Maroon ads bring results-five readers snared bymail-order watch scheme Students plan new canteenBy ABBE FLETMANThe Student Government Student Services Committee is making plansfor a student-run coffee and pastry concession to replace the vendingmachines on the A-level of Regenstein library.By JOEL JAFFERJoining the ranks of the victimsof a $1.8 million Chicago-areamail order fraud, at least fiveMaroon readers spent $16.95 fordigital watches advertised by abogus company.The five persons called TheMaroon and said they had sentpayment but had not receivedmerchandise from Teltronic,Inc., which advertised the wat¬ches three times in The Maroonlast December.Teltronic’s ads also appearedin TV Guide and Parade. Thecompany's Illinois assets,amounting to $1.1 million in threeChicago banks, have been frozenby court order pending the trial ofits president, John Rodine, formail fraud, a federal crime.Assistant State’s Attorney JohnMcPhee said victims shouldcontact the consumer frauddivision of the Illinois StatesAttorney’s Office, 134 N. La SalleSt., with pertinent dates,correspondence, and any proof ofpayment such as cancelledchecks.“But they will have to waituntil criminal action againstRodine has been completed,”McPhee said.One of the victimized Maroonreaders, C. B. Goodman, said heis “trying to initiate a suit”against The Maroon and theUniversity of Chicago for falseand misleading advertising.The State’s Attorney’s officereceived the first complaint about Teltronics’ ads onDecember 23 and has sincereceived 800 more calls.“By the time of the firstcomplaint, Rodine had vacatedhis home, business, and ad¬vertising firm,” McPhee said.“The social security number heused is that of an 80-year-oldman, and I suspect his name wasjust as phony. The advertisingfirm, Creative Media Specialists,was simply a mail drop.”Rodine, still at large, trans¬ferred $300,000 of his funds hereto a Mexico City bank before anIllinois Circuit Court issued atemporary restraining order twoweeks ago to freeze his Chicagobank accounts.Two days after the order,Rodine phoned O’Hare In¬ternational Bank from MexicoCity to transfer $500,000 to aMexico City Bank.A hearing on January 19th willdecide whether a preliminaryinjunction will be issued,designating a custodian for thefunds until Rodine is tried.“The necessary condition forthat to happen is that the funds inthe banks have to be proceedsfrom that fraud,” said JimStreicher of the United StatesAttorney’s office, which willprosecute Rodine for mail fraud.Three locations used by Rodinehave been searched, Streichersaid. “The Illinois State’s At¬torney conducted the search, butneither they nor I are allowed tosay what was found,” he con¬tinued. Members of Student Govern¬ment (SG) are making the initialplans for a student-run canteen toreplace the vending machines inthe basement of Regensteinlibrary, according to JonGrossman, chairman of theCommittee on RecognizedStudent Organizations (CORSO).A first proposal for a student-run canteen was rejected by deanof students Charles O’Connell astoo general.The Student Services Com¬mittee, an SG sub-committee, isworking on a more detailedproposal.Commenting on the proposal,Paul Ausick, assistant toO’Connell, said that running astudent car)teen is “an enormousundertaking.” He noted that thepresent canteen is open wheneverthe library is and that a newcanteen would be expected toprovide the same service.Despite these hesitancies, Ausicksaid, “If a good proposal comesin, they’ll (the Library ad¬ministration) consider it . . .They’re not in any hurry to makeany sweeping changes.”Howard Dillon, associatedirector for public services andchief spokesman for the libraryhas opposed improvements in thecanteen.“We don’t want to create anattractive place that outdoes theC-Shop or Hutch Commons,”Dillon said.“I’m anxious to work on adifferent set of problems thancoffee. I’m not closing the door,but I’d just as soon not have to putmore time and money into thecanteen at the moment. Grossman hopes to start thenew canteen “as soon aspossible,” perhaps before the endof the year. He pointed to severalobstacles, including therenovation of the existingfacility, the somewhat less thanenthusiastic response of theadministration to the idea and theacquisition of loans to finance theproject.The vending machines whichnow supply coffee, candy, andsoft drinks are run by ARA, anoutside company which is con¬tracted by the University toservice all vending machines oncampus. A student-run canteenwould be similar to the coffeeshop in Cobb, serving basicallydrinks and pasteries.SG hopes to improve thequality of the food, to provide jobs for students, to keep downprices, and to funnel more moneyinto campus rather than outsideorganizations. The presentrevenue from the vendingmachines is split between ARAand a general campus fund intowhich goes all vending revenue.The new canteen could serve alimited selection of food. Sand¬wiches and other more completefoods would be prohibited to barcompetition with University runfacilities and for sanitaryreasons. A service which wouldprovide cooked foods would haveto store perishable goods andmeet certain standards set by theBoard of Health.The proposal will first have tobe approved by the StudentServices Committee and then by-Dillon and O’Connell.According to Anita Sandke, director of career counciling andplacement, the number of companies interviewing Universitygraduates has increased from two in January 1976 to eight for thismonth. Art to Lie WithWaiting for Shapiro printsCollege gradsface strongerlabor marketBy JEROME MARCUSGraduating college seniors willhave an easier time finding jobsthis year as compared to lastyear, according to two studiesreleased last month.Northwestern University’sEndicott report, based on asurvey of 215 employers inbusiness and industry, projecteda 16 percent increase in the hiringof 1977 baccalaureates.The College PlacementCouncil’s survey of more than 600employers in business andgovernment indicated that hiringwould go up by a more modest 12percent.Increased hiring this yearwould reverse a two-year declinein the hiring of college graduates.Chicago students, however,should be careful not to read toomuch into the survey findings.First, it should be rememberedthat between 65 and 70 percent ofthe College’s graduates go on tograduate or professional schools.This means that less than 120people leave Chicago with a BAand begin looking for em¬ployment. it is also important to note thatmost of the hiring increasesreported in the two studies are inengineering, accounting, sales-marketing, and business ad¬ministration — areas that do nothave undergraduate programs atthe University.The College Placement Councilstudy projected an eight percentincrease in the hiring of liberalarts graduates, although thecouncil said the impact of theincrease would be “minimal inteems of actual numbers”because of a substantial drop-offin the hiring of liberal artsgraduates in recent years.The positive national hiringtrends do appear to have beenreflected at the University. AnitaSandke, director of careercounciling and placement at the University, said that “Thingsdefinitely look very good.”Sandke compared the numberof companies interviewing herein January of 1976 to those in¬terviewing this month. Last year,only two companies sent in¬terviewers to the campus. ThisJanuary, eight visits arescheduled.“Companies that haven’tcalled for years are on campusagain now,” Sandke said.The College Placement Councilsurvey also found that the in¬crease in job offers for womenwas 70 percent larger than thecorresponding increase for men.Offers to women constituted 17percent of all offers to holders ofBA degrees. In 1974, offers towomen made up only 12 percentof the total. By LISA CORDELLIn the wee morning hours ofFriday, December 7th, 28students laid down their bodiesfor Art.The 350 framed originals in theShapiro Collection were about tobe rented. The cost of having aRoualt or a Miro hanging next toyour Sierra Club calendar for twoquarters was at first glance $4.50,but the premium on the best ofthe lot was more than meremoney: it was a night on thecouches of Ida Noyes Hall.Economists call it queuing, — asin lining up to get a few gallons ofgas when the price is too low —but this bunch prefers to think ofit as trial by fire.The paintings were to be madeavailable for transport home at4:00 Friday afternoon. Toprevent the destruction of life,limb, or property in the scram¬ble for the prints, numbers areissued on the principle thatholders of the lowest numbers getthe first choices. The catch is thatthe numbers aren’t given outuntil 7:00 Friday morning.Anybody who arrives at IdaNoyes before then for a solidsojourn has his name put on TheList behind the guy ahead of him. This time the most devoteddevotee, Number 1, had beenthere since 8:30 Thursday-morning.So it’s 12:15 in the middle of thenight. Snow is falling; it’s betterto be inside the building thanoutside but better still to be homein bed. anywhere in bed. At 12:20Walter Jeschke appears in orderto go over the names on The List,checking to make sure thatearlier sincerity of intention isbacked up at that late hour by-physical presence. Walter hasbeen running this show ever sinceit started (in ’63, he thinks), whenJoe Shapiro took him to lunch totell him what it was all about. Hislarger job was running Ida Noyesin the days when it was the hub ofcampus activity, he says.Although he’s now’retired he stilldoes a few things around theplace. In three years he will havebeen at the University for fifty.Not everyone in the building ison the list. There are still a fewstragglers from the dual at¬tractions of the Playboy Bunny-of-the-Year Contest on the tubeand beer in the basement Pub —weaknesses of the flesh, in¬cidentally, which disqualify themArt to 2Art from 1asjovers of art anyway. But why are therest of these folks here?“Oh. I was drunk on sherry at the LawSchool and it sounded like a good idea.”“Ido it for tradition.”“Hell, this is a little much trouble fortradition.”“I love art. I have to be hauled out ofgalleries. I get immersed in it.”“It was a great time last year . . . Theytied shoes together over the balustrades,coats were hanging everywhere — I figureI can’t be more than a week behind withschool.”Number 14 had come directly from herlast class which ended at 4:00. Authorityhas it that Number 1 sacrificed all hisclassroom appearances for the day tonestle into a corner near the TV. A few the-spirit-is-willing types showed earlypromise but have disappeared by mid¬night. The absentees are crossed off TheList and the presentees are given loweinumbers. There’s back-slapping and hand¬shaking and comparing of track records asthe old-timers congratulate each other onmaking the Top Ten. When The List hasbeen finished, Walter mentions pastry andcoffee for breakfast at 7:00 and asks thatthe Numbers not turn into Animals whenit’s time to pick up the pictures. The early-to-bed and hearts-playing contingentswander off. The rest of the group leansback with a peaked attention becauseWalt’s getting pensive.He remembers when students turned outon Shapiro night hundreds strong and CBSsent its cameras. There were signs ofstudent life on campus then — “we didthings on the fly and enjoyed the heck outof ’em. Now you got MAB and they gotsalaries and fancy offices.” In the old daysthere was music every Wednesday night atIda Noyes — strictly students, Waltersays, the police hadda wait outside. Notjust anything went, however; W'alter tookthe mike away from student Paul But¬terfield because he slobbered on it when hesang.The Shapiro vets ask Walter eagerquestions to keep him talking. Heremembers the SDS takeover of the ad¬ministration building (the students inside ficers made**more money than they„did the?' ’ Norman Golb’s ttreamsitt ^tdnerest of the year); the Students for ViolentNon-Action digging trenches aroundRockefeller Chapel (the news camerapicked that up too); presidents’ receptionswith Hutchins (the man had charisma)and Beadle (she stood at the door, “Hello,I’m Mrs. Beadle, and this is Mr. Beadle”);the Rockefeller-Percy wedding (a lot ofmoney in one room); the days when VanBuren Street was “racy” (they sometimesgot off the bus for a better look). Waltertalks of Joe Shapiro’s hopes for thestudents who would eat and sleep near hispaintings (you could come to school just abum and leave a cultured person). He hashis own favorites in the collection andspeaks with affection of the walls insidethe Shapiro home totally obscured byworks of art.A rapt audience at Walter’s feet onlygradually leaves for couches upstairs andin the lobby. They are in for a hard night —the University (on the conservation kickwhich Walter atrributes to Arthur Godfredcommercials) has turned off the heat. Onefellow offers his jacket to a freezing lass —“Chivalry is dead,” she says, “but you cansure make an even trade better than youused to.”At 7:00 a m., lights on, building open,trays of pastry and hot coffee spread at thefoot of the lobby stairs. Walter is goingover The List for the last time, handing outnumbered cards as he goes, lookingskeptically at someone who comesbounding downstairs saying he missed hisnumber because he overslept, but handingthe card to him anyway and pointing himto the breakfast table. People beginbundling up — the bravest (most deluded)of them will head toward 8:30 classes, therest for long naps in warm places until 4:00hash rolls around. There’s satisfaction allaround, though; each of them has shownhis dedication to Art, and good stories andnew faces and slumber party giggling andthose thin crisp pastries that start in themiddle and wind outward and are bestwhen you dip the leading edge into blackcoffee. Each of them knows he’s anAesthete at last. By TONY ADLER. For Norman Golb, ten years of scholarlydreams appear to have come true. Golb,professor in the department of NearEastern languages and civilization, hasbeen doing research to prove that a largeJewish academy of higher learning existedduring the middle ages in Rouen, in nor¬thern France, in the midst of an extensiveJewish community. This summer, amonumental building was uncovered inRouen’s Jewish quarter which appears tofit the description of Golb’s academy.Golb emphasizes that there is no sureguarantee that the ruins found underRouen’s Palais de Justice are part of hisacademy. He says manuscripts frommedieval times mention a Jewishacademy in Rouen. In the 16th century, aFrench writer described a Jewish or¬namental public building which once stoodwhere the new Palais de Justice was justbeing built. This summer when the ruinswere found, the building was assumed tobe a synagogue rather than an academy.Golb thinks the building must have beenan academy. He noticed that windows arefound only in the north wall of the ruins,reminiscent of monastic libraries built atthe time.Golb was studying in Paris this summer,with the assistance of a French govern¬ment scholarship. By coincidence, hehappened to go to Rouen in September tovisit friends and found that a Rouen rabbihad wired the University trying to contacthim.The Rabbi Elie Martiano had foundGolb’s book. The History and Culture ofthe Jews of Medieval Rouen, in the Rouenlibrary, while trying to discover the natureof the ruins. He noticed the passage whereGolb postulated that a Jewish academymust have existed and been destroyedwhen the Paliasis de Justice was built.Golb is currently translating intoEnglish and revising his book about theJewish academy and the Jews of Rouen,originally in Hebrew. In his book, Golb describes the Jewishcommunity as a highly structured,“corporate” society. According to aChristian source, they had their own king,located in Rouen. It was the most im¬portant city in northern France during themiddle ages, dwarfing Paris. The Jewsflourished there until the First Crusadewhen anti-Semitism broke out. In the 12thCentury, the Jews were banished. Theiracademy soon fell into disuse, and one ofRouen’s three syngagogues was turnedinto a church.In its heyday, the Jewish academymaintained a strict regimen. Studentsattended year round for a seven-yearperiod. During this time they studied theBible and Jewish law. Golb points out thatthe curriculum was similar in earlymonastic schools and at the University ofParis founded in 1170, where Bible studiesand Christian law were taught.Golb has been studying the Jews of theMiddle Ages all his scholarly life. He hasbeen working with copies of a collection oforiginal documents, called the CairoGenizah, which deal with everything fromreligion and law to chess and other gamesof the time. In the future, Golb plans towrite a study on the Khazarian Jews basedon the documents.Norman Golb thinks ruins unearthed inRouen, in northern France, this summerare evidence of a large Jewish academyof higher learning during the middle ages.MiG' kUSDA CHOICE SHOULDERLAMB CHOPS99* per lb.Round bone cut $1.09 per ib EXTRA LEANGROUNDBEEF79*# %/ per Ib. COUNTRY DELIGHTCOTTAGECHEESE24 oz.container 89* t-Jr *JONATHANAPPLES3 Ib. bag 59* ST0UFFERS U.S. CHOICEFROZEN ENTRE STANDINGMACARONI RIB& CHEESE ROAST59* $12 9per Ib. RAGGEDY ANN £GRAPEFRUITSJUICE /Pink orRed.46 oz.can 49*Sale Dates: Wed., 12 thru Wed., 191226 E. 53rd(KIMBARK PLAZA)HOURS: MON. - SAT. 8:30 A.M. -7:50 P.M.SUN. 9-4:502 The Chicago Maroon-Tuesday, January 11,1977 Hht lantoersitu of ChicagoCOMMITTEE 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 programStudents 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 availableFor further information and applications forms write or telephoneCommittee on Public Policy StudiesWieboldt Hall - Room 3011050 East 59th StreetChicago, Illinois 60637753 1897COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC POLICY STUDIESStephen R. Berry, ChemistryNorman M. Bradburn, BehavioralSciences and BusinessPastora Cafferty, Soc. Ser. Admin.Gerhard Casper, Law andPolitical ScienceJames S. Coleman, SociologyKenneth W. Dam, LawSidney Davidson, BusinessDavid Greenstone, Political ScienceClifford Gurney, Biological Sciencesand MedicineJames Gustafson, DivinityPhilip W. Jackson, Behavioral Sciencesand Education John E. Jeuck, BusinessHarry G. Johnson, EconomicsEdmund Kitch, LawBarry D. Karl, HistoryWilliam H. Kruskal, StatisticsPhilip Kurland, Law and The CollegeAlbert Madansky, BusinessTheodore Marmor, Soc Ser AdminPhil C. Neal, LawGeorge A. Ranney, Jr., Law and Soc.Ser. AdminHarold A. Richman, Soc Ser Adminand ChairmanGeorge S. Tolley, EconomicsDaniel C. Tostedon Biological Sciencesand MedicineK /'l : i>Newsbriefs f ( j r *V /i'to the Iricf^; Religion and the,OrdihSry, by JoriSfha'nT:. Smith. WilliamBenton professor of religion.— Sunday, February 27: HumanCharacteristics and School Learning, byBenjamin S. Bloom, Charles H. Swiftdistinguished service professor, depart¬ment of education.Woodward lectures Dunham namedThe Woodward Court Lecture Series forWinter, 1977 has been announced by IzaakWirszup, professor of mathematics, andresident master of Woodward Court.The lectures, which are open to theUniversity community without charge, areheld in the Resident Masters’ apartment at5825 S. Woodlawn. Each program will startat 8:30 P.M.The schedule is as follows:Tuesday, January 11: To What TuneDoes Science Dance? by Geroge J. Stigler,Charles R. Walgreen distinguished serviceprofessor, department of economics andgraduate school of business; editor,“Journal of Political Economy.”— Tuesday. January 25: The Amoralityof the Gene, by Arnold Wr. Ravin, AddieClark Harding professor of biology.— Sunday, February 6: The First GreekHistorian: The Eccentric Herodotus, byDavid Grene, Professor. Committee ohSocial Thought.— Sunday, February 20: No Need to general counselAllison Dunham, professor of urban law,has been named to succeed W alter Leen asgeneral counsel of the University andsecretary of the Board of Trustees.Leen retired from the positionsDecember 31, but agreed to remain at theUniversity as a special assistant toPresident Wilson.Dunham, 62, is a specialist on probateand property law. He graduated fromYankton College in 1936 and received hislaw degree from Columbia University in1939.Leen reached retirement age last year,but was asked to remain for an additionalthree years by the Board of Trustees,which is authorized to make exceptions tothe retirement rule. It is expected thatDunham, who will reach retirement age inthree years, will be offered a similar ex¬tension. A small bottle of bromine, left under aprotective hood in an unused laboratory,was apparently the cause of a leak ofposionous gas which caused theevacuatioaof the James Franck Institute,5640 Ellis Ave. Sunday night.“Only a handful of people” were in¬volved, said Romuald Szara, assistant tothe director of the Institute, because theleak occurred during the dinner hour on aweekend, when relatively few researcherswere in their labs.Bromine is a highly reactive elementwhich, when exposed to air, becomes ahighly toxic reddish-brown vapor.Bromine is often used in laboratories formetal etching, and has other researchapplications.While working in his laboratory in thebasement of the Institute shortly before 6pm Sunday, post-doctoral researcher DanGuidotti saw a reddish-brown haze seepinginto the hall and smelled somethingsuspicious. He pulled the fire alarm andleft the area.Sidney Nagel, an assistant professor ofphysics ana a research associate atFranck, entered the area inadvertentlyand inhaled some of the fumes. Althoughhe suffered no ill effects, he checked intoBillings Hospital for a short time that J j-i - ^at -ip j I, l(J fty'ft)I t-fc.evening for observation. It waserroneously reported Monday in a Chicagodaily newspaper that Nagel was “felled”by tne fumes.While police arrived to close off EllisAve between 56th and 57th streets, DonaldLevy, an associate professor of Chemistryand a Franck researcher, donned a gasmask and entered Research Institute L-l,a laboratory that is currently being usedonly for storage. He turned on the exhausefan for one of the protective hoods, whichsoon dispersed the fumes. Broken glasswas found in the hood, leading Instituteofficials to surmise that a small canister ofbromine had been left there. There was noimmediate explanation of how the canisterw'as shattered. Szara speculated thatpossibly the bottle may have shattered orexploded as a result of a strong winddowndraft from the chimney of theexhause fanOther than the closing of Ellis Ave. forseveral hours, the incident caused littledisruption outside the Institute. TheComputation Center, an administrativeand research data processing facilitylocated in another part of the buildingwhich houses the Franck Institute, w as notevacuated during the leakSUZUKI VIOLIN, PIANO, CELLO, GUITAR LESSONSInstruction for children by 9 qualified teachers.Lessons and Classes begin this week.For information - 995-2105 or 778-1405Chicago State Academy of Talent EducationOFFICE WORK AVAILABLETOP WAGESSec ys, stenos, Dictaphone Operators:Cnallenging jobs in the Loop and on theSouth Side.2 or 3 Days a week or full weeksApply in person: Suite 631, Hyde Park BankBuilding. 1 525 E. 53rd Street.ELAINE REVELL, INC.Contact: Connie - 684-7000Chicago s Prestige Temporary Office ServicePUBLIC LECTURE SERIES WFSponsored by theENRICO FERMI INSTITUTEnf theUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE ARTHUR H. COMPTON LECTURESFourth Series byEarl SwallowElmhurst College, Department of PhysicsandThe Enrico Fermi InstituteSaturdays January 15 through March 19, 1977"HYPER0NS, CRAB EYES, AND SOLAR ENERGY:FROM BASIC SCIENCE TO PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS"Unexpected practical applications arising from basic scientific research are often viewed as lucky accidents and assigned such Madison Avenue labels as"spin off A major objective of this series of lectures is to demonstrate thatthis view is misleading and. inadequate by providing a more realistic view ofhow applications are found We will begin by examining some of the excitingquestions which have engaged the imagination of elementary particlephysicists in recent years, thus setting the stage for exploring a concrete contemporary example of the way it which unexpected applications drive from thepursuit of advanced basic research The desire to study rare decays of elementary particles (hyperons. in particular) has led to the development at the FermiInstitute of new techniques and devices for non imaging light concentrationwhich are now being applied in such diverse areas as vision research, infra redastronomy, and solar energy utilization We will discuss this progression frombasic science to applications in some detail, examining those characteristicsof basic science which make it a natural logical occurrence rather than apurely accidental uneA Reading list for the lectures will be provided.First Lecture: Saturday, January IS, 977 at 11 A.M.Eckhart Hall-Room 133-1132 E. 58th St.For further information, phone 753-MI1 Just off press!LINDAS PICTURES113 photographs by Linda McCartneySize:9‘4 x 12‘/i8* pagesin color61 pagesin black and white The best of hercamera workfrom The Beatlesto Jimi HendrixThe Rolling StonesDylan andMcCartneyA unique look at a fascinating world$25 at all bookstores*Published by Knopf3 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, January 11, 1977BMipj S ¥CalendarTuesdayMeetingsCalvert House: Learning to pray group. 8pm, Calvert House.Crossroads: Conversational German Class.7:30pm. Crossroads Student Center.Hillel: Beginning Hebrew. 6:30pm; ad¬vanced Hebrew, 8pm: class in "The ElijahStory: In Ancient to Modern JewishLiterature." 8pm. Hillel Foundation.Christian Science Organization: 5pm. EastLounge. Ida Noyes.LecturesHellenic Civilization Series: "The Scope ofOral Traditional Greek Epic & Its In¬terpretation." Albert B. Lord. 4:30pm,Classics 10.Microbiology Club: "Herpesviruses: TheQuestions for the Seventies," BernardRoizman. 12noon, EBB 117.Woodward Court Lecture Series: "To WhatTune Does Science Dance?" George Stigler.Charles R. Walgreen Distinguished ServiceProfessor. Department of Economics andGraduate School of Business. Editor."Journal of Political Economy.” 8:30pm.Resident Masters' apartment, 5825 S.Woodlawn.National Humanities Institute: "Writingand Print as Technologies: Death and Lifein the Text of the Book," Walter J. Ong.S.J.. 4pm. Harper 130. ArtsDOC: "The Crowd. 7:30: "Our DailyBread." 9:00. Cobb.WednesdayMeetingsUC Sailing Club: Meeting, registration forsailing lessons, and organization of racingteam. 7pm. Ida Noyes.Crossroads: Conversational Englishresumes. 2pm; Conversational French classfor beginners or intermediate, taught by-native speaker, 7:30pm. Crossroads StudentCenter, 5621 S. Balckstone.WHPK: Station meeting. 7pra. NorthLounge. Reynolds Club.University Bridge Club: ACBL sanctioned,new players welcome. 7pm, Ida Noyes.Hillel: Students for Israel. "ElectoralReform in Israel," Professor Arnold E.Enker. 12 noon: class in Midrash-PesiktaDeRav Kahanna. 7pm: class in Symbols &Rituals of Jewish Life Cycle and Festivals.8:30pm, Hillel Foundation.Christian Fellowship: 7:15pm. East Lounge,Ida Noyes.Country Dancers: 8-10pm. Ida Noyes.LecturesDepartment of Biochemistry: Michael G.Rossman. Purude University. 4pm. Cum¬mings 101.Southeast Asia Seminar: "Opening the Way-in Atoni Childbirth: Problems of Order andChange," Clark Cunningham. University ofIllinois, 4pm, Foster Lounge. Liberal Education and the ModernUniversity Lecture Series: "Origins:Research and the College." Charles W.Wegener. 4:30pm. Harper 130.Committee on Public Policy Studies:"Energy Choices Facing the New Congressand their Long-Range Implications." FrankPotter. Staff Director and Counsel, Subcommittee on Energy and Power. Com¬mittee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce.US House of Representatives. 1:30pm, Kent111.Econometrics & Statistics Colloquium: "AMicro-Modeling Approach to Determine theAdvertising-Sales Relationship," R.C.Blattberg & A.P. Jeuland. 3:30pm,Rosenwald 11.ArtsDOC: "Monkey Business," — plus twoshorts, "Zuckerkandl,” & "Courthship of aNewt," 7:15pm, & 9:30pm, Cobb.SportsUS Basketball v Roosevelt Univ: 7:30pm,BartlettThursdayMeetingsJudo Club: Work out, 6pm, 1st floor, Bar¬tlett Gym. Beginners come.UC Tables Tennis Club: 7:30. 3rd floor. IdaNoyes.Change Ringing: 12 noon - 1:00pm, locationannounced at Monday & Saturday meetings.Hillel: Faculty lunch, "Soviet Jews: TheirSituation. Destination and Integration,"Jeremy Azrael, 12noon; Hebrew folksong worships. 7pm. Hillel House. Israeli folkdancing. 8pm. Ida Noyes.Calvert House: Community Night atCalvert. 7-10pm: basic Catholicism class,7pm. Clavert House.LecturesThe Committee on Genetics: "Synthesis andJoining of DNA." Dr. Nicholas R. Coz-zarelli. 12noon, Zoology building, rm. 29.South Asia Seminar: "Traditional Symbolsand New Roles: The Women's Movement inIndia." Geraldine Forbes. 4:10pm. F'osterLounge.Committee on Virology: "5’-Terminal Capsin Eukaryotic Messenger RNA’s," Aaron J.Shatkin, 4pm, CLSC 101.Committee on Cognition and Com¬munication: “Current Trends in SovietPsychology.” James Wertsch, 4pm, BeecherHall 102.ArtsLaw School Film Society: "Adam s Rib.8:30pm. Law School Auditorium.International House Films: "Murder on theOrient Express." 7:00 & 9:30pm. In¬ternational House.Hitchcock-Snell Film: "When Comedy wasKing," 8:00 & 10:00pm, Cobb Hall.Joseph R. Shapiro Private Collection: Arare chance to view the private collection ofMr. Shapiro, donor of "Art to Live With,"and president of the Museum of Con¬temporary Art. sign up and pay in theStudent Activities Office. INH 209: busleaves at 6:30.ALLTOGETHERAt One LocationTO SAVE YOU MORE* WA«EN • CHEVROLET VOLKSWAGEN .SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICESFor ALL STUDENTSAND FACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Members oftne University of Chicago you are en¬titled to special money savingsDiscounts on /olkswegen & ChevroletPorts, accessories and any new orused Volkswagen or Chevrolet youbuy from Volkswagen South Shore orMerit Chevrolet Inc.lmiAJID • NmMSXlOA U10VA9N)SALES A SERVICEALL AT ONE GREAT LOCATIONMERIT- ICHEVROLETVOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE7234 Stony IslandPh«n«: (84-0400OpwnOally 9 9 PM. / Sot. D-3 PJVl.Ports Opon Saturday too til 12 Noon• CHEVROLET ' o Eye Examinationso Contact lenses (Soft & Hard)o Prescriptions filledDR. MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Park Skoppmt Center1510 E. 55th363-6363 Well give you a snowjobyou’re gonna like.< | IlST PREPARATION FORLaw Scmoi Aomissim TinGniout! Mmmimivt Aim Tin6naoviTf flicewe EiimaanoiMfotciL College Aoaa Tin• RROFEMIMAl IMmUCTMS• CURRENT MATERIALS• ADMISSION / APPLICATIONSTRATE8Y• LOWEST HOURLY COSTOf ANY PROSNAM782-2185is “•satSki Continentals Colorado.STOCK YOUR APARTMFNT NOWGreat Bargains:towels potsbed sheetsblankets panshouse waresDOLLARS & SENSE1312 E. 53rd St.Resole shop of K.A.M. IsaiahIsrael CongregationOpen Mon.-Fri. 11 am-5 pm25 to 50% 'off on clothing I ired of the same old scene? Relax andthink snow Colorado snow Continentalcan get you there on a wide-bodied DC-IOor spacious wide-look 727. Then ski yourway through Colorado with one of ourgreat ski packages. Here's a sample:Kreckenridge SI44-5 days/4 nightsAccommodations at Der Sieiremark.askieri/.ed Av is rental ear. 3 days of lifttickets, plus meeting semce at theairport.\ail S264-8 days/7 nights Accom- «£modations at Vails Holiday Inn. a skierized A\ is rental car. 3 days of lifttickets, plus meeting ser\ ice at the airportDon’t forget to ask about how you cansave e\en more with our special discountairfares. For more information on Continental sski package.call your Iravel Agentor Continental Airlines.Prices per |KTvn xlouhle occitpanex: lax airfare andi!a\ f->r rental ear are extra Drivers nttiM he ?l ,>r oxerWc really move our tail for you.CONTINENTAL AIRLINESThe Proud Bird with the Golden Taili, » V ?off ■a I:4-The Chicago Maroon-Tuesday, January 11,1977«r*/> > t » i fwiiii »•«•» niTtr« rfffW.‘ * ’ ' •‘A|,‘ •5rL* yv~-i?ew)rv iT^lc^Vf ealt f>nb noiJASi'ixiTTN/ .tTMIf* . y-'TWG*. : <91193 911/13® J Cii^lHVXnUThe unsung sciriusBy MAGGIE HIVNORThose of you who have inhabited HydePark for years have probably becomeblase about the squirrels here. Youprobably don’t know that the squirrel’sname comes from the latin Sciurus < scia &aural meaning “shade tail,” or “Thefellow who sits in the shadow of his tail.” You have forgotten how terrifying it is towalk by a trash basket and see it suddenlyexplode into life, to watch a black plasticgarbage liner move all by itself, and thento see some of the garbage actually leapout of the trash can and hurry down thesidewalk.You may also have forgotten howfascinating these parasites can be. Last quarter I saw a pear-shaped squirreldisappear over the edge of a trash con¬tainer in the quadrangles. Curious, I ap¬proached, but a professorial gentlemancaught my arm: “WVhatever you do. don’tcorner them.” he warned. “If they feeltrapped, they’ll bite. Rabies, you know.” Ionce had my thumb mistaken for a nut andI know that squirrel incisors are nothing tosniff at.Sadly enough, the squirrels have moreor less vanished over winter break. Itseems that last quarter they were in¬dulging in something called “autumndispersal” during which the youngsquirrels must scamper about until theyhave found a new home. Eastern GreySauirrels also rebuild their nests in thefall. There are some fine examples of theirleafy constructions in elm trees about thequadrangle, especially the one north-eastof Forster Hall. Thev eat more than twopounds of food a week, and bury caches ofnuts for the winter, a habit which endearedthem to a Bostonian Baptist sabbathschool society in 1847, which published oneof the earliest American books aboutsquirrels.In the tiny volume — a scant 3” by 2” —the Baptists set the grey squirrel up as amodel of cleanliness and godliness,because the squirrel provides for thewinter, just as all good children mustprovide for the winter of life.During the winter months, squirrels aresleeping, sometimes huddling two or threetogether in those bushy nests. If you hear a“shrill buzzing call’ in the quadrangle thismonth it may well be the serenade of arestless male.,The females give theirwooers a hard time, apparently, so that thefrustrated animal is often reduced totaking out “his pent-up emotions bygnawing vigorously at a branch or a patchof bark.” The squirrels eat only once aday, weather permitting. You will seethem carrying about a bit of hot-dog, orscrabbling in the snow, their noses pokedinto trim little nut-holes.Can we find inspiration in our fellowmembers of this community of scholars9As Keats said of fieldmice, “the creaturehath a purpose and its eyes are bright withit.” The squirrel is not only diligent inproviding for the future’ — he is •'f* r<>discriminating. Emily Dickinson writes:The Figure of a NutPresents upon a TreeEqually plausiblyBut Meat within.’is requisiteTo Squirrels, and to Me.NOTICEHEBREW FOLK SONG WORSHIPTHURSDAYS -7:00 P.M.HILLEL FOUNDATION5715 WOODLAWNWANTED!Students interested in government & public af-faris. Students who would like to have a voice indetermining public policy discussions. Interviewswill be held to discuss graduate studies at theSchool of Urban Affairs, Carnegie-Mellon.Friday Jan. 14, 1-4 p.m. atthe Office of Career Counseling SingingTelegrams?Songs tor all occasionsTELE-TUNE accompanied by banjo, ukulele,bagpipes and piano.338-8708 Mtjor credit cards accepted. JANUARY ISARELI FOLK DANCING SCHEDULEThursday • January 13Tuesday - January 18Thursday • January 20Thursday • January 27IDA NOYES -8:00 P.M.Sponsored by Hillel FoundationSTUDENTS FOR ISRAEL; Meets: WEDNESDAY, January 12, 12:00 Noon, Hillel HouseSpeaker: Professor Arnold E. Enker, Visiting Professor, Law SchoolBar Man University, IsraelSubject: ELECTROAL REFORM IN ISRAELBRING A BAG LUNCH ■ DRINK PROVIDEDMURDER ON THE ORIENT7:00 & 9:30 pm Thur. Jan. 13 & Sat. Jan. 15 $1.505The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, January 11, 1977The University’s first and onlyBy ELLEN CLEMENTSIt’s amazing the way mountains of paperare generated by events which in their daylook like they’ll bear Significantly on theDestiny of the Human Race but in fact aresoon forgotten, leaving behind only a trailof neatly filed memoranda by which theymight be traced.Take for example the time theUniversity faculty senate decided to makeseparate schools for men and women in thefirst two years of undergraduate work.The move created what was called theUniversity’s “first and only civil warduring its first quarter century.” That wasback in 1902 when dorms still had curfews,when men visiting women in theirUniversity quarters still had chaperones,and when ladies wore hats.The College of this fine new Universityhad by that year seen ten entering classes.The College was a very important part ofthe University — in more ways than one.Graduate work and research do not pay forthemselves, after all. The Board ofTrustees was packed with goodbusinessmen who trusted a healthy un¬dergrad enrollment along with high annualdegree productivity to maintain a finan¬cially secure, full-blooded university.But a change was taking place in thisundergraduate bodv. which manv notedwith discomfort. When the school openedin 1892, women made up 24 percent of theentering class. This figure climbedsteadily until, by the end of its first decade,the freshman class was 52 percent female.“Effeminization’’ of the institution wasfeared and forecasted. After all. theschools Chicago itched to rival did notadmit women at all; Stanford, its westcoast contemporary, was about to slap alimit on female enrollment. The idea ofwomen in education still conjured thoughtsof lace-making and water colors more thanof slide rules and microscopes.So it was not from out of nowhere thatthe idea came to President Harper ofseparating the boys from the girls in theJunior College, the first part of an un¬dergraduate program. The thought wasperhaps sparked by the offer of $1.5 millionfrom an anonymous donor for the creationof a women’s college at the University,although the existence of this donor waslater denied by Dean Henry Pratt Judson.fit must be admitted that at the time the “The inability of men to competesuccessfully with women in JuniorCollege work seems to indicate thewisdom of seeking more rather thanless of such competition as a stimulusto the men. ”Dean was much involved in defending —rather heatedly — the ethics and non¬materialist motives of the Universityagainst the aspersions of infuriatedAlumnae.) A further impetus came in theextreme overcrowding of Cobb Hall,where most college classes met. But thisoriginal purpose, if ever credited withbeing the real motive force behind themove for “coinstruction,” soon slippedfrom view in the ensuing fracas.In general, the idea was that twoseparate quadrangles should be created for Junior College men and women whichwould include classroom facilities wherestudents would learn their lessons in theprivacy of their own sex groups. Thesegregation was to occur only during thefirst two years of college, only in thoseclasses which were large enough to makedivision economically feasible, and onlyinsofar as division did not endanger thequality of education available to eithersex.Suffragists, Harvard men. scientists,interested Americans — everyone seemedto have something to say about “the planfor coinstruction” at Chicago’s Univer¬sity.” Those who favored segregationquestioned the value of educational in¬teractions between the sexes, mourned theloss of refinement and “corporate con¬sciousness” that had come out of exclusive(segregated) Eastern schools, and toutedthe virtues of manhood and womankindwhich could be nurtured best bycloistering each with his or her own kind.The plan’s opponents begged the march ofprogress, the dignity of women, and theexpense of duplicating facilities.The majority of the faculty supportedPresident Harper in the plan, which, in hispreliminary descriptions in the DecennialReport of 1902, seems thoroughly in¬nocuous. a mere administrative ad¬justment. In that report Harper stressedthe fact that segregation was in no way tolower the quality of opportunity offeredwomen. The idea was not to segregatewomen, but to move all Junior Collegestudents from the overcrowded Quads, —so Harper’s report had it. Besides, it wasonly in their classes that students would beseparated; no further social barrierswould be raised. All in all “the change willbe so gradual that it will hardly benoticed.”The University soon found out thatquestions involving the relation of thesexes are not lightly taken up, nor do theyallow of “gradual, hardly noticed’’changes via administrative edict. IfHarper had thought to make merely aquiet administrative change, he hadchosen unfortunately meaningful lines ofdivision.6-The Chicago Maroon-Tuesday, January 11,1977 civil warBut Harper’s further comments on thesubject, like these of most of the plan’sadvocates, suggest that it was not thecongestion of Cobb Hall alone that wasunder consideration. In the same decen¬nial report he suggests that the Universityneed not stand by coeducation as “theperfect ideal beyond which there can be noprogress,” for it is not certain that“membership in a large, undifferentiatedmass of men and women students fur¬nishes the best education.” It was possiblethat the “intellectual stimulation whichthe women have received is not wholly of asalutary sort;” they “have lost some of thefine attractiveness which somewhat closerreserve would have attained.” And theBoard of Trustees agreed that there was“need of better opportunity both for menand women in the earlier years to cultivatethe life peculiar to each. ”Faculty supporters of the plan fought theissue on points of science, chivalry, andpsychology, with back-up from ac¬counting. Sociologist Albion Small stood bythe University's right to experiment ineducation. “Coeducation” was not“something distinctly and unalterablydefined; and it would be “singularly in¬consistent with a scientific attitude ofmind” to demand that the Universityadhere without experiment to a rigid planof education.There were those of the Harvard crowdwho, like Robert Herrick, novelist andprofessor of literature, found the new stylecoeducation disconcerting and hankeredafter bygones. The professor protagonistof Herrick’s book. Chimes, “could not eas¬ily get over his dislike of seeing womenchatting familiarly with the men in thecorners of the halls, or sitting in the emptyclass rooms, flirting ... it offendedsomething romantic in him.” To theprofessor, it hardly seemed that men couldthrive under the arrangement; “In thismorning class the women took byprescriptive right all the front benches inthe room, while the minority of men slunkinto the rear, as if ashamed of exposingtheir cruder mentality before women inmass . . . they seemed obsessed by amental diffidence before the other sex.”And the women: “They were not as a rulepretty or even attractive ... plain and notalways tidy,” although most of them“were as able, even abler than the men,and were generally of a superior socialclass, with a more cultivatedbackground.” But then, in the opinion of atleast one other professor. Herrick couldhardly expect to find blooming inChicago’s heterogeneity the cosy socialnetworks which grace good Easternschools. How could such a flowering comeout of the "crowding and physical contact,the coarsening social effect" so in evidentin Cobb Hall?The psychological arguments took theircue from Herrick’s nostalgic view of theideal relation of the sexes. Men and womenwere different from one another, and notnecessarily each other’s bestschoolfellows. As Harper pointed out, “thegirls are apt to be patronizing toward theboys and the latter are self-conscious andembarrassed when thrown in companywith the girls.” And why should one try tofit men and women to one single form ofeducation any more “than one tried toconform the natural differences in theirvoices to one pitch?” They distract oneanother It was impossible, “under thepresent system... to secure subordinationof the social to the intellectual.” Classesmaintained “too much of the tones of aleisure-class social function.” And if thedoubters needed yet more convincing,segregation’s advocates would alwaysnote that two years of exclusive “coin¬struction” offered in conjunction withgeneral, progressive, coeducation wouldoffer the best of all possible worlds andattract lots of students *On the other side of the fence, acrossfrom the even-minded administrators,misty-eyed idealists and probing, disin¬terested social scientists, there pressed ananxious mob of equal rights supporters,democrats, and a sprinkling account¬taking pragmatists who were by no meansThe Board of Trustees was warned “that thousands of club women all overthe United States are watching with grave anxiety,’’that he “position takenby your University in opposition to coeducation is attracting the attention ofall civilized peoples of the world. ”ready to allow the professorial to continueits deliberations in peace.There were arguments of psychologicalhealth, law, and dollars on this side of theissue too. Coeducation was the only way todiminish the “unhealthy sexual glamor”which mystified relations between thesexes. Furthermore, the charter of theUniversity, under which it had acceptednumerous contributions, stated that op¬portunities in all departments would be“open to persons of both sexes on equalterms.” How could the administrationtamper with the clause now'? And besides,why the needless expense of duplication ofequipment, staff, facilities? A professor ofgeology argued the point simply, bysending the bill for the minimum equip¬ment necessary for the teaching of hissubject over to the president’s office.For many of the plan’s opponents,“segregation” was a highly emotionalissue. The president’s mail was pepperedwith protests from alumnae associationsand equal rights groups, ranging from thedignified to the nearly hysterical. TheBoard of Trustees was warned “thatthousands of club women all over theUnited States are watching with graveanxiety,” that the “position taken by yourUniversity in opposition to coeducation isattracting the attention of all civilizedpeoples of the world.” The plan was calleda backward step, a retrograde action inopposition to the progressive tendency ofthe age. In even considering its adoption,Chicago was “surrendering its standingamong the great University’s of theworld.” One suffragist, making the con¬servative argument work for women,reminded the president that “the world isa cleaner place wherever it is open to bothsexes alike,” for the “moral atmosphere U uplifted by the presence of women "andthey are strengthened by the presence ofmen.”Other interested parties reminded theadministration of the school’s social roleand obligations. The Reverend J. LloydJenkins declared that the proposed changetended to make “of our University a schoolfor the classes and not for the masses”,that segregation was a bait thrown to thepreference of the wealthy for segregatededucation. For one professor thedevelopment “is clearly a movement ofthe aristocracy as opposed to democracy;it is wealth trying to establish its distinc¬tion, while another insisted that “no stateand no city has any right to refuse to itsgirls the education it provides for itsboys.” The segregation plan was nothingless than a “social vivisection.”Among the foremost in the fray wasMarion Talbot, Dean of Women, whopointed out in her salty way that whateverthe imagined pedagogical benefits ofcoinstruction, there was no way to insureequal quality of education on both sides ofthe divisions and that women were sure tobe the ones to suffer. Furthermore, in spiteof the fact that the women of the Univer¬sity did at least as well academically astheir male colleagues, there would be noway to convince the public that the divisionhad not been made due to the discovery ofinferior capacity in the women. All this notto mention the damage done to the cause ofequal opportunity in education if theUniversity of Chicago should, after tenyears’ experience, think better of its policyand drop the practice. And there was theconsideration of progress besides. “If thetrustees could know how eager girls andwomen are to study as thinking beings and not as females, they would hesitate injustice to women to adopt this measure.”And so the battle raged during the springand summer months of 1902. Citizenssuggested that the University take intoaccount the wishes of the community itwas built to serve. Dean Judson parriedthat it was “utopian to expect the generalpublic to succeed even in correctlypresenting to itself the problem of anacademic situation until it is first beforethem in the concrete.” Some suggestedthat coeducation was detrimental to theacademic advancement of the men, whorefused to compete with women. A petitionsigned by 58 of the faculty suggested,among other things that this “assertedinability of men to compete successfullywith women in Junior College work seemsto indicate the wisdom of seeking morerather than less of such competition as astimulus to the men.” John Dewey, notedprofessor of education, praisedcoeducation as the best means ofdemystifying the relations between menand women. Dean Judson responded drylythat “quite enough of the desireddisillusionment may be secured byassociation for a part of the time.” In replyto the unfortunate argument (made evenby President Harper) that women andmen should not be expected to take theireducation together any more than theywere expected to take gym classestogether, Marion Talbot pointed out that“they could swim together in the ocean, ordance together on the ballroom floor eventhough in the latter case the costumes ofthe women were much scantier than wasallowed in the gymnasium.” The onlypoint to which reply cannot successfully beoffered was made by P J. Farnsworth,M.D. and Professor Emeritus of a mid¬ western medical school who, excusinghimself for the homely illustration pointed -out to President Harper — “When we workmares and horses together we emasculatethe horses. If you encourage coeducationto too great an extent you must at leastemasculate the course of study.”But what was the material result of allthe turmoil? Lexington Hall, “the hencoop” was built on $50,000 of Mr.Rockefeller’s money and opened in thespring of ’03. The building provided womenwith a private dining hall and readingrooms and they settled down comfortablythere, “enjoying more advantages thanbefore”. Dean Vincent quoted thestatistics on the plan to show' thatsegregation effected 4/5’s of the JuniorCollege in 1903-04, but Marion Talbotcountered his statement with the ob¬servation that 43 percent of the men and 25percent of the women had no separatedcourses while only two percent of the menand 3.5 percent of the women weresegregated in all their work. Miss Talbot“wondered if this shows a greater desireon the part of the women to keep alooffrom the men”. As Vincent himself statedin the President’s Report of that year, thesystem “cannot be said to have shown anymarked influence one way or the otherupon the scholarship of the first yearjuniors.” The place given to the subject ofsegregation in the deans’ annual reportsdiminished over three years' time frothree pages to scarcely a paragraph. By1908 the subject had been tactfully buried.As said Dean Talbot, who had overcome,“the whole thing quietly died. Nobodyattended the obsequies, and nobody tooknote of them.” As trustee Goodspeed notedin his later history of the University, “Thewar suddenly ceased. One was tempted toask what was it all about.”*rj“ ‘H d**“ 7 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, January 11,1977Sr - t votv •*« V oner'ir*"' *(SlltVUH /Usal 'W frMfi mBeloit bombsmaroons 82-56Cagers fall in league openerTodd Lewis readies a jump shot against Beloit. (Photo by David Rieser)Ski club impressivein local tourneyBy DAVID RIESERThe Maroon’s debut into Midwest con¬ference basketball was none too pleasantas Chicago took on the Bucaneers and gotwhipped 82-56.It was not one of Chicago’s best games.Never able to generate much offense theteam relied on it’s defense to keep them inthe game, which it did for one half, mostly,however, the Maroons just stood aroundwaiting for something to happen.What happened was that Beloit simplyoverwhelmed the Chicago squad. Hitting66 per cent of thier shots, the Bucs alsomuscled in to control both boards. Chicagomay have had a chance, but they certainlydidn’t take it.Although Beloit went out to a quick lead,in the first half, Chicago stayed withinstriking distance. For offense the Maroonswould go down, set up and wait. Oc¬casionally a shot would go up and in, butthe Maroons never really got their pat¬terned attack going.For defense the squad almost totallyclosed off the middle. Unfortunately,Beloit scored all it’s points from the out¬side. Mike Kujak put in 18 points in the first half, almost from the first row of thebleachers. The half ended with Beloit up37-27.The second half started with Chicagocharging out of the dressing room andtotally falling apart. Beloit continued toshoot the eyes out of the basket andChicago continued to be hopeless at theirown end of the floor. As the half went onChicago got desperate, even resorting tolong bombs down court. As one awedMaroon player put it, “we don’t even dothat shit in practice.”Steve Shapiro had the high total forChicago with 19 points. Jay Alley was thenext at 12.Coach Angelus was none too happy aboutthe game. “We just didn’t play wellenough,” he said.“We knew what these guys were going todo. But we weren’t going inside on them,we weren’t getting enough done. If we hadwe would have gotten the ball in.”Chicago’s first chance to redeemthemselves will come this Wednesdaynight with their home opener againstRoosevelt. That game will be played atBartlett Gym and will start at 7:30. Competing in sub-zero temperature atWilmot, Wisconsin on what was perhapsthe most difficult course of the season, theUniversity Ski Club showed that they arenot to be taken lightly in competition.Out of a total of 206 ChicagoMetropolitan Ski Council racers, MaroonsSteve Thomas and John V. Prunskisfinished 10th and 11th respectively in Class‘A’ competition. Victor Ostupchuk finished15th in Class ‘B’ competition..In class ‘C’ competition Jeff Guttermanand John Plananskv finished 20th and 26threspectively out of a field of 106. And intheir racing debuts Carol Burnside, LarryLevin and Jon Frenzen all showed goodpotential. 52% of all competitors failed to completethe tough course. U. of C. racers DavidLezak, Ralph Carpenter, YoshiYoshimura, Lora Rhodes, and Bill Zeilerdisqualified. Many racers fell victim to anespecially bewildering series of gates nearthe end of the course.Competition was fierce due to thepresence of many outstanding racersincluding several former Austrian teammembers and former CAN-AM racersJohn Yewer and Bill ClarkThis was not the club’s first race. OnDecember 18, Maroons Steve Thomas andJohn V. Prunskis finished 14th and 26threspectively. Victor Ostupchuk did notfinish.Sportss )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.B-The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, januar y 11,1977AM 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 over1/2 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 TonightSTUDENTS SAVE $165.00 OFF OE THE REGULAREVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS TUITIONSCHEDULE OF FREE MINI-LESSONSat the Chicago Theological Seminary5757 University, room 133 iMon. Jan. 1 0 7:30 pmTues. Jan. 1 1 7:30 pmWed. Jan. 1 2 7:30 pmThurs. Jan. 1 3 7:30 pmMon. Jan. 17 7:30 pmIf you cannot attend a Mini-Lessoncall Pam Modica at 236-1996 forinformation and registration.' o/iMost people go through life reading,without ever learning how! EVELYN WOODREADING DYNAMICS9-The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, January 11, 1977| . I I ***%«*•■» * * 1 rrJ»'Attention: The Teaching FacultyBook requirement forms will be delivered to all academic departments on January 7th.If you will be teaching a course during the Spring quarter of 1977, please ask yourdepartmental secretaries for these forms and return them to the textbook office byMonday January 17th.* /Please keep in mind that if the book requirements are turned in on time, the coursematerial will be available to your students that much earlier.If you have not received your forms by January 7th, or if you need additional forms,please feel free to call me, ext. 753-3305 or 753-331 3.Ronald HarrisManager, Textbook DepartmentTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORESendthisformtoMAROON1212 E. 59thCHICAGO, ILL60615 DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: UC PEOPLE50c per line40' per line to repeat NON-UC PEOPLE75' per line60' per line to repeatALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE There are 30 spaces per line, including all letters,spaces, and punctuation marks. Circle all lettersto be capitalized.HEADINGS: There is no charge for regular headings (i.e.,For Sale, Space, People Wanted, etc.). Your own heading(15 spaces) costs $1.00 (75' to repeat) per line.HEADINGr • 1 r“ !—■—i1i • 1lAdvertising deadlines for Tuesday editions. 12 00 noon the preceding Fridayfor Friday editions, 12 :00 noon the preceding Wednesday10 The Chicago Maroon-Tuesday, January 11,1977PRO-LIFECLASSIFIED ADS GAYCOFFEEHOUSES f, To«lVh(, 7 • 30, 2nd floor IdaNove, 8^0^PHYSClTUTipwri 'WWBfs; v/)»«ser.,'S'.?iryrr>.' -ism*SPACE FOR SALE AAASSAGE-WORKSHOP Where the friendliest folks on campus l ean help you with these subjects. Callgather for music, talk, and homemade 947-8)84 around 6goodies!Seek ROOMATE! Real nice apt 2 bigrooms, kitchen, bath central loc &offst. Parking male, grad, n-smok, ngay 288-5746.Apt. covers whole 3rd floor of buildingin quiet South Shore neighborhood. 5bedrms need one roomate Call 2885799Roomate wanted, female only. Drexel,Irg rm in sunny apt $114 incl heat, 947-5350 LeeSpacious Hyde Park apt. wantsroommate. Call 955-5932. ITS. LOW COST Charter Flights toEurope. 327 2858, 4-6 p.m1 Bdrm. Cooperative apt. Vicinity:55th & Woodlawn Near U. of Chicago.$12,000 or best offer. Call 736 3696 after5:30p.m.JCL CLASSIntroduction to operating systemconcepts, tape & disk usage, basic JCLstatements. 6 sessions $20. Computortime provided. Come to Comp Centerto register - call 753 8409 for info. Classstarts Jan. 25.Lge bedrm & bath in pvt Kenwoodhome for single std. Rm, bkfst, dinnerin return for maint work babysitting.Must be neat and willing to work. Call ^ TENNISMcDermott 924 1282. 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 atthe Gargoyle. TEXT—Downing's TheMassage Book. 7 sessions $35 Yogaprecedes massage on Thurs. 5:30 7:15.$5 off for both. Call Dobbi 643 3595UNCENSOREDENTERTAINMENTMARILYN 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. YOGARelax, energize, unify body-mind-spirit. A perfecTbalance 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.TRANSCENDENTALMEDITATIONFree intro talk on TM Tues., Jan. 11,7:30 p.m. Ida Noyes Hall, EastLounge. PAN PIZZADELIVEREDThe Medici Delivers from 10 p.m.weekdays, 5-11 Saturday, 667 7394Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourself.BOOKS BOUGHTBooks bought & sold everyday,everynight 9 11, Powells, 1501 E 57thSt. .A ,,»«joseph r. shapirocollectionjan 13A rare chance to viewthe private collection ofMr. Shapiro, donor of“Art to Live With.” Busleaves at 6:30, arrivingin Oak Park at 7:30.Sign up and pay in theStudent Activities Office.INH 209. $1.50Room for student woman on 3rd floorof private home. Very lg„ light. EastHyde Park. Light cooking facilities.$85/mo. 684-5076, eves before 10 orweekends.5 & 6 room apts in building beingrehabilitated. 5 min. from U of C on61st St. Coleman Corp 373-1800.9V2 acres, 150 fruit bearing trees, 1200sq. ft. brick frame house (built '59)with full basement, breezeway, at¬tached garage and work shop. 3 out¬buildings and pole barn. Spring-fedstream. 5 mis. east of Michigan CityInd. Hour from U of C $47,000. CallRenard at Callahan Realty. 219—9264298PEOPLE WANTEDSecretary full or part-time, wantedimmediately by research professor;call 753 2347 days or 538 1976 eveningsand week ends.Undergraduate with strongprogramming experience to programminicomputer (Nova 3/12) 15 or morehours/week. 753 2363.Female group worker for afterschoolprogram for 6 10 years old girls.Recreational and arts and crafts skillsessential. Call Marie Carr 643 4062Mature experienced typist for socialservice agency. Duties include an¬swering phone, detailed recordkeeping, dictaphone and copy typing,use of office machines. Call TheresaBell, Ml 3 4062.Author needs part time secretary,effective typing, hours arranged. 6438295 Rackets free. All ages & Levels ofinstruction. YMCA, JCC, groups &private. Jim Smith 667-4038.CALCULATORS-C.B.FOR BEST PRICES ONCALCULATORS (HP., T.I., CORVUS, COOMADOR, NOVUS, plusmany others), STEREO (home andcar), C B. RADIO and ALARMSYSTEMS CALL JEFF at 753-2249 rm.3410 leave message.USSAILINGCLUBRegistration for BEGINNINGSAILING CLASSES, organization ofracing team: this and more at IdaNoyes. Wed. Jan. 12, 7 pm. All newmembers most welcome.Experienced SAILORS and racersshould come to the US sailing clubmeeting Wed. Jan 12, 7pm Ida Noyes.We are organizing a racing team,racing seminars, and schedulingregattas.PEOPLE FOR SALEInterested in typing evenings in myhome. Will discuss price Barbara 3733594 after 5:30 p m.For exp piano teacher of all levelscall: 947-9746.French native teacher offers tutorialsph. 324 8054TOGAM ASS AG EYOGA i MASSAGE WORKSHOPS BEGIN ON CAMPUS MINER QUARIER MONDAY IANUARY 17TH AND THURS0AY JANUARY 2oTH AT THE GARGOYLE 5655 UNIVERSITYTHE YOGA WORKSHOP WILL INCLUDE ASNAS (HATHA YOGA POSTURES) PRANAYAMA (BREATH CONTROL)ENERGIZATION RELAXATION AN0 CHANTINGTHE MASSAGE WORKSHOP WUl BE BASED ON DOWNING S THE MASSAGE BOOK AND RUMANIAN DEEPMUSCLE MASSAGE PRACTICED IN MS KERMAN S FAMILY E0R OVER TOUR GENERATIONSTHE WORKSHOP WILL BE LEO BY DOBBI KERMAN WHO HAS TAUGHT YOGA ON CAMPUS SINCE 1971YOGA MONDAYS (FOR CONTINUING YOGA STUDENTS) & THURSDAYS (FOR BEGINNING YOGA STUDENTS)FROM 5 30 7 15 PMMASSAGE MONDAYS AT NOON FROM I? 00 I 30 PM (BRING LUNCHITHURSDAY EVENINGS FROM 7 30 9 00 P M7 SESSIONS Of YOGA $307 SESSIONS Of MASSAGE $357 SESS0NS OF BOTH $60E0R INFORMATION i PRE REGISTRATION CALL D06BI 643 3595 WEAR WARM COMFORTABLE CLOTHES ABRING A BtANKfT RESEARCHSUBJECTS NEEDEDEarn up to $300 as a research subjectin experimental drug studies in theDepartment of Psychiatry. Minimaltime required Must be between 21-35and in good health. If interested callRon at 947-6985 between 9:30 and 10:30Monday ThursdayPERSONALSDear Marilyn Meet you at Cobb thisSunday 7:00, 8:45 or 10:30 for your"Resurrection."-ChamberlinRoom for sublet 51st & Greenwood,$90/mo. 752-6151.DATING SERVICE Over 1200members. Low cost 274-6248 or 2746940.Writers' Workshop (Plaza 2 8377) Save $10,00 to $59.90 if you act now.If you’ve been thinking aboutgetting a programmable,Texas Instruments has aspecial offer for youNOWft*** •-SR-56 $109.95*If you want an incredible slide rule calculator that'salso programmable, then this is the one for you.Therere 74 preprogrammed functions and opera¬tions. And it has AOS, Tl’s unique algebraic operatingsystem, the underlying reason an SR-56 is so power¬ful. It'll let you handle problems with as many as9 sets of parentheses. Talk about memory. An SR-56has 10 (11 if you count the T-registered.) And you cando arithmetic with all of them.Chances are you'll soon discover how really easyit is to program. An SR-56 has 100 steps. Six logicaldecision functions. Four levels of subroutines. Dec¬rement and skip on zero. Compare a test registerwith the display to make a conditional branch. Andthis is just the beginning.Think about it Can you really afford to put off get¬ting your SR-56. now9 SR-52 8299.95*If you want the computer-like power of a card pro¬grammable then choose this one.Techniques like optimization, iteration, data reduc¬tion. what-if matrices, mathematical modeling, neednot tie up your mind - or your timeBut learning to use it is a hassle, you say Not truePrerecorded programs are gathered into softwarelibraries Electrical Engineering. Math. Statistics.Finance 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- r-'iright at your fingertips J 'lAnd (here’s not a better time to get anSR-52 than right now.Texas Instruments will rebate $10 00 ol your original SB 56 purchase price whenyou (1) return this completed coupon including serial number 12) along with yourcompleted SR-56 customer information card (packed m box) and (3) a dated copyof proof ol your purchase verifying purchase between Jan land March 31 1977SR-56 Rebate OfferP 0 Box 1210Richardson Texas 75080NameAddressCity StateSR-56 Serial NoPlease allow 30 days tor rebate Zip(from backot calculator) Electrical Engineering Statistics Math Finance Choose any two and (1) returnthis completed coupon including serial number along win (2) your completedSR-52 senaiized customer mtormation card (packed m boxi and (3) a dated copyot proof ot your purchase verifying purchase between Jan 20 and March 31 1977SR-52 tree software library otterP 0 Box 1210Richardson Texas 75080NameAddress —City State Z*(from backol calculator!F mance EEi SR-52 Serial NoMath Statisticsl Texas Instruments reserves the right to substitute software libraries ot equal valueI based upon availability Please allow 30 days for delivery• IOffer vox) where prohibited Dy law Good m Contmentai II S only• Suggested tetaA pree Texas Instruments1977 Te»as Instruments incorporated I NCOR POR A T f D11 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, January 11, 1977Faculty 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 BOOKSTORE»!♦♦♦♦* n m t