt Theatre Collective, the PlaywrightsCenter, the St. Nicholas Theatre Company,the Travel Light Theatre Company, StuartGordon’s Organic Theatre Company, theOld Town Players, the Amaranth Company,and The Peripatetic Task Force, are some ofthe best known theater houses and repertorycompanies causing such a stir in Chicagotheater circles.These theater houses are no plushpleasure palaces or architectural marvels.The majority of them are revamped fac¬tories, church basements, remodeledstorefronts or saloons. Here, however, youcan see some of the best livetoiusical revues,gusto dramatic acting, and attentivespectatorship in the City. Antonin Artaudwrote in The Theatre and its Double that atheater is any space where there is a stage, aconcrete physical place asking to be filled,and given its own concrete language tospeak. Much concrete language is deliveredon these Off-Loop stages, where feelings andwords transcend nightly.Most of the theaters are located in the Old-Town, Lincoln Avenue, New-Town area ofChicago, and provide the right amount oflocal color. Sure they cater to their ownhipper, swingier motley bands of neigh¬borhood play fanciers, but wealthysuburbanites and erudite academicsfrequent them often, and the verdict iscustomarily a positive one. There is agenuine enslavement of attention andS *I The Blue Gargoyle5655 S. University 955-5826Noon MealsCoffee HouseConcertsMeeting Space $$UNIVERSITY Of CHICAGOCOURT THfATRf PRESENTS-A ■CORNETSept.H58 0d.U3.MJ niff KMf IHfAIRf13 petal 1? surfeiis « an b? & Omeisiiy131 pi34—Tht Chicago Maroon—Friday, S«ptemb*r 24,1976 Gerald Castillo (left) and John Starrs in the St. Nicholas Theater's produArthur Miller's A View from the Bridge. (Photo by Ron Krajewski)thorough involvement here, a profoundunity between audience and performer.This Year’s OfferingsThe 1976-77 play offerings will certainlyhave to be innovative and attention grab¬bing if the Off-Loop theaters hope to com¬pete with the big Broadway imports comingChicago’s downtown-way this season:Fiddler on the Roof, starring Zero Mostel;West Side Story featuring Leslie Uggams;Katherine Hepburn in A Matter of Gravity;the award-winning Equis starring BrianBedford; Same Time Next Year, co-starringBarbara Rush and Tom Troupe; andMichael Bennet’s long-awaited smash, AChorus Line. The Off-Loop theater owners,however, are optimistic about their comingattractions, and have a fine lineup: StuartGordon’s “Organic” production of BenJohnson’s Volpone (the smash hit of JosephPapp’s Public Theater last year); DavidFreeman’s Jessie and the Bandit Queen;while over at The St. Nicholas Theatre isMike Nussbaum’s production of TheCollected Works of Billy the Kid; andSteven Schacter will be breathing life intoMert and Phil. This is a mere hint of the manshows lined up at the Off-LoopAlso not to be forgotten are the iexperimental acting troupes, therevues, the satirical lampoons,newly-created works especially fplease the ardent fans of these <ments. Artistry, originality, and iplay are an integral part inpatrons, but the nominally low tickranging from $2 to 15, lure steady scustomers as well. For one half,fourth the price of a ticket at any ctheater, people'can mix and milcomfortable and diverting atmospientering the fascinating and livelyChicago theater.Make the effort and acquaint ywith Chicago’s booming theater *plays are thought-provoking, tlinspirational, and the expertmeasurably rewarding. Wanewspaper ads, listen to nnouncements, and check the play'lthe Reader. Encourage your fisee this season’s offerings.UNFINISHEDFURNITURE COMING TO HYDE PAFMIDOCTOBER!!WITH A COMPLETE SELECTI•TABLES •DRESSERS •STEREO CEN1•CHAIRS •CHESTS •HALL TREES•STOOLS •ROCKERS0 •STORAGE CHE•BOOKCASES •MONASTERY FURNITURE •PLANT STANDOF FINE UNFINISHED FURNITURECOMPETITIVE PRICES/FINISHING SUPPLIES•OPEN7 DAYS A WEEK ^DELIVERY AVAILABLE «FREE INSTRUCTIONSNEWTOWN2431 N. CLARK248-0540 OLD TOWN233 W. NORTH' 787-0251 HYDE PARK1345 E. 53rd ST.288-4200UDENT COOP5706 S. University AvenueReynolds ClubTEXT BOOKS &GENERAL BOOKSBOUGHT & SOLDRECORDS ATROCK BOTTOM PRICESRegular hours:[days: 9:30-6 Saturdays: 10-4 Florsheim shoesformen and women.AlsoAddis, Bass, Clarks,and Dexter1SS4 Bast 55th Street Chicago, Illinois W415IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERJ1MW-M71*INTERNATIONAL HOUSE TALKING PICTURES- Fall Quarter, 1976• is.Thurs. & Sat. 9/30 & 10/2 American Graffitti 7:15 & 9:45 PfM.Thurs. 10/8 M/Lost Honor of Katrina Bloom 7:15 & 9:00 PJW.Fri. 10/9 Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore 7:15 & 9:45 P.M.Thurs. & Sat. 10/14 & 10/16 Swept Away 7:15 & 9:45 P.M.Fri. 10/22 Birth of a Nation/America 7:15 & 9:00 P.M.Sat. & Thurs. 10/23 & 10/28 Dr. Zhivago 6:30 & 10:00 P.M.Sat. 10/30 The Body Snatcher/ The Haunting 7:15 & 9:00 P.M.Fri. 11/5 Duel 7:30 & 9:15 P.M. *<Sat. 11/6 Closely Watched Trains/Loves of a Blond 7:15 & 9:00 P.M.Thurs. & Fri. 11/11 & 11/12 Hustle 7:15 & 9:45 P.M.Thurs. 11/18 Harakiri/Gate of Hell 7:15 & 9:30 P.M.Sat. 11/20 Hester Street 7:30 & 9:45 P.M.Thurs. & ‘AFri. 12/2 & 12/3 The Sunshine Boys 7:15 & 9:45 P.M.'— All pictures are screened in the International House Auditorium,1414 E. 59th St., University of Chicago. Admission is $1.50.A limited number of season passes are available for $10 at theI-House Gift Shop. For further information call 753-2270.r★★★* ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★*★★*★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★*★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★Friday, September 24,1976—The Chicago Maroon—37X\Welcome to theHYDE PARKCO-OP1526 E. 55th St. 667-1444VISIT OUR NEW AND IMPROVED SERVICESFine Wine & Liquor Dept. jf VeriBest Pork, Leaner)f Service Deli)f Home Economist on premisesIf Service Fishif Yogurt Dept.Jf Burny Brothers Bakery)f 15 Checkout LanesIf Extensive Frozen Foods Dept.if TesTender Beef. Guaranteed Tender )f Delivery Service^ Illinois State Lottery Tickets SoldOwned and operated by 11,000 of your friendsand neighbors.CELEBRATING OUR 44th ANNIVERSARY IN HYDE PARKStore HoursMonday-Wednesday 9 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.Thursday and Friday 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.Saturday 9 a.m. to7p.mSunday 9a.m. to3p.m.i The Chicago Maroon Friday, Sopfembei 24, lt7«Morry's Deli1603 EAST 55th STREETWhere You Get The MOSTEST - of the BESTEST - for the LEASTEST,The Deli, The Reader Says, is one of The Four Best Sandwich Shops in Chicago.Serving The Finest in Corn Beef, Roast Beef, Pastrami, At The Lowest Prices • TheFinest Quality - and The Largest Amount of any Deli Shop in Chicago.Students who have graduated and come back for a visit, make Morry's a MUST,telling us how much they miss our food.There is no other sandwich shop like Morry's in the United States.Eventually you will come here for a taste treat, that is, if you're lucky enough toget in.So if you're hungry for chopped liver, shrimps, fish, hot dogs, hamburgers, Italianbeef or sausage, Ham & Swiss - ok why go on -- Just hope to get in for the tastetreat of your life and not go away broke.<*T SPONSORED BY REYNOLDS SECURITIESTo Attend APERSONAL INVESTMENT SEMINARMany choices and unfamiliar terms confront investors when they decide how best to invest their money. Thisseminar series is aimed at those who invest, or would like to invest, and lays a foundation for making wiseinvestment decisions..This is a unique opportunity to learn about all types of investments ... from stocks andbonds, to retirement planning and tax shelters ... from experienced professionalsThe principal speakers will be Don Zordan, a well-known investment lecturer in the Midwest and an AccountExecutive with Reynolds Securities; and Karl Hauch, another wall-known speaker whose experience in theinvestment field spans nearly SO years.Seminar topics to be discussed include:CONVERTIBLE STOCKS ANO BONDSCORPORATE BONDSGOVERNMENT SECURITIESMUNICIPAL BONDSMUTUAL FUNDSPREFERRED STOCKS PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENTRETIREMENT PLANSSAVINGS PROGRAMSSTOCK OPTIONS (prospectus supplied)TAX PLANNINGTECHNICAL ANALYSISf > ♦/.* 4 A * > 4 .f 4 > 4 A 4 - - - - - - ■, -x ^ rW&L-'&Jfc-d V >?..•* A- AThe series runs for four consecutive Tuesday evenings, meeting at the Center for Continuing Education of theUniversity of Chicago, 1307 E. 60th Street, beginning October 5,7:30 p.m. — 9:00 p.m. The total seminar cost is$600 per person. To register, please complete the coupon on the reverse side and mail to Vie center Checksshould be made payable to the “University of Chicago." For further information, call Claire Morrison at the Center— (312) 753-3186.6 4 > * » I 6 * ,♦ V ♦ «. 6 I .4 # ♦ 4 > 4 V A * ♦ 4 >- A a V ♦ I. I V ♦ L 4 V A~ ■* ' J V?: A v A-r * v a vi Tj% : % - $ r-r ^ % C A • fFriday, September 24. If7*-—The Chicago Maroon JVStockHOURS:M- F 10 A M.- 0 R.M.SAT. 10 AM.- 8 PM,SUN. 8 AM.- 3 PM. 5500 S. CORNELL 241-7050 or 241^ 70515:30 to 7 P.M. SUPPER/RECEPTIONS at jUniversity Religious Houses: BRENT H0USThe Blue Gargoyle at the University Church oftDisciples, CALVERT HOUSE, HILLEL H0USFIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH, and in the honof the United Methodist and Baptist CamjMinisters.7 to 10 P.M. at IDA NOYES HALLStudent Activities Night.ORIENTATION SUNDAY* SEPTEMBER 26,1976UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS COUNSELORS PROGRAM4 to 5 P.M. at ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL%A choral program of Jewish, Christian asecular music by the Rockefeller Chapel ChjRichard Vikstrom, Director; Gerald Rizzer, Gui'Conductor, and Edward Mondello, Univers;Organist.WELCOME BACK KOTTER*and other assorted peopleThe Flying Hex Bexis the only deli on the south side that hand slices lox (justlike a real deli). As a matter of fact we are Hyde Parks onlyTo enable you to keep in touch with home, hearth & mother'scooking, we are selling the following New York style goodiesat unreasonably low prices:HAND CUT LOX $10.99 Per Lb.FRESHLY SMOKED STURGEON $5.99 Per lb.AGED VERMONT SHARP CHEDDAR $2.69 Per Lb.IMPORTED SWISS EMMENTHAL $2.49 Per Lb. POTATO SALAD OR COLE SLAW 69c Per lbKOSHER CORNED BEEF $4.59 Per lbKOSHER SALAMI $2.99 Per LbDR. BROWN'S SODA 35‘Ead*P.S. WE WILL BE CLOSeD THIS SATURDA Y FOB ROSH HASH AN A.inmon CoreBy Jan Rhodes| performing remarkably on thefinishing the wearisome CollegeEon, and nervously tearing open/envelope from the admissionj new College student greets thisof general education, these| sidewalks and ivy-covered walls,versity of Chicago. The studentinal hurdle, the set of forebodingat examinations, vaulting it onlyeked headfrist into the briar ofprimary sources, test tubes, and•ts known as the common core,ammon core as it exists today1966, under former Universityit Edward Levi, now United StatesGeneral. Levi’s changes werer the most recent in a graduali of the undergraduate curriculumslow shift from four years of[study to a combination of generalkialized study.i has always been a basic contestthe general education and theeducation components,” saysKrueger, senior advisor in theciences collegiate division. “Andi regard each as carnivorous. Theeducation people are all agreedrou’d let them do it, the chemistsorb all four years.”University President RobertHutchins imprinted his ideas ofeducation on the University in theeteen forties, the College had seenotion from the presidents and hadi preparatory role for the graduateHutchins created an un¬ite curriculum, now fondlyto as the Old College, of fourfork in general studies,were 14 specific three-quarter- three each in humanities, socialand natural science, and one eachophy, mathematics, English,of western civilization, and alanguage.r’s common core courses are theendants of the Old CollegeInstead of taking all 14, students now choose only four outtit modification of the original set.Hutchins College, a bachelor’sepresented general studies only,lege faculty was separate from theof the graduate divisions. Therevariation in the course of study,i would spend another three yearslized study for a master’s degree,students entered the College"tiing high school and it wouldfour years to complete 14Every College student either hadevery course or demonstrateof the area on placementitions, conceived for that purpose,ith high school diplomas were helds, after advanced placement,er Hutchins’s ideas were im-the emphasis on generalgan to wane. In the mid-nineteenallege students were required toht courses selected from the14 and to spend two years of more’ study in a graduate depart-eight College courses usuallyof two sequences of humanities,ences, and natural sciences, andforeign language and history ofcivilization. The College and’ faculties were still separateJ degrees were awarded jointlyw> groups.mid-nineteen-sixties, Levi’sral reorganization left thebetween general andstudy intact, submerging the> the four graduate divisions to®ur collegiate divisions and theYew Collegiate Division.[*J»ced the stipulated generalto four courses,“common one.” An The waning ofthe Old Collegeadditional year of general study, in¬formally called the second quartet, was tobe mandated by each of the five divisionsfor its own students.Levi’s reorganization was intended to beonly structural, but it may haveprecipitated a more philosophical tran¬sition. The amount of time spent in generalstudy, compared to study in a major area,supposedly remained as it had been since1953. But the course of general study wasradically altered. Instead of a singleobligatory course in humanities, for in¬stance. students now had a choice of threevariations. The general education com¬ponent of the curriculum was no longer anattempt to provide a survey of all humanknowledge as Hutchins may have hoped itwould be. The common core was designedto give all students a glimpse of differentintellectual disciplines. Not all Collegestudents will read the same books or studyspecifically the same topics, but all aresupposedly exposed to the modes ofthought and analysis which distinguish thehumanities, social sciences, physicalsciences, and biological sciences. Godfrey Getz, master of the biologicalsciences collegiate division, observes, “Itturns out to be much easier to recruitfaculty if one invites them to teachsomething in which they are expert . ”The biology common core represents theextreme case of course variety; 17 three-quarter sequences are offered. But biologywas the last core area to adopt the practiceof myriad offerings. For the other threeareas, the change from one to manycourses came in 1966-67. The biologycommon core consisted of a one yearsequence, with three “variants,” until1969-70. In the current courses, studentsdon’t study the same specific areas, but, inthe words of the common core informationbooklet sent to entering students, allconfront the “fundamental phenomena ofbiological continuity, organization,regulation and adaptability, andevolution.” Unlike the other three coreareas, every year the three-quartersequences are refashioned.The common core offerings as theystand today have developed over the past10 years. Three physical sciencegrowth of human knowledge.” (graphics by Noel Price)The development of the common core asit is today is the logical and inescapableoutcome of the growth of humanknowledge; one person simply cannotknow all there is to know. Charles Oxnard,dean of the College, points this out.“It used to be that I could teach threequarters of biology, and now I couldprobably only teach one,” he says. “Andit’s not because I’ve forgotten it. It’sbecause there are so many different thingsto teach now. You probably couldn’t findsomeone who could — or even should — beteaching all three quarters of a surveybiology course. Someone who knows allabout animal genetics probably doesn’tknow about human genetics. But the ideabehind genetics is the same whether it’sDrosophila or people ”Referring to the philosophy of the OldCollege, Oxnard continues, “It was a goodidea forty years ago, but it’s dead today.”The increased variety in core coursesstems not only from die fact that it isimpossible to teach every specific subject,but also from the more practical need tomake the best use of faculty members —whether it is prodding them to teach theirfield of specialty, or making it possible forthem to organize a course they are eagerto teach. sequences were devised in 1966. Onecourse was abandoned and replaced by thesequence in physics and chemistry. Theofferings were expanded to a total of fourwhen the sequence commonly calledRocks and Stars was divided and the starssegment expanded into a three-quartersequence last year.“The thread that runs through thephysical science common core,” notesDivision Master Leon Stock, “is ananalysis of natural phenomenon — largelyquantitative.”As an experiment, last year a six-quarter sequence in science was started,combining aspects of biological andphysical -science and reminiscent * of thetwo-year natural science courses of theOld College. A decision whether or not tocontinue to offer the combined sciencecore will be made later on in the year,according to Stock. There have been a fewwithdrawals from the sequence, but Stockwould not comment about the future. Getzsaid he hopes the combined course willcontinue. Neither Getz nor Stock envisionthe combined sequence replacing thephysical science and biology commoncore.Of the five social science common corecourses, two are direct descendents of theFriday, Old College, and the other three are thecreations of a few faculty members withspecial interests. This year a newsequence centering on East Asian studiesis being offered by Harry Harootunian andTetsuo Najita. Last year James Colemanand others interested in urban studiesestablished a sequence. The 161 sequence,titled Equality and Community in Con¬temporary America, was set up in 1972 by“a group who wanted a slightly differentemphasis of 121,2,3 — Self, Culture andsociety,” according to Krueger.In the humanities common core,Reading in European Literature wascreated last year. The other three corecourses were set up in 1966, resurrectedfrom venerable Old College ancestors. Thepurpose of the humanities common core,according to Jonathan Smith, collegiatedivision master, is to show students what itmeans to read a text with care, developskills in writing and talking, meet avariety of literatures, and “wrestle withtexts considered central to the humanistictraditions.”Smith points out, “You can’t read apoem like you read a play like you read anovel, and so on.”The European variation was createbecause there were no comparativeliterature courses for undergraduates andbecause there were members of thefaculty available to teach such a subjectbut who had no opportunity to offer it.“So the thought was,” explains Smith,“let’s get someone who reads Dante inItalian to tease you about the problem oftranslation, and maybe someone wouldactually want to major in Italian, whichwould be an earth-shaking event.”Last year, the Greek Thought andLiterature sequence was divided into twovariations, one with a general lecture anddiscussion group meetings, the othertaught in the usual small groups“There was a schism in the church, so tospeak,’; says Smith. Some teacherswanted the old format, some thought alecture would be the best way of handingout. basic information. “You sort ofcovertly lecture anyway,” he adds.The humanities common core is in nodanger of becoming a large lecture course,he.said. “I’m not sure always that we don’tmake a bit of a fetish about that smallgroup idea,” Smith interjects.Two years ago, the average class sizehad inched up to around thirty students.With the introduction of the HarperFellows last year, Ufc two-year ap¬pointments in the College, the average sizewas reduced to 21 to 22 students. Smithsays it will be the same this year. But if theHarper Fellows program isn’t extended,Smith may be faced with a problem nextyear. He sees three alternatives: return tothe larger class size, find more of thepresent faculty to teach, or reconceive thepurpose of the core.Krueger points out that lectures arebecoming increasingly rare in the socialscience common core. In 111, he said,there used to be lectures weekly, thenthree times each quarter. Last year therewere no lectures at all. The emphasiscontinues to be oirdiscussion.“But I don’t know what goes on in mostclasses,” Krueger comments.The question of the success of Levi’sstructure of the common core and thesecond quartet is debatable. There hasbeen a struggle to perpetuate a remnant ofHutchins’s ideal of a single but generalcurriculum, as well as a struggle tomaintain the integrity of generaleducation in light of the pressure in favorof early specialization.Humanities Collegiate Division MasterJonathan Smith points out that he wouldlike to see a humanities course focusing onnon-western materials, but he wouldn’twant to increase the number of humanitiescore courses any more than that.Cot* to 43September 34. ifM—The Chicago Memo*—41WELCOME:TO A GREAT UNIVEFTO A BEAUTIFUL CATO HYDE PARKTO COHN & STERNEVERY CAMPUS HAS AT LEAS'MEN’S STORE, THERE IS AT LE,ANN ARBOR, IN BERKELEY ORYOU MAY COME FROM.WE HAVE BEEN "YOUR” STOREYEARS AND KNOW YOUR PREFWHETHER YOU DRESS UP OR [IF YOUR "CUP OF TEA” IS A PA!LEVI’S OR A LEVI’S DENIM JACKCOME AND GET IT,A SWEATER, A PAIR OF GLOVEIMUFFS, COME AND GET IT,A BLAZER AND FLANNEL TROUCOME AND GET IT,A GANT OR HATHAWAY SHIRT!STURDY SHOES,COME AND GET IT.WITH THIS COUPON10% OFFON ALL MERCHANDISEOFFER GOOt) UNTIL 10/!Why Don’t You Just Pay UsBrowse, We’ll Tell You AboiHyde Park, Places to Visit oiWe Welcome You to an AIMSensibly Priced Men’s StorfYour Back Yard.1502 EAST 55TH STREET' IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55TH& LAKE PARK'Monday thru Saturday 9 to 6Thursday 9 to 8i uUiUO• iin o i L !~< ■’ < L- r i/■! .'i V i Mo ! fiw flAhO L > > ri i i> / • ! Ml*..u Core from 41“If you have a single core course, youwill have no faculty to teach it,” Smithsays, “But if you have thirtypfive corecourses, you don’t have a core at all.”. Albert M. Hayes, registrar anaprofessor emeritus in the department ofEnglish and the College, has observedmixed reaction.to the second quartet. “Itisn’t a total failure, but it isn’t a successeither,” he says.With the general educationrequirements in the hands of each division,an odd distinction has evolved in therequirements of the humanities and socialicience collegiate division on the one handtnd the physical science and biologicalcience divisions on the other. In thesecond quartet, the science divisionsdemand that their students spend anotheryear of study in the humanistic disciplines,as before the Levi changes. But the:eYour choiceGovernment Student Services Committee originally decided toproject of course evaluation late in the Winter Quarter of 1976. It wasjreed that we would work toward publishing evaluation summaries of[Core this fall. Our hope is to make this an on-going project which willllege-wide.itered many more hurdles than we expected in places where wethem and, unfortunately, we were not armed with the staff to[of them. However, with the help of the Biological Sciences Collegiate[Humanities Collegiate Division, and The Maroon we have managedat we hope is a useful and accurate set of course evaluation sum-aaries are based on the available evaluations for courses givenh76 academic year which will be taught by the same instructors thiscial sciences evaluations were provided by the social sciencesion student advisory committee, because we were denied access toations. The other student advisory committees and divisions were[preparation of the evaluations.; are not available in the physical sciences division.•evaluations prove useful to many, harmful to none, and that theyats to fill our and turn in those course evaluation forms. We lookoviding better evaluations write ups of this sort in the future.Student Services CommitteeThe following evaluations were not in any way edited by Theology1101 Responsesa large lecture courseprimate and humanvolution. Responses to themixed. Although aits felt that Klein“good presentations”be had an “impres-of the material,” somethe lectures “bland,”“repetitive.” Much ofto the lecturesto the fact that thetoo large. Requiredreasonable andchoice tests werecomplained thatunfair because theymemorization and|* knowledge of trivia. Onstudents who do well oni were pleased with theThere was no lab withsuggested that a. essay-style exams, andcould improve theHuman Heredity 22I as an introduction tolend, to some extent, dealt^implications of genetics,knowledgable andMost students saidQuestions well” and acommented that hehomework was con-* majority of thoseugh some students• relation to the rest ofclear enough to them,ttams “fair”, but therably from test tothought the class was too large (150 students). Due to the verysmall percentage of students responding,this summary may not present an ac¬curate picture of most students’ opinionsof the course.Williams-Ashman 106 Principles of SexualDevelopment and Function 22 ResponsesStudents considered Williams-Ash¬man a very talented instructor. He wasespecially praised for his ability to helpwith problems and to answer questions.His course was well received by nonbiology majors. Most students found thetextbooks “interesting” and “readable,”although a few were concerned that thereading did “not relate to the lecture.”While students liked the books, they also-felt that they were much too expensive'($25.00). There were two tests: a final anda midterm. The final counted for the entiregrade and some students wished that themidterm had counted, but it was agreedthat the tests were fair. Some students saidthey would have liked more discussion.Ihrochmorton 107 Genetics/Evolution kGeography 11 ResponsesThis course examines geneticinheritance, the relationship betweengenetics and metabolic processes, and therelationship of genetics, environment, andevolution. The large majority of studentsfelt that Throchmorton was a “good” to“excellent” instructor who bad a goodpresentation and was very willing to helpstudents. There was no written work andonly a moderate amount of reading. Themajor complaint was that the exams weretoo lengthy and could not be completed inthe alotted time. Although the exams werethought to be difficult, most studentsconsidered them to be fair. There was nolaboratory.Hoffman 110 Physiological Regulation andControl 22 ResponsesThe responding students all seemed toagree that Hoffman kept the class en- humanities divisions do not require theirstudents to pursue science. At most, theyrequire mathetmatics, which can usuallybe replaced by studying a language.Another quirk in the Levi structure is thatthe physical science common core coursesdo not satisfy that core requirement for the< two science divisions. Those students musttake physics or chemistry. Yet the socialscience and humanities common corerequirement is satisfied by the same set ofcourses, no matter what the student’sdivision.Krueger mentions the possibility of thesocial sequence collegiate division makingthe second quartet requirement morestrict, prescribing more specifically whichcourses must be taken.Smith doesn’t foresee any changes in thecommon core and u.e second quartet. Hesays he thinks that any changes in the nextgaged in lively discussions. He was anexcellent lecturer and was extremely wellorganized. He was enthusiastic abouthelping students, although he was not veryaccessible out of class. The readingassignments (hand-outs) were found to bequite advanced, however they wereusually explained and/or discussed up to. date with their work. The quizzes servedas feedback for the students. The midterm(an open book exam) and the final testedthe class on overall comprehension of thematerial. Some suggestions included thatMr. Hoffman be more available outside ofclass, that there be more lectures, and thatthe use of textbooks would be helpful.H. Wilson 120 Brain, Perception, andBehavior 32 ResponsesThis course deals with the organizationof the brain, its relation to the senses, andprocesses of perception. Students foundWilson organized, available, and helpful.Some commented that he was interestingor that he was friendly. Many students feltthat Wilson was especially adept atresponding to their questions. Studentsconsidered the exams (midterm and final)fair, but thought that they were a bit“long.” The visual aids used in the coursewere deemed especially helpful. Therewas agreement that there had been “a lotof reading,” some students thought it was“redudent,” and a few thought it was “toodifficult.” Wilson was praised for hisability to tie class together with thereadings and for his vivacity.Rosenthal 126 Ecosystems and the Qualityof Life 6 ResponsesThis course covered the interactions ofmau, animals, and plants. Most of thestudents felt that Rosenthal was a “good”lecturer who was well organized andresponded well to questions. Comments onthe quantity and quality of the readingsranged from “useful” and “just right” to“difficult.” Likewise comments on theexams ranged from “difficult” to “fair.”A term paper was required. two or three years will be in the majorprograms.“The major programs are theunexamined elements in all this,” hepoints out. “What does a BA in Frenchrepresent? These are questions we haven’ttouched on for years and years.“We’re going to examine it and we maydecide we’re doing a great job,” Smithcontinues. “We often do decide that.”Meanwhile, the week just passed hasalready determined for entering studentstheir basic course of study for the next twoyears. Computers have anlayzed theirplacement exams and offered placementrecommendations. The students’ short¬sighted struggle is not to live up to thefading visions of Hutchins’s Renaissancestudent, but to battle through the hordes atthe bookstore to have a check approved,and to finish that first paper on the twenty-fourth chapter of Homer’s Odyssey.Students felt that the major problem of thecourse was with the readings which couldbe corrected if they were coordinated withthe lectures in the future.J. Spofford 141 Continuity and Evolution 10This course deals in part with therelation of genetics to evolutionary theory.Students were clearly very impressed withSpofford’s “excellent knowledge” and“full command” of the material. They alsofound her quite willing to help. Somestudents thought that the class was “notlively” enough and that the material wastoo complex or “hard to follow.” Many feltthat there might have been too muchmaterial. Spofford was considered ap¬proachable and students though sheresponded well to questions. Herhomework was called helpful and “well-designed.” Students seemed to like thetests which they said were “fair” and“required creative thought.” They alsoseemed to enjoy the lab but they thought itwas “to long” and contained too muchmaterial. A few students wished the coursehad involved more discussion. This courseis clearly both good and difficult.Terri 152 Origin and Development ofEcosystems 28 ResponsesMr. Terri was an enthusiastic lecturer,although some students responding felt heoften strayed from the material of thecourse. There were no class discussionsand the readings were not covered in class.The students seemed to meet the readingswith a great deal of difficulty. There wasno written work and exams consisted of amidterm and a final. The exams testedstudents on points taken from class lec¬tures. They were found to be fair andobjective, although it was felt thatquestions should have been more generaland pertinent to the readings. The slidesused in class were helpful and interesting.Mr. Terri was open to questions and of¬fered help out of class.W. Martin 134 The Bacteria 16 ResponsesThis course is a survey ofmicroorganisms and deals especially withtheir role in nature. Martin was found“verv accessible” and “very, very willingto help the student.” His lectures wereconsidered disorganized. Students differedwidely in their opinions of the lab. Thismay be due to the complexity of thecourse, since many students felt theywould have got more out of the course ifthey had had more background for it.Foster 136 Plant-Animal Interactions 19The aim of this course was to studyelementary plant and animal interactions.Foster was consistently rated as a * good”to “very good” instructor who was “ableand knowledgeable”, “well organized,”“clear,” and who was very willing to helpboth in and out of class. Readings wereconsidered good; however, quite a fewstudents complained that the readingmatter was not related to the subjectmatter of the lectures. Two tests weregiven; the first was an essay exam and thesecond was a True-False exam. Theexams were considered “hard” and“difficult” by the majority of students. E. Evans 159 Bioenergetics 22 ResponsesThe aims of this course were to study theenergetics through metabolic pathways ofa biological system. Students found Dr.Evans to have an excellent command ofthe subject matter and very willing to helpin or out of class. Many felt, however, thathe assumed some knowledge of chemistryand biochemistry, and as a result could notalways be followed in class. Homeworkconsisted of reading which was not ex¬cessive. An optional paper was ap¬preciated by many as a means of adding totheir grade. Students found the tests dif¬ficult but fair. Many bio majors found thatthe course was lacking in detail whilemany of the non-bio majors found thatthere was too much detail and that it wassometimes over their heads. The mostcomplaints about this course were aboutthe book — Lehninger. Most students felt aneed for the use of a new book which wouldexplain topics better. Many students alsofelt that this course should require achemisty or organic chemistrybackground as a prerequisite.(Excerpted from Biological SciencesCourse Summaries, 1975-1976.)Friday, September 24,1974—The Chicago Maroon 43 *ft.fCommon CoreEvaluations from 43E. Garbo* 100 Human Gaieties 23ResponsesA survey of genetics emphasizinghuman gene transmission, this courseturned some students on to genetics.Garber’s willingness to help was called“unsurpassed” and he was considered“well organized” as well as “interesting,”but his response to questions was called“terrible. ’ ’ Students felt that he had beenimpatient with those who were lost. Thetextbook, which a few people liked, drew alot of criticism for being “too advanced”and “poorly suited.” student an understanding of classical andmolecular genetics. Students consideredGoldwasser knowledgeable but sometimesdisorganized. They said be was willing andavailable but that he sometimes failed tounderstand questions. Some students feltthat his lectures could have been moreinteresting, more lively, and less “dull.”The homework was found “helpful” aswell as “sparse.” Students called the testsfair, but criticized their apparent in¬dependence from the rest of the course. Afew students wished there bad been abetter book and a course outline. Fitch 171 Defense Mechanisms AgainstDisease 22 ResponsesSchwartz and Getz 168 The Cell andRegulation of Its Function 23 ResponsesC. Oxnard 161 Animal Form and Pattern 28ResponsesThe majority of responses indicated thatOxnard was an excellent lecturer, andencouraged questions, although there wasusually little class discussion. The coursereadings were optional. They were onreserve at Regenstein, which made themhard to get hold of, since the class size wasso large (67 students). The midterm andfinal were research papers. Students feltthat the papers were long and difficult,although they added that much waslearned from the assignments. Manystudents regretted that Dr. Oxnard couldnot devote much time to them out of class.He was enthusiastic, as well as humorous,in class, and the slides he used were in¬structive and enjoyable.E. Goldwasser 166 The Nature of the Gene27 Responses This course discusses the basic structureand function of the animal cell. Studentsfound Schwartz “available,” “enthu¬siastic,” and “open to questions,”although he sometimes had trouble an¬swering them. Students seemed to wishthat there had been written homeworkassigned. The tests were considered fair,though varying in difficulty. (Last yearthis course was co-taught by Schwartz andGetz, but his year it will be taught by Sch¬wartz alone). This course covered immune responses,antibody formation, inflammation, woundhealing and blood clotting. Dr, Fitch wasrated as “excellent” to “outstanding” asan instructor. He organized the materialwell, led good discussions in class, and wasvery willing to help students. The readingswere of a moderate amount and wereconsidered “useful” and “well related” tothe lectures. There were no tests, but onlyshort papers — one per week — whichwere considered valuable in un¬derstanding the subject matter of thecourse. The only complaint with thiscourse was that the text was a bit difficultfor the common core sequence. Based onthe evaluations, though, DefenseMechanisms Against Disease was a firstrate course whose instructor, Dr. Fitch,was considered close to outstanding inteaching ability and effort.L. Radinsky 173 Biology and Social Issues15 Responses in the classroom. He^help students in and oqsome students noted thsomewhat disorganiadifficulty improved as|and Dr. Dawson knewlectured. Reading q,background. Sometinjdifficult but the main poin class discussions. Sttextbook would havehelpful than the Scireprints were. Respommixed. Some students |fair while others thougnot related to the sutlectures.(Excerpted in partSciences Course SuminaHumaiSchwartz 168 Biochemistry of Cells 18ResponsesThis course is designed to give the The aim of this course was to provide anintroduction to biochemistry. However,the course was conducted on a more ad¬vanced level than some students had ex-Dected. Schwartz received mixed reviews— ranging from “excellent” to “dense”.Although considered competent in lecture,students complained that Schwartz hadtrouble understanding questions whichwere asked in class. Several problem setswere assigned which were considereduseful and the exams were considered fairby most students. The recurring complaintwith this course was that too muchbackground knowledge of biology andchemistry was required of the students. This course considers biologicalquestions as they relate to society. Thestudents though Radinsky was an ex¬ceptionally good instructor and charac¬terized him as “willing to help,” “in¬teresting,” “really caring,” “wellprepared,” “leading good discussions,”and “responding well to questions.”students very much liked the guest lec¬turers and the resultant discussions. Manyfelt that the course would be difficult toimprove upon. L Abel 10410 ResponseThe students said thatdiscussions well. She exyet steered the studentportant points. Herhelpful, although someshe didn’t give enough iiand form. She was alwaclass for help. Ms. Abeliby nine of the ten responDawson 179 How Cells Communicate 24ResponsesThe basic subject matter of the coursewas cellular communication; electricallyand chemically through hormones, nerves,etc. Dr. Dawson possessed an excellentcommand of this subject, as was apparent R. Becker 104 28 RespoMost students agreedwas a very enthusiast!structor. He was willinwhenever they neededhis criticisms to be mosseveral said it was a biEiWOMEfBACK TO SCHOOLFALL FLING!Coke Saturday and Sunday,October(■mark (S' NDandMarriott'sGREATAMERICA THOUSANDS OF FREE PRIZES!"°m6mfc7a• BeU Buckles • Flying Saucers<§» We dare you to try the.Turn of the Century, theworId’s longest looping roller coaster Enjoy morethan 125 thrill rides, attractions, parades, live showproductions, restaurants, shooting galleries, gamearcades, gift and craft shops. A COMPLETEond commercialConducted bysionols and gfurther info,enrollment. MeiUse this exclusive Fall Fling ,Savmgc Coupon for$1 00 o(f the regular gate admission at Marriott's$50 million theme park Clip this coupon andpresent it alrmg with proof of purchase from anytwo bottles of Coca-Cola, a; Great America s ticketbooth, for $1 ‘00 off the reg jlar $7 95 adult priceand $6.95 price for children 4 through 1T.tooOFF REGULARPRICE CbkC dctfllA-fafjCto...Marriott sGREAT AMERICASavings Coupon good for $1 00 off regular gateadmission price when presented in personat Main Entrance Ticket BoothOctober 2 and 3, 1976 10 00 AM to 8 00 P MCoupon must oe accompanied by two brandedcrown oners from anv bottles of Coca-ColaNo advance sale Valid for one ticket per coupon44—Tb* ChtcagaMaroon—Friday, S«ptfnbw 24,1974i from 44Lgyen papers, two outlines andFyJhich some students felt wasitten work. Yet, many of these, said that the writing practiceigif skills and ability insty three of the respondingrecommended Mr. Beckeri Responsesconsisted «of much lecturei for discussions. TTiere wasration on the form and stylereading selections. Mostlicated that Mr. Payne’sfor, student’s papers werehe stressed style andpapers could be taken toi criticisms were explainedIn addition, there was aStudents found him to beand both he and Mr.always available outside ofthat seemed to bemajority of the respondingi for Mr. Payne to encourageations and analysis fromMr. Ivy’s classes felt thatdisorganization in thethe class discussions and thewere interesting andthe understanding of theIvy presented various sidesHe was open to studentsyet did not push foration. The paper assign¬ ments were challenging, and students feltthat more papers should have beenassigned. Several students were disturbedthat Mr. Ivy was very lenient in extendingdue dates and that papers weren’treturned to them sooner. Mr. Ivy wasalways available for out of class help andstudents seemed to appreciate the mannerin which he criticized their papers.D. Postlethwaite 104 4 ResponsesThe students felt that Ms. Postlewaitehad extraordinary insight which sheforced students to discover for themselves.The class discussions were alwaysstimulating. In papers she looked forstudent interpretations and provideddetailed criticisms. The tutorials wereapparently appreciated only by thosestudents who needed helD.Strier 10417 ResponsesThere were few lecturs in this class andthe discussions were interesting, as Mr.Strier had great command of the subjectmatter. He was extremely willing to helpstudents and the class was conducted in arelaxed atmosphere. Students found Mr.Strier’s detailed criticisms of papers veryhelpful. There was a teacher’s aid whohelped out in tutorials and led severalclass discussions. Several students did feelthat at times Mr. Strier told the class toomuch and didn’t let them figure enough outfor themselves.Frank 104 8 ResponsesMr. Frank demanded students to speakin precise terms and refer to specificpoints during class discussions. Studentssaid his paper topics “provoked thought”and “created insight”. His criticisms werecomplete and he included grammar andstructure, as well as content. The studentsall appreciated his taped comments oftheir papers, and found them quite in¬structive. Mr. Frank was readily availablefor out of class help and his tutorials werevaluable to those who were helped bythem.GUITARS, BANJOS,MANDOLINS.RECORDERS,VIOLINS. AUTO¬HARPS ANDHARMONICASALSOBOOKS. INSTRUCTION AND REPAIRS G. Playe 10718 ResponsesStudents generally considered Mr. Playequite talented. They thought the papertopics were good and liked the take-homeexam: A few students felt that the aims ofthe course and the interrelation of thematerials were vague. Mr. Playe waspraised for his good handling of discussion,his willingness, and his accessibility. Hewas described as “enthusiastic”,“enlightening”, and pront to “going off ontangents”. Two students said they couldfind “nothing to criticize” about Mr.Playe’s teaching, and one said that thiswas his-her favorite course. Studentsthought that Playe’s criticisms were good,although occassionally “incomplete”.They said that he improved their un¬derstanding of literature, and one said,“he gave me a new outlook on literature”.Almost all the respondents said they wouldstrongly recommend Playe as an in¬structor to other students.P. Jansen 10715 ResponsesStudents seemed divided in theiropinions of Jansen. Many felt that thepaper topics were too vague. Some said th¬at the various readings had not been “tiedtogether” enough. Many students claimedthat the class became a lecture becauseJansen failed to stimulate discussion, butone blamed this on his-her fellow students.A few of the respondents mentioned thatJansen was unusually open to opposingpoints of view. Some thought that he hadtrouble “conveying his knowledge” to theclass. His paper criticisms were called“superficial” by some and “very helpful”by many. Students found Jansen “willing”and “helpful” and as many said theywould recommend him as said theywouldn’t.L. Olsen 1071 ResponseThere was only one response on file forMr. Olsen. He received the QuantrellAward for excellence in undergraduateteaching, as a result of student recom¬mendations. S. Loevy 10784 ResponsesStudents thought Mr. Lqevy to be anextremely energetic and innovative in¬structor. Students had complete respon¬sibility to conduct the class, answer onanother’s questions and question oneanother's interpretations, without beingleft to flounder around. He interjectedwhen he thought necessary and presentedhis interpretations, as well as encouragingothers. Tliere was always a great em¬phasis on student participation. He wasavailable out of class and encouragedstudents to see him regularly, especiallyafter graded papers were returned. Manystudents felt that Mr. Loevy graded theirpapers too severely, and several studentsfelt they would have preferred a moretraditionally taught class.Schwehn 10716 ResponsesMost students would have preferredmore lectures in this class. Mr. Schwehngave his own interpretations, as well asencouraging to hear some from thestudents, however at times classdiscussions seemed to lose direction. Mr.Schwehn was very willing to give studentsassistance out of class, though it wassometimes hard to get a hold of him. Heconcentrated on technical aspects inpapers and students felt that their writingskills improved greatly. There were manypapers and although most criticisms weregeneral, students felt that Mr. Schwehn’sremarks were complete and quite helpfulC. Koelb 11018 ResponsesThe newest Hum sequence has beenextremely well received. The reading listwas cited for being stimulating and in¬teresting by the majority of respondents.Course was well-structured and class timewas about half lecture, half discussion.The most valuable aspect of 110 wasKoelb’s method of paper critiques: ratherthan scribbling comments on the papers,Evaluations to 46A FINE CIGARCOMPLETES YOUR DINNERTREAT YOURSELFAND YOUR GUESTS Js pipe'ShopTHE ONLY ONE IF IT’S KINO IN THE H.P. AREAAt Harper Court Shopping Cen5225 S. Harper C-7 288-5151CenterOiinaviarvjre:XlBlLITY PLUS in this Swe-draftsman-style lamp. Foldingstretches to 33 in. and shade*ls to direct light anywhere.*able to hundreds of positions,ips onto any desk, table, work-'h, shelf. Baked enamel on steel'hite, black, brown, orange, red,°w, avocado and blue.M in Harper CourtSouth Harper, Chicago, IL 60615T 324-9010M in Schaumburg, Golf Rd.. Schaumburg, IL 60195^884-1440 AUTO 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: i684-5166 *. /-..AiruI I- M l.viil't, .TheVersatileOne$17.50IT'S WORTH THE TRIP!We accept Master Charge.Inquire about our revolving charge plan. LA RUSSO’S RESTAURANTFine Italian Cuisine j. p*Special Luncheons Everydayl r,-®$i% I(Every Night a Special for Dinner(Complete)NSfFull Bar with a fine selection v ^of winesPitchers of Beer $2.501645 E. 53rd St.NO 7-9390Friday, September 24,1976—TheChicagoMaroon—45Common CoreEvaluation* from 45he had individual conferences with eachstudent about his-her paper in his office.“He was genuinely concerned that hisstudents learn the technique of analysis inboth reading and writing.’' The onlycriticism was that Koelb taxied to be in¬flexible in his acceptance of (literary)interpretations differing from his own, thisbeing outweighed by his ability andcompetence in teaching this course.G. Walsh 12014 responsesStudents seemed to like Mr. Walsh’sclass very much. Many thought that thepapers were assigned too late to allowenough time for writing them. He wasfound unusually willing to help and hiscriticisms were considered good. He wassaid to be accessible and to “make it in¬teresting”. One student said of Mr. Walsh“he motivates”, and others said that hewas enthusiastic. Students called thediscusrns “good” and “well directed”. bination of lecture and discussion in a 1:3ratio (one student called this“ingenious”). Some students wished thatthere had been no final exam. TheMuellers were noted for their willingnessto help, tor their availability, for theirconcern with grammar, and for goodpaper criticisms. Most students con¬sidered the Muellers highly recom-mendable. In his discussions, which werethought to be “good”, students creditedMr. Ferguson with having brought uppoints relevent to the papers. Almost everystudent who commented on Mr. Fergusonsaid that he was “unusually willing tohelp” and that his paper criticisms were of“high quality”, and that he-sbe wouldrecommend Mr. Ferguson very strongly.Some students did, however, complainthat Mr. Ferguson was not availableenough. Krueger (111 only): Students pointedenthusiastically to his ability to lend greatinsight to the works under discussion.Lerner: Though not universally adored,many students found Mr. Lerner’sknowledge of the subject and hispresentation of it excellent.McGowan: He is a competent instructor:knowledgeable but not particularly in¬teresting.Social Sciences 121-122-123Social ScienceSOCIAL SCIENCES 111-112-113M. Murrin 12013 ResponsesStudents found this course challengingand thought that the paper topics wereespecially good. They seemed to likehaving all papers and no exams. Studentssaid that Mr. Murrin’s criticisms were -“valuable” and that he was “very willing”to help them. He was characterized as“stimulating”, “able”, “enthusiastic” and“thought provoking”. All but one said thatthey would strongly recommend Mr.Murrin to other students. The sequence provides great insight intothe political and economic philosophieswhich underlie our own government aswell as others. The reading list rangesfrom Plato and Hobbes to Admit Smith andour own Milton Friedman. Many studentscomplain of its depth and breadth, i.e.there is too much reading to complete inten short weeks. However, the real thorn inthe students’ sides is the grading systemwhich placed too great an emphasis upon acommon final.Beck: He is an excellent instructor.R. Ferguson, I. Mueller, J. Mueller 120 51ResponsesA lot of students said that the papertopics required 'thought and describedthan as “demanding”, “stimulating”, and“challenging”. About the same numbercalled them hard and said that they were“too brtoad” and “not clear”. Manystudents felt that the material was coveredtoo quickly, that the lectures “containedtoo much”, and that they were “too long”.Students seemed to like having fourteachers and especially liked the com- Danford He is new at the game and hisstudents think he will improve with timeand become a fine teacher.Ellsworth: Students found his classes openand intelligent, and his Wednesday nightsherry hours extremely enjoyable. Most common complaints were theirrelevance of lectures to class discussionsand the length of the reading list. Manystudents felt that inability to keep up withthis amount of reading stifled class par¬ticipation in discussion. However, studentsthought the readings proved worthwhile,in general, and found the whole course astimulating introduction to social theory,one which stressed points of view withwhich many had no previous experience.Reading list includes Freud, Marx, Weber,Benedict, and Durkheim, among others.Bert Cohler: He is described by hisstudents in glowing terms. His rapportwith the class and concern with hisstudents is repeatedly noted.Gunhilde Hagestad: She comes to classwell-prepared, but discussion remainedrather disjointed. Students expressedsome discomfort over the policy of gradingeach other’s papers in this section.John MacAloon. He has an extremelycomprehensive knowledge of the material.And his obvious interest in the material isconveyed to his students.Ralph Nicholas: Students found him openand approachable.Terri Straus: Students noted an apparentlack of confidence (which was un¬warranted). Many appreciated thematerial which her background of an¬thropology offered, especially herknowledge of American Indians.Karafiol (111 only): He received fairlystrong recommendations from hisstudents.Kipnis (ill only): He has an extensiveknowledge o' history and law and becauseof this discussions often developed intolectures. SOCIAL SCIENCES 161 - AUTUMN 1975The success of this course seemed todepend on the personality and/or ability ofthe instructor. One observation common tostudents in all sections was that the lec¬tures on the use of the computer in theanalysis of social science data wereinadequate and rather boring; thegraduate student giving these lecturesworked well on a 1-to-i basis with students, but was a poor, lecturer,suggested that the secticstructors should teach cand integrate this with thethe course. There were aabout the reading list (m*worthwhile) and the genejof the course (too loosdirectionless). Commentswere mostly favorable, |was considered to beMansbridge seemed to ha\with her students, andpraised for the way shediscussions. Zoois’ studentbe very interesting, andhim with the success of tithe relevance of the couissues was another of its stiSOCIAL SCIENCES 163-General comments on thtime-consuming 4 5 paperswork beforehand, plus a fjextremely interesting, itvalue in acquainting UmChicago and its public |There were many complifinal exam (it was apparmake sure everyone did thcomments were receiviPeterson. Mansbridge waspersonable, dynamic ins!was a little dry, althouglconcepts well and ofteidiscussion. Ewell was ecboth lecture and discuss!were well-planned, andwere centered aroundprovacative questions,students taking 163 aftsequence mentioned thatnot logically fit in with theiSOCIAL SCIENCES](COLEMAN, CLARKStudents in the newest of thsocial science sequences fcmaterial interesting airelevant. Many complaaround the sequence’s lac]but most students attribunewness. Ewell consistent]praise — he was consider®interesting, dynamic, andinstructors, and he wasdiscussion leader. The otwere not rated as higigenerally considered to bewell. Some students felt tltechnical, but on the who]received good ratings.With This Ad OnlyNEW FILE CABINET SALE2 drawers $354 drawers $45“cash and carry"EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.- Sat. 8:30- 5:00RE 4- 2111 WHAT IS A MCIHJUIJEWISH SUNDAY SCHOOL?for more than 25 years th# South Sid# School of Jo wishStudio* ho* offered Hyde Part or* # curriculum em¬phasizing Jewish history on* culturo. In grades 14 do*malarial covered Includes Jewish holidays. Slhla stories,tha history of th# Jawlsh poop la, tho Amoclcon-Jowish sz-parlanca, and IsraelTha program soaks to dovolIn contest of worldmusic, and holiday colobratlonscultural tradition.Class#* moat at Hlllal, University of Chicago. S71S S.Wood town A vo. on Sundays 10tJO-12x3u. For further In¬formation contactStarting Oct. 3rdIts to develop a sans# of Jawlsh IdentityI history and currant azparlanco. Dance,celebrations ora Included as part of thaHARVY STAUSSPres.947-9031 RICHARD WORTMANVice Pres.373-3004PARENT COOPERATIVE FOREARLY LEARNING PRESCHOOLFull and half day program (7:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m.) for children 2-6 years• classrooms designed for2 year olds3-4. year oldsKindergarten pif. Gregory of Nyssautheran Campus Parish ChurchLITURGICAL and EUCHARISTICCELEBRATIONSUNDAY 10:30 a.m.professional teachers-jiEiRCSCHOGL. 5300 S. Shore Dr.684-6363 Graham Taylor Chapel5757 So. University Ave.46—THd Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 24,1f74 BOKHOTI787-31Stud“When life is considered only in itized functions, the outcome is a workof meaning.” Rene DubosBRENT HOUSE5540 WoodlawnSunday: 5:30-7:00 p.m. Open House andMonday: 7:00-8:30 p.m. Bible Study of STuesday: 4:30 p.m. Evensong (Bond ChiThursday: Noon Holy Communion (BonFriday: 4:30-6:00 Sherry HourSunday: 5:00 Vespers6:00 Social Hour6:15 Supper with Tom Owens7:15 Dialogue with Spencer PaDean of Rockefeller Chap111“FAITH AND THE MEANUMW M KMj VfcM • «cturer.i secteach1th lwere1st (le•o'lcrunentsrable,to bei to hdV(|► anday shestudenti]andss of th»lhe>f its:ES163-on the iPapers ilas atog. Ittog the i•ubliccorappa5 did thenreceive.Ige wasdlie1 though li often |wasisciand•oundtions.S3 after |i thatththecVCES]LARK,]st of theqnces fong and]ompla;’s lack iattrifcistentlynsideredtand!i wasIre5 his1 to be infelt Ii whole]i. 1'>Jin itt |vorldlEi and'r of St|i ChaBond] NOW OPENWC&7\ult &€****te+1656 E. 55th St. - 288-8966uses:green wareand FIRE1NG-SUPPLIES-One Class FREE perPerson With This-AD-CORNER OF HYDE PARK BlVD.4 LAKE PARK AVE.IN THE VILLAGE CENTER(NEXT TO THE ASP)SERVING THE WORLD'SFINEST PANCAKES|b8tt«r rrt*d« from quality ingrtditnti bltndtd into au-|tic rtcipa* that havt baan carefully collected andfrom tha vary best of aach country or araa of oriqin.I PANCAKES FROM THE WORLD OVERIS: 7:00 AM TO 9:00 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEKf \1517 E. HycU Pork Blvd. A perfect balance to the life of the mind.Beginning Autumn Quarter Monday October 4thand Thursday October 7th Yoga classes will beoffered on campus at the Blue Gargoyle, 5655University.Classes will meet from 5:30 to 7:15 P.M.Yoga will be led by Dobbi Kerman who has taughtyoga for student activities at the U of C 1971-73,at the Gargoyle since 1973 and at IIT in 1975.Yoga will include Asanas (Hatha Yoga Postures),Pranayama (Breath Control), Energization, andMeditation.7 sessions $30, Registration is open until spaceis filled.Please wear comfortable clothes and bring ablanket.For information call Dobbi 643-3595answering service SU 7-4435.NOTE: following yoga a massage workshop willbe held at the same location with a $10 reductionin tuition for those who participate in bothsessions.Bring iton home.Visit theColonelYou can pick up Col. Sanders’ Kentucky Fried Chicken at:1513 E. HYDE PARK BLVDnnouncing new lower prices onTexas Instrumentselectronic calculators/g/^+J 9Vo- yj'/. ' ■ TI-1270 1270- $14.952550-11 -$34.95SR-50A-$59.95SR-51A-$79.95SR-52 -$299.95SR-56 -$109.95SR-56•1A University Bookstore5750 Ellis753-3033Master Charge and Bank Americard GOLD CITY INNgiven * * * *by the MaroonNtw Hours: Open DailyFrom 11:30 cum.to 9iOO pan."A Gold Mine Of Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Fork's Best Cantonee5228 Harper 493-2559(w8tr HirptrCiwl)Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.)Ooe^ tpy' 1-0DGo°6Vp«m* ‘upport.d K. p.1 hy • gr.,,1 from rK. Ilium, Art, Count.I. *n *jmu , of tha StM.Friday. Sepf^ber 24. i*?4—Th# CMc*g© M#roor*—.47 'Largest Selectionof Imported Beerin the areaLAKE PARK LIQUORS INC.1526 East 55tn StreetChicago, Illinois667-6833 quality service on most imported cars312-mi 3-31213foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.5424 south kimbark avenueechicago 60615 CONGREGATION RODFEI ZEDEK HOFFMARELIGIOUS SCHOOL(accredited by Board of Jewish Education)5200 Hyde Pork BoulevardANNOUNCES FALL REGISTRATION FORSUNDAY MORNING A AFTERSCH001HEBREW SCHOOLKINDERGARTEN THROUGH HAY (FIVE)(ages 5 to 13 years)Call PL 2- 2770 for information.Rabbi Vernon Kurtz, PrincipalCome to the Illinois Bell Open Housenext Tuesday and Wednesday.We have a lot to show you.The people from Illinois Bell will be hostingan Open House at the Hyde Park TelephoneOffice, 6050 S. Dorchester, Tuesday andWednesday evenings, September 28 and 29.It’s a chance for us to show you how themembers of the Bell System team'worktogether to give you the best phone servicepossible.An Illinois Bell Operator will show you howyour calls are handled. You can look inside anInstaller’s Van to see the equipment used toconnect telephones. You’ll also get to talk to aService Representative if you have any ques¬tions about your service. And you’ll see howlephone cable is spliced to carry your calls.Youli see a display of historical phones fromWestern Electric and find out how you wouldhave sounded on the telephones of yesterday. And you’ll learn about the transistor,• invented by Bell Laboratories oyer 25years ago.So be sure to stop in and see us Tuesday orWednesday, September 28 or 29 at theHyde Park Telephone Office, 6050 S.Dorchester. Well be there from 6:30 to 9 p.m.both evenings. Admission and refreshmentsare free. Bring your family and friends.Well be looking forward to seeing you.ONE BELL SYSTEM. IT WORKS.Illinois Bell AT&T Long LinesBell Laboratories Western Electric JANE LEE RESTAUFAST SPECIAL LOROmonitorsfrit SatSm n jo a11:38*13dOOJUCLOSED TUE5643-34071316 E. 53rd SmnzminLit* School AomissionGraduate MmioemektAiiGraduate Record ExamhhMedical Collebi Adm Ted• PROFESSIONAL IM8TRUC■ CURRENT MATERIAL!■ ADMISSION / APPUCAII8TRATEBY■ LOWEST HOURLY COOTOF AMY PROGRAMWt MAXI m BlltfMMCt782-2185!*.(J officialSwiss an. knives$5.50 to $42Free brochwtcomplete line in stock, ot itrun out of your favoriteorder it for you. 3 *delivery.the hodgepodj506 Mam St. Evanston tL 602312/864-4300Open Sundays 124 30HAIR IINEW 1 &, u sm*FOR MEN AND WOK10% Discount WitUut CIOf'arfumaa Cotmattc, .oweltyWanda MariaNanr— wOsmeucBoe5226 Harper Court, Chicago, lllinonfTelephone 1312)493-2903fWWIMPWWWMRfWMRMMRCARPET CIT16740 STONY ISUI324-7998as wliat you need froi10 used room size Rugustom carpet. Specialin Remnants & Mill returf|o froction ot the origost.ecoration Colorsualities Additionaliscount withJhis adFREE DELIVER'jgggggggggggggB/MBOOlOUMGCMixed Drinks,Pitchers of BeeiFREE POPCORNOpen Pianoaft for yourenjoyment,Viion the first L„rof the Del ral^otc *STUDENTS48—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 24, 1974FAMILY free school1448 C. 53rd Str.has opening forCHILDREN 5-9Free learning in a structured environmentLoving, experienced teachersEstablished parents' cooperativeFor info: Call FA 4-4100 (Judy Morris),842-8650 (eves.), or 548-2352OPEN HOUSE AT HILLELSUNDAY SEPT. \(o 5*15 VJOODLAUN5:00 PM BUFFET SUPPERNew $ returning studentsprogram information We serve fine Cantonese food. Try ourSweet and Sour Shrimp, its the studentsfavorite. Or, try our combination dishes,like Tomatoe Green Pepper with Beef withEgg Foo Young. For$1.85JACKSON INN1607 E. 55th PL 2-3786DUNCAN’SYour neighborhood discount storeSchool & Office SuppliesArtist materials♦1STORE WIDE SALEBeat the rush and save money1305 East 53rd Street HY 3-4111 ■ YDE PARK PIPE AND TOBACCO SHOP!1552 E. 53rd - under 1C tracksAH students get 10% gifask for "Big Jim"/ ■ **'Fift TtkoctM★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★AHEY BOOBIEWhatcha gonna do when ya grow up?LAW? MBA? MEDS?* Before you can get in, you have to pass theJ admission test. May-be we can help you.wrrere1342 E. 55 St. 493-6700 *4444444444444***4*4*44-4-*********4-*4-***44>:★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★*★★★**★★★★★★4444444**444* PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL SEMINARSl 1114 HALL AVENUEWINDSOR, ONTARION9A2M9CANADAWho are we& We are Professional School Seminarsof Windsor, Ontario.For twenty dollars, we will give you an afternoonseminar on how to prepare for your admission test.If you could use our help, send a cheque or moneyorder for twenty dollars to -We offer seminars on HOW TO PREPARE FOR THE1) GMAT 2) LSAT 3) MCATSo you have your choice. Please don’t forget togive us your name and address. We need the infor-* mation for our ist of suckers that we’ve ripped off.SAVE $18 SAVE $18RENTAPORTABLECOMPACTMINI SAVE$18REFRIGERATORand stand On the Full Two SemesterRental of a \Portable - Compact - MiniREFRIGERATOR and standwith own freezing component2 Semester Rental $50.00tofundable Deposit $10.00 fromTOTAL $60.00Full payment must be made on delivery. SWAN RENTAL SERVICES721-44008216 Stony Island Ave.Call Now for Free DeliveryFriday, September 24, 197*—The Chicago Maroon—49THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO CAMPUS BUS SERVICEFALL, WINTER AND SPRING QUARTERS (Effective September 20, 1976 through June 10, 1977)Buses are clearly identified by a sign reading "CAMPUS BUS." Upon signal from a patron,buses will stop to take on or discharge passengers ot any intersection or University Building. Buses will operate as stated below, Monday through Friday, except on official University holidays.Schedules are subject to change without notice.WHO MAY RIDEBecause of legal restrictions, use of this transportation serviceis limited to members of the University faculty, staff, andstudents. Passengers will be admitted to the vehicle uponsurrendering a ticket to the driver except on the MINI BUSwhere University identification must be presented. The driverwill not be permitted'to accept cash or to sell tickets. Identifi¬cation as a student, faculty member, or employee will be re¬quired when purchasing tickets. One-ride tickets at 25 centseach and Monthly Commutation tickets at RHR each for the• —^ $7.50 "N" & "E" routes and at 40 cents each ride or Monthly Com¬mutation rote of $12.00 each for the "S" route are sold at thefollowing locations:Bursar's Office (5801 Ellis Avenue)Billings Hospital, Cashier's Office (950 E. 59th St.)University Bookstore (5750 Ellis Avenue)Blaine Hall, Room 105 (1362 E. 59th St.)International House, Information Desk (1414 E. 59th St.) Reynolds Club, Attendant's Desk (5706 University Ave.)Law School, Receptionist's Desk (1121 E. 60th St.)Center for Continuing Education Reception DeskMaps and Schedules available at the above locations.(NO refunds on lost or u riffled commutation tickets. "S" routetickets are accepted on all routes).NOTE: See separate maps for Evening MINI BUS Services.(N) NORTH-SOUTH(25 cent tickets)Monday through Friday except on University Holidays(Approximately 30 minutes round trip under normal drivingconditions. Stops at all intersections upon signal from patron)ROUTEThe A.M. bus starts at 48th and Greenwood, proceeds East on48th to Dorchester; South on Dorchester to 53rd; East on 53rdto Harper; South on Harper to 54th Place; West on 54th Placeto Blarkstone; South to 55th; West to Dorchester; South onDorchester to 56th St.,- East on 56th to Lake Park; South onLake Park to 57th St.; West on 57th to Dorchester; South to58th; West to Kimbark; South to 59th & Kimbark, then Weston 59th to Ellis; South on Ellis to 60th; East on 60th to Dor¬chester, then north to westbound Midway, West to Ellis; Northto 57th; East to University; North to E. Hyde Park Blvd.; Eastto Woodlawn; North to 49th; West to Greenwood; and Northto 48th St., the A.M. Starting Point.NOTE: P.M. Buses start on 59th between Kenwood and Kim¬bark but run the some route. ROUTES AND SCHEDULES(E) EAST-WEST-BROADVIEWSCHEDULEA.M.Starts at 48th & GreenwoodN-l 7:10 N-2 7:217.50 7:518:20 8:218:50 8:519:20 -Last trip ends at 57th & UniversityP.M.Starts on 59th between Kenwood & Kimbark (25 cent tickets) »Monday through Friday except on University Holidays(Approximately 30 minutes round trip)Upon signal from patron, Buses will stop to take on or dis¬charge passengers at any intersection or University Buildingon the route.ROUTEStorting in the A.M. at 55th and Cornell, Bus proceeds Northto E. Hyde Park Blvd., East to S. Hyde Park Blvd., South to54th St., East to South Shore Drive, South to 55th, West toS. Hyde Park Blvd., South to 57th St. Drive, S.W. to 57th &Stony, South to 59th & Stony (the P.M. Starting Point), Weston 59th to Cottage Grove, North to 57th, East to Stony, Northto 56th, West to Lake Park, North to 55th, East to Cornell,the A.M. Starting Point.N-4 12.00* 3:00 N-5 - 2:50’12:30* 3:25* — 3:261:00* 4:05 — 4:061:30* 4:35 — 4:362:00* 5:05 — 5:062:30* 5:35 2:20* —Last trip ends at 57th & Dorchester* These runs not made during interim periods, December 13ththrough January 2nd and March 21st through March 25th. SCHEDULEA.M. runs start at 55th & CornellA.M.t-1 6:00 E-2 -6:30 7:006:55 7:307:25 8.007:55 - 8:308:25 9:00Last trip ends at 57th & UniversityPM.E-3 runs start at 59th & StonyP.M.(Tues. Only) E-4 —(Tues. Only) —1:20*1:50*2:20*2:50*3:20*4:004:305:00* 3:454:154:455:15** These runs not made during interim periods, December 13ththrough January 2nd and March 21st through March 25th.** These runs will end at 55th & University after completingfull round trip. (S) SOUTH SHORE-SOUTHCAMPUS(40 cent tickets)Monday through Friday except on University Holidays(Approximately 60 minutes round trip under normal drivingconditions. Stops at all intersections upon signal from patron)ROUTEThe A.M. bus starts at 67th and Jeffery and proceeds Southon Jeffery to 76th Street; East on 76th Street to Coles Avenue;North West on Coles to 73rd Street; West on 73rd Street toLuella Avenue; North on luella through 71st St. onto Craft-don, then North on Crandon to 68th Street; West on 68thStreet to Stony Island; North on Stony Island through JacksonPark Drive to 59th and Stony Island Ave. (the P.M. STARTINGPOINT); then West on 59th St. to University Ave.; North onUniversity to 57th St.; West on 57th St. to Ellis Ave.; Southon Ellis Ave. to 60th St.; East on 60th Street to Stony Island;South on Stony to 63rd St., the Elevated Station; East on 63rdthrough Jackson Park to 67th & Jeffery, the A.M. StartingPoint, where the normal route is again resumed.SCHEDULEA.M.A.M. Starts at 67th & JefferyS-l 6.05 S-2 7:407:05 8:408:15Last trip ends at 60th & StonyP.M.P.M. Starts at 59th & StonyS-4 1:20*2:203:204:305:25 (Tues. Only) S—5 2:20*3:20*4:155:15Last trip ends at 68th & Stony* These runs not made during interim periods, December 13ththrough January 2nd and March 21st through March 25th.Further information may be obtained from the Plant Department, 960 East 58th Street, 7^3-3082.The University of Chicago'"Free" Evening Mini Bus Service E. L. MILLER, Director, Plant OperationsFall, Winter and Spring Quarters September 20, 1976 through June 10, 1977There are four routes—A, B, C and D, each requiring 30minutes for a round trip. All four routes START and endon the 57th Street side of the Regenstein Library on thehalf hour except for University Holidays and interimperiods.MINI BUSES will operate seven days per week over theroutes shown below from 6 p.m. to 1 a.m. Servicestarts at 5 p.m. on Saturdays.On Holidays and during the interim periods, twobuses will cover all four routes. The "A" bus will coverthe "A" and *‘B" routes alternately and the "C" Bus willcover the “C" and "D" Routes alternately.(A and C onthe hour, B and D on the half hour.) The MINI BUSES are clearly identified by an illumi¬nated sign reading U of C MINI BUS (A), (B), (C) or (D).Upon signal drivers will stop at any University Buildingto take on passengers.This service is provided FREE OF CHARGE to Faculty,Staff and Students of the University of Chicago uponpresentation of University Identification.Pick up your MINI BUS route maps at the Bursar'sOffice, Billings Cashier's Office, Bookstore, Blaine 105,International House Information Desk, Reynolds ClubDesk, the Law School Receptionist's Desk and the Recep¬tion Desk at the Center for Continuing Education.Starts at Regenstein LibraryWest to EllisSouth to 59thWest to Maryland (Billings)North around Wyler to 57tl & DrexelWest on 57th to Cottage (In.erns Res.)North on Cottage to 56thEast on 56th to MarylandSouth on Maryland to 58thWest on 58th to Cottage (Nurses Res.)South on Cottage to 60thEast on 60th to DrexelSouth on Drexel to 61st (Nurses Res.)East on 61st to InglesideNorth on Ingleside to 60th (Faculty Housing)East to Stony (Burton-Judson & Plaisance)North to 59thWest to Blackstone (Breckinridge, & Int'l. House)North to 58th (Blackstone Hall)West to KenwoodSouth to 59th (Woodward Court)North to 57thWest to KimbarkWest to University (Ida Noyes)North to 57thWest to RegensteinSO—Ttf Chicago Maroon— Friday, September 24,197*ROUTE Starts at RegensteinWest to EllisNorth to 56thEast to UniversityNorth to 55th (Pierce)East to KimbarkNorth to 53rd St.East to KenwoodNorth to Hyde Park Blvd.East to DorchesterSouth to 54th St.East to BlackstoneNorth to 53rd St.East to So. Hyde Park Blvd.North to E. Hyde Park Blvd.West to BlackstoneNorth to 49th St.West to DorchesterSouth to Hyde Park Blvd.West to WoodlawnSouth to 57thWest to Regenstein ROUTE Starts at RegensteinWest to EllisNorth to 55th (5518 Ellis)East to KenwoodNorth to 54th St.East to HarperSouth to 54th Place (Harper Surf)West to BlackstoneSouth to 55thWest to DorchesterEast to Cornell *North to 54th St. 'East to South Shore DriveSouth to 55th (Shoreland)West to S. Hyde Park Blvd.South to 56th (Broadview)West to Lake Park (Windermere)South to 57thWest to Regenstein (5700 Dorchester) Route Starts at RegensteinWest to EllisNorth to 54th StreetEast to WoodlawnNorth to E. Hyde Park Blvd.East to WoodlawnNorth to 49th St.East to KenwoodNorth to 48thEast to DorchesterNorth to Parking Lot TurnarounSouth to 48th St.West to GreenwoodSouth to 55thWest to EllisSouth to 59thEast to UniversityNorth to 58thWest on the Quadrangle Drivearound circle and back toUniversityNorth on University to 57thWest to Regenstein.!, >1r » THE NEWSIEST PONCHOis in a bandana printwith matching scarf.Great over slacks andskirts - assorted colors -One size fits all.$12.00Susan Gale Shop1540 E. 55th St.Hyde Park ShoppingCenter324-72856<>KAIvd. "the Meeting-Place for Friends”GREEK AND AMERICAN FOOD\low you will enjoy dining at THE AGORA, where you varied menu hasfling to please every taste. We have full breakfasts, sandwiches, fine steaks,Spaghetti, chicken and chops, in addition to our authentic Greek specialties atliable prices.naroundjDrive'th Featuring: GYROSSOUVLAKIDOLMADESPASTICHIOOPEN TO 11 EVERY NIGHTiveniently located at 57th & Kenwood1335 EAST 57th STREET947-8309 BAKLAVAMOUSAKASAGANAKIand MORE PRACTICING THE ART OF MASSAGEWORKSHOPS AUTUMN QUARTER BEGIN MONDAYCOTOBER 4th & THURSDAY OCTOBER 7th, ON CAMPUSAT THE BLUE GARGOYLE. 5655 UNIVERSITY. FROM 7:30TO 9:15 P.M.THE WORKSHOPS WILL BE LED BY DOBBI KERMANWHO HAS BEEN TEACHING YOGA ON CAMPUS SINCE1971.THE WORKSHOP WILL INCLUDE THE STUDY ANDPRACTICE OF METHODS FROM RUMANIAN MASSAGE,A DEEP MUSCLE MASSAGE PRACTICED IN MS.KERMAN’S FAMILY FOR OVER FOUR GENERATIONS,AND GEORGE DOWNING'S MASSAGE. DOWNING’S TEXT,THE MASSAGE BOOK, WILL BE USED FOR THE COURSE.THE FORMAT OF EACH MEETING WILL INCLUDE THEDEMONSTRATION AND EXPLANATION OF DIFFERENTTECHNIQUES OF MASSAGE AND EXCHANGING MAS¬SAGES USING THE METHODS WE WILL LEARN.7 SESSIONS $30. WEAR COMFORTABLE CLOTHES &BRING A BLANKET OR RUG AND SHEET.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL DOBBI AT 643 3595OR LEAVE A MESSAGE AT SU 7 4435.NOTE: BEFORE MASSAGE A YOGA CLASS WILL BEHELD AT THE SAME PLACE WITH A $10 REDUCTIONIN TUITION FOR THOSE WHO PARTICIPATE IN BOTHSESSIONS.More calculating power than the HP21More memory registers than the SR 51The Corvus 500, introduced to usersof Scientific Calculators several monthsago, has rapidly earned its reputation asbest in the field1 Compared with othercalculators, feature for feature, you willbe convinced that the Corvus 500 is thebeet buy!The features you need are here for¬merly found only on higher priced cal¬culators now available at an affordablepriceMemory Store and Recall—10 registers10 Memory Exchange with Last xReverse Polish Notation (RPN)4 Level Roll-Down Stack12 Digit Accuracy—for Business12 Digit Display (10 digit mantissa. 2 digitexponent) for scientific calculationLog. LNTrig (Sine. Cosine. Tangent, INV)Hyperbolic Rectangular to Polar andInversey\ e*. 10* Vx, 1/x, x *—»y, n CHSvy through InverseFactorials of up to 120Degree-Radian Mode SelectionDegree-Radian ConversionPolar to Rectangular ConversionFixed Decimal Option (0-9)Recall Last xScientific Notation. Fixed and Floating%. 4%Mean and Standard DeviationProduct MemoriesS+. v-Farenheit to Centigrade Direct ConversionCentigrade to Farenheit Direct ConversionGallons to Liters Direct ConversionLiters to Gallons Direct ConversionPounds to Kilograms Direct ConversionKilograms to Pounds Direct ConversionInch to Centimeter Direct ConversionCentimeter to Inch Direct ConversionAt the GLOBAL price $69 95 What does this extra calculating powermean to you?Here are some of the answersReverse Polish Notation (RPN). WhyRPN’ Ask instead why proponents ofalgebraic entry always use an examole ofsum of products—never an exampleof product of sums Compare the solutionsto this problemHere S how It works: (4 - 6) x (8 - 5)Algebraic Entry 4*6= MS 8-5 = X MR =Total 12 key strokes (SR51 Add 2 morekey strokes)RPN Entry 4 Enter 6-8 Enter 5 - xTotal 9 key strokes'RPN allows you to solve the problem theway it is written in left to right se¬quence eliminates restructuring, elimi¬nates writing intermediate solutionseliminates extra key strokes You get theanswer faster, with less key strokes, moresimply, thus more accurately4 Laval Roll-Down Stack. Just roll downthe stack att the intermediate informa¬tion is at your fingertips plus x and yregister exchange for easy review andcorrection10 Memory Store and Recall (with Last xRegister). 10 addressable memories allowyou more entries more intermediate solu¬tions less writing down and rememberingthe Last x Register automaticallystores the last entry allowing easy correc¬tion, or recall tor use as a constant It alladds up to taster better calculating withfewer errorsFactorials of up to 120. Yes' The Corvus*500 does calculate up to 120 'Enter 120.DSP CHS (X1)—the Corvus 500. aftercompleting the calculation wiil snow aflashing result —now press CLX onceThe display stops flashing and shows 6 6998 or 6 69502913 98 maintaining its 13digit internal accuracy Since we cannotshow 3 digits ot the exponent, the flashingdisplay indicated that there should be a one (1) as leading 3rd digit, to read 69 196or 6 69502913 196 —the correct calcula¬tionMetric Conversions Metrics are comingand metric conversions will be a constantani e^r increasing necessity The Corvus506 makes its metric conversions directlywitj^re-programmed functions“Click-Key" Keyboard. You It like thepositive click-key feel of the Corvus 500keyboard There s definite positive feelwhen your entry is maOe no douDts orquestions Saves time Saves mistakesThe Corvus 500 at $69 95 is Completeeverything you need is in the package, Rechargeable Nickel Cadmium Bat¬teries, Adaptor Charger, Soft Carrying Case, 30 pg Instruction ManualThe compact contoured case is 5V»“ longby 3* wide by 114" high, and weighs only 8ozThe Corvus 500 is Guaranteed It is war¬ranted against defects m materials andworkmanship tor one year from date ofdelivery10 DAY FRII TRIAL!Try the Corvus 500 tor 10 days prove toyoureeif that it meets your every calculat¬ing need If you are not satisfied for anyreason your purchase price ot $69 95 willbe refundedTOU.-FRCB OR OCRINGNATIONAL: OOO 021-2307ILLINOIS: OOO 072-2000Phone ot Mu Order* BmkAiMncard or Mast*Charge Add $2 SO ><* Shippirvfl Shipping prepaid•Hth Chock Ot Monoy Oder WtnotB resident* OCC 5NSilts TaaGLOBALDivision ot Global Tabulating Co me1231 W Washington Bivo Chicago Hi 6060' I-Friday, September 24, 1974—The Chicago Maroon—$1A MEMORANDUMTO: STUDENT AND FACULTY SPOUSESRE: UNIVERSITY EMPLOYMENT (An Invitation)At the University of Chicago, spouses of students, faculty, residents and interns, constitute a highlyappreciated group among the several thousand people employed on the regular staff.Despite tradition, University SALARIES are fully competitive these days, with provisions for regularmerit increases and frequent pay range improvements.University regular employment BENEFITS are better than competitive, including 3 WEEKS VACATION,PAID SICK LEAVE, REDUCED TUITION for University courses, FREE BLUE CROSS-BLUE SHIELD and manyothers. Employees also participate in the University's many activities and functions.There is a great variety of employment opportunity at the University. Typical positions include:Office Positions of many kinds for those with typing, shorthand, bookkeeping or related skills.Also some clerical positions which do not require special skills or background.Administrative or professional positiohs for those whose experience or specialized field of train¬ing qualifies them.Technical Positions from time to time we have openings in research and clinical laboratories forthose with experience or with courses in chemistry, biology, microbiology, etc.Although we have some openings for part-time workers, the greatest choice of employment is forthose who can work fulltime, and who plan to work for a year or more.You are invited to explore your employment opportunities by contacting the University PersonnelOffice at 956 E. 58th Street; hours 8:30 to 5:00, Monday through Friday. Or call 753-4440.The University is an Affirmative Action, Equal Opportunity Employer M/FServing Hyde Park since 1941; 19 years on Lake Park,9 years in Piccadily Hotel (on Hyde Park Boulevard)and now located in THE FLAMINGO HOTEL on theLake at 4400 So. Shore Drive.Lunches and Dinners served daily(except Mondays)Lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.Dinner from 5:00 p.m. to 12:00 p.m.Complete Lunch and Dinner MenusOur bar is open from 1:30 p.m. until4:00 a.m., 5:00 a.m. SaturdaysDine in easy elegance- For reservations or informationcall: BU 8- 9241 or PL 2- 3800 University Symphony OrchestraBarbara Schubert, ConductorAUDITIONSThursday, Septmber 23throughWednesday, September 29Appointments made in Lexington Hall, Room 1First Rehearsal — Wednesday, September 297:30p.m.Mandel HallAll former members are invited to attend.First Concert — Saturday, November 20Mendelssohn: Symphony No. 3 in A Minor .(“Scottish”)Hindemith: Symphonie Mathis der MalerFor information call 753-2613.32—Tho Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 24,1974:»U-'C t&iyear of changeBy David Rieser“Whenever I feel like exercising, I liei until the feeling passes. ”I So said Robert M. Hutchins, President,University of Chicago, 1929-1951.And for a long time that was the per¬vading attitude. The school with the oldesterman’s club in the country, with thelgest coach in football, with the firsttrophy winner ever, languishedthe spirit of a man who was aiant and innovative educator but was alicated non-athlete. Students tended tothe type who were so involved in whatsir minds were doing that they simply)t about what the rest of their bodyvasupto.But change is here. In unprecedentedsrs students have been filling varsityintramural teams, crowding oldities, built for the old attitudes, to theig point. The fields and the courtsagain echo with the healthyids of athletic endeavor. The noble! of Amos Alonzo Stagg (whose recordstill the best in the National Collegiateletic Association) and Jay Berwangerfirst Heisman winner) was againeing played with no stigma attached andith increasing ability. The Alumni in-erest is perking up and plans for newIdings are finally being made. It iseing called renaissance.A renaissance. Could it be anymore than! wishful thinking of some old jocks whokeam for the glory years and of some|roung ones who never had any?It very well could be. In every facet ofsports program there is the sense ofig new. The department itself hasreorganized and made more ef-t. The men's varsity program facesst season as a member of an athleticference since it left the Big Ten 30years ago. The women’s program is stillIding the crest of interest and activityited three years ago with the firstsi-athletic scholarship in the countrywomen. And more people are playingthe intramural and recreational|programs everv vear.Perhaps Jeff Metcalf, the new athletic-tor put the matter best when he said,rWe will finally be able to attract peoplejotonly by our academic excellence but bywe chance to have a lot of fun playingI games.”For the men’s program especially this isIjjfenaissance year. There are new andbetter coaches in football, soccer, and golf.None of those sports can do anything butI improve. Indeed many teams are lookingmr best ever seasons: football especiallya new and finally competent coachingataff should have its best season in the last fourty years.The major change however is the joiningof the Midwest Collegiate AthleticAssociation, the first conference theUniversity has been in since it left the BigTen in 1946. Chicago is in on a two yeartrial basis but many on the teams and inthe department are expecting that it willbe more than just a noble experiment.First it will have the effect of setting upgoals for each team to reach. From themeasureless void of independent com¬petition teams will be able to try for aconference championship at the end of theseason. No matter how futile this attemptwill be at least there will be something tostrive for.Even allowing for the new conferencethere is a sense of competence that per¬vades the men’s department. The schoolseems to be attracting a much betterathlete, a fact due mainly to the StaggScholarship. Although not exactly anathletic scholarship in that the winner doesnot have to play his game, the four yeartuition grant is given to the three beststudent-athletes of the incoming class.Although shunned at first the program hasdone its part in restoring serious athleticendeavour to some sort of respectability.If the scene has changed in the men’sside it is nothing compared to what hasbeen happening with the women. At leastfor years the men had a couple of teamswho, in their quiet way went out to dosurprisingly successful battle. The womenhave not only had to contend with thepeculiar local sentiment but a wholenational set of morals. In the last threeyears however the program hasskyrocketed, leading not only to statetournaments, but to an amazingly activecampus organization, The Woman’sAthletic Association.To be sure, the change here came aboutwith the change in the nation and thebeginning of a serious drive to get womenout of the kitchen and onto the playingfield. It is safe to say that the universityhas kept up with the movement veryadequately indeed.To begin with, Chicago establishedthe first scholarship for women that hadanything to do with athletic ability.Modeled on the Stagg scholarship, it beganthree years ago and in that first year at¬tracted a set of young women who workedto turn the whole program around. Sooninstead of bi-weekly practices the teamstarted to work out daily. They started towin and started to care more about win¬ning.There is however a complaint that isheard both in the men’s and women’s locker rooms and that is the lack of whatmight politely be called school spirit;usually, the only rooters at any givenvarsity tournament are the other varsityathletes and the close friends of the peopleinvolved.The reason is simple and unique: this isa school of participants and not spectators.The very essence of this thing called therenaissance is that almost everybody isstarting to go out and do something.Chairman of the athletic department MaryJean Mulvaney cited the “nationalawareness of the need for physical ac¬tivity,” while sports information directorJeanne Dufort brought the matter closer tohome saying, “people here are beginningto recognize that you can’t be a mind withtwo feet attached.”This trend has been dramatic enough invarsity athletics but the major surge hasbeen in intramural and recreationalsports. In 1945 75 percent of the collegenever played in an intramural contest.Last year, 89 percent of all undergraduatemen participated in at least one in¬tramural sport.To be sure, some very seriousarguments can be made about that latteraim. Many of the more talented houses gothrough the debate as to whether they arein it to win or have a good time. If the goalis the former, then the less talentedusually sit out the entire game, an activitynot known for its popularity. Many houseseven go so far as to send in two teams soeveryone can play at their own level.Next to intramurals, the largest sourceof activity are the clubs. These are athleticorganizations usually set up so that thosewithout varsity eligibility, such asgraduate students, can participate in in¬tercollegiate competition. Many of theclubs are building national reoutationsThe Track Club sports several Olympianswhile the Women’s Crew Club recentlysent a lightweight four with cox to theNational Championships in Long Beachand took sixth.This is a year for change for thesegroups also because for the first time theywill have a source of funds beyond theirown pocketbooks and whatever they couldscrounge from student activities. A boardis presently being set up with represen¬tatives from each of the clubs to allocatethe $15,000 that was set aside for their use.The renaissance then, is in this enor¬mous upsurge of activity and the attemptof the University to meet its needs. Thisyear will be a chaotic one as facilities andprograms are overhauled and rebuilt butthe final product should be well worth the As part of the Renaissance, theUniversity is starting to build again. Inaddition to the Field House, there areplans for a swimming pool (natatorium ifyou will) to be erected in the not too distantfuture. Also planned is a structure out atStagg to house some locker and trainingrooms and some facilties to replace thosequaint port-a-potties that now grace thefield. This is to be built by August of 1977.The question this year of course is whatwe have NOW.Bartlett Gymnasium, 57th andUniversity. Bartlett was built in 1904 and isone of the few gymnasiums in the worldwith a mural and a stained glass window.The building contains a pool, the onlyhandball and squash courts on campus, arunning track (a lucky thirteen cur¬vaceous laps to the mile) a weight room,and, of course, a gym, with facilities, if notroom, for basketball, wrestling andgymnastics. Indeed it will be the homecourt for the men’s varsity teams in allthree of those sports.Ida, built in 1915, has a pool, a weightmachine and a gym with facilities forvolleyball and basketball and is the homecourt for the women’s varsity teams inboth sports. There is a locker room but itis yet unknown whether the lockers will betemporary or for rteq£. The floor is not inbad condition and is certainly better thanBartlett. *Boucher Gym, 53rd and Drexel. Boucheris an ancient structure done in either earlyprison or late insane asylum, depending onwhich school you went to. It originallyhoused George Williams College but hassince been under a series of owners, eachof whom swore that it would be torn downwithin the year. It is now owned by theUniversity and will be used by IMbasketball teams, the fencing team andanyone else who wants to make the trek tothis part of the neighborhood. The floorisn’t quite as bad as Bartlett but its close.The running track above overhangsslightly making those long shots from thecorner trickier than usual. Boucher alsohas a pool and a handball court that fewpeople, until now, know about. Althoughdilapidated, dreary and far away it has thevirtue of rarely being crowded and it willbe the only place this winter to get in agame of hoops before dinner, as both theIda and Bartlett floors will be taken by thevarsity squads.Stagg Field, 56th and Cottage Grove. Forthose who miss the wide open spaces ofwherever they came from, this is theplace. Stretching over two city blockswithout shelter from the wind or rainStagg Field is exactly that. The turf is invery good condition and the 440 tartantrack has a few lumps in it but is the stillthe best around There are 8 tennis courtsand two practice half courts, all with a nicesurface. (See page 55 for more sports)wait Friday, September 24, 1976 The Chicago Maroon^$3Where to do itBy David Rieser the middle of what was to become HutchFor all this talk about an upsurg inathleticism, this year there are fewerplaces to play than ever.Actually, this is not some maliciousparadox of an unfeeling institution. Thecampus is down one facility right nowbecause the Field House is being rebuilt tohandle the new situation. The edifice,which houses tennis and basketball courtsand a track, some lockers and some of thebiggest cockroaches one would ever wantto see, is having a new floor added to it.This floor will hold on top of it; a track, abasketball court, and some tennis courtsand under it there are plans for officespace, lockers, and some desperatelyneeded handball courts.In the meantime however the building islost. This means that all of the malevarsity athletes will now take up lockers inBartlett, filling an already crowdedlockerroom.The University has never been ex¬tremely well endowed with spaciousfacilities. The first physical educationclasses were held in Cobb and the firstgym was an odd temporary structure in Court. The barn went the way of mosttemporary structures on campus—itlasted for years. Soon the college founditself in the midst of bigtime sports so thenappropriate buildings were built—BartlettGymnasium for the men, Ida Noyes Hallfor the Women—Stagg field was built andrebuilt to handle the crowds thatdescended on the south side to watch theMonsters of the Midway devastate theiropponents. The Field House was finishedin 1932 and at the time was the first andbest of its kind, serving as a model forindoor facilities all over.The field house was the last sportsfacility built. The last time the squashcourts under Stagg Field were used it wasby Enrico Fermi who had so little ap¬preciation for the game that he built hisatomic pile on them. Later of course, theentire stadium was demolished to makeroom for Regenstein Library which hastaken its place in the hearts of students. Afield two blocks to the west was fenced off,sodded, tracked, and bleachered andnamed Stagg Field, but somehow it justwasn’t the same.Fullback Mark Ramirez will be leading the Maroon attack thisSaturday as Chicago takes on St. Ambrose in the first game of theyear. The game will start at 1:30 and will be played at Stagg Gield,56th and Cottage Grove.laphooe transcription care ofrecords Call Mrs. Beit. Ml 3-4062. detail 434-1533 afternoon.CLASSIFIED ADS Handyman-janitorpart time social ser¬vice agfency. 8:30 a.m.-12.30 p.m. Monday-Friday. Call Mrs. Bell Ml 3-4052.SPACE2 bedroom co-op apt 500 E ast E nd 5400/moelevator-security guards spacious kitchen. formal dining room 2 baths. Call 448-2506 Parttime sales help wanted-for 2omen'sspecialty store in Hyde Park ShoppingCenter. Any background in dance is a plusApply Neumode Hosiery. 1568 E. 55th orcall Ms. Potts at 642-7180 or 752-7588. Modern dance classes. Grahambackground, body alignment, expressivemovement. Begins Sunday 10/3, 4-5:15, atHyde Park Art Center, 5236 S. Blackstone.Call Wendy Hotfman. Ml 3 3304. PART-TIME JOBS—Work for the CitizensAction Program^ an independentgrassroots prganization. Helpf promotecitizens participation In the decisions thatshape our future and our city. Trainingprovided, advancement encouraged. Callfor interview. CAP. 2202 N. Lincoln Ave.,929-2922. government oft your back, and out of yourbedroom. McBride is on 35+ state ballots,including Illinois If you want to help out inthe campaign call 955-2442 or 752-6866 ordrop by our table on Student Activitiesnight. 69 VWconv. New engine. $600. 493-1466.55 gat. aquarium and all equipment Beoffer (cheap!) Call 241-5068.Attractive two bedrm Kenwood coachhouse for tent to childless person or coulewho would babysit 11:30 to 6:30 weekdayswith our children 9, 7. 3 in main house.*2.50/hr. Rent $225 on UC bus route. 548-0017. Also large 3rd floor apt available forexchange for 20 hrs. weekly babysittingeves. Sitter needed several afternoons per weekin my home. $2.50 per hour. Experiencedperson with car preferred. Call Susan at241-5068. •Few openings left at family free school,parent co-op alternate school for 5-7 yr.olds. Sliding scale tees, excellent teachers.Call 288 2985.Deluxe one bdrm. well heated apt stv; newrefrig, oak floors, buzzer sec system. 3064E. 79th $175, no child. 374-1239 Substitute teachers needed for pre-schoolon campus. Hours vary. Exper. with youngchildren req. 324-4100.5405 S. Woodlawn. 3-rm. turn. apt. 643-2760.or 667-5476 Mrs. Green SINGERS for fine church choir, oncampus. Work with TOM PECK of GrantPark chorus & IVY BEARD Of LyricOpera. Nonneed to audition. 324-4100.3 room 1 bed bsmt apt near co-op $130,10/1, adults, no pets. 764-2493Roomate wanted to share a secure newlyremodeled condominium two blocks fromcampus. 57th & Kenwood. Your privatebedroom and private living room. Sharekitchen, bath. Good parking. Near library,grocery, cleaners. Rent $175. Call Dobbi643-3595 or ans. serv. SU 7 4435 Non-smoker. $25 Planning to move into the U of CHousing System? Want to move in?Current Blackstone apt. resident will pay$25 to anybody who takes ov?r my housingcontract for Blackstone or anyother dormrm. or U of C apt. Call: 947-8498 ask forDavid or Iv. message.Apts, available for fall. Clean, safe, carpeted. free utilities, large studio close to,shopping, at campus bus stop, 324-3939,5118 S. Dorchester For another musical chicken (oh no) OnceMore With Meaning Student Activitiesnight Cloister Club 8:30 and 9:00. Adisoriented production.South Shore 5 deluxe rooms. 2 bathsnewest luxury air cond. 6 apt. bldg. Adultsonly. Must see to appreciate. $300 up. Also.1 bedroom. $185up. 684-5544. SING! U of C CHORUS auditions: 9/24. 13& 5:30 7:30. 9/25. 10-12; 9/27, 12:30 2:30 &5:30-8. 9/28, 5:30 7. 5835 S. University reh.foes. 7:30-9:30 beg. 9/28PEOPLE WANTED Manager for morning food service at SSA.Responsible for ordering food andscheduling staff. Staff positions alsoSalary appx. $30 weekly. Call MaryByrne—784 06C5or Don Finn—288 7708.Waiters & waitresses to work at TheAgora, call 947-8309The Blackfriars fall show "Merlin" needssinger, actors and dancers. Come auditionon Wed., 9-29. 7:30, Reynolds Club Theatreor Sun.. 10-2. 1:00. Ida Noyes Theatre. Student with dependable car to work Mon.thru Fri. 3:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. $15.00 perweek Call Barbara9to5. 266 0880Experienced Clerk-typist. Full time SocialService Agency. Answer phone, dieKENNEDY. RYAN. M0NIGAL S ASSOCIATES. IKDirectory of ValuesWe Know Hyde ParkReal Estate InsideOutAPARTMENTS FOR SALEOVER 1.800 SQ.FT.Handsome bungalow plan on high floor50th nr. Outer Or Tastefully decoratedthroughout. Parquet floors, lovelykitchen all appliances included. 6 rms3 full baths. You must see to appreciateCharlotte Vihstrom, 667 66665-FLAT SPECIAL"AS IS"Near 53 Maryland owner's apt 1stfloor 6 rm 2 bath 2 4 3 floor twoapts 3 rms each Immediate possession$22,500 Charlotte Vihstrom 667 6666 TWO BEDROOMSIN THE SKYImmaculate 5 rm 2 bath condo homeat 50th and the Lake Many decoratorextras Ready to move in. An idealhigh rise home for the discriminatingbuyer50TH S LAKE CONDO1 BR w/formai DR and excellentkitchen. High floor in secure buildingPriced at only $24,900 To see callGeorge Bilger at 667 6666ELEGANT CAMPUS BEAUTYWhere you want it1 Handsome 8 rm3 bath on sunny high floor between57th 4 58th on Kenwood Alt systemsand appliances excellent. Newly remodelled with taste and quality. Ownerleaving state 489,500LAKE VIEWM BR suite looks to Lake in this 4 BR3 bath condo 2 sunrms Off So ShoreDrive 4 Jackson Park. Immediatepossession at $28 000 asking To seecall Jan Haines or Frank Goldschmidtat 667-6666A DRAMATIC CONDO APT.4 rooms 1 bedroom, large formal DR,nice size kitchen LR has very highcathedral ceiling and floor to ceilingwindows - fireplace, 1 bath ParkingAsking $12,500 70 PI Paxton CallDon Tillery. 667 6666 FOR HOSPITAL ORSOUTHWEST CAMPUSIf you wofk close to southwest edge ofcampus, available now "neat as a pm"apartment in Brick, concrete 4 steel62nd 4 Indiana Low monthly nicelymaintained $11,500 Charlotte Vikstrom6676666HYDE PARK BLVD.3 BR 4 study/condo home w/2 fullbaths. Modern Kit w/DW, stove, refrigmet Laundry rm Off-street pkg $33 $00asking To see call Mrs Haines,667 6666ON HYDE PARK BLVDSpacious 3 BR apt w/study and yourown washing facilities Low assessmentoff street parking Conven publictransportation. $32,000 To see. callNadine Alver 667 6666 (res 752 5384) ENJOY THISLarge 6 rm. condo apt w/2 bathsEnlarged kitchen w/laundry and appliances mcl Sun room for plants Areally attractive unit w/low assmtPriced at $25,000 Call Mrs. Ridlon667 6666JACKSON TOWERSSuper Lake views from high floorSpacious w/large modern kitchen,reasonably priced at $41,900 CallMrs. Ridlon. 667-6666THIS IS REALLY LOVELYVery special 2 BR 2 bath co-op aptFantastic 25th floor north south viewsBeautifully located in Hyde Park.Parking low 30’s 58th & BLACKSTONEAttractive two BR apt in heart ofUniversity area. $21,000 Board ap¬proval required Call Margaret Kennedyat 667 6666.KENNEDY, RYAN, M0NIGAL & ASSOCIATES, INC1461 East 57th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637667-6666Daily 9 to 5 Sat 9 k) 1 Or call 66 / 6666 Anytime Kenwood family seeks couple to live inthree small rooms and bath on third floorof pleasant house. Couple will cook andclean up after evening meal for family offour and pay $150 month rent in exchangefor furnished rooms, full board, and accessto amenities of house-laundry, piano, bak-cyard and so on. Call Eleanor Nicholson a»KE 8-1707 evenings or. If evenings notconvenient 924-2358 days. Part fime—dental asst. Hours 2 fo 8 p.m.Exp. pref. but will train, qual. person. Loc.Hyde Park Bank bldg. Phone Ml 3-9807. MURAL DEDICATION Sat Sept 25 from IIto 3pm at 8100 8. Blackstone. An ecologicalmural 104 by 14 feet on the sooth wall of theResource Center will be dedicated withrefreshments and entertainment. Free to good home. Large cozy coudNeeds cleaning. Call 241-5088.Salesman for men's clothing store. Parttime-apply In person at Cohn & Stern, Inc.Hyde Park Shopping Center. 752-8100.Babysitter for one infant in my home 40hrs. per week. 947 8889 days. 884-8549evenings.The Director of Ancona School is nowinterviewing applicants for the followingpositions:1) Administrative assistant to handlerecords, financial books, payroll, andordering of supplies. Applicant shouldhave modest to good typing andbookkeeping skills and. above all. becheerful, flexible, accurate, orderly, andpossessive of good sense. Good salary.2) Part-time typist-receptionist. 12:00 noonuntil 4:00.3) Wednesday afternoon (12:00 noon until3:00) workshop teachers, who Willsupervise lunch and lead groups ofchildren in crafts, dance, drama, fieldtrips, interest groups or whatever leaders'interests and skills indicate. $15.00 for theafternoon.4) Teacher of physical activities andgames one fuH day or two half daysweekly.5) Lunch-time supervisor one hour fourdays a week.Ancona is a small (240 Children) friendly,swinging Monfessori school at 4770 Dor¬chester, at a campus bus stop. CallEleanor Nicholson at 984-2358 to arrangean interview. Babysitter to pick up child at lab school2:20 MWThF and 1:20on Tu and slay in myhome until 5:20 daily. 947 8980 days, 2412854 evenings. IMPORTANT STUDY ABROAD ANNOUNCEMENT: Limited openingsremain on CFS accredited Academic Year1988-87 Programs for Fall, Winter. Spring,or Full, year for qualified applicants.Students in good standing- Freshmen,Sophomores. Juniors. Seniors are eligible.Good faculty references, evidence of self-motivation and sincere interest In studyabroad and international cultural ex¬change count more with CFS than gradepoint. For information/applicafions:CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUDY/AYADMISSIONS/218 S. Stale/Box 808/AnnArbor Michigan 48107 (313 ) 882-5575. Teletypes, computers, electronics. 2012 $iJohns Highland Pk 432-3380. Loads (meters 8i printed circuit Boards p*,(orators 8. Allied items.Start the new academic year out right,without insulting television commercialsOutfox the advertisers by fixing your set jcut off the sound of their ads. For easInstructions send along $2 with a setaddressed, stamped envelope to Box 77z;£, Chicago IL 80880PASSPORT PHOTOSColor, 2 for $900MODELCAMERA1342 E. 55th St. 493 8700Young company is looking for represen¬tatives to sell handmade contemporaryjewelry on a home-show basis. Hourssuitable to your own schedule and nodelivery involved. Call Phil at 414-544-4282or write: Pleasant Changes. P.O. Box 2.Waukesha. Wisconsin 53188. FOR SALE1988 Volvo 122s 4 dr., 7 radial tires (2 new)sound 82K mi. but needs some mechanicaland body work. 824 8588 $250. Stereo shopping for ADVENT, BOSEIMF, JBL. NAKAMICHI, YAMAHA, LUXB & O. ADS, AMPZILLA $AEDAHLQUIST. and other seldondiscounted brands? Or do you just warthe best prices on DYNACO. MARANTZPIONEERM SHURE. and AR? Call 24+5752 evenings till 11.Babysitter wanted 3 days per week. 2:30 to5:30pm very good pay. Close to campus.Prefer someone begin 9/13, will considerlater date. Call after sept. 8 at 887-3718,947-8528, 753 3880.PEOPLE FOR SALEChinese cooking lessons. Learn Hunan,Cantonese. Mandarin, etc. Barbara at 324-3227 or 744-3028. All of the easiest to gorw (but beautiful)plants for your rooms are here, and manyrare ones-perhaps 400 species in all.Ceramic one-of-a kind planter pots-a yearround art fair tor many of the Midwest’sbest potters. Lots of flower pots, good soiland other supplies. Advice in depth aboutcare and design by our expert plant lovingstaff is part of our commitment to you.Students till midquarter get 10% off ourreasonable prices. Plants Alive! Nearcampus. 5210 S. Harper 887-1038. YOGARelax, energize, unify body-mind spirit.Autumne quarter Yoga classes begin oncampus. Mon. Oct. 41h 8. Thurs. Oct. 7th,5:30 to 7:15 at the Gargoyle. Led by DobbiKerman on campus since 1971. 7 sessions$30. Followed by massage workshop, jigoff tuition for taking both. Call Dobbi 643.3595. answ. service SU 7 4435.ART OF MASSAGESCENES Sat & Sun Oct 2 8. 3. Toys, gjmes. books.AM Flyer Trains 5 Gauge. Ice Skates. SkyKennel. File Cabinet. Furniture, Misc.Home items 125 E. 84th Street.Man in wheelchair needs a part-timepersonal attendant 1 hr. AMs or l1-; HRS.PM. $4/hr. Near 51st 8> Ashland. Call Ken LEGALIZE FREEDOMRoger McBride. Presidential candidate ofthe Libertarian Party wants to get the Danish arm chair $25. dble It fluor. dsklamp $20, drop leaf tble 38" $25. canebacked chair $10. 843-3832 eve. PRACTICING THE ART OF MASSAGEworks. Begins on campus at the Gargoyt.Mon. Oct. 4th and Thurs. Oct. 7th. 7 30 to9:00. Based on Downings. The MassageBook 8> Rumanian deep muscle massage. 7sessions $30. Call Dobbi 843-3595, ans serv.SU 7-4435. Directly follows Yoga sessionSlOoff tuition for both.Hewlett-Packard wrotethe book on advancedpocket calculators.Pick up your free copy today!32 fascinating pages—filled with vital factsand valuable comparisons to help you selectexactly the right calculator for school and beyond.The HP-21 Scientific.When simple arithmeticwon’t cut it.Just face a few tough prob¬lems that require more thansimple math. That’s whenyou begin to appreciate anHP-21 Scientific. It makesshort work of your tech¬nical and non-technicalcalculations. Log, trig andarithmetic functions areperformed automatically.You do the thinking, theHP-21 does the figuring Allthis and more tor$80.* The HP-22 BusinessManagement. Solving thehorrors of business math.Those mysterious time-and-money-managementproblems that await youpose no threat to theHP-22. You can zip throughloan payments, interestproblems investment cal¬culations and stat with afew fancy clicks of the key¬board. Your dad shouldhave had it so easy. Only$125.* The HP-25C ScientificProgrammable withContinuous Memory. Amust for future scientistsand engineers.The HP-25C retains yourprograms and saves yourdata—even when you turnit off Great for any studentwho uses a few long pro¬grams repeatedly New atonly $200.* Also available:the HP-25 Scientific Pro¬grammable Identical inevery respect to theHP-25C except withoutcontinuous memory. Only$145.* The HP-27 Scientific/Ptus.Science plus statisticsand finance—ail in oneneat package.Gives you 28 exponential,log and trig functions, 15statistical functions and 10financial functions—all pre¬programmed and stored.All you do is k§y in yourdata, press the appropriatefunction keys and see yourdata displayed in seconds.It s a lot of power for$175.*'Suggested retail price excluding applicableslate and local taxes—Continental U SAlaska and HawaiiMastercharge The University of Chicago Bookstore5750 South Eliis AvenueChicago, Illinois 60637Phone 753-3303 BankAmericard$4—The Chicago Meroon—Friday, September 24.1*74newepartmentst obvious change to come over[ersity sports program has beenganization of the athletic depart-jthough there is sure to be con-over the lovely bureaucraticons between chairmans andassistants and associates, its a very simple and straight*Ipian'Irmerly separate departments ofwomen’s athletics have beeninto a single department underip of an Athletic Director, aof the Department, and a Boardity. Under this level are four sub-ents, men’s athletics, women’sphysical education, and in-’and recreation,athletic chairman, is Harold R.f, former Dean of Students atSchool and the nephew of theity’s second athletic director, T.etcalf, who had the unfortunatetow in the footsteps of a livingGrand Old Man himself, AmosllTwill oversee the entire program,staff, but he will concentrate| raising efforts to sustain the in¬rated in a resurgent athleticj. He sees his new position as a;ic challenge” to build a new era in|ty sports.Chairman of the department isi Mulvaney, former chairman offmen’s department. She willthe day-to-day activities of theoent and will assist Metcalf inthe budget and in appointing[with personnel,unfortunate circumstances, shebe temporarily in charge of theeducation division. Former1 star and coach Joe Stampf wasthis section but he suffered aver the summer and is partially1. He will be gone for a year atI will be sorely missed.all of the change, one long-facet of the University’s athleticwill remain—the physicalrequirement. Mulvaney con*the most essential part of herbent’s program. “The academic standards are so high that people rarelvget an opportunity to learn (a physicalactivity). We feel strongly that they shouldfind at least one activity that they canlearn and pursue. ”A panel of faculty will oversee the newprogram. The Board 'of Athletic andRecreational Sports will review policyquestions and will have final say over theoperations of the department.Sitting on the board will be 14 facultymembers, picked to represent a broadspectrum of views from devout in-doorsmen to frothing jocks. There will beno students on the Board.Metcalf commented that, “the Boardwill give us some perspective on ourprogram. It will be a chance to see our¬selves as we really are.”Mulvaney called the Board an excellentidea: “now the University communityreally knows what is available and will befar more aware of the total program. ”* The reorganization is expected to lead tomore efficient use of the University’sovermirdened recreation facilities. Thecombination of men and women in mostphysical education classes will allowgreater flexibility in scheduling instructortime and facilities.The plan will also help in meeting therequirements of Title IX which stipulatesthat all gym classes be coeducation by1978. With the combined departments itwill simply be a matter of dropping con¬tact sports classes being held for the lasttime this year.The Intramurals and Recreationdepartment will be under the eye ofAssitant Director Bill Vendl. Vendl, for¬mer soccer and present swimming coachhad been in charge of the men’s and coedsIM programs. Under the new plan, he willalso coordinate the women’s IM schedule.The men’s and women’s varsityprograms will be run by AssociateDirector John Schkel and Assistantdirector Pat Kirby. Schael had been incharge of recreation and facilities and willnow watch over the varsity program inaddition to managing most of Universityphysical education facilities. Pat Kirbywill handle women’s varsity and will alsosupervise the use of Ida Noyes. rCLASSIFIED ADSDIRECTAPLAY SINGERSThe U of C Court Theatre is acceptingproposals for productions during fallquarter. Deadline for proposals is Oct. 4.For info or forms-R. Club 304 or call 753-3581.PARTYBoogie on down to the first PSI U PARTYtonite 9:30 till ?. 5639 S. University. UCIDRequired.MAB POSITIONSThere are three openings on the 76-77MAB. Anyone paying the activities fee iseligible. Appointments will be based onapplications and interviews A YEAR OFCOMITTMENT TO IMPROVING THEQUALITY OF LIFE AT UC 753-3444 askfor Aaron or PattiBLACKFRIARSWe re looking for an original musical showto put on in Mandel spring quarter. Submityours by 1-15-77. For more infor call 2883598.DRIVEWAY SALEFurniture, oriental rug, oak sideboard,china, clothes, books, children's things,ere. 1217 E. 50th, Sat. Sept. 25th 10-3 Interested in forming small choir (c. 12voices) for the performance ofMEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE MUSICcall 752 6204 evenings for audition ap¬pointment.BLACKFRIARSPresents Once More With Meaning onSept. 26 in Cloister Club at 8:30 and 9:00.Why not pack a lunch?CHEAPFOODFood contracts available 753-20S8.GAY PEOPLEOrganizational meeting of U of C gaypeople. Wednesday, October 6th 8:00pm.Ida Noyes Hall, room 301. show for Blackfriars and see what hap¬pens. Call 288 3598BOOKS BOUGHTBooks bought and sold everyday, everynight 9-11. Powells, 1501 E. 75th.PAN PIZZADELIVEREDThe Medici Delivers from 10 pm week¬days. 5-11 Saturday, 667-7394. Save 60 centsif you pick it up yourself.PERSONALSTOSCATrade 2 1st bal. ctr. box 12-6 for similar, 11-26, 29 or 12-17. 947-6541.UNDISCOVERED?Let us make your name. Write a musical Pregnancy Testing, Sat 10-2 AugustanaChurch 5500 S. Wood I awn Bring 1stmorning urine sample. S150 donationSouthside Women's Health 324-2992.WHATEVER HAPPENED to: "Do youmind if I smoke?" We are working to giveyou the choice in the quality of air youbreathe. For information please call theAlliance of Nonsmokers 528-3956.Are you sensitive to tobacco smoke? Doyou want to do something about it? TheAlliance of Nonsmokers has positive ac¬tion program to help you. The time hascome. 528 3956.GYROSGyros is a combination of lamb & beeflightly seasoned. Available at THEAGORA. For carry outs call us ahead andwe will have it waiting for you. 947-8309.AUTUMN NO-SHOWVACANCYQuiet, clean-living woman graduatestudent desires off campus sublease nowuntil December 10th. Anything respectableconsidered. Please reply, P O Box 5945Chicago 60680.WHAT'S A DMR?Who cares? Find out Student ActivitiesNight in Cloister Club 8:00 and 9:30 OFFICE WORK AVAILABLETOP WAGESSec'ys, stenos, Dictaphone Operators:Challenging jobs in the Loop and on the SouthSide.2 or 3 Days a week or full weeksApply in person: Suite 631, Hyde park BankBuilding, 1525 E. 53rd Street.ELAINE REVELL, INC.Contact: C. powell - 684-7000Chicago s Prestige Tomporary Office ServiceLLLLLLLLLLLLLLFAMOUS FOR GRUK POODDIANNA’SRESTAURANT “OPA A""SELECTED BY SHERMAN KAPLANOF WBBM RADIO AS ONE OF THEBEST RESTAURANTS IN CHICAGO"OPEN DAILY-SATURDAY & SUNDAY• LUNCH • DINNER • LATE SNACKS • COCKTAILSPETROS* Your HostKing oi the "Opaa"THE KOGIONES BROS.332-1225212 SOUTH HALSTED If no answer-332-13497REE PARKINO FOR OUR OUBSTS DIRECTLY ACROBB THE STRUT rrrrrr 2433 LINCOLN3484123IIIOCRAI'HEXCLUSIVE MIDWEST PREMIERE"GREAT AND ASTOUNDING . . . DAZZLING BEAUTY! The finalminute 4$ the most awesome of any picture in my memory. A triumphof action, speed, humanity and inspiration. Pure poetry, like Everestitself, an0 highly recommended!" —Rex Reed"MARVELOUS . . . REMARKABLE! The Man Who Skied DownEverest,’ more than a ski picture, more than a mountaineering gem,becomes an epic of man's daring the impossible. It has the potentialof exciting an audience as intensely as did The Endless Summer'."-Archer Winsten, N Y POST"THIS DELICATE, AWESOME FILM IS BRIMFUL OF MIRACLES... I could go on, but even if my words could convey what the filmlets you feel, I would be advised to leave you to your own discoveries."-John Simon. NEW YORK MAGTHEMAN ^ " *WHOSKIEDDOWNEVERESTFriday, September 24. 1976—The Chicago Maroon—55« * _ ft yn I — VBACKTO-SCHOOLNEWS HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER •L*£•Nq&*K55th Street and Lake Park AvenueStudents: Register at theHyde Pare Shopping Center forbig Values!A BIGFREE GIFT!Back to School Giveaway. No obli¬gation. Just fill in a coupon (at anystore) and you may win a 12 inchportable TV set. Three sets will beawarded. Drawings will be held onOctober 7th. Winners need not bepresent. Offer ends October 6th,1976.1L. 4~l m fc.JL»Your Campus Away FromCampus For Eight Big Days!September 24th thru October 1 st are student, faculty,and school administrator shopping days at the HydePark Shopping Center.Drop in for “real cool school deals” on apparel andappliances, on books and magazines, calculatorsand cosmetics, decorations and dishes, earrings andetchings, foods and beverages, games and glasses,hats and homework/classroom supplies—thousandsof items and many services such as currencyexchange, optometrist, restaurants, etc.*Trifr-Tht Chicago AAarooo—Friday, September 24,1974 doubleBUS RIPESfPAST POINTS OFINTEREST IN HYDE PARK.Five or six times per day, on Friday, Saturday,Monday and Tuesday, September 24,25,27and 28, a London-type double deck bus willstop at the University of Chicago StudentUnion building. You can get on board for aFREE tour of the community, which ends atthe Hyde Park Shopping Center.COME ON IN ANDGET ACQUAINTED.Book Nook1538 E. 55th StreetCohn & Stern1502 E. 55th StreetFannie May Candies1564 E. 55th StreetFlair Cleaners1548 E. 55th StreetFritz on 55th Street1500 E. 55th StreetHyde Park Co-op1526 E. 55th StreetKaffenio Restaurant1550 E. 55th Street 643 7511752 8100667 9870667 9855288 5454667 1444643 2240 Lake Park Currency Exchange1542 E. 55th Street 752 5034Dr. Morton R. Maslov, Optomet1510 E. 55th Street 363-6363Neumode Hosiery Shop1568 E. 55th Street 752 7588Pleasant Shop1536 E. 55th Street 288 1665Shoe Corral1518 1530 E. 55th St 667 947Susan Gale1540 E. 55th Street 324 7285Walgreen Company1554 E 55th Street 947-8886F. W. Woolworth Co.1532 E 55th Street 752 5310Hyde ParkShopping Center 1 ^University Jof Chicago /