The Chicago MaroonNo- 42 The University of Chicago © rhe Chicago Maroon 1979 Friday, March 9, 1979By Jackie HardyCondominiums — knocking at your front door?3-month condo bansought by LathropBy Jacob LevineA temporary “emergency” con¬dominium conversion moratoriumordinance was introduced in the Ci¬ty Council Wednesday by 5th W'ardAlderman Ross Lathrop. The billwould prohibit the conversion ofbuildings of more than six units forthree months following the bill’spassage.An attempt by Lathrop to sus¬pend Council rules and put the or¬dinance up for immediate con¬sideration by the full Council fail¬ed. and the bill was referred to theBuildings and Zoning Committee.The Committee will meet in theCouncil Chamber Monday todiscuss the condominium issue.The full Council will meet againnext Wednesday.“I expect that on Wednesday wewill come out with some form ofmoratorium,” said Lathrop. “One1a* r»f «■*and thi administrator knows it.”Botn Democratic inayurai can¬didate Jane Bvrne and Republicancandidate Wallace Johnson haveendorsed condominium mori-toriums.According to Lathrop. the con¬dominium issue helped Byrnedefeat Mayor Michael Bilandic inthe primary.The recent announcement of theconversion of 2200 units at Sand¬burg Village, located on the NearNorth side, has prompted reneweddiscussion of the issue. BothLathrop and Johnson spoke at arally on behalf of disgruntled Sand- 5400 HarperOne dead from gas fumesburg Village tenants last Mondaywhile Byrne phoned in her support.Last summer, responding to anumber of local conversions, theAd Hoc Tenant’s Committee wasformed in Hyde Park. In August,they called for a moratorium onconversions.An ordinance for a one yearmoratorium on conversions was in-troduced by Lathrop lastNovember and was stalled in theFinance Committee. Last week thebill was moved to the Buildingsand Zoning Committee.At the council meeting Wednes¬day, Lathrop’s motion to suspendthe rules was defeated after 14thWard Alderman Edward Burkesaid he had doubts the ordinancewould be legally valid and askedthat it be sent to committe.Lathrop said Burke was “full of ap¬plesauce.“Burke said he is intro¬ducing an ordinance that wouldcall for a three year moratoriumon conversions.41st Ward Alderman RomanPucinski, a cosponsor of the or¬dinance. protested moving the or¬dinance to committee, saying,“People can be denied housingduring the next six or seven days.”Lathrop said the Council is anxiousto act on condominium legislationbecause “they want to get it donebefore Jane Byrne takes office.”Lathrop said Wednesday themoratorium would “buy us sometime” while a more comprehen¬sive ordinance is drafted and actedon bvthe council. By Nancy ClevelandA 28 year old woman died in hersleep and more than a dozen othertenants, most of them Universitystudents or employees, were treat¬ed at Billings Emergency Roomfor carbon monoxide poisoningafter a faulty gas boiler spreadtoxic fumes throughout their 13-story building at 5400 S. HarperAve. early Monday morning.Sandra Robinson was pro¬nounced dead at the scene lateMonday night by Cook County dep¬uty medical examiner Dr. RobertKirschner. who blasted the build¬ing’s management for “criminalnegligence” the next day in hispost-autopsv report. In the deathcertificate work sheet, dated Tues¬day, he described her death as a“homicide.”Kirschner’s report is not a crimi¬nal indictment, and an investigatorfrom the state attorney’s office,who was in the building Wednes¬day to talk to tenants, said it wasunlikely the state would prosecuteanyone.“It’s just massive incompe¬tence,” said inspector Rich Kopei-kin.A loose damper in the chimneybreeching blew shut when a draftcame dowrn the chimney, accord¬ing to Kopeikin, and the damperbacked up all the exhaust andkilled Robinson. A special trouble¬shooting firm. Halibut, came intothe building Monday afternoon andfound the loose damper, and cut itout of the breeching. When thebuilding inspector got to the boilerroom that night there were minorleaks in the breeching, but nothingthat couldn’t be patched. But theinspector ordered it all replaced,and PAGE company has beenworking steadily since Mondaynight.“I can’t find fault,” said Kopei¬kin. "The medical examiner de¬clared negligence because he be¬lieved that the repairs in 1976(when two people in the apartmentadjacent to Robinson’s werestricken with monoxide poisoningand hospitalized) were shoddy. Ihave found they were not. It was afreak accident.”Although janitor Mate Mulac dis¬covered “hot smoke” coming from the ground level boiler at 7:30 Mon¬day morning, he did not notify anyof the building’s 150 tenants of thepossible danger. Not until 1 pm dida methodical door-to-door searchfor possible victims of the gasbegin, led by Billings EmergencyRoom doctors. And not until 8 pm.more than 12 hours after the fumeswere first discovered, was Robin¬son’s body found.The city fire department made several attempts to evacuate thebuilding, the last at 2 am Tuesday,but some residents refused toleave, and were not forced to go.The building has been without heatand hot water since Monday morn¬ing, when Mulac turned the boileroff, but at press time, the boilerwas being hooked up again. Mulacsaid he expected it to be fully oper¬ational by Thursday night.to 2Photo Nancy ClevelandFiremen clearing out 5400 S. Harper Ave.Vincent House victimof noxious gas prankToxic smoke bombs routedstudents from their beds in Burton-Judson Hall last Saturday morningat 3 a m Inter-house rivalries arebeing blamed for the incident.Three students have been im¬plicated in the incident. Investiga¬tions are being conducted to findout if other students were involved.Director of Student Housing Ed¬ward Turkington said he is lookinginto the affair and cannot commentwhile the matter is still pending.Three floors of the all-male Vin¬cent House were enveloped in thesmoke from cannisters containingbenzoil peroxide flakes Before ig-News analysisDespres: Mobilizing the 5th Ward niting the cannisters. the bomberspadlocked doors leading out of Vin¬cent House and turned off the halland stairway lights. Students wereonly able to escape the densesmoke through fire escape doors"The smoke was so thick.” onestudent said, "that it was as if so¬meone had put a pillow over myface.” Students were evacuatedwithout difficulty though somestudents complained of respiratoryproblems during the next day.Students from the first, second,and fifth floors of the house weremost heavily affected since thesmoke bombs were on those floors.The smoke prompted a fire alarmand the fire and police depart¬ments were suhimoned It tookover two hours to clear the fumesfrom the building.Jaan Elias* Leon Despres was 5th Ward al¬derman from 1955-75. He is now alawyer in private practice. In hiscover letter, Despres said. “Al¬though I am a Bloom supporter. Itried to write the article as accura¬tely and dispassionately as if Iwere doing it for the Economist ofLondon. ”By Leon DespresBy the time the next issue of TheMaroon appears, the Fifth Ward'sextraordinary April 3 aldermanicrunoff election will have been held.For the next four years, the aider-man will be either LawrenceBloom or Ross Lathrop In the firstround of the election, on February 27, the great surprise was thatBloom came in first, ahead of theincumbent, Lathrop Lathrop’smethodical campaigners expectedtheir man to come in first, and per¬haps even to receive more thanhalf the vote, thus winning the elec¬tion without a runoff However, hegot 36 percent of the vote, with 41percent goine to Bloom, 15 percentto Peter Stodder and 8 percent toJoseph Wilbanks. Coming in firstgave a boost tt> the Bloom cam¬paign workers’ morale, but mayalso lull them into over-confidence.Coming in second was a blow toLathrop, but he reminded peoplethat in 1975 he also came in secondin the first round and then pulled ahead to a 218 vote victory inApril.To win a clearly victorious mar¬gin. each side needs to hold its Feb¬ruary voters and acquire 2000 newvoters. Both sides will workfuriously to that end Nevertheless,even holding the February votersmay be a problem, because manyFebruary voters may not even goto the poils in April, when the excit¬ing Byrne-Bilandic contest will bereplaced by the tame match be¬tween Byrne and Johnson. There¬fore. between now and April 3. l>othsides will lie repeating their pre¬cinct canvasses to try to identity,remind and bring out their Febru¬ary voters. Where will each side find the 2000 additional voters itneeds0 The answer is in the Febru¬ary 27 results:Bloom 5240Lathrop 4643Stodder 1931Wilbanks 1084There is a floating total of 3015votes among the voters tor Wil¬banks. an independently organizedcandidate who broke away fromthe machine Democrats, and Stod¬der. the attractive Hyde Parkerwho aligned himself with the ma¬chine Democrats Wilbanks, whocarried four precincts in Southto 2 f "PublicationscheduleThis is this quarter s final regu¬lar issue of The Maroon. We w illresume publication Friday. April6. The first Grey City Journal willappear April 13. Next Friday.The Chicago Literary Review , aquarterly supplement to TheMaroon, will appear Its theme isthe photo essay.Maroon staff members are re¬minded of a planning meeting at 7pm in the Maroon office. April 2.To all. have a pleasant vacation.V /Deadly fumes at 5300from 1Alderman Koss Lathrop learned about thegas leak late Monday night. He has been inthe building several times offering assis¬tance to displaced tenants in finding emer¬gency housing. Two families have usedLathrop’s services. Lathrop also orderedthe city building department to hold thebuilding’s annual inspection Tuesday, andhas in his office a copy of their report, in¬complete as yet, but with 13 violation cita¬tions already. “The building will be in courtwithin the week” said Lathrop.Displaced University students and em¬ployees (who make up a sizeable proportionof the buildings inhabitants) were offeredhousing (at $8 a night) in InternationalHouse and the Windermere Hotel. Threestudents have accepted the University hous¬ing.Thursday, three different city agencieswere represented in the building; buildings,ventilation, and the state’s attorney's officeeach had an inspector prowling the pre¬mises. The people who have remained in thebuilding have been violating the law, ac¬cording to the building inspector, if theyhave been using their stoves to keep warm.But in several tenant’s apartments, temper¬atures had fallen below 55 degrees, and thekitchen was the only warm place.Three years ago. two people in the apart¬ment next to Robinson’s, #204, were hospi¬talized after suffering carbon monoxide poi¬soning in a similar incident. And in theboiler room a repair notice dated September30, 1976, the time of the previous poisoning,was still on the floor.Robinson’s body was not discoveredsooner because “the janitor said he remem¬bered seeing her leave for work that morn¬ing,” said Dr. John Lumpkin, one of twoBillings staffers on the scene. Robinsonworked in the Loop offices of the HarrisTrust and Savings Bank. Concerned whenshe did not show up for work Monday, hersupervisor called her family to ask if shewas sick. Her brother and sister entered herapartment at 8 pm with a pass-key andfound Robinson’s still-warm body curledface-down on her bed. Her alarm clock, setfor 5, was still buzzing.Tenants in the building are asking if Ro¬binson could have been saved if prompt ac¬tion had been taken when the fumes werefirst discovered. And Dr. Frank Baker, headof the Emergency Department at Billings, isasking why people in the building who no¬ticed the gas’s effect as earlv as Sunday af¬ternoon, did not call the police or gas com¬ pany and report it. “A nice old man told methat ‘sure, he knew there was somethingwrong with the air; he went outside to pickup the paper in the hall and got dizzy whenhe bent over. So then he went back insideand closed the door and was fine.’ ”Robinson’s family is considering legal ac¬tion against the building and managementcompany, even if the state’s attorney’s of¬fice decides not to launch a criminal case.And tenants are upset over the secrecy andmisinformation they feel surrounded the en¬tire incident.“I was in the building that entire after¬noon,” said a tenant, “and I saw Mate andasked him what was happening. He saidnothing, and when he came by a little laterwith the police and asked me how I was. Iasked him if he wanted to know because ofthe gas. All he said was ‘how did you knowabout it?' He didn’t want to tell me.”No signs were posted in the building warn¬ing people to open their windows or mention¬ing gas until late Monday afternoon. Theonly notice left by door-to-door searcherstold people to go to Billings Emergenc Roomfor blood tests if they felt ill, and did notmention the gas. The only notice that men¬tioned gas was put up by a tenant, and wasremoved from the elevator soon after.Now, the front door is plastered with no¬tices and offers for help. Thurday morning acopy of a Chicago Tribune story about Ro¬binson’s death was posted, but it had beenremoved by noon. £When Mulac shut off the boiler, he calledJoseph Good of Dalton Management Com¬pany, who has managed the building for 12years. Then. Mulac says, he called People’sGas Company, which sent over a crew toclean out the obstructed boiler chimney.Good could not be reached for commenton the death, nor could the owner of thebuilding. Remona Asmus, who holds it intrust with a suburban bank.None of the building’s 150 tenants was no¬tified that anything was wrong until morethan 4 hours later, after two student resi¬dents sought help at Billings EmergencyRoom. After blacking out several times inher apartment, Kathy Bell called the Eng¬lewood District rescue service for emer¬gency transportation to the hospital at 9:25am. An hour later, Gail Miller called Uni¬versity Security. Both women were nau¬seous and had blacked out several times,but neither suspected gas.At the Emergency Room, attending physi¬cian Bob Hockberger and resident physicianAnn Salmon put the addresses and symp¬toms together and ordered monoxide level blood tests. Miller and Bell both had monox¬ide counts of more than 25 percent, a cleardanger sign. Hockberger called LutheranHospital and arranged to have the womenflown by helicopter to their detoxificationfacilities.The test results came back at 12; 15, ac-cordng to Dr. Frank Baker, director of theEmergency Room. “And when we found outwe had someone from the second floor andsomeone from the fourteenth, we saw themakings of a potential major disaster, if allthe people on the floors in between had beenexposed to the same level,” he said.Baker called the city police and fire de¬partments. University security, and Assis¬tant Dean of Students Richard Royse whohandles student emergencies.Then Baker headed to the building withhis assistant, emergency medicine physi¬cian John Lumpkin.At the building. Baker and the fire crewconvinced Mulac of the need for a door-to- door search. But Mulac had no master-keyto each apartment, and many tenants hadadded an extra dead-bolt lock and not givena key to the janitor. Three people werefound to be suffering from monoxide expo¬sure during the first sweep of the building(between 1 and 3:30 pm) and 10 apartmentsremained upopened and unchecked by theend. Faced with the option of breaking downdoors or trying other approaches. Royse te¬lephoned Dalton Management and got thework telephone numbers of the people stillnot located. Three more who were called atwork were identified as suffering from expo¬sure and came in to the hospital.At 3:30 only three apartments remainedunaccounted for. The mother of a 5th floorapartment dweller called and had just spo¬ken to her daughter. She had complained offeeling drowsy all day. “She was unable tocome to the door herself, and we had to goget her,” said Lumpkin. “So we know wesaved one life.”Mobilizing the votefrom 1Shore and Woodlawn, nas already declaredfor Bloom. Neither Stodder nor the machineDemocrats have declared themselves pub¬licly. For each side, the keys to victory aretherefore (a) bringing back the Februaryvoters, (b) winning over Stodder and Wil¬banks voters, and (c) developing whollynew voters. Programs, energy, enthusiasm,money and, above all, precinct canvassingwill determine the outcome.For Bloom, a special problem is to orga¬nize the 20 precincts in South Shore. With 33percent of the population, South Shore castonly 23 percent of the vote, and Lathrop ledBloom there 1081 to 709. However, therewere 1111 votes for the eliminated candi¬dates. Woodlawn, with 10 percent of the pop¬ulation, cast only 8 percent of the votes.Bloom led Lathrop 213 to 206, but there were572 votes for the others. The center of thebattle is Hyde Park, with 58 percent of thepopulation, which cast 69 percent of thevote. Bloom led there 4318 to 3356, with 1332votes going to the others.One of the main issues in the campaign,both plus and minus, is Lathrop’s record asalderman. Lathrop says he has been a splen¬did independent, active alderman, the bestin the Fifth Ward for 25 years, and deservesreelection. The Bloom forces say he hasbeen generally unresponsive, inactive, se¬cretive, inaccessible and awake only at elec¬tion time. They say that, after the 1975 elec¬tion with machine money and votes, hisformally independent votes in the City Coun¬cil were only passive “tagalong” votes, de¬ signed to create the appearance of inde¬pendence without initiative or substanceBloom promises energy, independence, ini¬tiative, and responsiveness all year long.On general issues, Lathrop drew a hardline early. He took the risk of divisivenessand criticized his opponent for being “sup¬ported by a left-liberal coalition”. Thus, hepitched his own appeal toward conserva¬tives. Actually, Bloom’s support is verybroad. Both candidates have large “citi¬zens’ committees”.Lathrop has the continuing advantage ofbroad name recognition following fouryears in office. Bloom has the advantagenow of momentum and of the generally goodimpression he makes in personal appear¬ances — in coffees, debates, and street cam¬paigning.For the Fifth Ward the campaign is ex¬traordinary, because since 1935 when thelast Republican alderman left office, the pa¬tronage machine Democrats have neverbeen so reduced. The machine has won elec¬tions or been beaten, but it has always beena strong force. Even in 1975, by throwing themachine votes behind Lathrop, the machinewas able to veto A1 Raby as alderman andelect Lathrop. In February, 1979, it stillmustered 1931 votes for Stodder. or 15 per¬cent of the total. In April, 1979, however, itappears that the organization’s votes willcontribute to the result but they will not bedecisive. The outcome will depend probablyon how many interested, enthusiastic volun¬teer Bloom and Lathrop workers take partin the campaign. Both sides need them, ur¬gently.Court Studio Theatre presentsROPEby Patrick HamiltonDirected by Randy .SolomonMarch 2, 3, 4 and 9, 10, 118:30 P.M. Sundays at 7:30 P.M.Reynolds Club Theatre57th & University753-3581WE CARE ABOUT YOU!JON MAR CORP.7227 S. STONY ISLAND, CHICAGO, It 60649493-2600Secretarial Service(The Personalized Professional Service)TYPING XEROX COPIESLetters - Manuscripts - EnvelopesTheses - Resumes - StatisticalTRANSCRIBING Cassettes - TapesNOTARY PUBLIC- Conference Room Available -* PROMPT EFFICIENT * ACCURATE Center for Latin American Studies andDepartment of Romance Languagesand LiteraturepresentJOHN S. BRUSHWOODUniversity of Kansas“Intellect and Imaginationin the ContemporaryMexican Novel”Monday, March 12 •4P.M. • Classics 2 iTEACHERS,SALESPEOPLE,STUDENTSPart-time or full-time, $5 per hour tostart. Morning and Evening work. Class¬room demonstrations in pre-schools andin-home sales of reading programs.Compton’s division ofEncyclopedia BrittanicaPhone 9 a,m. to 12 noon449-26202 — The Chicago Maroon Friday, March 9, 1979fCollege GPA here lower than other schoolsBy Jaan EliasThe average grade point average (GPA)of students enrolled in the College during1978-79 was 2.91, according to figures re¬leased by the Office of College Statistics.This is the first year statistics on GPA’shave been calculated.• A breakdown of the general statisticsshow:• Men and women had the same averageGPA’s even though women had lower cumu¬lative SAT scores than men upon entranceto the College.• Students in the New Collegiate Divisionhad the highest total GPA (3.03) in the Col¬lege. Students in the Physical Sciences hadthe second highest GPA (2.96).• Students in the Social Sciences divisionhad the lowest average GPA (2.81).• Transfer students have slightly higherGPA’s than students who enroll in the Col¬lege as first-year students.• Students received their lowest gradesduring the second year. Fourth year stu¬dents had the highest GPA’s of any studentsin the College.• A brief telephone survey of similarschools around the country revealed gradesat the University were lower than grades atmost of the institutions contacted.The GPA figures released by the Office ofCollege Statistics are calculated differentlythan grade averages at other universitiesaround the country. The GPA’s here werecalculated by obtaining the GPA of each stu¬dent and then averaging those numbers.Other schools take raw course scores andthen divide by the number of grades given.This difference in methodology makes theaverage GPA calculated here slightlyhigher than it would be if computed by otheruniversities.Yale College students received anaverage grade of 3.23 during the past year.40 percent of the grades given in the Collegeat Yale were “A”s and another 37 percentwere “B”s. A recent Chicago Tribune arti¬cle said nearly half of the students at Yalegraduate with honorsThe Daily Northwestern, the student newspaper of Northwestern University, re¬ported the average grade given in the Col¬lege of Liberal Arts and Sciences was 3.05.The average grade at Northwestern hasdropped four percent in the last four years.A representative at Stanford University reported that Stanford grades have stabi¬lized during the last year and that no studyhas been done concerning them. In 1975, TheStanford Daily reported that the averagegrade given in undergraduate courses wasjust under 3.5. The faculty then recommend¬ ed the reinstitution of the “D” grade andsources there said this has brought downgrade averages.While other universities are worryingabout grade inflation, the College has con¬ducted studies on the low grades given incourses.A faculty committee was appointed herein the mid-1960 s to investigate the causesand effects of the generally lower grades atChicago after it was revealed that grades atHarvard were a full letter-grade higher thanthose in the College. The committee focusedattention on the grade issue and a slight risein grade averages was subsequently ob¬served.A second committee was formed sevenyears ago to study the grading issue again.This committee, chaired by Marvin Zonis.found grades had fallen once again tomid-1960’s levels.Zonis said he found a general recognitionthroughout the country that grades from theCollege were tougher than grades from in¬stitutions such as Harvard which he saidwere “worthless’’ to graduate admissionsofficers.One of the other findings of the committeewas that instructors in the College weregiven few guidelines on how to grade stu¬dents. This resulted in high grades from pro¬fessors who taught mostly in the graduatedivisions since graduate course grades tendto be higher than undergraduate coursegrades. New instructors, the committeefound, had little idea on the criteria forgrading in the College.The committee recommended publicizingthe tough standards at Chicago and encour¬aging department chairmen to coordinategrade criteria within their departments.Faculty and administration members arelooking into the possibility of puttingstickers on grade transcripts giving themean and median grades This, some hope,would alleviate student fears that thetougher standards at the Chicago will hurt astudent's chances for graduate school ad¬missions.MEAN MEDIAN Xo oCATEGORY .: r a SAT GPA SAT or 1111 H197778 Cumulabvp V M 197778 Cumula-tive -V M NUMB cases*2 3 4 5 V 8 9 101. ALL STUDENTS 2.83 2.91 620 640 2.92 2.98 627 646 24782. ALL STUDENTSWHO ENTERED(i) AS FRESHMEN 2.83 2.91 622 644 2.91 2.96 629 650 2114(ii) AS TRANSFERS 2.83 2.94 607 612 3.00 3.05 614 612 3643. ALL STUDENTSWHO ARE:(i) MALES 2.83 2.91 621 657 2.91 2.98 627 663 1610(ii) FEMALES 2.84 2.91 618 606 2.96 3.00 627 608 8684. COLLEGIATE DIVISIONS:(i) BIOLOGICALSCIENCES 2.83 2.91 600 633 2.90 3.00 602 638 416(ii) HUMANITIES 2.86 2.93 640 613 3.00 3.00 646 611 508(iii) NEW COLLEGIATEDIV 2.96 3.03 638 642 2.92 3.00 638 652 56(iv) PHYSICAL SCIENCES 2.87 2.96 619 700 3.00 3.02 626 710 413(v) SOCIAL SCIENCES 2.81 2.88 618 630 2.90 2.94 627 634 9625. CLASS OF(i) 1978 3.14 3.10 624 646 3.22 3.14 636 657 443(ii) 1979 2.75 2.90 619 642 2.88 2.94 624 645 653(iii) 1980 2.78 2.88 624 638 2.90 2.95 630 640 737(iv) 1981 2.84 285 613 635 2.91 2.91 620 641 618* Excludes students (i) who entered the College before 1972;(ii) those who withdrew during the year 1977-78; and (iii) those forwhom we do not have the particular information.Harper Court SportsWide selection ofsquash, racquetball, andtennis equipmentRunning Shoes - Swimwear5225 S. Harper 363-3748HEAR AGAIN STEREOSells guaranteed name brand usedand demo stereo components at 40%to 70% off regular prices.THESE AREOI KWEEKLY SPEC IALS:TX TEAC 4300 $309.00JVC 5501 89.00KENWOOI) 3130 99.00INFINITY 1001 ea. 75.00ONKYO TX 2500 179.00TECHNICS 5360 149.00PHILIPS 212 69.00OHM I) ea. 69.00SCOTT 344B 85.00SANSUI TU 7700 149.00Complete systems from $75 to $750.(i0 day trade back privilege. Namebrand components for limited bud¬gets.HEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 N. California 328-7737 Court Studio Theatre announcesOPEN AUDITIONSforLITTLE MARY SUNSHINEby Rick BesovanDirected by Michael Hildebrand,Music Direction by Michael JinboMarch 10 and 11.12 noon 'til 5p.m.Reynolds Club Theatre. 57t^ & UniversityBring a prepared song 753-3581LOOKING FOR SOMETHING BETTER?tie will have several apartme^s available forLease in the very near future.2 to 3Vi room 1 bedroom apts.Starting at 1225.Security and one-vear I>ease required.^ e have a lot to offer. Come see us.MAYFAIR APARTMENTS. 5496 So. Hyde Park bivd.VOLUNTEERS NEEDED SPRING BREAKin theSPANISH SUN!One week in theCosta del Sol from $399* Round trip air transportation between Chicagoand Malaga via World Airways DC-8, a U.S.charter air carrier.* Transfers between airport and hotel, includingbaggage handling.* Welcoming Sangria Party.* Seven (7) nights accommodations in the hotelof your choice.* Continental breakfast daily.. * Hospitality Desk.* All tips, taxes and gratuities for included items.Departures". March 23, April 6, April 20, ‘April 2~(Prices are per person, based on double occupancy)AIR ONLY $339 (plus taxes)STL YOLR TRAVEL AGENTCharter Travel Corporation^ I W '80 Xtcxt* caSaNe Street Chicago Nhnois 6060" 312 977 7400To Help Local Senior CitizensCan you spare a couple of hours a week to be:shopping assistant0companion for group outings?For information call:STUDENT VOLUNTEER BURE \lTIIF. BLUE GARGOYLE955*11 OK CAROL JONES, Coordinator HYDE PARK PIPE RND TOBRCCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStuderts under 30 get 10% offask for “Big JimMon. - Sat. 9-8: Sun. 12-5PipesPipe Tobaccos. Imported Cigarettes CigarsThe Chicago Maroon Friday, March 9, 1979 — 3EditorialIt could have beenworseThe University has long been criticized for itspaternalism in the community. Last Monday,however, the intervention was more thanwelcome.Because of the extraordinary efforts of Dr.Frank Baker, head of the Billings HospitalEmergency Room, and Assistant Dean ofStudents Richard Royse, the carbon monoxideleak at 5400 S. Harper Ave. was not nearly asdisastrous as it might have been.Ironically, Dalton Management knew aboutthe fumes long before Baker had a chance topiece the information together. Early that morn¬ing, instead of notifying the fire or police depart¬ments, or even the tenants themselves of theblocked chimney reported by the janitor, JosephGood, the building’s manager under the DaltonManagement Company, told the janitor, a manwho barely speaks English, to call the gas com¬pany. The janitor says he did, but at no time be¬fore the arrival of Baker and the city police, firedepartment and University Security, was any ef¬fort made to warn the tenants that anything wasamiss. In fact, when a tenant asked the janitor’swife why there was an ambulance out in front,she didn’t know. The ambulance was there topick up Kathy Bell, the first reported victim ofthe gas.This is merely one in a long stream of terribleincidents in this building. Three years ago, car¬bon monoxide from the same boiler put two peo¬ple in the hospital. There were two rapes in thebuilding in the last two years, and three attemp¬ted rapes in November and December of lastyear. Security is casual in this and other Daltonbuildings: intercoms are frequently broken formonths at a time, and the major deterrent to of¬ficials clearing the building was that manyresidents had put supplementary locks on theirdoors. As with the signs that warned of the recentrapes, the signs that Royse put up on Mondaywere taken down within hours.The University should not have to interfere inprivately owned apartment buildings. Vice-President for Community Affairs, JonathanKleinbard said the University has long been will¬ing to work with the Southeast Chicago Commis¬sion, and with individual landlords if necessaryto correct building violations when city agencieshave failed. If the University had not intervenedlast Monday there might have been, as the medi¬cal examiner said, 13 deaths, instead of one.The Chicago MaroonEditor: Abbe FletmanNews editor : Eric Von der PortenFeatures editor: Claudia MagatActing photography editor: Tim BakerPhotography editor: Carol StudenmundSports editor : R.W. RohdeAssociate editor: Jacob LevineContributing editor: Nancy ClevelandLiterary Review editor: Peter EngProduction: David Miller, Peter AdelsStaff: Curtis Black, David Burton, Lee Chait, KendallChristiansen, Jaan Elias, Dave Glockner, Jackie Hardy,Chris Isidore, Richard Kaye, Carol Klammer. Bob Larson.Bette Leash. Bruce Lewenstein. Donald Link. Dan Loube.Michael Rabin, Andy Rothman, Sue Sartain, Margot Slau-son, Howard Suls. Calvin Thrilling, Mark Wallach, JohnWright.4 — The Chicago Maroon Friday, March 9, 1979 Letters to the Editor\IFor shame!To the Editor:Has the City Dump moved to 53rdSt.? The main culprit is McDonalds.Before they moved to 53rd St., theypromised the community that theywould be responsible for their litter.It is over two months since the bliz¬zard. The snow has been melting forsometime, so there is no reason thattheir garbage couldn’t have beenpicked up. Equally responsible arethe business people on 53rd St. andour Alderman Have they no respectfor the people living in the neighbor¬hood’.’ On one of the posts overlook¬ing a huge mound of garbage is thesign “Lathrop working for you ". Forshame!Sue CohenIn the beginning...To the Editor :Who and What Governs the Univer¬sity of Chicago?“Aunque la jaula sea deoro, no deja de ser pri-sion.” (Mexican song).‘ Though the cage be ofgold, it is not less a pris¬on. ”In the beginning the trusteescreated the investments and profit¬ed from apartheid; on the next daythey elaborated with “moral” justi¬fications.Banks and corporations havebrought more than money to SouthAfrica. With their investments theyhave created a particular world, onewhich involves a way to appreciatelife: profits; a form of social rela¬tions: exploitation of the blacks; atype of insecurity: fear of govern¬ment by the majority; a strategicplan: defense of regimes associatedin the game of international capital;a burden of hypocrisy: investmentsto aid the oppressed blacks; a mock¬ery of international agreements: theimpunity of free enterprise.Fear and arrogance, lies andparanoia, profit and contempt arethe motives and attitudes of invest¬ment in the regime of apartheid. Toexplain it in any other manner wouldnot constitute an objective examina¬tion of that reality, but simply a posi¬tion in favor of the status quoHanna Gray’s appearance at Man-del Hall last week was a perfect op¬portunity to legitimate her leader¬ship before hundreds of students andprofessors. There was hope that theUniversity community would have anew encounter with its authorities;that the University would take acourse in keeping with its best pur¬poses; that it would recover its rightto be governed by humanistic princi¬ples, and not be merchants’ conven¬iences. From Hanna Gray’s perfor¬mance at the Forum would come ananswer to the question: who governsand what ends guide the University?Unfortunately Hanna Gray didn’tmeet these hopes.Promising to be open, Hanna Graydid not attempt a dialogue; she con¬firmed the previously stated positionof former President J ohn Wilson andthe trustees. She did not discuss thereasons for divesiture; she lamelyrepeated the “advantages” of in¬vestments. Having affirmed that theact of investment in South Africaconstitutes a “special case,” givenits political and moral implications,she treated the issue in a legalisticmanner Hanna Gray did not clarifyproblems, she avoided them; she didnot assume the defense of the Uni¬versity’s moral status; she merelyreferred to the code of economic “re¬ sponsibilities” of the Trustees. Shedid not encourage the participationof the University community; sheblocked it. She did not act as Presi¬dent of the University; she per¬formed as a mouthpiece of the cor¬porations. Hanna Gray did not winover the majority of those in MandelHall; rather, she disillusionedthem.Seeking to explain her logic,Hanna Gray fell victim to her inco¬herence. Hers was not a problem ofverbalization, but of opposition ofloyalties: truly to serve the Univer¬sity or to align herself to the mercan-tilistic criteria of bankers and cor¬porate executives.These are hard statements; moreso when directed toward the Presi¬dent of the University. Nevertheless,the most painful fact is what HannaGray upheld in the Forum. Can shecorrect this position? The answer isclear: She should do it for her owngood as President, for the good of theUniversity as an institution claimingto serve human values, and as a ges¬ture of solidarity with the South Afri¬can people struggling for the end ofapartheid. In accord with this, the“open hearings,” the referendumand various proposals advanced bythe Action Committee and othersshould be welcome.It is not surprising that the fester¬ing cancer created in the Universityby investments in South Africa andby the economic counsels deliveredto Pinochet’s fascistic regime by theDepartment of Economics gives riseto the repugnance felt for this insti¬tution around the U. S. and in the de¬veloping countries. Neither is it sur¬prising that hundreds, thousands inthe University community demandthe extraction of these tumors.Among other things, we believe, andwe’re sure that President Gray doestoo. that more than a sarcastic grinshould be evoked by the motto of theUniversity “Cresear Scientia, VitaExcolatur”“Veneno que no secura,Te carga a la sepultura”(Mexican popular say¬ing). ' *(“Poison not cured,leads to the grave. ”)Primitivo Rodriguez OsegueraNearly newsTo the Editor:I would like to give my reaction toa piece of news I nearly made.Two days ago carbon monoxideleaked throughout the thirteen floorapartment building I live in. Onetwenty eight year old woman wasfound dead on her bed, a couple ofpeople were found in critical condi¬tion, others took themselves to Bill¬ings Hospital. At the time I waselsewhere.This incident took place in Hyde Park on the corner of 54th Street andHarper Avenue. My apartmentbuilding is an old one. Plaster cracksfrom ceilings, walls need paint, andthere are roaches. The intercomsystem doesn’t work and has notbeen seen fit to fix. Last Decembertwo women were assaulted in theelevator. Each month my roommateand I send $260 for rent to DaltonManagement which takes care of thebuilding.I came to Chicago just this Fallfrom a small town in Washingtonstate. There, doors are left unlockedand people do not go out of their wayto do nothing for you. I am not usedto the kind of respect DaltonManagement places on human life.Neil PritzVarsity takesa runPetitions have recently been cir¬culated requesting that the FieldHouse track be open to the entireU.C. community during the earlyevening hours, as opposed to beingrestricted to varsity team use duringthat time period. As U.C. athletestraining for intercollegiate events,we feel these petitions demonstratea lack of appreciation for the de¬mands of varsity level competition.In order to be successful any teamhas to exploit fully every resourceavailable to it. Contrary to the peti¬tion's implications it is plainly notthe case at the U.C. that varsitysports have a monopoly over scarceathletic resources. In fact, the U.C.makes its athletic facilities avail¬able for recreational and intramuraluse to an extent rarely found even atmajor state universities. In this con¬text it is unreasonable for personsnot constrained by the necessity ofteam workouts to demand access tothe Field House during the part ofthe day that is elsewhere widely ac¬cepted as prime varsity trainingtime. An equitable sharing of theField House can only be accom¬plished if the burden of inconven¬ience is spread evenly as well. Werealize that recreational runnersmay have a legitimate complaintwhen they say they were not notifiedin advance that the track would notbe open to them. While we do notsupport this particular policy, wesupport the varsity's first claim tothe use of the Field House.U.C. Women's CrewResponsibilitiesandresponsibilitiesTo the P^ditor:Hanna Gray's argument againstdivestiture, precisely because it wasso well composed, was the bestpossible argument against liberaleducation as she understands it, thatI can think of.I do not know if Mrs. Gray’s argu¬ment really was water-tight. If itcontains no logical holes, it is all themore depressing. No matter what,though, to me the illegal “emo¬tional” response of Mr. ZolaTsembe. from the South AfricanCongress of Trade Unions, to hissituation — his very real outrageand demand that the audience con¬sider the effect of South Africa’s con¬tinuing policy ol black oppression asit pertains to individuals struck meas infinitely closer to addressing theproblem The word responsibilityhas become too ambiguous.Elizabeth SlangViewpointAlternatives to nuclear devastationJohn Marbes is a public affairs student at the Universityand a member ot the U.S. Nuclear Overkill Moratorium(NOMOR) Committee. Before entering the college.Marbes was a nuclear weapons team leader and an avia¬tion ordinance missile technician in the U.S. Marine Corpsand a member of the Institute on Comparative Politicaland Economic Systems at Georgetown University.By John Marbes1 can remember the fear struck in our young, flutteringhearts as the air-raid warning emptied classrooms intothe school’s corridors, to await the blast that would soonrain flying glass and brick. Along the solid rows of bodies,one could see kindergarten children assuming the civil de¬fense crouch position, their trembling hands clasped be¬hind their heads. Side-by-side we silently prayed that noharm would come to our family and friends. Each of uswondered. “Is it real this time, or is it just another drill toprepare us for when the Russians really do attack theUnited States?” Soon we were to learn that it was a falsealarm and that no missiles were coming — this time.That was 1962, a year which produced international mis¬trust and paranoia that permeated all levels of Americansociety. “The Russian Threat” was bolstered by NikitaKrushchev pounding the United Nations podium with shoein hand, delivering the infamous edict, "We will buryyou.” Although the context indicated that it was a declara¬tion of Soviet intention to become competitive with theU.S. economy as an exporting country, the news mediasensationalized < or capitalized, if you will) the message tobe taken as the officiation of our ^1 enemy. Since thattime, the two superpowers have neared nuclear confron¬tation on several occasions, while the interim was used toaccentuate the other's military pseudo-superiority to jus¬tify the arms race. The American public was bombardedwith the image of Soviet ICBM’s paraded through RedSquare. Thus each nation fabricated an enemy to facili¬tate massive appropriations for defense spending. Just asthe “Bomber Gap” resulted in the production of the SAC.B-52 armada in the 1950’s, the great “Missile Gap”claimed in 1960 also turned out to be c’est de la merde,when it was later learned that both scares were engin¬eered in a Pentagon propaganda campaign.It gradually became more obvious that something very-powerful was emerging. Its existence was recognized andconfirmed when President Dwight D. Eisenhowerwarned. “In the councils of government we must guardagainst the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whethersought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex.The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced powerexists and will persist. . . We must never let the weight ofthis combination endanger our liberties or democraticprocesses. . .” Recalling that Eisenhower was cultivatedas a military thinker, one would expect advocacy of ahard-line military stance. Furthermore, this was not avote-fetching slogan made to a small informal gathering,but instead it was his farewell address to the entire nationWe must ask ourselves what magnitude of pressure didthe Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces sense tohave caused him to sound this warning’’There may not be deliberate collusion of a military-in¬dustrial complex, however if power lies where the moneyis found, then the fiscal year 1979 projection of $132 billionfor national defense can be considered indicative of somefairly big interests. No other activity enjoys a strictercloak of secrecy. By design, the access to informationwhich any individual may possess is so fragmented thatno one can fully grasp the situation. The amount of controlthat the military-industrial complex has so deeply en¬trenched in our political and economic structure has led toa feeling of powerlessness experienced even by govern¬ment officials in controlling the nuclear arms race.The current level of the world arsenal stands as a testi¬monial to mankind’s shortsighted and destructive natureIt is a sorry state of mind when a person abandons all hopeby rationalizing that as long as man lives on this earth,continual wars will persist. For it is that false belief whichwill surely result in Armageddon.Unfortunately, people cannot easily understand an ab¬straction without something to link it to. The awesomeweaponry that has developed since the dawning of theatomic era is difficult to fully conceptualize. How conven¬ient it is to regard the more than 250.000 incinerated inHiroshima as another page in history. Or how easily we’veforgotten that the Hibakusha, the unfortunate survivors,still suffer today by our hand of destruction.A condescending public bears equal blame for the un¬controlled growth of nuclear weaponry. The questionarises. "Why should I get involved?” Simply stated, a citi¬zen who ignores the actions of government, supports itsactions in two ways. First, non-involvement allows gov¬ernment decision-making to go unchecked Second, suchpolicies and actions are directly supported through feder¬al taxes. The many important problems of pollution, raceand sex discrimination, political struggle, etc. center onthe survival of mankind. Unless we come to solve themore fundamental issue, all other endeavors are futile. Nuclear disarmament can be regarded as the ultimateecological threat.But disarmament, it is argued, is not practical duringthese present times of world tension. Just because we areexperiencing a time of peril does not necessarily mean wecannot find solutions. Actually, the risks of continuing ourpresent course are greater than if we were to find a newdirection. Not knowing enough about a new subject is noreason to avoid it. One does not have to be a junkie to knowthe destruction of heroine. Likewise, you do not need to bean expert on the specifications of TERCOM (Terrain Con¬tour Matching) guidance and control systems, or know thedetailed features of the Mark 12A warhead, to be able todecide whether or not nuclear weapons are a realthreat.The potential for annihilation is clear. Consider the factthat the U.S. is currently prepared to destroy 200 major(pop. 100,000+) Soviet cities with a minimum of 35 war¬heads targeted for each. Or the fact that just three of ourPoseidon submarines possess the necessary firepower toparalyze Soviet society, should be convincing except wedo not stop there. The U.S. maintains half of its Naval fleetof 41 submarines constantly on station, off the surround¬ing waters of the U.S.S. R., capable of destroying any So¬viet target within 15 minutes.These examples are ottered not to argue the merits otopposing strengths, but to provide some indication of themagnitude of potential destruction. One valid observationmade is that the issue has been debated largely on techno¬cratic grounds and has thus become ethically sterilized.Our technological advances have far outstripped the deli¬cate pace of ideological adaptation. This ever increasinggap must be bridged, or else we will irrevocably lose con¬trol of our destiny.Ostensibly, one of our primary functions is to preserveworld peace But how can we approach any semblance ofpeace with a defense posture based on the threat of de¬cimating the human race? In the action/reaction spiral, itis ironic that for every increment we expand our nucleararsenal, we increasingly become a definite target. Thepast has demonstrated that there is a correlation betweenour strengthening defense and a resultant security endan-germent.Adaptive warfare strategy provides for a self-perpe¬tuating mechanism. The internal dynamics in keeping onestep ahead of the competitor gives way to rapid obsoles¬cence of designed systems unless it can be modified toovercome enemy evasion tactics. For instance, electroniccountermeasure equipment is resisted by electroniccounter-countermeasure components.Each year, more sophisticated and dangerous weaponsare developed for use as bargaining chips. At least that iswhat the public is told. Other questionable practices in¬clude the deployment of weapons like the tactical cruisemissile, the Phoenix, and the 8-inch Lance projectile Thetemptation for other countries to illegitimately utilize U.S.designed weapons systems is a growing danger. One of themost recent announcements which has spurred worldw idedisdain is the development of the neutron bomb EvenNATO officials have expressed concern whether we canabate proliferation or fight a tactical war in a limited nu¬clear war. As the trend continues, we face the increasedrisk of deliberate misuse, incident, accident, unwarrantedproliferation and susceptibility to terrorist activity. Ournuclear policy has led to perhaps the greatest risk-strate¬gy of all: counterforce, an ability to strike missile silo tar¬gets before missile launch. Counterforce is identical to afirst-strike option in all respects except that we say wewill not but they know that we can.The Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) may be apositive step, however, it totally neglects the realm of tac¬tical nuclear weapons. While SALT negotiators jugglestrategic weapons numbering around 9.000 which belongto the U.S.. tactical weapons go unrestricted A tacticalnuclear weapon is the “little” breed of mass destructionranging up to 20 kiloton yields (for comparison purposes.Hiroshima was devastated by 12.5kt >. And how many tac¬tical warheads are deployed around the world"7 Roughly22.000 to the Soviets' 60.000.We boast of being the most progressive world leader,but Defense Department officials justify huge appropria¬tions on the basis of what the Soviets are planning Whatwe are left with is a race with no end in sight. If we mustdevote our precious resources for national defense, thenwhat limits do we set. or is it purely reactionary0 Do wewant to destroy the world once, or should we want to killeveryone fifty times over0 What domestic services do wesacrifice in order to remain the most powerful nation0Myth: Defense spending is good for the economy.Surprisingly, many people still believe this despite nu¬merous reports to the contrary The occasional studieswhich claim the economic virtue of military spending,usually point to the fact that arms production is a capitalintensive industry which induces smaller countries to im¬port U.S weapons. Defense contractors distribute thewealth back to their employees, these studies argue, in the form of payroll, job security, and fringe benefits while atthe same time, they lower the trade deficit.. and so on ..and they lived happily ever after.Granted, the defense industry is highly capital intensiveand it is very good for the defense contractor, as long as hecan realize a greater expected return on investments. Butwhen viewed among the other industries in terms of thenational economy, further analysis reveals the counter¬productive nature of the armaments business First of all.being highly capital intensive is only one facet of the en¬terprise. meaning that vast arrays of equipment for mak¬ing weapons and related materials. It is an irrefutablefact that its end-items are non-productive capital. Theway in which we achieve national growth is by producinggoods which will in turn produce other goods or contributeto some other end For example, a truck can be consi¬dered an end item in itself, but it is utilized for some fur¬ther purpose such as freight transportation or haulingconstruction materials to build a house or develop a road¬way. Agricultural equipment is also an end item, but itfurther yields farm commodities. Now. what does a bombproduce?Second, being a capital intensive industry indicates thatonly the much larger corporations can afford to enter themarket because it is a strain financially to be both capitaland labor intensive It is generaly more cost efficient toautomate than it is to pay several employees to performthe same task Therefore fewer jobs are available at thelesser skilled levels involved in direct operation of theplant, and so what is left are the limited positions for-thetechnically skilled and managerial staff. In regard to jobsecurity, layoffs are a genuine concern due to the com¬pany’s dependency on government contracts. The largerdefense contractors typically engender inefficiency by thesheer size of the programs they undertake. From the con¬sumer point of view the money the government awards toprime contractors is actually derived from what has beenpaid in federal taxes. Whenever citizesn are heavilytaxed, they retain less money to spend Decreased con¬sumer spending results in a decline in business revenuesand hence a reduction in available jobs.And finally, the patent argument used to justify armssales to foreign countries is that it helps balance the tradedeficit. This obviously demonstrates the company’s liabil¬ity and concern is limited to the moment of sale and doesnot look further into who the weapons will be used on andhow they can quantify human suffering We should allagree that human lives matter more than lavish profits.Peace is not merely an absence of war: it is a way oflife. Our grow ing interdependence necessitates a commu¬nity of interest rather than a conflict of interest in order topreserve civilizaticfn A military detente must be accom¬panied by a political detente as well. We cannot hope toachieve disarmament by simply scrapping our stockpiles,because it would be a tenuous peace indeed if we did notlikewise dismantle the motives for war It is time the U.S.provided some leadership in this area instead of profess¬ing empty promises America holds the lead in the raceand is therefore in the best position for initiativeBy addressing the problem of nuclear weapon's exis¬tence. we can make the world a safer and better place tolive, not only for ourselves, but for our progeny. We can nolonger afford to underestimate the hair-trigger readinessin which nuclear devastation will be delivered automatic-all. efficiently and effectively.niMOrf S9MOXSMOOP S. lllMOdQ1 Powell’s BookstoreHelp!We've been cleaning up — we need yourbooks — bring us your tired', your poor,vour huddled volumes.CASH FOR BOOKSNew arrivals:German LiteratureLinguisticsNew Judaica SectionReview CopiesAuto RepairPowell's BookstoreWarehouse102ft S. Wabash. 8th floor341-0748- Thisweek only -Open only Saturday■ POWCLL-S aoOKSTONCS KMIUf TOMM FOW1LL *Powell’s Bookstore1501 F. 57th St.055-77800a.m. -11 p.m.F\ er\da\The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 9, 1979 — 5JAMES GALWAYAnnie's SongandOther Galway FavoritesincludingBachianas Brasileiras No. 5/Liebesfreud"Carmen" Fantasy La plus que lenteCharles Gerhardt/National PhilharmonicARL1-3061SPECIAL-ONLY $3.60Julion Dreom0John V i I I i o m s STUDENT COOPRCA CLASSICAL SALERED SEAL$7.98 LIST - 42% OFF - NOW $4.70GOLD SEAL$4.98 LIST - 50% OFF - ONLY $2.50 SMETANAMa Vlast(My Country)Cycle of Si* Tone PoemsOrchestre de la Suisse RomandeWolfgang SawallischSALESTARTSTODAY IYC4I REYNOLDSCLUBBASEMENT CRL2-3242SPECIAL-ONLY $5.60//„ S/isfry'/ //('HI&*tc/i RED sen2 ntcoao setARL2-3090 SUPER SPECIALSBACH - BRANDENBURG CONCERTI WITH RAMPAL,ANDRE, PAILLARD CHAMBER ORCHESTRA2 RECORD SET — NOW ONLY $5.40PACHELBEL - CANON: ANDRE, PAILLARD - ONLY $4.50 ARL2-2359Tchaikovsky/Manfred SymphonyEugene OrmandyThe Philadelphia OrchestrarRCA RED SEAL RUBINSTEIN BARENBOIMBEETHOVENConcerto No. 3London Philharmonic Orchestra Joan Morris • William BolcomThe Girl on theMagazine CoverSongs of Irving Berlin JEAN-PIERRE ISAACRAMPAL STERNFLUTE CONDUCTORMOZARTTheTwo Flute Concertos, K. 313, 314Andante, K. 315Jerusalem Music Center Chamber OrchestraARL1-2945 ARL1-1418 ARL1-3089 ARL1-3084SPECIAL SALEWe’re clearing out our stock forinventory, so we have many bargainsat one all-but-unbelievable price:99<}We also have a selection of medicalbooks at drastically reduced prices.The sale starts today - please come inand browse (all sales final).University of Chicago BookstoreGeneral Books, 1st Floor • Hours: 8 - 5 Mon.-Fri., 9 - 5 Sat.We accept Visa and MasterCharge i6 —- The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 9, 1979ViewpointGray raises questions, but offers no answersBy the Action Committee on South AfricaThe Action Committee on South Africa believes Presi¬dent Gray failed to present an adequate defense of theUniversity’s continued investment in apartheid. Citing theUniform Management of Institutional Funds Act of the re¬vised Illinbis statutes, President Gray stated that legaldefinitions of fiduciary obligations prevent the Trusteesfrom withdrawing the University’s investment from cor¬porations active in South Africa:“In the administration of the powers to appro¬priate appreciation, to make and retain invest-,ments and to delegate investment management ofinstitutional funds, members of a governing boardshall exercise ordinary business care and prudenceunder the facts and circumstances prevailing at thetime of the action or decision and in so doing theyshall consider long and short term needs of the insti¬tution in carrying out its educational, religious,charitable or other eleemosynary purposes, itspresent and anticipated financial requirements, ex¬pected total return on investment, price level trendsand general economic conditions.”At best, such a citation raises more questions than it an¬swers. More important, however, is the fact that Presi¬dent Gray chose to cite this statute within the context ofthe Kalven Committee Report. This report, written in 1967by members of the faculty, addressed the role of the Uni¬versity as an investor. Specifically, the report stated thatwhile the University must remain politically neutral as aninstitution and investor, there are exceptional cases inwhich “corporate activities of the University may appearso incompatible with paramount social values as to re¬quire careful assessment of the consequences.” The Kal¬ven Committee Report acknowledges that it is fully withinthe realm of the legal obligations of the Trustees to accepttheir political responsibility as investors.It is w'ithout doubt that the systematic oppression ofapartheid violates “paramount social values.” PresidentGray agrees: “There can be no question . . . that the poli¬cies of apartheid . . . are to be condemned by all.” Theissue, therefore, is reduced to one of means.President Gray asserts that American corporations can be the progressive force for change in South Africa. Thefacts of the matter, however, do not support her assertion.The Senate Sub-Committee on Africa concluded that “. . .the net effect of American investment has been tostrengthen the economic and military self-sufficiency ofSouth Africa’s apartheid regime. . .” The system ofapartheid ensures the huge profits reaped by Americanfirms in South Africa. Without these firms, and the tech¬nology and capital they provide, the system of apartheidwould flounder. Since World War II. the steady rise inAmerican investments in South Africa has been paral¬leled by an equally steady rise in the repressive measuresby the South African regime.Withdrawal of American corporations and a cessationof bank loans, because of their central role in the econ¬omy, would seriously damage the South African govern¬ment’s ability to repress the aspirations of and deny rightsto the black majority. Corporate withdrawal would hastenthe day when the majority of the population in South Afri¬ca will be able to determine its own fate.The University has $84 million in corporations andbanks doing business in South Africa. The Action Commit¬tee believes that only divestiture of all $84 million can endthe University’s complicity in apartheid. We view divesti¬ture as a concrete means by which the University can helpforce corporate withdrawal from South Africa.We recognize, though, that we do not speak for the en¬tire campus community. In order that all opinions andfacts be aired, the Action Committee invites all student,faculty and staff organizations to participate in open hear¬ings on the issue of the University’s investments. An or¬ganizing committee composed of sponsoring organiza¬tions would hold the hearings at well publicized times andlocations next quarter. Testimony would be solicited fromboth expert witnesses and campus organizations Repre¬sentatives of sponsoring organizations would cross-exam¬ine witnesses. The opportunity to testify at and observethe hearings would be available to ail.The extensive conflict of interest of our Trustees makesthe open hearings especially important. 27 of the 55 Trust¬ees are also directors of banks or corporations with inter¬ests in South Africa. Given these connections, it is dubiousthat the Board of Trustees has the ability or desire tomake an objective evaluation of the facts of corporate in¬ vestment in South Africa. Divestiture by the Universitywould imply a condemnation of the role of these Trusteesas businessmen whose firms continue to support aparth¬eid.Despite this evident conflict of interest, we extend a par¬ticularly strong invitation to the Trustees to help organize,and testify at, these open hearings. It is the Trustees whohave, to date, set the University’s investment policy, so itis imperative that they explain their policy to the campuscommunity. It would also be an opportunity for HannaGray to continue the public discussion she has advocat¬ed.The necessity of open hearings to air the issue does notnegate the need to reach a firm decision. Kinsey Wilson,Action Committee speaker at the forum, pointed out that“we would do well to remember that South Africans aredaily laying their lives on the line. Beyond a certain point,the debate in which we engage becomes irrelevant, indeedbecomes an affront to those who struggle to overthrow thepresent pattern of oppression and exploitation. For ourpart, we must be prepared to act.” A campus wide refer¬endum is the best way to determine the actual opinions ofthe campus community on divestiture, and to decide theissue. Because of the evident conflict of interest of manyTrustees, we call for the Board to abide by the results ofthe referendum.STUDENTS FOR ISR AELMONDAY, MARCH 12th, 12:30 P.M.SPEAKER: ALLANSOLOMONOWExecutive Director. Middle EastPeace Project, New York CitvTOPIC: ISRAEL AND THE PLO-CONFRONTING THE UNTHINKABLEHillel Foundation. 5715 WoodlawnSNOWED UNDERDue to Typing Delavs?RELAX!Avoid the Rush and Leave the Typing to Us.We Do:Manuscripts / Theses / DissertationsResumes / Reports / Transcriptions24 Hour Telephone Dictation ServiceEMA KWIK SECRETARI AL SERVICE180 West Washington 236-0110Weekends & Evenings 726-3572ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL5850 South Woodlawn AvenueSunday • March 11*11 A.M.University Religious ServiceE. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the Chapel“BEYOND ABSURDITY”4:45P.M.Organ Recital, Edw'ard Mondello5:00P.M.SERVICE OF THE HOLY EUCHARISTCelebrant: The Rev. Charles D. BrownCo-sponsored by the Episcopal ChurchCouncil (Anglican)NAM Films PresentsJimmy Cliff inSaturday, March 10 TOGA,TOGA, [JJFRIDAYMARCH l-WM1DWSI1JDM.506016 S. INGLE3DE■-BAND-BEER i drinks mumRADIOFREE _lOJNO'SVJ PURIMMASQUERADE PARTYSATURDAY - MARCH 10 - 9:00 P.M.BAYIT - 5458 South EverettCostumes Optional - Prizes AwardedRegister Now forTemporary OfficeAssignmentsSPRINGVACATIONSTIVERS TEMPORARYPERSONNEL. INC.Chicago 332-5210 Ford CityElmwood Park 453-3380 Oak BrookEvanston 475-3500 RandhurstSchaumburg 882-8061Also Denver. Indianapolis, Kansas City.Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Minneapolis.Natick MA. Philadelphia. St. Louis.St. Paul. White Plains NY. 581-3813654-0310392-1920Perry Henzell’sThe Harder They Come. o .1. .ii: ... v W _ __ _ _ _ _(Reggae. Rebellion X Reefer! 7:15 / 9:30 Cobb HallThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 9, 1979 — 7)ASHUM-AMSASeminar Series 1978-79Program in the Arts and Sciences Basic to HumanBiology and MedicineandAmerican Medical Students’ AssociationPresentDr. Quentin D. YoungChairman, Department of Medicine, Cook County Hospitalspeaking on the topicPerspectives for thePublic Sector inAmerican MedicineMONDAY, MARCH 12' 19797:30 P.M.ECKHART 133 In Time For SpringNikon At Last Year’s PricesFe Body*320.95with 50mm f/2.0 lens*399.95With Nikon Body Trade-In*Your New Nikon CostsAll prices reflect$40.00 Nikon FE rebate‘We reserve the right to refuse any cameramodel camera1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700SPRING QUARTER LOANSW ill be available on Monday. March 12 at Haskell Hall. Room 312.Please arrange to sign for your loan aceording to the alpha sehedule listed helow.You must have the following with you:Students in the College (Graduate StudentsTuition/Housinj: fee bill andpermanent 1978/1979 1 diversityStudent 11) (lard Tuition fee eard and permanent1978/1979 1 diversity StudentII)(lardALPHABETICAL SCHEDULESlmlents w hose Iasi names l>e«r’m with:\ -1) Mondays Mar eh 12. 19.26. \pril 2K-J Tuesdays Mar ell 13.20.27. \pril 3K -()% \\ ednesdavs Mar eh 1 t. 21.2a. April 1H-Z Thursdays Mar eh 1 5. 22. 29. \pril 5\-Z Fridays March 16.23.30. \pril 6STIIDKM LOAN CKNTKR - II VSM.I.I .512 - 9:00 n.m. - 3:00 |>.m.Ml Loan- must In* poked up no later than Friday, \pril 6. 1979.Tuition and fee pavment- must be .ellled bv Friday, \pril 6. 1979.(graduate Students:Do not use drop ho\ or surrenderFee (lard to llursar if vou are Inreeeive a loan.8 The Chicago Maroon Friday, March 9, 1979From Chicago TrustFederal student aid funds expected to rise 35%By Abbe FletmanThe University expects a 35 percent in¬crease next year in federal funds for threecampus-based student aid programs, ac¬cording to Dean of Students Charles O’Con¬nell Formal notification of federal alloca¬tions will occur in early Spring, saidAssistant Dean Richard Royse.• College Work/Study funds are expectedto rise 86 percent next vear, from $403,726 to$750,000;• Supplemental Educational OpportunityGrant (SEOG) funds are anticipated to goup 43 percent, from $350,184 to $502,350;and• National Direct Student Loan (NDSL) capital outlays from the government are ex¬pected to increase 20 percent from $1,569million to $1,881 million next year.The $800,000 overall rise will bring totalfederal funds to the University for the threeprograms to $3.1 million.The increase in SEOG allocations is “justabout what we calculated when we deter¬mined that the University's unrestrictedstudent aid allocation needed to go from $5.4million to $6 million,” said O'Connell in aMarch l memo. But increases in NDSL andCollege WorK/Study funds are “consider¬ably beyond what we had hoped for,” hesaid.O’Connell attributed the federal increasesto “the persuasiveness of our application (to some uegice at least) as well as the avail¬ability for more funds.”The announcement of the University stu¬dent aid increase of 11.1 percent next yearaccompanied the announcement last monththat tuition will rise between 9.9 and 13.5percent.The College Work/Study program is opento both undergraduates and graduate stu¬dents who meet federal guidelines. The fed¬eral government provides 80 percent ofWork/Study students' salaries while theUniversity supplies the remaining 20 per¬cent.Royse said about 400 students participat¬ed in the program this year. The Universityexpects a 50 percent rise in participationnext year, he said. rSEOG’s are available only to College stu¬dents demonstrating “great need.”The NDSL program supplies three per¬cent interest loans to about 2000 Universitystudents. It is a revolving fund, with moneyrepaid by former University students recy¬cled back into a general lending fund. TheUniversity supplies one-ninth of the capitalcontribution each year Lending levels forUniversity NDSL loans are expected to in¬crease next year from $4.1 million to $4.85million Photo Carol StudenmundFederal College Work/Study funds to theUniversity will rise 86 percent next year.SALESoftContactLenses DUE TO THE "BUZZARD OF 79"OFFER EXTENDED TIL MAR. 15, '79A PAIRREG. $95INCLUDED AT NO ADDITIONAL CHARGE:oil fittings ★ ill adjustments★ audio/visial mentation ★ storage ease★ insertion and removal training★ lens care instruction ★ Hlostrated GOinstroction manual and wearing sebedaleWEAR YOUR CONTACTS NOMETHE SAME DAYMOST PRESCRIPTIONS IN STOCK asso38 S. Wabash he. 10th Floor,Satt 1000. Cfeup. ■ MM3CALL 346-2323 UC gets $2.5 million grantThe Chicago Community Trust announcedTuesday grants totalling $16 million to fiveChicago-area universities, including a $2 5million unrestricted grant to the Universi¬ty-The University has not yet determinedhow the grant will be used.The grants were made possible by a giftfrom John G. Searle. Jr., board chairman of the pharmaceutical firm of G. D. Searle andCo before his death in January'. 1978.The other schools to receive grants andthe amounts of those grants are:• Northwestern University. $10 million;• Loyola University. $1.5 million;• De Paul University, $1 million; and• The Illinois Institute of Technology. $1million.Including:Hold Out Never Had It So Good May As Well GoFancy Action Give Me Your Money. HoneyNeed Your Love/Come On. Come OnStart Spring Out Right At Spin-ItWe’re Having A Sale OnThe Entire C.B.S. CatalogHere’s just a few of the artists included:TRILLION AerosmithChicagoDan FogelhergWeather Report Neil DiamondMiles DavisDexter GordonBruce Springsteen Billv CobhamEarth. ^ ind & FireBilly JoelSantana4.797.98 LiMi.Ps.ONLYOther LP’s are 40% OFF Mfg. Sug. ListSale Runs Through March 18thCheap Trick at Budokanincluding:Surrender/Ain t That A ShameI Uf » W 111, 2 RECORD SETAN EVENING WITHHERBIE HANCOCK &CHICK COREAincluding:Liza/Button Up Someday My Prince Will ComeMaiden Voyage La Fiesta Remember the top50 and more arealuavs on salt* atSpin-It RET lRNEO I OR EVERLIVEincluding:So Long Mickey MouseThe Moorish Warrior And Spanish PrincessThe Endless Nignt (Part 2)Come Ram Or Come Shine The Musicianincluding:Watermelon ManA Mi No Me Engahan Ofou Better Believe W)Ja« Alai (Rena) Jamaican SunnseAfro Cuban Fantac, . ELVISCOSTELLOARMEDFORCESincludingOliver s ArmyAccidentsWHI Happen(What s SoFunny Bout)Peace. Love AndUnderstandingSenior ServiceParty GirtTHE B00MT0WN RATSATONIC FOR THE TROOPSincludingRat Trap Joey s On The Street AgainMary Of The 4th Form Me And Howard HughesShe s So Mooem t ike Clock workThe Chicago Maroon Friday, March 9, 1979 — 9'CampusArtHans Haacke: Recent work by a conceptual artistwith a particularly large social consciousness. ForHaacke. a visual image is primarily a communicativeimage: it can and should be used to convey opinionson very specific topics — politics, economics, and artitself. Closes tomorrow, March 10. The RenaissanceSociety Gallery in Goodspeed Hall, 1010 E. 59th St.Mondays through Saturdays, 11 am to 4 pm. 753-2886.Free.Jackson Pollock: ‘‘New Found Works.” 103 by theabstract, expressionist, action — actually un-categorizable — American artist. Early work and ex¬periments in unusual medium (‘‘unusual” forPollock, that is, who was primarily a painter), revealhow he was influenced by Thomas Hart Benton andSurrealists like Miro. Opens this Wednesday, March14; closes May 6. Smart Gallery, 5550 S. Greenwood.Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 am to 4 pm; Sun¬days, noon to 4 pm. 753-2121. Free.MusicContemporary Chamber Players: A memorial con¬cert for Mrs. Edna Kraus. Ralph Shapey, music direc¬tor. Elsa Charlston. soprano, and Diane McCullough,mezzo-soprano are soloists. Abraham Stokman onpiano. Program: Zsolt’s “Iconography #2”, Jolas’s“Quartet No. 2,” Shapey’s “Twenty-One Varia¬tions.” Tonight. March 9. Mandell Hall 8:30 pm. Free.University Symphony Orchestra: BarbaraSchubert conducting. Haydn's “Symphony No. 101 inD, ‘The Clock,' ” Wagner’s “Prelude to Parsifal,”and Berlioz’s “Symphonie fantastique, op. 14."Tomorrow, March 10. Mandel Hall. 8:30 pm. Free.Music of the Baroque: Thomas Wikman conductsTelemann’s “The Day of Judgement.” This Sunday,March 11. Mandel Hall. 3 pm. 643-9386. $6.50 to $9.50,$3 discount to UC students.The Liebeslieder Waltzes: The music of Brahms in aconcert sponsored by the University Chamber MusicProgram. This Sunday, March 11. Ida Noyes Library.8:30 pm. Free.Mark Daniels and Nick Filippo: Folk-countrymusic live at The Pub. Tomorrow, March 10. Base¬ment of Ida Noyes. 9:30 to 1 am. Memberships re¬quired.Radio Free Illinois: “Solid” compus-based rockgroup performing at, God help us all, a toga party.Tonight. March 9. Midway Studios, 60th and In-gleside. 9 pm. $1.50.Hanah Jon Taylor: The leader of Alien Gang andthe Hyde Park Jazz Workshop will present a concertentitled “A Grace Oddessey” tonight at the BlueGargoyle. Hanah described the concert as “a series ofmusical movements that depict a journey, gracefuland vivid in its description of strange and beautifulthings.”Alien Gang, which was a jazz band with fusionovertones, is going through some personnel changes,including the attainment of a bassist who plays ac-coustic bass. Hanah wants to get away from an “elec¬tric, contrived sound” toward “a more organicsound." On flute and soprano sax, Hanah spins amelodic line that takes off in amazing flights ofsound, that land in funky grooves, and soundsometimes like Eric Dolphy on flute, sometimes likeColtrane on soprano, sometimes like Charles Lloyd. With jazz, Latin, and funk roots — and branching into“creative music” — Hanah is definitely alwaysHanah. “A Grace Oddessey” will be a watershed inthe ongoing development of a musician who hasalready demonstrated tremendous talent.Hanah is excited about the concert, and wants to domore college concerts, because “that is where andwhen people listen.” He is tired of bars, where musi¬cians are brought in to sell drinks — though I haveseen him command attention in a noisy bar with nomicrophone, only the brilliance and fire of his flute.With Marcus Persiani, piano, Randy Ford, bass,Steve Cobb, drums, Karmouche, percussion, andfeaturing the poetry of G'ra. Tonight, at 5655 S.University, 8:30 p.m., $3.50.TheaterRope: last weekend. A murder mystery by PatrickHamilton, Rope was the basis of an early Hitchcockfilm. Directed and produced by Randy Solomon, asenior in the College and abbot of Blackfriars. Closesthis Sunday. March 11. Court Studio Theater, thirdfloor of Reynolds Club. Tonight and tomorrow at 8:30pm; Sunday at 7:30. 753-3581. $2, $1.50 students.Filmby Ethan EdwardsDark Star (Doc) Directed by John Carpenter.Carpenter received critical attention a couple of yearsago when The Museum of Modern Art selected hisAssault on Precinct 13 as one of the most unjustlyneglected films of the 1970’s. Then in 1978 hisHalloween took the Chicago Film Festival by stormand went on to thrill audiences all over the country.Rightly or wrongly, this critical interest inCarpenter’s work has extended back to Dark Star, aU.S.C. Film school project that was expanded intoCarpenter’s first feature. The plot sounds suitablyodd, with a group of Southern California surfersriding an intergalactic wave in the spaceship DarkStar in search of hostile planets to destroy. Unseen bythis reviewer. Friday at 7:15 in Cobb Hall.Alphaville (Doc) Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Aspecial agent, played by the exceptionally sleazyAmerican expatriate Eddy Constantine, travels to theplanet Alphaville, where he does battle with Pro¬fessor Von Braun and his computer Alpha 60. Thesociological approach of this film is indicated by thefact that the film was originally titled “Tarzan vs.IBM”. Although occasionally interesting, Alphavilleis neither good science fiction nor good filmmaking.Friday at 9:00 in Cobb Hall.The Philadelphia Story (LSF) Directed by GeorgeCukor. Even before the first line of dialogue isspoken, Cukor establishes the sexual antagonism thatforms the basis of the film and lets the audience knowthat it is in for some fast-paced fun. Many peoplehave watched this film on T.V., yet few have seen iton the big screen, and the handsome cinematographyand invisible cutting of a good Cukor film is a joy tobehold. The Philadelphia Story is a textbook exampleof how to write, act and direct a sophisticated roman¬tic comedy. The acting is unsurpassed, withdistinguished performances by major and minor The GreyThis WeekA weaknighcharacters alike. Hepburn won the Best ActressAward of the New York Film Critics and JimmyStewart won the Best Actor Oscar (although onewonders whether he won for The Philadelphia Storyor for Mr. Smith Goes to Washington of the yearbefore). Gary Grant was once again passed over,which is especially sad, since over the space of onlyfive years he turned in excellent performances not on¬ly in The Philadelphia Story, but in Topper, TheAwful Truth, Bringing Up Baby, Holiday, GungaDin, Only Angels Have Wings, His Girl Friday, MyFavorite Wife, Suspicion and Talk of The Town. Theseriousness of World War II audiences who thoughtcomedies unseemly killed the sophisticated romanticcomedy. In this film based on a Philip Barry play,Hepburn portrays a rich socialite who divorces Grantand plans a marriage to a pompous “man of the peo¬ple”. Stewart is a journalist covering the weddingwho falls in love with the bride. The mates sortthemselves out and Hepburn becomes even more at¬tractive (if that’s possible) when she learns to forgivehuman imperfection. One of the last of a lost genre.Highly recommended. Saturday at 7:00 and 9:30 in theLaw School Auditorium.The Harder They Come (NAM). Directed by Perry Henzell. This film is the fidealing with that musicalisland. A country boy. Ivfor the city to make his fora series of adventures tlsmarts Ivan finally makestion of personal and clasiproducer (an unalloyed barefuses to promote the rec<frustrated Ivan into the dntually must kill to supnotoriety grows, so does t)now being milked for alportunistic producer. Ivathe populace, and the storjpolitical mode. The politicespecially interesting becasions — e.g., while Ivansocialist (Cuban) liberatioihis personal ambition to nhis character harks cinem:individualism of the Aitechnically crude and stylifilm is irresistibly spontaiall, musical. Cliff is a n«TAI-SMfr-VlIICHI NISI-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing InCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Ord*rs to Toko Out131 • Eo«t 63rd MU 4-1062MEN! WOMEN!JOBS!< Kl ISF SHIFS#FRE10HTEBSNo experience. Highpay! See Europe, Ha¬waii. Australia. So.America. Winter, Sum¬mer!Send $2.75 toSEA WORLDBOX 61035Sacramento, C’A 95825 CanonONLY$339.95-.,o.„model camera1342 E. 55th St. • 493-6700 Canon’s Newest System C<The Canon A-1’sSix-mode exposure control puts an end to argumentsabout which exposure method is best forever—because / \it has them all, and then ^J^V^Canonsome! Six mode exposure control: wu—• Shutter Priority AE• Aperture Priority AE• Programmed AE• Stopped Down AE• Electronic Flash AE• ManualOr bring in y£Ufor a great t10 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 9, 19793rey City Journalk in the Artsweaknight in the Arts the Symphony, the performance will include works byRossini, Krommer, Mozart, and Breuker. Admissionwill be $4.50 ($1.00 discount to UC faculty, staff, andnon-UC students); $2.50 for UC students. Tickets andinformation are available at the Concert Office,5835 University Avenue (753-2612), and at the MandelHall box office after March 12.City listings begin here:ArtThe Soviet Woman: Included in this exhibit of theroles women play and have played in the U.S.S.R..are paintings, sculpture, films, and folk art. Rarelyseen paintings from the Leningrad Hermitage and ex¬amples of kholhoma, the decorative painting ofwooden lacquerware, are on display. Through March18. Museum of Science and Industry, 57th and LakeShore. 9:30 am to 4 pm weekdays: 9:30 am to 5:30 pmweekends. 684-1414. Free.Joyce Tremain: A former Chicagoan, Tremain doessmall sketches on small cards and large portraits onlarge canvases. Closes March 25. Art Institute,Adams and Michigan. Mondays throughWednesdays, Fridays, 10:30 am to 4:30 pm;Thursdays, 10:30 am to 8 pm; Saturdays, 10 am to 5pm; Sundays, noon to 5 pm. 443-3500. $2, $1.50students.Subways of the World: The aesthetic and functionaldesign features of rapid transit systems in thiiteenAmerican and Eurasian cities. Opens Monday, March12; closes April 6. East Lobby of the Daley Center.Randolph and Dearborn. Weekdays, 9 am to 5 pm346-3278. Free.Concept, Narrative, Document: Recent works fromthe Morton Family Collection Photographs by suchartists as John Baldessari, Richard Long, and PeterHutchinson examining, collectively, the functionalextremes of the medium. Opens tomorrow, March 10;closes May 20. Museum of Contemporart Art, 237 E.Ontario. 943-7755. $1, $.50 students. Call for times. "Duo in B flat Major," Bartok’s "Duos for TwoViolins," and Moskovsky's "Suite in B flat Major."Tomorrow, March 10. Auditorium Theater, 70 E. Con¬gress. 8 pm. 922-2110. $3.50 to $15.Michael Babatunde Olatunji and Ensembh: RareChicago appearance by the Nigeria-born jazz musi¬cian. Olatunji and "friends" combine West Africanand Black American rhythms with South and LatinAmerican jazz. Tonight, March 9, and tomorrownight. Columbus Auditorium at the Art Institute ofChicago, 200 S. Columbus. 8 pm 443-3800. $8. $7balcony.TheaterAttempted Rescue on Avenue B: The first Chicagoproduction of Megan Terry’s sequel to Hothouse. Setin late fifties New York, Rescue is a Beat love storyabout a "struggling actress" and an action painternamed Orlando Taverniti. Di icted by JunePyskacek Opens tonight, March 9; closes April 29. AChicago Theater Strategy production at the Jane Ad-dams Theater, 3212 N. Broadway. Fridays and Satur¬days at 8:30 pm; Sundays at 7:30 pm. 549-1631. $4-$5;prices lower on Sundays.The Caretaker: By Harold Pinter. A brief re¬engagement, at popular demand, of SteppenwolfTheater’s summer 1978 hit production. Pinter at hisblackest and most enigmatic — about a tramp whofinds a kind of home in the derelict house of twobrothers. Directed by John Malkovich. Opens thisWednesday, March 14; closes April 1. SteppenwolfTheater. 770 Deerfield in Highland Park. Thursdaysthrough Sundays at 8 pm. 433-5080. $5.50.Slave Story: By Oscar Brown, Jr. An X-Bag pro¬duction of a drama-set-to-music about the selling of ayoung girl named Crecie into slavery. Directed byYaumilton Brown. Closes March 18. Parkway Com¬munity House, 500 E. 67th St. Weekend nights at 8pm. HY-3-1305 (after 5 pm). $3.50.Filmn is the first Jamaican-made featuret musically and politically chargedy boy. Ivan (Jimmy Cliff), sets outke his fortune as a pop singer. Aftersntures that give him some streetly makes a record. But as an asser-and class power the fat-cat recordlloyed bad buy you can really hate)e the record. This setback sends theto the drug business, where he even-to survive. As Ivan’s criminal>0 does the popularity of his record,;d for all it is worth by the op'jeer. Ivan’s rebelliousness infectsthe story shifts into a more franklybe political elements of the film areting because of certain familiar ten-ile Ivan strives for a symbolicallyliberation, he never really abandonsition to make it big. and in the endts cinematically back to the ruggedthe American cowboy. Thoughand stylistically naive in places, they spontaneous, colorful and. abovef is a natural actor and a terrific singer. Where I come from. The Harder They Come isa musically and politically important cult film, withconsiderable scorn directed at those who do not see itas undergraduates. So be there or be square.Saturday at 7:15 and 9:30 in Cobb Hall.Winifred Wagner (Doc) Directed by Hans-JurgenSyberberg. Richard Wagner’s English step-daughterWinifred Wagner is interviewed at length in this prob¬ing 1978 documentary. Hitler is discussed so matter offactly that your reaction may range from boredom tohorror. If you’ve ever wondered what "SpringtimeFor Hitler" was like as seen through the eyes of oneadmirer, you may find that Winifred Wagner s ac¬count of her and Hitler’s mutual love for the music ofRichard Wagner satisfies curiosity. Sunday at 7:15and 9:30 in Cobb Hall.Comming soon:Hyde Park music lovers will be treated to a concertby the Netherlands Wind Ensemble on Sunday. April8 at 8 pm in Mandel Hall. The ensemble, composed of19 young musicians drawn from the Netherlands’finest orchestras, is known to American audiences asmuch for its lively and informal intermission presen¬tations as lor its polished musical execution. Co¬sponsored by the Department of Music and Friends of MusicSparrow: A concert of new chamber music combin¬ing jazz, blues, and classical forms. Tonight. March 9.N.A.M.E. Gallery. 9 W. Hubbard. 8 pm. 467-6550. $2.George Gershwin: Henry Mazer conducts theChicago Symphony to benefit its Musicians' Pensionfund. Earl Wild will solo on piano. Program includes“Concerto in F," "Rhapsody in Blue." and "AnAmerican in Paris." Gershwin called the latter "themost modern I’ve attempted." This Tuesday, March13. Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Michigan. 8:15 pm. 435-8122.$6-$15.Steve Reich: Labeled “minimal," "trance.""modular," "phase,” and "pulse." Reich’s musicemphasizes rhythm by repeating melodic patternswith minute metric adjustments. Program: "Musicfor Mallet Instruments, Voices, and Organ,” "Clapp¬ing Music," "Drumming (Part IV),” and "Music forEighteen Musicians" (the title track, incidentally onhis latest ECM album). Tomorrow, March 10. ThorneHall, Lake Shore and Superior. 943-7755. $6. $3students and members of the Museum of Contem¬porary Art.Itzak Perlman and Pinchas Zukerman: A jointrecital by two most popular violinists. Zukerman willalso perform on the viola: Samuel Sander ac¬companies on piano Program: Bach’s "Sonata in CMajor," de Beriot’s "Duo in G Minor." Mozart’s Rembrandt—Fecit 1669: Directed by Jos Stelling ofHolland. One of the best received films of 1978. LikeEdvard Munch, this film examines in depth the lifeand psyche of an artist who was, in his time, a revolu¬tionary. Less, of course, can be known about the realRembrandt; Stelling fleshes out his film byspeculating from the painter's works and by trying todepict "the richness, media. 1517 W. Fullerton Ave. 4pm. 281-9075.DanceAlvin Ailey Dance Theater: Six performances be¬tween this Tuesday, March 13 and Sunday, March 18by the highly accredited company. Thursday’s per¬formance includes a revival of "Flowers," Ailey’s"Rock Ballet" tribute to Janis Joplin. AuditoriumTheater, 70 E. Congress. 8 pm: Sunday matinee at 2pm. 922-2110. $3.50 - $14.American Ballet Theater: Performances this weekinclude Agnes de Mille’s "Fall River Legend" andTschaikovsky’s "Swan Lake." Cast includes Gel«*»^Kirkland. Martine van Hamel, and Anthony Doweiiof the Royal Ballet. Closes March 18. Program variesnightly. Civic Theater, 20 N. Wacker. 663-5370.Tickets start at $5. Call for times.Calendar compiled by Karen HornicK.Cornell Law SchoolUndergraduate Prelaw ProgramJune 11 to July 24,1979A demanding six-week programfor college students who wantto learn what law school is like.For further information write toProf. E. F. Roberts, Cornell Law School314B Myron Taylor Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 9, 197r — 11(Some to QornellcT/iis SummerWhere else can you polish your writing skillsand learn to use a computer or be in an under¬graduate prelaw program and take a course inintaglio printing? Where else can you interactwith so diverse a group of faculty and studentsin a uniquely attractive setting of hills, lakes,gorges, and waterfalls?Here at Cornell, you can fulfill requirements,complete courses in order to accelerate, orsimply take the time to study those appealingthings for which you’ve never before had thetime.Request an Announcementand see for yourself all thereasons why Cornell iswhere you should be thissummer.Cornell University SummerSession, 111 Day Hall,Ithaca, New York 14853.INTERNSHIPS IN LONDONSummer 1979 (May 16th-July 27th)Fall Semester 1979 (Sept 5th-Dec 14th)Museums, Town Planning, Social Science,Medical Research Labs, Educational Admin.Business, Politics, Pressure Groups,(credit available for all internships)Full details and Application Forms:EPA, JYA Office,Marymount College,Tarrytown, N.Y. 10591.Tel: (914) 631-3200 ACADEMY AWARDNOMINATIONSBEST PICTUREDIRECTOR • ACTOR • SCREENPLAYSUPPORTING ACTOR • SUPPORTING ACTRESSCINEMATOGRAPHY • FILM EDITING • SOUNDROBERT DE NIROA MICHAEL CIMINO FILMUNIVERSAL PICTURESandEMI FILMSpresent"THE DEER HUNTER'Co-starrmgJOHN JOHN MERYL CHRISTOPHERCA2ALE • SAVAGE•STREEP • WALKENScreenplay by DERIC WASHBURNstory by MICHAEL CIMINO & DERIC WASHBURN and LOUIS GARFINKLE& QUINN K. REDEKER Production Consultant JOANN CARELLIAssociate Producers MARION ROSENBERG ana JOANN CARELLIMusic by STANLEY MYERS Produced by BARRY SPIKINGS.MICHAEL DEELEY, MICHAEL CIMINO ana JOHN PEVERALLDirector o< Photography VILMOS ZSIGMOND, ascDirected by MICHAEL CIMINOPANAVISiON"RA UNIVERSAL RELEASE- ; Now a JOVE 8oc*RECORDED 'N□D DOLBY STEREO?1970 UNiVEPSAl CITY STUDIOS INC ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDWARNING- * AOUt 'Due to the nature of this film under 17 requires accompanying Parent or Adult Guardian (There will be strict adherence to this policy INOW SHOWING58 EastOakSteet 337-1117 ESQUIRE Sorry no passes or redi iced admission ticketsPUT A LITTLE CLASS IN YOUR SCHEDULE.NEW BREED MUSTANG 79.PRICES START AS LOW AS•Excluding title, taxes, destination charges.#549 $4478 Want others to take notice? Include sporty Ford Mustang in yourdaily game plan. It’s got the looks, and luxury, to help you make goodimpressions where they count.Full instrumentation inside includes a tachometer. There aretasteful woodtone touches, plus carpeting, bucket seats, and more.All standard. Test driving is believing, though. So put our NewBreed Mustang through its paces. Check handling features thattake you smoothly through traffic, and around tight turns Thencheck our student deal. We think you’ll be pleasantly surprised.OUR DEALS ARE MAKING HISTORYLesly Motors, Inc.2347 South Michigan Ave., Chicago12 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 9, 1979Maroons show strength at Conference meetsCarleton just edgestrackmen for first Swimmers place thirdBy Michael RabinDespite the fact that the men’s swimmingteam was not mentioned in the pre-MidwestConference championship press release, theteam showed up for the meet in CedarRapids. Iowa determined to be rememberedat the time of next year's report Rased onthe results of the meet this past weekend,the MCAC will never again forget to men¬tion the Maroons The Maroons posted threeconference champions, three second andfive third place finishers. Moreover,throughout the meet Chicago and defendingchampion Lake Forest College were battl¬ing for second place. Lake Forest finishedsecond by 19 points, only after outscoringChicago by 25 points in the diving.Senior Jon Rynning was most offended bynot being mentioned in the press release.Rynning was the defending conferencechampion in the 50 free and runner-up in the100 free This year Jon retired victorious inboth events. Wayne Hooper, also a senior,was intorduced to the 200 back this year andtook a six second drop at the conferencemeet to place sixth Wayne also placedfourth in the 100 back and 9th in the 200 free.Another senior backstroker. Cal Cooper,swam his best times in both the 100 and 200back, and placed 11th in the 200.The 200 back was one of the strongestevents for the Maroons. Sophomore AndyNeff surprised the top qualifier in the finalsand won the event with a new conferencerecord. Alan Buckler made the consolationfinals in both the 100 and 200 back. In addi¬tion to his victory in the 200 back. Neff plac¬ed second in the 400 Individual Medley, andthird in the 200 free. Steve Frederick alsohad a fine meet setting new school recordsin the 500 free (sixth place), 1000 free, and1650 free (third place). Meve also won meconsolation finals of the 200 free. AdrianTrevino probably had the best taper of allHe dropped three seconds in the 100 fly. sixseconds in the 200 I.M.. and 11 seconds in the200 fly. Trevino placed in every event: thirdin the 100 fly and fourth in the 200 fly.Michael Rabin took second in the 200 flywith a new school record in the event. MikeKundman sw am his best times of the year inthe 100 and 200 breast, and missed placing inthe 200 due to a change of the rules in themidst of the meetFor freshmen Tim Iida. Tad McGuire.Don Dowling, and Bill Landschultz. the twoday conference meet was something entire¬ly foreign Most high school meets are heldin one day. and each swimmer swims fewer,and shorter, events. Iida swam well on thefirst day. placing fourth in the 100 breastwith a new school record. McGuire dove bet¬ter on the second day, placing tenth in theoptional diving. Dowling swam the distanceevents, and did his best times in the 200 and500 free Dowling swam a tough race in the1650 free, and placed 10th Landschultzdropped his times considerably in the highlycompetitive sprint events, and is likely totake Rynning's place as chief sprinterCoach Schweer was very pleased with theresults of the meet The Coach will be verybusy during the next few months recruitingreplacements for the graduating seniorsChicago is due for another bumper cropyear that will enable them to match Gnn-nell's depth and talent at the Conferencemeet next year.From the PressboxThe Sports Page; An Apology of sortsBy Pia LopezLast Saturday. March 3, the Men’s IndoorTrack team hosted the Midwest ConferenceIndoor Track and Field Championships atthe Henry Crown Field House. The meetculiminated the indoor track season. TheMaroon team went into the meet with anundefeated record to face perennialstrengths Carleton College and Coe Collegealong with eight other schools. Carleton cap¬tured the meet with Chicago a close second.The top four teams w ere Carleton with 113 1 :tpoints, Chicago with 1094 points, Coe with96 points, and Monmouth with 31 points.Chicago's second place finish was a disap¬pointment j.o some and an encouragement toothers. The common consensus among teammembers was ’‘Wait ’til Spring.” Overall,Chicago captured four first places, four se¬cond places, three third places, and ninefourth, fifth and sixth places. Eight con¬ference records were broken, four byChicago alone. Of the 16 Chicago men com¬peting in the nine individual running events,only two did not place for points.The opening running event was the 60-vard hurdles. Competing for Chicago wereJim Jacobsen and Jim Read, both of whomeasily made it into the final. Read won hissemi-final heat in record-tying time, butplaced fourth in the final. Jacobsen placedsecond in the final, also tying the record of7.8 seconds. A new record of 7 6 seconds wasset by a runner from Coe.In the mile run Chicago runners Paul Hartand Mike Axinn contended with the Carletonrunners for the top places. After losing anearly lead, they finished fourth and fifthrespectively.The 440 was won by Bill Horsthemke ofChicago in record-breaking time.Horsthemke’s 51.7 seconds outdistanced hiscompetitors and broke the record by nearly2 seconds. Teammate Tom Goodrich somer¬saulted over the finish to tie for sixth place.Among the closest races was the 600 yardrun. David Greene and Ed Derse ran forChicago. Greene led the race coming intothe last curve where it then became a stridefor stride contest down the stretch betweenGreene and Carleton runner. Carleton won,setting a new record. Durse finished sixth.By RW RohdeUniversity of Chicago students love tocomplain. Intramural sports are an obviousexample; you could have a referee right outof Plato’s cave officiating a game and somelittle son of a Meletus < look that up in yourDialogues of Socrates) would be hanging onhim for every call.Sometimes the complaints are justified.Pia Lopez’s lead article on the track team isthe first article about Coach Haydon’s menthat the Maroon has printed all quarter.We’ve heard about it. Ideally, thingsshouldn't work out this way. But they do;last year we ignored the women's swimteam for all practical purposes. This articleis an explanation of why things work thatway and what one can do about itOne thing unique alxrnt a university situa¬tion is that a lifetime here is pretty short;four years on the average. As a result, peo¬ple tend to forget how things used to be.Back when 1 was a freshman, the FieldHouse (it only had two names then) was aone floor structure with a dirt surface andless lighting than ah-Plato’s cave. It had awooden varsity basketball floor that wasquite nice, but reserved for varsity and in¬tramurals. If you wanted to play ball, youhad to go to Bartlett Gym, along with halfthe University. Getting in to see King Tutwas often easier than getting into a gameThe sports page was in similar straits, itaveraged less than a page a week.Things have changed since then, the Maroon allocates close to two pages a weekfor sports. Coverage and quality have im¬proved. Unfortunately, the number ofwriters has not increased as much. We havethree to four regular sports writers(including myself). They cover what theywant, which usually means intramurals andmajor men’s sports.For everything else we rely on teammembers for some articles, while the SportsEditor tries to cover anything that’s left.There is only so much of him. Thank GodBut as a result, some things don’t getcoveredThere are a couple solutions to this pro¬blem. One is for us to tell the writers theyhave to cover certain sports on occasion.Assuming they don't quit, which would real¬ly put us up Cripple Creek, they probablywon t do such a great job on something theyaren't really interested in. Their stories willbe dull, and the only people who will readthem are team members who want to seetheir name in the paper and maybe theirfriendsContrary to popular belief, the sports pageis not a place for people to read their namesin the paper. If an athlete is participating ina sport for publicity, then that person pickedthe wrong school mot to mention having amessed-up sense of priorities). This is aplace for stories about sports, stories peopleare interested in. That’s why we tend to givepriority to major sports If you want to readyour name in the paper, take out an ad Orbetter yet, write a sports story. Chicago students love to complain, butthey don't complain efficiently. If you havea complaint, take it to someone who isdirectly involved Most of the complaints weheard from the track team were secondhand. If we get enough direct complaintsoften enough, we ll do something about itThe best way to solve a problem is to say: "Idon't like what’s being done, what can I doabout it°” Write an article Find someone towrite an article for you. If you can't do that,give us facts and people to contact and we lltrv and find someone to write it.As for Coach Haydon's squad: We owe youyou some coverage track team, we won'tfor-get it. Photo: Jackie HardySportsThe 60 yard dash was a disappointment toChicago sprinters Rich Gordon and TimLorello. Despite the fact that Lorello madeit into the final. Each were in different heatsof the semi-finals and only the top threefinishers make it to the final. Gordon placedfourth in a faster heat. In the final. Lorelloplaced sixth.In an exciting 880, Marshal! Schmidt of Chicago ran to a wide margin of victory.The lead alternated between Schmidt andthe top Carleton runner for most of the racebut at the last lap Schmidt sprinted farahead to win with a time of 1:56.5. a full twoseconds below the old recordThe 300 yard run was a good showing forTrack to ! 7The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 9, 1979 — 13The ston/ of a zoomanwith the courage to risk everythingfor what she believes is right.a MARTIN RI7T ROSE AND ASSEYEV production’ NORM A RAT"SALLY FIELD RON LEIBMAN BEAU BRIDGESPAT MINGLE BARBARA BAXLEYsciwnplav bv IRVING RAVETCH and HARRIET FRANK. JRmusic DAVID SHIRE ^diivctorof photographv JOHN A. ALONZO, A.S Cproduced hv TAMARA ASSEYEV and ALEX ROSEdirected bv MARTIN RITT"IT GOES LIKE IT GOES" Ivncs bv NORMAN C.IMBELmusic bv DAVID SHIRE COLOR BY DeLUXE*Now Playing At A Theatre Near You.Check Local Newspaper ForSpecific Theatre Listing. tig sTnrvrra b a b b bthtb a b fl-trtnnrg o 5 o'oo-oTnnnnnrSAO presents aTenth WeekROCK DANCETHE END OF THE ICY TUNNEL■WITHThe U.C. Jazz BandFRIDAY MARCH 16 CLOISTER CLUB 9:00 prFREE' UC ID REQUIREDIlflJULgJLflJULft-fl.Jt. SL JLfiJLfi-ft fl fl ft ft fl.JU.fl JU-fl.fl-g.flI STANLEY MOSSFRIDAY, MARCH 16, 8pmThe Poetry Center at The Museumof Contemporary Art • 237 EastOntario Street • $3.00 admission$2.00 for Students - MCA MembersThousands OfDollars Found InTrash On Campus.Check around your campus community. You, too,may be able to collect an educational award of up to athousand dollars if you Pitch In! Groups from campusesall over the country were awarded $8,750 last year byparticipating in Pitch In! Week.This year, Budweiser and ABC Radio Network willagain reward participating colleges, universities andapproved campus organizations who participate in PitchIn! Week. Five groups will win $1,000 in first placeeducational awards, five second place groups will win$500, and five third place groups will win $250.For entry rules and the Pitch In! Week program kit,simply send in the attached coupon.1979 National College Pitch In! Week OfApril 2-6. Pitch In! And Win Cash.NAMECOLLEGEADDRESSCITY STATE -ZIP _ORGANIZATION ON CAMPUSMail to: College Pitch In' Week Desk, c/o ABC Radio Network1330 Avenue of the Americas. New York, NY 10019Competition void where prohibited by law14 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 9, 1979Chicago basketball downedBy Steven FeldmanChicago has finally gotten a winning pro¬fessional sports team. Which one. you ask?The Bears? Bulls? Cubs? White Sox?Black Hawks? No. losing teams all. Thewinning record belongs to the Chicago Hust¬le. the city's entry in the newly-formedWomen's Professional Basketball League.The Hustle currrently find themselves tiedfor first place with Iowa in the league's Mid¬western Division, both with records of 13-8(the league has two 4-team divisions).Whether the league as a whole can be suc¬cessful is still an open question. Even theHustle, which can be considered among thethree best in the eight team league, has beenaveraging only 2.200 fans in their homecourt at DePaul University’s Alumni HallBut Hustle president John Geraty, a locallawyer and founder of a firm which repre¬sents professional athletes for commercialendorsements, exudes confidence. Theleague has already made plans for expan¬sion in four cities next year It hopes to beable to fill the rosters of these new teams (inphoto by J. WrightIM ReportsJoyce wins; Rule changeA co-ed fun run will be 3 feature event atthe women’s track meet tomorrow. Theevent will be held at 11:45. just before themeet begins. It is open to all and free ofcharge. A men’s run will be held at 12:50.Both events are 1500m. Chicago Hustles a winning teamBy RVV RohdeThe women’s basketball team ended theirseason with a bang and a fizzle last weekendat the state tournament in Quincy, IllThe bang was their loss to Olivet-Nazarene, a 68-63 affair last Friday duringwhich the Maroons put in some strong per¬formances while participating in the closestgame of the day. The Maroons were down byfive at halftime, but came back to take afive-point lead w'ith three minutes left. Itwas a couple of key Chicago turnovers andsome exceptional offense by Olivet thatturned the final tideNadya Shmavonian played real tough,scoring 28 points and pulling down 20 re¬bounds in her best game of the season. Shehad a strong supporting cast including JanetTorrey with 11 points. Ellen Markovitz withnine, and Kim Curran with seven. But itwasn't enough.The fizzle was the fact that the Maroons,who were seeded eighth and had hopes ofimproving on that, ended up losing to thetwelfth-seeded team in the first round. Thatis quite a blow7 to a team that many peoplehad expected to be a top contender at stateafter watching their early showings in theBy Howard SulsBasketball finally concluded last weekwith Jeremiah Joyce 19th Ward pulling offdouble victories in the All-U title game andin Open Rec under the alias Steve-0-Reno.For the All-U title they crushed the Droogs,winners over Psi U 43-30 for the Undergrad¬uate title In Open Rec Steve-O-Renoknocked off McCormick Seminary 37-25.In Men’s Racquetball Pete Pisula camefrom behind to beat Pete Janicki 20-21. 21-18,11-5 to capture the Independent bracket. Inresidence action Upper Rickert's Tim Lorel-lo crushed Henderson’s Tom Stein 21-5. 21-1,while Dave Hilko beat Elliot Burros, both ofHitchcock 21-10. 21-6. The winner of Lorello-Hilko faces Pisula for the Undergraduatetitle.In other business, the deadline for softballentries has been extended from March 8 toApril 12 Also, the IM Office has a file fornames of people interested in sports riot of¬fered. golf partners, etc., and people lookingfor teams to play onA new rule change is now in effect, limit¬ing the number of participants on an inde¬pendent team from any house that does notOpen Fun Run field a team itself. No more than X numberof people < where X is equal to 50% of a stan¬dard team, fractions rounded upi from saidhouses may be on any independent roster.As an example, if Fiduciary House does notfield a team in socim. then only fourmembers from tnat house can play on anygiven independent socim team. This is in aneffort to increase house participation. Checkthe IM office for further clarifications.Fieldhouse in January.Those expectations seemed well founded.This year’s squad lost only two players fromthe 1978 team that placed fourth at state,and that loss was more than made up for bynew additions and experienced gained.Unfortunately, the quality of women'sbasketball is going up at a phenomenal rate.Witness the increased publicity of women’scollege ball and the newly formed Women’sProfessional Basketball League. With therecent rulings on tile IX, this trend will pro¬liferate for a long time. And while otherschools are able to take advantage of this byoffering scholarships and shuffling their ta-lented-but-dumb students off to major inPhysical Education, Chicago has only theirtwo Dudley scholarships an no P.E. major.While the Maroons are not losing anyoneto graduation this year, their hopes for nextyear can only be so high. photo by RW Rohdehighly-publicized personality squables. Chi¬cago had the distinction of providing theWPBL's first such incident, involving theirstar guard. Logan. At the start of the sea¬son. the Hustle was pinning its hopes inlarge part on Logan, a flashy formermember of the Redheads, a women’s tour¬ing exhibition team. Logan had attractednational attention in 1975 when she beatJerry West in a game of “Horse-’ on televi¬sion’s Challenge of the Sexes. In addition,having been involved in a previous attempta few years ago to start a professionalwomen's basketball league. Logan wasnamed assistant coach of the Hustle andhelped select Chicago's preseason draft ofplayers. She and her close friend Mary JoPeppier, a former member of the UnitedStates Olympic volleyball team, were ex¬pected to provide the Hustle's scoring punchand. being the team's only certified stars, toserve as gate attractions. Trouble devel¬oped when Logan injured a foot. Though hereffectiveness was greatly impaired, she in¬sisted on being a starter and on playing inlarge chunks of each game Matters came toa head mid-way through the season whenHustle head coach Doug Bruno pulled herout of the starting lineup Logan andPeppier stormed out on the team and weresoon traded. Logan's replacement. Janey Fincher, hasmore than taken up the slack A fancy-dribbling guard. Fincher also has an accu¬rate outside shot, making her one of the Hus¬tle's major scoring threats with 16.5 pointsper game. Her partner in the backcourt isRita Easterling, a quick guard and a terrificpasser Easterling is the team's playmakerand is among the league leaders in assists,averaging almost 11 a game in addition to a19.3 point scoring average. The top scoringthreat is provided by Debbie Waddy-Ros-sow. whose nearly-unstopable shooting abil¬ities from near the basket have given herover 22 points per game and put her amongthe league leaders in offense The team'scurrent first-place standing is due in largepart to this trio's fine talents. All three w illbe on the league all-star team.The Hustle will have to continue their finestart if they hope to build a following amongfans. As coach Bruno put it. “In Chicago, thew ord is w i n We have to earn our follow ing,and l think we will. The players want toprove to the public that they're serious ath¬letes. good athletes, and that they're fun towatch. And that on top of that.that they'rew inners — something that Chicago has beenthirsting for "Considering they're the only winningteam in town, the men's sports team in Chi¬cago would seem to have a lesson to learnfrom the Hustle’s womenMen’s crewMen’s crew will be holding an organiza¬tional meeting at 7.30 tonight in the firstfloor lounge of Ida Noyes Hall A wide rangeof subjects will be coveredThe team hopes to be on the water by thesecond week of April. All persons interestedare encouraged to attend If you are unable‘.o attend or have further questions, contact\ndrew Lang at 753-3774Phoenix. LA, St. Louis and San Francisco)with the greatly increased number ofwomen athletes coming out of colleges Withthe passage of Title IX. schools will now-have to spend as much money per capita onwomen s athletic programs as they do onmens. The Women’s Professional Basket¬ball League hopes to take advantage of thetalent pool in women's athletics that thiswill create. It also hopes to benefit from thepassing of attitudes that said that sports,especially professional sports, was not aproper field of endeavor for women.The League's success will ultimately de¬pend on the quality of play it produces. Noone expects women's basketball teams tocompete head on against male teams — sim¬ply because of the men's height and speedadvantages. But the league does hope toprove that women competing among them¬selves can produce as much excitemenf asmens teams. The WPBL emphasizes quick¬ness. as well as shooting and dribblingskills, as opposed to the heavier physicalcontact of the NBA. The women display fin¬esse and agility, rather than “the powergame'' of their male counterparts That isabout the only difference between them: thewomen play under the same rules as themen and their games are just as high scor¬ing. But men still have a wide lead in oneimportant aspect of professional sports, sa¬laries. The WPBL is very reluctant to dis¬cuss figures, saying only that the women arewell paid for their five months of work TheHustle is reported to have the largest pay<enabling about half the team to make “a liv¬ing-’ from their basketball playing, accord¬ing to Karen Logan before she left the team.Million dollar contracts in women's athlet¬ics. it seems, are still a long way off.Women have also show n themselves to beequal to men in an increasingly commonfeature of competitive athletics, that ofphotos courtesy Chicago HustleThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 9, 1979 — 15'Azz^/a/fe ^l/tAAfaasrvReal Estate CompanyServing Hyde Park And South Shore 493-0666BEAUTIFUL 15TH FLOOR VIEWS OF LAKEGracious size and layout in traditional elegant BARCLAY Building at 50th EastEnd. Quiet tasteful decor throughout large four room apt. Lovely dining roomlooks out over Lake Michigan. Everything in excellent condition Price mid 40's(flexible). Condominium.MADISON PARK VIEWSCondo ready now. Spacious 612 rooms. Large sun room. Newly decorated 2 lovelynew tile baths. Immediate possession. Brokers invited. $60,000 Call Charlotte.AVAILABLE FOR RENT:1 bedroom at 4800 Chicago Beach. $390 month. Garage available, extra, ^ /House near 57th and Harper for 15mos. fully furnished Begins June 15.House on lakefront for one year - 4 levels of glass with cathedral ceiling - BeverlyShores. Indiana. Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372U.C. Students, Faculty, EmployeesSpecial ConsiderationOUR REPUTATION IS YOURGUARANTEE OF SATISFACTION. this SummerBARBIERI CENTFR/ROME CAM PUSJUNE 15-JULY 25-$995Art History MusicItalian Soda1 ScienceClassical CivilizationBarbieri Center/Rome CampusTRINITY COLLEGEHartford, Conn. 0610695FlatterPick np onlyAO3-28001460 E. 53rd ST.GRADUATE STUDIES INPREVENTIVE MEDICINE ANDCOMMUNITY HEALTHStudents holding baccalaureate, master’s or pro¬fessional degrees are invited to apply to the GraduateProgram in Preventive Medicine at The Ohio StateUniversity. The program opens career opportunitiesin the study of the health of human populations, theinvestigation of the causes of disease, and the plan¬ning of preventive strategies. There is growing de¬mand for persons educated in these areas in com¬munity, state, federal and international organiza¬tions concerned with health and health care delivery.Students in our program have come from such di¬verse backgrounds as the biological and social sci¬ences, engineering, education and the humanities,as well as the medical sciences. Our Department of¬fers the M.S. and the Ph.D. degrees.Inquiries should be addressed to:Office of Graduate StudiesRoom B-201, Starling-Loving HallDepartment of Preventive MedicineThe Ohio State University410 West 10th AvenueColumbus, Ohio 43210(614) 422-1989 DnnceCOTTERColumbia Co'iege • Chicago4 730 N Shenaan RaDANCE CHICAGO IVThe Chicago Premier ofHARRYDance and Other Works bySenta DriverMarch 16 and 17 8 00 pmComing SoonKo-ThiDance Company March 23 & 24Special GuestTo Be Announced March 30 & 31Oregon Mime TheatreMordine & Company April 6 & 7April 27, 28. May 4, 5. 11, 12. 13Genera! $5 00(Buv anv 3 shows, pick a 4th free )Student/Seniors $3 00CAPA WelcomeCall 271-7804 for reservationsDance Center ofColumbia College4730 N. Sheridan RdParking at Lawrence El" City CarageCTA - 151 or 153 bus.Wilson or Lawrence "El"Supported in part by the NationalEndowment for the Arts and the IllinoisArts Council Icelandicannouncesthe best dealto Europe:*334*roundtrip.(M67 oncw^v) MNo restrictions.toErayseatatthe same price.Confirmed reservations.Free wine, meats cognac.4 flights weekfy.Stay ! to365days.Purchase tickets inthelLS.A.The Department of Music presents TheCONTEMPORARYCHAMBER PLAYERSof The University of ChicagoRALPH SHAPEY, Music Director• SHAPEYFRIDAY, MARCH 9, 1979Works byDURKO • JOLAS • DALLAPICCOLASoloists: Gail Williams, hornElsa Chorlston, sopranoDian. McCullough, m.zzo-soprono MANDEL HALL, 57th & University AvenueAbraham Sf ok man, piano _ , . .1 11 •free and open to the public8:30 P.M. See your travel agent. Or wnte Dept. #. IcelandicAirlines, 6 East Monroe St., Chicago, Illinois 60603. Or call toilfree 800-223-5390.Please send me: Q A timetable of Icelandic's flights fromChicago, New York and Baltimore/'Washington. Q Your brochureon European Fly/Drive and Fly/Rail Tours.NAME rADDRESS.CITY .STATE ZIP.ICELANDIC25 years of low air fares to Europe. ICELANDAI**Pnce effective April 15 thru May 14 and subject to change.PUKlVlMONDAY - MARCH 12READING OF MEGILLAT ESTEROrthodox (Yavneh) Services -6:1bp.m.Conservative (Upstairs Minyan) Services -7:30 p.m.PURIM SPIEL (an original play),“THE ADVENTURES OF ARISTOTLE SCHWARTZ - 9:00 p.m.Groggers, Hamentashen, Wine and Punch. Children of all ageswelcome. Hillel Foundation. 5715 Woodlawn.r .. 'Jn_ V ~ or *&«... V } ~START PRACTICING NOW FOR STRING OF PEARLSlLC. Students: $5.00 i*>rf*>r*4>n ' ipril 97"The Glenn Miller Orchestra#/ZAH) per fterson tipvnolds (Jill) lioX ttfJU’e16 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 9, 1979Michael DennisBrowneauthor ofThe Wife of WinterandThe Sun FetcherWill give a readingon Mareh 14,1979,at 8 p.m., inHarper 130.Admission is without ticket and without charge.M.A. IN PUBLIC POLICY STUDIESat theUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOThe Committee on Public Policy Studies is a formal academic unitof The University of Chicago, offering a graduate master’s degreeprogram which focuses on preparation for a w ide variet\ of career-.The Committee does not automatically assume that governmentsolutions are the preferred solutions to public polic\ problems.11program presupposes a role for the private sector as well as thepublic sector, in solving public policy problems, and assumes thatpublic policy leadership requires an understanding of both arenasand of the complex economic and social framework within whichpublic policy operates.The Committee on Public Policy Studies offers a new two yearprogram leading to the Master of \rt- degree in Public Polie\Studies. Major components of the program include Analytic Coursesin Economics. Political Analysis. Stati-tics. and Decision Analysis:a range of Applications Courses offered b\ the Committee and theother departments and professional schools of the l niversitv: aseries of Policy and Research Seminars deyoted to the scholarly,interdisciplinary investigation of specific public policy issues: andInternships in the public and private sectors.For additional information and application-:Prof. Robert /. \liber. ChairmanCommittee on Public Policx Sludic-The l niversitN of ChicagoWieboldt Hall - Room 301I 050 East 59th StreetChicago. Illinois 60637\pplications for Fall Oiiarter 1979will be accepted until Ala\ 15. pnoro oy s. janachowskiChicago trackmen loseBill Horsthemke. Ed Derse, MarshallTrack from 13new Chicago runner Tim Lorello. Showinggood form, Lorello led down the stretch tcset a new record of 32.8 seconds. Lorello. asenior who is running for his first year, com¬mented “setting the record feels great. I'dlike to hold onto it for a while.” TeammateRich Gordon finished in fifth place but re¬mained optimistic, saying, “just wait til the220 Outdoors.”Chicago and Carleton vied for the top fourplaces in the two mile run. the last of the in¬dividual running events. Chicago andCarleton runners pulled away from the packtwo-thirds of the way through the race. Bythe last lap it was Pete Smith of Chicago andthe top Carleton man competing for firstplace. Smith finished second far ahead ofthe third place man from Carleton. DavidTaylor, also of Chicago, finished fourth.The 1600 yard relay was the last event andonly relay of the day. The Chicago team of Schmidt, and David Greene expected to dowell. Horsthemke's 52.3 second opening legestablished a close contest between Chicagoand Coe College, with Carleton and Beloitfar behind Second man Ed Derse momen¬tarily dropped to second but came aroundthe last curve with a burst of speed to turn ina split of 51.7 to give third man Schmidt thelead. Schmidt held the lead with an im¬pressive 50.3 clocking Anchorman Greene,running a 50.7 split, held onto the lead tobeat Coe by 3/10 of a second. A new record of2:24.6 shattered the old by nearly 4 seconds.In the field events Chicago was led byPete Wendel. third in the Long Jump andTriple Jump, and Steve Zalan. fourth in theTriple Jump. Records were set in bothevents.The team looks forward to the OutdoorSeason with additional sprint and hurdleevents that are expected to be majorChicago strengths. The Spring Seasonbegins in April.* asmi fvswssC rI :/i . MINOLTA XD-llSpecial with this AdXD-11 w 50mm f1.7 lens344°°The world's only compact, multi-mode 35mm SLR lets youSWITCH from aperture to shutter-priority to meteredmanual operation • use MD SERIES 2 full stopssystem plus a minus • OVERRIDE automatic exposureLENSES specially designed for multi-mode operation •Price reflects $13500 Minolta Rebatemodel camera1342 E. 55th St. • 493-6700The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 9, 1979 — 17Calendar -iFRIDAYQuantitative Methods Economics Seminar: “An Empiri¬cal Study of the Relation Between UnanticipatedMoney Growth and the Exchange Rate ’, speaker Gre¬gory E. Smith. 9:20-12:00 noon, Ro 301.Regenstein: Exhibit-“100 Very American Books’’ fromthe Epstein collection. Feb. 6-April 15.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “The Clouds ofVenus: The Results of the Pioneer Venus MultiprobeMission", speaker Robert Knollenberg, 1:30 pm. HindsAuditorium.Committee for African Studies: Films-“The History ofthe Negro People: Brazil’’ and “Berimbau", 2:30 pm.Pick 22.Arabic Circle: "Scientific Thought and its Content inMeideval Arab Society", speaker Saleh Omar. 3:30 pm.Pick 218.Economic History Workshop: “Deviations from optimalPricing of Lower Colorado River Water", 3:30 pm, SS106.Bizden Size: (discussion in Turkish), “Social and Economic Causes of Political Change in Turkey”, speaker.Kamal Karpet. 3:30 pm. Cobb 104.Women’s Union: Meets 5:30 pm, Ida Noyes above theFrog and the Peach.Hillel: Adat Shalom Shabbat dinner, 6:00 pm. Hillel.Karate Club: Meets 7:00-9:00 pm. in the dance room ofIda Noyes Hall.DOC Films: “Dark Star", 7:15 pm. “ Alphaville”, 9:00 pm,Cobb.Christian Fellowship: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes EastLounge.UC Concert Band: Plays 7:30 pm, Harper Library. Admis¬sion free.Contemporary Chamber Players: Ralph Shapey, direc¬tor. 8:30 pm. Mandel Hall. Free. Memorial Concert forMrs. Edna Kraus.Men’s Crew: Organizational Meeting. 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes first floor lounge.Spartacus Youth League: Forum-Women in Iran", 7:30pm, Reynolds Club Lounge.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture-' The Reli¬gious Policy Under Selim I", 4:00 pm. Pick 016.International House: Travelogue of Germany. 8:00 pm.Refreshments will be served.SATURDAYWHPK: Children's Hour, 10:00-noon. Not for Kids Only.Rugby Club: Meets 10:00-noon in the Field House.’Table Tennis Club: Practices 10:00 am-l:00 pm, Ida NoyesHall, 3rd floor.Overeater’s Anonymous: Meets 10:30 am, WashingtonPark Field House.WHPK: Opera-“Moses and Aron" Boulez, Reich. BBC12:00-4:00 pm. Success Without College: Comedic Humor,4:00-5:00 pm. Fine Women and Song: Music a Woman CanIdentify With", 5:00-6:00 pm.Law School Films: “Philadelphia Story", 7:00 and 9:30pm. Law School Auditorium.NAM Films: "The Harder They Come,” 7:15 and 9:30 pm,Cobb.Crossroads: Republic of China slide show and discussion,7:15 pm.University Symphony Orchestra: Barbara Schubert,conductor. Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm, free.Hillel: Purim Masquerade Party at the Bait, 5458 S.Everett, 9:00 pm.Pub: Live Entertainment. Mark Daniels and Nick FilippoUsed Oak DesksCocooand upUSED 4 drawer file cabinetsAND UP$25°°Bring your own trailerBRAND )EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:00Sat. By Appointment OnlyRE 4-211118 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 9, 1979 (Folk, Country and Western) 9:30-1:00. Membership re¬quired.SUNDAYWHPK: WHPK’s finest in Rhythem and Blues, 6:00 am tomidnight.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Service, 11:00am, E. Spencer Parsons.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch, 11:00 am, Hillel.Students International Meditation Society: Stalkingthe Wild Pendulum, speaker Keith Snail, 3:00 pm, IdaNoyes East Lounge.Overeater’s Anonymous: Meets 3:00 pm, Ill. CentralHospital, 4th floor.Rockefeller Chapel: Organ Recital by Edward Mondello.4:45 pm. Service of the Holy Eucharist, Celebrant: Rev.Charles D. Brown. 5:00 pm.Tai Chi Club: Meets 6:30 pm, 4945 S. Dorchester (enter on50th).DOC Films: “Winifred Wagner", 7:15 and 9:30 pm,Cobb.Univesity Chamber Orchestra: The LiebesliederWaltzes by Brahms, 8:30 pm at Ida Noyes Library. Ad¬mission is free.Folkdancers: General level with teaching, 8:30-11:30pm. Ida Noyes Cloister Club.MONDAYPerspectives: Topic: "The Village and Family in Contem¬porary China" guests. Sue Jones, Tany Tsou, and Wil¬liam L. Parish, Jr. 6:30 am, Channel 7.WHPK: Wake up and stay awake with HPK Rock,6:30-9:00 am.Crossroads: English classes for foreign women. 10:00am-noon.Danforth: Meeting at noon. Wieboldt 409C. Topic: “Jug¬gernaut and Prestor John: Interdisciplinary Study asendangered species”.Physics Undergraduate Journal Club: Repeat showingsof selected films, 12:30 pm, Eckhart 133.Hillel: Students for Israel: Topic: "Israel and the Plo:Confronting the Unthinkable” speaker, Mr. Allan Solo-monow, 12:30 pm. Hillel.Dept, of Behavorial Sciences: Colloquium-’When doPeople Learn: The Relationship Between ExistingKnowledge and the Acquisition of New Knowledge.4:00 pm, Beecher Hall 102, speaker Robert Siegler.Center for Latin American Studies: “Intellect and Imag¬ination in the Contemporary Mexican Novel”, speakerJohn Brushwood, 4:00 pm, Classics 21.Dept, of Chemistry: Lecture-“Structure and Propertiesof Interfaces Between Fluid Phases", speaker Prof. Ben¬iamin Widom, 4:00 pm. Kent room 103.Chicago City Colleges: Sponsors “English as a SecondLanguage" class, 4:30-6:30 pm, Rickett’s Lab.WHPK: Classical Music 6:00-9:30 pm.Hillel: Reading of Megillat Ester Orthodox (YavnehlServices, 6:15 pm, Hillel.Chess Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Karate Club: Meets 7:00-9:00 pm. Ida Noyes danceroom.Hillel: Reading of Megillat Ester Conservative (UpstairsMinyan) Services, 7:30 pm. HillelWomen’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm. Blue Gragoyle inWomen’s Center, 3rd floor.Ski Club: Meeting 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Hall. Sing-ups,info, etc.Baptist Student Union: Meets 7:37 pm in the 2nd floorADVERTISERS ANDCALENDAR USERS,TAKE NOTE:The Literary Review deadlinefor display advertising is Tues¬day, 12 noon. Classified ads andcalendar informatioon must beinbvMondav, noon. East Lounge ot Ida Noyes Hall.Folkdancers: Beginning level with teaching, 8:00-11:30pm. Ida Noyes Cloister Club.Hillel: Purim Spiel “The Adventures of AristotleSchwartz" and refreshments, 9:00 pm.ASHUM: Seminar Series-“Perspectives for the PublicSector in American Medicine", speaker Dr. Quentin D.Young. 7:30 pm. Eckhart 133.TUESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “The Family in ContemporaryChina", guests Sue Jones, Tang Tsou, and William L.Parish, 6:30 am, channel 7.WHPK: Wake up and Stay awake with HPK Rock,6:30-4:00 pm.Rockefeller Chapel: University Organist Edward Mon¬dello will give a lecture-demonstration and recital at12:15 pm.Ultimate Frisbee Team: Practices 1:00 pm on the mainfloor of Field House. New Players welcome.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture-“The IranianRevolution-Whither the Islamic Republic?" speaker,Abbas Amirie, 4:00 pm, Classics 10.Ki-Aikido: Practices 4:30-6:00 pm, Bartlett, next tosquash courts.WHPK: Folk Music, 4:30-6:00 pm. Classical Music,6:00-9:30 pm. Jazz, 9:30-3:00 am.Kundalini Yoga Society: Meets 5:00 pm Ida Noyes EastLounge.Hyde Pk Kenwood NOMOR: “Human Response to theNuc Arms Race”, speakers, Robert Cleland, Prof. Rich¬ard Tholin, 7:30 pm, Hyde Union Church, 56th and Wood-lawn.Hillel: Israeli Folkdancing, 8:00 pm. Ida Noyes Hall, 3rdfloor.Sexuality Rap Group: sponsored by U.C. Gay and Les¬bian Allaince, Ida Noyes 3rd floor, 8:00 pm.Archery Club: Practices 8:30-10:00 pm, Ida Noyes Gym¬nasium.WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Agriculture and Labor In Contem¬porary China", guests. Sue Jones, Tang Tsou. and Wil¬liam L. Parish, 6:30 am, Channel 7WHPK: Wake up and stay awake with HPK Rock, 6:30am-4:00 pm.Commuter Co-op: Get-together in Commuter Lounge inbasement of Gates-Blake, 12:00 noon.Rockefeller Chapel: University Carillonneur Robert Lo-dine will give a recital at 12:15 pm. Persons wishing atour should be in the Chapel Office by 12:10 pm.Fluid Mechanics Films: Repeat showings of Selectedfilms, 12:30 pm, Eckhart 133.Crossroads: English Classes for foreign women, 2:00pm.WHPK: Folk Music, 4:30-6:00 pm. Classical Music, 6:00pm-9:30 pm. Jazz, 9:30-3:00 am.Duplicate Bridge: Meeting; 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.New players welcome.DOC Films: “Red Line 7000", 7:15 pm, “The Power andthe Glory”, 9:15 pm, Cobb.Country Dancers: British folkdancing. All dancestaught. Morris, 7:30 pm. Dancing, 8 pm. Refreshments,10 pm. Ida Noyes Cloister Club.Badminton Club: Practices 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Gymnasi¬um.Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall. Ev¬eryone welcome.Michael Dennis Browne: Author of The Wife of Winterand The Sun Fetcher will give a reading at 8:00 pm, inHarper 130. Free.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Women and Family in Asian Socie¬ties ’, guests Liza Crihfield. Joan Erdman, and jacque-line Swearingen, 6:30 am. Channel 7.WHPK: Wake up and Stay awake with HPK Rock. 6:30am-4:00 pm.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture-’Arab-Afri-can Relations", 2:00 pm, Classics 10.Nuclear Overkill Moratorium: Weekly meeting of theU.C. NOMOR Committee, 3:00 pm. Ida Noyes 2nd floorEast Lounge.Committee on Virology: Seminar-“Gene Function forTransformation by Polyoma Virus" speaker Dr. ThomasBenjamin, 4:00 pm. Cummings 1117.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 Field House Balcony.Table Tennis Club: Practices 6:30-11:00 pm. Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.Debate Society: Practice at 7:00 pm. Debate at 8:00 pm.Ida Noyes East Lounge.Hillel: Chug Ivrit (conversational Hebrew), 8:00 pm, Hil¬lel.FLAMINGO ARTS.5500 S. Short* Dr.Studio »\ (hit* llulrniKuril. A I nfurn.slmrl A I .mi” I •■mi Hrnliil-8200 - 8100Parking pool. restaurant,valet, del i and t ran—|i<»rf at i«mi. <’ar|Mtin<:drape- i tie I.752-380Q DISCOVERMEANS OF ESCAPESOPHIA LIVING& LOVINGTHE KINGOF THE CASTLEA RUDE AWAKENINGIN MEMORYYETGREEN& manv more inHARPER LIBRARY’SPOPULAR READINGCOLLECTION Have a pleasant vacationCLASSIFIEDSSPACELooking 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.Sfudio apts. available immediately.Call 238 7941 am, 924 4287 pm Gradstudents preferred.Female roommate to share luxuryapt. Carpet, dishwasher, a/c, 2 baths,•2 bedrms., view $246.643 8975.Studio and garage to sublet eff. Apr. orMay thru July. Part turn. May takenew lease. Uni. Park Condo $300 callaft.6. 643 2287.Furnished room for rent, nice U.C.location. Call 955-7083.7 rm. apt. available on the Lake. SouthShore. $350 includes heat. Deposit.Phone 375-1661.Furnished 2 rm. apt. sublet 5442Harper for Spring with summer op¬tion. $195/mo. incl. util. BeautifulSiamese cat if you want. Call 752-8125.WALK TO CAMPUS, shops, 1C. 2 BR 2Ba professional decor. MODEL apt.mod. bldg, rent incl. AC, carpet,drapes, pool, 24 hr. seci»947-9597 eves.Comfortable 3 br cottage on beautifulFlambeau Chain of Lakes. In Wise,inc. pier and fishing boat seasonal ren¬tal. For info call 753-2233 rm. 224 or328-8064.PEOPLE WANTEDSECRETARIAL POSITIONAVAILABLE. Experienced secretary:60 wpm typing; use of officemachines; filing; knowledge ofSpanish helpful. Full-time 35 hrs perwk. Competitive salary and benefits.Small educational institution in HydePark. Contact Ruben Armendariz orDon Hasty 241-7800.Babysitter for 2 boys age 3 yr. and 3mo. Mon Fri 4:00-6:30 pm at our homein E. Hyde Park. 955-9571 after 7pm.Male for French conversation withbeginner 1 hr. per wk, 667-2846.ENERGETIC STUDENT TO DOHOUSECLNING GOOD MONEY.285 1398 Evns.OVERSEAS JOBS Summer/yearround. Europe, S. America, Australia,Asia, Etc. All fields, $500-51200 monthly. Expenses paid. Sightseeing. Freeinfo. Write: IJC, Box 4490 11,Berkeley, CA 94704.Need exceptional full-time person todo cleaning, cooking and care fornewborn in South Shore home. StartApril. Salary negotiable. Benefits. Call375 6353 eves.Tutor wanted for 9 year old withminimal LD problems • 2 hrs. onweekend needs help with phonics,comprehension, sentence structuring composition. Call 548-3772.Temp, part-time typist (45-60 wpm)for small educ. mag. Accuracyimportant-hrs. flex. • loop location.939-1333 Ext. 50.Wanted for U of C lab work mostlywith tissue cultures. Exper. preferred.753-2718.The Chicago Crime Commission willinterview on campus for its 1 yearstaff associate position on March 9.Those interested should contactCareer Counseling. Bring resume andwriting sample.Workers for campus area foodestablishment. Hours varied. Call753-3597 after 1:30 p.m., ask for Peter.Subjects wanted for psycholinguisticsexperiments. Will be paid. To registercall 753-4718.Normal adult males over age 21 areneeded for project in reproductivephysiology. Please see Dr. Jones inBillings M 170 or call 947-5437.Sexual problem? Univ. of ChicagoPsychiatrist investigating two stan¬dard treatment modalities for sexualdysfunction. Needs volunteer couplesover 18, in stable heterosexual relationship, with sexual difficulty. Freetreatment provided. If interested,telephone 947-6412.PART-TIME Admin. Assistant, 10-25hrs. p/wk $5 p/hr small office inHuman Services. 793 2080. Ask forGeorge.Morning babysitter needed 8-9 AM.good salary. Call Rosalie 684-2488 E.Hyde Pk. Location.The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center, 5711 SouthWoodlawn and 6354 North Broadwayneeds people who are willing to talkabout their personal problems andfeelins for 10 sessions with apsychotherapist-in-training. Par¬ticipation should not be seen aspsychotherapy or as a substitute forpsychotherapy, although participantsmay find it a useful experience. Par¬ticipants will neither be paid norcharged for their sessions. Call Pat at684 1800.KEYPUNCH person needed tokeypunch data for grad student $3/hr.cash 486-5579 eve/wknd.PEOPLE FOR SALETyping done on IBM pica by collegegrad. Fast, accurate, reliable. Termpapers, theses, law papers,manuscripts. Lincoln Park West areaCall 248-1478.ARTWORK of all kinds-drawing,calligraphy, illustration, hand¬addressing of invitations, etc. NoelYovovich, 493 2399.COOKING CLASSES Chinese and International series. Full participation.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO,—>voTOREPHOTO OFPT. 753-3317 Call Endy Gerrick, 538 1324.POTTERY CLASSES, day and evening. Small groups. Lots of individualattention. 624 7568.Typing: Student term papers, etc.Quick convenient and not too expensive Please call 684 6882.SCENESFIGURE DRAWING AND PAINTINGWKSHPS all levels-individual attention. Mon. Tues. eves-6:00 to 9:00 Sat.mornings 9:00 to 12:00. 10classes $50.00. Artists Studio 200 546W. Washington (near "L"-buses-trains-parking. Telephone 930-9317 or446-7183.UC Mens Crew 753-8342 Ext. 1234ANTICPATING A BORING BREAKWomen's Crew can change that Youcan join and learn how to row duringspring vacation in sunny Knoxville.We will train March 23-29 at U. Ten¬nessee. Wide eligibility: undergrads,grad students, U.C. staff, alumni,spouses. Beginners welcome. Don'tmiss this terrific opportunity. Call955 0932, 753-2233 rm. 320 now for information. This could be your $lastchance.EINSTEIN'SBIRTHDAY PARTYArtisans 21 gallery at 57th andWoodlawn is celebrating Einstein'sbirthday with free birthday cake andhot cider. Come to celebrate March 10,10-4.FOTAFota needs a fundraiser. Despite ma¬jor budget cuts following the loss of a$10,000 grant, Festival of the Arts isstill in financial hot water. We need anactive, dynamic fundraiser Call3 3591,3-3562.SYMPHONIEFANTASTIQUEPlus Haydn's Clock Symphony andWagner's Parsifal Prelude, performedby the University Symphony Or¬chestra under Conductor BarbaraSchubert. Sat., March 10, at 8:30 p.min Mandel Hali. Admission free.STUDENT CO-OPNew games have arrived Rail Baronand War of Rings. Columbia classicalsale continues 47% off on selectedalbums We are still buying your usedbooks at the best prices in the city.Downstairs at Reynolds Club. 9:306wkdys., 10-5 Sat.PERSONALSWriter's Workshop (Plaza 2 8377).VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1V* and2Vs Room StudiosFurnished or l nfurnished$189 - $287Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. Groakr NEWi FUJICHROME100 IS HERE!COLORS! FINER GRAIN!With this ad — One 20 exposure •roll of 100 ASA Fujichrome — jNow $1.75 reg $2.55THE COLOR OF THINGS TO COME |MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th • 493-6700 marian realty, inc.03REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available-Students Welcome-On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 LOST: Black and white Tabby cat withwhite spot on his back and blue rabiestab - Call 684 4962, keep trying.Pregnant Troubled Call 233 0305for help, free test referral.Female cat, possibly calico, foundFeb. 28 in Reynolds Club. Call 753-3583,Judy Fink.Please Please give me your correctphone number so I can come home,Tilly now! Sotp being a Kuhugao. stoprunning, why deny us.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 floor. Themore the merrier. 684 3189.FOLKDANCINGEvery Sun. and Mon. eve. at IdaNoyes. New time Sun. only: 8:30(general level). Mon. 8:00 as usual(beginning level with teaching). Joinus!WOMEN'S UNIONWomen's Union meets every Friday at5:30 in Ida Noyes Hall above the Frogand Peach. Everyone welcome.JOIN SKI CLUBDon't miss all the Winter fun 7.50 getsyou all the discounts, parties, andevents. Call 955-9646 for info: meetingMon. and Thurs. 7:30 Ida Noyes. Bringa friend.SERVICESRoom for one toddler in campusplaygroup. $55/workweek. Call KarenMalik. 288-5355.•Eye Examinations•Contact Lenses(Soft & Hard)•Prescriptions FilledDR. MORTON R. MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSServing the UniversityCommunity for over 40 years.Hyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363SCHOOL OFPUBLIC HEALTHUNIVERSITY OFILLINOIS AT THEMEDICAL CENTER.CHICAGOInvites applications fordegree programsMASTER OF PUBLICHEALTH <M.P.H.>M ASTER OF SCIENCEIN PUBLIC HEALTH(M.S.)DOCTOR OF PUBLICHEALTH (Dr.P.H.)DOCTOR OF PHIL¬OSOPHY IN PUBLICHEALTH Ph D.)Concentrations are of¬fered in Biometry. Epi¬demiology. Environ¬mental and Occupation¬al Health. Health CareServices and Adminis¬tration. Health Educa¬tion, InternationalHealth and NutritionFinancial assistanceis available throughPublic Health Traineeships and Research Po¬sitions. Deadline toapply for the M.P.HProgram is March 15.1979For further informationwrite or telephone:JAMES W. WAGNERDEAN OF STUDENTAFFAIRSUNIVERSITY OFILLINOIS AT THEMEDICAL CENTERP.O.bo\«99XCHICAGO. ILL. WHiTSi)(312) 996-6625 SCHOENBERGBoulez and Craft Sat. 12-4 WHPK.LIEBESLIDERWALTZESThe University of Chicago ChamberMusicj Program presents an eveningof Brahms: Liebeslieder Waltzes. Op.52 plus rarely performed duets. Sun¬day March 11, 8:30 p.m. Ida NoyesLibrary. Admission free. plications due June 29POU SCI MAJORSPlease turn in your QuestionnairesNOWMAROONThere is an early deadline forclassified ads and calendar items forMarch 16 issue. Deadline: Mon.,March 12, noon. Same deadline forDisplay adsPASSOVERIS COMING!!Did you get your Hillel Passover mail¬ing info on Seder placements, mealreservatoins, Seder workshops? comein and sign up before you leave cam¬pus at Hillel, 5715 Woodlawn. 752-1127.WORK/STUDYAPPLY NOW FOR SUMMER 1979ANDTERM-TIME 1979-80!!Undergraduates: Apply at College aid,Harper 281. FAF due April 1, AllWork/Study applications due April 18.Graduate Students: Apply at CareerCounseling and Placement, ReynoldsClub 200. GAPFAS due April 2; Summer Work/Study applications dueApril 30; Term-Time Work°Study ap FOR SALEFORD Pinto 74 runs well $600 Call753-4273 or 643 2768.MODEL CAMERA SPECIAL SALEPhoto Albums 25% off. ColorEnlargements; pay for 2, get 1 free.Fujichrome special—one 20 exposureroll of the new 100 ASA Fujichrome,$1.70 with this ad and your U of C ID(Reg Price $2.55) Model Camera, 1342E. 55th St. 493-6700GOING ANYWHERE SPECIALPassport photos while-u-wait. Wideselection of cameras, film, accessoriesto help capture all the excitement.Great deals in photo processing,frames, albums when you return. Stopin today at Model Camera, 1342 E. 55thSt. 493-6700 YOUR SOUTH SIDECENTER FOR PHOTOGRAPHY. •gallery b1645 e. 53rdsculpture from new guineatues. - sat. 2 to 6324-3088ATJIMMY’SWe Do NOTDiscuss Politics,Religionor Potholes. Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288 2900zArtim^ 21Celebrate Einstein's ICOth birthday with freebirthday cake and cider at the ARTISANS 2'gallery and shoo We are having a specia1opening SAT MARCH IQ. 10-4 in the FirstUnTanan Church 57th and Woodlawn (57th Stentrance)Jewelry ceramics paintings, toys and nnuchmore for your favorite physicst OP your favoritenomna1 oersonion't know any physicists or normalThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, March 9, 1979 — 19Something old.. .something newTX-8500MKIIAM/FM STEREO RECEIVEROld is Quartz-Locked tuning, as near perfect aspossible. New is digital frequency readout, inte¬grated circuitry, built-in Dolby* and instrument de¬sign beauty. Plus added power, 160 watts perchannel, minimum RMS at 8 ohms, both channelsdriven from 20Hz to 20kHz with no more than0.05% Total Harmonic Distortion, and frequencyresponse beyond hearing limits. Get versatility too,with multiple input/output facilities, detented con¬trols, dual power supply, LED function indicatorsand total quality in construction and performance.It’s new, superb audio of the future.•Dolby is a trademark of Dolbv Laboratories. Inc.Only $795.95TX-8500MKIIINNOVATIVE AUDIO’S SECOND GENERATIONONKYOTX-4500MKIIAM/FM Stereo ReceiverThe Only Way To ImproveQuartz-Locked TuningfD 4 The expertsthink Quartz-Locked Tuningis the best in thebusiness. So Onkyo made it better with integratedcircuitry. Long-lasting, cool running computer quali¬ty IC’s. Improved styling and added power too. 60watts per channel, minimum RMS, at 8 ohms bothchannels driven from 20 Hz to 20 kHz, with no morethan 0.1% total harmonic distortion. Frequencyresponse 15-30,000 Hz (± 1 dB) . And a host ofother improvements at the same low cost. See it all...see it soon.Only $399.95 Kitchen3437 West 63rd776-6715Ojw-n for Dinner5 P.M. Dailv3 P.M. SundayClosed MondayModerately Prieed Chieago (.wide:*"Eulitifi a I I hr FrrnrhKit thru is likr tliniuffuilh Julia (hihl."University of Chicago Bookstore. Photo Department5750 South Ellis -753-3317 DOC FILMSFriday March 9John Carpenter’sDARK STAR7:15andJean-Luc Godard’sALPHAVILLE9:00Sunday March 11Hans-Jurgen Syberberg’sWINIFRED WAGNER(An Unusual Documentary)7:15 / 9:30All Films $1.50 Cobb Hall