TWO receives $1.2 millionfor community aid and jobsBy David BurtonThe Woodlawn Organization(TWO) has received a $1.2 millionfederal grant to provide jobtraining and employment for 160local youths beginning February19.Rev. Geno Baroni, assistantsecretary of Housing and UrbanDevelopment (HUD), announcedthe award of the grant, madeavailable by the 1977 Youth Em¬ployment and DemonstrationProjects Act, last month inWashington.The money will be used todevelop marketable job skills inbuilding trades, landscaping,groundskeeping and urbanagriculture for 50 high schoolstudents and 110 out of schoolyouths between the ages of 16 and19, said Leon Finney, Jr.,executive director of TWO.There are 25,000 unemployedyouths in the Woodlawn and Hyde Park areas, said program directorCarol Millison. According to her,this is one of the first programs ofits kind. There is currently a grantfrom the city involving between 12and 48 youths.TWO will contract with the HydePark Career Academy to obtainteachers for the project and hasplaced advertisements for ad¬ditional counselors and tradesmen.Applicants will be accepted onthe basis of their expected abilityto succeed in the program, saidorganizers. In conjunction with theprogram, the Woodlawn Neigh¬borhood Health Center and theUniversity’s health services willprovide health care for the par¬ticipants.The program will test whethercommunity development cor¬porations such as TWO cansucessfully operate youth em¬ployment programs. This “willshow that we can do it,” saidMillison. The Woodlawn Organization received a $1.2 million HUD grant for job training. (Photo by Philip Grew)Moved out46 Shoreland residentsrelocated for renovationByJimMuckle complete renovation of theThirty of the 46 graduates and Shoreland by autumn 1979. Thisundergraduates in the northwest deadline was originally made wuhwing of the Shoreland who were the assumption that no work wouldinformed by mail last week that be done on students’ rooms duringthey would have to leave their the school year, but, Shawlrooms by March 3 met with the Associates — the constructionhousing director Edward management firm that supervisedTurKington Sunday night to discuss ^ erection of the Sears Tower andhonon thfl mootinfi the Shoreland — recently informedTurkington began the meeting th University that to make thewith a roll call and a promise that J“this won’t be sweet, but we’ll 1979 deadline, work must beginmake it short tonight.” It was immediately and continueneither. throughout this school year andStudents were told by next.Turkington an “arbitrarydecision” Shoreland to 3Forty-six students living in the Shoreland Hotel will be forced tomove sometime this quarter so renovation may be completed.(Photo by Sharon Pollack) Carter anounces tuition aid plan;$1.2 billion to go to middle classBy Abbe FletmanPresident Carter displayed aflair for the dramatic last Wed¬nesday when he unveiled a record$1.2 billion tuition aid programaimed at families that earn lessthan $40,000 a year. Carter calledupon Congress for swift passage ofhis proposal which would bring thetotal tedera! college aid budget to$5.2 bi lion.Some of the new funds will beused to expand the BasicEducational Opportunity GrantProgram (BEOG). Under Carter’sproposal, the program willguarantee a minimum grant of$250 to every student whose familyearns between $16,000 and $25,000 ayear. Last year, the program had a$16,000 eligibility ceiling.'The new program increasesstudent eligibility by over 300percent. While this year, 325students were eligible for theBEOG, next year, nearly 1,000students at the University might beeligible, according to Collegefinancial aid director Fred Brooks.Explaining the program, Cartersaid, “Increasingly, middle in¬come families, not just the lower-income families — are beingstretched to their financial limitsby the new and growing cdsts of auniversity or college education. Noone should be denied the op¬portunity for a college educationfor financial reasons.”Partisan moveBut Carter is not motivated onlyby a desire to lower college costs tomiddle-income families. Hisproposal is a partisan movedesigned to undermineRepublican-backed legislationcalling for tax breaks for parentsof college students, asCongressional reaction to theannouncement demonstrates.Carter announced the aid in¬ crement in the press room of theWhite House with Health,Education and Welfare SecretaryJoseph Califano and six membersof House and Senaate committeesthat consider educationallegislation.Rep. William Ford. <D - Mich.),who heads the House Educationand Labor subcommittee on highereducation called the aid program“the biggest single infusion offunding for middle-income collegestudents since the adoption of theGI bill at the end of World War II.”Sen. Clairborne Pell iD.-R I.)called it “absolutely superb "But Republican NationalChairman Bill Brock said.“President Carter’s proposal tomeet rising costs of college withexpanded scholarships and loans isa skinflint response to the pleas bymiddle-class families under greatest pressure.” Brock sup¬ports tax break legislation andcalled Carter’s program an un¬distinguished attempt to undercutCongressional backing of suchlegislation.Carter's program gives ad¬ditional funds to many existingfederal loan program, including:• $165 million for new work-study jobs for 280.000 students withthe government paying 80 percentof the salaries,• additional funds to theGuaranteed Student Loanprogram, increasing family in¬come eligibility from the current$30,000 to $45,000.• increasing the maximum grantfcr low income students from $1600to $1800.Aid to 3PRE-LAW MEETING“LIFE AS A LAW STUDENT”Panel discussion by U. of C.graduates now in Law SchoolWednesday, February 153:30 pmSocial Science 122Sponsored by Office of Dean of Students in the CollegeGetThe Great Ratesof Budget!Two locationsto serve you:5508 Lake Park493-79008642 So. Chicago We feature Lincoln-Mercury carsAll our cars areclean, well maintainedlate model cars.Now ... for Sears customers: Budget Rent a Car operates authorizedSears Rent a Car Distribution Centers at most Budget locations.Locally call: 374*1121 or 493-1 774A Budget System Licensee.374-07002 — The Chieaqo Maroon — Tuesday, February U, 1978Resigned Fermihead UC profRobert R. Wilson, the Fermi NationalAccelerator Laboratory director whor ’gned last nv^r ^^dequater "^arch funding. >s also a Universityphvsics orofessnr' ° mint appointment, not unusual for theUniversity, placed the physicist as head oftfle ,I,2 ,mile*diameter atom smasher, theworld’s largest.Wilson had threatened to quit last monthto protest the Carter administration’sfailure to give additional $38 million for aTevatron, a powerful machine designed toexamine “the secrets of creation,” and tooffer an increase in general financial sup¬port.Wilson said the Tevatron was needed tomaintain the lab’s superiority in the field ofhigh energy physics. Fermi currentlyoperated with an annual $59 million budget.Wilson has been at Fermi since buildingbegan 11 years ago. He supervised theconstruction, which was completed inrecord time and at much less than theestimated cost. Although Wilson resignedfrom the 1,500 employee lab in Batavia, Ill.,he is expected to continue to work at theUniversity.Appeal drawsextra aid fundsThe University is expected to receive anadditional $230,000 in supplemental op¬portunity grant funds in May as the result ofan unprecedented appeal of a federalgovernment decision.In 1977 the University applied to thegovernment for student aid funds. Afterreceiving less than they asked for, theUniversity appealed the decision, againrequesting more funds to go mostly to lowincome families. The unusual appeal andthe decision to grant the money were called “important for the University” by oneadministrative source. •The source also said that the funds are “abonanza”, adding to this year’s 7 percentincrease in student financial aid. The moneyis expected to be granted in May.It is not known whether the decision willmake it easier for the University to obtainsubsequent funds, or how many persons oncampus the additional grant funds willaffect, but. the reversal of the originaldecision represents an important boost forthe University as it attempts to raise aid tooffset the recent tuition hikeFOTA to holdposter contestThis year the Festival of the Arts (FOTA)will hold its second annual poster artscontest. It is soliciting entries from areaartists and will offer a prize of $100.00 to thewinner for complete rights to the artwork.The winning poster will be used as thecenterpiece for 2.500 copies of the FOTAcalendar.Entries should be no more than I6V2 wideand between 12 and 20 inches long.Reproduction will be limited to two colorsbesides back with no screening. Completecolor separation should also be submitted.Each entry should include the words“Festival Of The Arts 1978” or “FOTA 78”in letters no less than one inch tall.Entries should be mailed or delivered to:FOTA Rm. 218Ida Noyes Hall1212 East 59th StreetChicago, Ill. 60637All entries should include the name, ad¬dress, and telephone number of the artist.Entries must be received by Monday,March 6.1978.For more information contact the FOTAat 753-3562 or Irene Conley at 753-3598.r«-p: Wtn/G7Young Tender CO$Beef Liver uUSDA Choice 4 egRib Steak 1 /ibRed Labe! "70$Ice Cream (Vanilla Only) / /l/7 gallonPink Beautv 4 egSalmon 1 ' /tall canYellow Onions 29* /3'b ba?Pink Grapefruit 89* 5 lb ba?#1 Sweet Potatoes 25*Northern OC$Toilet Tissue O J 4 rollsSale Dates 2/15-2/181226 E. 53rd(KIMBARK PLAZA)HOURSs MON. - SAT. 8:30 A.M. -7:50 PJM.SUN. 9-4:50 LatIr Physicist Wyllienamed professorPeter J. Wvllie has been named the firstHomer J. Livingston Professor at theUniversity. Wyllie is a geophysical sciencesprofessor, and is editor of the Journal ofGeography.His special field is the study of highpressures and temperatures as they relateto the evolution of the earth and its crust.The Homer J. Livingston Professorshipwas established in 1976 bv the First NationalBank of Chicago Foundation to honor thebank’s former chief executive officer.Livingston served as a member of theUniversity’s Board of Trustees from 1951until his death in 1970 and was chairman ofthe Investment Committee.Wyllie was born in London and studied atthe University of St. Andrews, Scotland.Before joining the faculty at Chicago in 1965as a full professor, he was acting chairmanof the department of geochemistry andminerology at Pennsylvania StateUniversity. He has also been a reserachfellow and lecturer at Leeds University,England. Susan MalaskiewiczAid from 1• raising the amount of the average grantby $200 for students in families with in¬comes between $8000 and $16,000.Critics of Carter’s proposal charge thatstudent loan defaults will increase as aresult of the expanding programs. Califanotold a Congressional education hearing lastThursday that former students havedefaulted on $500 million in federallyguaranteed loans. CaTifano has promisedfour times since September to crack downon defaulters. Similar efforts are beinginitiated by both the state of Illinois and theUniversity.Carter’s proposal has a good chance ofswift passage by Congress. Education of¬ficials across the country and at theUniversity agree that expanding existinggrant and loan programs, not offering taxbreaks, is the most sensible way to easecosts for middle-income families. Shoreland from 1Rather than delay and postpone the in¬convenience to the 46 residents. Turkingtonsaid, the University chose to begin worknow. Turkington cited two reasons for thedecision to complete the work now;traditionally autumn is a peak period forhousing needs: and. a delay now would onlymean more inconvenience in the long run tothose who would have to vacate their roomswhen pipes broke down, a they have done forthe past three years.Following the announcement of thedecision. Turkington disclosed a detailedplan that included lotteries for availableextra rooms and. in two cases, movingstudents into local apartments.There remains a slight chance that themoves could be delayed until the end of thequarter. Turkington’said. but the studentswould definitely have to move by then.Students could not stay in the rooms duringconstruction, explained Turkington,because “it would be inconvenient, cold,dry, and dangerous,” he said.Turkington said he expected the rooms tobe finished by May 1, but admitted that hehad never seen a' company adhere to itsconstruction schedule.In the meantime, students have severaloptions open to them, said Turkington. Theycan remain at the Shoreland in newarrangements at a lowered cost, or if theywish to break their board contract and findtheir own apartment, their money would berefunded from the day they' left theShoreland. Students will also be allowed torequest places in other dormitories, wherethere are 12 to 15 spaces available.Student reaction to the announcement washostile. Some claimed it was an undueimposition, and were angered by shortnotice given in the middle of the quarter.Moreover, it was discovered that onereason for starting construction in the north¬west wing of the building may be to aid theconstruction of the resident master'sapartment on the second and third floors inthat wing.Though Turkington assured students thatconstruction on other floors would havestarted anyway, students were still angrythat the resident master's complex was thecriteria used for starting on their wing of thebuilding rather than anotherThe Morris Fishbein Center for the Study ofThe History of Seiene and MedicinepresentsA SERIES OF FOUR LECTURES0\ WHEAT \STRO\OMYh\NOEL M.SWERDLOWAssociate Professor of Medieval Historyand of the Histor\ of ScienceFebrtiar\ 1 f>: Planetar\ Theor\ in the AlmagestFehruar\ 23: Planetarx Theory in Ptoleim's PlanetaoM\ potheM"*All lectures on Thursday 1:00 P.M.in Harper 103The University of ChicagoThe Public is Cordially InvitedA new and startling chapterin one of the great journeys ofenlightenment of our time(cm Afim nos1NCI 1TH€ SCCOND RINGOfPOWCRThe Second Ring of Power goes far beyond anythingCastaneda has yet wntten In his great journey towardsknowledge and power, he finds himself in a deadly psychicbattle with dona Soleda a female apprentice of don Juan,who turns her power—power she learnt from don Juanhimself—against himLiterary- Guild Alternate SelectionPsychology Today Book Club Mam Selection$9.95 ^ SIMON AMD SCHUSTER ’’Technique withoutideals is a menace;Ideals withouttechnique is a messHAPPYVALENTINESDAYTo Tony KronmanFrom Karl LlewellynMy eyes are all redMy nose has turned blueWinter would stinkIf it weren't for youLove & Kisses & HappyValentine's Day Sweetie •Eye Examinations•Contact Lenses (Soft t Hard)•Prescriptions FilledDR MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th363 6363THE CAROLAN5480 S. CornellYES...we have large studioapartments available.YES...rental includes utilities.YES...we would appreciate theopportunity toaccommodate youTO1 MARIAN REALTY, INC.Ukri 684-5400!?EA'_TOD' THE PROBLEM OF THE PALESTINIANS:THE PSYCHOLOGICAL DIMENSIONSSpeakers:DR. AARON G. AUERBACHVisiting Clinical Psychologist in UCDept, of Child Psychiatry: School ofEducation Hebrew UniversityDR. THOMAS H. GORRYDept, of Psychology Baptist College atCharleston South Carolina formerly taught a4American Univ. in Beirut, Lebanon.FRIDAY - FEBRUARY 17th - 8:30 P.M.HILLEL FOUNDATION - 571 5 WOODLAWNUC. CONCERT BANDPOPS CONCERTWVd.t Feb. 15■MoUSSORGSKV"OA1NT-SAENSTt^pkofiefGershwin-■PLUS:/\SSOR-TED Marc:HESREVW0LD5 CLI[E>,j9T NOON, OF COURSE .Outward Bound is a shot ofhigh adventure in the wilderness.And a lot more.It's a trip that'll show you whatyou're made of.You can discover you can doalmost anvthingyou want—if youtry.Our 3-week experience in self-confidence sure isn't easy. But itmight just last you the rest of yourlife.Your first challenge: send forfull information.NameStreetCity Stale ZipSchoolPhoneCheck the courses that interest vouCanoeing — Desert expeditionsWhite water Wildernessrafting — backpackingSailing — MountaineeringOutward Bound. Dept. CG.165 W Putnam Ave .Greenwich.CT 06830Phone toll tree (800| 243-8520No experience necessaryOutward Bound admits students of anysex. race color and national or ethnicorigin. We are a nonprofit orqaru/.atioriSc hold rs h tp.s aea i la hie.Outward BoundBy Karen Homick“I m resigned to the fact that as soon isit down at Regenstein I'm going to fallasleep So I go to the library earlier than Ihave to. I put mv feet up on the table, closemy eves, and do it. An hour later I wake up.go to thejohn. and wash mv face. Then I canwork, no problem. ”Third year PERL Student"We have history at four o'clock. It’sawful. 1 can't stay awake. Our teachershows slides, pulls the curtains, and myeves just shut, my head falls down, and Ijust doze. I sit in the back. ”Second year Biology StudentDr. Allan Rechtschaffen devotes hiswaking hours to sleep He is the director ofthe University’s Sleep Research laboratory,established to study “the mechanisms ofsleep and how the brain functions duringsleep.”Located at 5741 Drexel Avenue, the Lab isone of the oldest and most prominent cen¬ters of sleep research. Even before theLab’s founding in the late fifties, theUniversity had a reputation for its successin the study of sleep. REM (rapid eyemovement) was discovered here in 1953 byEugene Aserinsky, then a graduate studentin physiology working under NathanielKleitman. REM is a sleep stage usually, butnot always, associated with dreams. Thediscovery of REM yielded the realizationthat there are various stages of sleep un¬dergone during a normal sleep period.Because of the interest it aroused, Dr.Rechtschaffen called the discovery of REM“the stimulus for the age of modern sleepresearch.”In practice, the Sleep Lab uses electrodesand EEG’s to record a sleeping volunteer’spassage from one level to another. As aresult of such methods, more has beenlearned about sleep in the last 25 years thanwas ever known before.Part of the Lab’s research is devoted tothe sleeping problems which most people,especially students, have to cope with. “TheSleep Lab is not a clinic.” Rechtschaffensaid, “but students with sleep problems canbe referred here by their doctors.”Another result of the increasing interest insleep research was the establishment of theAssociation for the Physiological Study ofSleep. Founded at Chicago, the in¬ternational organization recently held its19th conference here.Larks and owlsMost likely, no student who has irregularsleep habits has a genuine physiological oremotional disorder. Erratic sleeping habitsare as much a part of going to school aspartying until two or getting up at five in themorning to cram for an exam.“Young people are more adaptable thanothers,” said Dr. Rechtschaffen. “They canadapt to erratic schedules. No one’sscreaming ‘maintain a precise sleepschedule,’ but some people completely neglect the importance ot regular sleephabits in their daily lives. Intellectualperformance, mood, and energy levels areall affected by rhythm disruptions.”“The amount of sleep needed,” Recht¬schaffen said, “varies with the individual.Eight hours is a number somebody dreamedup. The statistical average is 7.5, but somepeople feel they need nine, and some peoplefeel best with five. Most individuals knowhow much they need, the problem is lear¬ning what’s optimal for you — and getting iton schedule. Sleeping too long can make youfeel as tired as sleeping too little.”A person should estimate how much sleepis needed to get through a day, and balanceit with the number of hours necessary forwork and play. A person can't store sleep —sleeping in until noon on Sunday so that he’llbe able to make it through lab on Monday won’t do the trick. The benefits of napping,commonly seen as a possible solution, areunproven. The best thing for most peoplewho need sleep is not. as popularly believed,to get exactly the same amount of sleepeach day, but to sleep as much as possible atthe same time every day.Dr. Rechtschaffen distinguishes between“larks” and “owls,” morning-people andnight-people Some people simply functionbest early in the day. and some late at night.These differences reflect the physiology ofthe individual and do not necessarily in¬dicate pathological problems. To be an owlin the nine-to-five world is inconvenient but.if you can, it is better to arrange yourschedule to suit natural inclinations than tofight them. For instance, students can findclasses that meet late in the afternoon.“If you need extra time to study,”Rechtschaffen said, “the best bet is to go tobed at the normal time and wake up early.There's less damage to the rhythm. You canalter your rhythm for a while, but yourmood and intellect will eventually sufferand you'll inevitably return to your regularrhythm.”How much sleeD0Dr. Rechtschaffen answered an oft-heardquestion: How little sleep can I get by with0“People have gone four or five daysawake without physical effects. Missingsleep won’t kill you The effects of sleepdeprivation show up in most people if threehours are missed, but the effect is nothingradical It shows up most profoundly inintellectual performance and in mood -irritability,” said Dr RechtschaffenWhen asked if a student should miss sleepto study. Rechtschaffen answered: “It’s atrade-off You may gather more in¬formation by staying awake, but you'llprobably be more alert and sharp if yousleep.” The doctor emphatically denied thepossibility of learning during sleepDrink coffee if vou must stay awake. DrRechtschaffen said Over-the-counter, keep-awake drugs don't contain any ingredient Erratic sleeping habits areas much a part of going toschool as partying until twoor getting up at five in themorning to cram for anexam."Missing sleep won't killyou. The effects show upmost profoundly in in¬tellectual performance andmood."more effective than caffeine. Am¬phetamines aren’t very good for ; ou,especially in the long run. The body quL dybecomes tolerant of them, and that leads tobuilding-up the dose and not gettinganywhere. Besides, speed can become habitforming.InsomniaErratic sleeping patterns can alsoproduce another sleep disorder: insomnia.“Insomnia, a common complaint, has manycauses — emotional and physiological,” Dr.Rechtschaffen said. “What do you do aboutit? Don’t pay too much attention to it ifyou’re okay during the dav. Don’t knockyourself out thinking you should get eighthours.”Waking up early over a period of daysmay be an early’sign of depression, butagain it should hot be taken as cause foralarm, unless there are other symptoms aswell.Common insomnia is often caused by adisrupted schedule. If a sleeping pattern ismaintained, the insomnia will probably goaway. “If you can’t fall asleep.” DrRechtschaffen advised, “get up and dosomething you like, don't compound anxietyby tossing and turning. Use your owndevices, different things help differentpeople. Exercise — early in the day. notbefore bed — is often good, and some peoplelike hot baths. TV, reading, or sex. Alcoholis not a good soporific. It induces sleep,knocks you out. but later encourages tossingand turning.The last thing to do is take sleeping pills.They can be dangerous — according to thequantity taken — and have hangover ef¬fects. Furthermore, tolerance to mostsleeping pills develops very quickly. After aweek or so they are ineffective. The dosemust be increased and a vicious habitdevelops.”REM’SSleeping pills, alcohol, and emotionalproblems can suppress REM periods. DrRechtschaffen denied a popular belief thatvou can become psvchotic if vou don’t haveREM's.“The importance of REM sleep isunknown...the rebound of REM’s impliesthere is an importance, but it is not tomental health." REM periods missed over aperiod of several days have a tendency tobuild ud and come back in a Darticularlvintense REM period. The result, night¬mares. will further disrupt a person's sleepA third problem, more rare than insomniaor rhythm disruption, is excessive sleepHypersomniacs find it difficult to wake up;may sleep for thirteen to fourteen hours; yetmay wake up feeling stuporous and lazy. Ifcaused by narcolepsy, a frequent and un¬controllable desire for sleep, hypersomniamay be accompanied by feelings of■paralysis’ at bedtime It may occur duringthe day with loss of muscle tone at momentsof emotional stress. A person suspecting thepresence of narcolepsy should, of course,consult a physician A relatively “new”disease, many doctors are still undecidedabout the causes and symptoms of nar¬colepsy, making it difficult to diagnoseGenuine cases of narcolepsy are veryrare. The average student who is behind insleep-time because of school pressures, canavoid a lot of pain by using common sense,by giving in to what Samuel Johnson called“the gentle tyrant" If you need to sleep youshould It is possible to make A’s and Z’s atthe same time"Insomnia has many causes - emotional andphysiological. If you can't fall asleep, get up and dosomething you like. . . hot baths, TV, reading, or sex."Photo by Nancy Cleveland — ■CalendarTuesdayDepartment of Mathematics: “The EternalTriangle-The Regular Solids: How to Build aDohecahedron,” Paul Sally, 11:30 am.Eckhart 133.History and Philosophy of Science: Student-faculty lunch and discussion group, 12:30-2pm. Classics 21, all interested welcome.Department of Economics: Workshop — “AnAnalysis of Deferred Compensation: TheImplicit Price Structure of PensionCoverage,” J. Whiting, 1:30 pm, Rosenwald405; Seminar - Applied Price Theory, generaldiscussion. 1:30 pm, Social Sciences 106;Workshop - “Differential Inflationary Ex¬pectations and the Variability of the Rate ofInflation: Some Theory and Evidence," AlexCukierman and Paul Wachtel, 3:30 pm. SocialSciences 402; “Social Security,” Warren Sch¬wartz, 4 pm, Law, C; Seminar-Center forUrban Studies - “Migration Through Bostonin the Later 19th Century: Tracing Those WhoLeft,” Peter Knights, 4 pm. Pick Lounge.Christian Science Organization: In¬spirational meeting, topic - “Safety,” 4 pm.Harper East 586.Episcopal Church Council at Chi¬cago: Evensong. 4:30 pm, Bond Chapel.HilJel: Israeli Folk Dancing. 8 pm. Ida NoyesHall.Science Fiction Club: meeting. 8 pm, IdaNoyes Hall.International House Folk Dancing: teachingand refreshments, 7:30 pm. I-House.UC Women’s Basketball Team vs GeorgeWilliams College, 7 pm. Field House.DOC Film: “The Steel Helmet,” 7:30 pm,Cobb Hall. WednesdayStudent Activities Office: Noontimer Con¬cert - UC Bond, 12 noon, Reynolds ClubLounge.University Feminist Organization: LuncheonDiscussion Series - “Woman s Respon¬siveness: Is Frigidity a Myth?” MargaretWarner. 12 noon. Blue Gargoyle.Hillel: Students for Israel, “Israel and theCommon Market,” Gideon Fishelson, 12noon, Hillel.Department of Economics: Faculty lun¬cheon, 12 noon, I-House; Colloquium -“Simultaneous Equations Models withTruncated Dependent Variables: ASimultaneous Tobit Model,” P. Schmidt, 3:30pm. Rosenwald 11.Graduate School of Business InvitationSeries: “Antitrust and CorporateManagement,” Murray Gibson, 1 pm,Business East, 105.Crossroads: English class for foreign women,2 pm, 5621 S Blackstone.Committee on Southern Asian Studies.Muslim Studies Sub-committee:“Experiences and Visions of ShahWalliullah,” Gilani Kamran, 4 pm, FosterLounge.UC Christian Fellowship: “Meditation:Absorbing, Implementing God’s Word,” 7:30pm. Ida Noyes East Lounge.Badminton Club: meeting, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes Gvm.University Duplicate Bridge Club: 7pm, IdaNoyes, new players welcome.UC Tai Chi Club: meeting, 7:30 pm, BlueGargoyle.Bailly Alliance: Meeting to plan for theMarch demonstration at the Museum ofScience and Industry to protest the pro-nuclear energy Commonwealth Edisonexhibit, 7:30 pm, Blue Gargoyle.Astronomy Club: Lecture - “The Search forExtraterrestrial Civilizations.” Dr. PatrickPlamer, 8 pm, Ryerson N-276B.Country Dancers: meeting, 8 pm. Ida Noyes.DOC Films: “Spendthrift,” 7:15 pm and “Weekend with Father,” 9 pm, Cobb Hall.ThursdayChange Ringing: 12-1 pm, location an¬nounced at Saturday meeting.Episcopal Council: Eucharist, 12 noon. BondChapel.Committee on Genetics Colloquium: "Non-Mendelian Genetics of ChlamydomonasReinhardtii diploids,” Eva Eves, Cummings11th floor, 12 noon.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Ha-Sadnah - “The Hebrew Language and itsSemitic Sisters,” 12 noon, Pick 218(discussions in Hebrew!.Danforth Fellows: Sack lunch meeting, 12noon. Swift 204.Biochemistry Seminar: TheDehydrogenases: Structure and Evolution,"Michael Rossman, 1 pm, Cummings 101.Department of Economics: Workshop -“Schumpeterian Competition," Carl Futia,1:30 pm, Law, C,; Workshop - “The WorkDone by Children and its Effects on Fertilityand Schooling,” Indra Makhija, 3:30 pm,Social Sciences 106.Fishbein Center for Study of the History ofScience and Medicine: “Planetary Theoryin the Almagest, " 4 pm, Harper 103.Transcentental Meditation Center:Introductory Lecture, 7 pm, 1638 E. 55th St.Judo Club: Workout, 6 pm, Bartlett gym,beginners welcome.Ki-Aikido: meeting, 6 pm, field house.Women’s'Union: Planning meeting for In¬ternational Women’s Day Coalition UC/HydePark, 7:30 pm, Women’s union Office, aboveFrog & Peach, Ida Noyes Hall.UC Table Tennis Club: meeting, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes, 3rd floor.DOC Film: “Caught,” 7:30 pm, Cobb Hall.Law School Film: “All Quiet on the WesternFront," 8:30 pm, Law School Auditorium. FridayCenter for Middle Eastern Studies: Faculty-student luncheon, 12:15 pm. Ida Noyes Hall;Arabic Circle, “Half a Century in the Life ofan Egyptian Intellectual,” Abd al-Mun’im al-Maligi, 3:30 pm. Pick 218, (Discussions inArabic); Persian Society. 3:30 pm. Harper135, (discussions in Persian); Bizden Size.Slides of Turkey, 3:30 pm, Cobb 430(discussions in Turkish).Department of Economics: Workshop/PublicLecture — “A Theoretical And EmpiricalAnalysis of the Labor Supply of ‘Older’Males,” 1 pm, Social Sciences 402;“Featureless Plains Featured: The Effects ofNineteenth Century Midwestern Railroads.”3:30 pm, Social Sciences 106; Latin AmericanEconomic Development and Public Financeworkshop, 3:30 pm, Social Sciences 402.Women’s Union: meeting, WU office aboveFrog and Peach in Ida Noyes, 5 pm.ASHUM Program: Applications due today,Harper 226.Hillel: Reform-Liberal Shabbat Services, 5:15pm; Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner, 6 pm;Lecture — “The Problems of thePalestinians: The Psychological Dimen¬sions,” Aaron Auerbach and Thomas Gorry,8:30 pm, Hillel.Court Theatre: Free performance of “Gam-mar Gurton’s Needle,” 6 pm. WoodwardCourt.The Poetry Center: John Logan will readpoetry, 8 pm, Museum of Contemporary Art,237 E. Ontario.Midway Studios: Opening reception forKenneth Burkhart - Photography, 6-8 pm.Midway Studios, 6016 S. Ingleside.DOC Film: “The Great Dictator," 6:45 and9:30 pm, Cobb Hall.China Lecture: “The Other Half of the Sky,"Impressions of the Peoples Republic of Chinaby Margaret Whitman and Unita Blackwell,7:30 pm. Kent 107.UC Lab School Parents Club: “Yeomen of theGuard,” 8 pm, Mandel Hall.By Karen HellerAdmission to NAM and Law School filmsis $1.50. Admission to Doc films is $1.00 onTuesday and Wednesday: $1.50 on all othernights * NAM and Doc films will bepresented in Quantrell Auditorium, CobbHall. Law School films will be shown in theLaw School Auditorium. 1111E. 60th Street.The Steel Helmut (1951), directed by-Samuel Fuller. (Doc) Set during the Koreanwar, Fuller's film depicts the attempts of asergeant, the sole survivor of an attack onhis patrol, to make it back to the front lines.Along the way he meets up with a Koreanyouth, a black corpsman. and a nervousbreakdown. After the “Reds” kill hisKorean friend. Sergeant Zack. normally atabacco-chewing toughie, falls apart. Arather novel plot for its time but it is a littleheavy-handed on the Communists (but¬chers >/Americans (saviors) slant. Fullerused a cast of unknowns who, after thepicture was released, plummeted to a levelof sublime obscurity. Tuesday at 7:30.Spendthrift (1936), directed by RaoulWalsh. (Doc) Townsend Middleton (HenryFonda) has just pished away the last of his$23,000,000. In announcing, his alteredfinancial status, he discovers that hiscreditors are no longer his friends and hisbride-to-be, a Southern peach: no longer inlove. Middleton celebrates his self-wonpauperhood by ordering a pheasant dinnerfor 30 complete with a couple hundredquarts of wine. Things are tough all over.Wednesday at 7:15.Weekend with Father (1951), directed byDouglas Sirk. (Doc) A widower (VanHeflin) and widow meet while sending theirchildren to camp. He is pursured by a glamorous television star, wnom msdaughters would like him to marry. She ispursued by a nature-bov. whom her sonswould like to her marry. Tired of leadinglives of quiet desperation. Heflin and Nealtells the brats to mind their own business.Wednesday at 9:00.Caught (1949), directed by Max Ophuls.(Doc) Barbara Bel Geddes portrays a car¬hop who takes a charm-school brush-up andsnags a nanasome millionaire. But aon tturn green with envy girls, wishing youcould slip into her dainty little shoes, thefellow, in spite of his liquid assets, is acreep. But then again he has a heart diseaseand James Mason (in his first Americanfilm) is the doctor. So there you have it.Barb’s “caught” because she’s waiting forRobert Ryan to kick, inherit his enormouscapital, and go off with Mason, HumbertHumbert himself. What a dilemma.Thursday at 7:30.All Quiet on the Western Front (1930),directed by Lewis Milestone. (Law) GeorgeAbbot and Maxwell Anderson adapted thescreenplay from Erich Maria Remarque’snovel of the same name. When released, thefilm was considered the most realisticrepresentation of the ravages of the GreatWar. Soldiers are shown starving, dying,killing rats in a dug-out and, mostremarkably, being afraid. When the centralcharacter and hero, Paul (Lew Aryes)returns home, he finds everything changed,including himself. He can no longer un¬derstand the enthusiasm he had in 1914when he enlisted. He quickly tires of thecivilians, naive view of the war, cuts hisleave short, and goes back to fight. Thur¬sday at 8:30. Valentine6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 14, 1978CLASSIFIED ADSSPACESpace available for roommate im¬mediately rent: $80 pvt. bdrm., sharekit., bath, Ivg. rm. Close to campus.UC Campus. Call Chuck 667 5050.Lge. 1 bdrm. apt. overlooking lake,H P. Hirise, pool, exc. tran. UC/loop,sublease to July 1. Can ext lease$332/mo. Call Rich, 7 a m. - 4:30375 5067.1 bedroom in spacious 3 bdrm. apt.56th and Blackstone, dishwasher/AC;$175/mo. Call 643 0625.CONDOMINIUM 56th and Blackstone2 bedrooms; 2nd floor; recentlymodernized; new wiring, tracklighting, storm windows & much more.Very well maintained bldg. Lowassmt. Approx. April occup. $49,500.947 9175 or 753 1491,Univ. Apts. 1400 E. 55th PI. 2 bdrm. l'/2bath apt. March 1 $345. 363 2111 before9:30 a.m., 3-11:30 p.m., or weekends.5Vi rm. apt. (2 bedrooms, 2 baths) nr.73rd and Lake on Campus bus rt„ 1blk. 1C CTA buses Ig. liv., dining rms.,porch, yard, small secure bldg. UCowner. Avail. Mar 1. $235. 753-4435days, 375-7435 eve.Reponsible married couple, assistantprofessor and PhD student, arriving atthe University for 78-79, would like torent Hyde Park apartment or house offaculty member going on leave for theyear. We have no children, no pets,can provide references, and will takeexceptional care of your place. Pleasecontact: Dr. S. Nonsell Oxford Univer¬sity, Dept, of ExperimentalPsychology, South Parks Road, Ox¬ford, EnglandRoom for rent on Kimbark near 53rd.Available March 1st. $91.67/mo. Call363 7881 and ask for Rick or Sean.PEOPLE WANTEDNeeded: Manuscript typists forpublications unit, 12-15 hrs. weekly(optional full time summer), musttype at least 55 wpm, no experiencenecessary, university pay scale. CallPat Morse 753-2518.TELEPHONE INTERVIEWERSfor a social research project beginning2/27/78 and continuing for 8 weeks.Hrs: 3 pm - 9 pm daily and an occasional Saturday. Project will belocated at the Windemere Hotel inHyde Park. $3.55/hr. High Schooleducation; some college and interviewing experience preferred CallPat Blake 753-1300 (NORC), Monday-Friday from 9 a m. - 4 30 p.m. AnEqual Opportunity EmployerPart Time Positions - Students wanteddocumentation service. 12-15 hrs.weekly; pays well. Contact JeanTeachman, 753-2518 during workinghrs.PL1 programmer needed to work ondevelopment of interactive information system. Minimum 2 yrs. program¬ming experience required BA preferred. Familiarity with TSO and interactive applications systems highlydesirable. UC location exc. benefits.Salary to $17,000. Please send resumeto Michael Harrison, National OpinionResearch Center, 6030 S. Ellis,Chicago 60637.Overseas Jobs Summer/year round.Europe, S. America, Australian, Asia,etc. All fields, S500-S1200 monthly, ex¬penses paid, sightseeing Free information. Write: BHP Co., Box 4490,Dept. 11, Berkeley, CA 94704.TENNIS PROS AND ASSISTANTPROS Seasonal and year roundclubs; good playing and teachingbackground. Call (301) 654-3770or send2 complete resumes and 2 pictures to:Col. R Reade, W.T.S., 8401 Connecticut Ave., Suite 1011, Chevy Chase,MD 20015.PEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK • Illustration of all kindsLettering, hand addressing for invitations, etc. Noel Price, 493 2399RESEARCHERS Free lance artistspecializes in just the type of graphicwork you need Noel Price 493 2399.French Native Tchr offers Frenchtutorials for adv. and beg studts.Also classes for kids. Ph 324 8054TYPING SERVICE 538 6066 aft 5 30and weekends Tape transcription,reas. rates, pick up & delivery.Child care Wife of PhD and, mother oftwo, will babysit in her home. 5220 S.Kenwood Full time $45 a week, parttime $2 an hour. Call Mrs.Fatimamunso 684 6698Spanish under tutorials, help in org. ofgrad papers. Jaqueline 753-2104 rm.632Evening Help, 7:30 pm and on orSaturdays and Sundays (cooking,cleaning, washing, babysitting) CallJaqueline 753 2105 *632.YOGA EXERCISES (individual)Lessons, your home $7.50 hour, atmine $5 00 hr., call 753 2104 *632 evenings.SCENESCOOKING CLASSES Chinese & International Limited to six students each.Full participation. Wendy GerickKE8 1324. GILBERT AND SULLIVAN presentedin Mandel Hall, Feb. 17 at 8, Feb. 18 at1:30 and 8. Tickets at Mandel Hall BoxOffice.The SF Club has captured real life ar¬tist and writer Alex and PhyllisEisenstein. They will be on exhibitTues., Feb. 14 at 8 p.m. in Ida NoyesHall.Softball organizational meeting andpractice, Wednesday, February 15 at 4p.m. in Ida Noyes Gymnasium for allundergraduate women.GILBERT AND SULLIVAN presentedin Mandel Hall, Feb. 17 at 8, Feb. 18 at1:30 and 8. Tickets at Mandel Hall BoxOffice.ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERNFRONT won an Oscar for Best Picture. This pacifist classic is one of thefirst films to be banned when atotalitarian government takes over.THUR, 8:30, Law Aud , LSFLESTER BOWIE Solo Concert Sat.,Feb. 18, 8 pm, Ida Noyes Hallpresented by the Chicago FrontTickets at Mandel Hall. $3/1D, $3.50without ID.FOR SALEDesk, twn. mattrss, gold 9 x 12 crpt.bookcse, Irge mirror, shppng crt, 24"rnd. tble, 4' rbbr tree. 285-6662.STEREO - Dual 1218 turntable, $40Pioneer SCA80Q Quad Pre amp, $100,Harmon-Kurdon Citation 12, 120 wattpower amp $100, 2 Janszen 2410 Elec¬trostatic speakers, $225, Koss ESP9Headphones, $40. DBX 119 expander$85 - Altogether $500. Jim 477-6121.Mercedes '65 SE 4 dr. Auto. Dk. bluew/nat. leath. snrf. Gd. Cond. $1400.476-5314.PERSONALSHas your small casette recorder beenlost or stolen? Call Rich weekdays753-8166, describe.HAPPY BIRTHDAY MOMSylvia, Happy 42 years! Yourdaughter, the editor.GILBERTAND SULLIVANYEOMAN OF THE GUARD at MandelHall Fri., Feb. 17 at 8. $2.50 and $4;Sat., Feb. 18 at 1:30, $2.50 and at 8p.m., $3.50 and $5. Tickets at Box Of¬fice.CRIME STUDYWe are conducting a study on crime inHyde Park. We're interested in yourpersonal experiences (especiallywomen). All responses will be con¬fidential. Call Stephanie at 955-4022 orJoanne at 955-4254.RIDE NEEDEDFrom North Hammond to Univ. Hrs.Norm. 8-4:30, but flex. Please call3-C1Q8 daytime or (219) 937-2731, evenings.WIN $100Enter the FOTA Poster Contest. Formore info, call 753-3562 or 753 3598 orwrite: FOTA, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago.60637STORE MANAGERWANTEDFull time store manager wanted goodsalary & working conditions call241-5512 The Pinocchio Toy Store. 1517E. 53rd St. In the Hyde Park BankBldg.VALENTINESThucydides, Herodotus, Peloponnesian War, Plato is pretty for kicks, Butit's Love, FelixDAY MAXFuzzy, be my Valentine.Lifeline to New York Happy Valentine's to Ma BellAnniekins, may you spend Valentinesburied in the snowKLH your initials spell a speaker. Nosmall coincidence. Happy Valentine'sday, D'editorI'm in lust, again. Nice going, treesHappy VD to GCJ.For the Sexy Sociologist, who's neverhad a lay Hope you finally make itthis Valentine's Day Love, the FastFloridian.EVDP: Who says you have to beJewish to type your life away in thegarret of Hyde Park?Happy Valentine's Day to the photoeditor whoever he or she may bePeter C. I want you out of my headand back in my bed, heaven is just asin away MarlaJeanne Remember the days when weused to blow Eskimo kisses in front ofthe Ad building NanookJames I filed the axle on your newBMW. happy Minting —Luck/ Our eyes first discovered each other inHutch,I swooned when we re-met "bychance" in Regenstein,Fell apart at Jimmy's; andMelted, died and was reborn again inyour arms the other night at my placeSusan Just because you failed thefirst time doesn't mean you can't do itat all. Try again. The Man from Nan-tuckett.T—Last year at this time I would havesent you a Valentine. Now you don'teven want to be friends. Doesn't seemright. I'm willing to try being buddiesif you areP. Jami You're the poet of my life.The OM.Happy Valentine's to the Freudianbusiness office. Love, Son/Brother.And thanks.For a Valentine with longevity; it'salmost spring, but till then, keep oncurling. Love, Jon-boy.Valentine: I can't stand your cookingand you ain't good looking, I'm goneWhy do the freshmen keep gettingyounger?Paula - sigh, woof - RobertB-Found me a woman who will holdm ybig toe 'til I have to go. Play with mesweet potato all night long. M.Carol,Be my Valentine-Yoni-HUGS AND KISSES TO:Anna, Carol, Eileen, Frances, Janet,Jennifer, Linda, Mary, Nancy, Peggy,Skye, Vadisand ValA message of love to all of you.For such fond memories both old andnew.A pause to reflect on all we've beenthruChances 'R' you remember too!Love, ClevelandJ: You may be a punk but you're stillawful cute. K.To the vegit-edit: It's not everyonewho has great lines.John Wilson: Last year I asked youwith great elanWould you fit into my romantic plan,Again & entreat you, if you can,Will you be my private man?Nancy: Ain't no one gonna ever makea copy of you.FEMINISTORGANIZATIONWoman's Responsiveness: Is Frigidi¬ty a Myth? Discussion led by MargaretWarner Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center. Wed., Feb. 1512 noon Blue Gargoyle. 5655 S. University, 3rd fl., info 752-4678. ALLWOMEN WELCOME.ALIENS WANTEDThe search for extraterrestrial lifeemanating from distant radio sourceswill be discussed by Dr. PatrickPalmer, 8 p.m. Wednesday, Feb 15 inRyerson N276B An Astronomy Clubpresentation, everyone welcome(enter through Eckhart Hall).WRITER'S FORUMMeet artist and writer Alex andPhyllis (UC alumna) Eisenstein Tues..Feb. 14, 8 pm, Ida Noyes Hall. FREEREFRESHMENTS.COMEDY AND MIMEFree workshops Feb 18 Mime: 2-3:30dance room in Ida Noyes Tim SettimiComedy: 3 30 - 5 Ida Noyes Librarywith "The Graduates" for informationcall 753-3591.SHABBATON THENORTHSIDEPROGRAMWould you like to spend a SHABBATwith an Orthodox family on the Northside of Chicago? Be a Guest Noobligations. Call: Rabbi JosephLieberman 764-0725.STUDENTS FORISRAELWednesday, Feb 15th, noon, speaker,Gideon Fishelson, Economist, TelAviv. Univ. on: ISREAL AND THECOMMON MARKET Bring a baglunch HillelFEDERAL SUMMERINTERNSHIPSThe Office of Career Counseling andPlacement has been asked tonominate third year college orgraduate students for internships withFederal Agencies. Interested studentsshould pick up the appropriate formsin Room 202 Reynolds Club and havethem completed and returned no laterthan March 1, 1978GILBERT ANDSULLIVANYEOMEN OF THE GUARD a» Mande'Hall Fri., Feb 17 at 8, S2.50 and $4Sat , Feb 18at 1.30, $2 50and at8p m ,$3.50 and $5 Tickets at Box Office <£) To My ValentineThree Years is JustThe Beginning of ForeverBG3F3VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBULBINGAttractive 1 '/2 and2‘/2 Room StudiosFurni*»h«*H or I nfiirnUhed$171 to $253Ha*ed on Availabilit\\ 11 ( tilitie** includedAt C.ampii- Bus StopFA 1-0200 Mrs. GroakM.AMINGO A«>TS5500 5. Shore Or»veS+ud'<> and One Bedrnt40*$. ^urn. & Unfyrn.Parking pool restaurantdrycleaning valet deli24 hr switchboardU of C shuttlebus V» blk awayFull carpeting & drapes inclSpecial University Rates Avail75?-3800SECRETARYLooking for a good job-5We may have just who*you ve been seeking.Pleasant working condi¬tions and congenial staffpositions open both HydePark and Coop If you havegood shorthand and typingskills along with legal experience and would like tobe considered please callUNITED CHARITIESOF CHICAGO939-5930 MS. RZEPKAAn equal oooor*un *vemploye; CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF THE ARTSannouncesDANCE AUDITIONSfor admission and scholarship award to1978-79 BFA and MFA programs inmodern dance and choreographyCristyne Lawson, Artistic DirectorSaturday, February 18—1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.Chicago Dance Center, 2433 N. Lincoln,Chicago, IllinoisFor appointment and additional information call(805) 255-1050, ext. 185All TOGETHERA* One locationTO SAVE YOU WORE!sPEciSTDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicogo Identification Cord.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-wogen South Shore or MeritChevrolet Inc.SALES & SERVICEALL AT ONEGREAT LOCATIONCHEVROLETV/)) VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE fn7234 Stony IslandPhone: 684-0400Open Dattv 9-9 P.M./ Sat 9-5 P.M.Part* Opan Saturday ’tH 12 NoonThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 14,19 8 — 74THE GRADUATESANDFebruary 18. Ida Noyes HallFree Mime Workshop 2:00-3:30 P M : Dance Room-Ida NoyesFree Comeav Workshop 3:30-5:00 P.M .: Library-Ida Noyesc o x a* o nn n m .Evening Performance At 8:00 P.M. - Cloister Club'.?rr;7 ' > -. /'CGoodman. Dizzy Gillespie. Duke Ellington and LouisArmstrong, she is a virtuoso of ragtime, swing, be-bopand modern jazz.information: 753-3598t"* • * - * * * *Tin* l rii\*-r-«it\ «»f ( ,hi< anoannounces a program in■ ■ ~ •' ■* ■ • '^ •. ■academic year from students currently enrolled in the Graduate Divisions and•' . ■ ■ lertise in the area of public policy in additiontO:applp^X '?£*; ?«|®K • V . % >t *?,;■awarded-; additional student aid will also be available I, .C ' ' '* : - ; ' ' :. ■ :CG: Wieboldt Hall - Room 3011050 East 59th Street:' : , 1 Z:.. .ry . * : ■ ;,y.IcOMlfefeE oi.PIR STEPHEN BERRY Chemistry * y-JNORMAN M BRADBURN Behavioral' Sci■■ -i„ The St Louis Jazz Quartet*•;'Friday Night8 and 10p.mHutch Commons'yBARRY D KARL History- EDMUND W KITCH Law 'g- ' 1 ’^ ■■■■-'•s ALBERT MADANSKY Business". : ' ’7 : " . . i ■ ■.'' Jy7G , | > 11 $3 w/feepASTORA CAFFERTY Soc Ser Admin-WILLIAM B CAr/. * y- -GERHAJAMES S COLEMAN Sociology y /' ij V-"KENNETH W DAM LawSIDNEY DAVIDSON BusmeJ DAVID GREENSTONE Political Science %CLIFFORD W GURNEY Biological Science GEORGE 'A& MedicineJAMES M GUSTAFSON Divinity ‘ “ *PHILIP W JACKSON Behavioral SckBOC6S-;& Education - : ft. , M.\ :8— The Chicaao AAaroon — Tuesday, February 14, 1978