JAN. 7$300 tuition hike set for 1977-78\By PETER COHNAnnual tuition at the Universitywill probably go up by $300 nextyear.The Dean’s Budget Committeerecommended the tuition hike inits annual report to the Presidentand Provost submittedDecember 3.The report also recommendedcontinued reductions in the size ofthe faculty and a 1977-78 budgetroughly equal to this year’s, abudget decline in terms ofdeflated dollars.The committee, chaired byVice President for AcademicResources Chauncy Harris andwith a membership of fourdivisional and professional schooldeans, plays a major role in thedetermination of budgetarypolicy.Although the tuition increase isnot yet official, Provost D. GaleJohnson said that the com¬mittee’s ‘ recommendation willprobably be approved by theBoard of Trustees next month.Commenting on the tuitionhike. Johnson said that “it’ssomething we’re worrying aboutand everyone would be happier ifit were less than that, but thecommittee was pretty realistic inits recommendations.”This year’s unexpectedenrollment shortfall of 400students, the expectation thatenrollment will remain atroughly the same level next year,and the impact of inflation werecited as reasons for what the committee called “an austere butrealistic budget report.”“It is clear that the most op¬timistic estimates of receiptsfrom all sources for the 1977-78budget year will not be be suf¬ficient to compensate for theanticipated effects of inflation.”the committee reported.Relative tuition level still lowThe $100 per quarter tuitionincrease is the largest tuitionhike in the history of theUniversity. Last year tuition roseby $210.Comparing the University’stuition levels with that of 10“comparable, private, nation,university-connected colleges,”jthe committee pointed out thatChicago’s undergraduate tuitionis “markedly lower than that ofcomparable institutions,” thatthe rate of increase of the pastfive years has been lower, andthat expected increases for 1977-78 will also be lower or within thesame range.This year’s undergraduatetuition was $500 lower thanColumbia’s, the next lowest of the10 comparable institutions, andalmost $900 lower than the tuitionat Stanford and Yale, the school’swith the two highest tuitions.At the graduate level, theUniversity’s tuition is the lowestof the same 10 schools, $300 lessthan Northwestern and almost$800 lower than the graduatetuition at Princeton or Yale.Along with the tuition increase,the committee recommended Tuition levels, 1970-71 through 1976-77College Graduatedivisions business1970-71 2,325 2,475 2,4751971-72 2,475 2,625 2,6251972-73 2,625 2,775 2,9251973-74 2,850 3,000 3,1501974-75 3,000 3,210 3,7501975-76 3,210 3,420 3,7501976-77 3,420 3,630 4,050“an augmentation of studentscholarships where need isgreatest.” Chairman Harrissuggested that there is apossibility that “scholarshipfunds would increasedramatically,” with possiblefunding from rearrangements inthe budget and money raised bythe Campaign for Chicago.Further study of “thepossibility and desirability ofincreased tuition differentialsamong the various units of theUniversity” was also suggestedin the report. Tuition in thebusiness school and in the lawschool is currently 10 percenthigher than tuition in thegraduate divisions.Maintenance of “balancedfaculty” urgedContinued reductions in the sizeof the faculty were recommendedby the committee. Faculty cutshave been a major part of theUniversity’s financial austerityplan of the last four years, andtotal faculty size has fallen from1,116 in 1970 to 1,076 in 1976. Ad¬ministration planners have beenaiming for an eventual total ofroximately 1,000.ccording' to Harris, thecommittee determined that the goal may have to be reduced stillfurther.Declines in the real purchasingpower of faculty salaries wereisolated as a major concern in thereport. The real wages ofprofessors and associateprofessors have declined byapproximately $2,000 since 1970-72, when real wages at theUniversity reached their peak.The committee concluded that“Inflation has obviously imposeda substantial tax on earnings. ” Salaries can be increased onlyif faculty cuts are made, ac¬cording to the committee. “It isdifficult to see how increases inlevels of salaries can be madewithout attrition in the size offaculty and staff,” the reportsaid. At the same time, thecommittee rejected a freeze onnew faculty appointments, in¬dicating that “An absolute em¬bargo on appointments reducesflexibility, falls unevenly andTuition to p.2Four faculty members awarded tenure;term contracts used more frequentlySecurity cops settleBy DAN WISENegotiators for campus policeand the University ad¬ministration reached agreementon a new contract late last month,raising hourly wages for theguards by 85-cents over a two-year period.The new pact, ratified by themembership of the UniversityPolice Association (UPA) onDecember 26. grants the guards a40-cent per hour raise retroactiveto February 1. 1976. The guardswill receive an additional fivecents an hour retroactive toAugust 23. 1976 and a 40-centraise beginning next month Thecontract expires Januarv 31.1978.The contract has not yet beenformally signed, pending ap¬proval bv the two sides of finallanguage in the agreement.Negotiations for the currentcontract opened nearly a yearago. when the guards wererepresented by Teamsters Local710. After several months oftalks, the Teamster negotiatorsbrought administration proposalsoffering the renewal of the oldcontract and a 40-cent per hourraise. The proposal was rejectedby the membership Then I,ocal710, which had represented theguards since May. 1969. waschallenged by a group of guardsseeking an independent unionContract talks were suspended until the representation issue wasresolved by an election super¬vised by the National LaborRelations Board (NLRB) heldJuly 23. The UPA took overbargaining and attempted tonegotiate an entirely new con¬tract. but the University gavelittle ground.Although University officialswould not approve significantchanges in working conditions forthe approximately 85 guards,they did agree to an addition tothe contract of a description ofduties and responsibilities for theguards.The administration proposalaccepted by the UPA included a40-cent raise which the Univer¬sity had granted in October. Theunion, in an unfair labor prac¬tices complaint filed with theNLRB, charged that theUniversity could not make anychange in working conditionswhich were still undernegotiation without theagreement of the union. OnDecember 15. the NLRBdismissed the complaint, rulingthat an employer can grant araise once an impasse had beenreachedPollard said that the uniondecided to accept the Univer-sitv’s proposal after their com¬plaint was dismissed by the By JAN RHODESFour faculty members weregiven tenure and promoted to thelevel of associate professor onDecember 15 — and two of thosewere in the history department.Julius Kirshner. whosespecialty is medieval andRenaissance history, and Ed¬ward Cook, in colonial Americanhistory, were promoted withtenure, the academician’sguarantee of job security.The total number of facultycases considered in the fall, thenumber promoted or extended,and the number promoted withtenure will be offically an¬nounced soon, Provost D. GaleJohnson said. He said he ex¬pected the information this weekThe names of individuals in¬volved are never releasedthrough official channels.Promotions without tenure forspecified terms were made inDecember, following the ap¬parent trend to grant tenure onlyat the highest levels of facultyappointment.December 15 is the usual datefor notification of about two-thirds of the annual appointmentdecisions, according to Johnson.Promotions with and withouttenure can be made at any timeand on any step of the facultyladder, without respect to age orseniority.Faculty members' cases areusually considered at the end ofthe person’s appointment—theacademic versions a contract—which depends on the date theappointment commenced and may fall any time during the level of full professor for aboutyear two years.According to the Statutes of the * Johnson said there is no similarUniversity, dated December 1, University-wide policy, but the1971, “instructor” and “assistant possibility is being discussedprofessor’’ are untenured informally,positions, and “associate Although most tenure decisionsprofessor” and “professor” are made by December 15, tenureusually are tenured ap- can be awarded at any timepointments. during the year, sometimes as aIn the past few years, as a result of an’individual's judiciousconsequence of fiscal austerity maneuvering,and the drive to cut the size of the Johnson said, “If an individualfaculty, the University has opted gets a tenure offer from anotherto make promotions without the outstanding institution, obviouslytenure which usually ac- we re almost certain to reviewcompanied the position. Instead that individual's case at thatof a new title and a permanent time.”job,.an individual may be given Austen recalled that he wasthe new’ title, but with a contract given tenure in 1973 after anset to expire after a fixed number initial decision was made to giveof years and a second shot at mm a term appointment and hetenure. responded by threatening toRalph Austen, tenured leave the University,associate professor in the history Final decisions on individualdepartment, jokingly referred to cases are made by the provostthis appointment stage as the and the president, acting on“tenuously associated recommendations from eachprofessor.” department. Most departmentsIn the Statutes of the Univer- set up committees, often con-sity. untenured, term ap- sisting of three faculty members,pointments at the associate and to examine possible promotionfull professor level are charac- cases in the department. Theterized as exceptions Yet the faculty of eacn uepartment votesGraduate School of Business has on whether to recommend abeen granting tenure only at the person for tenure.Special issueHyde Park retrospective■ P-7Community group fightsIC rate hike, court suitseeks rollback of increaseBy ADAM SCHEFFLERThe Regional Transportation Authority(RTA) must respond by today to a suitbrought by a local citizen’s group seekingto have a* 54 percent increase in IllinoisCentral Gull fares for Hyde Parkersdeclared illegal.The Hyde Park-Kenwood CommunityConference (HPKCC) filed suit against theRTA in Cook County Circuit Court lastDecember 1. The suif asks the court to rollback the increases which took effect onNovember 1 because they were imposedwithout a proper public hearing.The IC fare hikes, from 65 cents to onedollar for a one-way trip between zone two(which contains Hyde Park) and zone one(downtown), were part of an RTA move to“equalize” by zone the fares paid bycommuters w'ho ride the five railroadsregulated by the RTA under purchase-of-service agreements.The RTA provided the ICG with $9.5million under one such agreement lastyear, its largest railroad subsidy to date.The basic fare on any RTA-regulatedtrain is now 85 cents, to which 15 cents isadded per each five-mile zone travelled.On the IC line, this had the effect of raisingthe cost of a Hyde Parker’s trip to the Loopfrom about 10 cents per mile to about 18cents per mile, while riders in the farsuburbs saw their fare drop from abouteight cents to about six cents per mile.The cost of weekly and monthly ticketswas also raised substantially lastNovember, and the 25-ride ticket waseliminated.The HPKCC’s suit argues that when theRTA held a public meeting last year on the fare increase, there was no mention of thefare equalization plan which the RTA lateradopted.Richard Taub. assistant professor ofsociology in the College and chairman ofthe conference’s transportation com¬mittee. said not many people showed up atthat meeting because 10 per cent hadseemed like a reasonable request.“They are violating their ownprocedures,” he said. He termed theRTA’s action on a separate, unexaminedproposal “incredible.’’“We have to continue to ask RTA foreconomic data to justify the increase,” headded. “I think the reason they haven’tgiven it to us is that there isn’t any. Wehope that if they hold a proper hearingthey will see that they were wrong anddecide to distribute the burden morefairly.”Taub said he suspected the fare hikeswere part of the RTA’s “latent agenda”aimed at driving citv residents off the The Hyde Park Kenwood Community Conference is seeking a rollback of therecent 35 cent IC fare hike. (PHOTO by John Wright)commuter railroads so that it can close thestations and give suburban riders a non¬stop trip to the Loop.The IC recently reported that itsridership from the seven Hyde Parkstations declined by 38 per cent since 1969.This statistic, combined with the latestfare increases has contributed to a furtherstrain on already overcrowded CTA busesbetw'een Hyde Park and downtown. Therush hour situation on the Jeffrey Expressis reported to be particularly crowded.Taub said Conference representativeswill meet with CTA bus officials onMonday to discuss the possibility of ad¬ding buses on line in both peak and off-peak hours and Jeffrey Express service onweekends. Larry Bloom, one of the HPKCCvolunteer lawyers handling the suit, saidthe group will file a motion within the nexttwo weeks asking the RTA to either setaside money taken in as a result of in¬creased IC fares or issue receipts tocommuters. In the event that the increaseis ultimately ruled illegal, the lawyershope to prove that commuters werespending more than they ought to have.Today is the deadline for the RTA’slawyers to file an answer with the ocurt tothe Conference suit. The RTA isrepresented by Kirkland and Ellis, one ofChicago’s largest and most prestigiousfirms, and Hopkins. Sutter, Mulroy, Davis,and Cromartie.Tuition from p.lfortuitously where individuals retire orresign, and prevents appointment of newand younger faculty.”Expressing a concern for “The main¬tenance of a balanced faculty in a period ofcontraction,” the committee suggestedthat “Perhaps the whole pattern of seniorand junior faculty and of tenure and non¬tenure appointments needs to bereexamined.” The committee called forfurther study of the business school tenuresystem in which tenure is granted only tofull professors and suggested that “Perhaps new types of appointments needto be devised.”“We’re not suggesting a freeze,” saidHarris, “but we are recommending ex¬treme care in making appointments fromthe outside or on the inside to tenure —we’re suggesting a tough stance. ”Energy and support serviceseconomies urgedThe committee .recommended that“Strenuous efforts should be madethrough conservation measures sub¬stantially to reduce the consumption offuel and electricity.”A review “of all portions of the support services budget” was also recommendedas a potential economy measure. Inflation,according to the committee, creates thedanger “that the support budget will beallowed to increase more rapidly than theacademic budget.”Confidential appendicesFive confidential appendices “not in¬tended for general distribution” wereincluded with the report. Harris said thatthe appendices “point to special problemareas.” and was only willing to nameenergy conservation and the increasingcosts in the library as two of the areasexamined in the confidential document.announced topic of a general 10 per centFaculty and StudentsFebruary 7th will be the last day Winter quarter books will be on sale. The text¬book department will officially close after this date. All students who wishto purchase textbooks must do so before this date.I ask that instructors who wish to add books to their reading lists make all ad¬ditions two weeks prior to February 7th. Every effort will be made to expediteyour orders so that your late adoptions will be available before our closingdate.All books that are presently back order with the publishers because they wereout of stock when the original order was placed will be cancelled on this date.\THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTOREf-i The Chicago Maroonv-Friday, January 7,, 4977tl •r Daryl Koehn: Chicago’s first woman Rhodes scholarBy STEVE BLOCKAs she slowly ripped up her styrofoamcoffee cup in the Cobb Hall coffee shop.Daryl Koehn discussed her new claim tofame: she is one of 32 American studentsnamed Rhodes Scholars to OxfordUniversity in Britain for 1977.Thirteen women were chosen this year,the first time women were eligible for thescholarship provided by the will of Cecil J.Rhodes. British pioneer and politician inSouthern Africa in the late nineteenthcentui^.,A foitfth -year student in the College.Daryl came to Chicago from Concordia.Kansas, a small town of about 7.500 peoplenear the Kansas-Nebraska border. Thetown was overjoyed with the success of oneof its citizens, and Daryl was deluged bycongragulatorv calls and telegrams fromfriends and neighbors. What was Daryl’sreaction to the honor?“I was pleased, but not overwhelmed. Ithink you only jump for joy when you arebuilding up for something for years. Thiswasn’t the same.”How about Mom and Dad? “Oh.” shelaughed, “they screamed.”Presently, Daryl is studying politicalphilosophy while majoring in Ideas andMethods in the New Collegiate Division. AtOxford, she will participate in Politics,Philosophy, and Economics, an in¬terdisciplinary program. The RhodesScholarship provides two years of studyleading up to a B.A. Students work on aone-to-one basis with tutors in preparationfor exams.Daryl explained why she is lookingforward to going overseas: “The Britisheducation system is different. They thinkdifferently, and work different problems.It s good to be exposed to different ‘ideasand methods’: it’s unhealthy to have onlyone view.”As for going abroad, Daryl sees it as atremendous opportunity to travel. “I’venever been outside the country.” she said. Daryl has been exposed to a media blitz,ranging from interviews with herhometown newspaper, the ConcordiaBlade-Empire, to Time Magazine. All theattention showered on her contrastssharply with the relative quietness of lifein her remote hometown, a fourteen hourbus ride from Chicago. She first came toChicago when she was in seventh grade. “Ifound it excitingly busy and big. I stillbelieve this.”Daryl’s interest in applying for theRhodes award did not develop until thispast July. The lengthy, and complicatedapplication was due*by September 30.Mary C. Martin, director of internationalstudent services at the University,screened the limited number of applicantswhich any one school can allow. Daryl hada brief screening interview on campus inmid-October. Although she was successfulin this initial test, she did not hear fromher state committee for some time. “I wasbecoming a bit uneasy.” (The Americanawards are apportioned by geographicdistricts. Students may apply to theirhome district or the district where theirschool is located.)Finally, on Thursday, December 9, shewas notified that she was to be interviewedthe following Wednesday in Topeka,Kansas. After a brief stop at home, shedrove to Topeka in the early hours ofDecember 15 for a nine o’clock meeting.After clearing that hurdle, she flew toRochester, Minnesota two days later forthe district finals, and success.*The interview process was domi¬nated by probing intellectual questions.“I was a bit surprised. I expected'the usual ‘what are vour interests?’type of questions.” commented Dary l. Oneof the things she enjoyed about the in¬terview sessions was the opportunity tospeak to the other nervous Rhodes candidates.“Many of them shared my interest inphilosophy. Others played cards whilewaiting.”As a member of the first group of girls awarded the Rhodes scholarship, Darylwas pleased by the fair representation ofwomen among the committee membersas well as applicant finalists. Among the 12state level candidates were three women,while the district final was evenly with sixmen and six women.At the University of Chicago, Daryl hasbeen elected Phi Beta Kappa and is amember of the Maroon Kev Societv She is currently a junior research assistant inBillings Hospital. She has also served as aJunior Mathematics Tutor.Daryl is Chicago’s fourth RhodesScholar in four years, and, of course, itsfirst female awardee. When asked aboutthe five to one male-female ratio af Ox¬ford, she exclaimed. “Oh, that’s not sobad. After all, Chicago is about two toone.”writers wantedThe Maroon ispeople to join its looking forwriting staff.Anyone interested is en¬couraged to drop by our officeon the third floor of Ida Noyes.m CHECK OUR NEWEVERYDAY LOWMAGIC PRICES mDIET RITE COLAor FLAVOR J09+ 80Cdeposit NEWl SUNKISTORANGE JUICEA QtTO SELLReg. 59< M l2oz. CHICKEN OF THE SEA R£{.CHUNK LITE *o<TUNfl 55*..SWIFTS PREMIUMSLICED BACON129X lb. BANANAS15*. OLD STYLE BEER1 55WARM ONLY IReg. 1.69 i 6 Can.Monday-WednesdayThursday and FridaySaturdaySunday STORE HOURS9 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.9 a.m. to 8 p.m.9 a.m. to 7 p.m.9 a.m. to 3 p.m.HYDE PARK CO-OP SUPERMARKET1526 E. 55th STREET 667-1444JThe Chicago Marobb—PrXtey. January 7,1977-3Editorial Paul Peterson interviewHave we been heard?The beginning of the quarter offers an op¬portunity to pause—if only briefly— to renewour strength for another bout with the books,and the other trials of winter quarter. In theinterest of preserving the precious sense ofoptimism that disappears all too quicklyaround here, we would like to take note ofseveral recent events which might heartenstudents who feel powerless and insignificant atthis institution.While the administration rarelyacknowledges the influence of students in itsdecision-making process, on occasion ourvoices are heard, and sometimes even heeded.For example, note the following items:The College recently announced theestablishment of the Abram L. Harrisachievement awards, a series of non-need $500scholarships awarded to incoming freshmenand upperclassmen. A student ambudsman’sreport last year explored the University’s lackof merit-based awards for both entering andcontinuing students. Roughly one-fourth of theawards are intended for minority students.Last spring, a Student Government committeereport sparked a campus controversy andprovokea headlines in the city-wide press bydocumenting the steep drop in the enrollment ofminorities in the College since 1968, and theaccompanying decrease in financial aid funds.Later that quarter, President Wilson met with agroup of students from the Organization ofBlack Students to discuss the problem. Theawards obviously reflect the agitation of thepast year.We reported in October that the CollegeCouncil was considering adding pluses andminuses to undergraduate grades. The issuewas important to a number of students for avariety of reasons, and they did somethingabout it. A public forum, sponsored by thedebating team, brought the debate out into theopen so that student views could be heard. Apetition was ciruclated by another group ofstudents, and the 800 signatures on it werepresented at the November 30 meeting of theCollege Council. The faculty, which hadpreviously appeared to be solid in their supportof the idea, developed doubts and the proposalnow faces an uncertain future.Complaints about the poor quality of theofferings of the library canteen have almostbecome an accepted part of life here. However,a group of students in Student Government andfrom CORSO have recently been given thego-ahead to develop a plan to replace the un¬popular vending machines with a student-runcanteen offering fresh coffee and pastries. Theprofits will probably be used to fund otherstudent activities.In each case, students decided that an issuewas important to them, and then did somethingwhich demonstrated their commitment to it.In coming weeks, old issues will surelyreappear, along with new concerns such astuition hikes and service cuts which will affectour lives as students. Will we meet thechallenges they pose and show that we careenough to do something about them? Or will wepassively surrender to the winter doldrums?The Chicago MaroonEditor: Peter CotoNewt Editor Don Wlae Founded*, 1902FMturao Editor- Jan Rhode*Sports Editor David RJeserPhoto Editor: Dan NewmanAoooctoto Editor: David BlumPmdurtton Manager Michael DeianeySraphiM: MnnwBatoneaa Manager NUco MafcstmyaduAd Manager Doug Milk:»4tt:Tmr Aditr Earl AaOmn. 8Um 3toek. FJIaa Cleamu. Nmee,Ctevalaad Uau Cotaa. Sir* 9rdu». Abbe Flataur inn FostarMarl hi MT Harkact Aadru .'latiniay Burt lukov.u Boost,Kaakal, Fni Mac Eaa. Dau Maaantot. Broca Mrlnueblm PacMarear. Elaia, Mnaeaak Ena Oreau Daa PaOcraoa jobs Proaakin. BW taMa. A4aa SrJwffW Mark StraUoc Carol Studan•and Mark WooOwartkrk* Ckk4w Marais ia Ika aUSaal aaaao.paf o' Ika Ua, va.au, a< Ckuaw**“■*■< Tsaada,. “d Tn*a,, n*., Ma ’a*uiar •cadaa.u ,aa> Tka Maaaacd*aa aliralilalimnik Ckuat llkaan aatr —-f r ifoNMKI . End of the eulogiesBy JAN RHODESThere must be some twilightzone between a eulogy and a poisonpen letter. Besides that, the mandied almost three weeks ago. Localjournalists, and even campusjournal-ists. fear that to refrainfrom lauding the man is tan¬tamount to condemning him.Political jiber at Chicago politicsand Daley-the-politician aresuddenly seen as the words of theapostate who has not the sense tobe reverent in the face of death.The papers printed endlessparagraphs of chummy Daleyanecdotes, intimate confessions ofunexplained tears, maudlinreflections on the day Daley died,lamentations for a gloomy Chicagofuture without its Machiavellianprince. This is not one of thosestores.Remember how often politicalreformers wished — for Chicago —that Daley were gone. They ex¬pressed the thought withoutmalice, without noticing the im¬plication that — very likely —Daley would only cease beingmayor if Daley were dead. Thereformers usually assumed thatDaley’s disappearance wouldbreak his political Machine. PaulPeterson, associate professor ofpolitical science, who specializesin urban politics, does not thinkthis will happen.“The institution', once in place,doesn’t need a Daley to keep itgoing.” he savs.Political reformers are no moreable now to combat the Machinethan they were before the mayor’sdeath. The ‘‘old guard,” still intight control, has every reason tokeep the Machine rolling along asbefore, making no changes in theformula for Daley’s fuel. His keyingredient, Peterson says, was toplay the dual role of city and partyleader. Peterson thinks thereformers missed their one slimchance and that now. w’ith theMachine Democrats in control,there is no reason for a separationof the two key roles to ever comeabout. Although Daley’slieutenants might all want achance at powerful positions andtheir own bits of sovereignterritory. Peterson says they wantmost of all — a smooth transition toa successor mavor and theInside Out preservation of the system.Peterson thinks George Dunne isthe man waiting in the wings forthe starring role of mayor-and-party-leader. Before the wardcommitteemen elected himchairman of the Cook CountyDemocratic Party organization,Dunne was president of the CookCounty Board, historically a jobsecond only to the mayor in. power,Peterson says. The Cook CountyBoard has jurisdiction over thecounty’s road system and the largenumber of concommitant con¬tracts and patronage jobs. Dunnewas the logical political heir, in theeves of those who don’t want to seea bitter intra-party powerstruggle, a struggle which coulddestroy the party. Peterson thinksDunne will be the party’s can¬didate in the mavoral election, andthat he will prove to be as powerfula mayor as Daley.“The next mayor will probablybe Irish.” Peterson announces,noting that Dunne is, of course.Irish. Keeping the two keypositions in the hands of a singleperson is the insurance of thecontinuation of an ethnic dic¬tatorship which commenced in theearly thirties, Peterson says.“If the two positions were split,the whole political system wouldopen up. A closed system meanscontinued Irish control.”“They played an interstitial roleas immigrants who were somehowmore accommodated to the UnitedStates than immigrants from othercountries. Thev do have a stylewhich makes them get along withpeople. You know the old saying.‘Better an Irishman than aPole...’ ”.But Peterson points out thesolemn consequences of thatjocular saying. He says the Irishhave been plaving the city’s blacksagainst the Poles for years, alwaysemerging on to*p. He says if the 13black and the 16 Polish aldermencould ever agree, they couldcontrol the city council, whichconsists of a total of 50 aldermen.46 of whom are MachineDemocrats.“The black ward committeemenprovided the support for keepingthe system intact.” Peterson says.If the blacks and the Poles hadplayed their cards right, Petersonsays, the whole game might bedifferent now. If the blacks had joined with the Poles, the youngalderman, and the suburbanDemocrats in opposing Dunne aspartv head. Peterson thinks thecoalition might have defeatedDunne and been able to keep theparty post separate from themayoral job, and open up theentire system.Peterson views the upcomingspecial election for mayor as domost political observers: there willbe a Machine candidate, a blackcandidate, and a white DonQuixote candidate. The blackcandidate. Peterson says, will nothave the support of the blackDemocratic aldermen, who havealreadv signed away their supportto Dunne. He thinks Ralph Met¬calfe. Jessie Jackson, and otheranti-machine black leaders willhave a difficult time finding a goodcandidate.“There is. of course, no chancethat a black candidate will win.”Peterson comments. “And BillSinger will probably be the reformcandidate — a worse than uselessposition, because Singer will drawa lot of money, but get few votes.”Peterson thinks that if the whiteand black reformers could onlyget together, pick a good minoritvcandidate, and put a lot ot moneybehind him. sucn a candidate has adecent chance of winning.But Petrson knows it’s not goingto happen. The whites and blacksare not united, and the Machine isstill very much intact. Dunne hasthe power to add “mayor” to hislist of titles. Peterson thinks,pointing to the way Dunne was ableto consolidate his power in theparty swiftlv in the first days afterDaley’s dealh. Yet, even without aDaley-esque mayor, even withoutDaley’s machine. Peterson thinksthe City is in no danger of “goingthe way of New York.” He pointsout that the important difference issomething Daley had already-accomplished. Over the years hewas able to get the state*, county,and regional authorities to absorbthe burdening city costs which arenow crushing other big cities. Thatsystem is well-established and inno danger of changing, no matterwho presides over the city council,now or in the future. Even withoutDaley, the Machine will keepgoing; but regardless of the out¬come of future mayor elections, sowill Chicago.Tosteson s harmful legacyBy DAVID BLUMWhoppers have tomatoes, BigMacs .nave secret sauce, andHarvard University has DanielTosteson.Donald N. Smith, until this weekthe chief operations officer atMcDonald’s, announced Wed¬nesday that he has accepted, anoffer to join Burger King as itspresident. That decision, reachedshortly after Daniel Tosteson’sresignation last month as dean ofthe Prizker School of Medicine,prompted one medical school of¬ficial to conclude that Harvard andChicago were rapidly becoming ascompetitive as the two fast-fooddynasties for the leading positionin their respective worlds.Most administrators who workedregularly with Tosteson had cometo respect him as a strong leader inhis dual capacity as dean and vice-president for the Medical Center.He was offered the vice-presidencyafter less than a year of service tothe University, and many beleivedhis ambitions included theUniversity presidency. In Irv Kupcinet’s column in theChicago Sun-Times shortly afterTosteson’s resignation, it wasreported that Tosteson’s coleagueshas presented-him with a copy ofJohn Dean’s book. “Blind Am¬bition.” in joking reference to thewidely held belief that Tosteson’sdecision to leave reflected hispursuit for personal advancementat all costs. How-ever, no suchunanimity of opinion has surfacedamong the divisional faculty, andmany believe the column item wasplanted by angry administratorsthrough Sun-Times publisher andBoard of Trustees member Em¬mett Dedmon.Harvard begins the new year farahead in the battle of numbers andnames. During the past year itattracted four major scholars fromHyde Park to Harvard — Tosteson.Brian Bern- in geography. StanleyTambiah in antropology. andRobert Levine in behavioralsciences — in an effort to stakeclaim to what Presidents like tocall “academicdistinction.” The impact of Tosteson’sresignation on a search for hissuccessor is not vet clear, but an“inside” candidate would surelywin the President’s favor Severalobservers have speculated inrecent weeks that Tosteson'sresignation heightened the fear of“outsiders” bv the University’sgoverning body, the Board 'ofTrustees, as well as most ad¬ministrators Tostesson. formerlva department chairman at DukeUniversity, was the first recuit- ,ment from outside the University-in many years to a high-levelposition.In the long run. both institutionswould suffer from such animosity,whether overt or subconscious,and Chicago’s “insider” mentalitycould ultimately prevent the likesof Robert Maynard Hutchins andother previous “outsider”Presidents from leading the in¬stitution in the future. Bound tostrict confines of its ow;n faculty-and former students for its choicethe next search committee wouldcommit itself and the University toa destructive course4— The Chicago Maroon—Fnday, January 7, 1977AH a IE speedAt Tonight's Mini-Lesson you'll actually improve yourreading efficiency, both speed and comprehension,by using our techniques which have worked for overy2 million people just like you.Whether you're a "Lazy Reader"' unable to concentrate,; a "Word-at-a-time Reader" who spends days, weeks,and months reading material that should take minutes andhours, a reader who can't remember anything you read,or a "Skimmer", who reads fast but retains little . .we can help you.All the advantages of Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamicswill be explained and demonstrated completely at theFREE Mini-Lesson. Stop wasting valuable time . . .you've got nothing to lose, everything to gain!Attend a FREEMini-Lesson TonightMost people go through life reading,without ever learning howl EVELYN WOODREADING DYNAMICSv\' , , \ * . V,' ''U1 " : • • , ' V. T •1 he Chicago Mai Oon Friday, January 7. IV/?The Major Activities BoardA REPORT TO THE FEEPAYERSThis quarter, the MAB will collect about $8,000,00 fromthe students in the College.Our first show will have a budget of $10, 000,00 (PDQBach in Mandel Hail January i A 9), but we expect a ticketincome of $9, 000.00 so we'll lose (or "spend" as we liketo say) only a thousand dollars of the collected money.Next we' re bringing Steve Goodman to campus along withJim Post, Budget = $5, 000; Inc ome = $4, 500; ’bpent"-only $500.00.In addition, we'll be operating a new night club in IdaNoyes Hall. Every weekend in February a top qualityup & coming national act will appear in the club wherebeer, wine, sandwiches and excellent atmosphere arepart of the package. •*Our total budget for the quarter is $28, 000. 00. We ex¬pect to take in $21, 000 in ticket sales and what not. (Ifall goes well, we're looking towards a truly majorconcert event in the S pring.)Although we're collecting only $4,00 this winter, weplan to buy over $14, 00 worth of entertainment for everystudent in the College this quarter.Take advantage of the discounts. Enjoy the shows.Thanks again for your support.24 -hour concert info 753-3563 Contemporaryurooeanhe DevMiss1977Cobb6:00, 7:30,and a| U.C. ID please Must be 18 yrs.on display at ida noyes hall january 3-7.distribution friday january 7, 4:00-6:00 pm$4.50 to students and staff with i.d.call 753-3591rental period until Wednesday june 1stART TO UVE6 Trip Chicago Maroon Friday, January 7, 1977Chicago IssueCompiled and Edited by Jonathan MeversohnOver the past months various residents and ex-residents of Hyde Parkwere asked to submit articles on some aspect of the community or thecity they felt was particularly important, influential, or inviting. It seemsHyde Park has always been a place of passage, a place that singularlyeffected personal and intellectual growth. The University of Chicago.Hvde Park and the city have for years served as an environment in whichwriters, educators, and artists could concentrate their work: and often this work was itself based on life in this city. Thus, we have a “ChicagoSchool” in the social sciences and in architecture, a “Chicago Jazz"style, and a literary tradition from Theodore Dreiser and Upton Sinclairto Saul Bellow and Phillip Roth. Unlike some communities, it seemsimpossible to live in Hyde Park without having intense feelings about itsnature or its history. Here follows a series of essays based loosely aroundthe theme: Life in Chicago and Hvde Park, past and present.131 1J 5] It 1|Ji|h1 j. *fr ,;1 P| fa.llailia57th and Blackstone Ave. some time agoHyde Park: Urban Renewaland the Neo-Suburban ImpulseBy Jared ShlaesTo the student of today the Hyde Park of20 or 30 vears ago would seem an alien andexciting place. Congestion, conflict, in¬tellectual uproar and the clumsy ballet ofneighborhood change all danced them¬selves along to the music of 55th Street’snight spots: The Bee-Hive in particular,now buried under the asphalt surroundingmonoxide island, sang with JimmyYancey’s piano and Sidney Bechet’slegendary soprano sax six nights a week,leaving one day idle for study, love ormutual recrimination. In the back cornersof a thousand student pads, blearv-eyedyoung people swotted for comps or pickedat steel-string quitars and antique banjosin search of the ultimate folk music neitherPete Seeger nor Woody Guthrie, both stillthen alive and on campus as often as not. Elaine May's succinct motto for Hyde Park was:"Black and White, hand in hand, marching against thepoor."seemed quite able to reach. Big BillBroonzy and Lead-bellv delivered anethnic punch new to most W’hites as thelast strains of Glenn Miller’s Big Bandfaded into the sunset along with the heroesof World War IIIf there was music in the air. the crunchand whomp of the bulldozer were not farbehind Neo-suburbanites in the Univer¬sity’s hvperboreal regions were pastingtogether a neighborhood plan which at anappropriate point in time would be handedto Julian Levi for violent execution Aw hole new vocabulary of euphemisms andcatchwords was being developed for the purposes of both the University and JuliaAbrahamson’s Conference crowd,culminating in Mike Nichols and ElaineMay’s succinct motto for Hyde Park:“Black and White, hand in hand, marchingtogether against the poor.’’ It was on theground of class, not race, that the greatbattles of the 1950’s would have to befought, reflecting the propensity ofacademic types to love all humanity buthate the class directly below. Scribes andbookwallahs everywhere would surelyunderstand.It takes some understanding of thephysical form of the neighborhood to follow the events of the time. 55th Streetran straight and true from the Outer Drivewestward to Cicero and Midway Airport,then and until O'Hare arrived in 1955 thenation’s most active. Streetcar trackspopulated in the 40-s by old red woodencars and in the 50’s by the famous GreenHornets suspended by their trolleys froman elaborate network of exposed wiresraced east and * est down 55th as on othernearby streets: 61st. 6 rd. 47th. to be metby intersecting north-south lines on LakePark Avenue and Cottage Grove In the30’s, seven or eight cents would get youaboard, less if you were a student; in the40’s and 50’s, fares moved up but for a longtime stayed under 15 cents The sound ofmetal wheels on metal rails, punctuatedby thwocks and rattles as the cars crun¬ched switch points, bottle caps and small(continued on page 2)Grey City Journal - Friday, January 7,1?77 -1(continued from page 1)boys’ pennies against steel rails made yetanother music for the neighborhood’s earsAlong the street car trackage were thebuildings since eliminated bv urbanrenewal, which at least in Illinois wereinvented for that purpose by the Univer¬sity. On the upper floors of these buildings,mainly constructed around the turn of thecentury with facades of brick and stone onlots seldom over 25 feet wide, were theapartments and rooming houses which inthe eyes of University plannersrepresented the soft underbelly of HydePark Tenants in them ranged from lacecurtain to shanty, and lifestyles fromProtestant respectable to early hip.Students, junior faculty, leftover orthodoxJews, refugees from the industrial junglesof the great South Side and seekers afterthe great, the good, and the occasionalreefer came to share spaghetti and jugwine in the noisy, noisome, friendly hostilemilieu that was 55th Street. their rooms and their studies. The moralexample of these men. who had justfinished fighting the last just war inAmerican history, was immense; theirattitudes of mild seriousness and diligentgood humor kept adolescent radicalismand ill temper in perspective. Even theWallace campaign of 1948. which broughtout young revolutionaries of every shapeand stripe and set up innumerable youngliberals for the McCarthv-ite reaction ofthe 1950’s, was essentially a musicalcomedy kind of exercise in which only thetruest believers took themselvesseriously; how bloody could revolution bewhen its war songs came from Pete Seegerand much of its rhetoric from Harvard?Still, campus ferment existed and raisedthe proof of many good juices. Everyonebelieved that the raunchy behavior foundat W allace fund-raising parties and at theorganizing affairs of CORE and SNCCresulted from deliberate policy; the girlswere dedicating themselves to ensnare theStudents, funior faculty, leftover orthodox Jews,refugees from the Industrial jungles If the great SouthSide and seekers after the great, the good, and theoccasional reefer came to share spaghetti and iugwine in the noisy, noisome, friendly-hostile muilieuthat was 55th Street.On the ground floors of these samebuildings were the stores and taverns thatgave the neighborhood much of its specialcharacter Remnants of earlier and morestable days included the classic Jewishmerchants who had long dominated thestreet: Herzog’s Clothing Store. T RWolf’s great toy store (the vestige whichjust closed was a pale imitation of theoriginal). Tanenbaum's War SurplusAnathema to the neo-suburbanites, thesehad to go and they did. along with thetransients and hop-heads of the upperfloors. Soon Hyde Parkers woke up to findthat the corner drug store was now a mileaway, and that the fruit stands, bakeshops, delicatessens, snack shops,supermarkets and candy stores which hadlined 55th Street from Cottage Grove to theShoreland were to be replaced by onesmall A & P. one large Co-op, the en¬terprises of Hans Morsbach and a fewfranchise outlets.It is a pleasure to recall the excitementand delight of those days Nichols and Maywere holding forth in a tavern on 55thStreet and later in the Dock at Lake ParkAvenue, along with a host of futurecelebrities and near-celebrities: ShellyBerman. Andrew Duncan, BarbaraHarris. The sight of Miss Harris, thenmaybe 18 years old. shinnying up a steampipe to make a point in a Mike Nicholsscript was not to be forgotten Neither washer Winnetka matron, or Elaine May asheavy date. Campus theatricals weretimid by comparison, although rich inrevolutionary' rhetoric left over from theSpanish Civil War.Indeed. war and the memory of warwere very much a part of the sceneThanks to the GI Bill of Rights, largenumbeers of World War II veterans hadinundated the campus, bringing with themnot only Uncle Sam's dollars but an at¬titude toward their studies and toward lifethat clashed sharply with the dolce farniente preferences of the youngerstudents. All hung out with equalcasualness on the grass near the ReynoldsClub, at the tables of the C-Shop. bn theMidway or amid the fleshpots of 55th and63rd Streets, but you knew that theveterans were only waiting to get back to boys, since it was obvious to all that noself-respecting girl would make herselfavailable for copulation without anoverriding political reason. Universityhousing policies, which providedchaperones as well as sexual segregationand which required all students to sign inat early hours except by special per¬mission. did little to alleviate the generalaura of sexual tension.Sex was not the only problem associatedwith student housing. Thousands of theveterans made due with spartan tern- ubiquitous as they are now; street lighting,on the other hand, was low in key andalleys and gangw ays were dark.It is hard today to realize the extent towhich people lived in the streets. BeforeTV ownership became widespread in the1950's, people routinely left home in searchof diversion, and children were ordinarilyinvited to spend their time elsewhere thanat home. As a result, sidewalk games andshopping as a pastime were highlydeveloped Dozens of small merchantswho have since gone broke or died linedstreets now populated only by movingvehicles and the minions of the law. Atsome points on 55th Street, the Hebrewletters in the store fronts recalled theLower East Side of New York, an illusionsustained by the excellent gefillte fish andlox obtainable there. Non-Jews in the areatended to be either lower income Whites oruniversity people, a condition which tosome extent still exists, although the racialmix has changed. Blacks during the 1940’sand early 1950’s tended to be eithermembers of the intellectual elite or ad¬venture-some types interested in iden¬tifying with or bugging Whitey, a situationthat changed with the great influx of thelater 1950’s and with the militancy andattitude shifts of the 1960’s, which resultedin the present uneasy truce. Meanwhile.Yiddish has largely disappeared from thecommunity except for a few remnants inthe Drexel Home for the Aged, and theJewish Daily Forward is no longer to befound.The greatest single contribution to thehappy chaos of Hyde Park w-as preciselythe coming of the'Blacks Too poor to af¬ford the mansions of Kenwood and theimmediate campus area, they were easilycontrolled by the University Mafia in thoseenclaves, but in the apartment areas andparticularly in the mixed com¬mercial/residential areas on theperimeter of the community and on streets!t there was music in the air, the crunch of thebulldozers was not far behind. Neo suburbanites inthe University's hyperboreal regions were pastingtogether a neighborhood plan which would be handedto Julien Levi, official hatchet man, for violentexecution.53rd and Lake Park Ave. in the 1950’s, and todayporarv accomodations on vacant lots longsince built up with new Universitybuildings, their quarters seldomweatherproof and never spacious Manywere married, usually to somewhat care¬worn women who juggled babies and jobsin a constant battle to keep the family fedand respectable. Other students inhabitedthe basements, attics and slums of theneighborhood and worried about crime inthe streets. Incoming students, even in the1940’s, were warned against muggers,especially at night, but seldom hesitated totake their chances at any hour. Campuscops existed, although by no means sowhen he w~as not promoting the Eri- Richard McKeon: paralyzed the minds ofcyclopedia Britannica generations of philosophy students2 - Grey City Journal - Friday, January 7,1977 such as 55th they made quick inroads TheUniversity’s response was forthright andeffective: scorched earth in areas ofweakness, intensified fortification in areasof strength. Whole swaths of the com¬munity were cut out with singularviolence: 55th Street, 47th Street, LakePark Avenue. 61st Street. Cottage GroveAvenue became rubble and eventually newmiddle-class and upper-middle-classhousing and shopping facilities with a fewconcessions to the poor on the fringes.Population in the community fell by one-third largely as a result of this surgery,and its complexion paled perceptibly.Meanwhile, faculty and friends of theUniversity were encourage to buy realestate through a whole range of incentivesincluding second mortgage financing, andgood work was done to assure adequatepolice protection and clean streets, not aneasy task in view of the area’s tradition ofmaintaining an independent alderman.Perhaps the more powerful post of wardcommitteeman held then (and until quiterecently) by Marshall Korshak and beforehim by Barnet Hodes was what reallvcountedOn campus, the Aristotel ian/Thom istworld-view so effectivelv skewered bvRober* Pirsig held sway Mortimer Adlerbemused student audiences with his lec¬tures on God as love when not engaged inpromoting future editions of the En¬cyclopedia Britannica Richard McK eonwas paralyzing the minds of generations ofphilosophy students, while in SocialSciences Edward Shils and his colleagueswere trving to convince the world that sociology might one day become a usefuldiscipline David Riesman shook up theacademic, social and political scientistswith his insights from outside: Leo Straussinspired gifted students year after yearwith his forceful personality. In economiesand in the School of Business. Lord Keyneswas still being debated against thebackground of Frank Knight’s work:econometrics was a new* and esotericdiscipline just beginning to be taught, andthe computer was something to worrvabout in the fairly remote future. CarlRogers counselled emotional casualties onUniversity Avenue in a non-directive waybroadly believed to be faintly illicit: Freudwas the only officially countenanced guru,at least locally. The schools of Law andMedicine were developing rapidly andoffered numerous stars on the faculty andfuture stars among the students. But thereal excitment was at the undergraduatelevel in a college of perhaps 2000 studentswhich was scorned by the Divisions andprofessional schools but where much of theHutchins-Adler ideology was focused on avery young and very vulnerable studentbodv.Many of the undergraduates had enteredafter the sophomore year in high schoolunder a plan which provided not only forearly entrance but also for rapid ad¬vancement of qualified students. A batteryof placement tests allowed those who hadread widely or who had taken advancedcourses elsewhere to escape years ofdrudgery and often to graduate after twoor three years in the College, frequently atthe age of seventeen or eighteen, with aBachelor’s degree considered to certifythat the applicant had received a properliberal education Unfortunately, fewuniversities would take this degree at facevalue in any graduate program; evenChicago required three years of normalcourse loads for a master’s following itsown bachelor’s degrees Students soughteither Ph.B. or A.B. degrees, and the twocategories did little mixing. Strongeststatus contenders were members of theCommittee on Social Thought, in directcontact with Nef, Redfield. Reisman.Strauss, and other giants of the day.Others fought their w>ay though three orfour years of survey courses in thehumanities, the social sciences, and thenatural sciences, plus a year ofmathematics and one of philosophy, toachieve Bachelor standing. The spectacleof conservatively reared fifteen- andsixteen-year-olds" staggering under theimpact of Freud, Marx and Plato could beamusing; doctrines often imperfectlyunderstood by graduate student in¬structors were rendered even more con¬fusing by those senior professors whooccasionally deigned to lecture.Discussions in the dorms, however, ran hotand heavy, doubtless encouraging theformation of useful habits good in laterlife, although many felt that the two set¬tings for which the students were mosteffectively being prepared were thecocktail party and the after-game bullsessionArchitecturally, the University hadremained a bastion of Republican GothicOnly the banality of the AdministrationBuilding, which staggered the campus inthe late 1940’s, heralded the grotesqueriesto follow Rays of hope emanated fromSaarinen’s Law School, Mies van derRohe's School of Social Service Ad-(continued on page 10)Jared Shines. AH '50 MBA ’52. haslived most of his life in Hyde Park.This Hyde ParkBy Bertram J. CohlerIt is difficult to write about Hyde Parkwithout using the same worn cliches usedby critics and apologists alike indescribing this community. To beginwith, it should be noted that I have nogreat fondness for Hyde Park as aphysical environment. Mostly, it is cold'and dreary in winter and hot and dirty inthe summer. However, it is the placewhere I have spent most of my life andwhere nearly all my friends live. I guessit just grows on one after a while. Likeany place where one grows up. there arememories which give this community aspecial meaning for me. However, thereis something beyond such memories. Theone thing which is most striking to me isthat this is a community where peoplereally care about each ether, and thatthey continue to live here when theycould live in far more pleasantW%_Mostly, Hyde Park is cold anddreary in winter and hot and dirtyin summer. However, it is the%place where I have spent most ofmy life and where all my friendslive. I guess it just grows on oneafter a while.surroundings. I see evidence of this whenI am out doing errands on a Saturdayafternoon. I guess I get a kind of pleasurefrom meeting colleagues, friends, andstudents in the same neighborhood inwhich I live and from observing all aboutme small groups of persons engaged inlively conversations. It seems like justabout everyone in Hyde Park knowseveryone else (it is interesting to notethat it was at this University thatstudents of urban life first wrote aboutthe ‘•alienating" aspects of life in the citywhen, at their doorstep, was powerfulevidence of a moral urban community).Both University and communitybenefit from the fact that a majority ofstudents, faculty, and staff live in theneighborhood, if the University is torealize its goal of intellectual inquiry, thecommunity must support such inquiry.Frequent informal contact is essential tothe realization of this goal. Indeed. I havenever seen a University where there wasso much informal contact, so many in¬formal seminars, and so many op-oortunities for discussion as exists here.1 like to believe that this activetellectual participof the fact that in-ation is a direct resultthe majority of thestudents and faculty live in the com¬munity. Such discussion would be im-Dossible at a commuter school where thelack of community diminishes both thedesire for discussion and seriously limitsthe opportunity for such discussion.Clearly, the very existence of theUniversity has been critical to the sur¬vival of Hyde Park-Kenwood. Thiscommunity would not have survived theurban changes of the 50’s without thesupport of the University whichspearheaded a singularly successfuldrive resulting in the spending of'i' Staff MeetingThere will be a Grey City Journal stqffmeeting Tuesday. January 11 at 5 pm inthe Maroon office < Ida Noyes .103). Allreturning staff members are invited Ioarticularly encourage potential writers,u tists. and photographers to attend: weare beginning a new quarter and you panhelp introduce new material and idnav millions of dollars in public and privateredevelopment projects. This effort wasbacked up by block-clubs developed byUniversity faculty with experience inorganizational development whichconvinced many residents to remainrather than to flee to the suburbs. But. itwas the people who stayed and not justthe institutions. People wanted thiscommunity to work. A large number ofthese Hvde Park residents were alumniof the College who had really enjoyedtheir own undergraduate education andwho wanted to make their home in acommunity marked by such a com¬mitment to ideas (doesn’t this saysomething about the success of the ‘‘OldCollege" as an educational experience?>I think that many of us do not appreciatethe importance to the community of thelarge number of Hyde Park-Kenwoodresidents who continue to live here eventhough they do not have a connectionwith the University and who contribute tothe concern for the community as awhole which is so characteristic of HvdePark.The concern which Hyde Parkers showfor each other and for the community asa whole means that its traditions haveremained intact over a period of manyyears. The 57th street art fair has almostthe identical character of the original artfair in the 50’s. This community has notjust given way to bigness or to change forits own sake. Indeed, the more HydePark changes, the more it stays thesame. Even the issue of "crime on thestreets" is not a new one. My mother-in-law. who attended SSA in the thirties,tells me that students used to be afraid towalk alone through the Wiebolt arch forfear that their purse or wallet would bestolen. Those of us who grew up in HydePark during the 50’s remember with aweand fascination the rumbles of theMumcheck gang (complete with DAhaircuts and motorcycle jackets) whichused to hang-out in front of the oldWalgreens. Even the form taken bvsocial protest is not new. I have seen PeteSeeger many times in Hyde Park Myfirst memory' of a Seeger concert wasduring the time of the McCarthyhearings when he sang at a rally at theold Methodist church. Then during the60’s. Seeger was back singing in behalf ofequal education and open housing. Morerecently, he was back singing to protestthe war in Viet Nam.Of course, there have been some un¬fortunate changes. I think in retrospectthat we made a terrible mistake in urbanrenewing Hyde Park as we did.Throughout my childhood. 55th streetwas a dilapidated but cosmopolitanneighborhood shopping street (MikeNichols and Elaine May got their start atthe old Compass bar on 55th). At first itseemed sensible to replace this jumble ofold apartment houses and stores withshopping plazas, green spaces, and thelike. But it just hasn’t worked. The NewHyde Park Shopping Center hasn’treplaced the old 55th street, and evenNicky’s pizza just doesn't taste the sameas it did in the old hole-in-the-wall thatwas Nicky's first pizza parlor. Since thattime. I have received my second generaleducation in the College and have readJane Jacobs' The life and Death ofGreat American Cities. Now I realizethat the answer to the problem ofdeveloping a viable and safe urbanneighborhood is to be found in themaintenance of a neighborhood whichenhances interaction and which provideswhat Jacobs calls "eves on the street."supporting the moral force of the com¬munity. rather than in the creation ofgreen and useless spaces which are theurban developer’s dream but whichbecome merely blighted and dangerouspockets of further urban decay.The other unfortunate problem to besetHyde Park is the decline in the quality ofpre-collegiate education.^ I think thatwhat drives families out of Hyde Park isnot the crime which is supposed to existhere but. rather, the lack of good schoolsMuch of the money that went intoshopping centers and redesigned streetsshould have been spent on the develop¬ment of an educational park such as thatwhich was so much a matter of debate inthe sixties. For many families,especially those not connected with the /■n/ think in retrospect that we made a terrible mistake inurban renewing Hyde Park as we did. At first itseemed sensible to replace this jumble of old apart¬ment houses and stores with shopping plazas and greenspaces. But it just hasn't worked. Now I realize that todevelop a viable and safe urban neighborhood involvesinteraction, and support of the moral force of thecommunity.University, the'Lab School is just tooexpensive (tuition for non-universityaffiliated families is twice that paid onbehalf of the children of faculty andstaff). Further, it is easier to sendchildren to the Lab School than to spendtime and effort improving the quality ofpublic education. As a result, the com¬munity has been deprived of some of itsmost effective and vocal support onbehalf of better public education.In some respects, the community isvastly better off than it was during the50’s. If we have lost the Tropical Hutfrom 57th street (and who can forget theexperience of walking past on a snowywinter evening, and seeing the bar-bequed ribs roasting over the glowingcoals), there is now renewed deter¬mination to keep Hyde Park alive. Af¬ter all. there was a time when even theUniversity was seriously considering theprospect of moving out. (I am told theplan got so far that a means had beenfound to move Rockefeller Chapel stone-bv-stone to Mt. Carroll. Illinois, wherewe then had an affiliation with ShimerCollege.) The move to Hyde Park lastyear of McCormick TheologicalSeminary, and the expansion this pastyear of the Osteopathic Hospital meansthat other institutions in addition to theUniversity are committed to . thepreservation of this community.The use of land for such institutions hasits own costs. As a result of such moves. additional land and existing housing is nolonger available for students, youngerfaculty and staff, and young families inthe neighborhood. We must find someway to solve the demand for goodhousing in Hyde Park which has drivenreal estate prices to astronomical levels.Students and young families must beable to live here or we shall risk creatingthe kind of community like thatsurrounding Harvard in Cambridgewhere only the very poor and the veryrich can afford to live.Hyde Park has its own specialproblems. I think that we sometimes getcarried away with our ideologicalzeal such as is reflected in the murals(or lack of them) under the IC tracks, orthe problems involved in walking dogs orwalking where dogs have been. Effortdevoted to such problems may detract usfrom the larger issues confronting thiscommunity. However, in spite of ourexcesses. I think that we have preservedin Hyde Park, to an uncommon degree, asymbolic community which successfullyorganizes and preserves the collectivesentiments so essential to social life. It isa community well worth our collectiveefforts to protect and extend.Bertram Cohler is an associateprofessor in human development and ineducation. He won the Quantell awardin 1974.Shnuawy, ^/ea'mmce £/aJe <jUatmaes | lace1507 EAST 53rd STREET CHICAGO 60615▼L i *Grey City Journal • Friday, January 7, 1977 - 3VOLKSWASEN•CHEV RIP-OFFAUTO REPAIRFOREIGN CAR SPECIALISTSSERVICE ON VW& AUDIWe Offer Top-Quality Mechanical ServiceTune Ups * Electrical * Brake SystemExhaust System * Other RepairsConveniently Located at5508 S. Lake ParktGateway 'jvage B dq — Downsta-fS)V n-avv • Saturday 9am 9r*mCALL684-5166HILLEL STUDY GROUPSMONDAYS Martin Buber's Moses 3:00 P.M.Rabbi Daniel 1. leiferBeginners Yiddish 7:00 P.M.Mrs. Pearl KahanAdvanced Yiddish 8:30 P.M.Mrs. Pearl KahanTalmud 8:00 P.M.Rabbi Moses MeiselmanTUESDAYS Beginning Hebrew 6:30 P.M.Mr. Milla OhelAdvanced Hebrew 8:00 P.M.* Mr. Milla Ohel- The Elijah Story. InAncient to Modern JewishLiterature 8:00 P.M.Dr. Zanvel KleinWEDNESDAYS Midrash-Pesikta DeRovKahana 7:00 P.M.Rabbi Daniel 1. LeiferSymbols & Rituals of JewishLife Cycle & Festivals 8:30 P.M.Rabbi Daniel 1. 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All you need do is load a mag card, press afew keys and you’ll get answers that previouslyrequired a computer.You can make your own programs just as easily.In just a couple of hours you’ll begin toprove what a powerful asset you have-right at your fingertips.And there’s not a better time to get anSR-52 than right now.Texas Instruments will rebate $10 00 ot your original SR-56 purchase price whenyou (1) return this completed coupon including serial number (2) along with yourcompleted SR-56 customer information card (packed w box] and (3) a dated copyof proof of your purchase, verifying purchase between Jan 1 and March 31. 1977SR-SC Rebate OfferP.O.Box 1210Richardson Tern 75080NameAddressCitySR-56 Serial NoPlease allow 30 days for rebate State Zrp(from backot calculator) Electrical Engineering Statistics Math Finance Choose any two and (1) returnthis completed coupon including serial number along with (2) your completedSR-52 senabzed customer information card (packed in box) and (3) a dated copyot proof ot your purchase verifying purchase between Jan 20 ar,d March 31.1977SR-52 tree software library otterP 0 Box 1210Richardson Texas 75080NameAddressCitySR-52 Serial NoMath State Z%>Statistics (from back of calculator)_____ Finance EETexas Instruments reserves the right to substitute software libraries of equal valuebased upon availability Please allow 30 days for deliveryOttei vox) wtiere prohibited by ia« Good m Contnenoi ij S only' Suggested relax prxte19' Z Texas instruments incorporated Texas InstrumentsINCOR PORATEO4 - firey Cjty Journal Friday, January 7,1277wmmmmmmmm 9 »University of Chicago in Hyde Park: Random Recollections 1946-1958By David RiesmanWhen I arrived at the University ofChicago at the beginning of 1946,1 arrivedalong with a great many Veterans andothers returning from War service to findno place to live at all. My wife and I boughta large home, more than we wanted orneeded, at 5621 University Avenue, intowhich we were able to move in the fall; butuntil then, I had to scramble from hotel tohotel almost on a weekly basis, sincehotels were not allowed to keep permanentresidents in view of the housing shortage.It was a miserable life, made no easier bythe fact of having to get up simultaneouslyboth a new round of Social Sciences IIIwhich started in the winter term, and thesecond term for those who had begun in theregular fall term. There was no time totake advantage of the city, near or far.Once my wife and four children weresettled in that large house opposite whatwas then Stagg Field, my mood andsituation changed dramatically. It waswonderful to be so near to Mandel Hallwhere I lectured in Soc. II (now Self.Culture, and Society) so near to theSocial Science Research Building whereI later had my office, so near to the tenniscourts at the Quadrangle Club and theall-important covered courts a half ablock away in the other direction.And under the guidance of such Chicago-loving friends as Everett and HelenHughes, I began to explore the enormousand e\ ■ *•• ^ Chicago—not so muchHvde Park itselt. as all the environs:steel nr.'is ss.u suburbs; Frank LloydWright houses (I helped defend retentionof the Robie House when it looked as if itmight be torn down). Everett Hughesand I used to bicycle or walk along thefront—one of the most magnificent stagefronts for a city even if one is aware thatall that lies behind the stage front includesmuch that is tawdry, far from beautiful,and racially and ethnically troubled anddivided Still, the mood was one of hope, andthere was enough residue of the older“Chicago School” of sociology—indeed,there still is—to interest students in theCity and its exploration.More significant, as I compare Chicagowith my present institution, for example,was the fact that virtually all the facultylived within walking distance of theUniversity, although few lived quite asclose by as my family and I did—or themany graduate students to whom werented out rooms on our capacious thirdfloor. Harvard faculty are scattered all'over the Boston metropolitan area,.because housing in Cambridge isprohibitively expensive and cannotpossibly meet the needs of so large afaculty. But, as people are always sur¬prised to discover, given its worldwidedistinction, the University of Chicago issmall. And hence, most of its faculty couldlive nearby. A great many, ourselves in¬ cluded, sent children to the LaboratorySchool which in turn brought us intocontact with professional families, oftengraduates of the University, who hadsettled in the Hyde Park area.Compared to other eminent universities,the University of Chicago was in my dayunusually egalitarian. The blackpsychologist, Allison Davis, and his wnewere valued friends; so were the St. ClairDrakes. In Hyde Park, in part perhapsbecause there, it was assumed that womenwould have, if not professional careers, atleast professional interests; there was notthe stag quality which I had known as aHarvard undergraduate and rediscoveredwhen I came to Harvard to teach in 1958.At the same time, the intellectual life ofthe University and its milieu was ex¬traordinarily intense— more so than anyother institution I have seen anywhere. Itwas highly verbal with little interest in thearts; students and faculty were in¬ tellectually combative, but only oc¬casionally (as in music) aestheticallyengaged. For all its vibrancy, this im¬balance, which extended also to RobertHutchins’s hostility to athletic sports,helped engender a somewhat dehydratedquality at the University—perhaps a pricepaid for its very qualities of intellectualintensity. To leave was a hard decision,and my memories and affections remainstrong.The mood was one of hope, andthere was enough residue of theolder "Chicago School" ofsociology— indeed, there still is—to interest students in the city andits exploration.David Riesman is the William Jamesprofessor of sociology at Harvard. Hisbook The Lonely Crowd was based onwork he did in Hyde Park in the 1940'sand '50’s, when he taught Soc. II (nowSelf. Culture, and Society!.56th Street looking westMAB presentsPROFESSOR PETER SCHICKELEperforming and explaining away the music ofPDQ BACH5 D Q Bach: Suite from The Civilian Barberkhickele: Chaconne a' son Goutieethoven : Symphony 5 (New Horizons in MusicAppreciation) A sportscast with Pete Schickele andMel Zellman (of WFMT)5 D Q Bach: Echo Sonata for Two Unfriendly Groups ofInstruements5 D Q Bach: Missa Hilarious^rofessor Schickele will be accompanied by TheUniversity of Chicago Retrograde Music SocietyOrchestra and Chorus, conducted by Mr. James MackSaturday, January 8,8:30 PMSunday, January 9,3:30 PMHandel Hall, 57th & Universityi>7.50/$5.50>5.50/ $3.50 with activities fee\11 seats reserved\vailable at Reynolds Club Desk, open from 9:30amto 9:30pmfo find our current availability of tickets, call 753-3563Grey City Journal - Friday, January 7, 1977 5■I tV.:.'|# '■fe' M r v:V•. ..|| m ; *. ;VCh’^.i^ > has been a good c:t\ tor jazzmusicians. Many have roots here, whileothers have lived or worked in Chicagof ring crucial periods in their careers,me years have been better than othersbut as jazz musicians have longrecognized, “if it ain’t happening inChicago, it ain’t happening anywhere ”Unfortunately, jazz musicians have notdone too well in Chicago in recent years.The scene may be changing, however, forin the last 15 months or so. a number ofclubs have begun to feature jazz once; ,f Sogal. who has done more thananyone else to preserve Chicago’s jazzheritage, is doing a good job in bringingmany of the best jazz musicians workingtoday to the Jazz Showcase Bill Snyder’simaginative bookings at Rick’s CafeAmericain give many young Chicagoans achance to hear the likes of Urbie Greenand Art Van Damme for the first time.Regular engagements at Ratso’s of jazzgreats such as Carmen Macrae. Earl“Fatha” Hines. Stan Getz, and manyothers have filled a rather terrifyingvacuum *n Chicago’s night life for jazzaficionados. Other clubs throughout theChicago area present jazz on an occasionalbasis. Maynard Ferguson's and other bigbands are now appearing in Chicagoalmost every week, tooNot all that bad. Not all that good. Whatis absent in the current scene are thehundreds of clubs that used to presentlocal jazz groups every night - or at leaston weekends They disappeared slowly,one by one. during the late Fifties aridearly Sixties as rock came to dominate thepopular music scene They made for un¬forgettable Friday night's of travelingaround the city to catch your favoritegroups at five or six clubs at a cost of $15 or$20 for you and your date. And if your werean aspiring musician, you could bring yoursax along and sit in. perhaps even land agig. Those clubs were of ten hangouts forpeople who were as colorful as the namesof the places: Satyr’s Camp. FirstQuarter. Club Alibi. McKee's Show-Lounge. Joe’s Club........Chicago was an easy place to live inthose days. Jazz clubs seldom paid anyattention to race, and blacks and whiteslaughed together and simply dugthe music In the mid-Fifties. when I was inhigh school, my two favorite spots for bigname jazz were the Blue Note on Clarknear Madison < located above the old ClarkTheateri and the Sutherland Lounge in thehotel of the same name at 47th andDrexel. Whatever prejudices I hadassimilated as a child in Berwyn andCicero disappeared during my many visitsto those two clubs The Blue Note providedteenagers with a special section where softdrinks w ere sold, not in a lost corner of theroom, but just off from the bandstand.Duke Ellington. Count Basie. GeorgeShearing. Gerry Mulligan, and WoodyHerman often worked the Blue Note inthose days The Sutherland was perhapsmore of a bebop room, and Dizzy Gillespieand Clark Terry, appeared there often.Labels such as “bebop.’’ ‘’progressivejazz.” and all the rest never meant much to me, however, for all of the musicianswhom I heard played jazz and I dug it.The reason that the Blue Note and theSutherland stood out from all the rest ofthe jazz clubs in Chicago was quite simple.Their ambience was electrifying. Once theband took off. the entire evening was filledwith excitement as the audience sharedthe feeling with the musicians thateverything was all right and could only getbetter and better. First sets almost alwayswere boring, but usually during the middleof the second set. someone would get off onjust the right solo and put everyone in theroom in just the right groove, the ownersof the Blue Note and the Sutherland lovedjazz too. and did all they could to makeeach evening enjoyable. They wanted theircustomers - and the musicians - to have agood time. They wanted to have funthemselves. So you weren’t hassled fordrinks, though jazz buffs have neverneeded much encouragement to order around of drinks. By the time the bandplayed its final encore for the evening,everyone was ready to hit an all-nightclub.After-hours places used to abound inChicago Musicians loved them becausethey could play anything they wantedsince they played for free and on their owntime. These ciubs gave local jazz people achance to play with the real pros.Customers never quite knew what to ex¬pect * except some of the best musicaround. Police raids were always possible,of course, and they happened wheneverthe owner of an all-night club had failed totake care of the proper individuals. Syn¬dicate-operated spots had the least chanceof being busted since they made the mostmoney from such operations and sharedtheir wealth generously.A number of other clubs in Chicagoduring these years often featured top jazzmusicians, too. especially Mister Kelly’sand the London House. But I’ve neverconsidered either of these to be authenticjazz clubs because they catered to thewrong crowds, usually a bland mixture ofsuburbanites and tourists, particularlyconventioneers or businessmen who rarelyknew the first thing about jazz Once in awhile I would go to the London House tohear George Shearing, but invariably mydate and I would end up next to a foursomewho would talk loudly, as if Shearing wereplaying background music, while theyswapped tales about their latest purchasesfrom Sears. Roebuck & Co. The club scene that provided so manyjazz musicians with work has been gonefor a long time, but during its day it wascomplemented by some outstanding jazzradio programs in Chicago. Driving late atnight from club to club, you could catch SidMcCoy and Yvonne Daniels on VVCFL.rapping between numbers on their mid¬night til dawn program and making youfeel as if they were riding along with you.Have you ever driven up the Outer Driveat around two in the morning while CountBasie's band plays “Moten Swing” overyour car radio’.’Or. if you had the blues and were homealone, jazz until morning was one of thebest ways to get hold of yourself. Joe Segalused to have a late-evening program overWGES that introduced many of us to jazzfor the very first time. Dave Garro way’s1160 Club over WMAQ from midnight untiltwo during the late 1940s was without adoubt the best of them all. Dave might playa piece by the Duke, then go back andrepeat the solos two or three times.That’s something you can do at home, ofcourse. But in those days not many jazzbuffs had large record collections.Remember that 78s or 45s sold for 79 centsapiece, and people, especially students,simply didn’t have the money. .Now onecan go to a record store and pick up adozen or so albums and instantly have acollection that jazz buffs in the Fiftiescould only dream about. A number ofstations played jazz at different timesduring the day. however, so you couldalways keep up with what was going on,A number of major record companiescut records in Chicago until the mid-Sixties. giving local jazz musiciansanother source of income. But that scenehas faded, too. Universal RecordingStudios on Walton and Rush is stilloperating, however, and remains one ofthe best in the nation. Artists continue tohire its 'facilities regardless of their ownlabel Stan Kenton, for example, has madeseveral albums there in recent yearsOther recording studios have opened inChicago during the last few years, for¬tunately. and perhaps times will get betterfor our local musicians. Whether themajors will come back to Chicago remainsto be seen.No one has ever given a good ex¬planation as to why Chicago has playedsuch an important part in the evolution ofjazz. Even in the first decades of thiscentury, much more was happening inChicago in the way of jazz than anywhereelse - including New Orleans. The mythabout the “birth of the blues” obscureswhat was going down here m the earlydecades of the century. Chicago was it. New York became the focal point duringthe Thirties, especially during the SuingEra But Chicago was as lively as ever andkept turning out excellent jazz artists.Chicago continued producing out¬standing jazz artists after World WarTwo Just listen to the recordings of BennyGoodman. Lionel Hampton. Gene Am¬mons - or of any of the hundreds andhundreds of others that have origins here.1 have never found another city that hasthe dvnamism of Chicago. It’s a city thatcan be overpowering, especially whenMaynard Ferguson . Count Basievour are young and just beginning. Jazzmusicians, if they are any good, have adetermination and a sense of commitmentthat can go a long way to overcome almostany obstacle. The city of Chicago often hasplaced roadblocks in their way. Just a fewvears ago the Chicago Board of Educationproposed the elimination of the art andmusic curricula in our public schoolsystem. Fortunately, many musiciansprotested including a good number of jazzartists who came up through the city’spublic school Benny Goodman came hometo remind the Board how much he and hisearly sidemen owed to such courses andprograms.Jazz musicians are different from otherpeople Their lifestyles appearmysterious, almost decadent, to the nine-to-fivers. Movies and novel usually presentjazz musicians as addicts, whether to harddrugs or alcohol. Gene Krupa's narcoticsbust in the early postwar years convincedmany people that this was an accurateportrayal of jazz musicians. A movie thatdepicted a jazz artist as one who practicedat home five hours a day. went to arecording session at three in the afternoon,then came home for dinner with his familybefore going to a seven-hour gig at a nightclub would be a box office disaster Butthat happens to be the way most good jazzmusicians get by.It’s not an easy life Most Chicagoansdon't live easy lives. Chicagoans workThey survive. Perhaps there’s a rhythm, apace to the city that fosters jazz - in goodtimes and in bad. Whatever Chicago has.it's been home to many jazz musicians in away that New York. Philadelphia. Detroit,or Los Angeles have not been and couldnever beI hope that the resurgence of jazz clubsin Chicago during the last year will con¬tinue. It would be great to live throughanother era in Chicago that was as muchfun as the Fifties and early Sixties wereMaybe we’re going in that direction,maybe not. But for right now. take ad¬vantage of what’s going on in the local jazzscene. You'll never forget it if you doGeorge Spink is Assistant Director ofDevelopment at the University and hosts' ■Saturday Swing Shift” over \VHPK ~FM«f mt oca*comncrts tout mhnciTHAT TOUtSILf #|$AMO TOM GWSTStilt OMIT Oiit Of IT'S KINO IN INI H.P. AREAAt Horp+r Court SKoppIny c»n«»rSmS. Horpcr C 7 2«» 51 SIpipe NEW CLASS AT HILL EL HOUSETHE ELIJAH STORY; In Ancient to Modern Jewish—— LiteratureTime: TUESDAY, JANUARY 4, at 8:00 F.MWhere: SY15 Woodlawn AvenueTeacher: Dr. Zanvel Klein LOX AND BAGEL BRUNCHFIRST LOX AND BAGEL BRUNCHOF WINTER QUARTERSUNDAY, JANUARY 9th, 11:00 A.M.COSY $1.75HIllEl FOUNDAYION, 5715 WOODLAWNJean-Louis Bertucelli’sRMPRRTS OF CLRYSunday, Jan. 910 COBB HULLA White Collar Community RememberedBy William KomblumSo many of my memories of Chicago areabout people seeking ways to keep theirfamilies and their neighborhoods together,and struggling against difficult odds tomake a good life and to live in peace witheach other. The teaching and personalexamples of mentors like Morris Janowitzand Ari Zolberg led me to make this asubject for professional research. But myown personal experiences with the citybroucht me there also.In our first year in Hyde Park as anewly married couple we had a littleapartment near Cottage Grove. Ourbuilding was filled with the usual mixtureof spacy graduate student couples and amenagerie of pre-infant pets. Sojournersall. we were gently tolerated by the blackpeople who organized that neighborhoodand made it their permanent home. Afrequent visitor on the block at that time inthe 1960's was Little Milton, a rhythm andblues singer whose up-tempo hit song thenwas ‘ We re Gonna Make It.” But toomany of the people we were close to neverdid.One of our best friends was HelenMcGill, a second grade teacher at the LabSchool. We'd been in West Africa withHelen as teachers in the early days of thePeace Corps Helen had led a Cinderellalife there. As a young and beautiful blackwoman from America she captivated thepowerful families in the country. Back inher native Gary. Indiana, though, shestruggled again. She worked hard to in¬troduce ideas about open classrooms in theLab School, and she struggled with herown poor educational background to do graduate work at the University. The M.A.she earned while teaching full-time wasone of the proudest achievements of herlife. But a series of personal tradgedies. ofthe kind South Side people know too wellstruck Helen. Personal illness and theviolent deaths of people she loved tookmost of the joy from her life. In the sim¬plified imagery -of memory I think ofHelen's death as her way of not becominga bitter person. I see her dancing the"Mashed Potatoes” and the “High Life” inthe discos and dusky clubs of AbidjanIt was Helen who first introduced me tothe steel-making side of Chicago. In 1964 Ipaled around Gary with her during thecampaign for president of the UnitedSteelworkers Union. Most of the men inHelen's neighborhood were going to votefor I.W. Able because he was the anti¬establishment candidate. The hard¬working men we knew in the Gary ghettofound little to praise in the playboyunionism of incumbent president DavidMcDonald. So Able was their choice forunion president then, but if you walk thestreets of Gary or any of the other steeltowns South of the University moststeelworkers today will tell you' they'regoing with Ed Sadlowski against Abie’sman in the campaign for union leadership.Twelve years after the Able-McDonaldbattle another maverick is bucking theunion establishment. This time the con¬tender is one of their own. a guy theypromoted to national prominance them¬selves by electing him against the worstpossible odds in the Chicago-Gary District31 election two years earlier. And onceagain, after twelve years of relative political stagnation, the rallying cry forthe insurgents is “bring the union back tothe membership.” A vital aspect of thiscall is the desire to make this great in¬stitution of the worker into a more activeforce in the affairs of the membership intheir neighborhoods and their com¬munities.I have no guarantee that if Ed Sadlowskiwere to become the head of thesteelworkers union he would be able toaccomplish this feat. Nor do I have anyassurance that he would remain forevertrue to his ideal of union democracy.Despite my love for him and the people heleads under it all is a political sociologist.We tend to see the frailties of democracy inthe face of bureaucratic authority. Still, asthey say in South Chicago. “The game is inthe streets.” Should this hero lapse or tireanother will come to challange. There isthat faith. And besides all this. EdSadlowski is something rare: he is apolitical phenomenon of natureFor me Ed represents the best aspects ofworking class life in America, just as didHelen McGill in her own way. Back in themid 1960’s Sadlowski supported OpenOccupancy when you could have beentarred and feathered in his neighborhoodfor doing so. In 1968 he was arrested forsitting down in front of a Jewel Food storewith the Farm Workers Grape Boycott. Inthe same year he introduced anti-warresolutions in every union convention-fromSouth Chicago to Springfield. As presidentof U S. Steel’s South Works, he refused tosign the basic steel agreement which hadbeen negotiated by Able and the corporateexecutives in Washington, because the union membership had never an op¬portunity to vote on its terms.I am convinced that the insurgents willwin the union leadership next Februarywhen the election is held. There arehow hundreds, and soon there will bethousands, of unionists ail over thiscountry and Canada who will see to it thatthe election and the vote count are honest.This could be one of the most significantand constructive outcomes of all the grassroots organizing experience that so manyChicago people gained during the late1960’s and early years of this decade. I amnot very involved in this campaign, exceptthat as a friend of the Chicago insurgents Ido some work in my area around NewYork City. My goal is to settle in for thelonger haul: to help my wife so she canhave a satisfying career; to spend timewith my young children: to be active in acommunity and to ply my trade as asociologist. I've seen to many good peoplefrom Chicago and elsewhere along theroad become burned out in politics or inlife generally. And then there are peoplefrom Chicago of the 1960’s who are still inhiding, who are hunted, and who askthemselves for what purpose now. I feellucky to have lived in Chicago, to have hadgreat teachers and to have formedfriendships with people like Ed Sadlowskiand Helen McGill.William Komblum is a sociologist atthe graduate center. City University ofNew York. While living in Hyde Parkhe lived and worked with Ed Sadlowskiand the steelworkers and wrote BlueCollar Community <Univ. of Chicago.Press i.St Gregoryof Nyssa\ Lutheran CampusChurchFESTIVAL OF THE EPIPHANYSunday 10:30 a.m.Graham Taylor Chapel5757 So. University Ave. PIZZAPLATTER14MK.SMMl 3-2800FAST DELIVERY ii AND PICKUP ! Young Designs byELIZABETH CORDONHair Designers1620 E. 53rd St.288-29007 Days A WeekHYDE PARK PIPE AND TOBACCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - under 1C tracksAil students get 10% offask for “Big Jim"Pipm Toke«oi Imported ClparettM Clpw«The Uni\ersit\ is CourtTHtATSbCourt Theatre invites you to an Open HouseFriday, January 7, 5-7 P.M.in the New Theatre, 1st floor Reynolds ClubRefreshmentsIf you are interested in acting ortechnical work, come and find out what sgoing on this Quarter. a ajeNt'VALFtAScSUN, 1AM Id. HUTCH!N’$0\r COMMONS. 5-$0rvj U C. Students Faculry ir Sratf * 72* ’I DEADLYE for ticket sales Frt. Ian. 7I Tickets available ar Mandel Hall Ticker ^j Booth or in Ida Noyes 20P Mji/o S Harper*ift Harp*rMO 7-/040 MUSICAL INSTRUMENTSWe specialize in new instruments of finequality, plus gently used, old-time man¬dolins banjos, guitars & fiddles. Visit ussoon and let us help you find the in¬strument you want at the price you conafford.Also books, accessories, repairs, in¬struction.KArATEUC KARATE CLUB cordially invites vou to a freeINTRODUCTORY Calss being held atIDA NOYES HALL On MON. Jan 10 7 p m 8 p mGrey City Journal • Friday. January 7, tf77 7Attention: The Teaching FacultyBook requirement forms will be delivered to all academic departments on January 7th. If youwill be teaching a course during the Spring quarter of 1977, please ask your departments onJanuary 7th. If you will be teaching a course during the Spring quarter of 1 977, please ask yourdepartmental secretaries for these forms and return them to the textbook office by MondayJanuary 17th.Please keep in mind that if the book requirements are turned in on time, the course materialwill be available to your students that much earlier.If you have not received your froms by January 7th, or if you need additional forms, please feelfree to call me, ext. 753-3305 or 753-331 3.Ronald HarrisManager, Textbook DepartmentTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTOREKing>Size entertainmentfor everyone!4 \ * *4King KongDino De Laurentits presentsa John Guillermin Film"King Kong’-Jarnny Jeff Bridges Charles Grodin Introducing Jessica LangeEsecutive Producers Federico De Laurent in and Christian Ferry Screenplay by Lorenzo Semple. JrProckiced by DinoDe Laurentns Directed by John GuillerminMusic Composed and CoiidttL ted by John Barry Fbnac tsrm* in Color A Paramount Release' sm*.wm\iPC'WBrm SUttfSTIO ^^, n.tgl t- ft* ;*» fc» *<y<!>• U KJV', NfJNO4TH SPECTACULAR WEEK!State Lake, Ford City, Gateway, Morton Grove,Oow*K*w*> ChKfo J y Mono' bm.Woodfield, Vjrktown, RiverOaks, Ridge Plaza,mi. lomfc.-a C«r '“'o‘it** I".f - Grey City Journal - Friday, January 7,1977 writers wantedThe Maroon is looking forpeople to join its writing staff.Anyone interested is en¬couraged to drop by our officeon the third floor of Ida Noyes.4 * % • 4 ICreating a Community:Harper CourtBy Muriel BeadleHarper Court, just north of 53rd Streeton Harper Avenue, is a four-buildingcomplex of shops, the tenants of whichoffer a wide range of specialized goods andservices.It looks like any small shopping centerwhose architects went to some pains togive it character.. The buildings havepitched roofs and skylights and aredesigned to accommodate shops on twolevels. The brick-paved central courtyardis a community gathering place. In mildweather, its benches are popular with localbrown-baggers.In conception and operation, however,Harper Court is unlike any other shoppingcenter in the country. It was created inresponse to the dislocation of merchantswhich accompanied urban renewal ac¬tivities in the late 1950’s and early 1960’sand is run on a not-for-profit basis by agroup of local citizens who have charteredthemselves as the Harper Court Foun¬dation.Because the Hyde Park-Kenwood urbanrenewal plan required a reduction inpopulation density in the community, thefirst concern of the planners was torelocate displaced residents. By 1962, ithad become apparent that we were losingvalued shopkeepers, too.Among those were artists, craftsmen(potters, picture framers, upholsterers,cabinet makers) and owners of specialtyshops whose volume or turnover was small(used bookstores, custom services). Suchenterprises, along with any shop opened bya beginning businessman whose capital isseverely limited, require the low-rentspace that can most easily be found in acommunity’s older buildings.Such space was vanishing. The newcommercial buildings which were going upin Hyde Park in the 1960’s cost so much toconstruct that rents were necessarilygoing to be higher than merchants in thecategories just described could afford.They were therefore being forced to moveelsewhere or go out of business altogether.In the early 1960’s, the citizens of thiscommunity were intensely involved inconrete projects supplemental to the ur¬ban renewal plan. Harper Court, originallythe brainchild of a sub-committee of theHyde Park-Kenwood Community Con¬ference, was among the most innovative ofsuch projects because it found a way tooffer low-rent space in new construction.Three devices were used:1. A 25-year loan of $480,000 was obtainedfrom the Small Business Administration ofthe federal government. This sumrepresented 80 percent of the cost of theproject, a larger percentage than acommerical institution would have loaned,leaving only 20 percent of the cost —$120,000 — to be raised locally.The term of the loan was also ex¬ceptionally long (by conventional com¬mercial standards). Mortgage paymentsspread over 25 years instead of, say, 15years made possible a lower than averagerent structure in Harper Court. 2. Investors were given a very minimalreturn. The $120,000 equity was raised byselling debentures which pay only 6 per¬cent interest. Local residents boughtdebentures for civic reasons rather thanfor financial gain.3. A sliding scale of rents was devised,artists and craftsmen to pay less than theHarper Court break-even rate and themore commercially-oriented shops to paymore than the break-even rate, thenumber .of tenants in each category to becontrolled so that total income would beadequate to operate the Court.This balancing act has been difficult toperform. Throughout its 12-year history,Harper Court has either been in the red orjust barely in the black — thanks to in¬flation, rising taxes, occasional vacancies,and debts owed by failed merchants. Thishas saddened but not dismayed the HarperCourt Foundation’s board of directors,who knew from the beginning that theywere engaged in a high-risk venture.At present, the board is composed of 18community residents and is headed byAlbert M. Hayes. Other officers are EzraGordon, Barbara Fiske, Robert Sandberg,and John McCausland. Management of theproperty is shared by the board’sexecutive secretary, Florence Weisblatt,and the local real estate firm of KennedyRyan Monigal.There are not as many artists anacraftsmen in Harper Court today as therewere in the beginning, partly because suchshops have a high mortality rate andpartly because there are now so manyoutlets in Chicago for handmade goodsthat artisans do not need to establish theirown shops.Nevertheless, Harper Court continues todo what it was designed to do: offerbeginning businessmen a chance to testtheir ideas in the marketplace and providea congenial home for merchants who caterto specialized Hyde Park tastes.Its shopkeepers offer art supplies,natural foods, custom draperies, hand¬crafts, gourmet cookware, sewing sup¬plies, potted plants, clothing, shoes, petsupplies, toys, and giftwares from all overthe world. Stringed instruments, tennisrackets, and lamps can be bought orbrought in for repair. There are tworestaurants, two bookstores, and aveterinarian. One entire building (FORM)is given over to home furnishings.Harper Court has brightened the eastend of the 53rd Street shopping area, at¬tracting similar shoos to the environs.During the period when herhusband was the President of. theUniversity, Muriel Beadle helped toorganize the Harper Court Foundation,which developed and operates HarperCourt. After serving as its president for tenyears, she recently retired but continuesas one of Its directors. 20°toany item on the menui. e. S$- flu/l wine wfAi/ctfUy, $3501508 EAST 53rd STREETPHONE 667-2000■ ■-!. W> . - ■ ' ’ 1 'VJrev Citv Journal - f^ridav.' ^ILocal Politics: the role ofthe Independent AldermanBy James RedfieldThe alderman of the Fifth Ward has atleast three separate functions. As the onelocally-elected member of the citygovernment he has the task offacilitating and monitoring the provisionof city services to residents of the 5thward. People call his office with com-Dlaints about neighborhood securitv.cleanliness, repair oi streets, garbagecollection, sewers, etc. i The sewers are aparticularly lively topic, since the FifthWard sometimes seems to be sinking intothe lake as Venice is sinking into theAdriatic. > The alderman's office doeswhat it can to respond to these com-Dlaints. and is often effective.Second, the Fifth Ward alderman is.and as long as memory serves has been,one of Chicago's few independentaldermen As such he helps to providethe City Council with an opposition, andto maintain debate within the city on all¬city topics, so that the city council ismore than a mere rubber-stamp for theMayor.Finally the alderman, as the onlyward-government official elected by theward, serves as a kind of informalchairman of debate within the ward: henot only has views of his own. he tries todraw together the views of others, toclarify issues and develop consensus onlocal auestions.The aldermen of the Fifth Ward havebeen a distinguished lot. includingCharles Merriam. Paul Douglas, andmost recently. Leon Despres. Despreshad been alderman for so long that manyof us assumed he always would be. butbefore the last election he retired. It tooktwo elections to replace him Finally,after a run-off election against A1 Raby.Ross Lathrop 'by a narrow margin, aridmuch to the surprise of many observers )was elected alderman.Ross Lathrop had never run for officebefore; while he had been involved inseveral communitv-service projects, he had never been a political figure. He issomething of a new boy on the block, andhas been going through the process ofbeing tested, both by the cityorganization, and by the various in¬dependent organizations which make upmuch of local politics. He has beenlearning on the job — and since he has atleast three jobs there is a lot to learn InJob One he has been maintaining a full-service office which is directed by hisassistant Renny Heath. This office is aresource for all of us. He has also helpedbring about certain concrete changes —for instance, the traffic light at 57th andthe Drive.In Job Two he has become mostnotable for the “Lathrop log jam.’’ aprocedural move organized jointly by theindependents which complicated the lifeof the city council for some days until thecouncil agreed that legislation in¬troduced by independent aldermenwould be referred to working committeesfor proper discussion. In the city ofChicago, even a proper proceduralhearing can be hard to come by.In Job Three he has been active onmany issues, most visibly on thequestions of the future of the South ShoreCounty Club, and of Jackson Park andassociated roadways. These questionsare far from settled, and the neigh¬borhood is far from reaching a consensuson any of the questions. One place to keeptrack of the arguments is the Hyde ParkHerald. -•The alderman Works with the FifthWard Citizens Committee (FWCC). Thisis a group of residents, formally self-oerpetuating. but informally self-selected: it generally takes in those whowish to join its work. The FWCC workswith the alderman in' all three jobs.The Fifth Ward includes Hyde Park,and also large parts of Wood! awn andSouth Shore. The largest singleorganization in the ward is the Univer¬sity of Chicago, but the University by nomeans dominates the w ard, or even HydePark. Nor does this area speak with asingle voice: it is not a community, butcontiguous parts of many communitiesIn so far as the ward has (occasionally)reached some kind of apparent con¬sensus. it has been because someresidents have been able to define whatthey look upon as a local position versussome body — occasionally the Univer¬sity. more often the city. Paradoxicallythis means that the ward defines itselfversus a part of itself, or versus that ofwhich it is a part. Those who have spokenup for such an apparent consensus haveinvariably found themselves engaged inargument with some of the very peoplethey claim to represent No doubt this ishealthy, but it does mean that the jobsome ascirbe to the alderman — that ofTHE ECSTASY AND THEAGONY-' ISRAELILITERATURELITERARY RESPONSES TO THE $JA DWAND YON KIPPUR WARS.PROF. UARREIV BAR6AD m miLTo/v «.RATNU. PROF OF HtBRttd UT- KT SPCKT05COLIC6t OF JUDAIC# , CHICA60 CHINESE AMERICANRESTAURANT* Specializing inCAKTONCSf ANDAMERICAN DISHtSortN DAILY11 A.NL TO 4:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO *90 P.M.Qrdmn to ovt13 latest *9r4 MU 4*1003FfU. JAN. 7 S30 m AT Hllte*5TIS UJOOOi/lUiN Renewal(continued from page 2)ministration, and Harry Weese’s PierceHall, to be extinguished by Edward DurellStone’s Center for Continuing Education.I.W. Coburn's Middle-Earth monumentson Ellis Avenue and the Industrial Gothicextensions of Billings Hospital. WalterNetsch was allowed to crack one joke (theRegenstein Library) before beingbanished from the campus. The biggestjoke, though, was the urban renewal planfor the area, developed largely by JackMeltzer and his colleagues, which clearedout most of the lost institutions mentionedearlier and replaced them, if at all, with amixed bag of buildings, among the best ofwhich are townhouse and apartmentclusters by Weese, Pei, and Gordon-Levinat scattered locations in the community.George Fred Keck, whose office had madeimportant early contributions to ar¬chitecture in Chicago and elsewhere, wasrepresented in the renewal mainly by hisheavy-handed and rather Stalinist HarperSquare. Lost in the shuffle, of course, werehundreds of vernacular buildings, some ofexcellent quality, and many fine bay-windowed stone fronts on streets like 55thand 47th.Student hang-outs were concentrated on57th Street, with an outpost at Reader’sDrug Store south of Burton-Judson at 61stand Ellis and others in the watering holeson 55th. Steinway’s Drug Store at 57th andKenwood served as home base for many,including at least one Philip Rothcharacter. Gordon’s restaurant, now TheDove, was a regular refuge for after-studysnacks and high-flown discussions. ShagDonohue’s Red Door Book Store, a sanc¬tuary on the 57th Street side of the presentweecl patch extending between Kimbarkand Kenwood, offered the latest baseballscores as well as literate conversation andimported books; Walter Schneeman, whotook it over later and eventually moved itto the site of the present Medici restaurantas the Green Door, could boast of personalacquaintance with Ford Madox Ford. Hiswife Peggy, who took over when Walterdeparted, increased weekly sales of theSunday New York Times (for which herswas the only outlet in the community) toheroic proportions, but eventually lost out High-fidelity freaks swapped notes therein an era when the only way to get goodsounds was by assembling your owncomponents. An independent drug storewhere actual comic books could be pur¬chased occupied the northeast corner ofBlackstone and for a brief period a goodHungarian restaurant could be found in abuilding since demolished at Lake ParkAvenue. But the most popular institutionon the street was undoubtedly TheTropical Hut. a Midwest Polynesianemporium featuring shaggy bamboo andraffia decor and a barbeque of remarkableintensity which drew students, neigh¬borhood hangers-on and slumming out¬siders from as far away as Rogers Park.Along with the Red Door and MaryWomer’s Gallery, the T-Hut lost out to theneo-suburbanites and became part of theweed patch which now extends northwardto 56th. Meanwhile the 57th Street Branchof Hyde Park High School, which hadoccupied an old building at the northeastcorner of Kenwood and which added to thepopulation of teenagers and other un¬desirables in that vicinity, made way forthe present tot lot.In addition to its taverns and night clubs,Hyde Park boasted four movie theaters:the present Hyde Park, then the Harper;the Hyde Park located next to the HydePark Bank Building on Lake ParkAvenue: the Picadilly, last of the big-timemovie palaces at 51st and Blackstone; andthe Frolic, a small house on 55th near Ellisthat offered the only backwards layout inChicago: you entered from the front, ateither side of the screen, flashing the lobbylights in the eyes of every member of theaudience. Weekly showings of the latestGreen Hornet or Lone Ranger installmenthelped to enliven the proceedings. Nobody ~/i,,t* ” /*- w.j*:smoked or fornicated in the balconies,?|^®foS2fealthough a certain amount of popcorn and Scandy wrapper crunching was condoned,and sorority girls from Hyde Park High . tand the Lab School could often be heard *>:discussing nail polishes.To recount the joys and sorrows of those /not-too-remote times is to invite sensationsof a certain golden nostalgia that does notfairly express the real nature of the era.Hard-nosed realists recall another HydePark which they could write about withoutfalling into the elegiac mode, as I fear this f?;JrL ramble may have done occasionally. The« striving, the pain, the brutality of those v 1■ ■ * ■ ■' ’ ... ... .to the present pizza parlor. *|l „6, M.v. ^Elsewhere on 57th Street were the -; days are clear to anyone who lived throughfamous but rather stodgy Woodworth’s them For those newly arrived, however,Book Store, with its legendary messaged; and for those who may have forgotten the jtree and its tennis racket restringing and way it was, it seems important to convey,rtypewriter repair departments, and at least some faint appreciation of what fM'Lowe’s record shop, where in 1947 33 RPM •has been lost in the name of progress,records were just coming in, and where Perhaps next time we will have theMaggie Teyte’s 78’s were still popular, wisdom to do it better'being spokesman for the ward as a whole f: Daley:'"and one's own l can testifv that „-is an impossible pne. . there is no better antidote to this opinion^For decades the Fifth Ward has been§* than vthe* hard^slog ! of rdoor-to-door.isfeiengaged in an embattled struggle to rorecinct Avork^Withirt^the sometimes^l^maintain its political independence. This ,v maddeningly 'complex interlockingit has done, not by achieving unity, but by / oattern of local organizations there is - ..tolerating and even encouraging jL room for evervone to be involved://^ 'diversity. This diversity continues to be a^ v -■ v ■■ ■ ^fact, even if sometimes an unrecognized ^ T „ r - , >fact. It iseasv. in the Fifth Ward, to Qome ^^mes. field is professor of socuthought and in the college., He is alsdW}the co-chairman of the Fifth WardCitizen's Committee. . ^to believe that there must be only two/opinions on any topic: that of Mayor':Dorothy SmithBeauty Salon5841 BlackstoneHY 3-1069ooen 7 A M.-7 PM.Mon thru FrLclosed SaturdayHair Cutting Wedgies • etcTinting Bleaching - Perms.only the bes>Call for appt BUDDHIST EDUCATIONAL CENTERThe Buddhist Temple of Chicago4645 N. Racine Ave., Chicago, Illinois 606401Phone: 784-1661, 334-4661, 334-1617PROGRAM FOR WINTER '77WINTER TERM 10 Weeks January 10-March 18,1977; ft i-:'V:REMINDER:Student-Faculty Information MeetingTODAYfor those interested in theDivisional Master's Program in the Social Sciences4 p.m. • Pick LoungeRefreshments Buddhism 102 Fundamentals of Buddhism Mon 7 30 pm A >•-'Buddhism 211 Continued advanced sutra study Fri. 7:30 pmBuddhism 104 Buddhism other than Zen Mon. */ 7:30 pm - l AMuddhsim 107 Buddhist Art, a Survey Mon 7:30 pmSanskirt 101 Beginners • : Mon 7:30 pm /*? \Japanese 101 Beginners, Conversation 1 Thurs 7:30 pmJapanese 102 •Conversation II Thurs 7:30 pmJapanese 103 Conversation III Tues 7 :30 pmJapanese 201 Convsation IV Thurs. 7:30 pmJapanese 301 Literature (chosen by studentsand teacher). Mon. 7:30 pmHistory 101 Survey, Appreciation JapaneseHistory Wed 7:30 pm i*4 I/ Si^ IShodo Japanese Calligraphy. Beginnersand Advanced Mon 7 30 pm iSI /Sumi eIkebanaChanoyu Japanese Brush Painting Beginnersand AdvancedJapanese Flower ArrangementJapanese Tea Ceremony Mon 7:30 pmThurs.Wed 1 30 pm7 30 pmBonsai Japanese Miniature Tree Cultruemeets on the third and fourth Thursof March, April, May and JuneClass begins at 7 30 pm StartsSeptember 23 Kubose (and by appointment) I10 - Grey City Journal - Friday, January 7,1977J-CalendarFridayHillel: Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner. 6pm;Orthodox (Yavneh) Services. Sundown:Creative Service. 7:30pm; “The Ecstasy andthe Agony: Israeli Literature 1967-73.Literary Responses to the Sex Day and YomKupper Wars,” 8:30pm, Hillel Foundation,5715 Woodlawn.Rockefeller Memorial Chapel: Organ recitaland lecture. Edward Mondello, 12:15.Microbiology Seminar: Peter Karran. 4pm.Cummings 101.Folkdancers: 7pm. Ida Noyes Hall.DOC Films: “Taxi Driver," 6:15, 8:30, 10:45,Cobb.Chamber Music Series: Vermeer Quartet,8:30pm, Mandel Hall.SaturdayChange Ringing: Handbells 10:00-11:00am: Tower Bells, llam-lpm, Mitchell Towerringing room, 4th floor.Crossroads: Saturday night dinners con¬tinue this quarter at Crossroads In¬ternational Student Center, 6pm: OpenHouse for newcomers to Crossroads, coffeeand dessert after dinner, stop by, 5621 S.Blackstone Ave.UC Gymnasts: UC vs Triton. 1pm, Bartlett.Ski Club: Ski Night at Majestic Ski Hills,call Sherry 753-2249 11107). Ski Team race atWilmont, call Steve. 955-0380.Hillel: Orthodox (Yavneh) Services, 9:15am;Conservative-Liberal Services (The Up¬stairs Minyan). 9:30. Hillel Foundation.WHPK-FM 88.3: Interview with PDQ BachPeter Schickele. 12:30.CEF Films: “The Devil in Miss Jones,"6:00. 7:30. 9:00, 10:30pm, Cobb.International House Films: "ButchCassidy," 7:00 & 9:30pm, InternationalHouse.SundayChanges: "What Would You Like Out ofSchool?" 7pm, Blue Gargoyle. Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch. 11am, HillelHouse.UC Tai Chi Chuan Club: Master GeorgeLing Hu, instructor, 6:30pm, St. Paul’sChurch, 50th & Dorchester. All are welcome.Crossroads: Bridge. 3pm; "Grandeur andObedience." Part 7 of the Kenneth ClarkCivilization series, 8pm, Crossroads In¬ternational Student Center, 5621 S.Blackstone Ave.Brent House: Vespers, 5pm; Social Hourand Supper. 6pm; program/discussion,7:15pm.UC Folkdancers: 7pm. Ida Noyes.Rockefeller Memorial Chapel: EcumenicalService of Holy Communion, 9am;University Religious Service, “Jesus andHis Teachers," E. Spencer Parsons, 11am,Rockefeller Chapel.NAM Films: “Ramparts of Clay," Jean-Louis Bertucelli, 7:15 & 9:30, Cobb.MondayChange Ringing: Tower Bells, 6:30-8:30pm,Mitchell Tower ringing room, 4th floor.ChessClub: 7:30pm, Ida Noyes. Hillel: Class in Martin Buber’s Moses. 3pm;Beginners Yiddish, 7pm; Talmud, 8pm:Advanced Yiddish, 8:30pm, Hillel Foun¬dation.Crossroads: Spanish class (register atCrossroads- 684-6060), 7-8pm, CrossroadsStudent Center, 5621 S. Blackstone Ave.Brent & Calvert House: Bible Study with R.Jorgensen, and John Hurley, 7:30-9:00pm.Brent House.UC Folkdancers: 7pm. Ida Noyes Hall.UC Karate Club: free introductory class, 7-8pm. Ida Noyes Hall.Microbiology: “Different Mechanisms ofPolysaccharide Biosynthesis in E coli." Dr.Klaus Jann. 3pm, CLSC 101.Chemistry: Saunders Mac Lane, 4pm. Kent103.Music Department Lecture Series: CurrentTrends in Musical Theory, “Middleground-Foreground Motivic Relations in TonalMusic.” David Beach. 3pm. Regenstein 264.First Chair Series: Joseph Golan, violin,8pm. Pierce Hall.This Week in the ArtsP.D.Q. BachPeter Schickele, the sole discoverer andbiographer of "history's most justlyneqlected composer," will perform andexplain away the music of P.D Q. Bach at8:30 pm on Saturday, January 8, and 3:30pm on Sunday, January 9, in Mandel Hall.The event is sponsored by the Major Ac¬tivities Board of the University.The Drogram will be:— Suite from The Civilian Barber,P D.Q. Bach— Chaconne a son Gout, Schickele— Symphony No. 5 (New Horizons inMusic Appreciation), Beethoven; with MelZellman- Echo Sonata for Two UnfriendlyGroups of Instruments, P.D.Q Bach— Missa Hilarious, P D Q. BachSchickele, principal exponent of theworks of Johann Sebastian Bach'sheretofore unknown youngest son, P.D.Q.,is a graduate of Swarthmore College andthe Juilliard School of Music. His workscover a broad spectrum: symphonic(including commissioned works for the St.Louis Symphony); film scores(documentaries and four feature films,including Silent Running); theater (he wasone of the composer lyricists for Oh!Calcutta), choral, and chamber music.Tickets are $7.50 and S5.50, generaladmission ($5.50 and S3.50 for those whohave paid the University Major ActivitiesBoard fee) . For information, call 753 3563.Oliver LakeThe Chicago Front presents the secondconcert in its Great Black Music series:Oliver Lake in a solo performance of"Spaces." Saturday night at 8 PM in IdaNoyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St. Donation is$2.50 with student ID, $3 without.Shapiro CollectionOn Thursday. January 13th you havethe rare opportunity to view the privatecollection of Joseph Shapiro, one ofChicago’s top art collectors, donor of“Art to Live With." and president of theMuseum of Contemporary Art Busleaves at 5:30 for Oak Park Cost is $1.50,and you can sign up and pay at theStudent Activities Office. INH 209. Steve GoodmanUniversity and CourtTheatreFor all those interested in the theater,this quarter promises quite a few opportunities to participate in some capacityin a dramatic production at the Universityof Chicago Court Theatre.Open auditions for a reading of GeorgeBernard Shaw's Heartbreak House,directed by Katie Sparer and Enid Reiser,will be held on January 7 & 8 from 3 6 PMin the Reynolds Club Theatre. Performances are January 28, 29 and 30. Thescript calls for 4 men and 6 women.Open auditions for three one act plays,Susan Glaspell's Trifles, directed byBarbara Boyer, and Tennessee Williams'Auto-da-Fe and This Property is Con¬demned, directed by Josh Lipsman, will beheld on Thursday, January 13, from 7 10PM, Friday, January 14, from 4 7 PM andSaturday, January 15, from 15 PM, in theNew Theatre, first floor Reynolds Club, 57th and University. Performances areFriday through Sunday, February 1113and 18 20 The scripts cal1 for 5 men and 4women.Open auditions for A Little Night Music,directed by John Tsafoyannis will be heldon January 6, 7 10 PM, and January 9, 1 4PM in the Reynolds Club Theatre. Performances will be for six weekendsstarting February 25. The script calls for 6men and 9 women —singers and actors.For further information, or to volunteerto help work on sets, costumes, lights,properties or anything else you like to do,call the University Court Theatre at 7533581, or come to an informal wine andcheese get together on Friday, January 7,from 5 7 PM, in the New TheatreMedieval BanquetOn January 16 at the GREATUNIVERSITY BANQUET HALL (formerly Hutchinson Commons), thecommunity's lords, ladies, and folk willgather to celebrate the SECOND AN Chicago's foremost folkie, SteveGoodman, finally makes a Hyde Parkappearance next weekend in the firstconcert of the Major Activities Board swinter quarter lineup.Since his professional debut at the Earlof Old Town during the mid 1960's,Goodman's reputation has grown as both avirtuouso guitarist and talentedsongwriter. Some of his better knowncompositions, including "City of NewOrleans," have been recordea bynumerous folk, rock and countrymusicians.Goodman will appear in Mandel Hallwith Jim Post, another Chicago folkmusician, as well as other local performers Ticket prices for the January 15concert are S5 and $7, with a $2 discount forstudents who have paid the Student Activities Fee.NUAL UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOMEDIEVAL FEAST. This extravaganza, haded by medievalists andmodernists alike, will carry guests backto those days of yore in which banquettables groaned under mountains of rostbeefe, turkey, pate, wassail, fruits andcheeses—enhanced by the usual solemnprocession of ye whole suckling pygges!All will be washed down with quantitiesof wine and cider, while the assemblageis entertained by wandering minstrels,acrobats a qenuine dancing bear, andmadriqal s rqers.Portals will op*'n at 5:ju p m. for thisevening of hearty fare and boisterousentertainment All members of theUniversity community are invited(preferably in costume). Tickets are>6 50 tor students, $7 50 for faculty andstiff they are available at the newV maei Corridor tiket office, and must bepurchased by Friday, January 7.Grey City Journal - Friday, January 7,1977 11) Beginning our 45th yearDOC FILMSShowing 4S features this quarterincluding: Taxi Driver (tonight at 6:15, 8:30, 10:45)The Story of Adele H.Bunel's Land Without Bread & Los OlivadosSnow White and the Seven DwarfsResnais' StaviskyThe Godfather, Part IIRobin and MarianGodard's WeekendThe Sailor Who Fell From Grace Into the SeaJackson County JailHard TimesMurnau's FaustFarewell My LovelyHitchcock's Dial M for Murder& North by NorthwestOn Tuesdays: 13 films directed by King Vidorincluding, The Crowd, The BigParade, The Wedding Night,Stella Dallas, and Ruby Gentry,On Wednesdays: 13 comediesincluding Monkey Business,Born Yesterday, InnocenceUprotected, The Talk ofthe Town, and The Lady Eve,Associate memberships are still available for $7 each at ReynoldsClub, our office in Cobb 309. and Doc Films showings. Single ad¬missions are $1 during the weekend; $1.50 on weekends. If you don'talready have one, pick up a copy of our complete brouchure. For further in¬formation, our phone is 753-2898.COURT THEATRE AUDITIONS Monday, January 10thTHEJoseph Golan, ViolinCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAFIRSTIn a lecture-demonstrationCHAIRPierce Hall8pmAdmission free!Hhe Bmurain) of ChicagoJan. 6 7-10 P.M.; Jan. 9 1-4 P.M.Reynold's Club Theatre6 men, 9 women actors, dancers, singersA Little Night Music will run for 6 weeksPlease prepare a3 minute classicalor musical comedysong.Heartbreak House Jan. 7 4 8 3-6 P.M. Reynold's Club Theatre4 women, 6 men A staged reading directed by Katie Sparer.Trifles Jan 13 710 P.M.; Jon. 14 4-7 P.M./ Jan. 15 1-5 P.M.2 women, 3 men The New Theatre Directed by Barbara Boyer. COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC POLICY STUDIESIS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR ITS PROGRAM INPUBLIC POLICY STUDIESThe Graduate Program in Public Policy Studies leads to the Master of Arts degree in PublicPolicy. Applications are now being accepted for the 1977 78 academic year from studentscurrently enrolled in the Graduate Divisions and Professional Schools of the University For suchstudents, the Master’s degree in Public Policy is a one year program.Students who desire to develop expertise in the area of public policy in addition to theirongoing (or completed) work in a discipline or profession are encouraged to applyA limited number of UNIVERSITY PUBLIC POLICY FELLOWSHIPS will be awarded, additionalstudent aid will also be available.For further information and applications forms, write or telephoneCommittee on Public Policy StudiesWieboldt Hall-Room 3011050 East 59th StreetChicago, Illinois 60637A Little Night Musicdirected by JohnTsafoyannisThis Property is Condemned& 1 man, 1 woman each. Same time and place as TriflesauditionsDirected by Josh LipsmanAuto-de-fefor further information call 753-3581 between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m.No appointment necessaryey City Journal Friday. January 7.1977 COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC POLICY STUDIESStephen R. Berry, ChemistryNorman M. Bradburn, BehavioralSciences and BusinessPastora Cafferty, Soc Ser AdminWilliam B. Cannon, Soc Ser AdminGerhard Casper, Law andPolitical ScienceJames S. Coleman, SociologyKenneth W. Dam, LawSidney Davidson, BusinessDavid Greenstone, Political ScienceClifford Gurney, Biological Sciencesand MedicineJames Gustafson, Divinity"'' 'Philip W. Jackson, Behavioral Sciences* and Education . John E. Jeuck, BusinessHarry G. Johnson, EconomicsEdmund Kitch, LawBarry D. Karl, HistoryWilliam H. Kruskal, StatisticsPhilip Kurland, Law and The CollegeAlbert Madansky, BusinessTheodore Merman, Soc. Ser AdminPhil C. Neal, LawGeorge A. Ranney. Jr., Law and SocSer Admin.Harold A. Richman, Soc Ser Adminand ChairmanGeorge S. Tolley EconomicsDaniel C. Tosterors. Biological Sciencesand Medicinemat;8 30 pmTickets $5,00 and $7.00$2 00 discount w:th activities tee■'all students in me cohere haveoatd the fee)v"Pidtrg On the City of New Orleans"1 Lincoln Pa: k Pirates"The Dutchman"‘Banana Republics"•STEVE GOODMAN jim postJanuary 15 Mandel 753-3563Campus Interviews January 17,1977We think we’ve earned our reputation in the industry for original approaches to the management of hanking services. Theenvironment here is an energetic one. It’s ideal for the MBA who can offer fresh thinking and an aggressive outlook on thefuture. If you're that kind of person, look into l h«* entry level management (xissibilities at Citibank.National Banking CroupThis group markets a diverse range of commercial hanking and business services to the broad spectrum of thecorporations, governments and financial institutions thatgenerate the I'mted States' one third share of the noncommunist world’s Gross National Product.If you're a self motivated, intelligent problem solver w ithsp«*cial interests in finance and business administration,you’re an ideal candidate.Operating Croup()I*G is a series of independent services management(voters. Each tailors processing, product development,marketing, technical planning and customer services toa particular market segment, from small companies tomultinational giants. OPG also develops and implementsnew technological banking systems. Analytical, independent and energetic people with broad managementskills will enjoy this group.investmentManagement CroupThus group of Citibank is seeking management traineeswith concentrations in finance and marketing forthese areas:Investment ResearchResearch analysts are responsible for analyzing and evaluating all quantitative and qualitative factors affectingcompanies and industries within the assigned sector ofcoverage for the purpose of present or prospective portfolio investment.Portfolio ManagementResponsibilities include identifying client investmentneeds, selecting appropriate investment vehicles, andmaintaining client relationships.Group Management OperationsAnalysts deal with revenue costs and resulting profitdata at the Group. Division and Departmental k*ve|.They assist management in focusing on key currentvariables determining future profitability.International ServicesManagers handle a wide range of banking, fiduciary, andinvestment services for high net worth internationalcustomers.World Corporation CroupAccount managers m this group have global responsibilities coordinating the complete banking needs of leading multinational companies of 27 major countries.Candidates should have a strong interest in professionalfinancial management with an emphasis on arranginglarge vale transactions This group seeks MBA's with financial backgrounds,marketing ability, and entrepreneurial skills who wantto make a career of international finance.InternationalBanking CroupThus is the principal overseas banking arm of Citicorp. Itmanages operations in 103 countries and is responsiblefor marketing and administrating Citicorp services tolocal governments, financial institutions and businesses.IBG n«vds candidates with degrees in business administration. management, economics, law or some international field, who are committed to living abroad, and w hoenjoy working in div erse environments.Consumer ServicesCroupThis group, which serves the lifetime financial needs ofhouseholds and individuals around the world, has opportunilics in:Retail. Line ManagementMBA’s interested in early line supervisory responsibilitywith two functional areas (hopefully marketing & finance*are best suited for this program. Line assignments willhe supplemented by staff exposures for credit, operationsand marketing in order to develop general businessmanagers.MarketingMBA’s interested in product brand management withability to assume early full product management responsibility are desired. MBA's will train under managementwith senior level consumer package goods experience.Overall on the job training is oriented toward earlydevelopment of general business managers with emphasis on consumer marketing skillsiMerchant BankingCroupThe Merchant Banking Group assists governments,multinational '‘orporations and. fir anciai institutions inmeeting their global capital needs through fund raisingand consulting financial advisory services. If vour MBAis in finance or marketing, and vou re ready for a line assignment. this would be an excellent place to beginyour careerThe Corporate Finance Department deals in the areasof financial planning and restructuring, merger and acquisition analysis, private placement structuring, anddomestic and international cash systems Money Markets looks for people with interests in securities trading and selling w ho are capable of last decisions and risk taking. Similar opportunities are availableoverseas but require a willingness to accept long termforeign assignment.The Specialized Equipment Finance Depart ment requiresstrong negotiating skills to specialize in the planning,structuring, negotiating, and syndication of large so¬cialized equipment financing transactions.The Group Management Office has opportunities lorMBA’s to assist in worldwide strategic and operationalplanning and special project work in positions leading toline finance assignments, either domestically or overseas.Comptroller's DivisionThe Worldwide Operations I apartment of our Comptroller’s Division is responsible for inspecting all operationsand ensuring the protection of assets of Citicorp and itscustomers, the proper performance of operations, andthat accounting records are accurately stated. It performs periodic inspections on a surprise basis.Cndcr the Program, a group of inspectors who reportdirectly to the Comptroller are resident in each area orcountry overseas and in each principal domestic unit(andidates who have completed a two-year assignmentin International Inspection are an asset to the International Banking Group.Finance DivisionAs a staff area, the Finance Division is rrsjxinsiblo for( orporate level financial accounting and reporting, lavplanning and compliance and investor relations. In itsCorporate Treasury functions, the Division is responsiblefor managing the Bank s money position. domestic monevgathering activities, management of the investmentportfolio, formulation and monitoring of overseas fundingstrategies, and execution of Now \ork foreign exchangetransactions.People with law and accounting degrees and interests inin'ernational economics will be particularly interested inthis division.Citibank representatives unU be visiting y.,ur campus<m the dab above. Contort your placement office to arrange an iiitervieu appointment and to obtain more in¬formation. If you ran t meet with us on campus, pleaseforvard a resume, specifying your area of interest, toCITIBAN<0* r#rv, 7? i tun i wirin', i\eu j(rr,are an egual opportunity employer, m/f.20—The Chicago Maroon Friday. Januar ✓ } t i'j7, 1977■HMiClub committee splits fundBy DAVID RIESEROne innovation of last fall’s athleticdepartment reorganization has at lastbeen put into practice, and so far at least,seems to be working out pretty well.Previously athletic clubs have had tocome, hat in hand, to the Council onRecognized Student Organizations(CORSO). Usu&llv whatever they couldget was not good enough and they wereeither forced to raise their own funds orsimply not exist.But now the clubs have a differentplace in the University. Instead of justbeing another student organization,clubs have come under the watchful eyeof Assistant Director of Athletics. BillVendl, giving them almost equal statuswith other athletic progrms. Further, aspecial fund of $20,000 has been set up fortheir support. This fund was divided upby a Club council, consisting of thepresidents of all 19 athletic clubs.The meeting held last November lasted5 quarrelous hours. But the divisionswere finally hashed out. First $2,000 wasset aside for insurance for all club ac¬tivities. something the clubs have neverhad. Secondly a $5,000 emergency fundwas set up to pay for special expenses.Then the real battle began. Eachpresident had submitted budgets made up of various degrees of detail andreality. The combined total was upwardsof $17,000 from which $4,000 had to bepared.“We tried to find some formulas,” saidVendl, “but that turned out to be un¬workable. The decisions made werepurely subjective. This worked out prettyfair. Each president had to stand up andconvince the others why they should giveup their money.”The clubs hashed things out. Thebadminton club was convinced that theyreally did not need the most expensivebirds they could buy, and all clubs wereconvinced that the University shouldn’thave to fund their year-end banquets.At the end the women’s crew club ledthe list with $4,000. Next was the sailingclub at $1890, the men’s crew at $1,250and the ski and volley ball clubs at $1,000each. The Tae Kwan Do, Swi;n. Outing,and Judo clubs wanted no funds which isexactly what they got.Although many of the amounts seemexorbitant much of the money can beseen as capital investment. Many of theclubs are new and needed money just tobuy their basic equipment. This isespecially true of the crew, sailing, ar¬chery and women’s gvmnastic clubs.By and large club presidents werehappy with the results. Ernie Troth of theSportsMaroons to 3-3 startCagers strong against divison II champsBy FRANK MERRIWELLIn the books it looks like a bad start. But*that three and three record shouldn’t foolanyone. The University men’s basketballteam took on its toughest competition inyears and did much better than expected.The Maroons started the year in theirusual destructive fashion, rolling overperennial puffs. Trinity Christian. Nilesand Northwestern College (Wisconsin).The scores. 78-60, 84-52, 76-51 reflect onlysome of the domination involved. Still.Chicago went on its annual road tripstaked to a 3-0 record.It was not to be an easy trip. TheMaroon’s were to travel to the state ofWashington to face three top Division IIteams, no slight task seeing that Chicago isin Division III. Two of the teams averaged6’7” a man. Chicago’s tallest player is6’6”. The team further handicapped itselfby having half its members come downwith stomach flu two days before theirfirst match.But the first match turned out to be theclosest. The Maroons, playing theUniversity of Puget Sound, last year’sDivision champs, found themselves out toa 13 point lead early in the first half.Unhappily the home squad got out of shocklong enough to whittle the lead down to fivepoints by naiftime but still could not pullaway. With three minutes left, PugetSound was barely ahead 65-64.But that was it for the challengers.Puget Sound got two points on a fast breakafter forcibly depriving Maroon forwardDan Hayes of the ball. Coach Angelusexpressed his displeasure and PugetSound gained two more points on theresulting technical After that, they simplyfroze the ball and let the clock run out. Thefinal score was 74-66.Chicago also held on against SeattlePacific College but never got quite asclose. The Maroons lost that contest 67-58By the time they got to St Martins college in Olympia the team was just too whipped.Their third game in four days was just onetoo many and they were dulv blown out 68-49.If nothing else the road trip gave theteam a chance to toughen up for theMidwest Conference which looks to betougher than ever. Beloit, Ripon and LakeForest are all having hot years. Even non¬conference rival Roosevelt has puttogether a squad that looks to give Chicagomore than a small amount of trouble.In response to the challenge CoachAngelus stressed the old best offense.“Defense.” he said, “will be the key to thisseason.”The starting line are all veterans ofAngelus’ past campaigns. 6’2” GregRetzinger and 6’ Steve Shapairo will berunning the backcourt. Although both arevery solid performers, neither is the typeof flashy guard that team’s often turn tofor quick points. For those the Maroon willhave to look to forward 6’ ” Jay Alley, aman with an inestimably fine touch.Joining him in front will be 6’6” Dan Hayesa bom again forward who was moved overfrom his pivot position of iast year. Takingover his spot will be 6’6” Bret Schaeffer.This gives the team the versatility ofhaving two centers (or three forwardsdepending on how you look at it) withHayes providing the muscle and Schaefferproviding the speedThe bench also looks to be particularlystrong. Mark Miller, Daryl Bradelv andEugene Clark as replacements for theforwards. Ed Follev. Rick Dagen and ToddLewis will be ready to ake over the backcourt duties.The team’s next game will be againstconference contenders Beloit College thisSaturday night at Beloit The team willhave their nome opener of the year nextWednesday night against Roosevelt. Thegame will* be played in the friendly con¬fines of Bartlett Gym and will start at 7:3U men’s crew said although he would haveliked more money the whole thing was,“a fine idea.” He went on to say that atother schools clubs have always had toraise their own funds. “At last.” he said,“the University is recognizing thatpeople not in varsity sports need help,also.” The sentiment is echoed by LomaStrauss who is on the new faculty com¬mittee for athletics. “If the school was90% undergraduates then the varsity andIM programs would be enough. But withso many graduate students the clubsprovide opportunities they just wouldn’thave.”!M ReportVincent winspre x-mas tourneyByR. W. ROHDEVincent won the holiday basketballtournament, beating the Civil Proshandily in the finals, to finish last fall’sintramural action. It was the first timean undergradute residence team hadwon the all-University men’s cham¬pionship in a team sport in a coupleyears. Vincent had a harder time win¬ning the ‘A’ division, where they facedtheir toughest competition. But they beatthe Silver Spoons to win that title. Theythen went on to beat the winners of the‘D’ division. Med West, before their finalvictory over the Civil Pros, who barelybeat Bramblebush in their semi-finalgame.Wrapping up other action, the finals ofmen’s tennis ended up in a tie since it gottoo cold to play the finals. Bruce Carmanof Lower Rickert and Ervin Hollman ofthe graduate division shared the title. Insquash, Dave Sagan beat Tim Lorello ofUpper Rickert in the finals, and to giveHenderson the overall win in the sport. ’He then went on to lose to Mike Cherry, agraduate, in the finals.In overall point standings. UpperRickert has a good lead in the men’sdivision w-ith 680 points. Not too farbehind is Dodd-Mead at 615, followed byShorey with 599 points. Shoreiand 7 & 8 at594, then last year’s champions. SidHuttner’s Hendersonians at 591, and PsiU at 585, followed by the other 20 teams.Lower Wallace leads the 16 women’sresidences with 465 points, followedclosely by Upper Flint with 457 points.Upper Wallace and Shoreiand 12 are notfar behind, with 378 and 346 pointsrespectively.The two top teams. Upper Rickert andLower Wallace, teamed up to lead the Co¬ed division with 256 points. Shorey is notfar behind with 246 points. Other con¬tenders in the 14 team division are UpperFlint with 180 points, and UpperWallace/Lower Rickert w ith 175 points.The Winter quarter will start off withmen and women’s basketball, as well asmen’s doubles table tennis. The actionstarts next Wednesday, but all entries forthese events are due today.Basketball action promises to be good.Bill Vendl and his staff plan to spend a lotmore time concentrating on the qualityof the officials, now' that the lack hasbeer solved by the new procedures Thiswill be accomplished through a clinic. closer instruction and supervision, aswell as review and follow ups.Although graduate and independentrosters were not available at press time,we have these reports on the un¬dergraduate residence leagues.In the Red league. Phi Gamma Deltashould have little trouble winning thewhole thing. Upper Flint is favored as adistant second.Likewise. Upper Rickert should have afairly easy time of it in the Blue league.Psi U might possibly give them a littletrouble. „The Green league should be a littlecloser. Shorey looks like the top teamhere, but Shoreiand 7 & 8 will give them ahard time. Alpha Delta Phi looks goodalso.The White league is the toughest of thebunch. Henderson. Dodd-Mead, andThompson North all have good teams,but they’ll all be overshadowed by Tuftsand Vincent. Tufts gave Vincent one ofit’s hardest times in the Holiday tour¬nament, and should give it an evenharder time in league basketball. Vin¬cent is still favored to prevail in theWTiite league, and go on to the un¬dergraduate and all-University titlesNo matter who wins. IM basketballhave a new feature this year, ex¬tramurals. One team, most likely thebest eligible team participating, will bechosen from the entrants in the Leaguetournament, to play in a competitionagainst intramural teams from otherarea colleges. These extramural affairsare being brought to you by everyone’sfavorite, the Schlitz brewery, and will beheld in one of Chicago’s major athleticfacilities in early spring. Stay tuned formore details.There is another change in In¬tramurals for the new year, concerningthe IM council. The council will expandto include graduate students, and it’sjurisdiction is being extended to includerecreation as vu*ll as intramurals. Thismeans that the council, in addition to it’sregular duties, will have a say in suchthings as swimming hours andallocation, open recreation times asBartlett, and the like.People interested in reffing IMbasketball who missed the meetingyesterday, should attend the meetingnext Tuesday at 12 30. See the IM officefor details.Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 7, 1977—21MARILYNCHAMBERSResurrectionSUNDAY JAN. 167* CO 84S 1030 SEMINARY CO-OPERATIVE BOOKSTORE, INC.located atthe Chicago theological seminary5757 University Ave., Chicago, Illinois 60637RECENT ARRIVALS OF INTERESTTwo titlesin linguistics from Indiana:Elmar Holenstein, ROMAN JAKOBSON'S APPROACH TO LANGUAGE, $12.50Ann H. Stewart, GRAPHIC REPRESENTATION OF MODELS INLINGUISTIC THEORY, $11.50Two titles in the study of religion:John Saliba, HOMO RELIGIOUS IN MIRCEA ELIADE, $18.95Wolfhart Pennenberg, THEOLOGY AND THE PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE, $17.50Two titles relating to the study of hermeneutics:J.L. Mehta, MARTIN HEIDEGGER: THE WAY AND THE VISION, $16.00Paul Ricoeur, INTERPRETATION THEORY, $4.00Two titles by A.N. Prior:PAPER IN LOGIC AND ETHICS, $12.00THE DOCTRINE OF PROPOSTIIONS AND TERMS, $9.00Two Studies in political science:James Sanders, THE EDUCATION OF AN URBAN MINORITY: CATHOLICSIN CHICAGO, $13.95Leonard Binder, THE STUDY OF THE MIDDLE EAST. $25.00Two strong sellers by Marshall Sahlins:USE AND ABUSE OF BIOLOGY, $3.95CULTURE AND PRACTICAL REASON, $17.50Now back in stock after three months:TUTTII VERBI GRECI, $4.00CU/MBLRLIMPRESENT*iCOBB HALL 5811S. ELLIS AVE.S1.50 Slw/this ad UCID REQUIREDHo one under 18 admittedSAVE 33% rf you bring this adCLASSIFIED ADSSPACEVery nice apartment tor sublet. 2 bigrooms, kitchen, bath, all freshlypainted, offst. Park. Great transpo &Shopping. S195. pets. 288 5140 morn. &eve.Roommate wanted. Call 493-2803.ROOMMATE WANTED Little Pierce57th and Dorchester. Live with twomale grad studs. Own room availablenow. 493-5534.Pvt. rm. av.lmm. 50 & Drexei. 955-88485405 S Woodlawn, 2 rm. turn apt 1person. 043-2700/007-5740, Mrs Green ‘PEOPLE WANTEDRoom and board in exchange for childcare. Own Ig. rm. in Kenwood home.Greenwood area. Tel. Mrs. Werhane924-5241 after 0 p.m.CASH! Hay fever or asthma? We needvolunteers for drug study. Contact Dr.Valentin Popa 947-5515 or 947 1841.Coach house in Kenwood. Two rooms Undergraduate with strong$185 per month includes electricity, programming experience to programheat, water. References required. 043 minicomputer (Nova 3/12) 15 or more1395. hours/week. 753 2203.Lge. bedrm. & bath in pvt. Kenwood HOUSEPARENTS FULL or PARThome for single std Rm., bkfst, dinner TIME. To work with social agency. Toin return for mainf. work, babysitting, supervise a small group of childrenMust be neat and willing to work. Housing and Salary. Call: Mrs.a—* c cm ,——PTT Charlotte Ruark, Jewish Children'sApt. Space 5520 S. Ellis—Close to lib Bureau FI 6-6700 noWinter & Spring Qtrs. 324 4372- gyr_eau< M 6 670°, Ext. 310.furnished w/Kitchen. PROOFREADERS needed fortechnical journal. 3-5 hrs./wk. For exp. piano teacher of all levels call947 9746French native teacher offers tutorialsph. 324 8054Furniture stripping, refinishing callJohn 288-0950 MUSE OFFIRE DEPT. YOGASCENESSTUDENT COOPWinter Quarter textbooksavailable. New excitingbargain book table-hundreds of hardcovers.Open 9:30-6:00 M-F, 10-4Sat. Room for student woman on third floor Rackaround in natural cr-lonroHyPdeVPaerl!0mL!ghtercyoI,aking‘facilities1 P^red. $3/hr. 752 5264nts.$85/mo. 684-5076 eves, before 10 or Seek ROOMMATE! Real nice apt. 2weekends. big rooms, kitchen, bath, central loc. &c B , —:—r~,"y. r~:— offst. Parking. Male, grad, n-smoking,5 & 6 room apts. in building being n_,v ooo r7?A * *rehabilitated 5 min. from UofCon" 9ay 288 574661st St. Coleman Corp. 373-.1800. Free Swimming Instruction forAdults Mondays, INH 7:30-8:30 PMfor 9 weeks.The UC Tai Chi Chuan club meetsevery Sunday in St. Paul theRedeemer's Church NE corner of 50th& Dorchester at 6:30. On Jan. 16 at 6:30Master George Ling Hu, the in¬structor, will demonstrate Tai Chi &Kung Fu. All are welcome. $1donationOLIVER LAKE Solo Concert Sat. Jan.8 Ida Noyes Hall 8PM. Great BlackMusic Series by the Chicago Front.$2.50 w/student ID. $3.00 w/o. Interested in theatre? Court Theatreplans four different shows this winter.You will be part of them, whateveryour present level of ability and experience. Find our schedules andprojects at Court's Open House, todayfrom 5-7 p.m. in the New Theatre,Reynolds Club Food, drink, people,info, all welcome.Norweigian student wanted to tutorHP family in conversational Nor- FOR SALE• lye Ei»iuti0RS• Contact leases (Sett t Hard)• Prescription FilledOB. MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOItmtlSTSHyde Part; Shapeug Center1518 E . 55th363-63S3j/ane XZeeRestaurantDelicious iantone$e foodFast Special Luncheon:$1.95Mon Thun 11:30 AM 9:00 PMFn. A Sat. 11:30 AM 9:30 PMSun. 3:00 AM-9:00 PMCLOSED TUES.643-3407 1316 E. 53rd St. 9Vi acres, 150 fruit bearing trees, 1300sq. ft. brick frame house (built '59) ^ 3649 eves.with full basement, breezeway, at FACULTY SECRETARY McCormicktached garage and work shop 3 out- Theological Seminary. To providebuildings and pole barn. Spring-fed secretarial #services to facultystream. 5 mis. east of Michigan City members; typing of syllabi, shortInd. Hour from U of C <47,000. Call manuscripts, letters; ability toRenard at Callahan Realty. 219—926- transcribe from tape, plus general4298. office procedures. To begin at once.1 room apt 54th & Blackstone $120 a Mudoe *«« To"wL?flwn nSLl'month CallnowSJx-wi Mudge. 5555 So Woodlawn, Chicago.monin. ian now JZ4 3593 60637 or call 241-7800Author needs part-time secretary,effective typing, hours arranged. 6438295.PEOPLE FOR SALEInterested in typing evenings in myhome. Will discuss price. Barbara 373-3594 after 5:30p.m.CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Has what you need from a$10 used room size Rug too custom carpet. Specializ¬ing in Remnants & Mill re¬turns at a fraction of theoriginal cost.Decoration Colors ondQualities Additional 10%Discount with this ad.FREE DELIVERYCAIVERT HOUSEStarting Jan. 911:00 A.M. Sun., Massin Band Chapel MEDIEVAL TIXMust be purchased today, MandelTicket Office.PEOPLE WANTEDNew Nursing Home opening at 6125Kenwood. RN's & LPN's wanted. Call752 6000.SEXANDTENNISRackets Free. All ages & levels ofInstruction. YMCA, JCC, Groups andPrivate. Jim Smith 667-4038.CONCERTOCOMPETITIONOpen to entire University community.Application deadline: Jan. 10. Com¬petition held Jan. 2-28. For in¬formation about auditions or concertocompetition, contact BarbaraSchubert, Conductor. 753-2613. •GAY COFFEEHOUSE COSTUMES~~Saturday, Jan. 8 at the Blue Gargoyle, —57th & University, 8 p.m.-12 p.m. All good medieval costumes start fromWhere the friendliest folks on campus a bathrobe, academic gowngather for music, talk, and homemadegoodies!ITS. LOW COST Charter Flights toEurope. 327 2858 4-6 p.m.Snow Tires, Atlas E78-14, Exc. Cond.Best Of ter, 943-1520.1 Bdrm. Co-operative apt. Vicinity:55th & Woodlawn Near U. of Chicago.$12,000 or best offer. Call 736-3696 after5:30p.m.TOYOTA '72 Corona stick AM/FM.Only 26,000 mi. Eng and body in exc.cond. $1500 or best offer. 288-4641 Relax, energize, unify body-mind-spirit. A perfect balance for the life ofthe mind Yoga begins on campusMon. Jan 17th for continuing students,& Thurs. Jan. 20th for beginningstudents at the Gargoyle. Taught byDobbi Kerman on campus since 1971. 7sessions $30 Followed by a massageworkshop. Thurs. $5 off tuition forboth. Call Dobbi 643 3595.WHPK PRESENTSAn interview with PDQ Bach PeterSchickele this Sat., Jan. 8 at 12:30 onWHPK-FM88.3.TRANSCENDENTALMEDITATIONFree intro talk on TM Tues., Jan. 11,7:30 p.m. Ida Noyes Hall, EastLounge.STATISTICS MATHPHYSCITUTORI can help you with these subjects. Call947-8184 around 6.AAASSAGEWORKSHOPchoirrobe, turtleneck or tights. Check yourcloset. The best way to get a good massage isto learn how to give one. Workshops inSwedish and Rumanian Deep musclemassage begin MON. JAN 17th 12-1:30 & THURS. JAN. 20th 7:30-9:00 a*the Gargoyle. TEXT—Downing's TheMassage Book. 7 sessions $35. Yogaprecedes massage on Thurs. 5:30 7:15.$5 off for both. Call Dobbi 643-3595.EYE EXAMINATIONSFAHSHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist(58 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 The Great OpportunityYoung, fast growing .publishing company is looking for theright person to accept responsibilities in magazine circulation.Experience in direct mail marketing promotion and responseanalysis ideal. Inexperienced persons with a background inmarketing combined with mathematical or accountingabilities are encouraged to apply. Salaries commensuratewith qualifications.Responses should be sent to Rex Ryan3401 W. Division Chicago, III 6066122- -The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 7, 1977mmm LOX'N BAGELSWelcome back folks. You are invitedto Hillel brunch at 11 AM on Sundaymorning. $175 gets you two Lox 'NBagel Sandwiches, good company, andall the Sunday NY Times you can eat.Colme and enjoy. 752 1127. 5715 S.Woodlawn (Near Campus).UNCENSOREDENTERTAINMENTMARILYN CHAMBERS in"Resurrection of Eve" Jan. 16, 7:00,8:45, 10:30. Save 33%—Watch forcoupon in Maroon UCID required Noone under 18 admitted. KARATECREATIVESERVICESCreative Sabbath Services are heldevery Friday at 7:30 p.m. at 5715 S.Woodlawn. For more info., call 752-5655. Free introductory class with the UCKarate Club. Ida Noyes, Monday, Jan.10 at 7 p.mPAN PIZZADELIVEREDThe Medici Delivers from 10 p.m.weekdays, 5-11 Saturday, 667 7394.Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourself.BOOKS BOUGHTBooks bought 8. sold everyday,everynight 9-11, Powells, 1501 E. 57thSt.PERSONALSWelcomeMVPSN back MVP, HN, fromWOMEN'SAAAGAZINEPrimavera, a women's literarymagazine, is one sale in all Hyde ParkBookstores and Bob's Newstand.Watch for Vol .#3! Wenches, monks: get together at theMedieval Feast. Tix must be pur¬chased now, Mandel Ticket Office.To Sara and Vicki, the dinner in-vitation is still open. Steve 327-3277.Dating Service. Over 1200 members.Low Cost, 274 6248 or 274 6940Writers' Workshop (Plaza 2-8377). Interested in Media Marketing?WHPK needs apublicity directorCall 753*3588 for infottHn INTRODUCTION TO THE BIBLEA SERIESSponsored by BREN T HOUSE & CALVERT HOUSEMONDA Y NIGHTS AT 7:30JAN. 17 - JOSEPH SUTLER (AT CALVERT HOUSE)JAN. 24 - RICHARD BUHRER, S.U. (AT BRENT HOUSE)JAN* 31 • BARBARA DURGENSEN (AT CALVERT)FEB. 7 • JOHN L. McKENZIE (AT BRENT) VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGATTRACTIVE 1 V, AND2% ROOM STUDIOSFURNISHED or UNFURNISHED*138 .o *225Short TermBased on AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus StopFA 4 0200 Mrs. GroakTHEART OFMASS AG IPRACTICING THE ART OF MASSAGE'BY SPECIAL REQUEST THIS QUARTER BOTH A NOONTIME AND EVENINGMASSAGE WORKSHOP WILL BE OFFERED ON CAMPUS AT THE BLUEGARGOYLE, 6566 UNIVERSITY.THE WORKSHOPS BEGIN MONDAY JANUARY 17TH FROM 12 00 1 30 ANDTHURSDAY JANUARY 20TH FROM 7:30 9:00THE WORKSHOP WILL INCLUDE THE STUDY AND PRACTICE OR METHODSFROM RUMANIAN MASSAGE. A DEEP MUSCLE MASSAGE PRACTICED IN MS.KERMAN'S FAMILY FOR OVER FOUR GENERATIONS, AND GEORGEDOWNING'S MASSAGE DOWNING'S TEXT. THE MASSAGE BOOK, WILL BEUSED FOR THE COURSETHE FORMAT OF EACH MEETING WILL INCLUDE THE DEMONSTRATION ANDEXPLANATION OF DIFFERENT TECHNIQUES OF MASSAGE AND EXCHANGINGMASSAGES USING THE METHODS WE WILL LEARN7 SESSIONS 535 WEAR COMFORTABLE CLOTHES & BRING A BLANKET ORRUG AND SHEETFOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 00BBI AT 643 3595NOTE A $5 REDUCTION IN TUITION WILL BE OFFERED TO THOSE WHO ALSOPARTICIPATE IN YOGA CLASSES AT THE GARGOYLE ON EITHER MONDAY S ORON THURSDAY'S DIRECTLY PRECEDING MASSAGE FROM 5 30 7 15 YOGAYOGA BEGINS WINTER QUARTER MONDAY JANUARY 17TH AND THURSDAYJANUARY 20TH ON CAMPUS AT THE BLUE GARGOYLE, 5655 UNIVERSITYMONDAY'S CLASS WILL BE ORIENTED TO THOSE WHO HAVE PRACTICED SOMEYOGA THURSDAY S CALSS TO THOSE STUDENTS BEGINNING YOGACLASSES WILL MEET FROM 5 30 to 7:15 P MCLASSES WILL BE LED BY DOBBI KERMAN WHO HAS TAUGHT YOGA FORSTUDENT ACTIVITIES AT THE U. OF C. 1971 73 AT THE GARGOYLE 1973 76AND AT IIT IN 1975YOGA WILL INCLUDE ASANAS (HATHA YOGA POSTURES. PRANAYMAM(BREATH CONTROL.) ENGEGIZATION MEDITATION RELAXATION AND CHANTING7 SESSIONS $30REGISTRATION WILL BE OPEN UNTIL SPACE IS FILLEDPLEASE WEAR WARM COMFORTABLE CLOTHES & BRING A BLANKETFOR INFORMATION AND PRE REGISTRATION CALL DOBBI 643 3595NOTE A 55 REDUCTION IN TUITION WILL BE OFFERED TO THOSE WHO ALSOPARTICIPATE iN A MASSAGE WORK SHOP FROM 12 1 30 ON MONDAY ORFOLLOWING YOGA FROM 7 30 9 00 ON THURSDAY A REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATEfetal fstjte-General Rt-af Tstctc-GwvrfKEfiKcOV, RYAN, MQMiGfll & ASSOCIATES, »MC.(fiM mWm* mti.Directory of ValuesWe Know Hyde ParkReal Estate Inside OutHOUSES FOR SALETHE POSSIBLE DREAMA new house in Hyde Park! Of theseven town homes to be built at 54Biackstone for Summer oc¬cupancy, only one remains unsoldSee our scale model and floorplans for these exciting housingopportunities. Each home features3 or 4 bedrooms, 2 or 2Va baths, in-house garage, solarium and manymore features to insure com¬fortable and conventional living. PRAIRIE SCHOOLMANSIONThis lovely 15 room brick mansionhas great potential for a superKenwood home 5 baths, 2 cargarage surrounded by period ironfence. For information or to see,call Richard E. Hild 667 6666 or752 5384GRACIOUS AND INVITING11-room residence in lovely set¬ting. Nat. fireplace in large livingroom 6 bedrooms - librarysolarium. Cent, air, undergrdj sprinklers. 3-car brick garagej Side drive. Upper 60's. Call Mrs.! Ridlon 667 6666 6 RM. BRICK TOWNHOUSELook at the space! Comb., LR-DR.23'/2 x 17, master BR 17 x 10"2"plus 2 more BRs. Cermaic 1’/2baths 220 wiring for HotpointKitchen. Nice sundeck 8, largeback yard. Parking for 3 cars.$29,500. Nr. 78th & Yates.Charlotte- Vikstrom 667-6666:J| STOCK YOUR APARTMENT NOW§|!| Great Bargains:towels pots• //y4. bed sheets pansblankets house waress DOLLARS & SENSE'■"i 1312 E. 53rd St.m Resale shop of X.A.M. Isaiahn Israel Congregationsssssmm Open Mon.-Fri. 11 am-5 pm25 to 50% off on doth* SOUTH SHORE DRIVEBrick 4 BR home. LR, formal DRLarge enclosed porch Extra largeback yard next to Rainbow Beach.Asking $47,500. For more info.,please call Margaret Kennedy,667-6666APARTAAENTS FOR SALETWO BEDROOMSINTHESKYImmaculate 5 rm. 2 bath condohome at 50th and the Lake Manydecorator extras. Ready to moveAn ideal high-rise home for thediscriminating buyer.BIGGER THAN A HOUSE.but easier and less expensive tolive in. Eight plus (extrasolarium) rooms. Kitchen is super,apt. beautifully maintainedthroughout. Sunny, bright, allappliances Custom walnut studywith wall built-ins Must be seen.Low 60 s. nr. Hyde Pk. Blvd. &Woodlawn. Charlotte Vikstrom667-6666.BACHELOR APT.This bright 4 room co-op 4 airconditioners, new super gourmetkitchen, community rooms forworkshop and relaxation. A brightrehab, third floor apt. To see callRichard E Hild 667 6666 (res. 752-5384) COZY LIVINGNEAR U.OF C.Four large rooms plus study/sunporch, modern kitchen with built-in dishwasher and appliancesModern bath with ceramic tile,monthly assessment $96,00 To seecall Frank Goldschmidt 667-6666HI RISE CONDOSpectacular 14 floor view of thelake and city. 3 bedrooms, 2 fullbaths - like new kitchen with dish¬washer, double oven, side by siderefrig, and freezer, complete withbreakfast area LR has diningalcove and study alcove. Call J.Edward LaVelle 667-6666STARTThe New Year in one of these mosthandsome 5 rm-2 bath aptsw/new. kitchens - appliancescarpeting - 24 hr doormanparking Immed possession. 2ndor 25th floor Call George Bilger orHenrietta Ridlon 667 6666.WORKINGFIREPLACELESS THAN RENT Delightful four room condo southof 55th on Biackstone. SuperiorNeat 2 BR condo, newer well-kept condition. Available for im-building, St Philips School mediate occupancy New kitchen$17,000 Call Alfred Dale, 667-6666 and many extras S31 500CLASSIC BEAUTYThat looks out over park & lake 5 .rooms w/2 baths, private parkingbeamed ceiling & WBFP in liv. rmMo assmt $109 Full price $13,900Call Mrs Ridion 667 6666APT. BLOGS. FOR SALE71st & CORNELLVacant parcel of land $21,000,78x125. Transfer good title immediately Call CharlotteVikstrom 667 6666 INVESTMENTOPPORTUNITYCentral Hyde Park apt bldg- 4'sExcellent condition 30 apts5's and 6's. Annual income $90,000Asking $325,000(mm mu nen mu1151 cast 57th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60537667-6666Daily 9 to 5 Sat 9 to 1, Or call 667 6666 AnytimeThe Chicago Maroorv\~vt y vV.th.tL , viG* Friday, January 7, 1977—23•3- r*CC wV.ct-f.' v: ' 3.1 f <CJANUARY WHITE SALESome white wines are reduced by asmuch as 50%. A rare chance to beassured of our usual excellent qualityat very low prices.WHITE CHEESE SPECIALStPER POUNDONLY5 VariedWHITE GOURMANDISE w $189BRIE $1"PROVOLONE $159DANISH TYBO *1"BEL PAESE $2"BIANCO $1"NORWEGIAN TILSIT $159f„thWHITE SPIRITSBACARDI WHITE RUM half gallon »8"SCOTCH WHITE LABEL half gallon *12"ANISETTE. . WHITE ONLY *2"SMIRNOFF 80 PROOF VODKA HALF GALLON *929 FIFTHNOT ALL WHITE WINES ARE ON SALETfoVwiiu2427 East 72nd Street BA 1- 921024—The Chicago Maroon Friday, January 7,1977 -