Carter meets student pressat first college conferenceBy James HymanPresident Carter andmembers of his staff held whatproved to be a disappointingpress conference for 200 col¬lege news editors and directorslast month in Washington, D.C.Communications announc¬ing the meeting implied thatthis, the first college news con¬ference since the Kennedy ad¬ministration, would be an op¬portunity for students to ques¬tion Carter as well as membersof the Cabinet.Instead, Carter’s 40-minutequestion and answer sessionwas the only highlight in aday-long schedule of meetings with lesser under-secretariesand advisors.Even the meeting withCarter provided no noteworthyresponses, largely because hehad covered nearly all majorissues in a press conferencewith the National Press Clubthe previous day. As a result,the entire affair proved to bemore of a public relationsmaneuver by the administra¬tion than an opportunity forstudents to question top ad¬ministrators on major issues.Carter answered 12 ques¬tions and then concluded withan extemporaneous 10-minutespeech on the future of theCarter top. 2 President Carter at a recent press conference for college students.Vol. 87, NO. 45 Thp Universiiy of Chicago © The Chicago Maroon 1978 Tuesday, April 4, 1978Classicist namedHum master assumes postafter prolonged searchBy Abbe FletmanAfter a 10-month search andrefusals by at least two can¬didates, W. Braxton Ross,associate professor ofClassical languages andliteratures has been namedmaster of the humanities col¬legiate division. He assumedthe post April 1.Dean of the CollegeJonathan Z. Smith admittedthat the position took “a whileto fill.” Because the Universi¬ty stresses research andteaching, it is often difficult tofind professors willing tospend time in administrativeactivities. Smith said.“Being master is not a jobthat brings power or financialNew humanities division masterBraxton Ross: “a short first-listperson.” (Photo by SharonPollack) rewards,” said Smith.“You make a short first list,a short second list and a shortthird list,” said Smith. “Mr.Ross is a short first list per¬son.”Ross is responsible for staff¬ing Common Core courses,evaluating concentration pro-grams, hiring in thehumanities collegiate division,and drawing up the divisionalbudget.Ross, who has been at theUniversity for 10 years, hasnot taught undergraduatestudents for several years.Due to his unfamiliarity withCollege programs, Ross saidhe has been spending the lastfew weeks “finding out what’sgoing on in the humanities col¬legiate division.”He meets often with Smithand Karl Weintraub, dean ofthe humanities division. Healso plans to meet soon withthe Student Advisiory Com¬mittee of the humanities divi¬sion.“My immediate plan is tolisten and learn, to raise ques¬tions and to inform myself,”said Ross.Ross admitted that he wasreluctant to take the post atfirst because of his lack of ad¬ministrative experience. Buthe was convinced that becauseof his lack of experience, hewould be in a perfect positionto bring a fresh perspective tothe division. “I could comefrom the outside, ask ques¬tions, and act like a third par¬ty,” said Ross.Hum master top. 2 Faculty S. Africa reaction mixed;Bellow takes human rights standBy Richard BiernackiIn a recent poll, 32 Universityfaculty members expressed awide range of opinions on theSouth Africa issue and Nobel-laureate Saul Bellow took astrong stand against in¬vestments in repressive govern¬ments.Bellow disagreed with theUniversity’s refusal to takepolitical stands and indicatedthat the trustees should con¬sider human rights issues in allinvestment decisions.“We have relations with allkinds of governments that seempretty wicked,” said thenovelist. “If you want to divestfrom all of them, I am withyou.”But Bellow objected todemonstrators singling outSouth Africa to protest and ig¬noring other repressive govern¬ments. “If you want to tacklethem one at a time, starting withSouth Africa, I wont to see therest of the list,” he said.In a rare public statement.Bellow offered The Maroon hisgeneral philosophy on Universi¬ty investment policies: “I amfor virtue and not for vice,”he said.But Bellow’s views seem to besomewhat to the left of the ten¬tative and cautious attitude ex¬pressed by most facultymembers interviewed by TheMaio'n about South African in¬vestments.Many faculty membersdisagreed that the Universityshould sell its holdings in com¬panies with South Africanoperations, though several weredisturbed by the trustees’handling of the issue to date.Only -one quarter of the 32faculty members leaned toward disposing of University stock inthose operations, and half saidthey would not take a stand un¬til U. S. subsidiary firms ir.South Africa aie m o i ethoroughly probed. The remain¬ing faculty members either wereuninterested or contended thatthe trustees should serve asfinancial guardians without try¬ing to evaluate the wide-rangingpolitical implications of endow¬ment investments.Twenty- nine facultymembers, a resounding majori¬ty. rejected the argument thattheir academic freedoms mightbe endangered if the Universitytook an open political stand to divest itself of South Africanstocks. The prime considerationfor most faculty members waswhether pulling U S. corpora¬tions out of South Africa actual¬ly would help undermine thatcountry's apartheid policies,not whether the Universityshould take explicit politicalstands.“That academic freedomargument can be twisted.” saidbiology professor Arnold Ravin,a faculty member who wanted toknow more about corporatepolicies before making his mindup on divestiture.Reaction top. 2Reaction from p. 1“I think there are limits to that kind otivory tower righteousness. If there wereclear evidence certain companies weredirectly supporting a totalitarianregime, there would have to be a limit tohow long the University should keepstocks in them.”Against divestitureOpponents of divestiture explainedthat political responsibilities should notbe delegated to groups such as boards oftrustees that may not be subject todemocratic controls. As an alternative,they recommended that the federalgovernment, which is supposed to besensitive to public opinion, might be per¬suaded to pass legislation restricting U.S. investment in South Africa.Assistant professor in the DivinitySchool Larry Greenfield was one of thefew faculty members who thought thetrustees should never make “overtpolitical or moral decisions.”“What expertise does the investmentcommittee have on ethically sensitivequestions?” Greenfield asked. “If U. S.companies should not be in South Africaon moral grounds, I think action shouldbe taken by Congress — I want publicaccountability and a part in shaping thatdecision.”Because the trustees are notdemocratically elected, Greenfield said,they should invest endowment funds ac¬cording to purely economic considera¬tions to avoid subsidizing partisansocial causes.Sociology professor EdwardLaumann, drawing on his view of societyin which advanced institutions servespecialized functions, came to a similarconclusion.“Different elites have different stan¬dards of performance. The trustees arecompetent to make economic decisions,not political ones,” Laumann said. “Thefederal government could quicklychange the whole picture by cutting outtax credits for U S. companies operatingin South Africa — that is where thepressure should be put.”Because businesses work in private,Laumann said, they should let thegovernment make political judgementsso “the decisions will be out in the openand we can raise bloody hell where itbelongs.”Another foe of divestiture, Englishprofessor Mark Ashin, called the debateon investments in South Africa “apointless controversy.”“The Left has decided to pick up onthis and push it for all it is worth.” saidAshin. “But the University derives sup¬port from many corporations andsources with which somebody could findmoral fault. To be consistent you wouldhave to say the University should notderive income from corporations withmorally questionable practicesanywhere in the world.”Anthropologist Sol Tax objected tosuch a view because, “it could always beused to justify indifference, doingnothing. It says that if you cannot dogood for everybody, you should not dogood for anybody.“Added Tax: “Maybewe cannot get a perfectly clean portfolio,but we can try to do better.”Tax said the University has an obliga¬tion to set its own ethical standards toregulate investments because thegovernment may not be the final judge ofmorality. He questioned the relevance ofthe argument that divestment wouldpoliticize the University by arguing thatthe board of trustees does not purport tospeak for everyone in the University soit can make ethical judgements withoutimposing them on the academic com¬munity. The board already restricts in¬vestments on moral grounds, he said,because they do not put endowmentfunds in such highly profitable — andlegal — businesses as casinos and liquorstores. EconomicsSeveral professors thought that theUniversity should divest as a matter-of-course if it could receive the samereturns on its endowment portfolio.Others contended that the issue isprimarily a moral one, and that theeconomic consequences of divestituremust be borne at almost any cost. Butalmost all agreed that the trusteesshould release more information on thefeasability of divesting.Tax called on the trustees to issue apublic brief explaining their decisionagainst divestiture. ’ “Why hasn’tanybody in the treasurer’s office told usexactly how much is made by holding on¬to the South Africa stock?'’ he asked.“We want the money, but not at the costof supporting apartheid.”Said associate professor in the CollegeRichard Taub: “It is not as if there is on¬ly one best possible portfolio which theUniversity can hold — in fact, it may benuts to make massive investments incommon stock in view of the stockmarket's performance.”Professors contacted in the businessschool agreed that the University coulddivest without lowering its overall rateof return on the endowment, but theycautioned that it would make the schoolmore dependent on the fate of particularcompanies.Business professor Merton Miller, afinance expert, concluded that theUniversity would bear an unnecessaryrisk for the same rate of return by“violating the principle of not putting allyour eggs in one basket.”Another professor in the. businessschool, Roger Ibbotson, who once work¬ed in the treasurer’s office of the Univer¬sity, cautioned that divestiture probablywould be an ineffective means of pro¬testing U.S. corporate policy in SouthAfrica.Ibbotson explained that institutionalinvestors do not have enough clout in themarketplace to impose their ethics oncorporations because all the schools andfoundations in the country together con¬trol only four percent of the money in thestock market.Said Ibbotson: “If there were a lot ofpeople joining together to divest, to theextent they depressed certain stockprices, it would be the socially consciousuniversities that would be hurt by sell¬ing their stock at a reduced price. Thecynics could rush in to pick upbargains.”Pulling U.S. corporations out of SouthAfrica, would have a short run detrimen¬tal impact on the economy, he said, but ifthe U.S. left behind lucrative profit op¬portunities, other foreign investorswould step in to buy the economy in thelong run. On the other hand, leaving therealm of pure economics Ibbotson con¬cluded that he “might favor" withdraw¬ing U.S. companies as a political move toput pressure on South Africa to makeconcessions to the black majority.AccountabilityAlthough faculty members soberlyavoided challenging the trustees’ finalauthority to determine investmentpolicy, a few thought the trustees had anobligation to account for their decisions.Others were concerned that the trustees’close ties to mcst of the large banks andcorporations making profits in SouthAfrica make it difficult for them to ar¬rive at impartial decisions ondivestiture.Ravin said he believes “a fair numberof the trustees are not disinterested. I amnot sure whether they are the best peopleto collect information on the subject forus.”Philosophy professor Daniel Garberadded that, “So many of the trustees arebusinessmen, it may be a difficult per¬sonal thing for them to admit they maybe wrong about South Africa. They ex¬tend their personal views to dealing withthe University’s money, but I suspect the University has an obligation to bemore scr-upulous about its investments.”“What bothers me most,” Garber con¬tinued, “is the board of trustees unwill¬ingness to conduct a serious discussion.The responsible thing for them to do is tomake a case and discuss it with represen¬tatives of students and faculty in anopen forum.”Taub, echoing Garber, criticized thetrustees for their “depressing unwill¬ingness” to engage in an open debt tewith students on the issue.Said Taub: “The administration stillhas not recovered from the 1960’s. Theysuffer a beseiged mentality that keepsthings closed-up. This is an educationalinstitution, and when students raiseissues the University has an obligationto respond in an educational fashion.”But not all professors were sooutspoken. A more typical responsecame from international affairs expertMorton Kaplan, who said he does notcare what the trustees do because theUniversity’s endowment is not largeenough to have any concrete effect uponthe South African economy. Kaplanthought it would be “an interestingeducational experiment” to set up acourse for credit to examine U.S. in¬vestments in South Africa.Most faculty members said thatwhether U.S. investment in South Africaprops up the government or whether theUniversity can base its portfolio uponpolitical or moral concerns are complexquestions for which they have noanswers.Most faculty members willing to com¬ment said more important concerns areraised by the University’s financiallinks to South Africa than by its ties toother repressive countries. Although afew favored a broader investigation intothe University’s economic links to otherpolice states, a majority believed thatSouth Africa’s condemnation by theworld community, its racial policies, andits openly rebellious black liberationmovements make it a singular invest¬ment problem which the trustees shouldexamine with care.Carter from p. 1United States and the role students willplay.“I really admire what you all stand forand what you can do and ask you to joinwith me in a partnership to make ourcountry even greater,” Carter said.Other briefings in the morning wereconducted by Jill Schuker, the specialassistant to the assistant secretary forpublic affairs, who spoke about thePanama Ca,nal treaties; Mary Berry,assistant secretary for education, whodiscussed the administration’s plan toincrease student aid and extend repay¬ment programs though she mentioned nospecific new policies; and DavidRubenstein, deputy assistant to thePresident for domestic affairs andpolicy, who reconfirmed the administra¬tion’s committment to governmentalreorganization and gave background in¬formation on Carter’s energy policy.Following the meeting with Carter,students interviewed Midge Constanza,a top Presidential advisor, who noted asplit within the administration over thepotential Nazi demonstration in Skokie.Costanza said that she and other ad¬visors oppose the march while Cartersupports the Nazi’s right to march.“I resent their using the very freedomsthat they would like to remove fromother people,” said Costanza, comparingthe Nazis to the Ku Klux Klan and theMafia.Constanza also answered questionsabout Carter’s public image and reluc¬tantly admitted that the President’s in¬ability to speak dynamically was a pro-blepi that adversely affects his populari¬ty. She said that television exposure isparticularly bad for Carter’s image.Costanza also announced that similarmeetings with students will be held at0 — Tho fhirann AAarnrtn — T Anri I 4. 1978 Political sociologist Morris Janowitz,one of the professors who said he needs amore thorough report on South Africabefore committing himself on thedivestiture issue, said University invest¬ment in that country is a “special case”on which there should be “ongoingdebate.” But he cautioned that, “thecase for economic boycott rests more onmoral considerations than on practicalconsequences. The record of the impactof economic sanctions since the efforts ofthe League of Nations in the 1930’s hashardly been impressive.”“The reason we should divest fromSouth Africa and not South Korea orsomeplace else,” said anatomy professorLeonard Radinsky, “is that the strugglethere has heated up. Now is the timewhen divestiture will have an effect onthat particular country.”Radinsky said the trustees havealready endorsed a political position bycontinuing to invest millions of dollarsin companies that profit from the SouthAfrican economy. He asked that thetrustees give up their neutrality to “takea principled stand to give support to theprogressive forces in South Africa.”Seymour Glagov, a pathologist in themedical school, who said he is “general¬ly sympathetic to divestiture,” warnedthat the University might become a par¬tisan club if it always took action onpolitical issues. Unlike Radinsky,Glagov thought the University couldstay neutral on controversies of the day,although he added that in exceptionalcases “it has to draw the line.”The demand for divestiture is “anespecially touchy case,” Glagov said,because selling stock would be a mean¬ingful gesture only as part of a nationalanti-apartheid camgaign that wouldsquarely align the University with out¬side political forces.Nevertheless, Glagov concluded that“Universities have an obligation toassume moral leadership in society onthe really crucial issues. Faculty andstudents saw through the Vietnam messsooner than the rest of the country. Theyserve as a kind of barometer of things tocome.”least annually during Carter’s term inoffice. Invitations to the conference weresent to college newspapers and radio sta¬tions across the country and represen¬tatives of the first 200 organizations torespond were allowed to attend. Butregional quotas were imposed, enablingschools from the 48 contiguous states tosend representatives. Funds from TheMaroon, WHPK-FM, and WAIT-AMenabled the University to berepresented.Hum master from p. 1"Inherently and philosophically, I amvery deeply committed to undergraduateeducation,” said Ross. “I have missedcontact with undergraduates. I see thispost as allowing me to reinvolveundergraduates.”“It is students and faculty memberswho really shape the curriculum,” hecontinued. He sees his role as “enablingstudents and faculty members to do thethings they really want to do and dobest.”Ross said that the interchange bet¬ween a student and a faculty memberwhen the student is working on a BApaper is often beneficial, but “the BApaper is sometimes a pretty isolated ex¬perience.’’ He beUeves thatundergraduates should also have contactwith other students in their field and willconsider instituting senior seminars.Smith, who last held the humanitiespost, has been acting both as Dean of theCollege and Master of the CollegiateHumanities Division since July. “I amimpressed by Mr. Ross’s capacity tothink out a problem and to design a cur¬riculum stressing unity and concentra¬tion. said Smith. “And I’m delighted tobe relieved of the job.”NewsBriefsCommager oncivil libertiesAmerican historian Henry SteeleCommager will deliver the Janet PoliakCivil Liberties lecture entitled “EqualProtection & Social Justice” on Thurs¬day, April 6, at 4 pm in Breasted Hall inthe Oriental Institute.The lecture, jointly sponsored by theRoger Baldwin Foundation of theAmerican Civil Liberties Union and thehistory department, was made possibleby a grant from Fay Horton Sawyier. Itis free ana open to the public.Commager, now a professor atAmherst College, taught at ColumbiaUniversity for many years. He has heldchairs in American history at Cam¬bridge, Oxford, and numerous otheruniversities. His most recent book waspublished in 1977 and his 1972 work,“The Empire cf Reason” was awarded aGold Medal by the American Academyof Arts and Letters.Former phys edchairman deadEdith Ballwebbe’. professor emeritusand chairman of the women's physicaleducation department from 1938 to 1966,died last month at a nursing home inOlney, Ill. at age 77.The former director of the Ida Noyes ■Clubhouse joined the University facultyin 1927, after receiving a B.S. from Col¬umbia University and an M.A. from NewYork University in 1934. NSF to fund -student study .The National Science Foundation hasawarded a $17,300 grant to a group ofCollege students to study communityorganizations and urban decay inChicago this summer.Third-year student Eric Von derPorten will direct the student researchproject, and Richard Taub, associateprofessor in the College, will act asfaculty advisor.The group of third- and fourth-yearstudents will study Austin, aneighborhood in northwestern Chicago,to evaluate the role of communityorganizations in preventing thedeterioration of a community undergo¬ing racial transition.The students in the group have dif¬ferent backgrounds and skills. Their ma¬jors include political science, history,anthropology and psychology.There are still openings for people whowould like to participate in the study,said Von der Porten. Any interestedundergraduates should contact him at363-6086.Humor issueIn case there was any question, lastFriday’s New Chicago Maroon was ac¬tually our annual humor issue. The con¬tents were in jest and therefore not in¬tended to bear an overt resemblance topresent reality or even to our darkestpredictions for the future. We only hopeThe Maroon of 1988 will not bepublishing the kinds of articles we envi¬sioned last week. Woodward CourtCourt Theatre director D. Nicholas Rudallwill lecture at Woodward Court May 2. spring scheduleA University tradition, the WoodwardCourt lecture series, which celebrated its100th lecture last fall, brings fiveoutstanding lecturers to Woodward thisquarter. They are:• Wayne C. Booth, George M.Pullman Distinguished Service Pro¬fessor of English on Mere Rherotic,Rhetoric, and Reality, April 11;• Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, associateprofessor of behavioral sciences, presen¬ting Enjoyment and the Quality of Life,April 25;• D. Nicholas Rudall, associate pro¬fessor in Classcial Languages andliteratures and Court Theater director,delivering A Borrowed Voice: TheEnglish Poetry of Wales, May 2;• Philip B. Kurland, William R.Kenan, Jr., Distinguished Service Pro¬fessor in the College, lecturing onJudicial Government, May 9: and.• Carl Sagan, David Duncan Pro¬fessor of Astronomy and Space Sciencesand director of the Laboratory forPlanetary Studies at Cornell Universitypresenting The Exploration of Mars,May 18.Discussions and refreshments willfollow all lectures, which are held at 8:30pm.Poetry winnerscontact MaroonThe Maroon has lost the addresses ofthe winners of last quarter's poetry com¬petition. Poets whose work appeared inthe Literary Issue should contact TheMaroon as soon as possible to receivetheir awards.A« « T^r.cTqro!\ 1 O *> n \T o ^ A Vr VOHSPECIALDISCOUNT 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 LOCATIONM,1m CHEVROLETVOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE7234 Stony IslandPhone: 684-0400Open Dafty 9-9 P.M./ Sat. 9-5 P.M.Part* Open Saturday 'tM 12 Noon picturethis...at phofoShotvinternationalTh# Big Show...n*w and dlffarant...ratuma to Chicago! Tha nation ’» largaatpublic photo axpoaltlon! 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April 4. 10:30 a.m.Office of Career Counseling and PlacementThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 4, 1978 — 3ve got Pabst Blue Ribbon on my mind '.PABST BPC WING COMPANYMilwaukee Peoria Heights Newark I os Angeles PabstTravel CheaplyCAMPING THROUGH EUROPEGreat Britain 21 days: England, Wales, Scotland, $298.00 plus air fareArtie Circle 22 days: Germany, Denmark, Norway, Finland, Sweden$405.00Western Europe 22 days: France, Italy, Austria, Switzerland, Germany,Holland, Belgium, $406.00Greece 28 days: Germany, Austria Hungary, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria,Turkey, Greece, Italy, Belgium $41 8.00Plus many more Russia North Africa South AmericaCALL PROMENAD TRAVEL799-2606 THE PERCEPTION OF SCIENCE ACCORDING TOBOTH THE MYSTICAL AND RATIONAL TRADITION OF TORAHSPEAKER 'PROFESSOR PAUL RACCAH Head of Den* o* PhysicsUniversity of Illinois • Chicaao Circ*nWHERE THE RAYIT 84S8 Sooth Everett AvenueWHEN Friday Anril 7th • 9 00 P MSHABBAT DINNER PRECEDING LECTURE AT THE BAYI fSinn uo at Hillel hv Wednesday Ann! 8*hCo-Snonsored with Thn Association for TorahAdvancement4 — The Chicaoo Maroon — Tuesday. Aoril 4.1978The U of C Press:America’s largest academic publisherBy Karen Heller“In the world of British and Americanuniversity presses,” an editor at a com¬mercial publishing house said, “there isOxford and Cambridge, then Chicago,and then everything else. Chicago is thepremier American university press. Inquality, in quantity, in books and injournals, there is no other academichouse that approaches it.”There are very few peopleknowledgeable in the field of scholarlypublishing who would argue with thatstatement. Those few who might areemployed at the second and third largestAmerican university presses whichwould like to claim Chicago’s status astheir own.Recently. Publisher’s Weekly printedan article about Harvard UniversityPress in which the editors stated thattheir’s was the largest. In response tothis claim. Morris Philipson, Director ofthe University of Chicago Press said:“Chicago is the largest in number oftitles in print and in volume of sales. Wehave 3.000 titles. That’s a good deal morethan any other American universitypress. In amount of income and of unitssold we are twice as large as Harvard.”On the average, the University ofChicago Press publishes 200 new clothand paperback books each year duringthe fall and spring seasons. These booksare divided into three types: cloth booksof general interest, cloth books of specialinterest, and paperbacks of the Phoenixand Midway reprints. In a report fromthe 1976 conference of the Association ofAmerican University Presses (AAUP), Oxford is listed as publishing 564 titles.Cambridge 335, and Chicago 190. The on¬ly American press which surpassedChicago that year was California with203 titles but this number includes all ofpamphlets published by that press.The Press is proud of its JournalsDivision which is by far the largest inthe States among University presses. Inthe same 1976 AAUP report, Chicago,with 36 journals, is the second largestacademic publisher of journals in theworld. Only Cambridge is larger,credited with publishing 50 journals.Since the report appeared, the Press’sjournals list has expanded to 39, andseveral more are in the pre-productionstage.The Press employs about 250 people,most of whom work on floors three, fourand seven of the AdministrationBuilding. Many are employed at thePress’s warehouse and business office,located in suburban Pullman. Thewarehouse stores between three and fivemillion books. Eight people work at theLondon office which supervises Britishand overseas sales, accounting forroughly 10 percent of the Press’s totalsales. There are about seven salesmenresponsible for Africa and the Conti¬ nent. In the U.S. there are three regionalsales people, one based in New York andtwo in Chicago. The area sales managersalso hire commissioned representatives.The University of Chicago Press is asold as the University. William RaineyHarper conceived of the Press as one ofthe three main divisions of the Universi¬ty. defining it as. “not as an incident, anattachment, but. . . as an organic part ofthe institution.” During 1891. thePress’s first year of operation, onlybulletins and University announcementswere printed. The following year. D.C.Heath helped transform the Press into aproper publishing house. In 1892 thePress published five books and five jour¬nals. three of which, the Journals ofPolitical Economy, the Journal ofGeology, and the Journal of NearEastern Studies (originally entitledHebraica) are still published today.Until 1905. the Press, under strictguidelines established by Harper, wassolely concerned with “the printing andpublishing of books prepared or editedby University instructors.” An enor¬mous deficit accrued during the first fewyears of operation even though the Presshad already gained considerableprestige. Harper, not an unbiased critic. wrote in 1904. “It is safe to say that noseries of scientific publications so com¬prehensive in its scope and of so great amagnitude has ever been issued at onetime by any learned society or institu¬tion. or by private enterprise.” Soonafter making this claim. Harper arguedbefore the Trustee's Committee on Pressand Extension that perhaps the Presscould consider publishing works of com¬parable quality written or edited byscholars outside the University.The Press continues to publish asizeable number of books by currentUniversity faculty. Editor-in-Chief JohnRyden states: “There is a comfortableand fruitful relationship betweenUniversity professors and the Universi¬ty of Chicago Press.” He estimated thatabout 20 percent of an entire year’s (thatis two seasons') titles are written byfaculty members. In the spring 1978 list,there are books by 25 current or formerUniversity faculty members.Sometimes University facultymembers publish books with differentpresses. The Press does not publishlarge textbooks. A law professor mightpublish a special monograph withChicago and a textbook at a house thatspecializes in textbook publishing.Although the Press publishes many ofWilliam McNeill's books, he has alsopublished with five commericalpublishing houses. Promotion Manager.Dick DeBacher said, “We do have someoverlap with commercial and textbookspublishers. We publish books that mayUC Press top. 6The University of Chicago Press is as old as theUniversity. Harper conceived of the Press as one of thethree main divisions of the University.UC Press from p. 5be used as textbooks, such as Animalswithout Backbones, but we’re not atextbook publisher by any means.’’Ryden defined the majority of thePress’s publications as “scholarlymonographs of two to three hundredpages.”Morris Philipson is the current Direc¬tor of the University of Chicago Press.Before coming here in 1966, he served asEditor of Vintage Paperbacks at Knopf,as Editor of trade books at RandomHouse, and as Senior Editor at BasicBooks. Asked to define the Press’s rela¬tionship with the University, he said:“The Press is an academic departmentof the University with a unique arrange¬ment, appropriate to the fact that it pro¬duces publications and is self-supporting out of the income it earnsfrom sales: it does not have an endow¬ment. There is a sharp separation ofresponsibility. The Press staff is respon¬sible to the President through the Pro¬vost for all financial operations but theadministration has no editorial in¬fluence: on the other hand, the FacultyBoard of University Publications hascontrol of the imprint (that is approval ofpublications) but it has no financialresponsibilities or operational involve¬ment.”Editor-in-Chief John Ryden came tothe Press in 1974. He previously workedas Executive Editor of Humanities andSocial Sciences at Harper and Row andbefore that served as History Editor inthe College Department at that press.Ryden began his publishing career atMcGraw Hill.Ryden and Philipson agree that thePress is particularly known forpublishing important scholarlymonographs in the humanities and socialsciences. The Press has also published asizeable number of biological studies. The Press publishes the fewest numberof books in the physical sciences.Three years ago the Press began theChicago Visual Library which producesworks on microfiche combined with pam¬phlets called “text-fiche.” Up untilrecently the Press had published veryfew art books, mainly because of thetremendous cost involved in printingquality reproductions. A standard fichecard is 4” x 6” and can hold 84 imagesthat can be seen on fiche viewers whichare available at most large public anduniversity libraries. The film reproduc¬tion is more authentic and clear than aprinted one because the projected slide isone generation removed from theoriginal art work. The Press was recent¬ly assisted financially on this projectwith a challenge grant from the NationalEndowment of the Humanities and sup¬port from the Wood Charitable Fund andthe Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Inadvocating the text-fiche publications,Philipson said, “The economics of thetext-fiche is stunning. The volume ofthe Whitney Museum Collection sells for$19.50 and includes 168 full-colorreproductions on three cards. Now, inthe Whitney Museum you can purchase aslide of each of these paintings for onedollar each. So you can have the slidecollection for $168. or the text-fiche for$19.50!” Asked if the Press did extensivemicrofilming, Philipson said, “We havebeen leaders of microfilm publishingsince the 1930’s.”Most university presses have distinctrules about publishing fiction and workschat are not standard as scholarlymonographs. Wesleyan and Princetonare two of the leading universitypublishers of poetry. Of all the peopleasked, no one at Chicago could clearlydefine the Press’s positions onpublishing fiction. Of all the obscureanswers, it could be best surmised thatthe Press’s publishing of fiction is more the exception than the rule. Only four orfive poets publish with the Press, “'theresult of,” Philipson commented, “someeditorial decisions made by editors hereat an earlier time. We have a commit¬ment to the poets who have previouslypublished with the Press, but we are notadding new ones. The process ».fevaluating poems is very different fromour proper business, that of scholarlypublishing.” Norman MacLean’s ARiver Runs Through It was described byone Press employee as “clearly the workof a scholar,” and by another as, “morea memoire or an autobiography (thePress regularly publishes biographies)than a work of fiction.”The Press has published several booksof fiction by the noted writer IsakDinesen (Karen Blixen). The firstDinesen book that the Press contractedfor was a short volume of essays. It wasthen discovered that most of Dinesen’sbooks were out of print in the BritishCommonwealth. During the past few"The Press staff is probablycalled on more than anyother university press togive advice to other univer¬sity presses," said directorMorris Philipson. "One ofthe definitions of being aleader in the field is thatother people ask your ad¬vice," added Editor-in-ChiefJohn Ryden.years the Press has published several ofthe late Danish author’s works, in¬cluding previously unpublished works.The Press has just released a relatedwork, Errol Trzebiniski’s Silence WillSpeak: A Study of the Life of DenysFinch Hatton and his relationship withKaren Blixen.Almost all of the authors published bythe Press hold advanced degrees and aremembers of a college or university facul¬ty or of a research institute. Rydenestimated that roughly 80 to 90 percent ofall Press hardback books are written byscholars. Some exceptions in the springpublications list are Dorothy Commins’sWhat is an Editor?; Saxe Commins atWork, Trezebinski’s Silence Will Speak,and Isak Dinesen’s Carnival. Rydensaid that the Press is especially in¬terested in publishing a scholar’s firstbook. “One of the Press’s primary con¬cerns is the cultivation of works byyounger members of the faculty. Once awork is published by the Press, a pro¬fessor might well continue to send subse¬quent books for publishing considera¬tion.”The selection of new titles is an in¬tellectually thorough and often time-consuming process. “We are unusual inthe aggressiveness with which we seekout new books. The acquisition editorscall on previously published authors andon new writers. We have advisors hereand abroad who inform us about majorwriting in scholarly areas,” said Ryden.In addition, the Press receives between700-800 unsolicited queries andmanuscripts. Laura Gruen, Assistant tothe Journals Manager, said that of the1975-76 season, the Journals Divisionreceived 21 proposals, only three ofwhich were accepted. Some of these pro¬posals were for the acquisition ofalready established journals whose cur¬rent publisher, either scholarly orprivate, could no longer financially sup¬port production costs.1 Initial selection of a manuscript ismade by one of the six acquisitionitors. Each editor is responsible forreviewing manuscripts and queries in aspecific area or areas such as education,humanities, business and economics,although there often is some overlap. Incovering only a few areas, an acquisition editor is more capable of staying in¬formed of important scholarly researchin his assigned fields. Of these editorsonly two were previously employed atcommercial publishing houses. AllenFitchen, Senior Editor responsible forthe Humanities, came here from Mac¬Millan. Associate Editor for HistoryDouglas Mitchell was previouslyemployed at Scott-Foresman, one ofChicago’s largest commericalpublishers. All of the other AssociateEditors were trained at the Press.What kind of criteria are used in selec¬ting Manuscripts for publication? “Ifsomeone submits a book that has noconnection with either the nature of ourlist or the courses taught at our parentUniversity, it is easy to decline. The ma¬jority of our books are original contribu¬tions to scholarship. Some books likeKurland’s Watergate and theConstitution or Robert Engler’s TheBrotherhood of Oil are for the educationgeneral reader,” said Ryden. Philipsonadded, “The editorial staff is concernedwith books that are not easy to decline.”After an Acquisitions Editor decidesto consider a manuscript, usually afterseveral consultations with otherscholars in the field, the manuscript issent out to a recognized specialist in thearea for extensive criticism. Once thesecomments are received, the manuscriptis sent back to the author for revision.Ann Barret, Director of Publicity, saidthat the specialist’s evaluations usuallyfall “somewhere between terrible andmarvelous.” After the author has madechanges based on the specialists’ com¬mentary, the revised manuscript is sentout to another specialist for furthercriticism. The manuscript is then givenback to the author for further revision, ifrequired. Finding specialists who havethe time and getting the referencereports returned takes at the very leasta couple of months. In the event of con¬troversy or disagreement, themanuscript may be sent to a thirdspecialist.The Board of University Publicationsconsists of 15 faculty members who areappointed by the Provost. No book canbe published without the Board’s per¬mission. The Board meets monthly toconsider the reports on proposed books.At these conferences, the Boardmembers discuss dockets that containreports filed by the acquisition editor,the specialists who have served asreferences, and the author. Most pro¬posals, if they have made it this far, areapproved by the Board.Once a proposal has been approved itis given to the Office of Right® and Per¬missions. A contract is drawn up and issigned by the author. A pre-productionmeeting is then held at which the aquisi-tion editors, manuscript editors andmembers from the Production andMarketing departments discuss theplans for three to five books. Each bookis given to a manuscript editor who ischarged with editing for syntactical,grammatical and factual coherency.Most of the 10 manuscript editors havehigher degrees and some read severallanguages. A few editors are particularlyknowledgeable in a specific area such asmusic or math which supplements theirstylistic editing abilities. The editorialdepartment usually works one to twoseasons in advance. Ryden said that thePress is currently preparing books forspring and fall 1979.The quantity of the first printing ofeach book is determined by its subjectmatter. Recent publications like EdwardWasiolek’s Tolstoy's Major Fiction orWilliam Julius Wilson’s The DecliningSignificance of Race: Blacks and Chang¬ing American Institutions are clearlybooks of general interest while CharlesW. Jones’s Saint Nicholas of Myra.Bari, and Manhattan: Biography of aLegend and Michael Ermath’s WilhelmDilthey: The Critique of Historical“THE BRITISH ECONOMY:Its Present Position and Future Prospect”The Eighth Henry Simons LectureTuesday, April 4,19788:00pmThe Glen A. Lloyd Auditorium,The University of Chicago Law SchoolLecturer: SAMUEL BRITTANVisiting Professor in Economics &Principal Economic Commentatorof the “Financial Times”6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesdav Aori\ 4. 1978Reason are considered of special in¬terest. The first two books might initial¬ly receive a 5,000 print run while the lat¬ter two might have a limited run of 1,500.These decisions are made at the pre-production meetings. Sometimes 5,000copies of a book are printed but only2,000 are bound and distributed. The re¬maining 3,000 copies are left as foldedand gathered sheets (F and G’s), “If thebook ‘moves’ very quickly then we’llcloth-bind the F and G’s, otherwise we’llrelease them in paperback,” said Promo¬tion Manager DeBacher.While the book is being edited, theProduction department works on thedesign. Writing copy for the book jacketand the Press’s semi-yearly catalogue ishandled by the Marketing department.Type is set for many of the books on thePress’s compuwriters on the seventhfloor of the Administration Building.According to Ryden, less than half ofthe Press’s new books are sent to otherpresses for printing. Most of the large,special productions require specialequipment that the Press does not own.A recent publication, The HistoricalAtlas of South Asia, an enormouslyelaborate and comprehensive referencebook was printed by Rand McNally.Each author who has signed a contractwith the Press is sent a questionnaireasking where he feels his book should beadvertised and reviewed. The author’sresponses are taken into considerationwhen the Publicity and Productionmanagers start formal promotion of thebook. Publicity Manager Ann Barret isresponsible for all free promotion. Booksof general interest are sent to the BookEditors of major book-reviewing jour¬nals like The New York Times BookReview, The New York Review of Books,Publishers Weekly, Atlantic, Harper'sand The Times (London) LiterarySupplement. Books of special interestare mailed to the appropriate scholarlyjournals. Richard DeBacher overseesadvertising. Ads for general interesttitles are done by a professional adver¬tising firm. Ads for books of special in¬terest are written and designed in house.Many of the staff responsible for writingpromotional copy have been graduatesof the College or graduate students.DeBacher is sympathetic to hiring thelatter as he originally came to theUniversity for graduate studies himself.Leaving academic life for publishing is achoice, he said, he has never regretted.Selling 1,500 copies of a book on arather specific subject matter is easierthan it would appear. Books like RonaldM. Berndt’s Love Songs of ArnhemLand, described in the spring catalog asthe first study “to explore AustralianAboriginal sexuality as it is revealed intraditional songs,” does not seem thestuff from which Reader’s Digest con¬densed books are made. But the initialprint run can be easily sold. Companieslike Baker and Taylor, called “job¬bers” or “wholesalers,” buy large quan¬tities of a title at discount prices andthen sell to libraries. About 300-400libraries buy copies of everything thePress publishes. Specialized books clubsmay put the book on their list and buy300 copies. Up to 20 percent of sales maycome from university bookstores.Another 300 copies may be sentoverseas.Old titles, listed in the Press’s annualComplete Catalog of Books and Journalsin Print, are very important to itsprestigious position in the universitypublishing world. “The backlist” con¬stitutes the economic backbone of thePress. Seventy percent of annual salesare from backlist books. As one Pressemployee said, “the backlist pays thebills." Among the Press’s top ten bestsellers are A Manual of Style. Lat-timore’s translation of The Iliad, andMilton Friedman’s Capitalism andFreedom. The all-time best seller is AManual for Writers of Term Papers. Th » and Dissertations by KateTurabian, a fo mer Chicago dissertationsecretary who wrote the very popularguide after a suggestion that it “might beof some use and influence.” About200,000 copies of the book are sold eachyear.The Press must also consider where abook should be distributed. Most of thePhoenix paperbacks are sold in universi¬ty bookstores and bookstores in auniversity community. Some paper¬backs like Friedman’s Capitalism andFreedom and general trade cloth bookssuch as Kurland’s Watergate and theConstitution are sold to large citybookstores that cater to an educatedclientele. The Midway series are papereditions of books that have gone throughcloth and trade paper publication atChicago or another press and are printed“to keep the book in print.” A print runof a Midway title is usually between 200-500 copies. An interested reader usuallyorders a Midway title through the Pressor a university bookstore but sometimesthey are stocked at selected bookstores.Translation rights are licensed to theforeign publisher who contracts to printand distribute the book abroad. WayneBooth’s The Rhetoric of Fiction has beentranslated into five languages. Rydenestimated that Thomas Kuhn’s TheStructure of Scientific Revolutions hasbeen translated into 15 or 20 languages.“The Press staff is probably called onmore often than any other universitypress to give advice to other universitypresses," Philipsqn said. For example,the Press's Rights and PermissionsEditor was recently asked ttrchair theCommittee on New Copyright Laws.Heads of departments are often asked tospeak at AAUP and foreign pressesmeetings. Ryden said. “One of thedefinitions of being a leader in the fieldis that other people ask your advice."He also attributed Chicago’s pre¬eminence to the early establishment of AManual of Style. Originally published in1906. the book, often referred to as theChicago Manual of Style, has been con-stantly revised and expandedthroughout the years and is used by scholars and other presses everywhereas a definitive reference guide.The Press currently publishes 25 jour¬nals that it owns and 14 that are on con¬tract from societies all over the county.About 65 people work in the JournalsDivision, most of whom are crammed in¬to the main office of the third floor of theAdministration Building. The Divisionemploys about 30 editorial assistantswho work with a journal’s editor.The Journals Division, headed byJournals Manager and Assistant Direc¬tor of the Press Jean Sacks, reviews thePress’s journals in much the same waythat the rest of the Press considersbooks. Approval by the Board of Univer¬sity Publications is required in order totake over publication of an establishedjournal or to institute publication of anew journal. Five journals are reviewedeach year by the staff and the Board ofUniversity Publications. It is usuallyfirst studied by the journal’s boardmembers and contributors. In order for ascholarly journal to maintain a respectedposition in academic circles, it must beconstantly reviewed and criticized byother professionals in the field.Each article in a journal is usuallyreviewed by two specialists in the area ora related one. A journal’s editor isresponsible for making sure articles arereviewed before publication. Substan¬tive editing is done by the journal’seditor and staff. The Journals Divisionis responsible for manuscript editing,that is correcting grammatical and syn¬tactical errors, checking for conformityto each journal’s style and preparing themanuscripts for the printer.When a journal is being reviewed, itseditors present a written statement ofeditorial policies. Comprehensive com¬mentaries on the journal by esteemedscholars in each area are solicited by thePress. The five journals reviewed eachyear are customarily chosenalphabetically.Starting a journal “from scratch" is acomplicated procedure. Associate Jour¬nals Manager in charge of promotion andadvertising Irmgard Dozauer calculated that it sometimes takes up to two yearsto even get a completely new journalreviewed b^ related journals ornewspapers with large book reveiweingsections. In the past four years the Presshas published three entirely new jour¬nals: Critical Inquiry started inSeptember 1974; The Journal ofMedicine and Philosophy began inMarch 1976; and Signs: Journal ofWomen in Culture and Society first ap¬peared in Autumn 1975. This last journalpresented some difficulties in its concep¬tion. “There was nothing like it in theworld,” she said. “There was nothing tocompare it to.” While the Journals Divi¬sion searched for a permanent editor,Signs was edited in house. Sacks finallyfound Catharine Stimpson at Barnardwhom she describes as “just perfect.”With two associate editors, two manag¬ing editors, 15 international cor¬respondents in 13 countries, an 18-member advisory board, and an editorialboard of 44, Signs has one of the largeststaffs of any of the Press’s journals.Critical Inquiry, on the theory ofcriticism, the visual arts, literature,history and culture, music and film,has the largest number of subscribers(9,5001 of any of the 13 journals in thehumanities. Before the establishment ofthis journal, the Division did not publisha journal that contained articles on thearts. There is no monetary remunerationfor contributors to any of the Press'sjournals. Sacks and Dotzauer are proudof the list of Critical Inquiry's con¬tributors. Writers such as Jorge LuisBorges, John Gardner, HaroldRosenberg, Saul Bellow. Northrop Frye,and Eudora Welty could command (andhave) a high fee for the publication of thesame or a similar article in a more com¬mercial journal.A new journal is promoted throughreviews of it in other journals, directmailing to subscribers of journals ofrelated interest, overseas societies andjournals, and. occasionally, throughadvertising. Usually six months beforedistribution of the journal, the Divisionsends a letter stating that the journal ex¬ists and why to potential subscribers.Dotzauer attempts to exchange advertis¬ing with other scholarly journals. For ex¬ample an ad for Adolescent Psychologymay appear in a journal of psychology inexchange for an ad of that journal in AP.all for no charge.Besides the 13 journals in thehumanities, the Press publishes four inthe field of education, 12 in the socialsciences, six in the biological sciences,and three physical science journals.Laura Gruen, Assistant to the Journalsto the Journals Manager, said that thenumber of subscribers ranges from14,000 (Elementary School Journal) to1,300 for Physiological Zoology. Themost frequently published journal is theAstrophvsical Journal, which appears 24times a year in two parts. While somejournals staff members may work on 10to 13 journals, the Astrophvsical Journalhas its own staff to handle the constantproduction and manuscript editing.Because of its very timely findings, theAstrophvsical Journal is recorded inmicro-fiche simultaneously so that it canbe placed in a small envelope and mailedquickly to foreign subscribers.. Thelowest subscription rate is $10.00 a yearfor the Bulletin of the Center forChildren's Books which appears mon¬thly except in August. The most expen¬sive subscription rate is $130 a year forthe Astrophysical Journal.“The University of Chicago Press hasalways been in the vanguard of academicpublishing.” said an editor at a com-merical publishing house. “Thi.iv irealways new projects, new series, neuportant scholarly work published intheir books and journals. It's no wonderthat the Press has always maintained itssuperior position in the academicpublishing world."The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 4, 1978 — 7CalendarTuesdayRockefeller Chapel: Lecture-demonstrationand recital by Edward Mondello. UniversityOrganist. 12:15 pm. Rockefeller Chapel.History and Philosophy of Science:Student-faculty lunch and discussion group.12:30-2 pm. Classics 21. All interestedwelcome.Department of Economics: Workshop -“Wealth. Reservation Wage and the PhillipsCurve,” Reuven Brenner. 1:30, Rosenwald405; Workshop - “Some Evidence on theFunctional Form of the Hedonic Price Func¬tion for the Urban Housing Market.” PeterLinneman. 1:30 pm. Social Sciences 402;Workshop - “Liquidated Damages. Penalties,and the Just Compensation Principle.”Charles Goetz and Robert Scott, 4 pm. Law.C; Workshop - “A General EquilibriumModel of Asset Prices.” Christian Gilles.3:30, Social Sciences 402.Computation Center Seminar: Introductionto Computer Concepts 3:30 pm. Cobb 101.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture -“Four Periods in the Development of TurkishTheater.” Metin and. 4:00 pm. Classics 20.Department of Germanic Languages andLiteratures: “Ibsen. Then and Now,” JamesMcFarlane. University of East Anglia. 4:30 pm. Rosenwald 11.Calvert House: Religious discussion group. 7pm, International House; Bible study/prayergroup. 7 pm. Calvert House.UC Sailing Club: Race team meeting, 7 pm.Ida Noyes.International House Folkdancing: Teachingand refreshments, 7:30 pm. I-House.Science Fiction Club: "Solar Energy Pro-spectives.” Dr. O’Gallagher, 8 pm. IdaNoyes, public is invited.Hillel: Israeli Folkdancing. 8 pm. Ida Noyes.50® fee.ArtsUC Extension: Barbara Hendrivkd, soprano:Haydn. Paure. DeBussy. Strauss. 8:30 pm.Mandel Hall.DOC Film: "Pursued.” 7:30 and “The ManWho Shot Liberty Valance." 9:30, Cobb Hall.WednesdayCommittee on Genetics Colloquium: "DNASequence Reiteration without Rectification:The Petite Mutation in Yeast.” 12 noon,Zoology rm 29.Hillel: Students for Israel, speaker - EfraimInbar. “The Emergence of Israel as anIsolated State.” 12 noon. Hillel.Christian Science Organization: Topic - Con¬tinual Rebirth. 12 noon. Harper East 586.Department of Economics: Faculty Lun¬cheon. 12 noon, International House; Collo¬quium - “Reference Posterior Distributionsfor Bayesian Inference. J.M. Bernardo. Yale, 3:30 pm. Rosenwald 11.Rockefeller Chapel: Recital by RobertLodine, University Carillonneur, 12:10 pm.Rockefeller Chapel.Departments of Biochemistry and Biology,and the Molecular and Cellular BiologyTraining Grant: “On the Mechanism ofGenetic Recombination: I. Isolation ofRecombination Intermediates from IntactCells,” David Dressier, Harvard. 4 pm. Cum¬mings 101.Crossroads: English class for foreign women,2 pm. 5621 S. BlaCkstone.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: BizdenSize, “Four Periods in the Development ofTurkish Theater," Metin And, BagaziciUniversity, 4 pm. Classics 20, (discussions inTurkish).The Committee on Cognition and Com¬munication Colloquium Series: “InformationProcessing by the Human Visual System,”Hugh Wilson, 4 pm. Pick 016.University Duplicate Bridge: 7 pm, IdaNoyes, new players welcome.Badminton Club: meeting, 7:30 pm. IdaNoyes Gym.Tai Chi Chu’an Club: meeting, 7:30 pm. BlueGargloyle,UC Christian Fellowship: “Body-Life,” 7:30pm, Ida Noyes East Lounge.Astronomy Club: Discussion of plans for thequarter and after meeting telescope will beavailable for observation, 8 pm, RyersonN276A, enter through Eckhart, all welcome.Country Dancers: meeting, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Moody Lecture Committee: A reading byRobert Pack, 8 pm, Harper 130.Women’s Track Team: Tri-meet, 3 pm, StaggField.DOC Film: “Wild Boys of the Road.” 7:15and “Anatomy of a Murder,” 8:30 pm, Cobb.NAM Film “Protests Against the Shah.” 8pm, Social Service Administration, 969 E.60th.ThursdayDepartment of Biochemistry and Biology andthe Molecular and Cellular Biology TrainingGrant: “On the Mechanism of GeneticRecombination: II. Formation of Recombina¬tion Intermediates in vitro,” Huntington Pot¬ter. Harvard, 12 noon, Cummings 1117.Center for Middle Eastern Stud¬ies: Ha-Sadnah, “Israel as a Pariah State,Efraim Inbar, 12 noon. Pick 218, (discussionin Hebrew); Lecture - “Islam, Democracy andSocialism in the Arab World Today,” HishamSharabi, Georgetown, 4:30 pm. Pick 218.Department of Economics: Workshop - “TheRole of Price in guaranteeing Quality,” KeithLeffler, Rochester, 1:30 pm. Law, C.;Workshop - “The Work Done by Chidren andIts Effects on Fertility and Schooling: India.”Indra Makhija, 3:30 p.m.. Social Sciences 106;Workshop - “Estimation of Discrete TimeLenear-Quadratic Adjustment Cost Models,with an Application to Dynamic Factor De¬mand,” Peter Zarozny, 3:30 pm. SocialSciences 402.Department of Biochemistry Semin¬ar: “ADP-Robpsylation of Membrane Pro¬teins: Basis of the Activation of AdenylateCyclase by Cholera Toxin,” D. Michael Gill,Harvard, 2:30 pm, Abbott Hall, 101.Genetics 395/Advanced Genetics: SpecialRecombination and Genome Structure:‘ ‘ I n ter gr a t i v e Recombination ofBacteriophage Lambda: Role of DNA Struc¬ture in the Reaction.” Dr. Kiyoshi Mizuuchi.N’tl Institute of Arthritis & MetabolicDiseases, 2:30 pm, Cummings 101.Computation Center: Introduction to theDECSystem 20, 3:30 pm, Cobb 101.Roger Baldwin Foundation of ACLU and theHistory Department: “Equal Protection andSocial Justice,” Henry Steele Commager,Amherst, 4 pm. Oriental InstituteAuditorium.South Asia Seminar: “U.S. Pakistan Rela¬tions,” The Hon. Sahabzada Yaqub Khan.The Ambassador of Pakistan to the U.S., 4pm. Foster Lounge.Ki-Aidido Society: meeting. 6 pm. FieldHouse.JUDO Club: Workout. 6 pm, Bartlett Gym.Beginners welcome.JUDO CLub: Workout. 6 pm. Bartlett Gym.Beginners welcome.Table Tennis Club: meeting, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes.FilmsLaw School Film: "The Palm Beach Story.”8:30 pm. Law School Auditorium.NAM Film: “South Africa: The RisingTide.” 8 pm, Kent Hall.Greenwood Hall Film: “I)r. Strangelove." 7.8:45 and 10:30 pm.. Cobb Hall. Campus filmBy Karen HellerPursued (1947), directed by RaoulWalsh. (Doc) War hero Robert Mitchumreturns home, accidentally kills his step¬brother, marries his stepsister, and isalmost lynched by a mob led by his step¬father. This convoluted plot introducesFreud to the Wild West and contributesto create an intriguing, mythic Western.Walsh directs with observant detach¬ment. Photography by James WongHowe. Tuesday at 7:30.The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance(1962), directed by John Ford. (Doc) In1910, Senator Ranse Stoddard (JamesStewart) and his wife Hallie (Vera Miles)and in the small town of Shinbone to at¬tend the funeral of Tom Donovan (JohnWayne, and you thought he never died).A reporter questions him about hisunannounced apperance, and Ranse tellsabout his early days as a young lawyerin Shinbone when he opposed theruthless rule of Liberty Valance ' ?Marvin), a notorious gunfighter. The on¬ly other men in the town were unafraid ofthe outlaw were Dutton Peabody (Ed¬mond O’Brien), a drunken butcourageous newspaper editor (aren’tthey all), and Tom, a respectful rancherwho was in love with Hallie up until hisdeath. Is there love after death? Recom¬mended. Tuesday at 9:30.Wild Boys of the Road (1933), directedby William Wellman. (Doc) Eddie Smith,his friend Tommy and a girl named Sallyare the ‘wild’ kids who take to the na¬tion’s highways during the depression.All three are from modest homes uponwhich death or unemployment hasfallen, and all decide to take to the roadrather than remain a burden upon theirfamilies. (So that’s what they called wildback in ’33). Society refusing to care forour friends, they are driven into thecities, where through panhandling andpetty thievery (remember this is theDepression), they eke out their ex-ictpn^es. Wednesday at 7:15.Anatomy of a Murder (1959), directedby Otto Preminger. (Doc) In the up-country of Michigan, a moody young Ar¬my lieutenant (Ben Gazarra) shoots andkills a man, a tavern owner, whom thewife of the lieutenant (Lee Remick) sayshas raped her outside the trailer camp.But the wife is something of a sleaze andit isn’t altogether clear that her inten¬tions with the man were strictlyhonorable. Most of the action takes placein the courtroom between the attorniesfor the defense (James Stewart) and theprosecution (George C. Scott). Both areterrific. Wednesday at 8:30.Two videotape presentations: The Pro¬test against the Shah (of Iran’s Visit inWashington) and Recent Attacks againstthe Iranian Students in the UnitedStates. Co-sponsored by NAM with theIranian Students Association. Thesevideotapes were made by students of re¬cent political events. These student-produced videotapes were made of re¬cent political events in the U.S. aboutIranian politics. The second tape is of ademonstration that took place inChicago in front of the Loop YMCA.There will be a discussion lead by Ira¬nian students of recent political eventsin Iran. A donation of $1.00 will be re¬quested. Wednesday at 8:00 in the SocialService Administration Building. 969 E.60th.The Palm Beach Story (1942), directedby Preston Sturges. (Law) A tremendoushigh-brow comedy with a brilliant scriptand first-rate acting. Claudette Colbertand Joel McCrea are not getting along towell. After throwing around a lot ofmaterial possessions, the two settledown to a heaping portion of flirtation,he with a wealthy Palm Beach womanand she with the society woman’sbrother, portrayed by Rudy Vallee of allpeople. Highly recommended. Thursdayat 8:30.The University of Chicago TaiChi Chu’an Club invites you toparticipate in an introductoryclass of Tai Chi Ch'uan or Kung-Fu.TAI CHI CH’UANTai ChiWednesdays 7:30pmBlue Gargoyle5655 S. University or Sundays 7,30pm4945 Dorchester(enter on 5Cth)An opportunity to select from a comprehensivegraduate and undergraduate offering in the artsand sciences and eight professional schoolsCourses are open to Qualified college and highschool students and to individuals not currently at¬tending school Over eighty percent of the SummerSession teaching staff are members of thedistinguished Columbia faculty; visiting faculty in¬clude professors from American and foreign univer¬sities.The program includes daytime and eveningcourses m eleven languages including Chinese.Japanese, Korean and Russian; pre-medicalcourses: offerings in journalism, public speaking,social work and library service; diverse and in¬novative courses in the arts and sciences. Specialprograms include: an intensive six -ween programfor high school and college students interested inexploring the architecture and design professions;French language, poetry, and translation in Pans:Italian language and art history courses in Romearchitecture course in London.In addition to the superb Columbia libraries, thefacilities of the Computer Center, the DodgePhysical Fitness Center, and the Earl Hall SummerCenter for student activities are available to Sum¬mer Session students.Two sessions:May 22-June 30 and July 10-August 18For information and application, return the couponor phone (212) 280-2838 r Send to: CHICSummer Session Office102 Low LibraryColumbia UniversityNew York, N Y. 10027Please send me the ColumbiaSummer Session bulletin andapplicationName HAddressCity State ZipSUMMERSESSIONCOLUMBIA UNIVERSITY8 — The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, April 4, 1978Winter wrap-upTrackers 2nd in MCACBy Mark WallachThe Track team (18-3) completed its in¬door season in impressive fashion, placingsecond in the ten team Midwest ConferenceMeet behind Carleton College. Four dayslater they smashed Lewis College 82-49 in adual meet.Although Chicago scored only one firstplace in the Conference meet, Rich Gor¬don’s 6.7 seconds in the 60 yard dash. CoachTed Hayden was pleased with Chicago’swell-balanced effort in which fourteenMaroons participated in the scoring. “We’rethe only team that was only shut out in oneevent (the pole vault),” he said.Tim Bastian contributed an outstandingperformance in the 1,000 yard run, finishingsecond only to a Conference record-settingeffort of 2:15.2 by Dale Kramer of Carleton,who also set a new Conference mark in themile of 4:16.7. In all, seven new Conferencerecords were established.In the 600 yard run, Dave Green was se¬ cond to another record accomplishment.Green finished .3 seconds behind Carleton'sGene DiMagno (1:13.6). In the long and tri¬ple jumps, Pete Wendel was second andfourth respectively. In the meet’s final milerelay, Chicago took fourth to preserve theiroverall second place finish, edging out CoeCollege by two points.The meet was marred by the absence ofthree events: the 300 meter, 440, and 880yard runs. The decision to ax the events hadbeen made in November by the Conferenceathletic directors following a coaches’ vote.At least one runner at the Conference meetwore a T-shirt which asked what had hap¬pened to the three non-events.The Chicago drubbing of Lewis Collegeconcluded the indoor season. Unsurprising¬ly, the meet did not inspire the per¬formances that the Conference meet had.Nevertheless, the Maroons took nine out offifteen first places and 26 of the 43 topsports. Pete Wendel was a double winnercapturing the long and triple jumps.■ftp*Swimmers take fifthBy Mike RabinThe men's varsity swim team travelled tothe Midwest Conference Swimming andDiving Championships to prove that it wasfor real. By the end of the two day meet,held at Lake Forest College, no one in theconference doubted it. Although the teamonly placed fifth in the ten team field, itfeatured an individual champion andseveral finalists. Chicago’s relay teams allplaced in the top six. Fifth in the 400 medleyrelay, third in the 800 freestyle relay, and se¬cond in the 400 freestyle relay.By far, the outstanding swimmer of themeet for Chicago was Jon Rynning. Rynn-ing’s first event was the 100 meter freestyle.He led all qualifiers in that event, yet fell toLake Forest’s Jenkins in the finals. Rynn-ing’s qualifying time established a new poolrecord for the event which was not broken inthe finals. Determined to surpass this effort,Rynning came back on Saturday to lead allqualifiers in the 50 meter freestyle. Laterthat night Rynning won the event and gaveChicago its first and only champion in theconference meet.Freshman Steve Frederick also swam twovery good individual races in the 400 meterand the 1500 meter freestyle events. He plac¬ed fourth in the 400 and came back the nextday to swim the grueling 1500 meter race.Frederick, a high-school All-Americanwater polo player, was undefeated in the1000 yard freestyle during the season. Thisexperience paid off in the conference meetwhere Steve placed third in a strong field.Swimming alongside Frederick in the 400and 1500 freestyle events, in addition toswimming the 200 freestyle and two relays,was the workhorse of the meet, WayneHooper. Hooper placed fifth in both the 400and 200 meter freestyle races and sixth inthe 1500 meter event. Hooper’s toughestrace was definitely the anchor leg of the 800meter freestyle relay, where Hooper almostcame from behind to beat Grinnel, but wasedged out by a body length.Co-captain Dave Rodin surprised everyone at Lake Forest uy placing fourthin the 100 meter butterfly on Friday and se¬cond in the 200 meter fly on Saturday. Noone in the conference had heard of or seenRodin swim until the championship meet,and by then they wished that they had neverseen him at all. In both races, Rodin let thepack take the lead before coming frombehind strongly. In the finals of the 200meter butterfly, Dave passed three otherswimmers in the final lap and was bareiytouched out at the wall.Emerging from a sick bed, Michael Rabincame on strong in the 800 meter freestylerelay on Friday, in which the Chicago teamplaced third. Feeling stronger on Saturday,Rabin made the finals of the 200 meter but¬terfly, and placed sixth in the event. Rodinand Rabin’s 2-6 finish in this event wasamong the best finishes for the Chicagosquad. Rabin also swam the crucial secondleg of the 400 freestyle relay in which theChicago team placed second to Lake Forest.Two freshmen, Stan Wolner and MarkZoeller swam their best races of the year atthe conference meet and came through withsome important points for the team. Wolnermade the consolation finals in all three of hisevents, while Zoeller swam tremendousraces in the distance freestyle events.Backstroker Cal Cooper made the con¬solations in both the 100 and 200 meterbackstroke events, greatly improving overlast year. Dave Johnson, a freestyler. had atough season, starting the season with a tornmuscle and ending it with a missed flip atconference. Sophomore Mike Kundman alsomade a good showing. Lou Snitzer wasoutclassed in diving, due to a lack of divingboards at University facilities.It was a strong finish for the team Insteadof a seventh place finish and a 2-9 record,the team finished fifth and had a 8-4 seasonrecord, tops for the modern era The teamalso set 37 team and pool records. 35 morethan last year. Chicago looks to an even bet¬ter season in 1979, with a full-time coach toreplace the departing Randy Block and areturning squad that will lose oply onemember. Senior Dave Rodin. Women fourth at stateBy R.W. RohdeAs far as the women’s basketball teamwas concerned, the seeding committee didtheir job well. Chicago went down to the1AIAW state tournament at Illinois Benedic¬tine just over a month ago seeded fourth andcame away two days later with the numberfour spot.The Maroons opened up the tourney with apair of wins, downing St. Francis 75-62 andthen eliminating Quincy 52-47, led by thefine play of Paula Markovitz and NadyaShmavonian. The pair pulled down 39 re¬bounds against St. Francis, not to mentionscoring a combined total of 50 points in thegame.George Williams put an end to the hopesfor a state title. GW pounded in bucketsfrom the field while knocking out Kim Cur¬ a high-scoring shootout against a team spor¬ting two 6’2” players and going into thelocker room down 47-45 at half-time.Chicago lost Mary Klemundt when she foul¬ed out, and with three of their experiencedplayers out. the Maroons could not keeppace in the second half, eventually losingthe game 68-88.Coach Marcia Hurt called it “a good tour¬nament”, and mentioned the fine play ofMarkovitz. Besides pulling down in¬numerable rebounds, the Senior forwardaveraged over 20 points a game for the tour¬nament including 28 points in her final ap¬pearance in a Maroon uniform. “She's onlyfive-foot seven” said Hurt, “but she thinksshe’s 6 feet tall.”If talent runs in the family, Chicagoshould be looking towards a prosperousfuture. Markovitz’s younger sister is plann¬Sportsran and senior Barb Brink with a jaw injuryand a broken finger respectively. Althoughthe Maroons took an early lead. GW pulledaway to a 28-21 halftime advantage. Thenumber-one seeds kept up their hot shootingin the second half while holding PaulaMarkovitz to a tournament low of 15 points.GW took the game 61-46 and went on to winthe tournament with a one-point come frombehind victory over Greenville.While Greenville and GW met in thefinals. Chicago met Millikin for the numberthree spot, still lacking the services of KimCurran and Barb Brink. The Maroonsplayed well in the first half, keeping pace in ing to attend Chicago next year, and at 511”will stand taller than any of the presentteam members. Hopefully for Hurt, she willnot be the tallest member of next year'ssquad. The 6’2” center and potential Dudleyscholar from state champions Joliet Westannounced recently that she plans to attendChicago. Says Hurt. “I’ll believe it when 1see it.”Hurt and her team should be able to lookfor great improvements over this year’s 12-8record and fourth place finish. 6-2 center ornot. The squad is losing only two seniors,has no juniors, and has gained plenty of ex¬perience.PRE-PRE SCHOOL CAMPfor children 18 monthsto 3 years of aqe PRE-SCHOOL CAMPfor children 3 & 4years of aqeSPORTS CAMPfor children enterinq3rd throuqh 8th qradeJUNIOR EXPLORERSfor children enterinqkinderoarten or 1 stqrade DAY CAMPfor children enterinq1 st throuqh 6th qradeTWEEN CAMPfor youth enterinq7th throuqh 9th qradeSt#WELCOME TO SUMMERAT THE “J”1978 STYLEPRE-PRESCHOOL CAMPSPORTS CAMPJUNIOR EXPLORERSPRE-SCHOOL CAMPDAY CAMPTWEEN CAMPFOR A FREE DESCRIPTIVE BROCHURE,CALL 363-2770 OR STOP IN AT THEHYDE PARK JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER.5307 S. HYDE PARK BLVD. -MEZZANINE .The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 4, 1978 — 9Help a Uni tofed intclfiijcntami brujht>lfjiicattons arc nc*»v bcimj token to bdomea student Efcnwntvtry projcot {\TEP> tutrr.Cc'\( tr tfu' >TEf meeting on Thur»4uu, ,-tpnf t>(7:co pm ctt f»r >-♦ >. W<v<tLi*vM »4vc. t <rr oprft/ bvCVMtoetiMj/ ( bfcf-Hn,> CftarTu t>, TUf‘rr \j(.z ;444^. $TTEf j> a Urn Vtr>i ty cf s.hioufo>t»t«.U#if Organisation. lift .in jnnf*^ tvinn.Claudette Colbertin Preston St urges'sTHE PALM BEACH STORY (1942)Thurs.( April 6 8:30 Law Aud. LSF IS BREADNOT BUCKSAROUND THE WORLDTHROUGHOUT THE,, FOR TOO MANYthere's too little.THEIR BALANCE SHEETSAND ANNUAL REPORTSMEASURE SUCCESS INTERMS OF SURVIVAL...ONE DAY TO THE NEXT.PEACE CORPS AND VISTA WANT TO EXPAND THATMEASURE OF SUCCESS, YOU CAN HELP.SIGN-UP TODAY AT THE PLACEMENT OFFICEFOR A TALK WITH FORMER PEACE CORPS ANDVISTA VOLUNTEERS ON CAMPUS: APRIL 5 & 6Slrps® VISTAIncludes: SPIRAL • BALLAD • DERVISH D.TO THE UNKNOWN MAN • 3 + 3YOUR FUTUREWILL SOUND!LIKE THISHHailed internationally as one ofThe greatest keyboards players inthe world (New Musical Express),Vangelis has also been described as asingular artist with a unique view ofmusic in a field where mediocrity isrampant. (Melody Maker)Composed, arranged, and per¬formed in its entirety by Vangelishimself, “Spiral takes electronicinterpretation to a new summit ofmusicality. Connect with Vangelisand experience the sound ofthe future today. 1 Symphonic rock at itsheight—tasteful, excitingand panoramic in scope—Melody MakerftC/IRecords ■t,AVAILABLE ATSPIN IT RECORDS1444 E. 57 ST. FIELD ARCHEOLOGYIN ISRAELBurke College is pleased to announce its 1978archreological expedition to Caesarea Maritimain Israel. This expedition offers the following op¬portunities for the college student and faculty:1. An authentic archaeological experience forthe interested amateur. You will be working atthe site of Caesarea Maritima, the politicalcapital of ancient Israel from 12 B.C. to 640A.D., one of the truly great cities of the Romanand Byzantine world. No previous field orclassroom experience is necessary for the par¬ticipants in this program. A thorougheducational program will be carried on on thesite.2. A choice of three excavation periods is of¬fered to match your summer plans. These are:June 8-26, June 22-July 10, and July 6-24.3. The entire nineteen day experience in¬cluding air fare from New York, housing,meals, tours, and training for $ 1485.4. Academic credit is available.For further information contact Burke College(312) 724-7230 or write Burke Expedition I,P.O. Box 935, Evanston, ILL. 60204.Arts V,»,f 4 ’nnlr.Af'LrVMM* Lrp *h:' Oho*/lShow •v/„,.o,, Th« 'r-Rr.-In-Pirfnm«; Polpfv'fv look-A’iktf' 0'’Ipv' r nn n tft *hr> F v rV>rn-’* r»-S* 'rn- t»vM Ma’M 1P g -dav Arv*i 13 Onrvr♦u”-*vrnvo'^rjn rinrj >r'r)rje>l}’sri <r*n SUMMER STUDY IN NEW YORK CITYColumbia University offersover 350 undergraduate,graduate and professionalschool courses. Write forbulletin: Summer Session,Columbia University 102CLow Library, N.Y., N. Y.10027nobodyasked!He was in his twenties.So was she.Both were Catholic, unmarried,prayerful, creative.Both cared about peopleand cared for them. *How come he never thoughtof the priesthood?How come she never thoughtof being a nun?“No one ever asked me'/they said.Is this your story?No one ever asked you?Well, we're asking.■— Mail Coupon Today!Please send information on:Diocesan Priests P Religious PriestsBrothers [J Nuns l) Lay MinistriesI| NameI IIIIIIAddressVOCATIONS COMMITTEE/SUPREME COUNCILKVHGHTS of COLUW1BUS ftNew Haven. CT 06507 IIIIIII10 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, April 4, 1978CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEHuge 4 bdrms., 3 baths May 1. Cornell5508. Leave name Torres WilsonFOR RENT One bedroom apt., 54th 8,Woodlawn $205/mo. Call 667 5294Studio apt for sublet summer '78, 5220Kenwood S160/mo all utilities 8. furnishings inc. 324 6416.3 bdrm. condo., 1 k vw, bal., pool, nr.UC Cornell Vil, 21 fl, 752 7617LONDON FLAT FOR RENT, FULLYFURN, end June up to 1 yr. 2 3 adults.Swiss Cottage, nr shops, transport.Olkin950 Lathrop PI., Stanford, CA.Large bright furnished studio at 5496Hyde Pk. 752 1900 ext. 208Looking forward fo anofher year oflife(& > in the dorms? Consider thefollowing alternative: A coed Fraternity house featuring low rent, no mealcontract, no resident heads, oncampus location, mostly single rooms,complete kitchen facilities, TV, piano,laundry facilities, campus phoneWe're Delta Upsilon, 5714 Woodlawn.Give us a call at 753-3444, anytime andpick up an applicationUndergraduates only.PEOPLE WANTEDPart time or tull time sales helpwanted. Good salary and good workingconditions. The Pinocchio Toy Store.241 5512. 1517 E. 53rd St., Hyde Pk.Bank BldgWanted: Male volunteers over 21 forresearch in reproductive psysiology.Please call Dr. Jones at 947 5437.WORK SATURDAYS EARN $$ andhelp the fight against pollution. Highenergy outdoor work supporting thebattle for a healthy environment CallDale after 2:00 p.m. Tues - Fri., at 9391985.Athletes to run, swim, play squash,volleyball, or....raising funds to support the Teacher Center. Call 955 1329to get sponsor pledge card and preparefor the fun, April 8th.Children wanted for psychologicaltesting age 18 years and under. $2.50per hour. Please call Sheila evenings/weekends, 363 9141.So. Lake Shore apt coop needs twocreative, aggressive, attractive,mature self assertive and selfmotivated office professionals(property mgmt). One will be oursecretary-receptionist the second willbe an asst, property manager Bothwill be handling a wide variety of peopie heavy 8, detailed paperwork withmuch public contact, life to med. typing req. exp preferred. Send resumeonly c/o Charles H Goodman, Pres.Creative Professional Mgmt. c/oHarper Square 4800 S. Lake ParkRange $700 1000 & depending on experience much growth potentialPart time secretary wanted 9 a m. 2p.m. Good typing & office experiencedesired Varied duties $5/hr Call 6844920.WORK IN Japan! Teach English conversation. No experience, degree, orJapanese required, send long,stamped, self addressed envelope fordetails. Japan 302, 411 W Center, Centralia, WA 98531Interested in voluntary service inChicago and abroad’ Come to ameeting of International Voluntaryservice, Wednesday, April 5, at 12 inthe ida Noyes sun parlor, 3rd floor Bring your lunch.Dental Receptionist. General officeexperience necessary. Hyde Parkarea 5 days a week Call 324 2600Babysitter needed: 2 schoolage boys,Mon., Wed., Thur 2:30 5:30or 3:30-5:30p.m near univ. Very gd $$ 667 3716after 5:30cr947 6582$100 plus free room and board l monthfor young men who wish to serve assubjects for nutritional research project. See Dr. Richard L Landau, BillingsM 168 947 5534Summer counselors for Hyde ParkJewish Community Center Campus.Edith Deutsch. 363 2770.EUROPElct*s I tctiitmijl,P"72 farelall toll free (800) 325*4867Guaranteed or see your travel aqentReservations @ Utv.Travel Charters -FLAMINGO APTS *5500 S Shore DriveStudio and One BedrmVpts. Furn & TnfurnShort & I,unit Term RentalsParking, pool, restaurant,drycleaning, valet, deli.24 hr. switchboard. U of Cshuttle bus Vz blk. away.Full carpeting £■ drapes incl.Special University RatesAvail.752-WOO . Female models wanted to pose nudefor established published free lancephotographer. $30-50 hr. guaranteed(more if work published). No experience necessary.. If concerned thisisn't legit feel free to bring a friend toinitial interview Send photo andresume to William Hoff, 2470 N. Clark,Chicago 60614People wanted to care for four year oldboy Mon, Wed thru Fri 11:45-2:30.Tues 11:45 3:30 Academic family,near campus. Please phone 288 5674after 5 p.m.Sponsor your roommate, friend or toexert themself physically for a goodcause! Teacher Center Y athon. Sat.,April 8th 6 p.m. 10 p.m. Call 955 1329fo get a sponsor cardPEOPLE FOR SALESpanish lessons by native speaker (UCgraducated student). E xperienced andgood references. Call 753 4435 MissLois and leave message. Or write 7256S. Coles, Chicago 60649YOGA at your home by graduated UCforeign student. Call Jaqueline 7534435 and leave message. Or write 7256S Coles Chicago 60649For experienced piano teacher of alllevels call 947-9746.ARTWORK Illustration of all kinds,lettering, handaddressing for invitations, etc. Noel Price 493 2399.RESEARCHERS Free lance artistspecializes in just the type of graphicwork you need. Noel Price, 493 2399Piano Lessons for beginners throughadvanced. $4.00. 288-8747,PROFESSIONAL TYPIST: Articles,resumes, term papers, theses. Xeroxcopying. Brookfield, IL 312/485 7650and 387 0889Childcare in loving and creative atmosphere. Young children especiallywelcome. Rates negotiable. Near campus. Call 288 0576.SCENESFree Swimming Instruction for adults,Tuesdays, 7:30 8:30 p.m., beginningMarch 28 for 10 weeks in Ida Noyespool, all participants must have lockeror facilities pass.COOKING CLASSES: Chineses. International. Full participation, day &evening classes limited to 6 studentseach. Wendy Gerick KE8 1324Modern Dance Classes. Grahambackground, body alignment, expressive movement. Phone WendyHoffman, 924 4523.A reading by Robert Pack on Wednesday, April 5, at 8:00 p.m. in Harper 130,presented by the Moody Lecture Committee.FOR SALEDoctoral Gown, $50, hood, (hist ), $30,cap, $5 D Nodtvedt, 2236 EdgewoodDr., Boulder, CO.PASSPORT PHOTOSWhile-U WaitMODELCAMERA1344 E S5th St. 493 6700VIDEORECORDERSPanasonic, VTR units in stock Checkour prices.MODELCAMERA1344 E. 55th St. 493 6700High quality cabinetry and woodsculpting tools, some antique planesAlso 6x6' car camping tent, kerosenespaceheater 947 8317Advent/3 loudspeakers Perfect condition. $70. Call Ed 288-7797UC SAILING CLUBRace team mtg Tues 4/4. 7 p m IdaNoyes HalL•Eye Exam wot font•Contact lenses (Soft i Hard)•Prescriptions FHIedDR MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSHyde Pork Shopping Center1510 E. SSth363-6363VERSAILLESr>2.> 1 S. DorclieslerWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDING\llra<*tivt» l Vi amiIVi Hoorn StudiosKit rni*> lied or l n furnished$171 to $266IIii*<mI oil \\iiiluliilil\Ml I tililirs im-lmlrd\i ( ainpiio llii- Sloph \ 1-0200 Mis. t.roilk PERSONALSDATING SERVICE Low cost Over1400 members 274 6940WRITERS' WORKSHOP (PL2 8377).ALL world renowned, widelyacclaimed, famous or near famous UCprofessors and staff bring yourautographed memorabilia for theApril 10 Festival of the Arts (FOTA)auciion to Ida Noyes rm. 218 as soon aspossible.CRAFTCOURSESCalligraphy (beginners and advanced) and leaded glass classes are beingoffered Spring Quarter. Sign up in Student Activities Office Ida Noyes 210PAN PIZZADELIVEREDThe Medici Delivers from 5-10:30weekdays, 5 11:30 weekends 667 7394Save60 cents if you pick it up yourself.HELPLINEWanted: People willing to committheir time to the operation of a UC information and counseling hotline.Please leave name and number at 7534206.RECORDS WANTEDWe pay cash for used records, alltypes, 33 rpm only. Second HandTunes. 1701 E. SSth. 684 3375 or 2621593LOST:3 BOOKS1) Civilization and its Discontents, 2)Moral Judgment of the Child, and 3)Childhood and Society. All were left inPsyc B 102 after Acquisition of Valuesexam on Mar 13. My name is insidebooks If found, please call 753 2233,room 220 anytime.ENERGYDr. O'Gallagher will speak on SOLARENERGY PROSPECTIVES Tues Apr4, 8p.m. Ida Noyes, all invited POETRY READINGPrimavera Poetry Reading on Sat,April 8 at 7 p.m at Artemisia Gallery 9W Hubbard. Refreshments.HELPAKIDApplications are now being acceptedfor Student Tutors Elementary Project (STEP) Tutors Come to theSTEP meeting on Thursday 4 6 7 p.m.at 5714 Woodlawn Ave , or apply bycalling Susan (667 6115) Charlie (7525860), Pat or Frank (753 3444). STEPis a UC student organization Allstudents are welcomeCOLOR BLIND?Color Blind People wanted for experiments in vision and perception$2.50 per hour Call 947 6039BASIC CLASSLearn to program in BASIC on theDEC 20 computer Register at CompCenter before April 7 for 6 sessioncourse beginning April II No chargebut establish a DEC 20 account to doexercises. For more info, call 753 8400DECSYSTEM20Learn to use the Computation Center'sDEC 20 computer, accessible fromterminals all over campus Seminarsto teach how to use the system will beheld: Thursday, April 6, 3:30 5, Cobb101 Wednesday, April 12, 3:30 5 Pick022. No charge, all welcome.HELP WANTEDWaitresses & waiters, full time 8. parttime openings. Breakfast lunchdinner. IVj yrs of dining room ex¬perience necessary Clean cut appearance 324 6000 The WindermereRestaurantDR. STRANGELOVEGreenwood Hall presents StanleyKubrick's ''Dr. Strangelove." starringPeter Sellers and George C Scott,Thursday, April 6 in Cobb Hall, 7, 8 45,and 10:30 p.m./ COMPAREandCONTRASTTHE BOTTOM-LINEDISCUSS WITH FORMER PEACE CORPSAND VISTA VOLUNTEERS ANDSIGN-UP TODAY AT THE PLACEMENTOFFICE FOR A TALK WITH FORMER PEACECORPS AND VISTA VOLUNTEERS ONCAMPUS: APRIL 5 & 6Slrps® VISTAORIENTED SOCIETY OFTHE 70s...WITHTHE HUMAN SURVIVALSOCIETY OF THETHIRD WORLD.SENIORSJoin VISTA and share yourLiberal Arts experience withAmerica's urban & rural poor.Your degree in EDUCATION, SOCIALSCIENCE, HEALTH, BUSINESS ADMINPHYS. ED, or RECREATION can helpsolve social, human and environ¬mental problems of low-incomecommunities. Sign up at PlacementOffice for a talk with formerVISTA volunteer on campus:APRIL 5 & 6 COMPCENTER TEACHERS WANTEDCLASSESSpring quarter class list availableClasses in SPSS and BASIC Seminarsin Intro to Computer Concepts, Intro toDEC 20. APL, SCSS, and TSO Come tovmain Computation Center Rl C B27 orBusiness Office, 5737 University, orcall 753 8400GET-ACQUAINTEDCOMPUTERACCOUNTSStudents and faculty can open getacquainted accounts, either IBM 370or DEC 20, for spring quarter, $25 computer time given to students, $50 tofaculty Bring valid ID to 5737 UniversityRENEWYOURCOMPUTERACCOUNTNOWStudents and faculty with fall quarterget acquainted accounts may renewfor spring quarter new You mustrenew by Fri April 7 or account will beclosed Bring valid ID to 5737 University One full time, one half time teacher forparent run alternative school Openclassroom exp pref 1978 79 $ 7200 8000full time Send resume: PhoenixSchool 5600 S Woodlawn, Chicago60637,ROOMMATESWANTEDWanted Two roommates for beautifulapartment at 5709 S Harper.Vegetarians preferred. Call Abbe at753 3263 or 955 4022 Available summerand/or fall.FOUNDMale, black, lab shepherd mix (?)about 1 yr. old . affec and obedient Ifyours or want to adopt call 493-1218 aftand evesPARKINGWANTEDGarage or locked parking spot desirednear 58th and Dorchester Call David,947-0190.FOTA PHOTOFestival of the Arts Photography Exhibit May 1-21. reservation deadlineApril 14 Call 753 3598 or come by Student Activities Office Ida Noyes toreserve a space Open to UC students,faculty and stafff Are you ready for I ifafter graduation?By Charles Guy Moore, Ph.D.Executive Director National Institute of Career PlanningJust starting out? Let career wizard Charles Mooreadvise you every step of the way—from how to choosethe right career and sell yourself in today s job market towhen and how to move up to the big-money executivelevel. It's all in the handbook that shows you how to playTHE CAREER GAME -and winpaperbacks are sold (O) BALLANTINE BOOKS25 PUBLIC LECTURE SERIES ^Sponsored by the ENRICO FERMI INSTITUTEof theUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE ARTHUR H. COMPTON LECTURESSeventh Series bySydney W. Falk, Jr.The Enrico Fermi InstituteSaturdays April 1 through June 3, 1978"NUCLEAR ASTROPHYSICS,ALCHEMY IN THE UNIVERSE"The structure of ordinary stars;gravity, energy transport,and nuclear processes.April 8, 1978Eckhart Hall-Room 133-1118 E. 58th St.For more information phone 753-861 1.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 4, 1978 — 11£/t, Wi'6'Del MonteCorn or Green Beans 3/89Swiftening - ~qShortening 1 /«0!Star KistTuna(6*1 oz tin ......,....q5 eaDemmg Red Sock Eye * . QSalmon (7 0: can) J13(Red Only)Hawaiian Punch (46ozcan). 49*Ruby RedGrapefruits(5 ib bag) /JJfLarge Mexican Vine RipeTomatoes 29 ibUSOA Choice ~Round Steaks J"bUS Grade A _.Turkey Wings 59 ibUS Grade A _ .Turkey Drumsticks 49*FreshMushrooms 59^Cracker Barrel Extra SharpOlWM 10 or ok!) 1"Sale Dates 4/54/81226 E. 53rd(KIMBARK PLAZA)HOURS: MON. - SAT. 8:30 A.M. •SUN? *4:50 t£tr iGetThe Great Ratesof Budget!50 Free miles perday on all cars12.95 a dayminimum priceTwo locations to serve you:5508 Lake Park493-79008642 So. Chicago374-0700 We feature Lincoln-Mercury carsBudgetrnnt o nor A!! our cars areclean, well maintainedlate mode! cars.rent a carNow ... for Sears customers: Budget Rent a Car operates authorizedSears Rent a Car Distribution Centers at most Budget locations.Sears Renta Car Locally call: 374-1121 or 493-1774■-A ah*-. rj, A Budget System Licensee. r-FOTA 1Applications now being accepted forthe 1978-79MAJOR ACTIVITIES BOARDall 7 positions openapplications are now at StudentActivities Office and must be turnedin there by April 14.positions open to any studentin the University.Festival of the Arts Committee, University of Chicago,1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, Illinois 60637JWhere else can you study poetryand be In the undergraduate prelawprogram or fulfill a premedrequirement and take a course intransfer lithography withinteresting and exciting peoplein a setting of hills, lakes,gorges, and waterfalls?Fulfill requirements, completecourses in order to accelerate, orsimply take the time to study thoseextraordinary things for whichyou’ve never before had the time.Request an Announcement and seefor yourself all the reasons whywe’re where you should be thissummer.Cornell University Summer Session,111 Day Hall, Ithaca, New York 1485312 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 4, 1978