The fine art of applying theory is beingattempted at some city public schoolsBy Anne GluskerAn innovative educationaltheory called “mastery lear¬ning,” developed by a Universityprofessor, is in the early stages ofbeing put into practice.Benjamin S. Bloom, theCharles H. Swift distinguishedprofessor in the educationdepartment, is directing a three-month program designed to teachteachers in the Chicago PublicSchool System how to incorporatemastery learning techniques intotheir work.Conventional educationaltheory holds that during a setperiod of instruction studentsattain differing levels ofachievement. A test is given when the unit of learning iscompleted.But, proponents of masterylearning believe that the set timeperiod should be replaced byconcentrating on the student’slevel of achievement. For asmany students as possible toachieve this level, both teacherand student must devote moretime than usual to school work.As students gain confidence intheir ability to do the work, theirmotivation and rate of learningincreases and the extra timespent decreases, according toBloom.To implement this con¬troversial new theory, 120teachers from over 100 Chicagopublic schools gather each Saturday morning for lecturesand workshops in .Judd Hall. Inthese workshops the teachersdevelop the texts and materialsto be used in their courses.Participants also receive three-and-a-third graduate credit hoursfrom the University of ChicagoIn essence, mastery learningsupplements regular classroominstruction with a series of for¬mative tests. These diagnostictests inform the teacher of thestudent’s weaknesses. Thestudent can then be helped by theteacher, parents, supplementaryeducational material, or otherstudents.Mastery learning to 3 Education professor Benjamin Bloom: “Students learn what theyhave to teach.” (Photo by Jeanne Dufort)Vol.87, No. 25 The University ot Chicago © The Chicago Maroon 1977 Tuesday, November 22,1977Fewer than 10 candidates are onpresidential searchers’ final listIncreased loan negligencedistresses administrators;FISL charter questionedBy Abbe FletmanThe University is in danger oflosing its charter for FederallyInsured Student Loans (FISL)unless the trend of increasingdelinquency rates is reversed. Thedelinquency rate rose 12.6 percentfrom 1975/76 to 1976/77, causingHEW to question dean of studentsCharles O’Connell aboutUniversity loan practices beforereinstating the charter last week.O’Connell said that rein¬statement is usually routine, butthat the rising rates ofdelinquency, default andbankruptcy at the University hascaused administration officials tofear that the next year it may beDefault to 3 Loan office in Haskell Hall(Photo by Sharon Pollack) By Peter CohnThe trustee-faculty committeesearching for a new Universitypresident has narrowed its pool ofcandidates to a list of fewer than 10names which includes morechoices from outside theUniversity than for inside, ac¬cording to Norman Bradbum,chairman of the faculty searchcommittee.Bradburn said that he is “stillhopeful” that the final selectionwill be made by the committee'soriginal deadline of late Decem¬ber. “It depends on how long thepeople take to make up their mindsand on how successful we are inconvincing them to take it,” hesaid.“We have a list of people wewould like, any of w hom would begood,” Bradburn said. The com¬ mittee’s final list, from which ithas been working for about twoweeks, was narrowed down fromthe list of 40 candidates the paneldeveloped at the beginning of thequarter. There were 200 can¬didates on the original list lastspring.Because the committee ismaintaining strict secrecy, therehas been little information eitherfrom inside the group or fromoutside sources about the names onthe final list.Bradburn maintained that thecommittee has kept an open mindon the type of candidates it isseeking. However, he said that thecommittee tends to favor an out¬side candidate. “There is still ageneral preference for an out¬sider,” he saidCommittee members have beenmeetings of both the Trustees andfaculty groups and smallerdiscussions among individualmembers. “It’s been pretty in¬tense," Bradburn saidIn recent weeks, however, thepace of the deliberations has beenslowed by campus events such asthe rededication of the Field Houseand the medical school’s 50thanniversary', Bradburn saidIf the committee does name acandidate by the end of nextmonth, the search will have taken10 months the same amount oftime the last presidential searchtookIn that search, the committeefailed to find an acceptible can¬didate, ending its deliberationsonly when then acting presidentJohn Wilson agreed to accept thejob.The present committee, whichhas a different membership fromthe earlier group, was formed inFebruary when Board of TrusteesChairman Robert Reneker ap¬pointed a committee of sixtrustees In early March, theFaculty Council elected sevenfaculty members to the facultysearch committee .Although theTrustees have the final say in theselection of the president, the Faculty search committeechairman Norman Bradbum:“We have a list of people wewould like, any of whom would beood.” (Photo by *Carohtudenmund)faculty committee’s recom¬mendations carry substantialweight with the Trustees, notemost informed observersJust as the committee appears tobe moving more effectively towardaccomplishing its mission than thelast group, the searchers have alsobeen significantly more successfulin keeping their deliberations instrict confidenceW’hile leaks to the press werefrequent during the last search,committee members this timearound have kept the names on thelists to themselves As a result,even the most highly placedfaculty members have reportedthat they have no specific in¬formation about the deliberationsSearch to 3—Publication—scheduleThis is the final Maroon newsissue of the quarter December2 The Maroon will publish aspecial issue devoted to theUniversity presidency, plus aregular Grey City JournalNew's coverage will resume onJanuary 6. Have a pleasantThanksgiving and Christmasholiday.Trespassing violationUC grad banned from CircleBy David SkeldingWhy can’t a University ofChicago graduate get into theUniversity of Illinois CircleCampus (UICC)?Sandor John, Universitygraduate and member of theSpartacus Youth League (SYL)has been barred from UICC, underthreat of criminal trespassingcharges.On October 27, John was on thecampus upon the invitation of theCircle Campus SYL to help runtheir literature booth in the CircleCenter building While engaged ina discussion at the booth, .John wasapproached by the buildingsupervisor and three campuspolice who escorted him into theoffice of the assistant director ofthe building. The administrator,who had previously ascertainedthat John was not a student atCircle, told him that he had no official business on the campusand that if he were to be found oncampus again, he would bearrested on charges of criminaltrespassing. John was then takento the perimeter of the campus byuniversity police.According to the Circle Campusadministration, John had beenpreviously warned to stay offcampus and that he had violated •university regulations thatprohibit non-students from han¬ding out material.But, John said that CircleCampus is continually frequentedby non-students who have no of¬ficial business and that “campusevents are advertised in a mannerthat encourages non-students toattend.”An ad-hoc committee has beenformed on Circle Campus toprotest the action initiated againstJohn Barred: University graduate andSYL member Sandor John is notallowed on Circle Campus(Photo by Carol Studenmund)DEBATEResolved: that Capital Punishmentshould be abolishedRep. Mikva v. Mr. CarringtonTuesday, November 22, 8 pmIda Noyes TheatreSponsored by the Chicago Debate SocietyJ £hc Qniocrslcu of ChicagoROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 SOUTH WOODLAWN AVENUE . CHICAGO, ILLINOIS.M£SSI.AffbyGEORGE FRIDERIC HANDELTwo Performances, December 4 and II, 1977Sunday Afternoons at 4:00 o’clockRICHARD VIKSTROM, DirectorTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRAND ORCHESTRA (30 players)Guest Artist WALTER CARRINGER, TenorSUSAN NALBACH LUTZ and LYNDA TUCKER, SopranosPHYLLIS UNOSAWA and JENNIFER LANE, ContraltosDALE TERBEEK, Counter-tenor WILLIAM DIANA, BassL Tickets: Reserved $6.00 • Chancel Seating $5.50General Admission $5.00 • Students $2.50Available at: Reynolds Club Box Office, 5706 S. University AvenueCooley’s Corner, 5211 S. Harper AvenueI Mail Orders to: Chapel Music Office, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel5850 South Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637u^ Please make checks payable to The University of Chicago and enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope o*>*■*>&ATTENTIONMedical School ApplicantsAll students who plan to apply NEXT YEAR to enter medicalschool in Fall, 1979 should attend a meeting to discuss thenew MCAT and other details preliminary to submitting appli¬cations. The meeting will be heldTUESDAY NOV. 22nd4:30pmClassics 10 WHY? The reason is simple. Your hair, likeyour eyes, is a refleetion of your total personality.For notieeable hair, open vour eves to THE HAIRPEOPLE PERFORMERS.50% Off with this ad ONLYa five-part seriesJOURNALISTS VIEWTHE UNITED STATESfunded by the Illinois Humanities Council andThe National Endowment for the Humanities• Saturday, November 26, 2 p.m.feat nrin<iJAZZ, JEANS, “COLUMBO”AND OTHER THINGS —AMERICAN CULTURALIMPERIALISMJOHN C A WELTI, The University of ChicagoROGER EBERT. Chicago Sun-TimesGINO GULLACE, Oggi magazineI). NICHOLAS RUDALL, The University of ChicagoModerator: JEAN ALLARDatChicago Public Library Cultural Center78 E. Washington St.Sponsored by The Center for Policy StudyThe University of ChicagoFor more information, call 753-4494‘ 2 — Th4 Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 22,197/ /.»* **v» * t * r -ft ■rr—':: r%rDefault from 1even more difficult to secure a governmentcharter to loan.Difficulties at the University are part of anationwide trend of increasing delinquency,default and bankruptcy among students. Sixhundred and eighty thousand studentsacross the country have failed to pay backabout $840 million they borrowed, accordingto a recent article in the Chicago Tribune.The two reasons usually cited to explainstudents’ increasing negligence are thatdisbursement and collection processes areoften confusing, and, that after graduation,many students are unable to find jobs thatallow them to make their loan payments.There is a technical difference betweendefault and delinquency. A loan paymentthat is one to 120 days late is considered tobe delinquent; after 121 days the loanrecipient has defaulted.Although default at the University isrelatively low, it is rising. In 1975/76, FISLdefaults totaled three to four percent of thetotal loan payments due the University, butin 1976/77, the default rate rose to 8.5 per-cent. Delinquency has risen from a rate of14.8 percent in 1975/76 to 27.4 percent in1976/77. The national default rate on FISLloans is 16 percent.University students may borrow underseveral loan programs. Since 1973, theUniversity has been a direct lender underthe FISL program, but, students alsoborrow under other state-insured programssimilar to FISL. One of these is the NationalDirect Student Loan (NDSL) program,under which the University must matchevery nine dollars of federal funds with oneof its own. NDSL officials are more con¬cerned with delinquency rates than withdefault, but the University NSDLdelinquency rate has dropped in the pastyear from 14 to 13.5 percent.Bankruptcies at the University have alsoincreased — from two in 1973 to 19 in 1976and 13 so far this year. — but federal lawthat went into effect Sept. 30 prohibitingthose claiming bankruptcies to absolvethemselves of educational loans shouldlower the bankruptcy rate. If taken to court,the law will probably be found un¬constitutional, but until then, O’Connell saidit will help discourage bankruptcy claims.The most disturbing aspect of the loan problem, according to O’Connell, is thatstudent delinquency and default cripples theUniversity’s ability to loan to futuregenerations of students.“Anytime a student who has borrowedmoney from the University goes intodefault,” said O’Connell, “our ability to lendto the current student body is gravelythreatened. The delinquency rate is verydepressing.”In addition, O’Connell said that theUniversity does not agree with the formulathe government uses to calculatedelinquency rates. “It conceals the state ofthings,” he said.The University must count students whoare two weeks behind in their paymentsalong with those who are up to three monthsbehind. If students cannot make theirpayments because they are unemployedthey are considered delinquent even thoughthe federal government allows them towaive payments until they find jobs. Andthey continue to be counted among thedelinquents even after they resumepayments and are catching up with pastpayments.The University also sells its loans to athird party called the Student LoanMarketing Association (Sallie Mae).Because of this program, University moneyis recycled quickly into further loanswithout the 20-year wait until students finishtheir payments.Sallie Mae, however, is not willing to buydelinquent loans Consequently, as moreand more loans are sold to Sallie Mae, theUniversity is left with a smaller portfolio ofloans because of delinquency and default.Even if the real number of delinquenciesstays the same, the percentage rate goes upbecause of loan sales.O’Connell called this system of accounting“bizarre” and said that under the methodthe University would use to calculatedelinquency, the rate would be 17 percent.Yet this appears to be a semantic dif¬ference, and ultimately, delinquency ratesare high and are still risineTo battle this trend, the University haspetitioned the federal government to changetheir accounting system and has applied forfunds to do a study of the types of studentsmost likely to default on loans.Mooting of Studentsin ill Divisions of the CollegeInterested in tlie newProgram in theArts and Sciences Basic toHuman Biology and Medicine(ASHUM)MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 19775 P.M.HARPER 130Faculty participating in AS11UM will he present at the meetingt0 describe the aims and content of the program and to answerfinest ions. Freshmen and Sophomores interested in any aspect ofhuman health are especially urged to attend. In addition to complaints about loandefaults, delinquencies, and bankruptciesby University and government officials,students are voicing their own criticisms ofthe loan process. Faced with an array ofloan and grant programs that are notcoordinated by the federal government.Students must struggle with repaymentschedules, interest rates, and upper limitsso different for the various programs thatthev invite confusion and thus defaultMastery learning from 1As Bloom states in the November issue ofTeacher, errors made at the start of acourse become worse if unnoticed and “onlyrarely is the individual able to recover fullyfrom them.” Through the use of the follow¬up instruction involved in mastery learning,approximately 80 percent of students in aclass would be able to attain “mastery,”whereas only about 20 percent are now ableto do so The definition of mastery varies; itcan be defined as a grade of ‘A’ or B’ in acourse or 85 percent correct on a testThe now nearly completed trainingprogram is the result of a cooperative effortbetween the University of Chicago and theChicago Public Schools. It provides anopportunity for Bloom and his associates tosee the mastery learning theory at work andan opportunity for the Chicago PublicSchools to attempt to solve the learningproblems that pervade the city’s schools.Educators concerned about the need forexpensive remedial instruction and risingstudent inability to perform the so-called“basic skills” may increase theirwillingness to undertake mastery learningtraining programs.The program’s teachers were nominatedby their principals on the basis of theirdedication to their work and their com¬mitment “to the idea that students learnwhat they have to teach,” said BloomThe training program is funded by theSpencer Foundation, a Chicago-basedorganization with a special interest ineducation. Any further training, to be paidfor by the Chicago school system, will beeasier because many of the participants inthe program are district coordinators whowill be able to pass the techniques ofmastery learning on to other teachers Most teachers seemed to like tne idea intheory. Some attacked the problem ofputting it into use with enthusiasm, whileothers were more doubtful.“I’ve been making up two sets of testsever since this course began and I haven’tseen any improvement in those studentsusing mastery learning,” said one Thespeaker did not seem discouraged, butrather wanted to find a way of making thetechnique workableBloom and Tom Guskey, an officer in theChicago public schools’ department ofresearch and evaluation, will be monitoringthe program during its initial stagesWorking with abstract educational con¬cepts, the public high school teachers andcoordinators who are their “students” mustreplace these abstractions with concreteprograms. They seem willing to try to un¬derstand mastery learning, to attempt toimplement it in their classrooms, and to addto their already heavy work load by at¬tending the training sessions and con¬structing the blueprint mastery learningtests.Mastery learning requires extra time andeffort on the part of both teacher andstudent. The Spencer Foundation un¬derwrote the training program, but will theChicago Public Schools be willing to givedollar support to the teachers for futureexpenditures Plus, now, the students whoare not doing well in school must be con¬vinced to spend extra time in schoolSearch from 1However, several unconfirmed reportshave been received by The Maroon aboutthe candidates on the committee’s list Onefaculty member close to the search said thatthe committee had picked former Secretaryof the Treasury William Simon as their firstchoice. Simon told the committee that he didnot want the job, the faculty member said.The same source also reported that HannaGray, a former history departmentprofessor here and now provost of Yale, isthe committee’s second choice.Another source reported recently thatHenry Rosovsky, dean of Harvard College,has been contacted by the committeeRosovsky met with the searchers to offersome suggestions about possible can¬didates, although he reportedly told thecommittee that he would not accept the job.DRAMATISPERSONAE...Interested in theperforming arts?(Dance, Mime, Theatre)Come to an organizationalmeeting for this Festivalof the Arts Committee.Tonight (Nov. 22) at7 p.m.Reynolds Club LoungeWe know it’s ninth week, buttake a break from Regensteinfor this short (Vz hour)meeting.Refreshments!The Chicago Maroor - Tuesday. November 2?, 1977Ever noticehow it’s easier, to acethe coursesyou like?It finally comes down to commitment.When you don’t like a course, it’s hard to excel. The class getstedious. The texts get boring. The lectures get dreadful. Your worksuffers. And so do your grades.Compare that with the courses you really believe in.You care more. You try more. And without even noticing, you justnaturally do better.It’s true in school. It’s true outside of school.For example, we believe there’s just one way to brBusch beer. The natural way. With natural ingredient*Natural carbonation. Natural ageing.We believe that’s the best way to brew a beer.And when you believe in what you’redoing, you just naturally do it better.Taste a Busch and we think you’ll agree.BOSCHWhen you believe in what you’re doing,you just naturally do it better.; U ‘j • i i Xi»/. i .? / ) .1*2 ‘4 « / . i t' j*a!,( J Cr* r? Hv ^ I. lu f -i s ilj t» / f f!Gfm"r'l! * 4,i* f * i *_ —tUicWJ. ..iliuuc .t.LA.tA 1 iW / ).i ..i V — r 1 nnrwi.-mw Km.4 - The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, November 22, »77 v,i o ? Hr-TuesdayDetail from Linguistic Map of New Englanders pronouncing ‘ Those Boys. ” ‘ The' direction of my career was shifted from the literature of the EnglishRenaissance to the language of the United States by a reading of H L Menken sThe American Language ’’(Photo by Jeanne Dufort)Raven McDavid and the Linguistic AtlasBy Claudia MagatA hanging plaque in the third floor hall ofthe Classics Building announces: ‘TheLinguistic Atlas of the U. S. and Canada.” Apasserby peering through the metal screenwill most likely be met with silence anddarkness, as the office belongs to a busyman who keeps odd hours. The man isRaven I McDavid, Jr., editor of theLinguistic Atlas, professor emeritus ofEnglish at the University, and the world'smost prolific writer on American folkdialects.McDavid once wrote, ‘‘The direction ofmy career was shifted from the literature ofthe English Renaissance to the language ofthe United States by a reading of H. L.Mencken’s The American Language.” Forthe past 40 years, McDavid has beenstudying diversities in American speech. Hehas researched the history and developmentof communities around the country, andconversed with hundreds of people to seizeand record regional variations in accent,grammar and vocabulary.McDavid’s research and fieldworkcoalesce in the Linguistic Atlas, which iscomposed of maps, handbooks, and volumeson grammar, vocabulary, and phonology.In addition to his scholarly work, Mc¬David is concerned with practical aspects ofAmerican dialects. He has written ex¬tensively on the problems of teachingEnglish composition. He is often asked tocomment on anything from PresidentCarter’s accent to whether it is possible todiscern an individual’s race merely byhearing him speak.McDavid grew up in Greenville, SouthCarolina. He cites Charleston as on of thecities he most regrets leaving, but returns tothe area frequently in connection with theLinguistic Atlas.After graduating from Furman Univer¬sity in 1931, McDavid received an M.A. anda PhD from Duke University, as a student ofMilton’s political theory. In 1935, he beganteaching English at Citadel Military Collegein South Carolina, but was fired by a four-star general “for not being a very goodinstructor ”, “I then went to Michigan State Univer¬sity, where I taught freshman composition,and compounded, my felfiniLijyjRy^lisbtniLA.- glossary of Citadel slang,” McDavid said.McDavid returned to Duke in 1939 totranslate Milton’s Poetics, but left thefollowing year for Michigan. Settling at theLinguistic Institute in Ann Arbor, hebecame a fieldworker with the LinguisticAtlas projectThe idea of a linguistic atlas is notpeculiar to the 20th century As early as 1860French and German scholars conducted andpublished surveys of regional speech pat¬terns. The United States atlas, however,posed a special problem for linguistsbecause of the country’s size. In 1929, theAtlas project was launched, more or less asan experiment, under the auspices of theModern Language Association (MLA), andthe American Council of Learned Societies.Aided by trained field workers, linguistsBernard Bloch and Hans Kurath tackled theNortheast states first and the LinguisticAtlas of New England appeared in 1933.Kurath decided to continue the project,starting work on an atlas of Middle andSouth Atlantic states and another of theNorth Central states Later, linguists beganatlas projects of the Gulf states, the UpperMidwest, the Rocky Mountain states, andthe Pacific Coast.McDavid was an Atlas fieldworker inSouth Carolina for a year before leaving toteach English at a university in Lafayette.Louisiana. “I realized then that there werepeople in this country who did not have achance to learn English,” he said.When World War II started, McDavidjoined the Army Language Program in NewYork City, where he compiled Chinese- andBurmese-English dictionaries. “The in¬teresting thing about the World War IIlanguage program,” McDavid said, “wasthat the United States Army requiredknowledge of languages which had not beentaught in earlier language programs ”Almost every major American linguist overa certain age was active in the World War IIlanguage program, McDavid concluded.After the war, McDavid resumed field¬work for the South Atlantic states atlas,leaving in 1950 to study folklore at CornellUniversity. He taught at Case WesternReserve University from 1952 to 1957.During these years, besides compiling theSouth Atlantic data. McDavid worked withAlbert Marckwardt, whom Kurath ap¬pointed to head the North Central states atlas project.In 1957, McDavid came to the Universityas a professor of English Until hisretirement last year, he taught a coursecalled “English Language in America.” andgraduate classes in lexicography Becausehis work with the Atlas was so time-consuming, McDavid was given a reducedteaching loadAfter Marckwardt’s death in 1975, Mc¬David assumed responsibility for the NorthCentral states atlas and Marckwardt’s datawas transferred from Princeton to ChicagoThe South Atlantic atlas project, whichMcDavid also edits, remains based in SouthCarolina, although McDavid researches theregion’s history at Chicago’s NewberryLibrary.McDavid serves as consultant to the Gulfstates and Rocky Mountain states atlasprojects, and was a fieldworker for theUpper Midwest Linguistic Atlas, publishedin 1973.Associate editor of the Atlas and assistantprofessor of English Richard Payne, saidthat all atlas fieldwork is based on amethodology for linguistic geographicalsurveys established in France in 1902American Atlas fieldworkers study eachcommunity by speaking to: a minimallyeducated representative of the oldest livingnative generation; a middle-aged speakerwith formal education of about 16 years;and a highly educated, cultivated speakerwho is “representative of the best localtraditions.” Later, fieldworkers make taperecordings of casual conversationsMcDavid then prepares a questionnairethat fieldworkers use to record peculiarpronunciation, grammar, and vocabulary.A sample question from the Gulf statesquestoinnaire “How do you ask for the timeof day’’” Responses were: “What time isit?;” “What time do you have0;” “Whattime are you .’; ” and “What o’clock is it0”When all the data is gathered, linguisticmaps are prepared One such map indicatesvarious regional terms for earthworm:“redworm,” “angledog,” “fishing worm,”“groundworm,” and “dew worm ”“We attempt to space communitiesevenly, with some attention to populationdensity and time of settlement.” McDavidsaid In South Carolina, for example, 39 ofthe state’s 46 counties were surveyed. .McPavi.d.i$ now writing.^ Sputb. Atlantic. states handbook, which includes a summaryof dialect areas and origins, a history ofcommunities, and a bibliography of regionalhistory. He researches regional industrialdevelopment and population growth,looking especially for resultant social andcultural change. Five fieldworkers in SouthCarolina are preparing Atlas volumes ongrammar, phonology and vocabulary’McDavid’s bffice at the University ismore or less the center for the North Centralstates atlas project A staff of 10 - includingPayne and McDavid’s wife Virginia — isputting together the volumes from collecteddata. The North Central states handbookwill be written by an Atlas worker in In¬diana. Payne hopes that the North CentralLinguistic Atlas will be completed by 1979,when the project’s National Endowment forthe Humanities grant expires.McDavid corresponded — sometimeirreverently — with H L. Mencken, fror.1937 until Mencken’s death in 1948 Inresponse to McDavid’s note that a Louisianafolk term for the animal bull is “preachercow,” Mencken wrote, “That is the greatesttribute to the clergy- in 19 centuries ofChristianity.”Mencken was pleased with the idea of anAmerican Linguistic Atlas, and viewed it asan important step toward recognizing thediversity of American language He realizedthe completed Atlas would be highlytechnical, and regarded the survey’s em¬phasis on phonetics with wry disdainMencken’s book. The American Language,which McDavid abridged and edited in 1962,is an unusual linguistic text because it doesnot stress dialect phonologyIn the second supplement to TheAmerican Language, Mencken calledMcDavid “an able phonologist.” McDavid’swork is outstanding; not only his role in theLinguistic Atlas, but also his committmentto teaching an acceptance of dialects Hebelieves student-problems with writing andspeaking English arise partly becauseeducators assume students have been ex¬posed to conventional language normsMcDavid wrote in 1973, “It is important toteach the use of standard language to thosegroups for whom the standard language isnot native, but we must recognize varietywithin the system itself ” The LinguisticAtlas is. above all, a celebration of thatyariety !The Chica^'Mai'(^w.,W^(fa^>fiovember'2?§' *"Portrait of a student as a poetBy Karen HellerIn many a Hyde Park apartment, beneatha stack of thick books set beside a bed, orlost among old papers in a desk drawer,there are personal journals filled with proseand poetry. Much of the poetry, tooemotionally involved or explicitly intimate,remains the private pleasure (ordispleasure) of its author. But somestudents, aware of other readers, writepoetry that is more careful, moredisciplined and, ultimately, more ex¬pressiveUp until last year, with the publication ofpoetry w/art. there was no place for suchyoung poets to reach an audience. Nextweek eight undergraduates will have twooccasions to share their writing; in the thirdpoetry w/art, which goes on sale in Cobbhall and at a poetry reading Tuesday,November 29, 11:30-1 pm in Weiss coffeeshop (M Level, Harper).Last year, a group of undergraduates,with some funding from CORSO, started themagazine. Two issues were released: awinter magazine for sale and a free,smaller-circulation edition in the spring.Neil Alers, the current editor, and a staff ofeight students, all in the College, select themagazine’s contents. Poems are submittedto the magazine’s box in Ida Noyes beforesixth week of each quarter. At weeklymeetings, poems are read first by each staffmember and then outloud. The staffdiscusses each poem to determine itspotential appeal. In the case of indecision orindifference, the poem is placed in a folderto be reviewed at a later date.Beginning with this quarter’s issue,poetry w/art will feature a poet whose poems will constitute a sizeable portion ofthe magazine This issue the featured poet isDonna Ratajczak, a young poet of ex¬ceptional voice and talent. The majority ofher magazine contributions were writtenthis fall while riding the Cottage Grove busto Circle campus where she is taking awriting course from poet Robert Anania.“The Public Transportation Sequence’’reflects a verbal coordination of pullingtogether chance elements while main¬taining a particular tone which isdescriptive, insightful, sensitive to commonthings, and often witty.I waited too long, the bus iscrawling north (LAUTER) when Iwant to be flying “due south.”wrong side of the street. My sense ofdirections’wired to another city’s circuitry.Favor ruhl as it may, the spotlightsof beauty cast a tenuous light, andfamiliarity can pull the plugfor good Floundering’s a highholiday; the spirit, nudged from itscatastrophe, grips the draftingtable of the present new emotionRaised in Baltimore, Ratajczak never leftthe city, save its outlying suburbs, until shewas 14. Her conception of place was: “Therewas Baltimore and everything else wasouter space.” Her religious family (with agrandmother who “had more religious iconsand pictures per square foot than anycathedral in Europe”) had very few books.Beginning prose writing in third grade, hersubjects were mostly fantastical. She wrote science-fiction even though she had neverread any, had no exposure to science, butdid dislike math. She wrote plays withouthaving seen or read any. At the Catholicschool she attended through eighth grade,Ratajczak remembers being assigned toread only one non-religious work: JohnGunther’s Death Be Not Proud She did notlike it.At public high school, Ratajczakdiscovered literature and the public library.With eclectic taste and little discernment,she checked out armfuls of books, devouring“everything from Rosemary’s Baby toFinnegan’s Wake.” Except for one ex¬ceptional English teacher who promotedreading by keeping a circulating paperbacklibrary in the classroom, she found herteachers “just passed on their mediocrity tothe students.”Ratajczak started writing poetry andkeeping a journal. She estimated that shefilled over 16 such journals. She recentlythrew out the eight earliest ones becausethey were “embarrassing, goopy.”“If there’s anything you can’t share,” shesaid, “it’s those traumas, those deeplypersonal emotions. To have poetry servesome personal end is terrible It subor¬dinates literature to life; it debases life, itdebases literature.”In high school, Ratajczak started enteringpoetry contests and won first prize in mostand placed in all the rest Her senior yearand first year at Goucher College, awoman’s school outside Baltimore, sheabandoned writing for music mainlybecause she “couldn’t have any respect forwords I saw them always being misused ”After two years at Goucher she transferred to tne University, not because she knewmuch about it (actually she’d never heard ofit), but because a friend was consideringtransferring here. Reading the catalogueshe was impressed most by the gargoylesand the cathedral-like buildings. “I thoughta school like that had to have an incrediblesense of humor or no humor at all. ”While she’s been here, Ratajczak hasnoticed a maturity, a positive change, in herpoetry. She has read a lot of modern poets(“You can’t write unless you read,”), manyextraneous to course assignments and hasdeveloped a strong personal taste. Shefavors poets like Kenneth Koche, JamesSchuyler and John Ashbery. She has beenstrongly influenced by Frank O’Hara andJack Spicer, who wrote of “the big lie of thepersonal,” and conceived of the poet asradio, transmitting ideas through his voice.“There’s such humility in that statement,”Ratajczak commented. She views WilliamCarlos Williams as “The prototypicalcraftsman. He wrote that poetry is ‘amachine made of words.’ There’s greattruth in that.”Ratajczak is submitting a selection of herpoems for her B.A. project. Although shewill finish her course work this quarter, shedoesn’t plan to graduate until March Sheneeds the additional time to work on herproject, to write and submit more poems toher advisor. She would like to be a poet andentertains the thought of someday teachingwriting. Ratajczak s future plans are in¬definite but she will probably apply towriting programs for next year. Most likely,wherever she is, riding the bus, on thestreet, in Chicago or Baltimore, she willcontinue to write poetry.Why doesn't anyone tell youthere's a difference betweenmaking love and being in love?** £k, **1 %1 ; rDo you remember...PARAMOUNT PK. TURTS PRtSfNls A TURMAN-FOSTERCOMPANY PRODUCTION "FIRST LOVE"Starring WILLIAM KATT SUSAN DEYScreenplay by )ANE STANTON HITCHCOCKand DAVID FREEMAN Produced byLAWRENCE TURMAN and DAVID FOSTERC *87/ Pirmtjir*sm Co»oor*«jrDirected by jOAN DARLINGR RESTRICTEDNOW SHOWING!At These Selected TheatresM* LINCOLN VILLAGE,ChicagoMORTON GROVE,i Morton GroveARLINGTON,Arlington HeightsBREMEN,’'^-"Tinley Park NORRIDGE,NorridgeLAKE,Oak ParkDIANA,Homewood STUDIO,Oak UawnOGDEN MALL,Naperville6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 22,1977 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE COMMITTEE ON SOCIAL THOUGHTandTHE JOHN U NFF FUNDannounce a public lecturePROFESSOR WILHELM HENNISProfessor of Political Theory and Constitutional Lci'xUniversity of Fret bur v ntt Rrets^au Federal German RefubluandTheodor 11cuss Professor at the Next School for Social ResearchLEGITIMACY: NOTESON A CATEGORY OECIVIL SOCIETYTHURSDAY, DECEMBER i, iy774:00 P.M.Social Science Building, Room 1 221126 Fast 59th Street. hlmnuurt is without nc if I an,! without chargeHyde ParkJEWISH COMMUNITY CENTERPROGRAM FAIRTuesday, November 29th7:30 - 9:00 p.m.atSIANI TEMPLE1720 E. 54th St.^Student and teacher art show* Sample projects from new courses* Join-in demonstrations NOW SHOWING!ESQUIRE,ChicagoFri: 5:15, 7 45.10 10Sat 2:30. 5:15. 7:4510 10. 12.30. A MSun 2:30, 5 15.7 45 & 10:10GOLF MILL,NilesFri: 5 00, 7:30 & 10 00Sat &Sun 2 30. 5:00,7 30 & 10:00 NORRIDGE,NorridqeFri 5:00. 7:30 & 10 00Sat &Sun 2 30. 5:00.7 30 & 10:00WOODFIELD,SchaumburgFri Sat& Sun: 2:00 4 307 :00 & 9:30 YORKTOWN,LombardFri., Sat &Sun 2:20. 4 45.7:20 & 9:55ORLANDSQUARE,Orland ParkFri,, Sat &Sun 2 15, 4 45,7 15 & 9 45 EVERGREEN,Evergreen ParkFri.. Sat &Sun 2:30. 5 00.7:30. & 10 00RIVER OAKS,Calumet CityFri., Sat &Sun 2 30.5 00,7 :30 & 10 00 RIDGE PLAZAGary IndFri , Sat &Sun. 2 00. 4 30.7 00 & 9 30OLD ORCHARD.SkokieFri. 4 45. 7:30. & 10.00Sat &Sun : 2:00, 4 45.7 30 & 10:00Day by Day by Robert LowellNew York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux(138p. cloth). $8.95.For three decades, ever since thepublication of his second book of poems,Lord Weary’s Castle, in 1946, Robert Lowellhas been a dominant figure in Americanpoetry. His dozen volumes of poetry havebeen highly and widely praiski. He alsowrote plays and translated and edited theworks of other poets. When Lowell died in aNew York taxi cab two months ago. theliterary world lost the man whom manycritics, heralded the best English-languagepoet of his generation.Day by Day, in many ways, can be seen asthe maturation of Lowell’s artisticdevelopment that began with his firstvolume, Land of Unlikeness (1944).Generally regarded as the turning point inLowell’s career,Life Studies (1959), in¬fluenced an entire poetic culture andpointed to new directions for a generation ofoutstanding young poets.In Life Studies, Lowell discarded the rigidrhyme and meter schemes that had shapedhis earlier volumes. Instead, he worked onverse that would propel itself more freely;he found this by using harsher, drumminglanguage allied with more descriptive andless dense and suggestive imagery. Lowellnoted that before Life Studies “I had feltthat the meter plastered difficulties andmannerisms on what I was trying to say tosuch an extent that it terribly hamperedme.” For him, the thematic changes wereeven more important than the loosenedstyle. In Life Studies, he etched sharpportraits of literary friends and family. Butthe protraitures in that volume are hardly“detached:” the poet continually and veryconsciously projected the self into theseother lives.In Life Studies Lowell fashioned an in¬direct, yet no less intense and agonizing self¬scrutiny. Many readers were unable toidentify with the religious obsessions thathad saturated Land of Unlikeness and LordWeary’s Castle. Traces of the millenium-ridden consciousness trailed off with LifeStudies Lowell began to direct a Puritanscrutiny on his New England heritage inLife Studies; on politics, society, and theself in Notebook 1967-66 (1969); and onhistorical figures and events in History(1973).Ix)well did return for some time to stricterverse, - couplet-quatrains and sonnets inNotebook and in the 1973 triad: For Lizzie aqd Harriet, History, and The Dolphin. DayByS^ay this is the poet’s conclusivestatement. The free verse is here to stay; itis the medium by which the poet is finallyfreed to say more directly “what hap¬pened.” Language is less dense and imagesare clearer As the title suggests, the poemsdeal with the myriad experiences of dailylife“Ulysses and Circe,” the volume’s firstoffering, is a magnificent poem. It ranksamong Lowell’s best works. A reflective,close study of The Illiad, it succeeds inbringing back the fresh, fated knowledge ofUlysses.he will die like others as the gods will,drowning his last crewis uncharted ocean,seeking the unpeopled world beyond thesun,lost in the uproarious rudeness of agreat wind.The ease with which the poet constructsimages is striking; each image is classic,disturbing, and portentous, driving thenarrative to the next image. This run ofimages creates a remarkable coherence tothe poem, all the more remarkable whenone considers that coherence in individ¬ual poems) has never been one of Lowell’sstrong points. “Ulysses and Circe” hasconsiderably alleviated the mangled den¬seness of earlier narrative poems,especially the title sequence in The Mills ofthe Kavanaughs (1951). This passage fromthe poem Illustrates the freer imagery:On his walk to the shipa solitary' tree suddenlydrops half its leaves;they stay green on the ground.Other trees hold In a day or two,their leaves also will fall,like his followers,stained by their hesitationprematurely brown.“Ulysses and Circe” is an anomaly in thisvolume; indeed, it is one of the rare in¬stances in recent volumes in which Lowelluses the narrative form. The rest of thepoems in Day by Day are plotless and moreconversational in their disconcern for anychronological ordering of events.What Low'ell had not lost, however, washis compulsion to project the self andexamine it by examining its manifestationsin others “I see myself change in my changed friends,” he admits in a laterpoem. Here he sees himself wandering inthe footsteps of Ulysses. “The full heat ofhis pilgrimage,” he writes of the wandered,"assumes the weight/ and gravity of beingalive.”These words could well sum up a poeticcareer. Lowell had always writtenagonizing and troubled verse, from thesearing outcries against sin and war in LordWeary’s Castle and The Mills of theKavanaughs, to obsessions with savagepower in Life Studies, and sickness anddeath in For the Union Dead (1974). Thevoice had always been intensely emotional,self-revealing, “confessional.” The poetbetrayed a profound uncertainty, a fear forthe precariousness of the generation. Muchof the “confessional” work was a reaction tothe horrifying global disruptions scarringthe forties, the fifties, and the sixties It allseemed so desperate: “Even though ourcities weren’t bombed you felt they mightbe, and we were destroying thousands ofpeople. The world seemed apocalyptic ...”The poet still feels on edge. To the extentthat there is a “confessional” theme in Dayby Day, it is the transience of human yearsFor Lowell, transience is a manifestation ofour loss of control, our helplessness in theface of an impending doom. In “Since 1939”he writes:We feel the machine slipping from ourhands,as if someone else were steering;if we see a light at the end of thetunnel,it’s the light of an oncoming train.And in “Our Afterlife II’’;We are things thrown in the air alivein flight...The impending doom is now death Aging isthe process by which the self draws closerand closer to death (“each saving bread¬th/takes something ”).But Lowell does not rail against theinescapable. He realizes that aging is an“indelible stain,” like a bump that “staysfirm and yellow,” he writes in “LoganAirport, Boston.” It is the self-reevaluationsuggested here that became, with Day byDay, Lowell’s maturation Age and decaystill bring about painful thoughts, but poetryis no longer a way of further agonizingthem. Poetry' becomes, rather, the self’sattempt at self-ordering, of understandingpain in the context of a life One senses,even, an almost joyful acceptance:Bright sun of my bright day,I thank God for being alive —a way of writing I once thought heart¬less.Lowell has conclusively thrashed behindhim the irritatingly obsessive character ofhis previous work: the poetic prisons of NewEngland, of God. of war. of death, of guilt.There are very' few poems with an “con¬fessional” content in Day by Day : it is thepoet, and not his emotions, that is in controlThese poems, if broadly categorized, areintellectual; they display a range of per¬ception possible only through stepping backfrom a tortured self. Not that the self hasbecome less aware — quite the contrary —but that it has become less batteredOpenly touching and tender poems recallthe exuberance of the Notebook periodWarm words are poured out to JohnBerryman, lost fellow-poet and friend:To my surprise, John.1 pray to not for you,think of you not myself,smile and fall asleep illustrate how these qualities create im¬pressive poetic possibililties for free verse:This picture is too much like their life—a crisscross, too many pretty facts,this bedroomwith one candle still burning in thecandlelabrum,and peaches blushing on the windowsill,Giovanni’s high-heeled raw woodenslippersthrown on the floor by her smaller onesOne wishes heaven had less solemnity:a sensual table tablewith five half-filled bottles of red wineset around the hectic carved roast —Bohemia for ourselvesand the familiers of a lifetimecharmed to communion by resurrection-running together in the rain to mail asingle letterIn the greater “simplicity” of his verse,Lowell sometimes comes across as lessoriginal. Many poems in this 138 pagevolume are too conversational, dense, orincoherent. At times the reader wishes toreturn to earlier volumes to marvel at thevaunting metrics of Lord Weary’s Castleand the historical explorations of LifeStudies and History But even in thoserare moments, the reader does it hesitantly.In the genius of this generation of poets,Lowell once complained, rhythm, meter,and subject have become so polished thatpoetry has become a “craft. ’ a specializedpursuit divorced from life. “Almost thewhole problem of writing poetry,” Lowellobserved, “is to bring it back to what youreally feel.” In this last volume he hasbrought his poems back to life and past hisprevious art.Day by Day is pieced together in thesame, deliberate, sequential manner inwhich Lowell pieced together all hisvolumes of poems. “Ulysses and Circe”introduces the full panorama of the self’stravels; the remaining poems in Part Onerelate troubled thoughts on that span ofexistence. Part Two consists mainly ofportraits of acquaintances and closefriends. In the title sequence “Day by Day,”the longest section in the book. Lowellstudies the relationship of self with others.He maintains an impassioned honesty indoing so, for not only are the poems ofpersonal experience, they are of everydayexperience. Day by Day is the poetry' ofrecording a waik. a fishing trip, meeting afriend at the airport, a wife’s sickness,memories of prep school.The volume reads as one imagines apoet’s diary must — a myriad of small, self-contained images enriched and broughttogether. by a commanding artistic per¬ceptionBooks of Related Interest RecentlyPublished by the University of ChicagoPress: (Descriptions are from the Pressreleases):The Collected Poems of Howard NemerovCloth. (560 p.) $17.50 to 12/31/77; $20 00thereafter“This volume marks the capstone of thecareer of one of America’s most highlyrespected living poets. For nearly thirtyyears, Howard Nemerov has given uspoems whose intelligence, perspicacity, andwit have become his hallmarks For the 1947publication of The Image and the Law,through the appearance in 1975 of TheWestern Approaches. Nemerov’s voice hasdeepened and expanded, yet kept faith withhis vision of the kernel of wonder within thecomprehensive silence’ of the world.”A lively freshness is evoked in “Shadows”:I must borrow from Walt Whitman topraise this night.tw ice w aking me up smiling, mys¬teriously in full health.twice delicately calling me to the worldLowell’s strong quality now is his eye fordetail; he works the natural affinities ofwords to impart a richness of detail. In freeverse with neither a plot nor narrativestructure, the poet has found the mostnatural rhythm of all — the driving force ofa unified perception The reader is con¬tinually reminded of just whose eyes he islooking through, of just whose voice he islistening to. Passages from two magnificentpoems, “Marriage’’ and “The Withdrawal,” Samuel Johnson and Poetic Style byWilliam Edinger Cloth ( 288 p ) $17 00“By insisting that the ultimate source ofall stylistic virtue is the informed in¬dividual intelligence,’ Johnson played animportant part in the shift from the con¬ceptual to the perceptual — from theRamist. didactic, and neo-Platonic ten¬dencies of seventeenth-century criticism, tothe later demand that poetic style embodyan authentic and direct perception of thesensory world Edinger sees Johnson asboth a transitional figure in the emergenceof new stylistic values and as the last andgreatest interpreter of neoclassical valueswho left the most comprehensive, flexible,and subtle critical synthesis of his age.”Peter Eng is a third-year political sciencemaior in the CollegeTuesday, November 22,1977 — 7The Chicago MaroonTheChicagoMaroonTuesday,November22,1977DutchMillChocolateNutFudgeCandy regular$3.25lb.withcoupon$1.50lb.or50%with10.00purchase (excludingcigarettesandcigars) KimVillage Pharmacy1527E.51st 752-5252 20%Offonall14Kt. 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W. RohdeThe Midwest Athletic Conferencerepresentatives met to discuss the fate ofthe University of Chicago last week, alongwith some other interesting issues, andthat’s about all that happened.“It was a quiet, subduedweekend,’’ said Athletic Director JeffMetcalf.The MW AC representatives put off thedecision on whether to admit Chicago to theconference, as well as decisions on thefuture arrangement of football divisions andon recruiting rules for coaches until the nextmeeting on May 20, 1978. Meetings are held presidents and scholars to persuade theirathletic directors and facultv reps to votefor Chicago. The presidents are generally infavor of Chicago, according to Replogle,because of the academic repute it will bringto the conference and because of theUniversity’s location. Besides giving theirathletes a chance to see the big city, mostMWAC schools have alot of alumni in theChicago area, playing at Chicago bringsopportunities for alumni get-togethers.The AD’s and coaches, according toReplogle and Metcalf, who are againstChicago are concerned that the school isgoing big time again, and that the MWAC isjust a stepping stone to the Big 10.Two motions to change the MWAC con-semi-annually, not annually as reportedearlier.The postponement will probably work toChicago's advantage. The present con¬ference constitution allows one school toblackball any prospective school, and Knoxcollege is definitely against Chicago’s entryat this point. Knox contends that Chicago’sStagg Scholarships violate conference rulesagainst athletic scholarships. Six monthstime will give Metcalf and representatiaveRobert Replogle time to do some lobbying,as well as allowing motions to changeconference rules to come to the floor. Inaddition, the delay forced the reps to extendChicago’s temporary membership throughthe end of 1978.Chicago’s lobbying efforts will centeraround getting the conference school’sIM Top TenHoliday Basketball1. Bruins (2)2. Tufts (2)3. Stop Killing Lizards (1)4 Dr Fox5. Laughlin6. Montana Wildhacks7. Breach Boys8. Snorklers9. Quadranglers10.Lower Rickert Points474541362826201374Also receiving votes: Lil’s Hot shots,Dodd-Mead. Vincent, ShoreyDeGowin winsIM v-ballDeGowin won the intramural co-edvolleyball title Sunday, edging Shoreyhouse in the all-University finals. DeGowingot to the finals by downing Broadview, stitution brought up at the meeting could aidChicago’s chances if they are passed nextspring. The first would change the blackballrule to require that only three-quarters ofthe schools need vote for a school before itenters the conference. The other wouldmake all Stagg-type scholarships legal.Both changes require three-quarters votefor approval.All these proposals will be brought upagain at the spring conference, which willbe held simultaneously with the conferencebaseball finals plus track, golf, and tennismeets The whole affair is scheduled to beheld at Cornell, but that school is havingsome difficulties getting the necessaryfacilities. If they are unable to hold theconference meeting at Cornell, then it willbe moved to Chicago.Sports Shortswhile Shorey upset Dodd-Mead in threegames for the residence title and then tookindependent champ S.G.F.G. for the un¬dergraduate title.Results of other IM activities wereunavailable at press time. A full wrap-upof the fall season will appear in the Jan. 6thissue of The MaroonRuggers take'snowball’ matchThe Chicago ruggers won their finalmatch of the fall season last weekendbeating the Amoco B’s in the annual‘snowball’ game 20-10. The victory uppedChicago’s record to 4-3 for the season.Dick O’Brien and Mark Ramirez didmost of the scoring for the Maroons withtwo trys apiece, while an anonymousfullback hit two of four extra points, worthtwo points each, to round out the Chicagoscoring.The ruggers were pleased with thematch. They had a good ref which resultedin the cleanest match of the year. Chicagoplayed a good match all around, with By Gene F. PaquetteThe University men’s basketball team,featuring height, depth, and experience, andhoping to greatly improve over last year’s11-9 record, start the 1977 season Fridaynight at home against Edgewood College.“Home” refers to cozy Bartlett Gym again,as the Field House, will not be ready toaccommodate the Maroons until January 5against Westminster College.In the meantime. Coach John Angelus andhis forces will have more than enough tokeep them busy while preparing for thewinter season. After hosting Edgewood,they play Coe away and Grinnell at home,take ten days off to tend to academicmatters, then spend the first week of winterbreak on an eye-popping east coast tripOver a five day span, the Division IIIMaroons take on Duke of the ACC, Drexel(another Division I school), and Haverford.Then they have almost three weeks torecover before completing their 19 gameschedule against mostly conference op¬ponents.Maroon optimism lies in the fact that fourstarter and three others who saw heatedaction last season are returning, and theyare welcoming the arrival of a promisingfrosh. Jay Alley, a 6-3 junior, led theEastern Division of the MWAC with almost20 points per game and was a unanimousAll-Conference choice. Returning with himare the rest of last year’s front line: 6-5senior co-captain Dan Hayes, who played intwo leagues last summer, shed a fewpounds, and came back to fall practice astep or two quicker, and 6-6 junior BretScheafer, who scored at a 16.1 clip, provedto be an awesome rebounder at times, andreceived Honorable Mention in All-Conference voting. Mark Miller, a 6-4junior, proved to be an able replacementspecial mention going to Pat Costello,Brooks Dexter, and Byron Wright, thelatter who played his last match forChicago on Saturday.Cross country thirdThe varsity cross country “A” teamplaced 3rd of seven teams entered in theCentral AAU 10,000 meter cross countryopen at Washington Park Saturday,finishing behind the U of C track club andNorth Central College's Winged Foot Club.Other teams in the race were U of C “B”and “C” teams, and two other teams fromthe UCTC. Several runners also par¬ticipated independently.Top finisher for the varsity was PeteSmith, who ran the 6-plus mile course in33:21. This was good for 10th place overall.Dave Taylor and Lester Savitt also ran wellfor the “A” team, finishing in 34:39 and34:52, respectively, good for 15th and 16thplace.The race was won by Kurt Schallen-berger, of the U of C Track Club, with a timeof 31:48. when not nagged by knee injuries. All, willhave to make room for one Jim Tolf, anintimidating 6-7 freshman, who is not yetquite refined offensively, but is able, saysAngelus, to “play defense right out of highschool, which is unusual.”In the backcourt, co-captain SteveShapiro returns with a double figure scoringaverage, a fully healed wrist that should nolonger hamper his shooting, and a fierce,competitive streak that made him a goodpenetrator as well as a key to the stingyteam defense. The only departed starter isdefensive ace Greg Retzinger, but hisreplacement, 6-2 Tod Lewis, is just asadequate defensively. Mike Mervin, a quick5-9 guard, and Kevin Tetsworth, a 6-3swingman, should also see playing time.The Maroons have what appears to be aDotentially powerful ballclub, a goodcoaching staff, and a toughening earlyschedule, all of which enhances theirchances of winning the conference title.Every conference team which beat Chicagolast year has lost most of their starters withthe exception of Lake Forest, who, alongwith Chicago are listed as favorites for theEastern division Several of last yearslosses, including two to Lake Forest, werevery close games in the final minutes,games that this year’s more experiencedMaroons should be able to pull out.In addition, 8 or 9 regulars give Angelusthe depth that was lacking last season andwill enable him to use the press, once thetrademark of the Maroon attack, moreoften. And defense will be the major factorin determining the extent of the team’ssuccess. In spite of their offensivecapabilities, it was the defense- one whichranked high among the country’s DivisionIII teams, holding opponents to less than 65points a game which kept the Maroons ingames last season when the offense wassputtering. This season, the offense shouldbe better balanced. Though plays aregeared to the front line, the backcourtshould up their output with Shapiro’s healedwrist and Lewis’ booming jump shot.No fast breaking, though. Only on freebiesprovided by a press; otherwise, saysAngelus, “we’re using a controlled, set-upoffense.” But what a set-up offense: fourformations with two variations, all endingup with “the three big guys crashing theboards and one and a half back” (that is,one guard at the foul line, and the other backon defense close to half court). In practice,Angelus employs segmented drills he sayshe saw Dean Smith use in the last Olympictrials. The big men work out their options intwo on two drills on one court, the guardsthrow alley oop passes to one another on thenext. “Basketball is all movement, counter¬movement, and the pass.” Angelus com¬pares the drills to gestalt. “We teach theparts, then integrate them into the whole.”Which the Maroons do shortly afterwards,in a 5 on 5 fullcourt scrimmage. “Basketballcomes down to instinct, but you have toplace it within a controlled structure.” Butfour offenses with two variationsv “Theseguys are smart and can remember them.They’re premeds and stuff like that. If theywere dumb, we’d run ”ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSUNDAY, NOVEMBER 279 A M. Service of Holy CommunionCelebrant: Donald Judson, Episcopal Chaplain Cosponsored by the Episcopal Church Council 11 .MADVENT CELEBRATION.A Service of Music and ReadingsReaders: NICHOLAS RUDALL, THOMAS REIF, ESPENCER PARSONS, BERANRD O. BROWN MUSICTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIR, RICHARDVIKSTROM, Director EDWARD MONDELLO,Organist, 12 NOON Advent Service of Communionaccording to the Reformed and Free Churchfradition. fTlEAL CONTRACTS AVAILABLEFor Winter and Spring Qtrs.Alpha Delta Phi5747 University Ave.$275/qtr. 10meals/wk.Contact Amy Mashberg753-3257-■«■* *>»* c ... THE UNIVERSITY OF CHILAGOTHE COMMITTEE ON SOCIAL THOI OUTTHE JOHNU.NEF FINDunciTHE NORMAN WAIT HARRIS MEMORIAE FOUNDATIONIN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONSannounce a public lecture bvPROFESSOR S.N. EISENSTADTI’rofrsxor af Sociology. The llehreir 1 uirenilY of Jerusalem A'I isilinf! Prnfenmtr. De/mrlmeni nf Snrinlnfiv. Slnrranl ( nirernilyREVOLUTIONS ANI) THE DYNAMICSOF CIVILIZATIONSFRIDAY. DECEMBER 2. 19773:00 l».MSocial Science BttiMino. Kmoiii 122I 126 Ka-t .”><)||i Sired\11n11— i<>>> i. wiilimii ticket mill toillintil cliitrpcULV *VV.*. V.CalendarTuesdayDanforth Fellows: Sack lunch, 12 noon, SwiftHall 204.Department of Economics: Workshop, “TheEffect of Social Security on EarlyRetirement,” Michael Boskin, HarvardUniversity, 1:30 pm, Rosenwald 405;Workshop, “Price Flexibility in the US, 1953-1977,” Eric Hirschhorn, 3:30 pm, SocialSciences 402.Episcopal Church Council at Chicago:Evensong, 4:30 pm, Bond Chapel.UC Debate Club: Topic — On Resolved thatCapital Punishment should be Abolishedwith Rep Mikva vs Mr. Carrington (Directorof the Americans For Effective Law En¬forcement) 8 pm, Ida Noyes Theatre.Hillel: Latke-Hamentash Symposium,Cloister Club — Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 pm.International House Folkdancing: Teachingand refreshments, 7:30 pm, I-HOuse.Southside Creative Writers’ WorkshopMeeting, 8 pm, 5744 Harper (P. Long).ArtsUC Band: Program of American Music, 12noon, Reynolds Club.Rockefeller Chapel: Recital-lecture by.University Organist, Edward Mondello, 12:15pm Rockefeller Chapel.Collegium Musicum: Venetian Music of theRenaissance, 8:30 pm, Bond Chapel.DOC Films: “Hatari,” 8 pm, Cobb Hall.Open at Bergman Gallery: Posters fromMainland China. Bergman Gallery; fourthfloor Cobb, 10-5 M-F, noon-5, Saturday andSundayWednesdayDepartment of Economics: Faculty Lun¬cheon, 12 noon, International House;Seminar, “Applied Price Theory,” SocialSciences 402, 1:30; Colloquium — “ThreeDimensional Stachastic Processes with anAr*olication,” 3:30 pm, Rosenwald 11.History & Philosophy of Science: Student-faculty lunch & discussion group. 12:30 — 2pm. Classics 21. All interested welcome.Seminar on Resource Analysis of the Com¬mittee on Public Policy Studies: “The Oil Industry and Antitrust,” Dr RobertBatlivala, Senior Economist Standard Oil Co,1:30 pm, Wieboldt Hall Seminar Room.Crossroads: English class for Foreignwomen, 2 pm, 5621 S. Blackstone.The Committee on Cognition and Com¬munication: “Structure and Measurement ofInterpersonal Communication,” MyronWish, Bell Laboratories, 4 pm, Beecher 102.International House: International Dinners,Cuisine of India, 4:30 — 7 pm, I-House.University Duplicate Bridge Club: 7 pm, IdaNoyes, new players welcome.Tai Chi Chuan: classes, 7:30 pm, BlueGargoyle.Calvert House: Overeaters Anonymous, 7:30pm, Calvert House.UC Christian Fellowship: “Celebration ofAnticipation for the Second Coming of JesusChrist,” 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Country Dancers: 8 — 10 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.Hillel: Israeli Folkdancing, 8 pm, Ida NoyesHall.DOC Films: “Stars in my Crown,” 7:30 pm;“Great Day in the Morning,” 9 pm, CobbHall.ThursdayROCKEFELLER CHAPEL: 50th annualcommunity Thanksgiving Service, 11 am.Rockefeller Chapel.DOC Films: “The Birds,” 7:15 pm;“Psycho,” 9:30 pm, Cobb Hall.HAPPYTURKEY DAY!FridayCenter for Middle Eastern Studies: SherryHour, 4:30 pm, Kelly 413.UC Men’s Basketball Team vs EdgewoodCollege, 7:30 pm, Field House.DOC Films: “The Birds,” 7:15 pm,“Psycho,” 9:30 pm, Cobb Hall.Court Studio Theatre: “The Sorcerer," 8:30pm, Reynolds Club Theatre.Winter Court Theatre: “Butley,” 8:30 pm,Reynolds Club New Theatre.SaturdayChange Ringing: Handbells, 10 am - 11 am;Tower Bells, 11 — 1, Mitchell Tower RingingRoom. Crossroads; Potluck Dinner, 6 pm, 5621 S.Blacktone.Law School Film: “Sunset Boulevard,” 7 pm& 9:15, Law School Auditorium.NAM Films: “Alexander Nevsky,” 7:15 &9:30 pm, Cobb Hall.Court Studio Theatre: “The Sorcerer,” 8:30pm, Reynolds Club Theatre.Winter Court Theatre: “Butley,” 8:30 pm,Reynolds Club New Theatre.SundayRockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy Com¬munion, 9 pm; Advent Celebration, 11 am;Advent Service of Communion according tothe Reformed and Free Church Tradition, 12noon, Rockefeller Chapel.Free Vegetarian Festival: Hare KrishnaTemple. 5:30 pm. 10! 4 Emerson, Evanston.Crossroads: hr idge, 3 pm, 5621 S. Blackstone.K.A.M. Isaiah Israel: “King Tut Revisited,”Albert Haas, 10:30 pm, 1100 Hyde Park Blvd.Court Studio Theatre: “The Sorcerer,” 8:30pm, Reynolds Club Theatre.DOC Films: “The Bed-Sitting Room,” 7:30 &9:15 pm. Cobb Hall.Winter Court Theatre: “Butley,” 8:30 pm,Reynolds Club New Theatre.Campus filmAdmission to Tuesday and WednesdayDoc films is $1.00. Admission to NAM, Law-School and all other Doc films is $1 50. NAMand Doc films will be presented in Quantrallauditorium in Cobb Hall Law School filmswill be shown in the Law School auditorium, •1111E. 60th.Hatari (1962). directed by How ard Hawks.(Doc) The Momella Game Farm inTanganyka is world-famous as a source ofwild animals. When the owner is killed by arhinocerous, his French-bom daughterdecides to carry on her father’s works withthe assistance of an odd melange ofcharacters with even more bizarre names With John Wayne. Tuesday at 8:00.Great Day in the Morning (1956), directedby Jacques Tourneur (Doc) The story of thegreat day for Dixie when a handful of rebelsbrought $2 million in gold into the con¬federacy, outsmarting a large number ofYankees. With Robert Stack and VirginiaMayo. Wednesday at 9:00TTie Birds (1963), directed by AlfredHitchcock (Doc) Now that you’ve feastedon your bird led Alfred Hitchcock’s birdsprey upon man. And you thought JonathanLivingston Seagull was a gentle, kind of cutething’’ In Sausalito a young woman hastremendous difficulty with her mother-smothered sweetheart, his mother, his ex¬girlfriend and birds. A chilling movie madeeven eerier by the total absence of musicWith Tippi Hedren, Rod Taylor and JessicaTandv. Thursday and Fridav at 7:15.Psycho (1960), directed by Alfred Hitch¬cock. (Doc) Tony Perkins stars as theclassical multiple-neuroses Mama’s boyJanet Leigh is a w'oman who has alwaysdepended on the kindness of strangers Witha famous shower scene and a fanatastic andhighly controversial ending Hitchcock wasforced by Paramount to add an additionalscene to satisfy their sense of justice andquell the audience’s nerves RecommendedThursday and Friday at 9; 30.Sunset Boulevard (1950). directed by BillyW’ilder (Law) Gloria Swanson stars as adecaying silent screen star in the days whenHollywood was more tin than tinsel WilliamHolden is terrific in his portrayal of a wittybut not too wise screenwriter that getssnared into her den of iniquity. With Erichvon Stroheim Recommended WithStagedoor Cartoon Saturday at 7:00 and9:15.Alexander Nevsky (1938), directed bySergei Eisenstein (NAM) An amazinglydetailed re-enactment of the butchery thatorcnrred on a winter’s day in 1242, when theinvading Teutonic knights met the serfs,muhiks and warriors of Novgorod on theice of Lake Peipes The Russians won bymight, strategy and the collapse of the iceunder German armor. A Russian warning toHitler Music by Prokoviev RecommendedSaturday at 7:15 and 9:30WINTER QUARTER LOANSWill be Available on Monday, Nov. 28 at Haskell Hall, Room 312.Please arrange to sign for your loans according to the alpha schedule listedbelow. You must have the following with you:Students in the CollegeValidated, permanent ’77-781.D. cardor your printout of course registration. Graduate StudentsFee card and permanent 77-781.D. card. Do notuse Drop Box or surrender Fee Card to Bursaruntil you have seen a loan officer.ALPHABETICAL SCHEDULEStudents whose last names begin with:R-Z MONDAYS:K-Q TUESDAYS:E-J WEDNESDAYS:A-D THURSDAYS:A-Z FRIDAYS: Nov. 28, Dec. 5,12, 19Nov. 29, Dec. 6,13,20, 27, Jan. 3Nov. 30, Dec. 7,14, 21,28, Jan. 4Dec. 1,8, 15, 22, 29, Jan. 5Dec. 2,9,16,23, Jan. 6i’V*‘ AH Loans must be picked up no later than FRIDAY, JAN. 6,1978Obtain loans early and avoid lines.The Chicago Maroon ^Tuesdav. November 22.1977 — 13;ZZZZZZZZZZZZ3!ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ^SZZZZZ2ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZssss If you can’t fly Continental,you may have to stay after school.Let us take you away with our economical discount fares.It doesn’t take a course in economicsto know that Continental is the way to gofor the holidays. Because we’re pioneers inthe area of discount fares.Like our Night Coach prices? Fly atnight and save a full 20% off the cost ofa regular Day Coach ticket.Or. if you’re off to Los Angeles, you'llsave a bundle with our Super Coach fare—just S99 one way — and no restrictions!And only Continental has EconomyFares everywhere we fly—save 10% just byskipping a meal.No matter where you fly in Continental’sWe really move our..CONTINeNTAt USA—north, south, east or west —we’ve gota great schedule and a discount fare to fityour budget. And you’ll still get the kind ofservice Continental is famous for.For more information about our money¬saving discount fares, call your campus rep.travel agent, or Continental at 686-6500. else¬where in Illinois Toll Free at (800) 972-78%.And remember, if you can’t fly Continental,try to have a nice trip anyway.‘Night Coach Fares good only on flights designated by Continentalleaving between 9;(X) PM and 7:00 AM.jmm®CONTINENTAL AIRLINESThe Proud Bird with the Golden Tail. ShSssssssssssspresenteSergei Eisenstein's ALEXANDER NEVSKYSaturday, Nov. 26 7:15 & 9:30 P.M. COBB HALL14->>♦*< The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 22,1977' v.'» V.V •. *i ‘ “ .'./s.*-*. . r, . '.V ; VImmm CLASSIFIED ADSSPACESTORAGE AREA NEEDED ^DO Yothave a spare room (or less)? I wouldlike to rent it for l>/2 years to store myhousehold goods while I do dissertatlon research in West Africa CallLarry Martin at 324-9238 anytime.2 bdrm. 2 bath coop apt-superb viewfrom 23rd floor, custom kitchen, allnew appliances, beautiful windowtreat, built-in cbnts, luxur carptg 81tile flrs-spot lighting. $41,500 mortg.terms discussed by appt. only.643-1476.Responsible college professor, a UCalumnus, needs lodging duringmonth of January. Would like tohousesit in Hyde Park. Call 947 9899after 6p.m.Room in private residence of professoravailable Jan 1 common meals.Full Privileges. Grad studentprefered. 324-3483.HOUSING CONTRACT: Take my contract for any available grad,undergrad, or married student hous¬ing. I can pay, if desired-you're my on¬ly hope! Thanks, Sophie 684 1569.Opening for 1 in 3 br apt. 55 8,Woodlwn. $84/mo. Laundry, yard,parking. Male grad or prof st. pref.Call Greg 752 6152 or 753-2753.Apt.-2 bdrm, 4 rooms, full bath nococroaches, green grass lawn. $135call 753-8579 days 247-6037 eves.Own bdrm, part turn, use of apt. Mustbe neat 8< like children 8< cats. 5500Cornell, 684 6961 after 11-27.Roomate needed to share 4 bedr apt.!175/mo. 493 78045 RM REMOLD APT NEAR WrigleyField. Bright, comforatble, spacious.Avail. Dec. 1 $250/mo. Call Beth 3 4884days 327 5306 eve.Spacious studio apt-lakefront bldgshort, long term rentals, turn or un-dur, rest, deli-pool bdrm apt. alsoavail. 752 38005420 S. Cornell, Studio Apt. ModernBldg. Central A.C. You control heat.Pkg. space. We pay utilities exceptelec. $185/mo. Lease. No pets. K 8.G Management. 263-6693.House in Beverly Shores IN On twofenced lots 3 blocks from Lake. 3bedrooms, IV2 baths, part basement,attached garage All furnishingsincluded. Immediate Possession.Futute National Park leasebackpossible. $46,900 Call Renard atCallahan Realty. 219 926 4298Hyde Park woman seeks quiet room inhouse or apt. 493 2040.4 BEDROOMS basic turn 5508 Cornell3 bath. $400 Wilson-HillRoommate wanted to share largetownhouse, sytle apt. Only $83 81 1/3util. Morf OK. Call Juan or Gary548 2426after6:30p.m. TYPIST/TERMINAL OPERATOR,Jesuit-KraussMcCormick,Seminary Library, 1100 E. 55th, 35 hr.wk. 667 3500, ext. 224 or 229. Call9-12 or 2-4.Crafts People: Sell your wares at thecrafts sale Dec 1 or 2. Call Irene atStudent Activities 753-3598 to reserve aspace20-29 yr old heterosexuals needed for 3mo study of mood and activity:(1) stable couples not living together.(2) males and females without aregular partner. (3) male and femaleroommates who are not partners.Contracepting couples not using thepill or rhythm. Will pay. For moreinformation call Mary Rogel, Ph D.947 6596 days.Sales person wanted part or full time.Call or see manager THEPINOCCHIO TOYS STORE, 1517 E.53rd St. in Hyde Park Bank Bldg.Tel -241-5512.Subjects wanted for PsycholinguisticsExperiments. Will be apid. To registercall 753 4718.Subjects wanted forneurophysiological study, pay $7.50 hr.For further particulars, call Dr.Crayton. 947-6415.Secretary needed in a researchlaboratory. 15 hrs wk. Time flexible.Typing, ordering laboratory suppliesand budget supervision. Please call753-2702 for interview.Openings in all string sections forWinter quarter University SymphonyOrchestra. Also some openings inwoodwind and brass sections. Formore information contact BarbaraSchubert. Conductor. Lexington Hall.753 2613.1978 University Symphony OrchestraConcerto Competition, open to allmembers of the University community. Applications due January 22,1978. Auditions eary in February.Performance on University Or¬chestra's spring concert. For moreinformation call the Department ofMusic. 753-2613.Addressers wanted immediately!Work at home, no experiencenecessary, excellent pay WriteAmerican Service. 8350 Park Lane,Suite 269, Dallas, TX 75231.Are you a normal healthy adult?Volunteer for research! We will pay$25 to attend an interview, fill out aquestionaire, and push a button. Totaltime required is 5 hours. Volunteersmust be healthy, have advanceddegrees and be between 35 8, 65 yearsof age For further info call 947-6983 MW-F 9 am to 4 pm.Help wanted TV attendant, part time.Hospital in area. Excellent pay.No TV knowledge necessary. Mr.Eastman 676 2226.Windermere Restaurant, Waitress orwaiters, full time or part time call FA46000PEOPLE WANTEDStudent wife with own child willing tocome to my home to care for infant. 684 6961 after 11-27 FOTA PRINTSSPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT Orders for FOTA prints must be receivedby Dec 2 Specify how gift card shouldbe signed Set of 4 prints $5, we mailthem anywhere.FORCOPYPRINTSBY KODAK• Made right from yourfavorite color prints• Order as many duplicatesas you wish• Ask about KODAKColor Copy Enlargements tooUniversity of ChicagoBookstore-Photo Department5750 S. Ellis 753-3317Mastercharge A Visa Accepted PEOPLE FOR SALE FOR SALE FOUND GERMAN EXAMSKILLED SEAMSTRESS needs extramoney, what do YOU need? I dQalmost anything: hemming, mending,alterations, and production of camping gear clothes and toys. Janet643-9158.GERMAN READING EXAM betterluck next time pass It with my experthelp yrs of experience high successrate native german PhD Call 493-8127or 493-1851.U of C faculty member's wife wishes tobabysit on a regular basis at their aptMon-Fri 324 3219.ARTWORK - Illustration of all kinds,lettering, hand-addressing for Invita¬tions, etc Noel Price, 493-2399.RESEARCHERS-Free-lance artistspecializes In just the type of graphicwork you need. Noel Price, 493-2399.TYPING SERVICE/HYDE PARK/538-6066 after 5:00 pm.FRENCH NATIVE coll tchr offerstutoring- all levels- w/ lang regs-classfor kind being organized. Pn 324-8054.SCENESLoglan is a language designed to testthe Sapir-Whorf hypothesis that thenatural languages limit humanthought. It is transformationallypowerful, metaphysically par¬simonious, syntactically unam¬biguous, semantically non-restrictiveand culturally neutral. If you knowLoglan or are interested in learning it,and would be willing to join a Loglanstudy group, please send your nameand telephone number or address to:J.R. Brown, 345 W. Fullerton, Chicago60614.SPERM DONORSWANTEDWanted Sperm Donors for ArtificialInsemination. Donors must beparents. For information call 947-1813.AUCTIONS ITEMSWTDFeeling down perk up by donatingsuperfluous possessions (housewares,collectibles, antiques, etc) to HydePark-Kenwood Community Con¬ference Holiday Auction. TaxDeductible, too! Call 288 8343 Smith-Corona portable electrictypewriter. Condition like new asking$125. Call 684 8487QUALITY XEROX COPIES, 8 centseach 1st Unit Ch 5650 Woodlawn, hrs9-5, 7-10 daily. 'I'll pay $25 to anyone who will takeover my housing contract. If you are afull time grad or undergrad 8, want tolive anywhere in the University hous¬ing system call Marilyn 753 3486 day,752 9019 nite.Spinet piano In perfect condition $650o.n.o. call 241-6779,Dreams In Stone prints on sale InReynolds Club, Monday and Tuesday,II to 1. Now only $5 for set of 4 and wemall them anywhere, makes a greatglftlFOTA will mall a set of Dreams InStone prints for only $5. Send theperfect holiday gift, to friends 8,relatives. Place orders with FOTA InIda Noyes.For sale 74 Toyota Corolla great ongas. Easy to park, needs bodywork.$800 or best offer 493-4336 evens.PERSONELS"EXECUTIVE 8. PROFESSIONAL"LOANS BY MAIL. $5000 to 35.000signature only. No advance fees ac¬cepted. M.D.'s, Dentists, ResidentsSenior Medical Students, College &University Educators, Federal, State8, Municipal Employees, GS-12 orhigher, Corporate Employees making$20,000 or higher. Send brief resume toChatham Financial ConsultantsDepartment UCM PL Box 21406Chicago, IL.60621.Writers' workshop PL2 8377.PREGNANCY TESTS SATURDAYS10-1 Augustana Church, 5500Woodlawn Bring 1st morning urinesample. $1.50 donation. SouthsldeWomen's Health. 324-6794. CLOSEDNOV 26th.Norma- If you go to SUNSET BLVDwith me on Sat, I'll help you with yourcomeback. Max"I am big, It's the pictures that gotsmaller," Gloria Swanson in BillyWilder's SUNSET BOULEVARD. SAT7 & 9:15 Law Aud.PAN PIZZADELIVERED RAP GROUPThe Medici Delivers from 5-10:30weekdays, 5-11:30 weekends, 667-7394Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourself. A Women's Rap Group will meet everyMonday at 7:30 pm on the 3rd floor ofthe Blue Gargoyle For more info- 752-5655.ALL TOGETHERAt One LocationTO SAVE YOU MORE!SPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicogo Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago youare entitled to special money sav¬ing Discounts on Volkswagen &Chevrolet Parts, Accessories andany new or used Volkswagen orChevrolet you buy from Volks¬wagen South Shore or MeritChevrolet Inc.SALES & SERVICEALL AT ONEGREAT LOCATIONv/:m CHEVROLETVOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE7234 Stony IslandPhone: 684-0400Open Oatty 0-9 PMJ Sat. 9-5 P.MParts Open Saturday t« 12 Noon Woman's gold watch, near Biologygate. Call Sharon 493 5245.DOG FOUNDFemale miniature collie, found 11/7 invicinity of 58th 8, Ellis Cali: 753-8155days; 375 4447 eves.•Cya Eiammctions•Contact Lenses (Soft 1 Hard)•Prescriptions RHad)R MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Perk Shopping Center1510 E. SSth363-0363 Take April Wilson's German coursethis winter and high pass the springlanguage exam! Classes meet MWFfrom 12-1 or from 7 8pm, from Jan 9 toApril 29. Limited enrollment. $110 toregister, call: 667 3038TAj-SAM-MMCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Orders to take Out1318 East 63rd MU 4-1062ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueTHE FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARYCOMMUNITY THANKSGIVING SERVICEThursday, November 24, 1977, 11 A.M.Preacher: CHARLES SHELBY ROOKS. PresidentChicago Theological Seminary *Sermon: WHAT'S ALL THE NOISE ABOUT?'’ TheCombined Young Voices of the Churches andSynagogues and The Chicago Childrens Choir,CHRISTOPHER MOORE, Director Edward Mondello,Organist Robert Lodine, Carillonneur Sponsored bythe Council of Hyde Park and Kenwood Churchesand Synagogues.moderator: prof howard i. aronson. • 1 LQ.rscsuC^c^>participants. xphilip gossett (music) *%*%£*% ^irving kaplansky (mo.themafcvcsj ^ ?kenneth kaye (ed.ucat.ioK) 3%%^albert madanskv ^business) tj ^james d mccawly t ^ar eai>terr\ IoAck'" ^ CamKAT IDA NOYES HALL 1112 E 59CKTUES. NOV. 22. T;30 PM.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, November 22,1977 — 15Custom Black and l^hite ProcessingIt you have ever developed or printed B&W film yourself you know the highQuality achievable with hand processing methods Even today with all thescience and machinery available in the large photo iabs B&W handprocessing will produce superior resultsWe offer the finest B&W processing available Even the large Pro" labs donot process B&W film by hand anymore So for the best B&W processing foryour film —see us PUSH and PULL processing to your specifications at asmall additional charge135mm develop & Contact Sheet only $4 50 We specialize in repairs!Repairs are one of the specialties of Model Camera. We canhave a Nikon, Pentax, Olympus, Leica or Canonoverhauled, cleaned, adjusted, calibrated, etc. and usuallyback within a week or two. If it is repairable, we can do it!And we will get you an estimate first.Olympus CanonNikonOLYMPUSOURLIST PRICE$293 00 $194.95413.00 259.95478.00 299.95AE-1 Body onlyw/50mm f1 8SCw/50mm f1.4SSCCompact and lightweight withNikon quality and dependability.Latest Gallium Photo Diode thru-the-lens metering system. Acceptseconomically priced motor drive.The only compact with Nihonquality.LISTF2A Photomic Bodyonly $649.9w/50mmf2.0AI 776.5w/50mm f1.4AI 871.5F2AS Photomic Bodyonly 810.0w/50mm 12 0AI 037.5wif50mm 11 4AI 1032.5Nikon EL2 Body only 510.0w/50mm f2.0AI 637.5w/50mm f1.4AI 732.5auto winder. AW-1 179.5Nikon FM Body only 360.0w/50mm f2.0AI 487.5w /50mm ft.4AI 582.5Nikkormat FT-3 Bodyonly 297.0w f 50mm f 2,0 AI 424.5w / 50mm ft. 4A! 519.5 The Fuji ST-605 is one of our allaround best buys. Check thesefeatures: Lightweight, compactdesign. Extra-fast accurate siliconcell metering. 3-way focusing.Precision focal plane shutter. SharpFujinon f2.2, 55mm lens. Acceptsall standard mount lenses andaccessories. Special internal flareprotection.List Price $258.50All this and a camera case for$139.95.You’ll want to take it everywhere!AT-1 Body onlyw/50mm f1 BSCw/50mm f1 4SSCAccessories for AE-1AT-1Power Winder ASpeedlite 155ALenhood BS-55The same remarkable features ofthe Olympus OM-1 and OM-2 is thefirst 35mm SLR with a meteringsystem that measures light directlyat the film plane DURING THEACTUAL EXPOSURE! WithOlympus Motor Drive, breeze by at5 frames per second!OURLIST PRICEOM-1 MOChrome Body only $279.95 $170.00w/50mm f1.8 364.95 232.95w/50mm f1.4 419.95 269.95w/50mm f1.2 534.95 345.00Black Body. add $16.00 OURPRICE,F-1 Body onlyw/50mm fi.8SCw/50mm f1.4SSCTXw/50mm I1.8SCand casePocket FujicaPocket Fuji 200-F, a best buy in lowpriced pocket cameras. Speciallight touch shutter release. Aim andshot—no focusing, no exposuresetting. Uses new Flipflash for 8flashes with one unit. Minimizes"red-eye”. Ultra-light and compactbody.List price $27.95Our price $19.95 Canon FD LensesHard Case, add JOM-2Chrome Body only 434 9w/50mm 11.8 519.9w/50mmfl.4 574.9w/50mm f1.2 689.9Black body, add 1Hard Case, add ... 2Accessories for OM-1 & OM-2 OURLIST PRICE$427.00 $249.00323.00 187.50277.00 162.00250 00 137.00380.00 236.00139.00 75.00290.00 189.00270.00 172.00260.00 155.00216.00 130.00399.00 245.00185 00 92.50259.00 154 00490.00 288.00.268.00 1 57.00399.00 270.0017mm f4.0SSC20mm 12.8SSC24mm 12.8SSC28mm f2.8SC28mm f2.0SSC35mm f3.5SC35mm f2.0SSC50mm f3.5 MACRO85mm f1.8SSC100mm f2.8SSC100mm f4.0 MACRO135mm f3.5SC135mm 12.5SSC200mm f2.8SSC200mm f4 0SSC300mm f5.6SSC35-70mm f2.8-3,5Zoom100-200mm 15.6 SCZoomOM Winder I w/6VBatt. HolderOM Winder I w/6VBatt. HolderMotor Drive I/ControlGrip/ Batt. HolderQuick Auto 310Flash UnitBounce GripTTL Auto Cord A Nikor LensesLIST OURPRICE PRICE Pocket Fujica350 Zoom16mm f3.5 (full frame)w/case18mm 14,0 wi lenhood20mm 14.024mm f2.828mm f2.028mm f2.828mm f3.528mm 14.0 PC35mm 12.8 PCw/case35mm f2.835mm f2.035mm 11.445mm 12.8 GN 1C(old style onle)Ol/mpus Lenses Fujichrome RlOOfor speedand fine grain colorOUR. LIST PRICE$524.95 $355.00284.95 175.00459 95 308.00219.95 137.95294.95 1 98 00169.95 109.0085.00 67 00140.00 104.00255.00 179.00284.95 1 70.00314.95 206.00219.95 142.00259.95 158.00189.95 116.00269.95 171.00449 95 295.00359.95 228.0024mm 12.024mm f2 828mm f2.028mm f3 535mm f2.035mm f2.850mm f1.850mm f1 450mm f1 250mm f3.5 MACRO85mm 12.0100mm 12 8135mm 12.8135mm f3.5200mm 14.0300mm 14.575-150mm 14*0 You get more with Fuji’s 35mmslide film. Fujichrome R100, 100ASA gives you speed plus fine graincolor. You get brilliant reds, naturalgreens, and excellent skin tones inevery daylight situation.LIST OURPRICE PRICE127.50 80.00222.50 199.00321.00 208.95315.00 208.0050mm 12050mm 11.450mm 11.255n,m 13,585mm 11.8(old style only) Zoom versatility in a Pocket SizeFuji’s great pocket zoom camera,available with or without electronicflash. Features include a 7 element15.6 super sharp zoom lens, 1/125sec. shutter, and electronic flashcapability.List price $94.00Our price $79.95List price (includes case) $119.50Our price $94 95 (with flash)105mm 12.5205mm 14.0 MACRO135mm 12.0135mm 13.5135mm 12.8180mm 12.8 case200mm 14.0300mm 14.5500mm 18.0 reflexw/case28-45mm 14.5 Zoom43-86^™ f 3.5 Zoom80-200 mm f4.5 Zoomw case% ;16 The Chicago Maroon - Tuesday, November 22,1977', •' ■ ■ •' ■' ' "■ V. '''■ ■. ' ' . ■ • ' , ... ... . '■ •'" ■' ; ' . . ' :■ ' ' ' 1342 E. 55th Street 9,30-6,00 /Hon.-Sat. 493-6700