Chicago law keeps College dry; Pub remains openBy Richard KayeChicago’s new liquor ordinance,which makes it illegal for anyoneunder the age of 21 to buy liquor,has put an end to the traditionalserving of wine and sherry at Uni¬versity functions, reduced the IdaNoyes Pub to an estimated half ofits clientele, and forced bars sur¬rounding the University to enforcethe law stringently or risk losingtheir licenses.The new law, passed on March21, states that “it shall be unlawfulfor any person to sell, give, or de¬liver any alcoholic liquor to a per¬son under the age of 21 years.” It isalso illegal for anyone under theage of 21 to “purchase, deliver, po¬ssess or consume alcoholic li¬quor.”‘ Bartenders and owners of barsare going to have to be very atten¬tive,” said Marge Butler, a bar¬tender at The Eagle, which usuallycaters to an older clientele. “Most people think that bars are going toeventually ignore the law, butthey’re wrong. There have been in¬stances in the past when bars havelost their licenses for breaking theliquor law.”^ard Turkington. associatedean of students, has sent letters tothe housing staff stating that therewill no longer be liquor served atthe traditional sherry hours, par¬ties or receptions. And while Tur¬kington advised the housing staffto refrain from policing the privatedrinking habits of students, hewarned that no member of thehousing staff should purchase alco¬hol for those under twenty-one.“We re not interested in becom¬ing agents of the liquor controlcommission,” said Turkington.“And although we consider the law-very unfortunate, we’re in no posi¬tion to disobey it.”Turkington went on to say thatthere have been very few alcohol- related problems at the Universi¬ty, and only a small number ofabusers.“Moderate use of liquor is not aproblem, and I’m convinced thatour ability to serve liquor at socialoccasions made for more successf¬ul activities.”There have been various rumorssuggesting that the Pub in IdaNoyes is closing, but according toDirector of Student ActivitiesRiley Davis, the Pub will open asusual. Davis said he expected thePub to suffer a net loss as a resultof the law. which he estimatedwould cut the clientele by morethan half, but said that the Pub isconsidering some new marketingtechniques to win new customers.“We’re hoping to offer a largervariety of foods * pizzas, moresandwiches. You can now bringfood down from the Frog andPeach and eat it in the Pub.”to 5 Photo: Carol KlammerNew city ordinance bars Woodlawn Tap and other Hyde parkdrinking establishments from serving 19 and 20 year olds.Vol. 88. No. 44 The University of Chicago Cnicaao .VWoon 1979 Tuesday, April 10, 1979H-bomb secrets imperiled,nuclear physicist chargesPhoto: Nancy ClevelandUnion watcher awaiting election results election night This is the first of a two-partseries dealing with United States v.The Progressive. The governmenthas successfully sought an injunc¬tion against The Progressive mag¬azine’s publishing an article detail¬ing the principles of constructionfor a hydrogen bomb. The secondarticle will deal with many of theissues raised by the case, bothlegal and political.By Bruce LewensteinA University-affiliated physicisthas charged U.S. Department ofEnergy (DOE) officials with abreach of national security in their reaction to the “H-bomb article "written for The Progressive maga¬zine.Theodore Postol. from ArgonneNational Laboratory, said lastweek that he was “frightened andshocked" when he read an affida¬vit filed by DOE consultant JackRosengren in a government at¬tempt to prevent publication of thehydrogen-bomb article.In a decision that pits FirstAmendment free press rightsagainst national security interests.U.S. District Court Judge RobertWarren, in Milwaukee on March26. issued the nation's first prior-restraint order for a publication.Election results finalUC clerical workers’ union formingBy Lee ChaitOn March 23, Teamsters Local>3 won the right to represent theniversity’s 1,900 clericalorkers. The decision by the Chi-igo branch of the National Laborelations Board (NLRB) cameiter nearly four months of delib-•ation. The union won the No-jmber 16 elections by a 21 votetargin (743-722), and the periodnee that victory has been markedy controversy and visible anti¬lion activity.The initial election results wereiconclusive because of 87 voteslallenged by either the NLRB oric union. Some of the votes werejunted by joint agreement be-veen the University and theriion. but the NLRB ruled on theiajority of them, disqualifyingnly two votes.The University has filed a re-uest w ith the main NLRB office inashington to review the criterion of the Chicago branch's decisionon 67 contested votes. This actiondelays NLRB certification of theunion which is necessary before of¬ficial bargaining between theTeamsters and the University canbegin. However, this review doesnot seem to be a major hurdle forthe union, with even Edward Cole¬man. University director of per¬sonnel, expecting certification bythe end of this week.Meetings between the clericalsand the union to determineworkers' demands to be includedin contract negotiations with theUniversity have already begun.Grievances have not yet been arti¬culated by the union, but Colemanexpects the issues to include sa¬laries. benefits, and formal griev¬ance procedures. The negotiationswill also determine whether theUniversity will be an open orclosed shop.Coleman does not think thatchanges in these areas will lx* asmuch of a problem for the Univer¬ sity as standardizing clericalworker supervision policies. Atpresent, differences exist betweenthe way that different divisions ofclericals are supervised. The hos¬pital workers, who make up ap¬proximately half of the 1.900 cleri¬cals employed by the University,are tightly supervised, whereasthose who work on the Universityside of Ellis Ave. generally work insmaller offices, often for profes¬sors. and enjoy more flexible at¬tendance. working, and disciplinary policies. Coleman sees greatdifficulty in making the changesthat would be necessary if the Uni¬versity must comply with a unioncontract that calls for equal condi¬tions for all the workers that it rep¬resents.Since the NLRB ruling, anti¬union leaflets have appeared allover campus, but primarily in thehospital. It is not clear who is be¬hind this action. Some anti-unionclericals are attempting to forestall a two-year contract so that the union might be voted out at theend of the year. Coleman deniedUniversity administration involve¬ment. but said that an organizationof anti-union clericals might be re¬sponsible. Acknowledging thatUniversity materials and copyingmachines appear to have beenused in making the leaflets. Cole¬man "does not see this 'unauth¬orized use of University property)as a real problem.” and is takingno steps to stop it.Further controversy has beenaroused by the claims of formerLocal 743 steward Charlie McCor¬mick that he was ordered byTeamster superiors to lie to theUniversity clericals during thecampaign for recognition. McCor¬mick scheduled an open meetinglast Friday at the Center for Con¬tinuing Education to explain his al¬legations to workers, but the meet¬ing was cancelled at the lastminute w ithout explanation. Unionofficials were unavailable for com¬ment.- The Progressive is appealing thedecision.The article, written by HowardMorland. a freelance journalistwith little technical training, dis¬cusses the principles involved inthe construction of a thermonucle¬ar (fusion) weapon, the so-called• H-bomb”. Morland claims, andthe government does not dispute,that he gathered all his informa¬tion from unclassified sources andfrom interviews with governmentofficials.However. Rosengren states inhis affidavit that “the Morland ar¬ticle goes fax beyond any otherpublication in identifying the na¬ture of the particular design usedin the thermonuclear weapons inthe U.S. stockpile“The Morland article describesin a*relatively detailed manner thebasic design concepts and certainspecific design features of U.Sthermonuclear weapons.’’Postol. who checked an early-draft of the article for technical ac¬curacy at the request of the editorsof The Progressive, agreed withRosengren's statement that “thereare many feasible and grossly dif¬ferent possible designs for thermo¬nuclear weapons." not all of whichare practical.Postol said his first reaction tothe article was “ho-hum. anotherH-bomb article There would be noway to establish that this is anymore than one plausible design."But Postol said he felt “pure ter¬ror" at Rosengren's admissionthat the design specified by Mor¬land is "far superior in efficiencyand practicality to any otherknown type of design."“If I were involved in develop¬ment of a bomb, I would now beable to concentrate efforts on thisdesign concept.” said Postol. in¬stead of working on a largenumber of possible designsto 5Board to decide on hospital planBy Abbe FletmanDiscussions concerning a $70 million “re¬placement” plan for the University Hospi¬tals and Clinics tUCHO are nearing conclu¬sion. A decision is expected Thursday whenthe Board of Trustees meets.The Board's Executive Committee tookup the subject at a meeting Monday. April 2.Discussion continues today in a meeting ofthe Committee of the Council of the Univer¬sity Senate.The plan calls for construction of a newpatient care unit and for renovation of olderparts of the UCHC complex when funds areavailable. Thursday's meeting is one ofeight regular meetings of the 94-memberBoard held each year. A University, official said the ExecutiveCommittee has discussed the selection ofan architect, but Vice-President for Aca¬demic Resources Jonathan Fanton saidthese discussions do not mean a decisionconcerning the plan has been reached. Spe¬cial Assistant to the President F. GregoryCampbell said a decision on the architect“could come” at Thursday’s Board meet¬ing.The plans to construct and renovate hospi¬tal facilities in part account for the two-yearaccreditation rating the UCHC received lastmonth from the Joint Commission on Accre¬ditation of Hospitals (JCAH), UCHC offi¬cials said. For the past three years, the Uni¬versity had received one-year ratings from University of Chicago Hospitals and ClinicsJCAH.60 percent of the hospitals reviewed re¬ceive two-year accreditations, the highest approval rating granted by the private, not-for-profit. national hospital survey organi¬zation. But, said a JCAH official, the poorcondition of the UCHC physical plant pre¬vented it from receiving two-year status.In addition, the JCAH required that UCHCpatients’ medical records conform moreclosely to regulations set forth in a 210-pageaccreditation manual issued by the JCAHand that the UCHC formalize a peer review¬ing process to assess the quality of patientcare.Hospital officials said they were pleasedby efforts of UCHC personnel that resultedin the two-year accreditation. According toJohn Scott, associate director of the UCHCand chirman of the UCHC accreditationcommittee, approximately 250 individualswere involved in the accreditation effort.Free Cookiesand Juice!!!The Blood Bank needsyour help.Donate andwe’ll satisfy your crav¬ings for munchies. Call-1 Hospital, RoomOpen 8:30a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Moniff Jewish United Fund Campaign 5739Continues through April 22Your pledge will help support communi¬ties around the world — school childrenin Israel, the aged in Chicago and theabsorption of Russian immigrants.Help Reach This Year’s Goal Of $5739When A Student Solicitor Calls On YouAny Questions? ContactArt 947-5071 or Naomi 946-0065WE ARE ONE AROUNDTHE CORNER ACROSSTHE WORLDAn opportunity to select from a comprehensive grad¬uate and undergraduate offering «n the arts and sciencesand seven professional schools Courses for academiccredit are open to qualified college and high school stu¬dents and to individuals not currently attending school.Over eighty percent of the Summer Session teaching staffare memoers of the distinguished Columbia faculty; visit¬ing faculty include professors from American and foreignuniversitiesThe program includes daytime and evening courses intwelve languages including Arabic. Chinese. Japanese,Korean and Russian, pre-medical courses, offerings inengineering, film, journalism, creative writing and theatrearts: diverse and innovative courses m the arts and sci¬ences Special programs include an intensive programfor students interested in exploring architecture and thedesign professions. French language offerings in Paris;Italian language and art history in Florence, architectureprograms in London and PansIn addition to the superb Columbia libraries, the facil¬ities of the Computer Center, the Dodge Physical FitnessCenter and the Earl Hall Summer Center for student ac¬tivities are open to Summer Session students.Two sessions: May 21-June 29 and July 9-August 17For information and application, phone f'212) 2802838 orwrite Summer Session Office, 102 Low Library, ColumbiaNew York, N Y 100272 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 10, 1979 II♦ Jolm J.SxT THES'TRAIOHTOFFt.The Se*t$eS Kyotkov,The 'Retd<Cb*kepts and Catte^oi^e^Sofcr&t Wr/B£$$ TV IIIIIIIIII » COURT ThCATKC5706 £ University Avenue Oneago, Hlwoi* H06J7 'Winter Court TheatrepresentsShakespeare’sMEASURE FORMEASUREDirected by Nick RudallSet Design by Maher AhmedApril 12 through May 138:30 P.M., Sundays at 7:30 P.M.New Theatre,. 57th & University753-3581Low priced preview onWednesday, April 11 at 8:30 P.MLow priced preview onWednesday, April 11 at 8:30 P.M.News briefsEdward ShilsU. of Exxonfunnierthan you thinkThe Law School is soliciting applicationsfor scholarships from women over 30 whohave worked in law-related occupations.Two of the scholarships, which will pro¬vide full tuition for three years and up to$3,000 per year expenses if necessary, willbe awarded in 1979, and two in 1980.The scholarships,, which were providedby an $84,600 grant from the Exxon Educa¬tion Foundation’s Improved Access Pro¬gram, were announced last year, but notheavily publicized until this year becauseof law school application deadlines.The grant was awarded, said Exxon, be¬cause, “We believe that many women’s as¬pirations to become lawyers were inhibit¬ed by public attitudes . . . (many) mayhave chosen a career in the legal supportarea (e.g. paralegals, legal secretaries,court administrators, etc.). Some of thesewomen may have found it difficult to takeadvantage of changing attitudes and up¬grade their professional training becauseof heavy financial obligations. . . This pro¬gram is designed to attempt to remedy thissituation.’’A similar grant was also made to theUniversity of California at Berkeley,where the women receiving awards will becalled “Joanie Caucus Scholars,” after theDoonesbury cartoon character who gra¬duated from Berkeley’s Boalt Hall LawSchool in 1977.Shils to lectureEdward Shils, Distinguished ServiceProfessor in the Department of Sociology and The Committee on Social Thought, willdeliver the 1979 Jefferson Lecture in theHumanities.The Jefferson lecture was created in1972 by the National Endowment for theHumanities to “recognize individualleadership in bringing the perspectives ofhumanities to bear on issues of broadpublic concern and to give the humanities a national forum.”Shils will deliver the lecture in threeparts. The first part will be given inWashington on April 9, and will be con¬cerned with the role of the governmenttowards the university. The second part, tobe delivered in Chicago, will focus on therole of the university in society. The finallecture will be at the University of Texas,in Austin, and will deal with the universityin a democratic society. All three lectureswill be broadcast on National PublicRadio.Previous Jefferson lecturers from theUniversity include John Hope Franklinand Saul Bellow.Savethe mansionA committee of 80 Kenwood residentshas been formed to prevent the demolitionof the Julius Rosenwald mansion at 4901 S.Ellis Ave. The committee is urging thatthe 22 room building be converted intothree condominium units, one on eachfloor.The house was built in 1903. designed byarchitects Nimmons and Fellows forRosenwald. the developer of the Sears em¬pire and founder of the museum of Scienceand Industry. It has not been occupied by asingle family in 45 years. The building ispresently owned by a real-estate developerwho obtained a demoliton permit for it lastfall.UC womenattendconferenceThe second annual conference of theGreat Lakes Women's Studies Association(GLWSA) was held on April 6 and 7 inMilwaukee. Two University students. SaraSchulman and Lisa Roberts, attended theconference. The GLWSA. the regionalbranch of the National Women’s StudiesAssociation, promotes feminist educationin every educational settingMost of the conference participants wereprofessors active in Women’s Studies pro¬grams at colleges and universities inMichigan Minnesota. Illinois, and Wiscon¬sin The University was the only schoolunrepresented by any faculty membersThe conference consisted of fourworkshops: “ Wo.^en and Autobiog¬raphy.” The Use oi Oral History inWomen’s Stmdies. ' “Homophobia in theClassroom,” and “Academic Feministsvs. Feminist Academics: a Redefinition ofFeminist Education.”V All the actionfit to printThe Action Committee on South Africahas conc]uded an active week as part ofregional "activity week organized bv theMidwaest Coalition for the Liberation ofSouthern AfricaLast Friday they showed the film “SixDays in Soweto.” Saturday the ActionCommittee participated in a march whichstarted at the Daley Plaza and ended witha rally at the Federal Building downtown.Different groups from around the Midwestparticipated in the march. Saturday nightthe committee held a fundraising party.This week, the committee plans to handout armbands and literature today andtomorrow, along with selling buttons toraise funds. The armbands will be a solidcolor, probably gold, unlike the onesearlier this year which had silk-screenedwriting on them. They will be distributedat Cobb and at Reynolds Club. Thursdaythere may be a demonstration outside abuilding where President Hanna Gray andthe trustees will be meeting. Then on .Thursday night a film, “Controlling In- *terest” will be showm in Ida Noyes Hall at 8pm. Admission will be $1.50.Field Housephases inThe Phase Two renovation of the CrownField House is scheduled to be completedby the end of Fall quarter 1979 and will cost$1.2 million, according to Harold (Jeff)Metcalf, director of University athletics.The construction will bring to a close threeyears of renovation at a totaling cost $5.2million.The additions to the Crown Field House,which include a multi-purpose gym. morelockers and squash courts, and a weighttraining and wrestling room, will all be onthe first floor, except for a mezzanine levelof lockers that will be directly above thepresent locker room. Metcalf estimatedthat the additional locker space, which w illalso be expanded on the first floor, willprovide seven times as many lockers asthe present arrangement.The middle of the first floor will housethe weight training room, the wrestlingroom and the multi-purpose gym. The gymwill have a batting cage which can also beused for driving golf balls. The fencing andarchery teams will also have a niche in thegym.On the west end of the Crown FieldHouse, four squash courts will be added,two of which can also be used for racquet-ball and handball. A viewing gallery willallow spectators to watch matches and inaddition, the overhead lights which now in¬terfere with play will be flushed into theceiling. An administrative office, anequipment-issuing room for varsity andrecreational users will be in the small areato the north of the lockers. The classroomswill be a place for the varsity teams to plotstrategy and to hold such athletic-relatedclasses as Red Cross first aid.Next year’sbeaverseagerThe College is running one hundred ap¬plications ahead of last year's recordnumber, according to figures released bythe Office of College Admissions. The totalnumber of applications will not betabulated before all applications are in onJuly 1.An initial statistical breakdown of theapplicant pool reveals a class compositionsimilar to last year's class. 36 percent ofthe applicants were women, two percentmore than the number of women who ap¬plied last yearDirector of .College Admissions FredBrooks, said he believed this year's appli¬cant pool will yield an entering class asstrong academically as classes have beenin the past.7\V. DI/COCL MIda Noyes Hall <>5 Lessons<n/2H,.each)s800Tuesday Evenings ,»(Exact Time TBA) :Sign up in the Student Activities Office 11Call 3-3598 for Info. .Beginning apr. 11Learn the age-old technique of leading windows.All materials and equipment supplied formaking one 12” square window.Taught b> Harry Bastrom Six lessons lor $25Wednesdays at (i:00 P.M.Sign up in Ida Noyes 201)The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 10, 1979 3News analysisBloom edges LathropBy Nancy ClevelandArm in arm with fellow independent Al¬derman Martin Oberman (43rd), newlyelected 5th Ward Alderman LawrenceBloom declared, “The 5th Ward has been re¬turned to the people.”Speaking before a boisterous crowd fillinghis 53rd St. campaign headquarters on elec¬tion night, April 3, Bloom called three timesfor a peaceful transition and the healing ofpartisan factions. Bloom beat one-term in¬cumbent Ross Lathrop by less than 400votes, 6,859 to 6,469, in a hard fought cam¬ leadership role in the body. “I was verycomfortable, both on the floor and in person¬al conversation with aldermen of all politi¬cal stripes,” he said.With Byrne’s hefty 82 percent electoralmandate, she car. influence the apportion¬ment of Council committee chairmanships.But, according to Bloom, she will have to actfast or the old line regulars will solidify theirgrip once again, and politics in Chicago willcontinue as usual.“It Byrne acts now, she could help form acoalition of independents and liberals whocould dominate the Council,” he said. “Butit will have to be before the first full meet¬ing.” That meeting is scheduled for April 17,Photo: Nancy ClevelandLarry Bloom, Fifth Ward Alderman-electpaign.“We should recognize fully the contribu¬tion Ross Lathrop made to the ward, and re¬member that we and his supporters all haveto continue to live in the 5th Ward together,”said Bloom.Facing a small, grim crow'd of supporters,Ross Lathrop conceded the election after re¬minding them, "we ran a clean race.” Hesaid he has no immediate future plans.Lathrop later phoned Bloom at his head¬quarters to offer help during the transitionperiod. Bloom will be sworn in, along with atleast seven other indeoendent aldermen, therest of the City Council, and Mayor-electJane Byrne, the evening of April 16.The jubilant mood at Bloom’s head¬quarters election night was broken severaltimes as catcalls and booing interruptedBloom’s speech. Moving quickly to dispellcriticism that he is a puppet of the Indepen¬dent Voters of Illinois (IVI), Bloom said heis his own man. “Sometimes I’ll disagreew ith you” he said later when he called on hissupporters to be gracious in victory.Council changesSince the election, Bloom has attendedtwo unofficial meetings of the new CityCouncil, and sees himself taking a strong the night after the new members are swornin.Even if the regulars — Aldermen EdwardVrdolyah, Edward Burke, and W ilson Frost,the council’s current leaders — regain con¬trol of the Council, it will be a Council morereceptive to the wishes of the people, ac¬cording to Bloom. “At the first meeting,held Wednesday after the election, EddieBurke stood up and proposed one third of thereforms the independents have been fight¬ing for, himself.“He wanted to change the Council rules tomake no bills called for vote when the spon¬sor was not present, place all proposed billsin the clerk’s records at least 24 hours be¬fore a vote, have regular council meetingstwo times per month, meet several timeseach year in outlying areas of the city, thatall bills be numbered and a transcript bekept of the council procee<fings.“They want to show thatHhey are in touchwith the people,” said BloomRegular endorsementsAfter Bloom and Lathrop beat out twoother candidates in the F eb 23 primary toface each other in the runoff, both campaignstaffs switched managers and began reor¬ganizing to collect precinct workers in theirlightly covered Woodlawn and South Shore4 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 10, 1979 by 400 votesprecincts.Both defeated candidates, Peter Stodder,endorsed by the regular Democrats, andWoodlawn resident Joseph Wilbanks, a reg¬ular Democrat and the only black in the pri¬mary, gave their personal endorsement toLathrop. Stodder campaigned actively forhim, and was in Lathrop’s headquarters onelection night.Three weeks before the election, GeorgeCole and James Williams, the leaders of the5th Ward regular Democratic Organization,met and decided to throw their endorsementbehind Bloom. Bloom responded with a let¬ter in The Hyde Park Herald repudiatingtheir support, and denying that he had eversought it or indicated he would take it. Coleand Williams, angered, recinded their en¬dorsement.The regular organization had providedLathrop with assistance from precinctworkers and captains in his 1975 raceagainst another independent, A1 Raby, whohad the backing of the IVI. In this race,Bloom received their support.And, according to a 25 year veteran of theCity Council, former 5th Ward aldermanLeon Despres, Lathrop’s camp again soughtmachine support in this election.Machine DealAccording to Despres, on the Sunday nightbefore the election, Lathrop's forces decid¬ed they were going to come up 1,300votes behind. They decided they had bettergo to Williams. They sent an envoy, and of-lered a deal: in exchange for throwing hissupport and votes for Lathrop. Williams wastold that Lathrop’s camp would run some¬one against Alan Dobry (independent 5thWard committeeman and a staunch Bloomsupporter), thereby splitting the indepen¬dent vote and assuring victory for Williams,should he run. Williams has indicated thathe is interested in running against Dobry during the next election, in March 1980.Despres said W’illiams’ support was worth900 votes, almost enough to swing the out¬come.“Ross has said in The Herald that he in¬tends to remain active in independent poli¬tics,” said Despres. “Well, that might be hisactivity: mounting challenge to Dobry.”“Those guys never give up, do they,” saidLathrop. “You must know the discontinuouscontact the Bloom campaign had with theregulars. The best defense for that is to ac¬cuse your opponent.“I don’t know where Leon (Despres) gotthat information. He hasn’t spoken to me in3 years. He make assertions that will servehis political advantage. I guess that it’s sortof flattering to me for them to be makingthose changes after the campaign. I didn'tapproach Stodder. Wilbanks or Williams,and Leon was saying Wilbanks supportedBloom before he had declared for anyone.”State Representative Carol MoseleyBraun was also at Bloom headquarters tocelebrate. She gave Bloom her endorsementeven though it caused a split in her re-elec¬tion committee. Lathrop supporters specu¬late that she was promised exclusive IVIsupport in the 1980 state representative pri¬mary, over her fellow freshman indepen¬dent Barbara Flynn Currie.Currie remained neutral in the race be¬cause “it was a fight between independentsand I didn't feel I should become involved."Braun calls it “idle and vicious speculation”that she sought the IVI endorsement overCurrie.Both Currie and Braun have begun an¬gling for re-election, concerned that onlyone of the two independent seats will be re¬tained. Both publicly maintain that two in¬dependents seats can be retained. The 24thlegislative district traditionally has been re¬presented by one Republican, one indepen¬dent. and one regular Democrat.©UofCuting ClubApril 10, 7:30 p.m.East Lounge, Ida NoyesFilm: The Wild RiverSign-up for Spring TripsClimbing - CanoeingHiking - CavingHr- <»> oB>»SIMULATEDPEARLA Ballroom DanceThe U.C. Jazz BandGray honoredPresident Hanna Gray was one of fivewomen to receive a 1979 Catalyst Awardfor outstanding achievement at the annualCatalyst Award Dinner in New- York Citylast month. Gray received her award fordistinguished work in the field of educa¬tion.Award winners are chosen from among276 women serving on the boards of the1300 top companies for their contributionsin the fields of education, the arts,business, government, and trade associa¬tions. Gray is a director of J.P MorganCompany and Morgan Guaranty TrustCompany of New York. She also serves onthe board of Cummins Engine Company.ORGANIZATION of BLACK STUDENTSImportant Meeting! Will Discuss Elections and April WeekendsTues. 4/10/79 7:30 P.M. 4 , Ida Noyes Library—Please Attend —those over 21Pub open forfrom 1Students under twenty-one who havememberships in the Pub can come in andobtain a 50c refund on their two-dollar mem¬bership card.“It’s a very unfair law,” said Davis.“There have been no incidents or problemsas a result of liquor on campus. It’s very un¬fortunate, but there was quite a lot of lobby¬ing to get the drinking age reduced.”“But no one can blame the University forenforcing the ordinance. We re victims ofthis law too.”Meanwhile, Hyde Park bars which nor¬mally attract a large number of Universitystudents under the age of twenty-oneshowed signs of having been hurt by the law',although their owners and employees werenot anxious to admit the fact. A bartender atThe Cove, a bar which normally attracts agood number of undergraduates from theShoreland Hotel, claimed that they were notnoticing any reduction in customers. But onSaturday night. The Cove and Jimmy'sWoodlawn Tap were nowhere near full.At Jimmy’s, perhaps the most popular campus bar near the University, there wereseveral empty tables on what is normally avery active night.“The night trade here is going to be whereit hurts,” said Jimmy Wilson, owner of thebar and liquor store. Wilson wrote a letter toseveral government officials in June. 1978urging the adoption of a single liquor law al¬lowing those over 19 to purchase any kind ofliquor.“Now a person 20 years of age presents adifferent situation. He may even be marriedand supporting children. He’s a man, andhe should be treated like one that is 21 orolder.”It’s a stupid law,” one patron of Jimmy’ssaid Saturday night. “What is stupid is thatit’s not even designed to prevent 19 and 20year olds from drinking. It’s supposedlyaimed at preventing these people from buy¬ing liquor for high school students. But theCity Council has no qualms about takingaway the rights of adults to drink.”“And what’s really horrible,” said thewoman sitting next to him. “is that nowthere are no 18. 19. and 20 year-old guys hereto pick up.”Nuclear press leakfrom 1A research program to find the proper de¬sign would require a large scale industrialand technical base, said Postol. Most coun¬tries do not possess the resources for an H-bomb project, he said.In his affidavit. Rosengren says that de¬sign of a practical H-bomb “would normallytake a substantial investment of time andresources which would be obviated by publi¬ cation of the article and it is therefore an ex¬tremely important disclosure to a nationseeing a thermonuclear capability.“Once a nation has produced a fissionweapon (the so-called “Atomic Bomb”),gaining the required know-how to design apractical thermonuclear weapon presents agreater obstacle to the development of athermonuclear weapon than the problem ofacquiring the additional material (thermo¬nuclear fueU.”Henry Moore’s Nuclear Energy Photo Nancy TordaiGet in Step forSTRING OFPEARLSSaturdayApril 148pmIda NoyesFree!UC IDDance Instruction 8-9pmTHE CENTER FOR FAR EASTERN STUDIESpreseotaJOHN NATHAN'SFarm Song&The Blind SwordsmanFriday, April 13Cobb Hall - Quantrell Auditorium2:00 FARM SONG3:30 THE BLIND SWORDSMANDr. Nathan will be present after the screeningsto discuss his films and to answer questions.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 10, 1979 — 5^EX LIBRISBegins Its SecondSuccessful Quarter!The Finest100% Columbian Coffee,over 40 varieties of Tea,Natural Snacks, A Plethoraof Pastry, Much Else.A Level, RegensteinM, T, W, Th. 6 pm -11 pmSat. 12 Noon - 8 pmSun 12 Noon -11 pmNow Accepting Applicationsfor Employment:CONTACT DAVID W. REEDER753-3548 - 9-5753-3390 - Eves.667-5549 - Anv TimeTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE DIVISION OF THE HUMANITIESpresents a series of lecturesTwo Types of Universal HistorybyARNALDO MOMIGLIANO(University College London)Alexander li hire Visiting Professor, University oj ChicagoThursday, April 12Thursday, April 19Thursday, April 26Thursday, May 3Thursdav, Mav 10 Universal history between politics andreligion: the cases oj E. A. Freemanand Max IVeberThe origins of political universalhistory in GreeceThe origins of religious universalhistory in JudaeaThe Greeks outside and the Jewsinside the Persian EmpireThe paradox of Rome and theChristiansThe Lectures will be held at 4:00 in the afternoonin Harper, Room 130THE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED • ADMISSION FREE Outward Bound is a shot olhigh advent lire «in the wilderness.And a lot more.It's a trip that'll show you whatyou're made of.You ran disc over you c an doalmost anything you want—if youtry.Our 3-week experienc e in sell-confidenee sure isn't easy. But itmight just last you the rest of yourlife.Your first challenge: send forfull information.zipPhone( hr< k the( .movingWhin- w. 11 <Outward Mound. Dcpi < G.165 W I’utiLim Avt ..Grrrim u h.( T 06HMO.Phone toll I reef MOO 1 24.TM520No i‘.\jH'rit’tu e iwi essurg.Outward Hound admits student* ol unitsex. race color and natunud or ethnicorigin Ur are a nonprofit nrgam/.attonS< holarships nrailahleOutward BoundThe course that never endsWhere you’re a stranger but onceGROCERY DEPT . SALE DATES APRIL 12 -14 >Pillar RockSalmon 16 oz. $1.59v Certified Red LabelNoodles nb.pk.590Delsey Tissue4 pack 890Cranapple Drink98048 oz. Swans Down kCake Flour 32oz 790 1Pampers 11 -23 lbs.Over Night $1.59Roast Beef Hash15 oz. can 890Country DelightFoil Heavy Duty 790Easter Special.Large EggsDoz.690MEAT DEPT. CLOSED**£Sv*t r~*= Lamb Shoulder Chops $1.69ib \CertifiedSliced Bacon 1 tb.pk. $1.39[ Smoked Hams Shank Half $1.19ib ^iCf Butt Half $1.39ib.FPRODUCE DEPT. £: Mushrooms Boz.pkg. 790C White Potatoes 10 lbs. 980 sjWe reserve the right to limit quantities and correct printers errors. ^ mm6 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 10, 1979FeatureRockefeller, Mitchell bells keep ears ringingBell Ringers in Mitchell TowerBy Margaret BabingtonWhere does that damn ringing comefrom? With.strong curiosity I climbed al¬most 300 stairs to discover the source of theheavenly tones; the overshadowing towersof Mitchell and Rockefeller Memorial Chap¬el contain intricate and diverse systems ofbells.The carillon in Rockefeller Tower, thesecond largest in North America, was dedi¬cated to Laura Spelman Rockefeller in 1932,by her son John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Built inCroyton, England in 1929, the carillon con¬sists of 72 bronze bells. The carillon at Riv¬erside Church in New York houses 74 bells.One-hundred and seventy carillons are scat¬tered across North America.The bells range in weight from 15 pounds,the smallest of the 58 small bells, to 18 and ahalf tons, the second largest bell in theworld. Engraved on this bell, called theBourden, is the inscription ‘In loving memo¬ry of my mother”.The Clavier Room in Rockefeller’s towercontains an organ-like instrument surround¬ed by chairs for curious visitors. The key¬board consists of batons and pedals. Thebatons are connected by wires to the clap¬pers of the smaller bells above the room.When pushed by the carillonneur's hand, theclapper strikes the stationary bell, evokinga clear tone. The pedals are attached to thelarger bells below the room. The art of play¬ ing the carillon lies in coordination of thefeet and hands’actions.Normally, the bells are played at 10:45 onSundays before services. Another feature ofthe carillon is put into use on on special oc¬casions, such as convocations, commence¬ments, deaths of important individuals anddeclarations of war. The five bells are usedto create a peal, an automatic processwhereby each bell swings 180 degrees; thepeal is followed by random strikings of anyof the five bells. The third system of thecarillon is most familiar to campus lis-terners. Every quarter hour, automaticallycontrolled electro-magnets pull the clappersfor the appropriate time. At the first quarterhour, the bell strikes four times and four ad¬ditional times for each following quarterhour. On the hour, the bells strikes 16 timesplus the hour.Robert Lodine takes great pride in his 18years as a carillonneur. He has been withRockefeller Memorial Chapel for nineyears. He previously worked at St. Chrysos¬tom Episcopal Church, the only other caril¬lon in Chicago.When the bells were installed in 1932, Fre¬derick Marriott became the University’sfirst carillonneur. Marriott retired in 1953,and James Lawson followed until 1960 whenhe went to Riverside Church in New York.David Robins, now’ deceased, played until1969 when Lodine replaced him.Lodine enjoys playing transcribed guitarpieces as well as violin and cello pieces. Alsoincluded in his repertoire are pieces written specifically for the carillon. His scheduledplaying time is every Wednesday from 12:10to 1:15. Vistors are encouraged to come and listen.The one-hundred and twenty seven feet ofMitchell Tower overlook University Ave.and 57th St., but the interchanging sequenceof tones emanating from the tower can beheard across campus. The tones are the re¬sult of and old English art called changeringing. Robert Gruen. the conductor, said.“Although we are plagued with one devotedvocal complainer we hope that the silentmajority enjoy our ringing.” This art in¬volves the ringing of bells in certain patternor round interrupted by a call change fromthe conductor. These patterns are mathe¬matically created.The bells were cast in 1908 at WhitechapelBell Foundry in England, and dedicated toEllis Freeman Palmer, the country's firstcollege dean of women. Ellis Palmer's hus¬band. George Herbert Palmer, had the bellsengraved with scripture passages which de¬scribed his wife's life. This virtuous womanwas honored with such phrases as, “A gra¬cious woman retaining honor", and “Greatin counsel and Mighty in work.”The ten bronze bells, ranging in weightfrom 564 pounds to 2443 pounds, hang abovea small room. Here a small group of devotedchange ringers stand in a circle with theirhands in position on the ropes, ready to pullupon instructions from the conductor Theart demands coordinating one s actions w iththose of the person who rings directly be¬fore. to insure continuity of the change ringing pattern and control of the tones.Gruen became interested in the “exer¬cise" of change ringing during his graduateschool days. He has been ringing for nineyears, and has practiced with the RoyalCumberland Youths in London.The University’s Change Ringing Societyusually uses six people to ring. The art ofringing is difficult to learn; five experiencedringers are required to instruct one new stu¬dent The ringers share a long range vestedinterest in the art. as well as genuine lovefor it. Their most memorable performancewas on March 22. 1975, when they rang anhistoric peal which lasted two hours and 52minutes and entailed 5040 changesMitchell Tower is one of twenty membersof the North American Guild of ChangeRinging Its nearest neighbor is the NationalCathedral in Washington D C.Each Saturday from ll a m to 1 p m., andeach Monday evening from 6:30 to 8:30. thisdedicated Society rings patterns andchanges while relatives and visitors observethe intense actions and expressions of theringers.The Maroon is entertaining!A special guest is appearing at the Maroon office this Friday at 4 p.m.Staff members and prospective writers are encouraged to attend.Remember: it’s your social life.The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 10, 1979 — 7TuesdayWhat I did last weekendBy Junie Moon“So what do you think about the world of Fiorucci com¬ing to Chicago?” It was 4:00. Sunday afternoon. Hilda andI were sitting in Jane Lee. a Chinese restaurant on 53rdSt., having risen late into a day heavy with the threat ofrain and aimlessness, short of food in the cupboard. Therewere three other people in the restaurant; they all ap¬peared decidedly melancholy. In the shadow of the kitch¬en a waiter smoke a cigarette, looking over at us. urgingus with his eyes to leave, as if crowds were clamoring forour seats. Hilda was staring gloomily out onto 53rd St.“This is like a bad Dorothy Parker story.” she said. Andthen, “What's Fiorucci?”I explained about the press release which came in themail last week.FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE!! !THE WORLD OFFIORUCCI COMES TO CHICAGO!"What is the Fiorucci phenomenon?”, asked the pressrelease. “And what will it bring to Chicago? Fioruccibegan in Milan in 1967, as a reaction against the dicta¬torial chic of European fashion. Fiorucci has since beencalled ‘the most imaginative fashion force in the worldtoday.’ Elio Fiorucci believes in ‘total freedom in fashionby providing a place where people can find their releasethrough the enjoyment of an environment which allowsfor fantasy and individual expression through music,graphics, inner-concept apparel and accessories, gifts,and ‘fun things. ”“Fiorucci is glitso,” I explained. Glitso means any at¬mosphere which involves a large number of potted plants,a great deal of glass and mirror, and peculiarly stale per¬fume scent. “The store is opening May 6 in WatertowerPlace.” I said. “I was thinking of going.” Welcome, Fiorucci! “That would be great,” Hilda said. “Slob student visitsFiorucci. You could see how much they abuse you.”Speaking of glitso, speaking of Watertower Place, I wasthere on Friday night, peering into store windows at man¬nequin’s nipples, short shirts, and spiked heels. Thanks toa spread in the Sunday Tribune several weeks ago, myroommate and I were able to recognize these phenomenaas part of the return of the w7oman as sex symbol. The ar¬ticle proposed that during the past decade, women demon¬strated equality with men by wearing pants and other as¬sorted unattractive clothing. Now women are sufficientlyliberated; they feel equal' without the trappings of malefashion. You can imagine how much the article upset me:all those years when I believed myself a sex symbol — aNorth American sex symbol if not an Italian sex symbol —I was actually making a political statement.We had gone to Watertower Place to eat dinner atMcDonald’s after seeing the movie “Hair.” McDonald’s,incidentally, has a new product, a sort of hash brown pattywhich comes in a paper bag and is served at breakfast.There are so many exciting products around these days!One of these is Coast, a deodorant soap with blue streaksin it. Actually, Coast has been available for about a yearand a half, but we didn't catch up with it until two weeksago. I took my first shower with Coast on Sunday morning.Washing with this soap is indeed an invigorating experi¬ence, mostly because of the way it smells. Above andbeyond Janitor in a Drum. Lemon Pledge, and Fantastic,Coast captures the fresh strong smell of clean.It is still the beginning of the quarter, still cold and grayenough to think that June is very far away, that there is aninfinite number of hours between now and then, that thereexists all the time in the world to take showers, see mov¬ies. wake up at noon, and reflect in these pages. Hilda iseven going home for a few days next week, without feelingquilty. “Hey listen,” I said, “send me a Passover card.”STUDENT GOVERNMENT SPRINGELECTION SCHEDULED FORMON. APRIL 23 TUES. APRIL 24THE FOLLOWING SEATS WILL BE OPEN:Officers: Pres., Vice Pres., Treas., Sec., Finance Chair.Business School 5 Seats Law School 2 SeatsSocial Services Administration 2 Seats Divinity School 1 SeatPublic Policy 1 Seat Fraternites 1 SeatLibrary School 1 Seat Woodward 2 SeatsMedical School 2 Seats Shoreland 2 SeatsBiological Science Division 3 Seats Pierce 1 SeatPhysical Sciences Division 2 Seats Burton Judson 1 SeatSocial Sciences Division 6 Seats Snell - Hitchcock 1 SeatHumanities Division 3 SeatsGreenwood - Breckenridge . Blackstone 2 SeatsCollege at Large 6 Seats Student Faculty Administration Court 6 SeatsPetitions due in SAO Ida Noyes Hall April 16Contact Lisa Archinow at 753-2249 if you have questions.8 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 10, 1979TuesdayC--runch! Of cars, cops, and departmentalpolicy in ‘the city that works’By Bruce LewensteinC-rruncn;At about 3 pm on Thursday last, two cars collided at theintersection of 59th St. and Woodlawn Ave. A yellowChevrolet westbound on 59th apparently ran a stop signand hit a car traveling south on Woodlawn.In this city of casual drivers and cavernous potholes,where lane divisions and stop signs are frequently ignoredin the battle to save one’s tires from imminent destructionby gaping holes in the road, accidents are no oddity.But, demonstrating that this “city that works” oftendoesn’t, that yellow Chevrolet sat in the exact middle ofthe intersection for nearly 48 hours. A Chicago police towtruck did not take what a University administrator calleda “hazard” away until early Saturday afternoon.In the meantime. University officials repeatedly report¬ed either that they would see what they could do, or thatthey could not, by departmental policy, comment on whatthey were going to do. I wonder if departmental policy letthem tell President Hanna Gray, who lives a block fromthe intersection about the obstruction.Late Friday afternoon, a day after the accident, Vice-President for Community Affairs Jonathan Kleinbard saidthat although he had been unaware of the problem, hewould see what he could do. He later said that the Univer¬sity “had been after (the police) to tow it ever since theaccident.”Also on Friday afternoon, a desk sergeant at the Chi¬ cago police’s 21st district reported that he had originallycalled for a tow truck at 8 or 9 the previous evening, andwould put in another call immediately.Before he could have made that call, a Chicago policepatrol car took up a vigil just a few feet from the wreck.The two officers inside said they had spotted the wreckwhen they began their beat patrol, and had put in a call fora tow truck. That made at least four calls. Now they werewatching to be sure no further serious accidents oc¬curred.Asked about the delay in towing, one of the officers com¬mented, “You know what it is? There's an adequatenumber of trucks on the streets. But they're still workingon cars from the snow .”But the other officer noted. “If I were a citizen. I’d beangry, trying to drive up and down this street on the wayto work. Suppose it were foggy like it was two weeks ago.They should get that car out of here.”The two officers intended to maintain their surveillancethrough the remaining six hours of their watch. Althoughit was their duty to patrol the area from 57th to 61st Sts..Woodlawn to Cottage Grove Aves., they seemed content toguard a useless mass of metal for most of the night. Chi¬cago’s Finest they are.At 11 the next morning, the car was still there. The towtrucks must have been real busy. A University securityofficer, in a particularly helpful comment, reported.“We've had a lot of calls on it. The city has a call out for it to be towed.”When asked if perhaps the University could take respon¬sibility for moving the car. the officer replied. “Yeah,we re going to do something about it. but I don’t feel liketelling you what. It’s our matter and we’ll take care of it.”Maybe he intended to blow it up.Long after the car was gone. Kleinbard said. “We don’tdo towing. It’s a city matter.” But he also said, “TheG—n thing was a hazard. It was blocking traffic.” No kid¬ding. Cars coming into the intersection from any directioncouldn’t get around the wreck without making at least two90-degree turns.Despite the security officer’s plans, that poor mangledover-observed yellow Chevrolet was towed in the early af¬ternoon by the police to what, in all probability, will be itsfinal resting ground: the city’s Auto Pound Seven at 3201S Western Ave.But. perhaps in respect to the departed’s last wishes.University Security refused to report the obvious. A secu¬rity officer, asked at 4 pm what had happened to the car.responded, “I'll be honest wit’ ya — I have the informa¬tion. but I can’t give it out. It’s departmental policy; I can¬not give it out.”I suppose that in the great cosmic scheme of things, it isunimportant whether the University took any action on aclear traffic hazard within its own confines * albeit on Cityproperty). And why should they? After all. the car didn'tpay any tuition.ACJTHOR OF THE HIGHLY-ACCLAIMED “SON-RISE”The story of his family's “miracle-worker'' success with their autistic childAND AUTHOR OF TO LOVE IS TO BE HAPPY WITH”has written two new books66 GIANT STEPS 11A deeply moving account of the determination andcompassion of one man and the courage of theyoung people he touches during moments of ex¬treme crisis (rape, questions of sexuality, a dyingparent, divorce, the prison of drugs).’ Fascinating. Filled with love and greatpromise. I read it practically in one sitting."- Allan Arkin"A passionate love story. You'll laugh,you'll cry, you may never be the same, butyou'll walk away cheering." - Dr. Wayne DyerPublisher; Coward. McCann & GeogheganAvailable in Bookstores THE BOOK OFWOWS&UGHS!"At first, I didn't know what to call them. . . sayings,thoughts, insights. Many were funny, silly. . seem¬ingly out of context to the passion and seriousness ofmy work with people and my other books. Yet. Ibegan to value these concise comments more andmore. When I presented them to a dear friend. Iheard several ahs.' an u-huh. a couple of wows.'then an ooo and an ugh.' Several more wows.' thenstill another ugh. Thus. . .came the title of thisbook in an attempt to allow everyone their wows andughs." - Barry Neil KaufmanPublisher; The Option Indigo Pressbiot Available in BookstoresOrder now through: THE OPTION INDIGO PRESS. P.0 BOX 400. CENTERPORT. N Y. i 172NameAddressPlease send copies of GIANT STEPS at $9 95. plus$ 1.50 postage and handling per bookPlease send sohcover copies of WOWS AND UGHS ^at $4 95. plus $ 1 00 postage and handling per book __ StateNe* York State residents add sales ta* ZipSNOWED UNDERDue to Typing Delays?RELAX!Avoid the Rush and Leave the Typing to Us.We Do :Manuscripts / Theses / DissertationsResumes / Reports / Transcriptions24 Hour Telephone Dictation ServiceEMA KWIK SECRETARIAL SERVICE180 West Washington 236-0110Weekends & Evenings 726-3572 New and selected poems by PAULFRIEDRICH: remaining copies of the first,unabridged printing ofBASTARD MOONSare still available at the UC and CTS book¬stores, Stuart Brent. & Rizzoli’s. 105p. $1.00 Yvef Bonnefoy, a prominent Frenchpoet, will read from his poetry, accompan¬ied by translator Susanna Lang Wednes¬day at 8 pm in Swift Hall Commons Spon¬sored by the William Vaughn MoodyCommittee and the Chicago Review Freeto the public./ SPoetry readingThe Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 10, 1979 — 9CalendarTUESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Prevention and Detection of Pan¬creatic Cancer”, guests Dr. A. R. Moosa, Dr. BernardLevin, and Dr. James P. Bowie. 6:30 am. Channel 7.WHPK: Wake up and stay awake with ‘HPK Rock, 6:30am-4:00 pm.Crossroads: Craft demonstration, learn to make col¬ored eggs and paper flowers. 10:00 am.Comm, on Developmental Biology: Colloquia-“Identityand Expression of the Viral Genes in HSVtk + cells”speaker Jeff Leiden, 12:00 noon-l:00 pm.Regenstein: Exhibit: ”100 Very American Books” fromthe Epstein collection. Feb. 6-April 15.Rockefeller Chapel: University Organist Edward Mon-dello will give a lecture-demonstration and recital.12:15 pm.Comm, on Public Policy Studies: Seminar - “StochasticModels of Social Change”, speakers Lalitha Sanathananand Alan Wolsky from Argonne Nat l Lab., 1:30 pm,Wieboldt 301.Men’s Basketball: U.C. vs. George Williams 3:00 pm.Stagg Field.Rfugby Club: U.C. vs. Mexico National Junior XV. 3:00pm, Stagg Field.Dept, of Biochemistry: Seminar - “B-Galactosidase:Genetics. Structure: Function, and Evolution”, speakerIrving Zabin. Ph.D., 4:00 pm, Cummings room 101.Women’s Softball: U. C. vs. DePaul 4:00 pm, NorthField.Ki-Aikido: Practices 4:30-6:00 pm in Bartlett, next toSquash courts.Kundalini Yoga Society: Meets 5:00 pm, in the EastLounge of Ida Noyes Hall.WHPK: Folk Music, 4:30-6:00 pm. Classical Music,6:00-9:30 pm. Jazz, 9:30-3:00 am.DOC Films: “Secret Ceremony”, 7:15 pm, “The Go-Be¬tween”, 9:15 pm, Cobb.U.C. Outing Club: Meeting at 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes EastLounge. Film, Sign-ups.Crossroads: Beginning French (third quarter), 7:30 pm.First Chair: Joseph Golan, violin, 8:00 pm, GreenwoodHall. Free. *Sexuality Rap Group: Sponsored by the U.C. Gay andLesbian Alliance, Ida Noyes 3rd floor, 8:00 pm. Call753-3274 Sun-Thur 8-10 pm for info. Hillel: Israeli Folkdancing. Ida Noyes 3rd floor, 8:00pm.Archery Club: Practices 8:30-10:00 pm. Ida Noyes Gym.WEDNESDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Surgical and Medical Treatmentsfor Cancer of the Pancreas” guests. Dr. A. R. Moosa. Dr.Bernard Levin, and Dr. James P. Bowie, 6:30 am. Chan¬nel 7.WHPK: Wake up and Stay Awake with ‘HPK Rock6:30am-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, 12:15 pm. Persons wishing a tourshould be in the Chapel office by 12:10.Crossroads: Free English classes for foreign women,2:00 pm.Center for Latin American Studies: Lecture - “20 Anosde Teatro en Chile", speaker Antonio Skarmeta, 3:30pm. Classics 21.Computation Center: Introduction to SCSS 3:30-5:00 pm.Pick 124.Dept of Biochemistry: Seminar - “Antibodies to Estro-philin: New Probes for the Study of Estrogen Receptorsand Steroid Hormone Action”, speaker, Geoffrey L.Greene, 4:00 pm, Cummings room 101.WHPK: Folk Music. 4:30-6:00 pm. Classical Music,6:00-9:30 pm. Jazz, 9:30-3:00 am.Chicago City Colleges: Sponsors English as a SecondLanguage classes, 4:30-6:30 pm, Ricketts Lab. Free.Hillel: Orthodox (Yavneh) Services, 6:00 pm, Hillel.Calvert House: Communal Service of Reconciliation,7:00 pm, Calvert House.Duplicate Bridge: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes. Newplayers welcome.DOC Films: “The Criminal Code", 7:15 pm, “You andMe”, 9:00 pm, Cobb.Country Dsmcers: British Folkdancing. All dancestaught. Morris, 7:30 pm. Dancing, 8:00 pm.Refreshments, 10:00 pm. Ida Noyes Cloister Club.Badminton Club: Practices 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Gym.' Science Fiction Club: Meets 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall. Ev¬eryone welcome.William Vaughn Moody Lecture Comm.: Reading byYves Bonnefoy, 8:00 pm, Swift Commons. South Asian Student Association: Presents the 2nd An¬nual George V. Bobrinskoy Lecture, "From Sacrifice toRitual and Beyond" by J. C. Heesterman. 8:00 pm. SwiftHall. 3rd floor lecture hall.THURSDAYPerspectives: Topic: “New Approaches to Cancer of the-colon", guests Dr. George E. Block, and I)r. Warren E.Enker. 6:30 am. Channel 7.WHPK: Wake up and stay awake with HPK Rock,6:30-4:00 pm.Hillel: Orthodox (Yavneh) Services, 9:15 am. Hillel.Conservative (Upstairs Minyan) Services, 9:30 am, Hil¬lel.Noontime Chamber Music Concert: Brahms: Liebers-lieder Waltzes, noon. Reynolds Club. Free.Calvert House: Noon Mass.Smart Gallery: Exhibit: “Jackson Pollock: New foundWorks", March 14-May 6.Committee on Genetics: “The Use of Gene Fusions toStudy Outer Membrane Protein Localization in Escheri¬chia Coli”, Speaker, Thomas Silhavy, 2:30 pm, Cummingsroom 101.Nuclear Overkill Committee: Weekly meeting at 3:00pm, Ida Noyes 2nd floor East Lounge.WHPK: Folk Music, 4:30-6:00 pm. Classical Music,6:00-9:30 pm. Jazz, 9:30-3:00 am.Ki-Aikido: Practice 6:00-7:30 pm, Field House Balcony.Calvert House: 5:00 pm Mass at Bond Chapel. 6:00 pmSeder Supper, 7:00-midnight, Adoration of the BlessedSacrament.Table Tennis Club: Practices 6:30-11:00 pm, Ida Noyes3rd floor.Debate Society: Meets to practice 7:00 pm. debate at8:00 pm, Ida Noyes East Lounge.DOC Films: “Underworld”, 7:15 pm, Cobb.Hillel: Chug Ivrit (conversational Hebrew), 8:00 pm, Hil¬lel.Southern Africa Solidarity Film Series: “Controlling In¬terest”, 8:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Law School Films: “Dead of Night”, 8:30 pm, Law SchoolAuditorium.Compton House: Film-“North by Northwest”. 7:00 and9:30 pm, Cobb.Campus filmFrom The Go-BetweenBy Ethan EdwardsSecret Ceremony (Doc) Directed by JosephLosey. Losey offers one of the older mother-daughter relationships in film. Mia Farrowbrings home Elizabeth Taylor because shelooks like Farrow’s dead mother. Taylorgoes because Farrow resembles Taylor’sdead daughter. Losey’s earnest seriousnesseffectively renders the bizarre goings on.Tuesday at 7:15 in Cobb Hall.The Go-Between (Doc) Directed by JosephLosey. The lyrical 1971 film is very slowmoving, but excellent. The lush camera¬work and’the exceptionally beautiful scorecontribute to a pensive study of a little boy(Dom minic Guard) who carries love notesbetween the daughter (Julie Christie) ofrich parents and a poor farmer (AlanBates). Recommended. Tuesday at 9:15 inCobb Hall.The Criminal Code (Doc) Directed by FritzLang. Lang once again examines the role ofthe criminal in society in the context of19.30’s social consciousness, but this time ina musical written by Bertolt Brecht andKurt Weill. In this 1938 film the superb Syl¬via Sydney, a “fallen woman," settles downwith George Raft, an ex-con. A real oddity. Wednesday at 9:00.Underworld (Doc) directed by Josef VonSternberg. This first film work of screen¬writer Ben Hecht is loosely based on a jail-break remembered from his days as a re¬porter for the Chicago Daily Journal. Inexplaining how he came to create Hol¬lywood’s first gangster movie, Hecht wrote:“In a novel a hero can lay ten girls andmarry a virgin for a finish. In a movie this isnot allowed. The hero, as well as theheroine, has to be a virgin. The villain can lay anybody he wants, have as much fun ashe wants cheating and stealing, getting richand whipping the servants. But you have toshoot him in the end. When he falls with abullet in his forehead, it is advisable that heclutch at the Gobelin tapestry on the librarywall and bring it down over his head like asymbolic shroud. Also, covered by such atapestry, the actor does not have to hold hisbreath while he is being photograhed as adead man An idea came to me. The thing todo was to skip the heroes and heroines, towrite a movie containing only villains and bawls. I would not have to tell any liesthen.” Hecht blames Von Sternberg forsome of the film’s more sentimentaltouches, but Von Sternberg more than re¬deems himself with camerawork that is re¬markably baroque for a 1927 film. Thursdayat 7:15 in Kent 107.Dead of Night (LSF) Directed by AlbertoCavalcanti, Robert Hamer and others underthe supervision of Michael Balcon. In this1946 British film an architect comes to anEnglish country home and tells the smallgathering there that he feels he hasdreamed of being there before. After he pre¬dicts a few minor incidents, other individu¬als tell of possibly supernatural occurrencesin their own lives. The movie tells each storyas a separate episode and each is directedby a different director. Two of the episodesare among the best horror sequences evermade — one in which a haunted mirrorcauses problems for a young couple and an¬other in which a ventriloquist’s dummytakes on a personality of its own and domi¬nates the ventriloquist. If this sounds likethe film Magic, you’re correct, but here thestory is played so that some doubt remainswhether this is insanity or the supernatural.Dead of Night is a delicate film whose ten¬sion can be easily destroyed by a rowdy au¬dience Highly recommended. Thursday at8:30 in the Law School Auditorium.10 — The Chicago Maroon — Tuesday, April 10, 1979Classified adsSPACESummer sublet w/Fall Option $117mon. David N. 947-8047 D. 667-1060.Male roommate wanted for 2 bdr apt. 1block from Co op. Available May 1st.$145,955 1592.Visiting prof, wants furnished room orapt. for May. 955 9782.Need registered student uninvolvedwith University housing to take overmy housing contract. I am offeringdiscount call 241 6851.AVAILABLE to Grad S t u -dent/Teacher, 1 1/2 rooms, telephone,private bath, kitchen, .desirable location, $140 (Plaza 2 8377).$25.00 REWARD FOR GARAGE Location between 55th and 58th, Harper andKenwood. Call Day: 753-3675. Night:241 6305.Family wanted to appreciate ParkForest home with 3 block walk to ICG,quiet street, nice neighbors, a kitchencustom designed for cooking conve¬nience, 3 bedrooms, den, panelledfamily room, central A/C, patio, extrainsulation, garage and much more.Priced for quick sale in the low $60's.Phone evenings or weekends: 748-6496.FOR SALE: Indiana Dunes. Spectacular view on dunetop overlookingLake Michigan and Indiana DunesPark. 1300 sq. ft. completely remodeled 1975. Central air. Fireplace. 5 ap¬pliances. Quick possession. $68,000.Call Renard at Callahan Realty.219 926 4298.Near campus, room and private bathfor rent, $10/week. D03-2521. Male stu¬dent only.Charming mod. yr. round cottage inInd. Dunes overlooking lake, sleeps 6,avlble. for one summer month. Reas,rent. Refs. Reqd. Shown by apptmt.Phone wkdays. 9 to 5. H Y3-0200.PEOPLE WANTEDTurn TV time into extra income. $200to $500 monthly. Call 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. forappt. 667 4038 NOWPart-time and full-time secretary. Ex¬cellent typing skills. Variety of workassignments. Must enjoy detail work.Flexible hours. Museum of Scienceand Industry, 57th and Lake shoreDrive, 684-1414. Equal OpportunityEmployer. Interview by appointmentonly.Small professional social science assnseeks asst editor for journal and admin aide to coordinate conferencesand related activities. Persons seeking1st full time job encouraged. Excellentopportunity for person seeking shiftfrom graduate school program topublishing or administrative career.Send resume to M. Janowitz Box 31Social Science Bldg. Univ. of Chicago,Chicago, III. 60637.Lab tech needed for doctor's office.Part time S. East. Salary open call731-1754.SIT DOWN AND GET FIT QUICKJoin U.C. Women's Crew now andlearn to row at U. Wisconsin Saturday,April 14. No experience necessary!Call 955-0932 or 753-2233 rm. 320 for in¬fo. Your time has come.The Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center, 5711 SouthWoodlawn and 6354 North Broadway,needs people who are willing to talkabout their personal problems andfeelings for 10 sessions with apsychotherapist-in-training Participation should not be seen aspsychotherapy or as a substitute forpsychoterapy, although participantswill neither be paid nor charged fortheir sessions. Call Pat at 684-1800WHPK News needs people to write andreport. Join the exciting world ofbroadcast journalism! Call J. Elias at753-3588 Mon.-Thurs. 1:30 - 3:00 p.m.and Friday 1:30 - 6:00 p.m.Babysitter - live free in spacious rm. inlovely Kenwood home on campus busrte. With salary of $25/wk. for sittingwith 9 yr. old girl early mornings andsome eves start mid-June. Call642-9269.OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer/yearm A Puttie Service of This Newspaper A The Advertising CouncilDionne Warwicksays:“Getyourblood intocirculation.”Call Red Cross nowfor a blood donorappointment. round Europe, S. America, Australia,Asia, Etc. All Fields, $500 $1200 monthly. Expenses paid. Sightseeing Freeinfo. Write: IJC, Box 52-11, Corona DelMar, CA 92625.FOR SALEComplete home furniture cheap call371-3245 9 to 11 am for appointment.1976 Chevy 4 dr. ht. air radials Im¬maculate 32,000 miles. Carlos 11 a m.only 3500 firm. 955 4334.King Size Bedp.m. 493-1066. CHEAP Call after 6PEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK of all kinds drawingcalligraphy, illustration, hand addressing of invitations etc. NoelYovovich. 493-2399.Excellent Accurate Typist with col¬lege degree will type themes, termpaper and theses as well as letters,resumes or whatever your typingneeds. Work done quickly and neatlyat very reasonable rates. Call Wandaat 753-3263 days or 684-7414 evenings.Comp Sel typist Mss Theses Letters.Pickup and delivery. 374-0081.SCENESWomen! Enjoy spring this year. Self-defense classes for women begin Monday April 9, 7:00 pm at the Gargoyle, 6week classes 5655 S. University. Call955-4108 for more information.Modern dance classes. Grahambackground, body alignment, ex¬pressive movement. Telephone WendyHoffman-Yuni, 924-4523.The William Vaughn Moody LectureCommittee and The Chicago Reviewpresent a reading by Yves Bonnefoy at 8 p.m. in the Swift Commons room onWednesday, April 11th.FORTRAN CLASSLearn to program in Fortran. 10 session class begins April 17. Cost $25Computer time provided Come toComputation Center before April 13 toregister. Call 753 8400 for more in¬formation.MATH MINUSFEAR GROUPAt Blue Gargoyle Thursdays 68:30pm. Apt 26. Call 636-4709 or 624 0595for more info.COMP-CENTERCLASSESSpring quarter class list availableSeminars are introduction to; DEC-20,SCSS, SPEAKEASY and SuperwylberCourses in: SAS and Fortran. Formore information, come to main Computation Center, R.I., C B27 orBusiness Office, 5737 University, orcall 753-8400STEPTUTORINGVolunteer Tutors needed No previousexperience necessary. Most of yourtutoring requests are for reading-somefor math all age groups. If you are atall interested, or you want more in¬formation, call Charlie Carpati(752-5860) or Frank Yang (324-3693).WANTEDBicycle: any speed; under $50. Leavemessage 753-2249 rm. 3128.marian realty, incREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available-Students Welcome-On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400STANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 40 Years The Standard ofExcellence In Test PreparationpnEPAm eopf MOAT* DAT* LSAT16RE • 6RE PSYCH • 6RE BIO • SWATPCAT • 0CAT • VAT • HAT • SAT■ NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS * VQE * ECFMG| FLEX * NAT1 DENTAL BOARDSP00UTRY BOARDS - NURSING BOARDSFlexible Programt and Hour*-HKAPLANI ff§ KAPLA« y UkMmii Cntr■ US Madlaon »*•n.y laoza <** m as i Visit Any Center Anc Set Ft'Yiarulf Wky Wi Mjkt The DittirmiTEST PREPARATIONSPECIALISTS SINCE 1934Cent*'$ ♦*» MUtor US C»l*» ticeToronto t u*|or*o S»ifre'io»*oSPRING, SIMMER.K/NCATIIIIIIfOUTSIDE N.Y. STATE CALL TOLL FREE 800-223-CHICAGO CENTER 16216 N. CLARKCHICAGO, ILLINOIS COL RS60b60 THIS(312)764-5151 SAT---ORES. W. SUBURBAN19 S. LAGRANGE 3D. n>:xtSUITE 201LAGRANGE, ILLINOIS OKA :-0052 c(312)352-5^0For »«*!©/ motion AbCs.t 0**9' C#**»9'S rcr'TH:lsa:T*»n 9C MS»0» US C»t #0 i Afcrooc IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII CLASSICALLY HEYYOURS TWINKLETOESNoontime Chamber Music Concert, Twirl on over to SIMULATED PE AR LReynolds Club Lounge This Thurs and dance up a storm with the UCday, April 12, Brahms: Liebeslieder JAZZ BAND Sat Apr. 14, 8:00 p.m.Waltzes. Free. UCID It you clomp rather thentwinkle on the dance floor, there'll befree instruction 8 00-9:00.DELTAUPSILON REFRIGERATORSThis coed fraternity is still taking ap For only $25 plus a refundable depositplications for summer and '79 '80 of $25 enjoy the services of a compactresidents. Undergraduates only should REFRIGERATOR all Spring Quarter!apply by Friday April 13. Call 753 3444 Call Natasha at 3-2249 *1223 or the SGfor info, or drop by 5714 S. Woodlawn. Office afternoons We must have your_ order and $'s by Friday the 13th.RIDESWANTED RIDERS to help drive LTDto LOS ANGELES. Leaving 4/14 15. Ipay room board. 357-6155.ADVENTURESign up for Spring trips—hiking, clim¬bing, conoeing, caving—with the U ofC Outing Club Tues. April 10 at 7:30p.m. in the East Lounge, Ida NoyesFilm showing: The Wild River!STUDENTCO-OPGet our few remaining course booksfor Spring Qtr. while they last. Nowtaking orders for Vox/TurnaboutsLPs. Downstairs at Reynolds Club VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL M AINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1V2 and2V2 Room StudiosFurnished or f nfurnished$189 - S287Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. GroakFLAMINGO APTS.5500 S. Shore Dr.Studio & < hie BedrmKuril. & l iifnrn.Slmri i\ l.utiv Term KrnttiL8200 - 8400Parking pool, restaurant,valet, deli and trans¬portation. C.ar|ietin<'drajH'- inel.752-3800 SUMMER STUDY INNEW YORK CITY:Columbia University of¬fers over 350 undergrad¬uate. graduate and pro-fessional schoolcourses Write for bulle¬tin:Summer Session,Columbia University.102 C Low Library.N.Y..N.Y. 10027t Ruby's Merit ChevroletSPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDEN1S andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago you areentitled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Chevrolet Parts,Accessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from Merit Chev¬rolet Inc. 2GM QUALITYSOVICi PASTS Krrf‘ /•hul (G 1/ herlinnutih ,mir .—JrA'C£\« 'AGENERAL MOTORS MUTTS DTVTSJON G t.\ll\LG W Vuih vr* A-♦A1 fflilflflili mmMER 3CHEVROLI! ET &i72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9 Sat. 9-5 Part* open Sat. til Noonm VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE f72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, So*. 9-5 Port* open Sat. til Noon A•••••••IThe Chicaqo Maroon — Tuesday, Aoril 10, 1979 — li— WatSfessr: • -jj.’--'M . Texas InstrumentsT|C7Programmable v/.XTVj Ai<5'CList S600J Bookstore - s5000A versatile key programmablecalculator.Programming is easy.You already know how toprogram-or almost.Whenever you perform aseries of calculations, thenbring them together to get o ^an answer, you're programming. Except you keepmost of it in your head, making each decision as you go!n fact, you can do a great deal of programming andnever use more than the four basic functions (add,subtract, multiply, divide). Programming is natural,you can express your persona! approach to problemsolving. Whether comparing finance costs on aninstallment purchase, or so'ving complex statisticalproblems. The T! Programmable 57.A powerful super slide rule calculator.Supplementing basic addition, subtraction, multiplica¬tion, and division functions, the Tl Programmable 57provides many advanced mathematical capabilitiesto simplify problem solving:• Functions of x - square, square root, reciprocal,factorial*, y\ and \* y.• Logarithmic functions-common and naturallogarithms and their inverses.• Trigonometric functions and their inverses (solved indegrees, radians, or grads).• Statistical functions - mean, variance, and standarddeviation, operate on two variables.• Nine levels of parentheses and the ability to store upto 4 pending operations let you handle even complexequations quickly and easily.• Eight multi-use memories for stormg and recallingvalues and addition, subtraction, multiplication, anddivision of data to memory.• AOS'v algebraic operating system. AOS is more thanjust algebraic entry. It's a system that allows you toenter problems exactly as they are stated algebraically,without rearranging the order of the problem, orresorting to the use of memories to store partialresults. This is accomplished by the use of a fullalgebraic hierachy coupled with multiple levels ofpending operations and parentheses. This permitseasy left-to-right entry of expressions — bothnumbers and functions.AOS provides an incredibly powerful, easy-to-usesystem for problem solving. And makes the calculatorpart of the solution — not part of the problem.This example has only one right answer. But not aflcalcu!ators wilt give it to you if you enter the problem Idirectly. i1 - 2 a (3 - 1/7p - ? jWith AOS, you solve it exactly as it is written: 11 C±] 2 Ex] XU 3 ErE 1 G±E 7 [_'□ [>*2 2.5 E=E 28.596874■proyfd.TimdDie function I Texas Instrumentsimline 50"scientific calculatoruuith statistics andnew Constantmemory-feature.List - s4000Bookstore-POWERFUL SCIENTIFIC FUNCTIONS $3050• 60 functions automatically handle a wide rangeslide-rule functions: roots, powers, reciprocals,common and natural logarithms, and trigonometryin degrees, radians, orgrads.• Includes many special functions such as pi, algebraic percent.constant, factorial, scientific notation and mantissa expansion.FULL STATISTICAL FUNCTIONS• Built in statistical functions include data entry, mean, and standarodeviations and variances for both sample and population data.• Helps you to handle large sets of data points and boil down”data with the most commonly used statistical calculations.Slimline 50' uuith neuuConstant memory" feature.University of Chicago Bookstore5750 S. Ellis AvenueTypewriter Dept. 2nd floor753-3303W? Frog PeachOFFERS THE FINEST FOOD ON CAMPUSFOR LUNCH AND SUPPER11:30-8:OOM-FCLOSED SATURDAY & SUNDAYdaily home cooked buffet specialsmilk shakes banana, peach, raspberrychocolate, vanilla & moregrilled sandwiches - hamburgers, frog specials, tuna & morelocated in Ida Noyes Hall1212 E. 59th 753 3597 The Pub Is Still Open!!(FOR THOSE 21 YEARS OR OLDER)Freddy, are you 21 years old yet?The Pub is in the basement of Ida Noyes Hall -4p.m.-1:30a.m.M-F7 p.m. 1:30a.m. Saturday*Still the best selection ofbeers in Hyde Park...Came Room ... Checkers orBackgammon available ...*Sandwiches & Munchies