Teachers awarded terms,not tenure by University:‘regretable consequences'By Andrea HollidayIncreasingly, the University isappointing associate professors toterms of from three to five yearsrather than giving them tenure.This not only places youngprofessors in an uncomfortableposition by robbing them of jobsecurity, but also results in afaculty body that gets older everyyear, said faculty members.The University employs Ph D’sat three levels: full professors,who are always tenured: associateprofessors, who are usuallytenured, and assistant professors,who are never tenured.Assistant professors and in¬ structors are often referred to as“junior faculty.” Their dutiesoften include much of “lackey-work,” tasks such as headingseminar committees or fellowshipcommittees, which may be tediousbut are undoubtedly important tothe University.“Senior faculty”, that is,associate and full professors, havethe same responsibilities. Totalcompensation — including fringebenefits such as health insurance,life insurance, reduced tuition forchildren, etc., valued at $1,180 — isroughly $35,000 for full professors.$24,400 for associate professors.Terms to 3\ fkftr„ ■**iMark Kishlansky is an assistant history professor who received aterm appointment. (Photo by Sharon Pollack) Grand jury, IRS investigatinglegality of TWO’s expendituresBy David BurtonThe Woodawn Organization(TWO) is being investigated by aFederal grand jury for possiblemisappropriation of $10,000 infederal money, and the InternalRevenue Service (IRS) isdemanding that TWO pay $270,126in unpaid taxes dating from 1972The FBI is assisting the U S.Attorney’s office in their in¬vestigation of the $10,000. Afterapplying to the now defunct stateBicentennial Commission andreceiving the $10,000, TWO was tohave matched the grant withanother $10,000 and held a three-day Black Arts Festival.The festival became only a oneday affair at Hyde Park HighSchool and TWO’s federallyrequired report detailing how themoney was spent allegedly con¬tained irregularities, questionableexpenditures and a lack of sub¬stantiating receipts.After learning of a Federal in¬vestigation into the irregularities,TWO returned the money onSeptember 27 with a check drawnon its Urban Development ac¬count. not on a special account setup for the grant.According to Wednesday’sChicago Tribune, the grand juryhas studied records subpoenaedfrom TWOFrozen fundsThe Ford Foundation announcedit has frozen future TWO funding“unless a change in management occurs.” Since 1970, the Ford hasgiven TWO $2 5 million and helpedit secure a $1 million loan.Two weeks ago the Departmentof Housing and Urban Develop¬ment (HUD) approved a $1.2million grant to TWO to fund a jobtraining and employment programfor youth. HUD was “aware of theinvestigation” when the grant wasapproved but the grant is underreview by HUD’s Office of Neigh¬borhoods, Voluntary Associationsand Consumer Protections, TheMaroon has learned.Before any funds will bereleased, the inspector general ofHUD will conduct an initial pricingreview to see if TWO has a “good”auditing system, and TWO mustestablish a separate accountingsystem to avoid comingling offunds. TWO must also submit anauthorized signature card to HUDbased on a Treasury letter ofcredit, complete pay scalesnegotiations, disclose the nature oftheir expenditures.A four-year, $250,000 grant toTWO by the Chicago CommunityTrust won’t be awarded unlessTWO submits to a satisfactoryaudit by June 30.Leon D. Finney, Jr., TWOexecutive director, was out of townand unavailable for comment.FBI press agent, George Man-dick said. “We have been lookinginto TWO for misappropriation offunds but there are no indictmentsorwarrents vet.” Release statementAccording to Tribune reporter,John O’Brien the IRS hasdemanded payment of $270,126 inunpaid taxes* dating from 1972.Most of the tax money allegedlyowed is in withholding taxes TWOdid not remit from the salaries ofits 400 employees. The IRSdeclined to comment on TWO’staxes.TWO released a statement toThe Maroon late Wednesdayevening in the midst of theallegations and the Ford Foun¬dation’s announcement that it washalting further funding of TWO. Inits statement. TW’O said that it hadno official word that the FordFoundation had withdrawn itssupport from the organization.TWO said it was “encouragedthat the major funding sources ofTWO’s comprehensiveredevelopment efforts havedeclined to follow the foundation'slead.” It claimed it was ac¬countable to the other majorfunding sources.Andres Smith, TWO BoardChairman, said that while acommunity development cor¬poration is required to meet theobligations of its many sources ofincome in the form of grants, thatfunding source should not becomea major factor in controlling theleadership or direction of theorganization.”TWO to 3Innovative programInternal problems in ASHUMBy Peter ThomsonThe University pre-medicalprogram that has been called themost innovative in the countryhas several organizationalproblems, according to biologyprofessor Arnold Ravin, coor¬dinator of the Program in theArts and Sciences basic toHuman Biology and Medicine(ASHUM).In introducing a new programto study the social impact ofmedicine, difficulties areinevitable, particularly ingenerating student interest andcohesiveness. But these problemsare not insurmountable, saidRavin.ASHUM, funded by a $1.8million grant from the Com¬monwealth Fund, combines thehumanistic aspects of medicinewith a coordinated curriculum ofmedical courses.The program, now in its secondquarter, spans the last two yearsof undergraduate education andthe first two years of medical orgraduate school, culminating in aM.S. degree in human biology.PublicityThe program had a problemlast quarter with a poor responsefrom eligible sophomores due to alack of publicity. This quarter. however, advertisements,pamphlets, informal meetings,and lectures have informed morestudents about the new program.But Ravin still expects fewerthan 90 applications for amaximum of 45 places next year.Social and HumanisticMedicineThere are several other teasonswhy the program is not attractingmore students. First, it does notguarantee pre-med students aplace in medical school to finishup their program. Ravin said.Second, pre-meds are wary ofthe new, and as yet not widelyaccepted program. But to allaythese pre-professional fears,Ravin said that Yale University,for example, has said that itsmedical school would gladlyreceive applications fromASHUM students.Despite the fears of medicalpre-professionals, the programhas thus far attracted mostly pre-meds.“ASHUM naturally attractspre-meds and I feel sad that thered-hot types.” the most com¬petitive students, are involved,said ASHUM student SophiaMarvis.New ApproachPritzger now allows students to take elective classes in theCollege. But, most medicalstudents feel that the moremedical courses they take, thebetter prepared they can be totreat patients, said Ravin.ASHUM to 3ASHUM program coordinatorArnold Ravin: “Trying to openup medical education.” (Photoby Sharon Pollack) HEW challenges minorityemployment policies at UCBy Jon MeyersohnIn a small office on the 6th floorof the administration building, aformer Lab School teacher is busydrafting a reply to the departmentof Health. Education, andWelfare’s recent findings that theUniversity’s affirmative actionprogram is inadequate and in¬complete.Assistant vice-president foraffirmative action programsMargaret Fallers and her smallstaff are revising and completingportions of the University's af¬firmative action plan, which HEWfound deficient Feb. 3.The University now faces theproblem of compiling an enormousamount of information andstatistical data in a short period oftime. HEW claimed in a letter tothe University that it has notshown complete figures regardingavailability pools and future af¬firmative action plansHEW* “defined problem areas.”said a source there, and theUniversity has until March 6 torectify those problems or rebut thecharges. By compiling figures onthe availability of employees, theUniversity will attempt to showthat they have complied withFederal guidelines for the hiringand promotion of women andminorities, said Fallers.H E W to 3 Assistant vice-president for af¬firmative action MargaretFallers “We’ve had a plan allalong that needed to be updated ”Inside 1Editorial p. 4GCJ p. 7Calender1 p. 15Sports p. 16Big Time Basketball!Chicago at LoyolaWednesday, February 22, 7:30 p.m.Alumni Gym, 6525 N. Sheridan Road(Loyola stop on Howard Street El)See the Maroon men in action against one of the country’stop independents and help support a worthy cause! Chi¬cago is replacing Evansville on Loyola’s schedule, so ournet proceeds will be donated to the University of Evans¬ville. Tickets on sale at Bartlett Gym 101,9 30 am - 4:30pm M-F, $2.50.A charter bus will depart from Ida Noyes Hall front en¬trance at 6:30 pm and will return immediately after thegame. Round trip is $2.00, paid in advance by Mon., Feb.20, at BG 101. (Subject to cancellation if interest is insuf¬ficient.)******Please note these schedule changes for women’s bas¬ketball.Friday, Feb. 17: Chicago State here at 4:00 pmFriday, Feb. 24: Eastern Illinois here at 7:00 pmAlso, please note:Saturday, Feb. 18: Knox here at 1:30 pmThursday, Feb. 23: Illinois (Urbana) here at 7:00 pm******Last day for tickets for Tennis/Racquetball night!Tickets at $25.00 per couple at Bartlett Gym 101y.nf(E.Hraaa H a r y r r library^ u n b a y n i y h t.tfrb. 19BOD ym3F r r r Abmiss ion ! Artists:win $100in the FOTA postercalendar competitionThe Festival of the Arts is now accepting en-|tries for its second annual poster competition.'Deadline is March 17, 1978. The artwork will'be used to highlight FOTA’s calendar of<events, and will have a distribution of up to!2500 copies.For all information, rules and specifications,'go to the Student Activities Office, Ida Noyes]Hall. Open to all area artists.We cordially invite you toattend a reception in honor ofMIRCEA ELIADEauthor ofTHE FORBIDDEN FORESTThe University of Chicago Bookstore5750 S. Ellis Avenueon2 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, February 17,1978 Friday, February 172:30 - 4:30 p.m.Terms from 1$19,700 for assistant professors, and $16,900for instructors.In the past 10 years, the percentage ofassociate professors in the University —excluding the medical school — hasdoubled. This year there are 53 untenuredassociate professors (20 percent of thetotal), who will find themselves without jobsif they are not awarded tenure before theirterms expire. It is inevitable that a numberof them will not.Taub denied tenureRichard Taub is an associate professor ofsociology whose term appointment was toexpire in July of 1978. Taub was originallydenied tenure, but the decision was reversedlast spring after Taub’s plight waspublicized in The Maroon.Taub said that the term appointmenttrend has regrettable consequencesregarding academic freedom. “To be un¬tenured is very constraining for a professorwhose work deals with political questions,’’he said. “It discourages young faculty fromspeaking out, taking risks.’’According to Taub, young teachers canplace their jobs in jeopardy by pursuing anunpopular issue or expressing an opinionthat differs from the generally acceptedview.Taub, however, did not blame theUniversity for the dwindling tenure awards.“The University is faced with a murderousset of circumstances,’’ said Taub. “Givensuch massive overhead expenses, it isinevitable that the University will makefewer tenure awards. When I was first of¬fered the term appointment I could haverejected it and left — but I liked it here. Ididn’t feel abused or exploited.”Tenure at other schoolsIt is unlikely that the University will loseteachers to other schools by refusing toaward tenure immediately to all itsassociate professors, because the trend is asstrong or stronger elsewhere. While 80percent of Chicago’s associate professorsare tenured, the figures at other schoolsare.•Yale, 34 percent•MIT. 40 percent•Northwestern, 48 percent•Stanford. 73 percentAt Harvard, for 10 years, it has been thepolicy that only full professors are tenured,while at Princeton, all associate professorsare tenured.OverheadFixed overhead costs have prompted theadministration to reduce the size of thefaculty. According to the official June count,the faculty numbered 1116 in 1970; the 1977count was 1039. As tenured professorsremain until they retire or die. this meansthat the University cannot hire very manyyoung faculty.The steady increase in the average age ofthe faculty is perhaps the most unfortunateconsequence of this trend. Provost D. GaleJohnson lamented the restraint on hiringyoung teachers. “We always need new bloodin the faculty,” he said.Taub agreed: “A lot of vitality is being sapped out of the system. He expresseddismay at the prospect of the Universityturning into a “geriatric village.”Both Johnson and Taub rejected the idea,recently discussed on the campuses and inCongress, of abolishing mandatoryretirement for professors or raising theretirement age from 65 to 70.“I would argue vehemently against suchan idea,” said Johnson. It would aggravatethe current difficulty in bringing in youngteachers.”Tenure reportA report by a subcommittee of the facultysenate on the matter of tenure, headed byEugene Goldwasser, is currently beingexamined by various faculty bodies. Thereport recommends that the divisionscontinue to award tenure to most of itsassociate professors, a practice that hasalways been customary here but which isbecoming less and less common.The report also recommends that thelength of term appointments for assistantprofessors be increased by one year, afterwhich they must be promoted to the rank ofassociate professor or dismissed.HEW from 1It is “very, very difficult” to determinewhat a “pool” of available candidatesmeans, said Fallers, but the University’sdefense hinges on its ability to prove that ithas hired women and minorities to a degreecommensurate with their availability.There are many ways to calculate thepool, and if the University chooses a “pool”made up of Ph.D.’s from the most elite U.S.institutions, or from international univer¬sities. rather than from all universities inthe country, the pool of women andminorities will be much smaller. Fallerssaid the University has not yet determinedwhich method it will use.HEW requestsAn affirmative action program mustinclude complete sections on the work forceanalysis, on utilization of minorities andwomen, and on future goals. The Universitywas deficient on the second and third points,an HEW source said Wednesday.According to the source, the Universityhas not given HEW enough information todetermine whether:•the University offers unfair wages towomen and minorities,•minorities and women are concentratedin jobs at the bottom of the pay scale or atpositions with few advancement op¬portunities.•the University had hired too few womenand minorities in faculty and professionalpositions.•hiring, recruitment, and promotionpractices are discriminatory.The University was also cited for. in a fewcases, offering faculty no definitepregnancy leave program, for announcingno overall affirmative action program, andfor, in one contract for including no af¬firmative action clause.ATTENTIONSOPHOMORES:Applications to theASHUM program aredue in Harper 226TODAY Federal fundsUnder the provisions of Executive Order11246. the University must review andanalyze all aspects of its hiring, salary,promotion, and training practices. HEWmust find the results satisfactory for theUniversity to be eligible for a $1.7 millionNASA contract.University deans and department headshave, in the past few weeks, compiled muchmore extensive information concerningtheir specific areas. Fallers and Provost D.Gale Johnson must now draft a reply toHEW.“It’s a tremendous amount of work, butwe see this as a routine compliancereview,” said Fallers. HEW last made acomplete review of the University’s af¬firmative action program in 1971. After thereply is completed, HEW has 45 days tomake further comments, findings, orrequestsConsidering the small number of womenand minority faculty members with tenureor in tenure track positions, it is likely thatHEW will discover problems with theUniversity’s reports.“Though it looks like there are problems,we don’t know exactly where they are now,and we won’t until we get the numbers backto HEW and they reply to us,” said vice-president for public affairs D.J.RBruckner.But, Bruckner added, “it’s too early totell, but I think we can get a satisfactoryreply and will be in compliance.”Questions in letterIn its 33-page letter. HEW’ questioned theUniversity areas that should be in¬vestigated.Although student organizations are notparty to HEW-University negotiations. UFOplans to use all available channels to en¬sure that the interests of women andminority groups are safeguarded.The HEW source noted that the Universitymay be clustering women and minorities atpositions at the bottom of the pay scale andin skilled craft, service, and maintenanceareas. But problems in these Universityareas may be more easily rectified than infaculty hiring and promotion, where theUniversity has traditionally stuck to itspremise of “academic freedom ”“In a place like the University, it would bedifficult for the administration to force thedepartments to hire someone they didn'twant to.” said Bruckner “No one wants tolean on them; there has to be consensus.' ’But the University has run out of time toreach its pragmatic consensus. Affirmativeaction programs have rapidly caught upwith the University, and with it comes a newera in which this institution, no matter how'private and “free.” i'ill have to comply withfederal standards to receive federal money. ASHUM from 1ASHUM attempts to broaden this scope byintegrating social concerns such aspopulation control, genetics, and starvationinto the basic medical school curriculum.Ravin said that ASHUM will employexperts in social sciences and humanitiesfrom within and outside the University toteach the more than 30 courses designed forthe program. These courses will not berestricted to ASHUM students, said Ravin.Although well over half of the program’scurrent 25 students plan to become doctors,some are looking forward to differentcareers in medicine. One student said thatin addition to the ASHUM program, he willgo to business school to become a hospitaladministrator.Traditionally, medical education “tendsto make a person feel special and as thoughhe’s privy to some magical power,” saidRavin. ASHUM encourages a broader ap¬proach to the study of medicine by involvingsocial concern.But with this broad approach comes theloss of the common bond that most medicalstudents have traditionally shared. Dif¬ferent classes and career goals haveresulted in a lack of cohesiveness in theASHUM program, which might have longrange implications. “Unity has an ex¬traordinary professionalizing impact,” saidRavin.To alleviate this problem. Ravin said thathe is considering various group activities,such as a lecture series.But if ASHUM students don’t shareclasses, they do share common interestsand goals, “there is a commonality in thesestudents visions.” said Ravin. “They seemedicine as a service to humanity, and seeit in a broad social contest.”TWO from 1TWO, regarded nationally as one otChicago’s foremost communityorganizations, is a South Side communitygroup founded by the late social activistSaul Alinsky in 1960. It is composed of over100 community organizations and blockclubs that are committed to therevitalization of the Woodlawn communityof 64.000 people. Currently. TWO is active inhousing, health care and manpowerdevelopment programs.TWO has been involved in disagreementswith both city officials and the Universityover how Woodlawn should be renewed.TWO claimed that an undue number ofbuildings were being torn down w ithout thecommunity's approval.In 1968, it was revealed that $927,000 inFederal job training grants to TWO for theBlack P Stone Nation street gang wasgrossly mismanaged. Investigationsshowed that gang leaders were using fundsto purchase luxury cars and that the classeswere seldom held.Center for Middle Eastern StudiesUniversity of ChicagoREFLECTIONS ON DEMOCRACYAND POLITICS IN SINGLE PARTY:THE CASE OF TUNISIAA Lecture BvAHMED MESTIRILeader of Opposition within the Destourian SocialistPartv. Former Ambassador to the Soviet Union and Algeriaand Former Cabinet Minister.Tuesday, February 21, 1978-4:30 P.M,5828 S. University Avenue, Pick 218* The Chicago Maroon —Friday, February 17, 1978 —3EditorialSeventies studentsThe now infamous student apathy of the 1970’sis about to come to an end. So are the 1970’s. Butin the meantime, on campus anywav. studentactivism, or at least activity, is rearing its in¬spired, if sometimes innocently overzealoushead once again. This time, however, it’s infairly fractured form.This quarter, student discussions (or in somecases, non-discussions) about the University’sinvestments in companies in South Africa atuition increase, and the implications of a non-existant affirmative action program, havecreated something of a stir, a minor yetmeasurable rumbling from the 1960’s. On theverge of the 10th anniversary of student ac¬tivism, the taking over of the administrationbuilding, and the Seige of Chicago, here, at the“educationally free” and internalized Universityof Chicago, where political and social change isadministered through passive discussion andintellectual encouragement rather than activecommitment and ethical responsibilty, over2,000 persons have recently signed a petitioncalling for the University io flip the extremeand divest from South Africa* students havehelped bring it to HEW’s attention that theremay be discrimination in University em¬ployment practices, particularly in the lawschool, and students are, we hope, preparing toprotest our ignorance about the causes of therecent 10 percent tuition rise.The question, of course, is what do these variedand disparate “protests” have to do with oneanother. At the root of all protest is the idea ofinterconnection of injustice, and for a studentvoice (a voice of responsibility even as a voice ofanger) to be heard over this campus, it mustdefy all the University’s previous philosophicalmodels and begin to behave on one level — thatwe shall be heard.Tuition and South Africa are two issues thatseem to have little in common, yet represesentthe University’s absolute neglect of both astudent and (perhaps more upsetting to a“faculty-run” institution) a faculty voice.Tuition is rising, in part, because the ad¬ministration must pass off losses and expenses inother categories, such as the plant department,the Computation Center, and the Center forContinuing Education. Students are not(going?)to be told where their money is being spent,where possible losses occur, how the Universitycould be more efficiently run, and how non-academic expenses rise with relation to the costof living index and the educational cost index.More worrisome to the University in the longrun, is how faculty members, who have had noraises recently, who have been receiving tenureat a reduced rate, and who have been unable tohire junior faculty, fit into this picture.Academic costs have not risen exorbitantly, buttuition rose and the faculty has not grown. Whereis the money going?We do not know. Nor do we know, really, whythe University will not address the question ofSouth Africa as a moral and ethical issue, eitherin committee, or in public. Educational freedomis a catchword that outdated diehards hidebehind to protect them from facing the truenature and net effect of University investments.If students could bring themselves to compose anoverall picture of administration disclosure, theeffect of University action (investment andproxy policies being actions) and Universityaffirmative action inadequacies on a wider scalethey would be able to speak together, as astudent voice asking a number of questions.The Chicago Maroon Letters to the EditorCynical clienteleTo the Editor:“El dia que la mataron Rositaestaba de suerte. de tres tirosque le dieron, nomas uno erade muerte”(Mexican Corrido)(Rosita was lucky the day theykilled her; of the three shots they firedat her. only one was fatal)The current political situation inSouth Africa is not only the reality of apeople’s struggle for liberation; it isalso the trial of human conscience Setin the limits of pride and blindness,human conscience only finds, in SouthAfrica, two alternatives: dignity ordegradation Once we acknowledgewhat is taking place in South Africa,we have no possible escape: we mustjudge and be judgedVorster does not challenge a peopleor a race, but humanity as a whole Headvances the final judgement and,transformed into an angel of death, heshouts to the continents: “either youare with me or against me.” There isno room for a third position as therewas none with HitlerVorster does not seek friends; thosewho renounce their conscience seekonly accomplices The denunciationand the condemnation of free menunveil Vorster’s great lie and shatterthe basis of despotism But Vorster,like Hitler, knows that he will findaccomplices for his crime in con¬fusion, fear, cowardice and cynicismIn this way, Vorster only receivesbacking from those of crippled dignityand from the mercenaries of con¬science Some people prefer not to havedealings with South Africa or companies that operate there. I think thatit is as unreasonable to ask theUniversity to make sacrifices becauseof these preferences as it is to ask TheMaroon or South African blacks.David Mitchwill have lost the last vestige of morallegitimacy to represent the Univer¬sity as an institution of human valuesand human promotion In such a case,as in the days of resistance againstfascism, that legitimacy will be takenover, with fullness and pride, bv thehundreds of students, professors andemployees who, by their signaturerejecting apartheid and demandingthe withdrawal of the University’sinvestments in South Africa, have T J n rQ n H OTTl r£lQlOproven that dignity and conscienceare not dead at the University ofChicago“Our suffering and our owndeath will not be vain as longas there exist men sensible tojustice and to the worth of ourstruggle.” (SteveBiko)Primitivo RodriguezForecasting To the Editor:I appreciate the attention givenWHPK in the Maroon’s recent twopart series. I found the response fromthe student body encouraging, andsince the article was published, theUniversity administration has expressed greater interest in the stationHowever, the articles and MarkNeustadt’s February 3rd letter to theeditor need some clarification.To the Editor- Neustadt’s letter indicates howA number of letters and opinions urimfornied some students are abouthave appeared in The Maroon WHPK. It was written withoutsuggesting that the University’s knowledge of current station‘‘South African” investments (if it is operation, and its possible impactdiscovered that University graduates alarms me. People who do not know-are working for the South African WHPK might accept his comments asgovernment, will the University valid. Neustadt’s letter attempted tobecome a South African investment?") draw some comparisons between theare not particularly profitable and University of Pennsylvania radiothat a higher return could be earnedin alternative activities. Before theUniversity decides to hire the authorsto make its investment decisions it station and WHPK concerning thelack of administrative control overprogramming. The two radio stationsare in no way analagous. Penn-may want to take two considerations sylvania’s station operates with 1,900into account. First, most people are watts and is subject to more stringentVorster’s government persiststhanks to the silence of those who fearfreedom and to the professionals ofcynicism The cynicism that standsagainst any law or constitution,against any morality and valueposing the most effective policy ofhuman destruction: “business isbusiness ”If the sale of men is business, letthere be slavery If killing is business,let there be war If discrimination isbusiness, let us impose racism If the idegradation of conscience is business,let cynicism rule. To carry onbusiness as the principal and the finalgoal is not to deny politics, but toaffirm it in its most nefarious reality.It is from this reality that thepolitical cynics profit Whoever dealswith “arguments,” “reasons” and“explanations” trying to deny theirevident complicity in the crime, onlyserves these political cynics’ in¬terestsThe clientele for political cynicismis numerous among both the, un¬conditional and the paid apologetics ofthe multinationals: if apartheid isgood business, long live Vorster andapartheid In this no American law isviolated; something worse occurs:the principles that legitimate theselaws is annihilated; namely,organizing and promoting humanvalues and those proper to humancoexistance good ex post forecasters. It wouldn’thave been hard to pick a profitableinvestment portfolio from 1975 to 1978with knowledge of 1978 prices. Theproblem, of course, was that theUniversity didn’t know what 1978stock prices would be when it made its1975 investment decisions. Given 1975information, “South African” in¬vestments may have appeared soundin 1975 and they may appear sound forthe future, given 1978 information.Second, most investors want toconsider the risk of an investment aswell as its return and in particular theeffect an investment will have on therisk of an overall portfolio. The F.C.C. regulations than 10 wattstations like WHPK. Moreover, unlikethe Pennsylvania radio station, ad¬ministrative control is exercised overWHPK: Riley Davis, Director ofStudent Activities, must approve allexpenditures, and a governing boardcomposed in part by administrativerepresentatives must approve everyquarter’s programming.The articles written by ClaudiaMagat were informative, but theyalso need some explanation. DeanO’Connell was quoted as saying that“the nastiest attitude I could havetoward WHPK would be that the“South African” investments may be University can’t afford to fund a play-a wise choice even with a low return, toy for 40 would-be disc jockeys.”if they pay better than other in- Unfortunately, O’Connell’s ‘mastiest”vestments when the market as a conception of WHPK seems prevalentwhole is doing poorly. (Allison among University administrators. IfDunham’s statement about earning WHPK can in any way be seen as athe highest possible return is perhaps play-toy, it would be because themisleading if risk considerations are administration is unwilling topart of the University’s investmentstrategy.) adequately fund the radio stationWHPK’s $6,500 annual budget barelycovers estimated yearly costs, andleaves little room for the purchase ofThe absurdity of the whole “South equipment needed to update theAfrica” controversy was made station, and to replace outdatedevident by The Maroon’s answer to equipment. We cannot foster theAaron Levin’s letter in the Feb. 3 “professional atmosphere” called forissue. (The Maroon claimed it had no by Riley Davis without facilities evenchoice about accepting Ford and IBM remotely approaching professionaladvertising if it was to maintain its standards,editorial freedom.) The Maroon hasThe time has come when thetrustees of the University of Chicagomay no longer avoid judging andbeing judged in the case of SouthAfrica They are not confronted with apolitical problem, not even with aneconomical one; their option will be inthe sphere of morality and con¬scienceIf they decide to keep investingUniversity funds in South Africa, they as much choice about its advertisersas the University has about its in¬vestments. The appeal to “editorialfreedom” strikes me as hypocritical.The University could claim that itmust invest in Ford and IBM tomaintain freedom of intellectualinquiry. Ford and IBM could claimthat they must sell products to SouthAfrica and earn profits from SouthAfrican black labor to keep openplants in the United States andprovide jobs for American workers aswell as fellowships for Americanstudents.Those who advocate economicsanctions against South Africa shouldconsider tne possibility that theburden of such sanctions could fallmore heavily on South African blacksthan on the existing political regime.If American companies stop hiringSouth African blacks, what alter¬native jobs will the blacks be able tofind? Despite administration comments,WHPK has served as more than aplay-toy for 40 would-be disc jockeys.The station has given all of its 80 plusmembership legitimate experience inbroadcasting, and in the last yearseveral station members have goneinto the broadcasting and recordingindustries. This is a significant con¬tribution to the education and lives ofWHPK personnel. Furthermore, theUniversity is not merely funding astudent activity for 80 students, butalso for the entire Hyde Park com¬munity which benefits from WHPKprogramming.Once again 1 thank the Maroon fortheir series on WHPK, and I wouldlike to encourage anyone interes.ed inbecoming involved in WHPK to visitthe studios at Mitchell Tower in theReynolds Club.Jeff LeavellStation ManagerWHPK4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, February 17,1978OpinionOppose the trusteesLast Thursday, Feb. 9th, the University of ChicagoBoard of Trustees voted unanimously to continue to investin corporations doing business in South Africa. The boardtook this action without participating in any publicdiscussion of this issue. In seeking to short circuit thecampus debate on divestment the board did not notify thepublic or the campus community that it was planning toaddress the issue until four days before the meeting.Trustees Robert Reneker and Kingman Douglas offered alast minute private meeting to representatives of theAction Committee but refused to allow Action Committeemembers to present our views to the entire board. Theydid not offer to discuss the issue, but merely to hear theAction Committee position.We rejected that meeting for two reasons. We felt MrReneker, a trusteee of Continental Illinois Bank, was illsuited to present our views to the board and we felt asecret meeting was contrary to our goal of a full publicdiscussion of the issue by the campus community. We arenot the only ones concerned about the issue.The Action Committee did present the board with a3.000-word position paper on University investments andSouth Africa but there is no sign that the trustees read it orconsidered its arguments in their decision. The trusteesapparently made no attempt to solicit information fromanyone at the University or elsewhere. The Boar d seemsto have relied solely on it’s own judgement and has noteven bothered to study the question as other universityboards have felt compelled to do. The trustee’s responseto the call for divestment shows their isolation and refusalto take seriously the issues raised by the Action Com¬mittee, The Maroon, and numerous organizations both inthis country and abroad, including the United Nations andthe Christian Institute in South Africa.The trustees’stated reason for their refusal to divest isthat divestment would not-“in any way effect the apar¬theid policies of the South African government.” At thesame time they add a coda: many members of the Boardof Trustees, “expressed the belief that the presence ofU.S. companies in that country might contribute con¬structively to the well being of all the races there throughtheir progressive labor policies.”Board Chairman Robert Reneker added that theUniversity’s absolute commitment “to intellectualfreedom” formed a powerful restraint on “committingthe University as a body to a particular action in a par¬ticular case.”The University’s vaunted change of position on proxyvoting is so vague as to be meaningless. According to thepress release, the University will vote with managementif its position is “constructive and responsible.” The in¬terpretation of constructive and responsible action is leftto the treasurer of the University. If the treasurer hasdoubts about the constructiveness and resDonsibility ofthe management position, the trustees’ investmentcommittee will consider the issue. In neither case are anyfurther criteria mentioned for their decisions.Turning to the question of academic freedom raised by-Mr. Reneker and previously by President Wilson andothers, we find the assumption underlying their position isthat the University is now “neutral” on the issue ofapartheid. The Action Committee rejects that premise.Whatever one may think about academic freedom and itsrelation to political stands by the University, it is nowclear that the University has taken a stand in favor ofcontinued corporate investment in South Africa, hence infavor of apartheid. We don’t think our efforts or thepossible action of divestment by the University threatenacademic freedom or put any limits on the free exchangeof ideas.On the contrary, we believe the debate on this issue hasenlivened the exchange of ideas on this campus, and hopethat process will continue despite the board’s attempt toshut off debate.The University has announced to the world that U.S.corporations play a progressive role in South Africa Itwas reported by the Chicago Sun-Times that “sometrustees said that U.S. firms operating in South Africahave helped ease racial restrictions with progressivelabor policies. Neither the Sun-Times story or theUniversity’s press release contained any mention ofdissenting views of corporate involvement. Now for some facts about the oft asserted progressiverole of U.S. corporations in South Africa. The SenateForeign Relations Subcommittee on Africa in a reportissued in January of this year found an “abysmal per¬formance” by most U.S. firms in relation to South Africa'sracial policies. The report noted that only one U.S.company had made any moves to recognize black laborunions. The report also noted that the “net effect ofAmerican investment has been to strengthen theeconomic and military self-sufficiency of South Africa’sapartheid regime.” The report concluded that U.S.government policy should henceforth actively discourageAmerican foreign investment in South Africa.” SinceWorld War II the Gross Domestic Product of South Africahas increased from $1.5 billion to $14.5 billion and foreigninvestment has increased 300 percent. During this period,the system of apartheid has been consolidated, its mostrepressive features institutionalized, and its economicinequality exuberated. Given these facts, the argumentthat U.S. corporations will reform apartheid from withinis ludicrous.As to the trustees opinion that divestment will have noeffect on the apartheid policies of the South Africangovernment, we hasten to point out that the University'sdivestment would not be an isolated action but part ofworld wide campaign for the economic and politicalisolation of South Africa. The U.N. General Assembly hascalled for “the termination of economic collaboration withSouth Africa” and several universities in the U.S. havealready announced their decision to divest. Divestmentwould be reported in the press both here and abroad andwould contribute to the growing movement to end U.S.support for the apartheid regime in South Africa.As exiled South African poet Denis Brutus pointed out atforum on campus, every act of opposition to apartheid is asign of hope for the black people of South Africa. Trusteescarefully worded press release didn’t get to the heart oftheir refusal to oppose corporate investment in SouthAfrica. President Wilson in his interview with campusmedia last week was more candid. He said that the mostimportant thing is “to avoid a physical revolution so thatpeople don’t kill each other.” He argued that the presenceof U.S. corporations in South Africa kept the country frommoving toward “open revolution” and that U.S. cor¬porations kept the “pace of change in South Africa fromgoing faster” thus making a positive contribution to SouthAfrica.Perhaps Mr. Wilson doesn't read the newspapers;people are already killing each other in South Africa.Since June 1976 more than 1000 black Deople have died inSoweto and elsewhere from police bullets. Steve Biko wasbrutally murdered in prison and his killers set free by theSouth African system of justice. Only last month RickTurner, a white*opponent of apartheid and a universityprofessor, w’as shot and killed in his home. More than 700people are currently being detained without trial.This is only the tip of the iceberg. Millions of BlackSouth Africans are restricted to arid and infertile Ban-tustans where it is impossible to eke out a decent living,while the most fertile farmland is reserved for whites.Those blacks that are allowed to live in cities are sub¬jected to the daily harassment of apartheid, are paidwages far below whites, and often are separated by lawfrom their families.The violence apartheid inflicts on South Africa’s people.African. Asian, colored, and even white opponents of theregime, is plain to see. We believe corporate withdrawalfrom South Africa is a necessity if this violence is to beended, apartheid overthrown, and the majority of peoplein South Africa allowed to decide their own future.Universitv divestment is one step towards corporatewithdrawal! The University’s refusal to divest, in thecontext of other statements by trustees and by PresidentWilson, constitutes support for the present regime inSouth Africa and for apartheid. The Board of Trustees,while piously holding up the free exchange of ideas as thesacred mission of the University, has refused to hear theAction Committee and has attempted to discouragedebate.The issue will not go away. Over 2.(HR) people havealready signed our petition calling for divestment and wewill continue our campaign. We ask all who oppose theTrustees decision to continue investing in South Africa tojoin us in a protest rally at noon on Friday. February 24thin the center of the quads. CHARGE.UC PEOPLE NON-UC PEOPLE50c per line 75c per line40c per line to repeat 60c per line io fepeatriiiiiiI DATES TO RUN| NAME. ADDRESS. PHONEI Do you want to rent,sublet, buy, or sell?Get It Done...Use Maroon Classifieds TIIIIIIIIIIaa11 il ^Ljii i wte are 30 space* per line, including all letters, |spaces and punctuation marks. Circle all letters Ito be capitalized |ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE jjiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIo)-sh.^> Cutout thisform andbring it toThe ChicagoMaroonIda NoyesHall 304‘"1IIIIIIII8III1— " ■— -ij.ir 1|L ——iL!i -TJ- i—111ii1* —— — — iThe Chicago MaroonSt * \ \ \ % % % V \ * V W V • Friday, February 17,1978 — 5Unbelievable SavingsCALCULATORS& STEREOSCalculatorslexos InstrumentsWAS SALETI-59 $300 $224 95TI-56 $125 $93 95TI-57 $60 $59 99PC-100A $200 $14995MBA-FINANCE .. $50 $59.99SR-51-II .. $00 $45.95SR-40 $30 $2195BA-BUSINESS ... $30 $23 95TI-5040 $130 $94 95MOOULE UB. FOR55 $ 59 $29 95 HEWLETT s PACKARDWAS SALEHP-10 $175 $153.95HP-19C $345 $299 95HP-21 $50 $59 95HP-25 $125 $109 95HP-25C $160 $140.95HP-29C $195 $171.95HP-55 $395 $129.95HP-57 $450 $374.95HP-92 $525 $519 95HP-97 $750 $624.951. Abo* prtcaa Includa A/C Adaptor-Chargar A Carrying Casa $12.05axtra for 110/220V Adaptor.2. All above calculators ha* full ona yaar factory warranty.3. Enclose payment In full with order, or remit $20 with order, balanceC.O.D.4. Shipping charges: Add $3.00 for calculators and 4% of price forrecal*rs and 5% for speakers.5. FAST DELIVERY GUARANTEED only with M. 0. or certified checks. Per¬sonal checks will delay the order until It clears banks.Receivers SpeakersREG. SALE REG. SALEHarmon Kardon 730 ... $420 $299 JBL 1-100 $354 oa $239Harmon Kardon 430 ... $320 $209 JBL L-36 $240 aa $171Harmon Kardon 3300 ... $240 $175 JBL L-166 $425 aa $325Sony STR-6800 $500 $377 EPI 120 $140 aa $99Sony STR-5600 $500 $310 EPI 100V $100 aa $59Sony STR-46O0 $400 $241 EPI 70 $75 aa $51PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTEDONLY WITHCREDIT CARDS814-237*5990(Add 9% tor Cradft Cart Ordara) SENDFORFREECATALOGUESTEREOWAREHOUSE110 NEW ALLEY, STATE COLLEGE, PA. 16801If you’re consideringa Mercedes280E,drive a Peugeot604.Like the Mercedes 280 E, the Peugeot 604 SL has four-wheelindependent suspension, a resonsive six-cylinder engine (ours is aV-6), power steering (ours is rack and pinion), a unitized bodyheld together with thousands of welds, power windows, fullyreclining front bucket seats, tinted glass, and meticulous atten¬tion to detail.The Peugeuot 604 has alsobeen engineered for asuperior level ofcomfort. Withoversized shockabsorbers, large coilsprings, a floating differential, andseats that are actually tuned to the suspension system.But comfort isn't the only thing that sets the 604 apart from theMercedes. There’s also the price. Which starts at about$11,000.* And which may be its most coitiforting feature of all.Inc.Sales / Leasing / Parts / Service2347 So. Michigan Ave. Chicago 326-25501* Manufacturer’s suggested retail price. Delivery, optional equip¬ment, license, title, taxes, dealer preparation not included. ftofdsIfindermere HU Y-SIYI H STKKKT AT J AC KSONTKI.KI'HONK FAirf»i\ •ARK Do you feellonesometonight?Are iron depressedbecause your car issick and the streetsare slippery{/."tVyV <-Uplift your spirits - Live dangerously - Walk overto the WINDERMERE'S ANCHORAGE DiningRoom and order A DOUBLE-DOUBLE Martini ormanhattan absolutely FREE with your dinner.(Bring this coupon with you. Hotel guests andresidents excluded).. Open 5 P.M. to 9P.M. Monday - Saturday12:00 Noon to 8 P.M. on SundayOur menu includes Lobster Tail, Frog Legs Proven-ceale, Steaks and Chops, Chicken and Fish PlusDaily Specials.Don't you owe yourself a treat? Do it nowA NO TIPPING POLICYPlanning a Wedding reception or a Social functionFrom 10 -1+50people?Think of Hyde Park -Think of THE WINDERMEREWe have our roots here, Don't You?A CHINA MEMOIR: Film and 2 Speakers7:30 om Fri. Feb. 17 1978Kent Hall Auditorium1020 East 58th StreetUniversity of ChicagoDonatio i: $i°°with u c i.d.s2°° generalFtl-rr “The Other Half of the Skyby Shirley MacLaineSponsors:US China Peooles Friendship Association U of C Chao"?rO.B.S. Orqan izo’ion of B’ock S'jdemsS.G. S’uden* Go/ernmed*U.F.O. Uni«/ersi*y Feminis- Or'joo:70 on6 — The Chicaao Maroon — Frtdav. February 17,1978 ' * A ITheater p.9Music p.11Dance p.13'. 4Bowie meetshornBy the RumprollerAnyone familiar with jazz knows the difference betweena saxophone and a trumpet. The saxophone is very prettyand fast, no one objects to a competent sax man playingsoftly in a dimly lit night club. The trumpet is loud anddeclarative. Usually the mere sight of a rookie horn mantaking his trumpet out of his case is enough to start youpacking your gear and getting ready for the long ridehome.There have been dozens of good sax players, and a goodnumber of great ones. The great trumpet players can becounted on two hands.There's no clearly discernable reason for this; after allboth are just wind instruments. But a new sound on thesaxophone always sounds like the logical next step for theinstrument, while a new sound on the trumpet sounds likethe musician has overcome some great hurdle to realizehis artistic sensibilities. Some examples are Louis Arm¬strong's high B flat on "West End Blues," DizzyGillespie's cadenza on "A Night In Tunisia," Miles Davis'haunting tone on "Round Midnight," and Lester Bowie'sA Lester Bowie concert is thepresentation of colorful musicalpanoramas. He shows you the minstrelshow, the marching band, rhythm andblues, and jazz from the '30s, 'l+Os, ’50sand '60s.The First LadyBy the Rumproller ^Three times this week, when I mentioned Mary LouWilliams, I got the response, "Does she sing?" Well, noshe doesn't but that would be a natural assumption abouta female jazz artist and especially one who came to famein the swing era.There are certainly other women in jazz who do notsing, but Mary Lou Williams stands alone, both for hergreatness as a pianist and for her ability to take part in thesocial circles of jazz, circles generally as chauvinist as theJesuit order.She began her protessionai career in 1930 as the pianistfor Andy Kirk and his Twelve Clouds of Joy, one of thegreat Kansas City bands. During the Pendergast era,Kansas City was the most wide open town in the Mid-West,and it was this environment which bred the incrediblyhearty Kansas City musicians: Lester Young, CountBasie, Ben Webster, Pete Johnson, Lips Page, JackTeagarden, Jimmy Rushing, Charlie Parker and manymore.These musicians had a talent for improvisation whichturned the jazz world on its ear when it reached New Yorkin the late '30s. The most crucial factor in the developmentof their awesome skill was the late night jam which was aK.C. institution. The jam would go on for hours sometimesall night, until a winner was decided. It was the most competitive environment in all of jazz, and Mary LouWilliams was right in the center of it. It is from herthat we have the story about the night Lester Young beatColeman Hawkins, or at least the second half — she wasawakened by Ben Webster at 4 in the morning to come andspell the pianist so the battle could continue until dawn.She may not be the only woman in jazz, but she's cer¬tainly the strongest, and the only female instrumentalistwho sits at court with the great giants of the swing era.Since then Mary Lou has refused to remain stationary.Her complete history is hard to trace, she appears in in¬credibly diverse company. She assisted Monk, BudPowell, and Tad Dameron to build their own musicalrevolution in the '40s. She knew Cecil Taylor when he wasstill a conservatory student trying to figure out whetherjazz was worthy of a great intellect. She plays DizzyGillespie's samba as well as he does She wrote ' MaryLou's Mass" for Alvin Ailey, and the "Zodiac Suite" forthe New York PhilharmonicMary Lou's own music is hard to describe. Or the Deccasessions from 1936 one hears a refreshing and disarminglightness of touch, much more like Count Basie than PeteJohnson. But she always had a leaning toward Earl Fathakines and sometimes her cleanly stated ideas end in atorrent of sixteenth notes.continued on page 8almost verbal concept of the instrument heard at any ofhis recent concerts.Yes, Bowie has entered into the ranks of these othermen. One could say it officially happened about threemonths ago when he went down to Roy Eldridge's turf todo battle against the master.Bowie is best known as the trumpet player for the ArtEnsemble of Chicago. In that band he serves as a foil tothe firmly entrenched musical sensibilities of the two reedmen, Roscoe Mittchel and Joseph Jarman. He has abackground in R&B, and when things get hot and frantic,with Jarman and Mitchell wreaking havoc on every inchof the sound spectrum, Bowie flies above them with short,to the point, statements of musical intention.continued on page 8Lester Bowie Mery Lou WilliamsMary Lou from 7She seems to delight in her reputation as an eclectic,and in a single concert she can make reterence to justabout every pianist from Willie "The Lion" to Cecil T.Behind all of her work one can hear the sensibility of acomposer. Her statement of theme could be transcribednote for note to a big band chart.People will come to this concert for their own reasons.Some to hear the great swing arranger, others, one of thebest practitioners of fhe Kansas City style of pianoplaying, or fo hear one of fhe best left hands playing today,maybe even some out of feminist curiosity. All will comeaway with a single impression, one that can only begleaned in concert. Mary Lou Williams is a warm,*andwonderfully alive musician. She develops an instant bondwith the audience and draws them into her vast musicaluniverse. Last time I saw her was at a Catholic Benefitwhere the audience contained about one third nuns andpriests. Half way through the second half the nun sittingbehind me let out a little cheer, not much of one, justbarely audible, but a strong testament to the great talentsof this unique performer.Mary Lou Williams stands alone, bothfor her greatness as a pianist, and for'herability to take part in the social circlesof jazz, circles generally as chauvinistas the Jesuit order.There will be two shows performed by Mary LouWilliams, one at 8 pm and one at 10 pm, in Hutch Com¬mons, Friday night, February 17. Tickets are $3 for MABfee payers (any undergraduate) and $5 for everyone else.Tickets are on sale at the Reynolds Club box office.Playing warm-up will be the St. Louis Jazz Quartet. Theconcert is presented by MAB.Mary Lou Williams' original style can be heard onKansas City Piano (Decca DL 79226). The best of her morerecent records is probably Zoning (Mary Records M103).Mary Lou's Mass is on Mary Records M 102. Lester Bowie Bowie from 7This article began with a discussion of the trumpet andnot avant-garde jazz, because now that Bowie hasflowered into a fully mature musician, he seems to havemore in common with Henry Red Allen than he does withwhen it is played by one of its masters, the music can sortof fall away, and we are left with a reminder of howwonderful that instrument really is.The solo concert Saturday night should be the perfectsetting to fully appreciate Bowie's talents. He is a goldmine of musical ideas, so anyone concerned about a good20 minutes and a dull hour and a half should stopworrying. A Lester Bowie concert is the presentation ofcolorful musical panoramas. He shows you the minstrelshow, the marching band, rhythm and blues, jazz from the'30s, '40s, '50s and '60s, all on a single trumpet that seemsto have an unlimited number of voices. He uses half stops,false notes, high pitched wails, muted sobriety, and aclear, bell like, open tone.The history of the trumpet presents its most recentchapter this Saturday night in Ida Noyes Hall. You willrecognize Bowie by his doctor's jacket and his welltrimmed beard. Get his looks and his music firmly en¬trenched in your mind. This is certainly a musician youwill want to tell your children about.The Lester Bowie concert begins at 8 pm in the IdaNoyes library, 1212 E. 59th St. Admission is $3 for studentswith ID, $3.50 for everyone else. The concert is the fourthin the Great Black Music series presented by the ChicagoFront.THE GRADUATESFebruary 18,’lda Noyes HallFree Mime Workshop2:00-3:30RM.Free Comedy Workshop 3:30-500 RM.Evening Performance At 8KX> PJM.Tickets At The Reynolds Club Box Office: 2information:753-3598 TIM SETTIMIPage 8 The Grey City JournalTheaterOut of the closetand into thefrying panBy John LanahanA "closet drama", I have been told, is that piece whichis better read than performed. An "uncloset drama,"therefore, is a play which is better in performance thanreading. Travel Light Theatre's current production ofJames Kirkwood's P.S. Your Cat is Dead! is certainly oneof the latter. In addition, it has aspirations of being an"out of the closet" drama. The play is structurally a farceand manages, somewhat sporadically, to portray thepainful but reassuringly manic antics of a not-so youngNew York actor as he is forced to reevaluate and recon¬struct his life. The work grapples with some problems ofmedium weight without becoming self-conscious; but itswings out of control when it takes on sexuality and endsas either an annoyingly limp or meaninglessly teasing,fag joke, depending on your orientation.Russ Tutterow directed the script well and controlledthe necessarily manic energy of farce. He did not,however, perform the essential editing that is needed tomake this show a successful and satisfying production.The whole cutesy-fruitsy pas de deux between the two leadmales should have been cut from the end of the play(either go to bed or don't, but stop sliding around like a lotof hot KY). The blocking for the most part is good,Mr. Gustaferro as Vito, was supple,warm, emotionally agile, andprovided a focus for the rest of the castujhile strapped bare-assed to a kitchensink.although rather simple, as one of the two main charactersis immobile throughout most of the play. The timing andpace for rhe first part of the show was also good, and Mr.Tutterow proved his ability at focused ensemble direction.Vinny Gustaferro as Vito, the street-wise bisexualburglar who first victimizes and then is victimized by thelead character, carried the show. Mr. Gustaferro wassupple, warm, emotionally agile, and provided a focus forthe rest of the cast while strapped bare-assed to a kitchensink. Jeffrey Steele as Jimmy, the actor-protagonist, wasmechanical and surface in the first scene; but once heplayed off Mr. Gustaferro, his angular mania contrastedwell with Vito's devious sensuality. Eric McGill as Car¬mine had all the voodoo elegance and alien fascination ofthe best black androgynes; and Lesley Abrams as Kate,Jimmy's bitch nymphet of a girlfriend, loosened upenough by the second act to create an effective ensemblewith the rest of the cast.The set, by Peter Winter, was a convincingly realisticrecreation of a comfortable but threadbare New Yorkloft; and the lighting, by Gary Heitz, didn't blow my mindbut did the job. The music, for which nobody in theprogram took credit, was no golden shower of notes, butrather a tape of some silly and irritatingly tinklingragtime piano.One of the other critics in this city has described thisshow as having plenty of "yucks and yowls". That it doeshave, and it is well enough written, directed, and acted tobe an adequate farce, no easy art form. What I foundannoying about the show was that if often attempted toexamine more serious questions, would succeed enough togain my interest, and then drop the whole thing as if itwere some short circuiting vibrator. It skirts everythingit raises. The show demonstrates that Travel LightTheatre is one of the few companies in Chicago that canproduce adequate drama; but in theatre, as in basketball,there is more to the game than rimming the crowd with afew swish shots. P.S. Your Cat is Dead! plays ThursdaysSundays at the Theatre Building, 1225 W. Belmost Avenue,in Chicago. The show is extremely popular, so reservations are advised; call 281 6060 for ticket informationand show times.Friday. February 17. 1978 Still crazy after all these yearsBy John Lanahan ~ "I find that if I see a play that has been around for overforty or fifty years, I accept as "historical" and "period"certain idiosyncracies which would bother me in moremodern works. When I saw Kaufman and Hart's YouCan't Take it With You, the current production at the St.Nicholas Theater, I had trouble at first cutting throughsome of its trappings, until I just relaxed and accepted itfor what it is: a masterpiece of screwball domesticcomedy. It is unfortunate that this particular dramaticform spawned a plethora of forgettable trash for the stagewell into the 1950's, and survives now in an even moredegenerate form on prime time TV, since these dull andspineless descendants remind one of the play'sweaknesses and obscure its strengths. It is great as abeautifully crafted farce, wonderfully timed and focused.Some of the satire is gone; some if it, such as its ratherglib racism, is offensive if not viewed with considerableaesthetic distancing. But a great deal of its bite still cutsthrough, specially in the '70's, where rising up angry hasbeen transformed into rising young professionalism.The direction, by Gerald Gutierrez, was precise andsuperbly detailed. The show has just enoughnostalgia and "oeriodness" about it to make thecliches fun, and Mr. Gutierrez never lost touch with themanic undercurrent necessary for farce. The timing wasgreat, the scenes always focused. The cast was handledmore like an orchestra than an ensemble — but that's theway they used to write plays.The cast was uniformly excellent, almost too perfect inits blending of type and style. Barbara E. Robertson was a fresh, angular, but peachy ingenue as Alice Sycamore;Audrie J. Neenan was great as her flightly older sister,Essie. George Womack pursed his lips a little too much,but was otherwise a fine Martin Vanderhof, urvater of thewhole crazy Vanderhof Sycamore clan. Marge Kotlinskywas spacey and amiably blunt as Penelope Sycamore,George's daughter and the girls' mother; and GeraldWalling was boyish and affably paternal as her husband,Paul. I could keep raving, but special mention should go toGerry Lange as the exiled Grand Duchess Olga Katrina,who managed to extract both high farce and a little hightragedy from her magnificently tacky role.David Emmons's set was in rococco-chaotic style andthe lights, designed by James Highland, were effectivebut forgettable. The costumes, by Julie A. Nagel, wererestrained and never distracted from the movement of theplay.You Can't Take it With You has only recently droppedfrom the community-dinner theater circuit; it's abouttime it made its way onto the classic playbills. When it iswell done, as this show most definitely is, and viewed as awell structured and occasionally incisive period piece, aswas done by this reviewer, it is one hell of a good time. Forwhat more need one ask? You Can't Take it With Youplays Thursdays-Sundays at the St. Nicholas Theater, 2851N. Halsted Street, in Chicago. Reservations are essential.Call 281-1202 for ticket information and show times Theshow closes February26.Photo by James C. ClarkSteve Fletcher, Sheila Keenan, Bob McDonald, and MargeKotlinsky in the St. Nicholas Theater production of "You Can'tTake It With You."Jeffrey Steele and Vinny Guastaferro in Travel Light's "P S YourCat Is Dead " Photo by LuAnn WingPage 9v iO ?-•» O 9M* v- &&ADID SOMEONE TRY TO RAPE YOU IN THE PASTTWO YEARS? DID YOU MANAGE TO AVOIDTHE RAPE?Dr. Pauline Bart of the University of Illinoiswould like to interview you for her research.Understanding your experience may be helpfuI to other women.If you are female 18 years or older and will¬ing to talk about your experience, a confiden¬tial interview will be arranged. Carfare, childcare and other expenses will be covered. Foran appointment, please phone (312) 782-3174.The Fever is Spreading10TH DYNAMITE WEEK!At These Selected TheatresSTATE LAKE LINCOLN VILLAGE EDENSDowntown Chicago NorthbrookNORRIDGE RANDHURST CINEMANorndge Mt ProspectYORKTOWN ORLAND SQUARELombard Orland ParkEVERGREEN RIVER OAKS RIDGE PLAZAEvergreen Park Calumet City Griffith. IndTHE IMVERSm OF CHICAGOTHE COMMITTEE ON SOCIAL THOUGHTamiTHE JOHN l . NEFFI NI)annoitncp a seminar discussion h\PROFESSOR ALLAN BLOOMDepartment of Political SciencesThe l nirersitv of TorontoTHE EDUCATION OF DEMOCRATIC MAN:ROUSSEAU’S EMILEMonday. February 20. 19784:00 P.M.Social Science Biiilriin*'. Room 1221126 East 59th StreetAdmission is without ticket and without charge HYDE PRRK PIPE RND TOBACCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim”Mon. - Sat. 9 - 8; Sun. 12 - 5PipesPipe Tobaccos Imported Cigarettes CigarsPREPARE FOR: ( ou, JMCAT<DATLSAT'6MaMjGRE OCAT VAT SATNMB I, II. Ill * ECFMG * FLEX * VQENATL DENTAL BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFlexible Programs & HoursThere IS a difference!!!For Information Please Call:2050 W DevonChicago, III. 60645(312) 764 5151SPRING, SUMMER, WINTER COMPACTSMOST CLASSES START EIGHT WEEKSPRIOR TO THE EXAM. STARTING SOON:MCAT-DAT-LSAT-GRE-MCAT EXAM EARLY-APRIL 15thOTHER CENTERS CALL TOLL FREE: 800 223 1782Centers in Major US Cities Toronto, Puerto Rico and Lugano, SwitzerlandX Written by a Tibetan M2lama this revolutionary vision opensN. w m'new horizons on both traditional and non A Am ■. ,traditional methods of thinkingTIME. SPACE. AND KNOWLEDGE^A NEW VISION OF REALITY (/)by Tarthang TulkuThis comprehensive, new Knowledge will benefitHumanity throughout all of Time and SpaceAvailable from many bookstores or fromthe publisherD6aima Pubhs6*ng 5856 Doyle Street^^<^^Emeryville CA 94608Organ KetitalTuesday Evening, February 21, at 8 O’ClockRockefeller Memorial Chapel • 5850 South Woodlawn AvenueEdward MondelloUniversity OrganistWorks by Bach, Pachelbel, Liszt, Franck and RegerAdmission is without ticket and without chargePage 10 Bachat his bestBy Richard BrownBach: The "Brandenburg" Concertos, ABC SEON AV67020/2 (2 album set).Last spring I welcomed ABC's New SEON Series withopen arms, noting the fine engineering of the records, thecare taken in record production (everything done withclass, down to the serrated edges on the albums), and theexcellent collection of recordings that they started outwith. Their recent release of Bach's "Brandenburg"Concertos under the direction of Gustav Leonhard surpasses all of their previous efforts and must be one of thefinest renditions of these works (the nickname was givento these works 100 years ago; Bach just called the pieces"Concertos With Several Instruments").For those unfamiliar with the SEON Series, the SEONalbums are recorded by a talented group of musicologist-musicians mainly from Holland, on instruments that wereused at the time the music was composed. The performershave done extensive research into performance practicesof the past, and doing their best to forget more recentconventions, they try to approximate the sound thecomposer had in mind when blackening his music paperwith his cryptic symbols. The sounds produced by theoriginal instruments on this Bach album are refreshing tothe modern ear, which has become jaded by composerswho hand on to the conventional instrument combinationslike a hang-glider hangs on to his kite one hundred feet up.The original instruments work muchbetter for the Brandenburgs than modeminstruments, especially because of theundesirable brashness and piercingquality of modem brass instruments.(It's remarkable how close the lower basses in thesecond movementof the first Concerto come to soundinglike a saxophone. It is just one example of the fact thatBach's concept of how his music should sound is verydifferent from ours.) The original instruments combinedwith the unusual combinations of instruments Bachemploys for each concerto makes listening to the recordsinto a mind-bendinq experience.• The original instruments work much better for theBrandenburgs than modern instruments, especiallybecause of the undesirable brashness and piercing qualityof modern brass instruments. The older instruments allsound woodier, darker in tone, and as a result they blendmuch better than their modern counterparts, which aremore suited to the more aggressive modern music. Theover all sound is seductive and it's a shame more of theBaroque voilins, viola de gambas, et. al. aren't around.Their use would open up new possibilities for modernmusic, especially since dissonance would sound lessdisturbing with the purer sound they get and the moremellow quality of their tone.The pieces themselves are all gems, needless to say. Inthem Bach was experimenting both with different com¬binations of instruments and with different ways of sub¬dividing them into subsections. An instrument thatdominates as a solo instrument in one movement might befound mainly providing accompaniment in the nextmovement. In this way they are excellent studies in or¬chestration.Besides the scholarly liner notes included with thealbums, every set comes with a facsimile of Bach'sautograph score for all six concertos (86 pages long).Even if you're not a musician, you'll find many things ofinterest just in gazing at it. If you're fairly advanced, youcan look at the corrections in the score and try to figureout what Bach had in mind when he found a "better”solution to a problem.1978 BY Richard BrownThe Grey City JournalMusicBy Jeff MakosArt rock is boring. More to the point, "classical" rock -ail those synthesized strings and blurps and squawksmaking your speakers do the St. Vitus dance, the con¬voluted rhythms and melodies, the whining multi-trackedvocals from singers who sound like they've barelyreached puberty, the totally meaningless lyric gibberish -is all hopelessly banal and worthless.Sometimes I kind of like it.Granted, it's got to be taken on its own terms. The poorsaps from Yes and King Crimson and Pink Floyd(although they really deserve a category all their own -something like Drone Rock or some equally over workedphrase that would describe that unique form of Floydianexcess) and even has-beens like Hawkwind really do taketheir musique seriously, even though the results end upsounding like something out of a Henry Mancini wetdream.But the terms are simple: overblown musical pom¬posity equals rock "creativity" and "seriousness," andonce the rules of the game are accepted it soon becomesclear that the true geniuses working in the field are thegroups that don't take themselves seriously at all andshoot the genre all to hell by making noise that has moreto do with Barnum and Bailey than it does to Beethoven.Then the genre gets interesting and fun, fun, fun as theart-rock groups start to separate into two distinct camps:they either shoot off into an opium ozone - trying tobecome the next Johann Sebastian - or realize the inherentabsurdity of a "classical rock" form and redeem them¬selves by accepting the wallowing in the wretchedbanalities that other groups try to pass off as "art," and inthe process come up with sounds that in the end are reallypretty good to listen to. Sort of like Jan and Dean meetingthe Grateful Dead, with those beachboys stealing thehippies' best dope.Now, these boys from Genesis really know how to ridethe art-rock surf. First, they've got the de rigeur obscuretitle for their new live album, "Seconds Out." Then theyfeature songs like "Squonk" and "Firth of Filth," lettingus know right off the bat that this platter means to betotally devoid of any deadly seriousness. Last, it's adouble album, meaning that you probably won't listen tomost of if anyway, thus rendering at least half of thematerial as potentially useless and in a master strokegiving the band even more leverage to just have a goodtime rather than worrying about making every song countin some sort of conceptual scheme. I tell you these guysare killers from start to finish!It takes some nerve to push the dull thud of ChesterThompson's drums to the front of the record's mix, buteven this reversal of the typical organ and guitar-basedmeanderings of a group like Yes is but a small part of theway in which these limey Genesians throw around thebeloved concepts of art-rock bands like they were just somany concert frisbees. Besides, Thompson used to workfor Frank Zappa, and if anyone could cut through thepomposity of 20th century popular musical culture it wasFriday, February 17, 1978 Zappa in his heyday, and even though the grand wazoo hasgone pretty much downhill it still like his old pupilThompson has increased Genesis' ability to clown it up.On first impression it seems that all Genesis' playingconsists of one long chord with two tempos, slow and fast,yet even though this is to a great extent true it has nothingto do with musical ineptitude but rather with the band'sability to denigrate itself just for Ihe laugh and it's a suresign that this group has a sense of humor. The songs arereally different in a lot of substantial ways, but the bandshows its total superiority to any other classical rockoutfit in their ability to play as if they had no abilitywhatsoever and then shift back into their own form of highgear, which never approaches excess or pompous wan¬derings as Thompson keeps his metronomic clamps down,insuring that the group won't get any artistic nonsenseinto its collectively light head. The fact that Thompson'sThe true geniuses in the art-rockfield are the groups that don't takethemselves seriously at all and shootthe genre all to hell by making noisethat has more to do with Barnum andBailey than it does to Beethoven.grip on the music is overtly emphasized by his prominentposition in the record's sound mix is probably Genesis'way of thanking him for keeping them in line.The songs more or less start to filter into your skull afterthree or four weeks of consecutive listenings, and oncethey do you start to find out that their differences don'treally matter, except for the ability to be able to avoidside three, the 20 minute "Supper's Ready," which startsout with no direction and keeps going there. The album ismade up of the band's greatest hits recorded live, but noone is ever really going to know unless you are already aGenesis fanatic in which case you have all the albumsfrom which this set was compiled. But if you haven't beeninvolved with the group's singular form of bizarritude,this will be a pleasant sampler, if only for the fact that it isprobably the only major work by an intellectuallyoriented band to be grounded in the ethic that lyrics are tobe rendered as meaningless and as unintelligble aspossible."Squonk" is one of my favorite three or four songs onthe album and I still haven't been able to figure out morethan a few words, which is actually to the album's benefitas the listener can make up his own words to the babblingof lead singer Phil Collins. Collins has realized thepossibilities suggested by Fats Domino's statement that"one should never sing lyrics clearly" and if anyonewould know the possibilities of total manipulation of be squonk’audience expectation it would be the Fat Man. So Genesis,on an album that is getting a major promotional push byAtlantic to break the group into a huge market, has totallybypassed the problem of new listeners wanting to hearwhat the band is saying by making everything totallymeaningless, thus assuring that people will be listening allthe harder at the same time that they will only really behearing the band, which leads back to getting ones earsravaged by the thud of Thompson's toms, and this in turnleads back to the genius and the joke of the bands'audacity in the art-rock field.I mean, you must have at least once heard the single"The Carpet Crawl" on the radio - can anybody tell mewhat that song means? I'm sure someone might, but evenmore importantly, does it matter? "You got to get in to getout" repeated over and over again - I have no problemswith Genesis' form of rock meaninglessness, because theyare so good at it that the question of meaning becomespointless.At least Genesis is obvious about their pretentious lackof pretention, which is more than I can say for the nerve-wracking sounds of Yes and their imitators shrieking upand down the scales in search of some arfistic intensitythat never gets beyond the tonal equivalent of theNuremberg rally.Instead, Genesis bounces from "Squonk" through "TheCarpet Crawl" into a delightful "Robbery Assault andBattery" in which Collins plies his English accent to giveus the impression that the song is about a cockney thiefwhen in fact we don't know what the hell he is singingabout because the lyrics are so unclear. But the swift andsubtle tempos drive the song into "Afterglow" which isone of the prettiest love songs I've heard in a while -"chasing the warmth of your smile" - even though it couldbe about Tunisian pirates for all one can really tell. Sidetwo begins with an incredibly overstated intro tc"Firth of Filth" that shifts abruptly into a soft in¬strumental midsection, soon finding Tony Banks'keyboards swirling over Thompson's polyrhythms in amad buildup to a restatement of the intro, and showingwhy the intro deserved to be overstated in the first placeBut after the applause dies down the tun really begins, asthe band swings into what is the closest thing to a Genesis"hit," "I Know What I Like."How can one deny the pleasure inherent in a song whosemain chorus goes "I know what I like, and I like what \know, It's getting better in your wardrobe. . ." and thermumbles on to total unintelligibility as Chester pounds theband through a Collins tambourine solo as the fans wildlyclap away? When I put this song on the turntable I get upand boogie - the cat in the hall gets up and boogies - ancit's even better because of the fact that it doesn't meananything except what it is: a good piece of agreeable noisethat lasts eight minutes or so and then ends.Any claims Dy rock groups to anything more than atemporal meaningfulness is stupid anyway given thenature of the plastic arts and changing times. So wherGenesis swings into selections from their "rock opera"called "The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway," you knowthat they are aware that this work - once acclaimed as oneof the greatest achievements in rock - can now be found irthe bargain bins, and that it doesn't matter: "The Lamb,"with Collins sputtering on about "brave imperial aerosolkings," strolls on regardless of its age and the fact that ityou haven't heard the opera you can't tell what the song isabout. Plus, any third generation British band that carthrow in a little bit of the Drifters' "On Broadway" is fineby me.Sides three and four are throwaways but it's alrightbecause after the first two sides you don't need any moreGenesis In fact I think I would recommend this album tofanatics who had all the other Genesis albums, becauseI'm sure that these versions are probably better, andfanatics can get off on the neat pictures on the insidecover.Genesis doesn't take itself seriously, and neither shouldyou. Even when they do take themselves seriously, it'sstill part of the fun, and they soon get back to cranking outthe kind of inebriated raveups that make "Seconds Out"such a great record. As far as I'm concerned they can dono wrong at this point, unless they decide to get heavy and^elf-consciously serious under the weight of the attendantsuccess that this album will probably produce. Somepeople go for that kind of stuff.Me? I'd rather dance.Page 17The fact that The MBAMcalculator was designedfor business professionals is a great reasonfor buying one while you’re a student.We designed The MBA tohelp professionals arrive atfast, accurate answers to abroad range of business andfinancial problems. The sameones you’ll face in your busi¬ness classes.Interest, annuities, ac¬counting, finance, bond analy¬sis, real estate, statistics,marketing, forecasting, quanti¬tative methods and many morecourse applications are in yourhands with The MBA.This powerful calculatoralso features preprogrammedfunctions that let you perform more difficult calculations atthe touch of a key. Instantly.Accurately. You may also enteryour own programs up to 32steps long, saving significanttime ifyou’redoingrepetitiveclassworkproblems.TheMBA comeswith anillustratedtext, “Cal¬culatorAnalysis for Business and Fi¬nance.” This new guide shows you how simple calculatoranalysis can be with The MBAcalculator. It’s 288 pages ofunderstandable, easy-to-followreading. And it’s coupled tomore than 100 real-world ex¬amples that show you step-by-step how to make calculatoranalysis work for you as neverbefore.If you’re building a careerin business, The MBA businessfinancial calculator can be oneof your strongest cornerstones.TEXAS INSTRUMENTS...INNOVATORS IN \ VrPERSONAL ELECTRONICS 'Texas Instruments© 1978 Texas Instruments Incorporated I NCOR POR AT E DPage 12■ * - The Grey City JournalV*V«V« V* V«Y»V4V»Y*Vr« V*V*V»V*V«V»*4Y4V»V*Y*Y«V«V*V»V»=Danceas a working principleBruce Becker in Negro Spirituals Photo by Zachery FreymanRepertoryBy Eden ClorfeneJust for the record, let it be known that: 1) dancers ofdivergent training backgrounds can come together toform a single, cohesive performing ensemble, and 2) asuccessful "repertory" (i.e. eclectic) company isfeasible. Five by Two Plus, a young modern dancerepertory company of five dancers, performed lastSaturday in Mandel Hall, and proved the above claims.Founded by Jane Kosminsky and Bruce Becker, andlater joined by Carol Parker, Dan Ezralow, and KathrynKomatsu, Five by Two Plus is a very capable and excitingtroupe. All five dancers are intelligent, conscientiousperformers. They have poise and technical aplomb; theygive 100% to the audience and to each other. The onlyobstacle to their becoming a first rate company at thispoint is their merely adequate repertoire, a judgmentbased on the selections of Saturday's program.The evening was substantial, offering the works of awide variety of choreographers: Norman Walker's"Celestial Circus," Helen Tamiris' "Negro Spirituals;"James Waring's "Gallopade;" Anna Sokolow's "Song,"and Bruce Becker's "Just Another Dance." The dancershandled the various stylistic demands with ease and grace— that is to say, they did the choreographers justice. It'sjust that not enough of the choreographers did themjustice. With the exception of the Sokolow piece, all hadareas of interest, but none were consistently excellent.All five dancers are intelligent,conscientious performers. The onlyobstacle to their becoming a first ratecompany at this point is their merelyadequate repertoire.Bruce Becker performed the six roles of Tamiris'"Negro Spirituals." With debut performances dating allthe way back to 1928, and Becker being the first dancer toperform them since Tamiris herself, I imagine this workis the prize of the company's repertoire. Among the sixsongs are "Go Down Moses," "Swing Low, SweetChariot," "Joshua Fit De Battle of Jericho." The songsare primary; Tamiris' dances are visual afterthoughts, asthey merely accompany the songs rather than derive acharacter independent but complementary to them.Tamiris often uses mime gestures for a literalrepresentation of the words, and also the emotionalquality of the gestures are determined by that of thesongs. The result is somewhat predictable and redundantchoreography. Subordinate to the music, it merelymodifies or embellishes it rather than tell us anything newabout it, like honey on a sweet roll.The dances for the most part have an intense, sharp andstaccato quailty to them. The kinetic vocabulary is indeedsmall, but it comes across as economical rather thandeficient. Becker assumes stances and carriages of drive,anger, and despair. He makes a forceful and clear im¬pression, and his small body covers the stage withalacrity. Yet, clad in a light blue leotard, rather than acostume more in line with the songs' content, the strengthof his affect is undermined. The much more contemporary "Celestial Circus" ofNorman Walker (1975) is a long, cryptic piece, set to themusic of George Crumb. The four dancers enter onstage,one by one, draped in heavy, silver, larger-than-lifecloaks; the lighting is shadowy, the atmospheremysterious. The performers divest their cloaks, Crumb's"music" begins, and what follows is a series of duets andsolos, of alternating lyricism and hardness. The piecemight be a modern day evocation of Mt. Olympus, wheregods perform, dispassionately, for each other. Walker hasdevised some striking poses, breathtaking churning ofslowly moving silhouettes. The movement is focused, butthe emotional frame of reference covert. James Waring's "Gallopade" is a well structuredexercise in dalliance. Set to four Viennese dances ofJoseph Lanner, "Gallopade" might be a refined socialdancing contest; more likely, it's a mild spoof of ballet.The dancers, barefoot, spend most of their time dancingon the balls of their feet, as if they're missing ballet'spointe shoes desperately. Ballet's manners are parodied— its mindless cuteness, absurd flirtatiousness, rigid sexroles, and symmetry to the point of deathly boredom.There are zillions of ballet works withr those elements inthem, and Waring's work, though it wears thin after awhile, transforms them into entertaining spectable.D Charlie Chaplin’soC Friday, February 17th 6:45 & 9:30The Great DictatorFriday, February 17, 1978 Page 13This weekend in the artsFilmBy Karen HellerAdmission to NAM and Lower Rickertfilms is $1.50. Admission to Half the Sky is$1.00 with U.C.I.D. and $2.00 general. Ad¬mission to Doc films is $1.00 on Tuesday andWednesday; $1.50 on all other nights. NAM,Doc and Lower Rickert films will be shownin Quantrell Auditorium, Cobb Hall. Half theSky will be presented on Friday in KentHall.The Great Dictator (1940), directed byCharles Chaplin. (Doc) In his first soundfilm with dialogue, Chaplin plays a double¬role: a mild-mannered Jewish barber (whohas suffered amnesia ever since World WarI) and the ranting demagogue Adnoi Hynkel(who preaches racism under the flag of thedouble-cross). The two exchange places toPaulette Goddard's amazement. Friday at7:45 and 9:30.The Other Half of the Sky (1977), directedby Shirley MacLaine. Sponsored by the US-China People Friendship Association, U of CChapter; Organization of Black Students;Student Government; and UniversityFeminist Organization. The film, a Chinamemoir, will be presented with twospeakers, Margaret Whitman and UnitaBlackwell, Whitman, a four-time visitor tothe People's Republic of China said thefollowing after her first visit to China withShirley MacLaine: ". . . my admiration forthe Chinese people and their feelings is soboundless that I'm going to change. I feelnewly liberated. . ." Blackwell, a formerdisenfranchised farm worker, a civil rightsactivist, an accomplished communityorganizer, and the first Black woman mayorin Mississippi, said about China: "One of thethings I learned in China was who I was andwhat I could do and to assess what has beendone in the struggle of Black people inAmerica. So I came home with a greatersense of purpose that the struggle I was inwas more important than the personalities.The struggle is against oppression and thethree-fourths of this world is with you. Whenyou go to China and see one-fourth of theworld's population in one country, it givesyou a different perspective when you gethome." Friday at 7:30 in Kent Hall.Everything You Wanted to Know AboutSex... But Were Afraid to Ask (1972),directed by Woody Allen. (Lower Rickert)Inspired by Dr. Reuben's poetic work of thesame name. In this film Woody Allen asksthe following questions (among many, mostof which go answered): What are sex per¬verts?; Do Aphrodisics Work?; What isSodomy?; and What happens duringejaculation? Only the last sketch in whichAllen portrays a reluctant spermatozoagetting ready for a Barnard graduate ("Youtook an oath to fertilize an ovum or die in theattempt.") is a remarkable product of thecomic's ample wit. The only othermemorable touch is the opening credits witha warren of white bunnies, twitching theirnoses to a vintage recording of Cole Porter'sinspirational "Let's Misbehave". Saturdayat 6:30, 8:15and 10:15.Signs of Life (1968), directed by WernerHerzog. (NAM) The German director's firstfeature film is based in part on a newspaperreport of an incident that occurred duringthe Seven Years War. In 1944 Stroszek, aGerman soldier wounded in combat is sentto a Nazi-occupied Greek island to guardan old fortress. He is accompanied there byhis w:fe and two other Nazi soldiers. Withnothing to do, they pass the time doingvarious sundry things like painting theirquarters; translating ancient Greek texts;building cockroach catchers (a favoriteHyde Park pastime); and building ex¬plosive rockets. Stroszek finds ’"signs oflife" by going mad. Sunday at7:15and9:30.The Fall of St. Petersburg (1927), directedby Vsevolod Pudovkin. (NAM) A centralwork of the Soviet cinema, commissionedwith Eisenstein's October, to celebrate thetenth anniversary of the RussianRevolution. Pudovkin concentrates on theindividual, but the force of historical eventsis always present. Recommended. Mondayat 7:15 and 9:30. Tim Settimi & The GraduatesSaturday is a full day for lovers of mimeand comic theater, when Tim Settimi andThe Graduates come to Ida Noyes Hall.In the afternoon there will be a mimeworkshop led by Settimi from 2:00 to 3:30,and then a comedy workshop from 3:30 to5:00. The wor kshops are free to holders oftickets for the evening performance, whichbegins at 8 pm and features both groups.Tim Settimi is a gifted mimist, musician,and multi-media magician technician whohas received wide acclaim for his uniquecombination of street and theater mime.The Graduates are a three man comedyteam, originating from Chicago's SecondCity, who have gone on to expand theircomic talents through comedy writing (theyworked for Norman Lear), television ap¬pearances, and college and club dates.Tickets for the evening performance are$2 and $3, and are available at the ReynoldsClub box office. For more information call753-3598.Tim SettimiYeomanYeoman of the Guard by Gilbert andSullivan will be presented this weekend atMandel Hall by the Gilbert and SullivanOpera Company. The Victorian grand operamarks the eighteenth year of performancesby the company, and will feature a fullproduction with a large orchestra andchorus.Yeoman, also known as "The Merrymanand his Maid," was considered by itsauthors to be their finest work together, ajudgement to which most critics agreed.The strong and realistic drama, with itshighly operatic music, will featureRaymond Lubway as Jack Point, the Jesterwho is one of Gilbert's most interestingcharacters, and Robert Heinrikson, aChicago local, as Colonel Fairfax.Yeoman will be presented on Friday,February 17th at 8 pm, and on Saturday,February 18th at 1:30 pm and 8 pm inMandel Hall at 57th Street and UniversityAve. Tickets may be purchased at the dooror by phoning for reservations to 955-9697.Tickets for Friday evening are $4.00 and$2.50, for Saturday matinee are $2.50, andfor Saturday evening are $5.00 and $3.50.Senior citizens get $1.00 off the generaladmission prices. Elly Ameling: Master of songDutch soprano Elly Ameling, one of theworld's greatest lieder singers, will appearin Mandel Hall on February 21, 23, and 25 aspart of the University of Chicago Extention's series of five great singers, amongthem Barbara Hendricks and HermannPrey.On.the 21st, Ms. Ameling, along withpianist Dalton Baldwin and the CamerataSociety of Chicago orchestra, will presentPurcell's Music for a while, the cantata"From rosy bow'rs," Dido's lament, the airof Dido, and a recitative, along withMozart's concert airs K. 538, Vado, madove; K. 217, Noi avete un cor fedele, and K.505, Ch'io mi scordi di,te. The 23rd will be anall Schubert performance, and the 25th willfeature works by Faure', Wolf, and Strauss.Born in Rotterdam, Holland, Ms. Amelinghas made annual tours of the United Statesand Canada since her American debut atLincoln Center in 1968 Besides appearingthroughout Europe, Miss Ameling hasappeared with leading orchestras inChicago, Boston, San Francisco andToronto. Miss Ameling is considered asuperstar by connoisseurs of the vocal arts All performances will be at Mandel Hall,57th and University, and will be at 8:00 pm.The February 21st concert is part of the firstseries of 5 performances; the other two arepart of the second series. Tickets are S7.50.Students with ID's can get singles for $4.00Tickets are going fast but a few can still behad; for further ticket info call 753-3137. Allprograms are subiect to change.The Gre/ City JournalEditor: Mark NeustadtAssociate Editor: JeffMakosStaff: Tom Flannigan, George Drury,Peter Cohn, Karen Hornick, Anne Glusker,Tracy Springer, Karen Heller, StuartRyder, Richard Brown, the Rumproller,Eden Clorfene.CalendarF ridayASHUM: Applications due today, Harper226.Commuter Club: Get together, 12:30-1:30 pm,Hutchinson Commons.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Faculty-student Luncheon, 12:15 pm, Ida Noyes;Arabic Circle, “Half a Century in the Life ofan Egyptian Intellectual," Abd al-Mun’im al-Maligi, 3:30 pm, Pick 218; (discussion inArabic); Persian Society, 3:30 pm, Harper 135(discussion in Persian); Bizeden Size, Slidesof Turkey, 3:30 pm, Cobb 430, (discussions inTurkish).Department of Economics: Workshop/PublicLecture - “A Theoretical and EmpiricalAnalysis of the Labor Supply of ‘OlderMales;” Robert Cotterman, 1 pm, SocialSciences 402; Workshop/Thesis Seminar -“Featureless Plains Featured: The Effects ofNineteenth Century Midwestern Railroads,”Bradley Lewis, 3:30 pm, Social Sciences 106;Workshop - Latin American Development andPublic Finance, 3:30 pm, Social Sciences 402.Department of Biochemistry InformalSeminar; ‘‘Saymmetric DiscontinuousReplication of B. Subtilis DNA and the Roleof Uracil Incorporation,” Dr. FiyuhikoTamanoi, Harvard, 12:30 pm, Cummings1117.Department of Geophysical SciencesColloquium: “Elastic Properites of FluorideAnalogs of Mantle Compounds,” Leonie E.A. Jones, Harvard, 1:30 pm, HindsAuditorium.Women’s Union: Meeting, 5 pm, Women’sUnion office above Frog & peach in Ida NoyesHall.Hillel: Reform-Liberal Shabbat Services,5:15 pm; Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner, 6 pm;Lecture - “The Problem of the Palestinians:The Psychological Dimensions,” Drs. AaronAuerbach and Thomas Gorry, 8:30 pm, Hillel.Crossroads: Ice Skating on the Midway, meetat Crossroads at 7 pm or at Midway at 7:30pm.Baha’i Club: “Baha’i Perspective,” SusanBrill, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Christian Forum: “Secularization: Fact orFancy?" Brent House, 8 pm.China Lecture and Movie: “The Other Half of the Sky,” 7:30 pm; Speakers: MargaretWhitman and Unita Blackwell, Kent 107.ArtsDOC Film: “The Great Dictator," 6:45 and9:30 pm, Cobb Hall.UC Lab School Parents Club: “Yeomen ofthe Guard,” by Gilbert & Sullivan Opera Co.,8 pm, Mandel Hall.Midway Studios: Opening Reception forKenneth Burkhart - Photography, 6-8 pm,Midway Studios 6016 Ingleside.Court Theatre: “Gammar Gurton’s Needle,”6 pm, Woodward Court, Free.The Poetry Center: A Reading by Jon Logan,8 pm, Museum of Contemporary Art, 237 E.Ontario.Major Activities Board: Mary Lou Williamswith The St. Louis Quartet with JeanneTrevor, 8 and 10 pm, Hutch Commons.SaturdayResource Center: Recycle Glass, cans andpaper at 54th PI and Greenwood. 10-4,Saturdays.Changeringing: Handbells 10-11 am, towerbells 11 am-1 pm, Mitchell Tower.Hillel: Onegei Shabbat at the Bayit, 5458 S.Everett, 4 p.m.Crossroads: Saturday night dinner, 6 pm;following dinner - Concert of Modern Com¬positions by Daniel Galay.UC Women’s Basketball Team vs Knox, 1:30pm, Field House.Inter-House Council Film: “Everything youWanted to Know about Sex but Were Afraidto Ask," 6:30, 8:15 and 10:15 pm, Cobb Hall.ArtsStudent Activities Office: A Day of Comedyand Mime — mime workshops: 2-3:30 danceroom in Ida Noyes with Tim Settimi; comedyworkshops: 3:30 - 5 Ida Noyes Library with“The Graduates: Evening performance 8 pm,Ida Noyes Hall.UC Lab School Parents’ Club: “Yeoman ofthe Guard,” by the Gilbert and SullivanOpera Co., 1:30 pm and 8 pm, Mandel Hall.Court Theatre: “Gammar Gurton’s Needle,"6 pm, Pierce Tower, Free.UC Indian Music Circle: Classical VocalMusic by Mani Manjusha Majumdar ac¬companied on the Tabla by ArvindDeobhakta, 7:30 pm, 5459 Hyde Park Blvd(C.M. Naim). Chicago Front for Jazz: Lester Bowie - soloconcert, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.SundayRockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy Com¬munion, 9 am; University Religious Service,“Winds of the Spirit," E. Spencer Parsons. 11am, Rockefeller Chapel.Students International MeditationSociety: Discussion and Group Meditation, 3pm, Ida Noyes East Lounge.Crossroads: Bridge, 3 pm, 5621 S.Blackstone.Brent House: supper 6 pm, meditation, 7:15pm, Brent House.Court Theatre: “Gammar Gurton’s Needle,"8 pm, Reynolds Club.UC Stage Band: Concert, 3 pm, Ida Noyes,free.Brass Society: Concert, 8 pm, HarperLibrary,free.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch, 11 am, HillelNAM Film: “Signs of Life,” 7:15 and 9:30pm, Cobb Hall.Woodward Court Lecture: Professor N.MacLean - “Teaching and Storytelling,” 8:30pm, 5825 S. Woodlawn.MondayResource Center: Free bundled newspaperpickup at addresses between 55th and 59th,Woodlawn and the IC tracks, 8 am and on.The Committee on Social Thought and TheJohn Nef, Fund Seminar Discussion: “TheEducation of Democratic Man: Rousseau'sEmile,” Prof. Allan Bloom, University ofToronto, 4 pm, Social Sciences 122.The Child Development ColloquiaSeries: “Now You See It, Now You Don’t:More Studies of Object Permanence." 4 pm,Judd Hall rm 205.Department of Chemistry: "Design ofInhibitors of Angiotensin-Converting En¬zyme: A Chemist’s Approach to En-zymology." Dr. Miguel Ondetti, E.R. Squibb& Sons, Inc., 4 pm, Kint 103.Ki-Aikido Club: meeting, 6 pm, Field House.US Chess Club: meeting 7 pm; Annual SpeedChess Tournament. 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Committee on DevelopmentalBiology: “Unfinished Studies on Cell Dif¬ferentiation,” 8 pm, Zoology-Lillie Room #29.NAM Films: “The Fall of St. Petersburg,"7:15 and 9:30 pm, Cobb Hall. NewsBriefHonoraryprofessorshipsto fiveFour University faculty members havebeen named distinguished serviceprofessors, and Harold Richman, dean ofthe School of Social Service Administration(SSA), has been named the Hermon DunlapSmith Professor.The new distinguished service professorsare physicist Albert Crewe; theologianMartin Mary; anthropologist DavidSchneider; and historian Karl Weintraub.Crewe, named the William E. Wratherdistinguished service professor, developedthe scanning transmission electronmicroscope, a new type of microscope withwhich he obtained the first photographs ofisolated atoms in 1971 and the first motion-picture sequences of moving atoms in 1976.Crewe is professor in the department ofphysical sciences division.Mary, Fairfax M. Cone distinguishedservice professor, teaches the history ofmodern Christianity in the Divinity School.He won the national book award in 1972 forRighteous Empire.Schneider, William B Ogdendistinguished service professor, studies therole of kinship and social organization in thedevelopment of culture. Schneider’s workcenters on North America.Quantrell award winner Weintraub,Thomas E. Donnelly distinguished serviceprofessor of history, is dean of thehumanities division. His research has dealtmainly with the study of the development ofhistorical thought. He is the author ofVisions of Culture, and the long-awaitedbook The Value of the Individual; Self andCircumstance in Autobiography.Richman. an authority of social welfarepolicy, has served as a special consultant tothe Secretary of Health, Education andWelfare. President Carter last year namedRichman to the President’s Commission onMental Health.There are currently 54 distinguishedservice professors on the University’sfaculty.Lower Rickert Presents Woody Allen’sEVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SEX*Saturday, Feb. 18 Cobb 6:30, 8:15 & 10:15 - $1.50*but were afraid to askl SPEND NEXT* SEMESTER ABROADAcademic programs available in:FLORENCE ■ LONDONAMSTERDAM ■ STRASBOURGMADRID ■ MEXICO* Apply now Hof Fall 1978* Variety of courses offered* No language background required* Financial Aid available* Summer programs available in England, Italy,Israel, Switzerland, Austria, East Africa andThe NetherlandsFor more information and application, write:5VRRCU5E UfllV/ERSITVDivision op inTERnflTionniPROGRflmS ABROAD335 Comstock Avenue feieonr neSynruse New voru 132*0 (3’5) *123 347' BRENT HOUSE5540 S. WoodlawnEpiscopal, Lutheran, Methodist MinistriesFriday - 5 -6 Sherry HourSunday • 5:30 - 6:00 Social Hour6:00 Supper(1.25)7:15 8:15 LENTEN MEDITATIONBarbara Byhower, LeaderJAZZ CONCERTClassic DuoDavid Bloom, guitar-fluteLarry Gray, bass• This Sunday •Blue GargoyleeFeb. 19#8 pme$2 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE*X COLLEGE STUDENT STUDY PROGRAM A? Hayim GreenbergCollege in Jerusalem for a semester or one year Curriculumincludes Hebrew language. Literature, Bible, History Education Philosophy Sociology. Talmud Credits by leading urnversitles in the U S Also, tours, cultural and recreationalprograms. Scholarships availableUNIVERSITY SEMINARS 6 *eeks of study at Israeli universities Plus tours, cultural and recreational activities. Up to !1recognized credits may be earnedFor information and applications call o> write **•*X. WORLD ZIONIST ORGANIZATIONW 70 *#70 Department of Education A Culturev v I 515 Park Avenue N Y C 10022(212! 752 C600 e«t 385/386 7>-A\ NameAddressCityState\ J /wmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, February 17,1978 — 15iFirst time in 2 yearsSwimmers break.500 markPhoto by Jeanne DufortMaroons falter at BeloitBy John PomidorA second-half rally by the men’sbasketball team fell short Saturday atHenry Crown Field House, and the Maroonswere beaten by the Beloit Buccaneers. 63-53.In the first half, the Beloit offense set thepace by fastbreaking and running aroundthe Maroon defense, and led at the in¬termission. 30-21. Meanwhile, an aggressive2-1-2 Buc defense held the Maroons outsidefor long periods of time.“We were playing like we were asleep.”lamented forward Bret Schaefer.In the second half, the Maroon woke up.and put together several small rallies togradually creep up behind Beloit. On a feedfrom guard Steve Shapiro, a Jim Tolf dunkput the Maroons behind by five. 34-29, withthree minutes gone in the half. But a fewfast breaks put the lead back at nine. Withhalf the period gone. Schaefer hit a three-point play and a layup, but charged his man.The penalty situation was on. and two foulshots by Beloit made it 46-41.With 7:00 left, and the score 50-45, Tolftipped in a shot. Forward Dan Hayes con¬nected. making it 50-47. and Jay Alley stolea pass and downed it to put the Maroonswithin one. Mark Miller stole another pass,and Schaefer put in two from the charitystripe, making it 51-50, Maroons. Hayestraded baskets with Beloit center JohnGronke to put the score at 53-52.Beloit lost the ball on their next op¬portunity, but the Maroons turned it rightback Miller fouled Buc forward Kevin Sch- mitting while stealing the ball, Schmittingsank both his shots, and Beloit let 54-53. TheMaroons were called for charging, butBeloit returned the ball on a travelling call.Shapiro missed a foul shot, and the Maroonshad to foul to get the ball back, as the Bucswere in a stall.Alonzo Jackson sank one. and Beloit gotthe ball back when the Maroons forced ashot. Guard Mike Gargrove gave Beloit twomore, and a subsequent fast break byJackson put the game out of reach.“We weren’t using our heads out there,”said Maroon asst, coach Chuck Schacht.Guard Steve Shapiro, playing his lastMaroon home game along with forw ard DanHayes, had a good reason not to use hishead. He was hit there early in the game,and couldn’t remember much of it. Also.Jim Tolf had a few days off from practicedue to a blow in the back.Shapiro’s bump could just as well havehappened any other time during thephysical game. After complaints from bothbenches, as well as the stands and on thecourt, the refs finally brought the gameback to sanity with a double-foul call onHayes and Buc forward Steve Lowenhoven.But as one Beloit coach said, his teamseemed to have a little bit more poise thanthe Maroons Saturday. This weekend, theMaroons will travel to Ripon and Lawrencefor two more conference games. They canbe seen locally one more time this year,when they take on nationally-ranked Loyolaaway. Tickets are available in BartlettGym. By Mike RabinA new' winning tradition has started forthe men’s Swimming and Diving teams.After a dismal 1-3 start, the tide turnedlast Wednesday with a convincing victoryover University of Wisconsin-Parkside.Though the team lost to its South-Side rival.IIT. the swimmers pulled together for thefirst time this season, and swam their besttimes. Led by co-Captains Wayne Hopper.Dave Rodin, and Jon Rvnning. and fresh¬man distance man Steve Frederick.Chicago won every event except for the 200Breast and Backstrokes. Hooper waspushed to his fastest times in the 200 and 500freestyle, while Dave Rodin slashed a 3-year-old school record in the 200 fly. In the1000 freestyle, freshmen Steve Frederickand Mark Zoeller both swam their fastesttimes of the season. The 400 yard freestylerelay of Hooper. Frederick. Rabin, and Rv-nning swam their best time of the seasonand lost a close race to IIT. The IITParkside meet was marked by the fact thatfor the first time in team history, the meetwas won with the divers. Lou Snitzer andWayne Hardy took 1-2, both the Requiredand Optional diving, giving the team aninsurmountable lead. In the 200 BreastJim Tolf jams the ball against Beloit.Beloit won the game 63-53. (Photo by JohnWright) Stroke W’oolner and Mike Kundman com¬bined for a 2-3 finish to add to Chicago’slead.Chicago travelled to St. Louis over theweekend to swim the University of Missouriand Illinois College in a double-dual meet.After starting off slowly and losing theopening relay to both teams, the swimmerscame back to beat both opponents in thefinal event. Both meets were close, and goodtimes were registered by everyone. The twobest races of the meet were the 1000 yardfreestyle and the 200 fly. In the 1000.Frederick outclassed the field, and cruisedto an easy victory. Mark Zoeller on the otherhand, raced neck-and-neck with theswimmer from Illinois College for the entirerace, but lost in the final lap. His time was apersonal record by 15 seconds. In the 200 fly.Dave Rodin set another school record of 2minutes 15.1 seconds, breaking the recordhe set two days before. Michael Rabinplaced third in the event with his ow-n per¬sonal best. Jim Muckle and John Murashegealso had strong races, in the double victory.Dave Johnsen swam the 50 and 100* Freestyle events and posted good times.On Valentines Day the men hosted GeorgeWilliams College. Although GeorgeWilliams was at a disadvantage — havingonly six swimmers and having to swim inBartlett “Natatorium” — the Chicagoswimmers were merciless and crushedtheir opponents.The 400 yard medely relay of Cal Cooper.Stan Woolner. Dave Rodin, and JohnRynning, came from behind to beat GeorgeWilliams in the final leg of the relay. In the1000. Wayne Hooper led the whole w ay andset a school and pool record in the event.Hooper also swam a fast, yet controlled racein the 160 Individual Medely, winning itdecisively on the freestyle leg. John Ryn¬ning swam his fastest 100 free. His time of0:50.7 places him in the top 15 time in theNCAA Division IIP this month. In the 200free, Steve Frederick and Mike Rabin took1-3. Dave Rodin and Michael Rabin sweptthe 200 fly, Rodin setting a new team record.The strongest showing in the met camefrom the Chicago back and breaststrokers.Cal Cooper and Stan Woolner. Both swamstrong legs in the medley relay, and cameback to swim their best times in the 200 backand breast respectively.The Maroons have three more dual meetsthis season Having beaten two of the teamsalready, the swimmers, now 5-4. expect togo into the Midwest Conference Cham¬pionships with a dual meet record of 8-4.their best record in three years. CoachRandy Block expects the team to improveon their sixth place finish last year and alsoavenge dual meet loses to Ripon College andLawrence University whom the teamsmeet at the Championships which are to beheld at Lake Forest College March 3 and 4.Hoopers win 2 of 4 in tough weekJanet Torrey puts up a shot againstGeorge Williams. Chicago lost to GW 55-60.(Photo by John Wright)at 1:30. The Maroons will go on the road toMundelein after that, then return to theField House for their final home stand withU of I next Thursday at 7 pm.ByR. W. RohdeThe Women's basketball team clinched astate play-off birth and played the statetournament in one week, or so it seemed.Just two days after returning from the MITtournament in Boston, the Maroons took onConcordia and began an eight-day period inwhich they would take on three of the topsmall college teams in the state as well astheir last league game. Chicago won two offour games during the torrid week at theCrown Field House.Concordia came to the south side onTuesday the 7th and fell to the Maroons by ascore of 45-42. Although the score was close.Chicago held the advantage all the way ledby Nadya Shmavonian’s 23 points. If Shmavonian was good against Con¬cordia. she was great against Lake Forestlast Thursday, the only league opponentChicago had not met and conquered. Sh¬mavonian scored 20 points and pulled down25 rebounds in a game the Maroons won by18. 63-45. The differential might have beenbigger, but starting guard Janet Torrey wasout of action due to illness.Torrey was back for the Greenville gamelast Friday, but not at full strength, and inthe meantime Shmavonian caught whatTorrey had. Shmavonian played but onlyscored 5 points, and it was up to PaulaMarkovitz to pick up the slack. Markovitzhit 27 points and grabbed 16 rebounds, butthat wasn’t enough as the wounded Maroonsfell to Greenville 66-55. Chicago got a rest over the weekend, andby the time George Williams came to townthis Tuesday, the Maroons were ready toplay what Coach Marcia Hurt called “one ofthe best games of the season.” The Maroonsfell behind to GW in the early going, butcame back in the second half to go ahead by4. A long scoreless period soon followed butGW ended it with several baskets and tookthe lead. The Maroons went into the final 17seconds down 55-56. but GW had the ball andwhen Chicago fouled a GW player sheconverted both ends of a one-and-one toclinch the victory. Paula Markovitz againled the team with 21 points, while Torreyhad 12 and Kim Curran 10.Though the Maroons lost. Hurt felt thegame was a turning point for the team. Theweek proved that Chicago will be a strongcontender at State. The Maroons provedthey could beat Concordia and stay closewith Greenville and George Williams whilenot playing at full strength. If Chicago ishealthy for state, they should be in thefinals.The Maroons can be seen at full strengthtonight in the Henry Crown Field Houseagainst Chicago State at 7 pm. Chicago willtake on Knox at home tomorrow afternoonSports16 —The Chicago Maroon — Friday, February 17,1978From the PressboxIntramural basketballBy Rory RohdeIt may not be Kermit Alexander andRudy Tomjanovich, but this year’s in¬tramural basketball season has not had alack of violence.Over the past couple weeks, severalaltercations have come to our attention.These include a case where one playerslugged another, a ref being threatenedwith bodily harm for forfeiting the game, abench-emptying confrontation in agraduate league game, and an altercationinvolving a player who was suspendedonce for threatening a ref and then let backin the league on a promise never to do sucha thing again.The action isn’t limited to men either; inone case a referee was assaulted by afemale during class for calls made duringa previous night’s game.The previously mentioned graduategame between the Bruins and Stop KillingLizards is typical of the confrontations.The game went fairly smoothly until thethird quarter. Then during a fast break bythe Bruins, a Lizard player pushed a Bruinto prevent a lay-up. and the official calledtravelling, drawing much criticism fromthe sidelines. Just a few plays later theLizards had the breakaway and a Bruinpushed the Lizard player, this timedrawing a foul. But that wasn’t enough forone of the other members of Stop KillingLizards, who apparently saw the foul asretalitory and rushed towards the Bruinplayer in a Leon Spinks pose. Both benchesemptied in short order, but the refsseparated the two teams and called a two-minute ‘cooling off’ period before anyonehad a chance to throw a punch. The gameproceeded smoothly from there.Despite these many incidents, the IMdepartment has only had four cases ofbasketball violence reported to it this year,far below last year’s norm of ‘one a day’.Only two cases of a referee beingthreatened have been reported forrFieldhouse courtsopen (finally)After a month of delay, the Crown FieldHouse racquetball and handball courtsopened this week bringing with them arevised reservation system and severalrules.The new system includes setting asideone court at Bartlett and the Field Housefor phone-in reservations, hour-lengthreservations at the Field House duringweekdays, and taking walk-in reservationsin the Trophy room.The new courts are quite nice, andseveral rules have been made to keepthem that way. All playing shoes must becarried to the Field House, Racquetballsmust be blue or green and racquets maynot be made of wood and must have basketball, one more than football. But thequestion is wrhy it happens at all, and wiiatcan be done about it.Marty Howard, one of the refs for lastSaturday’s Bruins-Lizards game andcertainly one of the best intramural refs,feels that part of the problem is due to thepoor quality of officials, and feels the IMdepartment doesn’t make much of aneffort for quality control nor much of anattempt to schedule good refs for toughgames. Howard went on to say there wouldstill be some fighting no matter how goodthe officials are. citing the NBA as anexample, and that all incidents should beseverely dealt with. “Players who fightshould not be able to get back in just beapologizing and promising not to do itagain.’’Intramural director Dan Tepke felt thattrouble usually arises from “highlymotivated individuals who are as intensein IMs as they are in class and can’t dif¬ferentiate between the two. This is un¬derstandable considering how intense thisplace is, but not excusable.” Tepke saidthere was not a lot to be done to prevent itdue to the great difficulty in reffingbasketball and the intensity of students,especially around mid-terms when most ofthe fights seem to occur. Tepke also told ofa classic example of taking intramuralstoo seriously. He was making the roundslast year when he found two intramuralplayers squaring off for a fight — over agame of table tennis.Perhaps the IM department could do alittle more, but it seems to us that is ismostly up to the students to show a littlerestraint. One could blame the Universityand admissions for making this school asintense as it is, an unfortunate changefrom the relaxed atmosphere eight yearsago, but that situation is not going tochange in the near future. Even if the refsaren’t, the intramural program is one ofthe best around. So remember guys (andgals), “this isn’t the NBA.Sport shortsguards. In attempt to preserve the qualityof the courts, all violations will be severelydealt with.The squash courts are expected to opensoon.Fencers go 1-2 at NDThe Maroon's Fencing squad won onematch and dropped tw’o for the secondweek in a row at an away meet at NotreDame. Chicago beat Milwaukee TechnicalCollege 16-11 while dropping their match toDetroit by an identical score and thenlosing to Notre Dame, the defending NCAAchampions, by a score of 7-20.The Notre Dame saber squad, sportingthe nations individual college champ,proved to be too much for the previouslyundefeated Chicago squad, knocking theirrecord down to 10 and 1. The team has an Grapplers revive at KnoxBy Mitch MartinAfter the first round of wrestling at theKnox tourney, held last Saturday inGalesburg, it looked as if all hopes for astrong Chicago showing were vanquished.Not one Chicago wrestler was able to win amatch although two of the more ex¬perienced maroon grapplers did comeextremely close. Sophomore Bob Michell,wrestling up a weight class at 134 lb., lost agrueling 4-2 decision to Stevens fromMillikin in overtime. And almostsimultaneously on an adjacent mat,sophomore Joe Cullen (150) lost a heart¬breaking 3-2 decision to second seededBertrum also from Millikin.But after their initial defeats, threemembers of the Chicago team made strongcomebacks. Michell managed to win hisnext two matches against stronger op¬ponents, one of them again in overtime,before the tired wrestler was finally stopped by Fox from Wheaton 18-1. Steve Feldman,after his initial defeat, came back to win hisfirst match of the season and clinch 4thplace in the 126 lb. weight division bydefeating Kuyhendall from Knox 5-0.But of all the Maroon wrestlers, JoeCullen had the most stunning comback.After his loss to Bertrum. Cullen easilydefeated Atwell from Illinois College 8-0 andBellamy from Monmouth who he pinned in3:15. Advancing to the consolation finals,Cullen again faced Bertrum and this timeoutmaneuvered him, winning a 3-2 decisionwhich clinched a third place for the inspiredgrappler in the 150 lb. weight class.This Saturday the Maroons travel to DesMoines Iowa where they face Coe Collegeand Grinnel in a double* dual meet. Only aweek before the midwest conferencetournament, the Maroons performance atthis meet will be crucial in determiningtheir possibilities for being seeded at theconference.Things started out well in the Bruins — Stop Killing Lizards game,but deteriorated in the third quarter Order was restored by theofficials, and the Bruins went on to win the game. (Photos by Rory Rohde)IM reportBasketball playoffs startBy Howard SulsThe big news this week is the beginning ofthe basketball playoffs. Final league scoreshad Bruins over Fallers 43-21 and Snorklersover Human Capitals 50-25. Final Flingnipped Med I to take the Grad White league32-31 and move into the A bracket for theplayoffs.Major playoff results had Laughlin overMatthews 37-26. Bad News Bulls lynchingW’alloo’s Wacks 58-32. Dr. Fox crushedMontana Wildhacks 42-18, and in the biggame it was Bruins 33. Stop Killing LizardsThe fencers travel to Madison this week¬end for a four-way meet with the Air ForceAcademy, Tri-State University, and U. ofWisconsin.IM Top 10MCAC East DivisionLake Forest W5 L1 Pts. Opp.57.2 lapxChicago 3 3 61.2 62.575.3Ripon 2 2 74.5Beloit 3 4 65.2 63.7 i apxLawrence 1 4 61.2 63.4Dan Hayes. Jay Alley, and Steve Shapiroare all among the top ten scorers in theEast Division. Hayes is averaging 14points a game while Alley and Shapiro areaveraging 118 and 11.4 points per gamerespectively./ 30 in a battle for university supremacy. LateA-bracket games had Lower flint overSalisbury in a first round matchup, and thenLower Rickert over Lower Flint in a see¬saw battle. Finally, it was Dodd-Mead overa tough Alpha Delta Phi team 28-25.Other league scores had Human Caps byforfeit over Peg's Poor. Dog Style 35.Shoreland 5-13; Upper Flint rolled overChamberlin 30-16 Divinity bombed 6lstPygmies 64-14,1-House nipped Fallers 27-23.Shorev demolished Bishop 71-19 and it wasLil’s Hot Shots 45. Left Guard 19.Womens scores has Workhouse Bom-berettes over Full court Press 13-10 Fish-bein rolled over Snell 23-11 and Shorev beatBishop 18-12.Free throw competition was held lastweek and results are as follows; Coedwinners were UW/LR for the team title withUpper Flint tied both with 48. Individualresults had Greg Sachs and Patti Mercer ofUpper Flint tied with Ricky Jansen andJane Redfern of UW/LR at 26. Men's resultshad Lower Rickert s Jansen with 86. andJim Fukuyama of Upper Flint at 84 In¬dependent and All-University results hadGene Pacquette winning with 94. and MartinGleason second at 87 Men’s team resultshad Lower Rickert winning, with UpperFlint and Psi-U next. Womens results hadDanila Oder of Shorev with 30 and MarieMalo of Upper Wallace second with 24,Team scores had Upper Wallace with 99.Lower Wallace w ith 98. and Shorev with 73.Womens Badminton results hadRussell/Malo of Upper Wallace blowing bytheir competition to win easily.One last note; With the retirement ofMark Pennington the IM officiating corphas been seriously diminished Wecongratulate Mark on his four years ofdedicated service.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, Februarv 17,1978— 17-Vel WMi I* LOVE?* . . i. \\ \\ \ A REVUEDirected by Nick RudallFebruar*' 24, 25, 26 / March 3. 4, 5 / 10,11, 12 / 17,18,19 at 8 30 PMThe New Theatre, 57th and University AvenueS3 general admission / S2 for students and senior riti/ensCall 753-3581 lor information and reservationsCAPA vouc hers welcome except SaturdayROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSUNDAY — FEBRUARY 199 A.M.A SERVICE OF HOLY COMMUNIONCelebrant: Donald JudsonHomilist: The Reverend Leonel Mitchell,Professor of Theology atThe University of Notre DameCO-sponsored by the Episcopal Church Council11 A.M.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICEE. SPENCER PARSONSDEAN OF THE CHAPEL“WINDS OF THE SPIRIT” Used Desks, Chairs,Files, Drawing TablesBRAND EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave,Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:00RE 4-2111 •Eye Examination!•Contact lenses (Soft A Hard)•Prescriptions Filled)R MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Pork Shopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363 Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900ALL TOGETHERAt One LocationTO SAVE YOU MORE!specIaTDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago 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 LOCATIONCHEVROLETm VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE7234 Stony IslandPhone: 684-0400Op#r Daffy 9-9 P.M./ Sot. 9-5 P.M.Parts Opon Saturday 'Iff 12 Noon / T 4 s V { )rSALES with lservice is ourBUSINESSREPAIR specialistson IBM, SCM, §Olympia & othersFree Estimate >Ask about ourRENTAL withoption to buyNew & Rebuilt ATypewritersCalculators <DictatorsAdders 4-$U. of C. Bookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave. Y753-3303MASTER CHARGE *BANKAMERICARD V•t PIZZA PLATTER1460 E 53rd St.OUR SPECIALTYPizza Also Italian FoodsPick Up OnlyMl 3-2800 DOROTHY SMITHBEAUTY SALON5841 S. BLACKSTONEHY3-1069Call for appts.7 A.M. - 7 P.M.Monday thru Friday,closed SaturdayHair Styling - PermanentsTinting-Facials-Skin Care oo'#ALLCIGARETTESThe best newsstand in the worldalso has 2000 magazines for you!51st and Lake Park Chicago II. 60615 (312) 684-5100 55cA PACKDrury LaneTheatreWater TowerPlace Revolutionize Your DarkrdftmWith VivitarThe Vivitar VI Enlarger, for great black-and-white enlargements:• Solid construction reduces problem-causing vibrations• Optical Bench design assures alignment of key optical'mechanicalcomponents• Modular system design for easy addition of Dioptic’* Light Source• Prints up to 16x20” at the baseboard ^ _ _ _ _• Left or right-handed operation ^ / O 95• Accepts negatives up to 6 x 6 cm ^ A /The Vfvitar Dioptic’“ Ught Source/Light PipeT“ Illumination add itfor great black and white and color enlargements:• Brighter ■ Transmits 90^ of usable light for reduced exposure times• Cooler • Virtual elimination of heat at negative plane keeps film frompopping out of focus• Permanent dichroic filters also simulate full range of variable contrastfilters for black and white printing• Stabilized power supply included• Uniform illuminationThe Vivitar VI Enlarger and Dioptic Light Source.What an Enlarging System Should Be.rndcw. camera1342 E. 55th Street 9:30-6=00 /Vlon.-Sat. 493-6700Vivitar In-Store DemonstrationFri. & Sat., February 24th and 25th17995NAM FILMSSIGNS OF LIFE/Werner Herzog THE FALL OF ST.19lh7:.5S9 30 PETERSBURG /PudOVkiflCobb Hall $1.50 Monday, Feb. 20th 7:15*9:30Monday, Feb 20th 7:15*9:3018 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, February 17, 1978itmCLASSIFIED A DRSPACE1 bedroom in spacious 3 bdrm. apt.56th and Blackstone, dish washer/AC;$175/mo. Call 643 0625.S'/j 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. Monsell Oxford Univer¬sity, Dept, of ExperimentalPsychology, South Parks Road, Ox¬ford, England.Sublet room in apt. 2 blocks from cam¬pus for spring and possibly summerqtrs. Eric 241-5457.A quiet and considerate third yearundergraduate male seeks room in anapartment or a room in a house, forSpring quarter. Please call: 752-5757ext. 38 or 288-09)9, ask for CraigKlafter.Sublet Cheap desk or office space inthe Hyde Park Bank Building.241-5771,$50 REWARD for taking over lease inIV2 room apt. 5254 S. Dorchester$174/month avail. March 1. Tel752-5788 unt. 11 p.m.IV2 rm. turn. apt. avail. Mar. 1. 55thand Blackstone. Evenings. 752-7729.1 room in large 6 bedroom apt. 1 blockfrom campus. $80 monfh includesheat. 684-2336 beg. Spring qtrRoom with kitchen facilities wanted.3/19 - 4/22 for responsible f. student.Near UC. Call collect p.m. (314)968 4581, Pattie.Female roommate wanted. 363-6748,PEOPLE WANTEDOverseas Jobs Summer/year round.Europe, S America, Australia, Asia,etc. All fields, $500 $1200 monthly, ex¬penses paid, sightseeing. Free in¬formation. Write: BHP Co., Box 4490,Dept. 11, Berkeley, CA 94704.TENNIS PROS AND ASSISTANTPROS - Seasonal and year-roundclubs; good playing and teachingbackground. Call (301) 654-3770 or send2 complete resumes and 2 pictures to:Col. R. Reade, W.T.S., 8401 Connec¬ticut Ave., Suite 1011, Chevy Chase,MD 20015.Register now for the lunch alternativelearn the "Allis" system of physicalfitness. $30 for 10 wk. term beginningFeb. 28, Tues. This is a half hoursystem taught by Pat Fischer at theBlue Gargoyle, 955-5826. Carolyn forregistration.Modern dance classes begin Feb. 28,Tues. taught by Pat Fischer at theBlue Gargoyle. 10 wk. term. $40. Call955-5826 Carolyn, for registration.Harper Square Child Care Center hasone opening for 3 yr. old child. Call538-4041.Tutor for computer programming(Math 105) final program. Fee to bearr. 643-9158.PEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK - Illustration of all kinds.Lettering, hand-addressing for invitations, etc. Noel Price, 493-2399.RESEARCHERS Freelance 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 324-8054.TYPING 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 6698.Spanish under tutorials, help in grg. ofgrad papers. Jaqueline 753-2104 rm.632.Evening Help, 7:30 pm and on orSaturdays and Sundays (cooking,cleaning, washing, babysitting). CallJaqueline 753 2105 if632YOGA EXERCISES (individual)Lessons, your home $7.50 hour, myhome $5.00 hr., call 753-2104 #632 evenings.SCENESGILBERT AND SULLIVAN presentedin Mandel Hall, Feb. 17 at 8, Feb. 18 at1:30 and 8. Tickets at Mandel Hall BoxOffice.LESTER BOWIE Solo Concert Sat.,Feb. 18, 8 pm, Ida Noyes Hallpresented by the Chicago FrontTickets at Mandel Hall. $3/ID, $3.50without IDRIDE NEEDEDFrom North Hammond to Univ. HrsNorm. 8 4:30, but flex. Please call3 8108 daytime or (219) 937 2731, evenings FOR SALESTEREO - Dual 1218 turntable, $40Pioneer SCA80Q Quad Pre amp, $100,Harmon-Kurdon Citation 12, 120 wattpower amp $100, 2 Janszen 2410 Elec¬trostatic speakers, $225, DBX 119expander $85 Altogether $500. Jim447-6121.Brand new 100% wool extra thickcarpet from Kashmir. 50" x 57"unusual colors on ivory ground. Ex¬cellent value 363-2529.Am moving - Quick Sale. Table, largeblue carpet, sofas. Jon, 363-7671.Vivitar representative demonstratingVivitar VI Enlarger and Dioptic LightSource. Special Prices on this fineequipment. Fri. & Sat. Feb. 24 & 25.MODEL CAMERA 1342 E. 55th St.PERSONALSThe Maroon apologizes for the un¬fortunate and accidental ommission ofthe Gay Liberation classified ads.MELVIN, It was great! One moretime? Love, Lyle.Hyde Park Coop school needs unusua/castoffs for rummage sale. Call947-8834 or 365-1630 for free pick up.Kerj, Maribelle longs for you andBismark languishes withour Arthur.Be ours.Federal prisioner would like cor¬respondence with outside world. Writehim at:Jackie L. Martin 04025-156P.O. Box 1000Marion, IL. 62969.I have given notice that I will beresigning my position as SeniorSpecial Assistant to the ResidentMasters of Woodward Court, effectiveMarch, 18,1978. J. R. Hooker.Pregnancy tests Saturdays 10 1Augustana Church, 5500 S. Woodlawn.Bring 1st morning urine sample. $1.50donation. Southwide Women’s Health.324-6794.Writers Workshop (PL 2-8377)Pregnant? Troubled? Call 233-0305 10am-1 pm. F-F or Mon & Thurs. 7-9 p.m.Lifesaving help, test ref.Need Baby Crib. Ph 324-9392.Lonely Federal Prisoner, WilliamMeyers, interested in bowling, rollerskating, motor cycles, traveling,singing, movies and soft music desirescorrespondence with anyone in¬terested.Box 1000, Oxford, Wisconsin. 53952.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.$100 AND A KEGOrder ot the C Blood Drive. MostDonations: $100, keg, IM pts. playnight in the Field House. 2nd and 3rd.More Beer (and D.L.) Info. 753-2240Rm. 1010.STORE MANAGERWANTEDFull time store manager wanted goodsalary & working conditions call241-5512 The Pinocchio Toy Store. 1517E. 53rd St. In the Hyde Park BankBldgCOMEDY 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 3591LOST DOGMedium size black female las* seen at5400 Woodlawn wearing red bandannaCall Kent 324 3779.FLAMINGO APTS5500 S. Shore D-iveStudio nod One BedrmAnts. Fum. & UnfurnParking pool restaurantdrycleaninq valet deli24 hr switchboard(J of C shu’hebus 'Y blk awayFull carpeting & drapes inclSpecial University Rates Avail7V GAY/LESBIAN &CHRISTIANInformal support group atCalvert House, 5737 S. Univ , 8:30- 10:00, Wed. Feb. 22, secondfloor.SUBLET S240/MQ.Large 1 bedrm. apt in Parkshorebldg, at 55th & lakefront nearShoreland. 24 hr. security. Avble. lateMarch. Lease expires Sep. 30.Renewable. Call Lasky 947 3905 or493 7318. RAP GROUPA Women's Rap Group will meet everyMonday at 7:30 p.m. on the 3rd floor ofthe Blue Gargoyle. For more info752 5655.LITERARYMAGAZINEPrimavera is on sale in most HydePark stores & Bob's Newstand Weneed women to join the editorial staff.Call 752-5655 if you can help out.Volume4 isout!LIBERAL-REFORMSERVICESFriday, Feb. 17, 5:15 p.m., HillelSpecial Creative Service this Fri.Prepared by Liz Goldrich. PAN PIZZADELIVEREDThe Medici Delivers from 5 10:30weekdays, 5-11:30 weekends 667-7394.Save 60 cents if you pick it up yourselfSUNDAYAFTERNOON JAZZThe UC Jazz Band gives its premierconcert Sun., Feb. 19 in Ida NoyesCloister Club. 3:30 p.m.. Free.HELPLINEWANTED: People willing to committheir time to the operation of a UC in¬formation and counseling hotline.Please leave name and number at753-4206.FEDERAL SUMMERINTERNSHIPSThe Office of Career Counseling andPlacement has been asked tonominate third year college orgraduate students for internship withFederal Agencies. Interested studentsshould pick up the appropriate formsin Room 202, Reynolds Club and havethem completed and returned no laterthan March 1,1978.WOODLAWNIf you live in this areaRECYCLE!Free bundled news¬paper pickups 8 amMondays59th St.-55th St.Please place in viewof driver.RESOURCECENTER493-1466IC TRACKS CLOISTEREDJAZZUC Jazz Band Charts by Basic, Herman, etc. Sun. 3:30 p.m. in Ida NoyesCloister Club. Free.MEDICICONTINENTALBREAKFASTCome to the Medici Sunday morningfrom 9:30 -1 and enjoy Sunday papers,fresh orange juice, homemadesweetrolls, fresh fruit, homemadeyogurt and coffee All you can eat for$2.50.rAl-SArVt-MNCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYIT A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.MOrders to take Out1318 East 63rd MU 4-1062THE CAROLAN5480 S. CornellYES ..we hove large studioapartments available.YES...rental includes utilities.YES...we would appreciate theopportunity toaccommodate youMARIAN REALTY, INC.684-5400REAlTO0'THE PROBLEM OF THE PALESTINIANS:THE PSYCHOLOGICAL DIMENSIONS%Speakers:DR. AARON G. AUERBACHVisiting Clinical Psychologist in UCDept of Child Psychiatry School ofEducation Hebrew UniversityDR. THOMAS H. GORRYDeo‘ of Psychology Baptist College atCharleston South Carolina formerly *augh* a*American Univ. in Beirut LebanonFRIDAY - FEBRUARY 17th - 8:30 P.M.HILLEL FOUNDATION 5715 WOODLAWNEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYE WEARCONTACT LENSESUK. KURTROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plazal1200 East 53rd Street493-8:172 VERSAILLES525 1 S. I)orvliesterWELL MAINTAINEDBIDDINGAuractiie 1 Vfc and2*2 |{nom StudiosKiirni»lie«l or I nfiirimlittlSI 71 to §2.53on \\ ailahililvMl l lilitif. included\i ( aiii|)ii« Itu- 'SlopFA 1-0200 Mrs. (iroak KENNEDY, RYAN, M0MGAI & ASSOCIATES, INC.iDirectory of ValuesWe Know Hyde ParkReal Estate Inside OutHOUSES FOR SALENORTHOF47TH STREETBrick & frame home, brickgarage, new elec., 8 rms. Theadvance north has started.Get in on the ground floor!$12,500. Move-in cond. To see,call Richard E. Hild. 667-6666(res. 752-5384).NATURAL ELEGANCEEverything a family couldwant. 5 bedrooms, 3’/2 baths -enclosed yard, 2-car garage,finished basement, spaciouskitchen, sun parlor, 2woodburning fireplaces &much more in this mintcondition Jackson ParkHighlands home. To see, callEleanor Coe, 667-6666. APARTMENTSPLUS COMMERCIALHYDE PARKChoice 53rd Street location.26 Apts, plus lots of first floorcommercial space. Goodincome. Assumable mor¬tgage in place, price $265.00.For further info, call RichardE. Hild, 667-6666 (res. 752-5384).RAY SCHOOL DISTRICTTWO FLATNeeds work, frame, $48,000.To see, call Richard E. Hild,667-6666 (res. 752-5384).APARTMENTS FOR SALERAY SCHOOL DISTRICT2 bedrms. & 2 baths plus astudy make this condo idealfor a small family or youngcouple. Completelymodernized. Inside parking,wood working shop & more.558,000. To see, call RichardE. Hild 667-6666 (res. 752-5384).LOOK TO THE LAKEMost attractive 2 bedrm.coop apt. w/lrg. liv. rm., tiledbath, cozy kit. w/appliancesincl. Excellent location.Priced at $19,750 To see, CallMrs. Ridlon. 667-6666.BRETHARTE SCHOOLLarge living rm. w/nicesunroom area for plants. 3bedrms., formal dining rm.,l’/2 baths. Come w/ap¬pliances (including washer &dryer). Asking $45,000. CallNadine Hild, 667-6666 (res.752-5384).57TH& KENWOODKenwood Green 3 bedrm., 2bath condo home facing park.Modern kitchen, baths,woodburning fplc. Newlydecorated. Spring possession.This one won't last! $64,500.To see, call Mrs. Haines, 667-6666RIGHTONTHEMIDWAYIt's your choice—3 rooms or 4in beautifully maintainedcoop. Many built-ins oakfloors. Low assmts $11,900 or$16,900 Call E leanor Coe 667-6666. LAKE VIEWFrom living rm., dining rm.& bedrm, in this beautifullydecorated 2 bedrm., 2 bath hi-rise apt. Asking $48,500.Reasonable assmts. CallNadine Hild, 667-6666 (res752-5384).CONVENIENCE PLUSIn this newer elevator bldg,w/parking. Attractive 1bedrm. condo w/balcony sundeck, laundry & game rms.—ideal living for busy coupleLow assmt. Priced in low30's. Call Mr. Goldschmidt orMrs. Ridlon 667-6666.75TH ON THE LAKEThis modern 3 bedrm., 2’zbath condo w/sunken livingrm. is in move-in condition.All appliances includingwasher 8. dryer are a part ofthe package. Asking $48,900.Call Nadine Hild about theextras. 667 6666 (res. 752-5384).ONLYONE LEFTRenovated condo 3 bedroom,2 bath apt. With large sunporch and new kitchen.$39,800. Call Afred Dale 667-6666 or 955-7522.57th & KENWOODKenwood Green 3 bedrm., 2bath Condo home facingpark. Modern kitchen, baths,woodburning fplc. Newlydecorated. Spring possession.$64,500. To see call Mrs.Haines 667 66661461 East 57th Street, Chicago Illinois 60637667-6666Daily 9 fo 5 Sat 9 to 1, Or cal! 667 6666 AnytimeCall us tor a free no obligation estimate of value ofyour home condominium or co oowithThe St. Louis JazzQuartet withJeanne Trevor“Their music engages the mind and thesenses; the nerves lurking just below theskin tingle with a recognition of somethingfine.” “She is the best example of a musicianwho has refused to be imprisoned by eith¬er style or tradition.HUTCH COMMONS 8 & 10 p.m.Tickets Still Available Presented by the$3 w/fee; $5 Major Activities BoardMary Lou Williamspianist, arranger, composer-always on theforefront of jazz, from swing to bop to mod¬ern. Currently artist-in-residence at DukeUniversity.20 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, February 17,1978