CCE set as siteUniversity’s solar energy plans approach completionPhoto: Carol StudenmundThe Center for Continuing Education, site of a possible solar energy system.By Owen NowakThe Center for ContinuingEducation (CCE) may be heatedby solar energy as early as nextwinter. It would be the first cam¬pus building to be heated by thesun.The University is preparing aproposal for the project that pro¬bably will be submitted to theDepartment of Energy <DOE)within two weeks. The cost of in¬stalling the collectors on the CCEroof will be approximately$300.000-$400,000, according to RoyMackal, University Safety andEnergy Co-ordinator.If approved, the federal govern¬ment will pay for as much as two-thirds of the project, Mackal said.The remaining funds will comefrom the University’s budget.Heating and utilities costs for theCCE were approximately $260,000last year, according to figures pro¬vided by Mackal. Installation ofthe solar collectors could reduceenergy requirements in thebuilding by as much as 40 percent,Mackal said. If these estimates are correct,the solar system could pay backthe University’s investment inthree to four years, according toMackal. He said the useful life ofthe system is probably at least 25years.The solar system will utilizeCompound Parabolic Concen¬trators (CPC’s), collectors thatconcentrate light (up to a factor of 10) by the maximum amount possi¬ble from any view angle. The CPCwas developed by Roland Winston,professor in the department ofphysics and the Fermi ResearchInstitute.Because the CPC’s can collectlight efficiently from any angle,the collectors do not need to trackthe sun’s path nor are seasonal ad¬justment in the angle of the collec¬ tors necessary. The collectors in¬stalled at the CCE will be sta¬tionary and will be able to concen¬trate light by a factor of 1.5. Thiswill allow the system to operate atapproximately 300° F.The project, if funded, will bepart of a major program in solarenergy and research funded byDOE. Installation of the solar col¬lectors at the CCE would save thousands of dollars annually. Butbecause major solar energysystems of this type required largecapital outlays, and would not payfor themselves for many years,they are not economically leasablewithout government subsidies.Federal demonstration projects,such as that proposed for the CCE.are intended to spur commercialmanufacture of solar energysystems on a large scale. Massproduction could reduce the cost ofsolar systems so that they could beinstalled by private institutions.According to JosephO’Gallagher. Senior ResearchAssociate at the Fermi Institute,the University will have one of themost advanced solar collectors yetdesigned, if the project is approv*ed. The system will generate heatwith a 50 percent efficiency, afigure he called “very respec¬table.”O’Gallagher also said the heatfrom the solar collectors couldeventually be used during the sum¬mer to run the CCE's air condition¬ing system.The Chicago MaroonVo*. 88. No. 32 * The University of Chicago © The Chicago Maroon 1979 Tuesday, February 6, 1979Racial quotas setfor parish schoolPhoto: Carol KlammerSt. Thomas Apostle Church school on Woodlawn Ave. and 55th St.Energy updateBudget not hurt by oil .price increasesBy Dave GlocknerThe steep oil price increasevoted by the Organization ofPetroleum Exporting Countries(OPEC) last December probablywill not seriously affect the Univer¬sity’s energy budget for fiscal year1978, according to economics pro¬fessor Larry Sjaastad.The University uses natural gas,not oil, to heat its buildings. Butthere has been speculation that the14.5 percent oil price increasemight force natural gas pricesabove the levels projected in theUniversity’s budget.As oil prices rise, Sjaastad said,more oil users will shift to naturalgas and the increased demandcould result in higher gas prices.Sjaastad. however, does not exDect the oil price rise to add noticeablyto the cost of natural gas during thesix months that remain in thisfiscal yearThe University budgeted for a17.2 percent increase in the price ofnatural gas this year. That figure,determined prior to the OPECdecision, was based on informationfrom the People’s Gas, Light andCoke Company.15.6 percent of the anticipated in¬crease is accounted for by“historical” price increases, ac¬cording to Roy Mackal, UniversitySafety and Energy Coordinator.The remaining 1.6 percent is aresult of recent federal legislationdesigned to eventually deregulatenatural gas prices.Mackal said the People’s Gaspredictions are usually accurate but added that the unexpectedlylarge oil price increase may throwoff this year's estimate. “To theextent they’re right or wrong onthis, we’re going to be right orwrong,’’ Mackal said.Soaring energy prices have plac¬ed severe strains on the Universi¬ty’s budget in recent years.Energy costs consumed 4.3 percentof the University’s unrestrictedbudget in fiscal year 1971. In 1976,that figure was 7.1 percent, despitemajor energy conservation efforts.A preliminary report made lastfall on fiscal year 1978 energy ex¬penditures projected a budgetdeficit of over $1 million. Universi¬ty officials expressed confidence atthat time that conservation effortswill enable the University to avoida deficit. By Lee ChaitIn an attempt to retain racial in¬tegration. St. Thomas the ApostleElementary School has modifiedits admission policy. St. Thomas,located on the corner of WoodlawnAve. and 55th St., will considerrace as a factor for admission ofapplicants from outside the HydePark parish.The St. Thomas Apostle ScoolBoard announced the new policy inan open letter to its parishionersand to parents of the school’s 330students. The letter emphasizesthat, “part of our school’s specialstrength has been that it is a racial¬ly integrated school reflectingHyde Park and our parish. . . Weare committed to preserve thisspecial quality.”Over 80 percent of St. Thomas’sstudents are black, although theHyde Park parish is only 23 per¬cent black according to JohnMcDermott, chairman of theschool board. McDermott attri¬butes this disparity to the ever-in¬creasing exodus of non-Hyde ParkSouth Siders t who are predomina¬tely black) from public schools andto St. Thomas's “open door” ad¬missions policy.According tof McDermott, non-Catholic South Side parents whowant to enroll their children in pri¬vate schools are attracted to St.Thomas’s non-discriminatorypractices, high quality, and relati¬vely low tuition fees ($630 peryear). As the black to white ratiogrew disproportionate, whitesturned to other private schools inthe area with more normal racialbalances, further exacerbating theproblems, said McDermott.Explaining that St. Thomas has “a racial balance so one-sided thatwe are no longer integrated.”McDermott said the plan calls for“a student racial mix where nei¬ther white nor non-white enroll¬ment will be less than 35 percent ofthe student body.” The school, hesaid, will “nurture integration” by-implementing the plan one gradelevel at a time, beginning with nextschool year's kindergarten class.The new policy will not apply tochildren of parishioners who willenjoy preference in admissions re¬gardless of race. If youngerbrothers and sisters of childrencurrently enrolled apply to theschool, they will not be affected bythe new criterion either; nor willstudents already enrolled be askedto leave to meet the 35 percent fig¬ure.The integration plan was unani¬mously approved by St. Thomas’s12-member, interracial schoolboard whose members are electedby the school’s parents and parish¬ioners. They claim their plan issimilar to many affirmative, pro¬integration policies currently usedby public schools throughout thecountry, and that it has been ap¬proved by the Archdiocesan Catho¬lic School Office as appropriate forSt. Thomas.The school board conducted asurvey, and held a number ofmeetings about the issue withparents and parishioners beforemaking the final decision. Accord¬ing to an article in the February 2issue of The Chicago Catholic, bothwhite and black parents arepleased with the school’s new ad¬missions policy. Those interviewedsaid they want a more integratedschool experience for their chil¬dren.ALL TOGETHERAt One LocationTO SAVE YOU MORE!SPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor oil 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 ondany new or used Volkswogen orChevrolet you buy from Volks¬wagen South Shore or MeritChevrolet Inc.SALES & SERVICEALL AT ONEGREAT LOCATIONm VOLKSWAGENW SOUTH SHORE7234 Stony IslandPhone: 684-0400Op*-. 9 6 P MV Set 9-5 P.MP»‘- --»r. Zy.ufOMf 'tl 12 NoonSoftContactLenses p^0.HardLensesStill a LowA PAIPs 69 50A PAIRWEAR YOUR CONTACTSHOME THE SAME DAYMOST PRESCRIPTIONS IN STOCK INCLUDED ATNO ADDITIONAL CHARGE* all liftings* all a<3:LiSfrner>ts* audio visual of'en«ai»on* storage case* osehion and remova' training* lens care instruction* iustfated •nstmcfton manualand wearing scheduleFor a no¬obligationappointment,call:346-2323<X$*^36 S. Wabash Av., 10th Ffoor, fSuite 1000, Chicago, III. 60603•Minus Power OnlyFLAMINGO APTS.5500 S. Shor«* Dr.Studio A One Kt-drrnFurn. A I nfiirn.sh«»rt A I ,ihi{ I ifm Kr«uMU8200 - 8400Parkm» |mm»I. rrMiiijraiit.*k-li au<l Iran—flirtation. (,ar|M'liu»ilraj**- iiM-l.752-5800 men: women:jobs:< HI 1st Sif lot's*! KtM.III t KsNo experience. Highpav!See Europe, Hawaii, Aus¬tralia. So America. Win¬ter. Summer!Send $2.75 toSKA WORM)Box fiior>Sacramento. (A 95825 GO SOMEPLACE ABROADTHIS SUMMERSYRACUSE UNIVERSITYoffers study and travel opportunities in 21 summer programs abroad.Applications due March 1st.LONDON:Shakespeare, Filmmaking, History of Costume, Masterpieces of the VisualArts, Studio Art, Visual Communications, Photography, Law, Transportat¬ion & Distribution Management.FLORENCE:Architecture, Studio Art & Synaesthetic Ed., Humanism & the Arts inRenaissance Italy, Psychology.VIENNA:Architecture, Music, German Language, Culture & History.AMSTERDAM:Biology, Law & Public Policy.YUGOSLAVIA:Organization & Management in a Worker-Owned Economy.EAST AFRICA:History & Evolution of the Kenyan Nation.GREECE.Classical Geology.All coursai offer six semester credits for undergreduetes. graduates & practicing professionals. Fo moreinformation please contact Syracuse University, Division of International Programs Abroad, 335Comstock Av* , Syracuse, N.Y., 13210, tel (315) 423-3471.Court Studio Theatre presentsCZECHSA NEW PLAY BY Jan NovakDirected by Gerald MastFeb. 9,10, Hand 15,16,17,188:30 P.M. — Sundays at 7:30 P.M.Reynolds Club Theatre57th & University753-3581SPECIAL VALENTINE’S DAY SALE SAT., FEB. 10. KM al the-Artisans 21 gallery in the- First Unitarian Church at Sith and Wood-lawn.Free- drawings for Valentine's cards. Valentines made to order andcalligraphy demonstration.Hoi spiced cider and cookies will be sert edCallerv is open Thurs.-Fri.. 11:30-3:39. Sun. I 2 SECRETARIES WANTEDFULL AND PART-TIMEAT THEMUSEUM OF SCIENCEAND INDUSTRYYou’ll never be bored again — notwhen you participate in the farranging activities of the Museum’smany functions. Good office skills,excellent typing and language flu¬ency are ‘‘musts”. Lots of on the jobbenefits and good pay. Call thepersonnel office for an appointmentfor interview at 684-1414.We are an equal opportunity employerSNOW BIRDSpring Break March 24-31After you’ve died during finals week go to heavenlyspring powder skiing at Snowbird, Utah. RT air trans¬portation, transfers, 7 night deluxe condominium lodg¬ing (fireplaces, saunas, queen-sized beds, fully equip¬ped kitchens), 5 days lift tickets for only $390.00. Eat upthe 2900 vertical feet under the aerial trailway and the85” of fresh snow in March. Lift tickets are exchange¬able at Alta and Park City.Deposit is due by next Wednes¬day at the Utah ftalley, 7:30p.m., Ida Noyes.Other Trips This Quarter:Learn to Ski Night Feb. 16. (Woodward Court Night)$17.50 members, $21.00 non-members. Sign up by 2-14.WINTERGREEN One day trip Feb. 17. $26.50 mem¬bers. $30.00 non-members. Deposits due 2-14.UCSKI CLUBRegular meetings are Monday and Thursday, 7:30p.m.-IDANOYES.CALL 955-9646 FOR INFO.3 COURT ThCATRC5706 S University Avenue Chicago. Illinois b0637 / 753-1581Open Discussions of Anouilh’sANTIGONELed by David BevingtonAfter the performance onThursday, Feb. 8In the RC North Lounge■XXJXXXK.wXXJXXXJOixxxxxxaxxxxx axxxx* uxjuocxxoQor I ~(xxxxxxxxx aooonoooa era mrm nnmnryrl0U9Ujuuul XXXXXXXXXJ rrcranryijryuoa ixxxxxxx axxxjxar*xxxx rxxxx rxxxm■ rxxxxxx xxx txxxr The University of ChicagoDepartment of MusicThe CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES presents anIMPORTANT CHICAGO DEBUTBORIS BLCCHFirst Prize Busoni International PianoCompetition, Bolzano, Italy, 1978Silver Medal Arthur Rubinstein InternationalPiano Competition, Israel. 1977First Prize Young Concert ArtistsInternational Auditions, New York, 1976Beethoven • Chopin • Ran •Rachmaninoff • Liszt BusoniMONDAY .FEBRUARY 12, 1979 *8 00pmMANDEL HALL • 57th & Universityraxocmxxxxtt txxxxxxxmxxuxxxrxxxxaxxxvxu l J ixxxxxxxxx i ujuooaxa iiaXxxxxxxXI itXXXKXXXX xccxxxxxxxxxxxx warn txxxxxxxxxxxxxxx' i rxjooQotxoaraxn'Xjuxxxr-xxxxxaxxxxxxxoaaoaxoa S3 00 student with ID. $2 00CMS subscribers ONLY $1 50tickets and information at Concert Office,5835 S University Ave 60637753 261? and at Mandel Hall box office2 — The Chicago Maroon — Tt esday, February 6, 1979AldermanicforumsAll four candidates for 5th Whrd aider-man will be speaking and answering ques¬tions at a forum Monday, February 19, inthe Ida Noyes library. 1212 E. 59th St.,beginning at 6 pm. The candidates forumis the fifth scheduled before the February27 election. February 5. at 7:30 pm theOkeefe Area council will sponsor a forumat the Bryn Mawr Community Church.7000 S. Jeffery Blvd. at 7:30 p.m. February6. there will be a forum at the BlueGargoyle, 5655 S. University Ave., at 7:30.February 13 the League of Women Votersand the Hyde Park-Kenwood CommunityConference will sponsor a forum at theOsteopathic Hospital, PeckhamAuditorium. 1122 E. 53rd St., 7 pm andFebruary 18 the KAM Isiah Temple spon¬sors a forum, at 5039 S. Greenwood Ave.. at10:30 am.StateInternshipsThe Governor’s 1979 Summer Fellow¬ship Program is now taking internship ap¬plications from qualified students who areinterested in experience in state govern¬ment. Interns will work from June 15 toAugust 15 for state agencies, departments,and boards and commissions, either inChicago or Springfield and will receive aminimum salary of $600 a month. The pro¬gram also includes weekly seminars withguest speakers who will discuss variousaspects of state government.To qualify, a student must be an Illinoisresident presently enrolled in a college oruniversity, and be at least a junior by thefall of 1979. Graduate or professional stu¬dents in their first year are also eligible.Applications are available at the Officeof Career Counseling and Placement inReynolds Clubs or by mail from the Gover¬nor's Summer Fellowship Program. 160 N.La Salle St.. Room 2000. Chicago. Illinois,60601. For more information, contact LucyGerardi at 793-3757. News BriefsJeuck winsteaching awardJohn Jeuck, Robert Law Professor ofBusiness Administration at the GraduateSchool of Business (CGSBi, has won thefirst McKinsey Award for Excellence inTeaching. The award from the McKinseyFoundation carries a prize of $10,000 inrecognition of contributions made in thepreparation of men and women for careersin management.Jeuck joined the GSB school faculty in1946 and served as director of the Ex¬ecutive Program from 1952-54 and as deanfrom 1952-55. He is presently a director ofthe Economic Club of Chicago, the Mare-mont Corporation, the Stein Roe & Far-nham Balanced and Stock Funds, theWalgreen Company, Woodlawn Hospital,and World Book-Childcraft International.Inc.The award is based in part on extensiveinterviews and recommendations of GSBstudents.Summer JobsWith 30 inches of snow on the ground, theOffice of Career Counseling and Place¬ment is looking toward summer, trying topublicize a number of jobs and internshipsavailable to students.The Federal Government sponsors aFederal Internship program for collegeand graduate students in different govern¬ment agencies. Job descriptions are avail¬able at the Placement Office in ReynoldsClub 202, and initial applications are dueon March 1, 1979. Applicants must havecompleted their sophomore year in col¬lege, and many of the positions have spe¬ John Jeuckcial requirements, such as positions forlaw students, business students, and grad¬uate students.The Placement office puts out a monthlycalendar of opportunities for employment.Calendars are given to all of the residentheads and additional copies are availableat the Placement Office. The Office is alsoabout to begin a mailing to solicit summerjobs for students from businesses, resorts,amusement parks, and Social Serviceagencies. Responses from the mailing willbe available to students at the PlacementOffice.The Placement Office also keeps listingsof current jobs on file, and also has severalinternship directories available to stu¬dents. Worth1000 wordsThe W'inter 1979 Chicago LiteraryReview will be devoted to the photographicessay. Along with general articles andreviews, the issue will feature originalphotographic essays, either submitted ordone on assignment. Photographers andessayists can be paired, so there is no needto be skilled in both areas. Interestedphotographers, essayists, and reviewers,in and outside of the University, are en¬couraged to contact the Literary Revieweditor at 753-3265. Please leave name andphone number.Prewitt to headresearch councilKenneth Prewitt, professor of politicalscience and director of the National Opi¬nion Research Council (NORC) has beenappointed president of the Social ScienceResearch Council.The Social Science Research Council is anot-for-profit corporation established forthe purpose of advancing research in thesocial sciences. Prewitt will serve parttime at the Council during the first monthsof his presidency, pending the appoint¬ment later this year of his successor atNORC.Common corelecturewritten bv Xancv Cleveland and Jacob Levine Jan Blits, from the University ofDelaware, will speak on “Manliness andFriendship in Shakespeare's JuliusCaeser" this Thursday at 8 pm in HarperMemorial 130. The lecture is the secondWinter quarter presentation of lectures onbooks, themes, and questions consideredin the Common Core, sponsored by theDean of the College and the staff of“Human Being and the Citizen. The lec¬ture will be followed by refreshments anddiscussion in Harper 284.VisitAmerican ATHEISTMuseumPrides Creek ParkEntrance, RR3Petersburg, IN 47567Send For Free InfoGUADALAJARASUMMERSCHOOLUniversity ot Arizona ottersmore than 40 courses, i.e .anthropology, bilingual edu¬cation, history, Spanish,etc. at Guadalajara. Mexico,July 2 - August 10. Tuition$265. Board and room withMexican family. $300.WriteGuadalajaraSummer SchoolAlumni 211University of ArizonaTucson 85721(602) 626-4729 coming...WELCOME TO THE JOB MARKETWhat’s your best bet in today s marketplace9 Whatcan you expect from your first job? Need it be a nine-to-five one? These and many other questions relatedto entering the job market will be discussed in thisissue of “Insider—the free supplement to yourcollege newspaper from Ford.Ford hopes these tips about what awaits you inthe job market will help you start your career off onthe right track. And if you're in the market for anew car or truck, we also hope you'll check out thegreat lineup of 79 Fords.Look for"InsiderFord's continuing series ofcollege newspaper supplements. FORDFORD DIVISIONThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 6, 1979 — 3GRADUATE STUDYinPUBLIC POLICYProfessional Degree ProgramAdmissions MeetingFor all students in the CollegeTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 154:30 p.m.WIEBOLDT HALL, ROOM 301Professor Robert Z. Aliber, Chairman of the Committee on PublicPolicy Studies, will be on hand to answer questions about admissionsprocedures, fellowships in Public Policy, and financial aid. a poetry magazine (w/art)’By Dan NemanIt is often called by critics and the unin¬formed, “A Poetry Magazine Mart.” Still, apoetry magazine (w/art), now in its thirdyear, is gamely striving for greater studentrecognition as one of the University’s majorpublications.The magazine was founded in 1976 by thensecond-year student Neil Alers, as the onlyliterary publication exclusively by under¬graduates. A sixth issue co-edited by Alersand third-year Nancy Gale, is on sale now.Because poetry (w/art) contains only thework of undergraduates, Gale cautions,“the quality cannot be expected to be pro¬fessional. I think this has been misunder¬stood.”Being so young an institution, a poetrymagazine (w/art) is still maturing. Ex¬plains Gale, “we will get better as we getmore experience.” The magazine is nowvery informally run: there are no set rules,no constitution and no established staff. Be¬cause nobody has definite responsibilities,staff membership fluctuates. Apart fromAlers and Gale, only two other students —Lise Hauser and George Hoffman — regu¬larly attend staff meetings, at which themagazine is put together and submissionsare reviewed.During its three-year existence, Poetryw/art has featured the works of over 50 au¬thors, accepting any kind of style or theme.Only one poem in the “traditional” (rhymed and metered) style has been printed, be¬cause it was the only “traditional” submis¬sion good enough to publish. However, offi¬cial policy holds that all poetic styles shouldbe represented.The publication also includes some art, al¬though there is very little of it. Only a few ofthis issue’s 50 pages are allotted to art andphotography, but in the future there will bemore.Leadership of the magazine changeshands with this issue. Alers, who edited thefirst five issues, is graduating in June, andGale will be the new editor. She will institutea fixed format, so that the magazine will bephysically recognizable. Gale also wants tocontinue the featured poet section, in whicha senior — in this issue Rick Rutkowski — isgiven ten pages to fill in any way he sees fit:the followed poet section, which prints re¬cent works of people who published poetryin the magazine and have since graduated;and public reading of the printed works bythe authors themselves.A typical contributor is Lise Hauser, afirst-year student. Hauser started writingpoetry when she was young because “theone thing I could do right — was write”. Po¬etry, she maintains, “has become an out¬growth of everything I do.” As for her expe¬riences on the magazine, “there is a realsense of accomplishment when I’m able togo beyond what I originally intended to doand say.”STUDENTS FOR ISRAEL *WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7th, 12:30 PMSPEAKER:PROFESSOR MARVIN ZONISAsso. Prof. The College and Dept,of Behavioral SciencesTOPIC:THE NEW IRAN AND ISRAEL VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1V2 and2V2 Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$189 - $287Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. GroakSEND LIVINGVALENTINES.Those FTD Florists reallyget around... for you!FTD LoveBundle* Bouquet, usually available for less than $17.50.FTD Valentine Bud Vase, usually available for less than $10.00. As anindependent businessman, each FTD Florist sets his own prices Ser¬vice charges and delivery may be additional. Most FTD Florists acceptmajor credit cards‘ © 1979 Florist*’ Transworld D«ltv«ry Aldermanic Candidates DebateHear Lathrop, Bloom, Stodder,and Wilbanks Contend for the5th Ward SeatWednesday, February 7th4:00 to 5: 30Pick LoungeSponsored by the Divisional Master’s Programon the Social Sciences and the UndergraduatePolitical Science Steerine Committeemarian realty, inc,REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available-Students Welcome-On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 EtocitlMUi CMterCall Days Imlrys & WtmmSPRING, SUMMER,PALL INTENSIVESCOURSES STARTI5STHIS MONTH:GMAT, GRENEXT MONTH:JAi, JAA, -6216 ii. ClarkChicago, Ill ilzbO(312)764-5:5;cor Information About Other ZaatarsIn Major US Cit*t A HnmaOwtsida NY StatsCALL T0U fid M*-» 'VMaroon staffers: Please attend the Constitution Meeting,one week from todayin the Maroon office at 7:30 pm.4 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 6, 1979FeatureMortimer Adler: a man of all reasonMortimer J. Adler who delivered Sumday’s Woodword Cdiirt lecture taught at theUniversity of Chicago from 1930 to 1952.While he was here he was a close associateof Robert Maynard Hutchins and was in¬strumental in the adoption of discussion ofthe Great Books as the primary means to aliberal education. Adler currently is Direc¬tor of the Institute for PhilosophicalResearch, headquartered in Chicago, whichseeks to summarize philosophical thought ina Summa Dialectica in the manner of St.Tomas Aquinas’s Summa Theologica. AsChairman of the Board of Editors of the En¬cyclopedia Brittanica Adler developed the15th editionof that work. His most recentbook is Aristotle for Everybody.This interview was conducted in Adler’sOntario St. office on January 18 by AndrewPatner, an associate editor of The Maroon.Patner: If we accept your thesis thatthere is one education for all people — onecourse of study that will make everyone lib¬erally educated . . .Adler: No, that’s not what I’m saying.(Adler drew a bell curve on a piece ofpaper). If this is the curve representinghuman intelligence, then these (pointing tothe beginning of the curve) are the people inasylums, you can’t use the Great Books withthem. Now these (pointing to the end of thecurve) are the people with IQ’s of 120 or bet¬ter, the college population. These are thepeople that you can use the Great Bookswith, the people capable of being fully edu¬cated.The Great Books have two essential ad¬vantages as educational tools. First, theyare over the heads of the students, and sec¬ond, they deal with ideas. Both of these forcethe students to think.Patner: What I’m getting at is how isthis one system of education adequate, oreven desirable, if it excludes non-Westernthought?Adler: We tried that at Aspen. It doesn’twork. That’s a scholarly recreation, not forstudents. We had a project where we tried totake ten works of Western thought andmatch them up with ten comparable worksof non-Western thought. We had Aristotle’sEthics and Confucius’s Analects; Dante’sDivine Comedy and the Mahabharata, but itdoesn’t work.The cultures of the world are still suffi¬ciently diverse that differing systems ofthought continue to exist. That is not to saythat the Great Books approach does notwork in the East. We’ve had great successesin Tokyo with a group that reads both East¬ern and Western works, and they often readthe W’estern works better than many West¬ern readers.If we live another 1,000 years on thisearth, if man lasts that long, we will be onelarge world community.Patner: I’m concerned also with the ab¬sence of Jewish thought from the set.Adler: The only Jewish though thatwould work is Maimonides. The Talmud isvery difficult unless you’ve had some Tal¬mudic training It deals with intricate pointsof Jewish law. It doesn’t raise issues that...If you asked me would it give any additionalinsight into the Great Ideas I’d say no. Tal¬mudic study is very good training, though.Patner: You say that philosophy dealswith constants — man and his ideas — andthis view of the constancy of ideas and theircontinuity enables a study of philosophy asif it were one great discussion. Haven’tsome of the ground rules for discussionchanged in our time. Haven’t the events ofthe Second World War changed our experi¬ence — Hitler and the atomic bombs, for ex¬ample.Adler: No, the ordinary experience ofman is all you need for philosophy. Philoso¬phy exists to determine what everyoneknows, in any time or place, as a matter ofcommon sense.Patner: I don’t understand what youmean by this common experience.Adler: The rising and setting of the sun.breathing, sitting, standing, running. Whatis known to many everywhere at all times.Patner: But can men who have experi¬ enced different events share the same un¬derstanding and perception of what you callcommon events? Don’t we deal differentlywith some of the basic ideas today as a re¬sult of twentieth century experience?Haven’t new ideas been introduced, for ex¬ample, Hannah Arendt’s concept of the ba¬nality of evil? Isn’t our perception today ofsuch basic ideas as good and evil differentfrom those of the past?Adler: I’m acquainted with HannahArendt. She’s talking sociology, not philoso¬phy. The twentieth century is not so dif¬ferent from the past as many like to believeit is. There is as much violence in the fifthand fourth centuries B.C. as there is today.Patner: What about the Holocaust?Adler: What about Melos? The menwere all killed and the women and childrensold into slavery. What’s all the fuss aboutthe twentieth century? People today are ig¬norant of history. If you want to talk aboutwhat sets the twentieth century apart it isthe massive ignorance of history.The ideas that were raised in the past, andthe questions about these ideas are as perti¬nent, are more pertinent, than any raisedtoday. Plato’s questions about justice aremore acute than today’s questions. TakeAristotle's views and discussions of justice,the Ethics, for example, we should discussthis book as if it were written yesterday.Patner: Wither education today? Canwe still raise the cry of “Back to Basics!’’?Or your cry of “Back to Aristotle and Me¬taphysics!”?You have said on various occasions thatthe only school in this country that providesa true liberal education is St John’s College(in Annapolis, Maryland and Santa Fe, Al-bequerque). If a young man or woman, pre¬sumably bright, were to walk into the roomright now7 and ask you where to go to collegewould you still tell them to go to St.John’s?Adler: Absolutely. Without question. St.John's is the only school with an entirely re¬quired curriculum of the Great Books, thediscussion method of teaching, inquiry intothe origins of scientific discovery, language,it is the only school that does all thesethings. The only school where all membersof the faculty teach all the subjects of thecurriculum.Patner: You say that you yourself foundthat teaching took you away from the re¬search that excited you . . .Adler: Undergraduate teaching shouldbe done by very young people. If I went intoa classroom today, the difference betweenthe knowledge in my mind and the students' minds would be too great. A college teachershould be 25 or 30, 40 at the most.One thing that Hutchins did (at the Uni¬versity), over the opposition of the faculty,was to make the College faculty an auton¬omous ruling body. The graduate schoolsshould have nothing to do with the College.Not a thing! Graduate schools regard col¬leges as feeder stations, as bush-leaguebaseball teams. William James talkedabout “the Ph D. octopus.” The Ph D. is adisqualification for teaching.Don’t talk to me about education. I don’tlike taling about education. I get tooangry.Patner: You advocate a system such asthey use at St. John’s, of outside oral exami¬nations. Why weren’t these used at Chica¬go?Adler: Too expensive. Oral, outside ex¬aminations are the only way of finding out ifthe student is using words or ideas. Is he justgiving back what the teacher told him or isMortimer's10 best list1. Thucydides. The Pellopenesian Wars2. Plato, selected Socratic dialogues3. Aristotle, Ethics4. Aristotle, Politics5. Plutarch. Lives6. Dante. Divine Comedy7. Montaigne. Essays8. Shakespeare, the Great Tragedies9. Swift. Gulliver’s Travels10. Locke. Essay on Civil Liberty11 Tolstoi. War and PeaceAdler: (laughing) That's 11 isn’t it?Patner: What is Mortimer Adler readingnow?Adler: An H.G. Wells novel,Tono-Bungay. I recommend it.he understanding and articulating ideas0Patner: Are you aware that AlfredNorth Whitehead in The Aims of Educationsaid that among one of the more needed re¬forms of the British educational system, onethat uses outside oral exams, was the aboli¬tion of such exams? Whitehead held thatonly the teacher could determine what thepupil had gained from his classroom experi¬ence.Adler: That could be. I don’t know. 1don’t recall reading that.Patner: You have complained about alack of scholastic community, especialy when you were at the University of an in¬ability of professors in different disciplinesto talk across the boundaries of their disci¬plines. Didn’t you add to that division byasking for free discussion of ideas but condi¬tioning it to your framework of discussionthat posited that philosophy organized dis¬cussion and was thus superior to science.It’s sort of like the Egyptian-Israeli peacetalks. Begin and Sadat say to each other,let’s have open discussion but I have theseconditions . . .Adler: There is no community of schol¬ars. It doesn’t exist. It’s very hard to have acommunity.Patner: Aren’t you more concerned withthe formal cause than with the final cause —with form and organization rather than withcontent? I am specifically thinking of yourpassion for outlining, making lists, and fil¬ing. and your consideration of a job with theR. H Macy organization as sort of a “refer¬ee” at their board meetings.Adler: Except in matters of art, formaland final causes are the same. That’s a com¬mon misreading of Aristotle’s concept of thefour causes. Yes, I’m concerned with it overcontent. I don’t think I would have lasted toolong if I had taken that job!Patner: What about reading in transla¬tion. Are you going to be able to really un¬derstand the writers of the Great Books, theproponents of the Great Ideas, if you arereading in translation. I know, just in my li¬mited experience when I had a quarter ofPlato in my humanities sequence we hadthree or four translations in the classroomthat were often at extreme variance withone another. And if we had not had a teacherwho in addition to being a humanist was alsoa Greek scholar we could have come awaywith some awfully garbled idea of whatPlato was trying to put forward.Adler: If you are reading poetry the lan¬guage is quite important. The English trans¬lation of other things, though, will give youthe same ideas. Ideas are the same in anylanguage.Patner: But will the ideas in the originaland those in fhe English translation be thesame as each other? What about yourself. Inyour autobiography you mention that youhad trouble with French and German. Doyou know Greek0Adler: I didn’t master Greek.Patner: What about Latin, or other lan¬guages.Adler: No, no languages. I don’t knowany language other than Engish.Patner: How can you analyze Aristotleor Aquinas if you don't have them in theoriginal. How can you truly read them?Adler: I regret it. The English does getvery confused.Patner: Business refers to what it callsthe “trickle-down” effect, where businessdoes things in its own interest and if it doeswell, this good "trickles down” to society asa whole. Is that how your role as a "philoso-pher-at-large” operates0 How do we trans¬late your ideas into action? If everyone“made philosophy his business” as you sug¬gest and as a result became your style ofphilosopher, and became as you are a “non¬signer” and a "non-joiner" What would wedo to reform society’s ills?Adler: I've never had very much attrac¬tion or much hope to reform society.Patner: But what then is the purpose ofyour spreading knowledge to as many peo¬ple as possible, of the Great Books, or Brit¬tanica? What about the seminar you con¬duct in Aspen where you read the GreatBooks with businessmen0 Do they becomebetter businessmen0Adler: If you are going to reform societyyou better start at the top than at the bot¬tom. That is where the changes are going tohave effect. I wouldn’t make any claims forthe widespread effect of these things, ofcourse How To Read A Book was very popu¬lar.Patner: Well what then do you do aboutthe society that you live in what do you do tomake it better for yourself and your chil¬dren?Adler: 1 don’t. 1 don't do anything. I justsit and think and read and write.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 6, 1979 — 5Patner: What about the Holocaust?Adler: What about Melos?Tuesday ,A-skiing we will go-to more snowPhoto: Bruce LewensteinBy Bruce LewensteinOn the first day of the quarter, one of my roommatesdisappeared. She said she was going skiing; then she wasgone. Three times in four days she left books, classes, andincompletes behind, and headed for the slopes with othersfrom the University of Chicago Ski Club racing team.I'm from California, where we “go to the snow" ratherthan let it come to us. We leave snow in its proper location,far away from where we live. I have always been curiousabout people sentenced to a cold snowbound winter whochoose to dive even deeper into powdery wastelands.And so, like any good reporter. I investigated.Only a week after the Blizzard of 79. I joined a Ski ClubLearn-to-Ski trip. As we began our drive north. I asked mycohorts why they were trying to escape the Chicago mushby heading for even more snow.To my surprise, they all seemed oblivious to the irony ofleaving a snowbound city for the wilds of a snowboundcountryside* Are University students immune to theweather? I wondered.Perhaps they believe the unspoken option offered by theold joke: an unsure forecaster comes on the air. looks inbewilderment at the arrows, circles, and dots grease-pencilled on his map. and intones. “There will be weathertoday.”The question nearly became academic when it took usover an hour to fight our way through the ruts of the SouthSide. We were blocked by two cars mating in the middle ofWoodlawn, a man unloading groceries on University,stalled traffic on Garfield, and ridges of snow created on¬ly hours before by the first plows to find Hyde Park in overa week.Finally we reached the Dan Ryan. Dave Murdy. thefourth-year undergraduate who is president of the SkiClub, admitted to me that he may be committingacademic sucide by trying to run the club — which he call¬ed a $30.000-a-year business — in addition to going toschool. But he defended the time he spends; “I wouldn’tbe running these trips if I didn’t want to get people out ofthe city, away from books.”Three hours after leaving the University, we pulledalongside “Majestic Mountain,” near Lake Geneva. Theycall that majestic? It looked more like an overgrownsnowball made by a couple of toddlers. But no matter:here we were and a-skiing we would go. I had given up myoriginal investigation. Instead I was intrigued by the no¬tion of “skiing” down w’hat looked like a molehill.I joined an intermediate lesson. First we worked onvocabulary. The instructor told us about “angulating,”“weighting-unweighting.” and. the greatest of sins, thepsuedo-skiing “Midwest shuffle.” This I learned, is thetechnique one develops on such under-developed slopes. Itis a peculiarly mid-American trait — back where I comefrom you can't survive if you try to fake your way down areal mountain.After the lesson I joined Murdy. watching him tutor afew beginners and talk about the club at the same time.He was like a politician — flitting from one constituent tothe next, reminding them about his (the club’s) previousaccomplishements. such as a winter break trip to JacksonHole. Wyoming, and his plans for the future, such as thespring break trip to Snowbird. Utah.After a quick warm-up and dinner break. I returned tothe slopes for two hours of up and down and up and down. The cycles went quickly: ten seconds in line, threeminutes on the lift, one minute of skiing to return to thebottom. Up and down and up and down. I longed forhome, where a single run can take half an hour. But then,downhill skiing near Chicago requires midwesterntopography. Up and down and up and down.We left at 10:30. “Did everyone have a good time?”Murdy asked, bubbling with enthusiasm. A half-heartedchorus of yes’s greeted him.But behind me someone muttered, “Yeah, but it sure as hell wasn’t worth $20.” Why? I asked, “It was such ashort time — just a few hours. We should go up earlier inthe day and get more skiing. However. I’ll go again. I'mglad to have been.”And so we drove home, a gentle hum of conversationfalling over the bus as people reminisced. “There’s thislittle bump, y’know, and he went over it and landed on hisback, y’know, and broke his pole.”“And then I crossed my tips...”“Every time I fell...”Campus FilmBy Ethan EdwardsStraight Shooting (Doc), directed by JohnFord. Ford’s first full-length feature filmfollowed fifty-odd shorter films. It will be ofinterest mainly to fans of silent films and toFord aficionados. Far from fantastic.TUESDAY at 7:15.The Long Gray Line (Doc >, directed by JohnFord, is a tribute to Marty Maher, the ex¬tremely Irish, and therefore belovedathletic trainer for three generations ofWest Point cadets. Ford’s treatment of hissubject is reminiscent of the style used inThe Quiet Man. with music-hall Irishbrogues and stereotyped Irish characters.This would-be affectionate look at Ford’s fellow Irish-Americans fails to capture theaudience, which is more often made un¬comfortable by his slapstick Irishcharacterizations than amused by them.TUESDAY at 8:15.Notorious (LSF), directed by Alfred Hit¬chcock. Cary Grant talks the beautifulGerman-American Ingrid Bergman into in¬filtrating a Nazi spy ring in South America.She loves Grant, but marries Germanspymaster Claude Rains in the service ofher country. The film brilliantly displaysmany of Hitchcock’s hallmarks: long track¬ing shots, simplicity of plot, extension oftime to build emotional impact, and un¬ paralleled black and white cinematography.Francois Truffaut and Roger Ebert(Pulitzer-Prize-winning movie critic of TheSun-Times) agree that this is Hitchcock’sbest film. Ebert will be at the Law Schoolafter the show to tell you why. HighlyRecommended. TUESDAY at 7. Jerry Lewis. Less painful than any ofJerry’s other solo efforts, and considerablyless painful than his telethons. An ugly andsocially inept professor is transformed intoBuddy Love, an oily crooner patterned afterDean Martin. As a confession of Lewis’ envyof Martin, this film manages to capture theaudience’s emotions. WEDNESDAY at 8:45.Topaz <Doo, directed by Harry D’Arrast. Abizarre comedy about a professor who useshis intellect to gain power and pleasure inthe real world — and we’re not talking abouttenure. With John Barrymore and thealways tasty Myrna Loy. WEDNESDAY at7:15.The Nutty Professor (Doc), directed by Diary of a Country Priest < Doc), directed byRobert Bresson. The spiritual travail of aFrench country priest (Claude Laydu)whose parishioners cannot understand hiscrise de foi. Pauline Kael calls this “one ofthe most profound emotional experiences inthe history of film. ' Holy agony. Batman!THURSDAY at 7:15.6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 6, 1979CalendarTUESDAYPerspectives: “Diagnosis and Prevention of LearningDisorders", guests: Dr. Peter R. Huttenlocher, Susan C.Leehey, and Anne Merency, 6:30 am. Channel 7.WHPK: Wake up with WHPK Rock,6:30 am-4:00 pm.Rockefeller Chapel: Edward Mondello, University Or¬ganist, will give a lecture-demonstration, 12:15 pm.Regenstein: Exhibit - “100 Very American Books" booksselected from the Epstein Collection. On display Feb6-April 15.Smart Gallery: Exhibit - “Decorative Designs of FrankLloyd Wright", Jan. 10-Feb. 25. Open Tues. Thurs. 10-8,Wed. Fri. Sat. 10-4, Sun. noon-4.Ultimate Frisbee Team: Practices 1:00 pm on the mainfloor of Field House. New players welcome. More info,Robin 955-0481.WHPK: Folk Music, 4:30-6:00 pm. Classical Music,6:00-9:30 pm. Jazz, 9:30-3:00 am.Ki-Aikido Practice: 4:30-6:00 pm, Bartlett gym, next tosquash courts.Bishop Brent House: Spirituality in Protestant Tradi¬tion, Spencer Parsons speaking, 5:45-7:00 pm, Dinnerand discussion. Call 753-3392 for supper reservations.Law School Films: “Notorious", 7:00 pm, Law School Au¬ditorium, plus Roger Ebert in person.DOC Films: “Straight Shooting”. 7:15 pm, “The LongGray Line”, 8:15 pm, Cobb.Hillel: Israeli Folk Dancing, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.Astronomy Club: Meeting to plan trip to see solareclipse, 8:00 pm, Ryerson 251.Sexuality Rap Group: Sponsored by UC Gay and LesbianAlliance, Ida Noyes 3rd floor, 8:00 pm. Info call 753-3274Sun-Thurs. 8-10 pmKundalini Yoga Society: Meets 5:15 pm, East Lounge,Ida Noyes Hall.WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Treatment for Persons with Learn¬ ing Disorders”, guests, Dr. Peter R. Huttenlocher, SusanC. Leehey, and Anne Morency, 6:30 am, channel 7.WHPK: Wake up with WHPK Rock Music, 6:30 am-4:00pm.Office of Career Counseling and Placement: RecruitingVisits - U.S. Navy. For appointments, call 3-3286Smart Gallery: “Frank Lloyd Wright at noon”, a seriesof Wednesday talks. Speaker Joseph Connors, Dept, ofArt.Commuter Co-op: Get-together in Commuter Lounge inbasement of Gates-Blake, 12:00 noon.Rockefeller Chapel: Robert Lodine will give a carillonrecital. Persons wishing a tour should be in the ChapelOffice no later than 12:10.Hillel: Students of Israel, “The New Iran and Israel”,Prof. Marvin Zonis speaking, 12:30 pm, Hillel.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women, 2:00pm.Committee on Social Thought: Nef Lecture - “SymbolicStructures in German 19th Century Painting: Karl Spitz-weg”. Prof. Otto von Simson, 4:00 pm, SS 122.Dept of Biochemistry: Seminar - “In Vitro Transcriptionof Xenopus 5S RNA Genes”, speaker, Edward H. Birken-meier, 4:00 pm, Cummings room 101.WHPK: Folk Music, 4:30-6:00 pm. Classical Music,6:00-9:30 pm. Jazz, 9:30-3:00 am.Duplicate Bridge: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall. Newplayers welcome.DOC Films: “Topaze ", 7:15 pm, “The Nutty Professor”,8:45 pm. Cobb.Badminton Club: Practices 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes gymnasi¬um.Ski Club: Snowbird Rally, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes. Films,Info, Excitement.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall. Ev¬erybody welcome.Country Dancers: British folkdancing. All dances taught. Morris, 7:30 pm, dancing 8:00 pm. Refreshments,10:00 pm. Ida Noyes Cloister Club.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Discovering the News: A SocialHistory ot , American Newspapers”, guests, ArthurMann, Michael Schudson, 6:30 am, channel 7.WHPK: Wake up with WHPK’s Rock Music, 6:30 am-4:00pm.Hillel: Faculty Luncheon - “Considerably Lower Thanthe Angels: The World of Isaac Bashevis Singer”, speak¬er. Prof. Marvin Mirsky, 11:30 am-l:00 pm. Hillel.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Ha-Sadnah (Discus¬sion in Hebrew), “The Revival of Hebrew in Israeli Liter¬ature”, speaker Nathan Shaham, 12:00 noon. Cobb116.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Persian Society (dis¬cussion in Persian), a discussion of literary censorship inIran and the types of works censored. 3:30 pm, Cobb202.Dept of Microbiology: “Interactions of macrophageswith intravascuolar bacteria in protozoa”, speaker. Dr.Thomas C. Jones, 4:00 pm, Cummings 11th floor seminarroom.WHPK: Folk Music, 4:30-6:00 pm. Classical Music.6:00-9:30 pm. Jazz. 9:30 pm-3:00 am.Ki-Aikido: Practices 6:00-7:30 pm in the Field House bal¬cony.Table Tennis Club: Practices 6:30-11:00 pm. Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.Debate Society: Meets to practice 7:00 pm, debate at8:00 pm. Ida Noyes East Lounge.DOC Films: "The Diary of a Country Priest”, 7:15 pm,Cobb.Calvert House: 7:30 pm. Prayer Group. Basic Catholi¬cism. and Gaudium et Spes.Women’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm, Blue GargoyleWomen's Center (3rd floor). For info, call 752-5655 or643-7248.Collegiate Lecture Series in the Liberal Arts:“Manliness and Friendship in Shakespeare's JuliusCaesar", speaker Jan Blits. 8:00 pm. Harper 130.CLASSIFIED ADSSPACELooking for tenant or apt? Come toS.G. housing Referral Service. Weeklylist available In S.G. office in IdaNoyes Hall. Open 12:00 3:30 Wed.,1:30-5:00 Thurs.ROOMMATE SOUGHT; Malenonsmoker. Furnished bedroom/ studyand kitchen privileges Good location.$125/ mo. plus utilities. 493-6291 even¬ings. 753-2905 days.Roommate wanted: M/ F own bedrmin E. Hyde Park apt. $125/ mo and secJoe 644-3100 x549 (days), 288-3113(eves).Immed. Studio sublet: 57th andBlackstone! $165 a month includesgas, lights and heat! Well-kept bldg, ingreat local. Very secure. Call 684-5198.For sublet: Attractive studio apart¬ment $165 utilities included 5118 S.Dorchester «207. 324-3939.Room w/ private bath. Furnished,near campus bus $130 mo. avail imm¬ed. For more info call 538-1324.F wanted to share w/ 2 F own bdrmand bath. 52nd and Dorchester.493 2767. per hour, call 753 4735.Faculty, Protessional and other Am1bitious Couples and Singles. Save$1000's buying what you now buy, fromyour own no risk, no investment,unlimited potential six to ten hrs. aweek, part time business. Solid, Bookabout bus. made NY Times best sell¬ing list Royalty Income. Profit Shar¬ing. Tax Savings. 667-4038 5 p.m. to 9p.m.Part time graduate student preferred.TV atendant hospital in area No TVknowledge necessary. Call Mrs.Eastman, 676-2226.RESEARCH TECHNICIAN-20 hrs perweek, to conduct studies involving theeffects of psychotropic drugs on moodusing human subjects. Duties includesubject recruitment, drug preparationfor blind administration, record keeping of procedure and results, and dataanalysis. Must be able to work independently. Data analysis requiresan ability to use computer, specificallythe Dec-20 (using basic 2). Call RonDurnford, THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO dept, of Psychiatry,947-1794. An Affirmative action, equalopportunity employer.Space for 1 in small baby sitting groupnear campus. 493-9475.Wanted to rent in Hyde Park. Room tobe used as workspace by art student.Call 288 4685Rare in Hyde Park- great apts nearUC 1 and 2 bdrms- BU8-0718 aft. 12noon. Sundeck,Apartment for rent. Bedroom,Dressing room, living room, largekitchen and bathroom. BlackstoneVilla, 5514 S. Blackstone. Tel 752-2223.$230/ mo., starting March 1.Room w/ private bath. 5213 Dorch.$62/ mo. Large sunny apt. w/ threeaffable roommates Call Tim:643 6238.PEOPLE WANTEDMANUSCRIPT TYPISTS (3) Part-time (12-15 hours/ wk). School year,summer if desired. Will be trained totype camera ready copy on IBMcomposers Must type 55 wpm, Abilityto type Spanish or French desirable,not essential Top student rates.Contact George Rumsey, Communityand Family Center, 753 2518OFFSET PRESS OPERATOROperate Davidson press, bothblack/ white color Experience makingnegatives and multi-color workdesirable Contact Kurt Robson, Community and Family Study Center753 2518Right and left handed subiects Testyour Preceptual Abilities. Earn $2.50 MEN! WOMEN! JOBS ON CRUISESHIPS AND FREIGHTERS. No ex¬perience. High pay! See Europe,Hawaii, Australia, So. AmericaCareer Summer! Send $3.85 for Info, toSEAWORLD, ER Box 61035,Sacramento, CA 95860.Babysitter needed: Mondays 3 30 to6:00 pm. Call 947-0087.ATTENTION ARTISTS: Have yourwork printed and appreciated bymany! FOTA needs a unique posterdesign for its 25th Anniversary Calen¬dar. $100 Prize! Stop in Ida Noyes rm218 or call 3-3562 or 3-3598 for moredetails. Deadline is March 2.Healthy males with proven fertilityneeded for semen donors. For more in¬formation, call 947-5364.WANTED Person to carry signs andhand out numbers for presidents' dayspromotion at Hyde Park shoppingcenter. 3 or 4 various hours (to suityou) per day- Wed. Thurs Fri. Sat.and Mon. Feb 14, 15, 16, 17, and 19$3 50 per hour. Contact Bob Salomon at943 1300.TRANSLATORS, English to SpanishTwo students, part time ContactIsabel Garcia, Community andFamily Study Center, 753 2518Experienced babysitter for infant fulltime in the home of a U C facultymember. Hyde Park. Call 64 3 8992 or753 2718SECRETARY to work with fundraiser for small grad school in Hyde Park. Must have gooa clerical skillswith organizational ability and be able♦o work independently. Salary open.Call 493-0200. EQUALOPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.Male/ Female.Needed. Part-time secretary for U.C.laboratory '15 hours/ wk. Hoursflexible. Typing, phones, filing,ordering supplies Call 753-2718.FOR SALE2 wooden oboes in good condition. CallKathryn, 363-3150.PIANO. Everett upright 3 yrs old Ex-cl. cond. Must sell. 667-2127.PEOPLE FOR SALE.Typing done on IBM pica by collegegrad. Fast, accurate, reliable. Termpapers, theses, law papers,manuscripts. Lincoln Park West area.Call 248-1478.FRENCH native prof offers Frenchtutorials all levels Ph. 268-9262.ARTWORK of all kinds drawing,calligraphy, illustration, handaddressing of invitations, etc. NoelYovovich, 493-2399.Experienced tutor available for allmath up to and including CalculusCall John, Room 227, 753-3751.SCENES"DREAM MAGIC" Makes Life aDream! Easy, enjoyable method. Setown fee. B Frieden, 643-2826 (Ans.machine calls returned).ARTISANS 21ARTISANS 21ARTISANS 21Special Gifts for special people.Gallery and shop open Thurs. Fri.11:30-3:30, Sun. 12 2. In the UnitarianChurch, corner of 57th and Woodlawn.OPEN STUDENT POETRYREADING All are invited to par¬ticipate in an afternoon of poetryreading on TUESDAY, Feb 6th at 3pm in Ida Noyes Library.GILBERT AND SULLIVAN'S THEMIKADO presented in Mandel Hall,Feb 23 and Feb 24 at 8 and Feb 25 at2. Tickets at Mandel Hall Box OfficePRE MEDS: For information about anew Medical School AdmissionsProgram write Physician ContractProgram, Box 159. Claremont, N H.03743Tamil Film VAZHNDUKATTUKIREN Sat. Feb 10,2 00 pm.Ida Noyes 2nd floor $2. PERSONALSPASSPORT PHOTOS While-U-Wait,MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 55th St.,493-6700.Writer's Workshop (Plaza 2-8377).Your mother is a groundhog.HAPPY B DAY JEMMY POOPS!!You said no choruses of HappyBirthday... Embarrassed? Lets tryfour. Love.FESTIVALOFTHE ARTSFestival of the Arts is celebrating itsbig 25th Anniversary with a bang.FOTA will be sponsoring comedianDavid Steinberg: Mark Twain, a oneman show; Daniel Heiftz, classicalviolinist: FOTAFEST: The annual pic¬nic on the Quads Plus FOTA's series-of-series, "The Great Books On Film",the noontime, midnight and Performing Arts workshop series. To make thisyear's Festival the best ever we needpublicity people to organize-mailingsto all city publications, radio and TVstations that otter free calendar orclassified ad listings We needdesigners for display ads in theMaroon, Chicago Journal, and HydePark Herald We need people toorganize special mailings. And finally,we need designers to create the over 45posters that cover the UC campus during the Festival. We need your help, ifyou are interested Call 3-3562 or 3-3598or stop by room 218 or rro. 210 IdaNoyes Hall.RESEARCHSUBJECTSWANTEDEarn up to $165 as a research subjectin Psychotropic drug studies in thedept, of Psychiatry. Studies will beginin January through March. Minimaltime required Must be between 21-35and in good health. Call Ron MonThur. mornings between 9 10 a m.947-1794.WOMENDrop by the Women's Center at theBlue Gargoyle for information aboutwomen's activities Open Wed andThurs. from 7:30 10 00 Rap Group isnow Mondays at 7 30, 3rd floe*^Themore the merrier, 684-3189GILBERTAND SULLIVAN THE MIKADO at Mandel Hall Fri.Feb. 23 at 8, $3.50 and $5; Sat. Feb. 24at 8, S4 50 and $6; Sun. Feb 25 at 2, $3.Tickets at Box OfficePHOTOGRAPHYand more in *6.MONTEGO BAY,JAMAICARent a villa fully staffed with pool.Rates low as $28,00 a day per person.Villa accomodations for six. Inf. andresv call 3^2 783 8034ARTWORKand more in »6.ECLIPSE 79See tne total solar eclipse on Feb 26;Astronomy Club planning session Tue.Feb 6 6 00 pm, Ryerson 251 or callJoe Uiowetz 3 8546POETRYand more in »6.ISSUE HA POETRY MAGAZINE (W ART)featuring Rick Rutkowski sales star¬ting Wed the 7th in Cobb from 10-2,Reynolds on Thurs. and Fridays from11-1 and in bookstoresKUNDALINIYOGA Kundalini yoga, the yoga ofawareness, is the most effective andpowerful form of yoga. The U of CKundalini Yoga Society is meeting onTuesdays from 5:15 to 6:15 pm in theEast Lounge of Ida Noyes All arewelcome.RACQUETBALLCLUBNEXT MEETING Monday Feb 12,5:15 pm, 3rd floor, Ida Noyes Hall U ofI (Circle) club is sponsoring a fundraising racquetball party, Sat Feb10, 8 30 pm-l :00 am Mid Town CourtHouse 1235 North LaSalle. $10 perperson including games, drinks *oodetc For details and tickets call MrGraham, 996 2419SQUAREDANCINGY'ALL COME! Square D*"ce 3ndParty, Ida Noyes ceb 10th 8 00 pm.Free beer, sandwiches.DINNERPARTYSUNDAY, February 11, for studentsonly Dinner at the only KOSHERCHINESE RESTAURANT INCHICAGO Shaing Chai. Sign up byWednesday, February 7, at Hillel. 5715Woodlawn. Meet Sunday, Feb 11 4:30pm at Hillel.WOMEN'S UNIONWomen's Union meets every Friday at5:30 in Ida Noyes Hall above the Frogand Peach Everyone welcomeThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, February 6, 1979 —NAVY OFFICER.YOU GET RESPONSIBILITYTHE MOMENT YOUGET THE STRIPES.A lot of companies will offer you an important soundingtitle.But how many offer you a really important job?In the Navy, you get one as soon as you earn your com¬mission. A job with responsibility. A job that requires skilland leadership. A job that’s more than just a job, becauseit’s also an adventure.If that’s the kind of job you’re looking for,speak to the Navy Officer Programs Officerwho will be on campus, in the Placement Office,on the 7th of February. Or give us a callanytime at (312) 657-2234, collect.bWhere you’re a stranger but onceWELCH’SGRAPE JUICE24 oz.Bottle m COLUMBIA SLICEDBACON1 lb QQf>Package t yUSDA BLADE CUT CHOICEPOT ROASTROUND BONECOUNTRY DELIGHTLOW FAT, 2%MILK$1.49 GallonPERRIER WATER$7.98 sn99#HUNT’STOMATO PASTE4™ $1.00 lb.lb.iDozen23 oz. Bottles2911S. Vernon Per Case1226 E. 53rd St. kiWe reserve the right to limit quantitiesand correct printers errors. a series oflecture/demonstrationsgiven by principal performersof the Chicago SymphonyOrchestraFebruary 12. Dale Clevenger, Horn, Woodward CourtFebruary 26, Edward Druzinsky, Harp, Hitchcock HallApril 10. Joseph Golan, Violin, Greenwood HallApril 16, Chicago Symphony String Quartet, Breckinridge HouseApril 30. Ray Still, Oboe. International-HouseThe programs begin at 8 p.m.Admission FreeInformational Meetingfor all students interested in theDIVISIONAL MASTER SPROGRAM IN THESOCIAL SCIENCES— one year M. A. program— B.S. - M.A. program(for juniors in the Social Sciences Collegiate Division only)THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8 3:30-5:00Pick Lounge (Ground Floor of Pick)Faculty and advisors will be presentto talk with students and answer questions.TPHEjU# TOE K'O'UVELLE ^Joseph Cokrat> .* theTlajTan.e.ry O’the Habit or 3-EiwdLItET&AL Speech.£eorge* ‘Ba'iaiUe.,Bl»v£ of TsToorcMax WtUy,XCo»sJOT-a*rAKTJ) SoC-lETVTCO-OPERATIVE,„ , S’rS’f aourK *v>JivER3r'*Y': 3o • g~. co ff:0o 4. 0« JJVJB.S