1The Chicago MaroonVol. 88, No. 47 The University of Chicago L The Chicago Maroon 1978 Friday, April 20, 1979NCD in questionPERL closes to freshmenPhoto: Carol StudenmundJeanne Klimczak Photo: Carol KlammerJeff EltonSG vote next week;26 seats stay emptyBy Abbe FletmanA 23-member slate calledGreater Student Influence (GSI)faces a five-member ticket calledProgressive Action Party (PAP)in Monday and Tuesday’s StudentGovernment (SG) elections.Two referendums — one on di¬vestiture from corporations whichdo business in South Africa and oneon the draft — will appear on theballot.Second-year College student JeffElton leads the GSI ballot, whilethird-year College student JeanneKlimczak is PAP’s leader.There are 27 candidates for 50 as¬ sembly seats. In two instances,seven are vying for six openings.Of the 27, 24 will be elected to theassembly. 26 seats will remainempty.‘It’s a really dull campaign,”said outgoing SG Preseident SteveKehoe. ‘‘It hasn’t generated muchinterest.”The vice-presidential race pitsPAP candidate Nadya Shmavon-ian against GSI-member TimSpears. Running for treasurer areGSI contestant John Polster andPAP member Greg Samorajsk.to 2 By Jaan EliasThe Politics, Economics, Rheto¬ric, and Law (PERL) program willnot admit new students into theprogram for the coming academicyear, program director CharlesWegener announced at a meetingof PERL students last Monday.Wegener also announced he willbe stepping down as the program’sadvisor. He will be replaced byWendy Olmstead.Wegener told students that thedecision not to admit new studentsinto the program did not necessari¬ly indicate the end of the program.However, he said, it would be‘‘foolish” not to admit the possibili¬ty that the program will end whenthe students who are presentlyenrolled in the program graduate.PERL problemsWegener said there were manyreasons for PERL’s decision not toaccept new students for nextyear.PERL has had problems attract¬ing new staff members. Withoutfaculty support of the program.PERL could not provide as manycourse offerings as it would haveliked. Wegener told the PERL stu¬dents at Monday’s meeting.Students often believed thatPERL was a pre-law program, ac¬cording to W’egener. This createddifficulties in recruiting staff fromthe Law School, since the confusionover the intent of the program put Photo: Dan NewmanCharles Wegenerthe Law School faculty in the diffi¬cult position of supporting a pre¬law program. Wegener told stu¬dents at the meeting that thepeople who were originally com¬mitted to the program had becomeincreasingly “distracted.” We¬gener has been the program direc¬tor for the last 11 years.Wegener said the program wasnot lacking student support. Lastyear. PERL received more appli¬cations than the program had re¬ceived in the last few years.Wegener also emphasized thatDraft bills up for discussion in Congress;UC professor Janowitz urges compromiseBy Andrew PatnerAt least seven pieces of legisla¬tion that would institute registra¬tion, induction into the armed ser¬vices, or a so-called “national ser¬vice” for young American men andwomen, are before Congressionalcommittees today.Two of these bills, one to revivethe draft and the other to begin anational service program, arebefore committees of the UnitedStates House of Representativesand may reach the floor-of theHouse by summer.The “Montgomery Bill,” H R.1901, would require the Presidentto begin draft registration within90 days of the bill’s enactment. Itwould then require the classifica¬tion and induction of 100,000 to200,000 men and women into activemilitary training. There would beno student deferment under the billand other deferments would berevised to facilitate the conscrip¬tion of a standing peacetime forceof at least 100,000.The “McCloskey Bill,” H. R.2206, would require all men andwomen to register at age 17 withthe Federal Government and atage 18 to choose between:•active military service for twoyears.•a six-year military reservecommitment that would includesix months of active training.•a year of civilian service (suchas working in a hospital, or in voca¬ tional rehabilitation), or•taking a chance in a draftbefore the age of 26. Educationalbenefits would be provided by thebill, but only for those who choosethe active military service. Therewould be no student deferment.Both bills would provide for con¬scientious objector status but thefinal form of that status, and itspossible exclusion, will be deter¬mined in committee hearings andon the floor of the House itself.Resistance groups are beingformed across the nation, and inChicago an unlikely coalition oflibertarian and anti-war groupshas been forged as the CoalitionOpposing the Draft.The Coalition has adopted as itsstatement of policy threesentences; “We are opposed toconscription and every stepleading towards it. We will lobbyagainst conscription. We will sup¬port all who resist conscription.”The Coalition includes represen¬tatives of Students for a Liber¬tarian Society, the EthicalHumanist Society, None of theAbove, the United Auto Workers,Clergy and Laity Concerned,Women for Peace, and the NewPatriot Alliance.Defenders of the draft’s revivalhave pointed to what they see asthe ineffectiveness and low staff¬ing of the all-volunteer army Theybelieve that a well-trained stan¬ding army of at least 100,000 isnecessary to repel an invading force or rush to the aid of an ally ifa conventional armed attack werelaunched by a hostile nation.Perhaps the most outspoken sup¬porter of the draft has been ArmyChief of Staff General BernardRogers who says that its reinstate¬ment must be “immediate.”Opponents of the draft citeeverything from “indentured ser¬vitude” to the buildup of themilitary-industrial complex intheir attack on any registration orconscription measures.“Conscription would promoteand encourage irresponsible and il¬legal military ventures like the one in Vietnam” said Sidney Lens, con¬tributing editor of the Progressivemagazine, a long-time peace ac¬tivist, and a former Hyde Parker.“It would endanger nationalsecurity and would needlesslydisrupt the education, careers, andlives of young Americans.” Lenssaid.The Coalition has launched apetition drive and is assembling aspeakers bureau. One of themembers of the coalition. Con¬stance Cryzan. a Lake Foresthousewife spoke at a recent publicmeeting called by the Coalition.to 3Draft protesters in 1967. the program was not in financialdifficulty.First year studentsMany first year students are dis¬appointed that they will not be ableto join the PERL program. “It wasone of the reasons I came here.”said one first year student, “eventhough I was not sure I would haveapplied to the program. 1 am verydisappointed to find out I will nothave this option.”Wegener said he made the deci¬sion to pull out now because the re¬quired rhetoric sequence in PERLwhich is offered every other yearwas offered this year, thereby al¬lowing students presently enrolledin PERL to complete the require¬ment.“I am very happy the programwill continue and that our gradua¬tion will not be affected,” a secondyear PERL student said. “I camehere for this program and if I werea freshman this year 1 would feelas if someone just pulled the rugout from under me.”PERL and NCDThe -30-35 students involved inPERL constitute over half of thestudents enrolled in NCD WithoutPERL. NCD would be seriouslylacking in course offerings and stu¬dents.NCD has not had a permanentmaster since Charles Wegener re¬signed as divisional master in Juneof 1976. Dean of the College Jonath¬an Smith is the present acting mas¬ter.NCD was created by University-President Edward Levi during themid 1960’s. It was intended to be anexperimental unit of the College,allowing programs to be construct¬ed with inter-disciplinary courseofferings."This program embodied theidea of liberal education." a thirdyear PERL student said “I hopethat there will be some discussionto devise a substitute."Wegener said he was not pre¬sently involved in talks to imple¬ment a substitute program Hesaid there w as a possibility that theprogram could be continued in analtered form under the auspices ofthe political science department.Many present PERL studentsare dismayed that they could bethe final class of PERL students.Said a student. “1 feel as if I havebecome an anachronism."next Monday,SG electionsfrom 1Finance Committee Chairman Jeff Lea-vell (GSI), the incumbent, faces PAP-sup-ported Adam Pool.Incumbent Jeff Lasky (GSI) is unopposedin the race for secretary.SG presidential hopeful Elton, who decid¬ed to run four months ago, stresses studentactivities and student input in forming Uni¬versity policy.Elton called for a “two-tier” approach tothe administration. Pushing to get studentson review committees appointed by Presi¬dent Hanna Gray and making strides to es¬tablish student representation on the Boardof Trustees comprises the two tiers, hesaid. Elton also hopes to sponsor majorcampus events with profits from the SG Re-genstein Library canteen. Ex Libris. TheMorris on Board?Norval Morris, Julius Kreeger Professorof Law and former dean of the Law School,may be appointed to the Chicago PoliceBoard by Mayor Jane Byrne, the Sun-Timesdisclosed yesterday.The Board will nominate a replacementfor Superintendent James O’Grady whoresigned Wednesday.A member of the Byrne administrationsaid that “it is only a rumor as far as Iknow,” but said that it would be “a fine ap¬pointment.”Morris was out of town and unavailablefor comment. events would possibly be co-sponsored bythe Major Activities Board, and would beheld in part to garner support for a campus¬wide student activities fee to be collectedwith tuition and dispersed by SG, Eltonsaid.According to PAP presidential candidateJeanne Klimczak, SG’s biggest problem is“it isn’t known on campus.” Encouraging“feedback” from students will be one of hertop priorities, she said.Working to obtain a student union build¬ing. ensuring student housing, and organiz¬ing a “free university” like the one at theUniversity of California at Berkeley areprojects Klimczak hopes to initiate. A “freeuniversity” would offer courses such asyoga and transcendental meditation.Klimczak said she views SG as a represen¬tative body for students and as a liaison be¬tween the students and the administration.A member of the Action Committee onSouth Africa, Klimczak said she “wants tobe open to activists.” Klimczak introduced areferendum at the last SG meeting on a caseby case review of University investmentsconcurrent with gradual divestiture. Thereferendum was defeated in both the ActionCommittee and in SG.As a dormitory dweller, an SG assemblymember, and an SG committee chairman,Elton has built up a powerful organization,sometimes referred to as “a machine”. Ac¬cording to Elton, it is comprised of about 75percent dormitory residents and 25 percentapartment dwellers.Klimczak. who only recently entered theBackgammon benefit for cancerCompton House — formerly Shoreland 8— will take advantage of the recent back¬gammon craze this weekend to benefitcancer research at University Hospitals andClinics. Members of Compton House will beplaying backgammon against each other for64 consecutive hours — roughly 400 games. Four local businesses have already pledgeda total of $140. The backgammon marathonwill last from Friday to Sunday. Individualsinterested in contributing or pledgingmoney should call 752-9459 during the mara¬thon. All contributions will go to the Univer¬sity Cancer Research Foundation. Tuesdayrace, said she is campaigning by “talking topeople and having my friends talk to theirfriends.”Although Elton has criticized SG Presi¬dent Steve Kehoe for trying to do too muchhimself and for not telling assemblymembers of his plans, Elton has receivedKehoe’s endorsement, as has Tim Spears,Jeff Leavell, and Jeff Lasky.Kehoe, who will remain active in SG, saidhe will devote next year “to getting somegood grades.”Both candidates agreed SG has movedfrom being a target of riducule last year tobeing a group few think about or talkabout. One arrestedfor gas prankSecond year student Peter Lourenco wasarrested last Wednesday in connection withthe March 4 smoke bomb incident in VincentHouse.A warrant was issued for Lourenco’s ar¬rest after he failed to appear for an April 3trial date. Lourenco was scheduled to ap¬pear in court in response to a complaint filedby some students in Vincent House.Lourenco’s arrest occurred at the Searlechemistry laboratory about 4 pm Wednes¬day afternoon. He was taken by two in¬vestigators to the 21st district station wherehe was held on $100 bail.One good bite deserves anotherIn an effort to cadi attention to the BloodBank’s pressing need for donors, members Mark Woodworth, and Mark Bernstein,of the Lower Rickert House cast of Dracula Pamphlets on being a blood donor will beprove it is better to give than to receive. Pic- available at performances of Dracula, Apriltured are Michael Co x John Carini, Paul 21 and 22, 8 pm at Ida Noyes Theatre.Robinson, John Chen, Edgar Arredondo, Technicians who draw the blood promise notCindy Pol vino, Arnie Ostrofsky, Bruce Cox, to bite.ooc FILMSFriday April 20Jane Fonda & James CaaninAlan J. Pakula’sCOMES A HORSEMAN7:15 and 9:30If you feel nostalgic, see Jane asBARBARELLA(directed by ex-hubby Roger Vadim)midnight separate admissionSunday April 22Wim Wender’sKINGS OF THE ROAD8:00(Please note correct date; it was misprintedon our green schedule)All films $1.50 Cobb UC BRASS SOCIETYSaturday, April 21Bond Chapel9=00 PM(FREE!)2 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 20, 19793 plans eyed for theaterPhoto: Carol StudenmundVice-President for Community Affairs Jonathan Kleinbard speaks to Women’s Unionmembers seeking a meeting about crime.Crime meeting postponedA group of Women’s Union members call¬ing for regular release of crime statisticshas been blocked by red tape, leading themto believe that the University is unwilling tonegotiate in good faith.After waiting over a month for an appoint¬ment with Vice-President for CommunityAffairs Jonathan Kleinbard to discuss the“proper mechanism” for releasing crimestatistics, five Women’s Union memberswere told Tuesday that the Wednesdaymeeting was cancelled. They had waitedover a week to make the appointment, saidWomen’s Union representative SharonPollock.A “very, very important meeting”prevented Kleinbard from confering withthe campus feminists, his secretary said.Only after nine Women’s Union sup¬porters protested the cancellation of themeeting by standing at the receptionist’sdesk on the Administration Building’s fifthfloor was the meeting rescheduled. The fifthfloor houses the offices of President HannaGray and most top administrators includingKleinbard. Three Women’s Union members will con¬fer with Kleinbard May 1 at 10 am. Wednes¬day’s meeting was to include two additionalWomen’s Union members, but Kleinbardsaid he “does not take to big groups.” By Chris IsidoreUniversity officials will select one of threealternatives for a new campus theater bythe end of this week. The decision will deter¬mine not only plans for the theater buildingitself but also the future of the Court TheaterCompany.The recently-established professionalcompany has grown out of its present home,the small 120-seat theater on the groundfloor of Reynolds Club. Director NicholasRudall said it is possible that the top staffmembers, including Rudall himself, willresign unless work is started on a suitablealternative.The preferred alternative would be con¬struction of a 475-seat theater on Ellis Ave.between 55th and 56th Sts. This buildingwould also include studios, classrooms,workshops, and an office. But costs are ex¬pected to reach at least $5 million, and theUniversity has funds and pledges for onlyabout half of that. Construction will notbegin until another $1 million has been rais¬ed.The second choice would be the purchaseand remodeling of a local church. The nameof the church has not been released becausethe purchase is still uncertain. Also being considered is the renovation of the LouisXIV ballroom at the Shoreland Hotel. Thisalternative would be the least expensive,but questions have been raised because ofthe lack of space at the Shoreland.The staff has been waiting since last sum¬mer for University officials to choose one ofthe three alternatives. A decision was due atthe end of February, but Rudall said he hasnot heard anything new for months. He ishoping to receive a decision from PresidentGray at a meeting late this week, he said.Rudall could not speculate about how hisstaff would react to the alternatives. Butchances seem good that some of his top staffmembers — including business managerJudy Fink, producing director and technicaland design director Linda Buchanan — willresign unless some alternative to ReynoldsClub is found. They had announced their in¬tentions last summer at the opening of thecompany’s 24th season.“We are now a staff of professional peoplewith a professional company,” said Rudallat that time. “The theater downstairs (inReynolds Club) was a stop-gap measure andthe time period for the stop-gap is aboutover. To do theater, you have to have ahome.”Professor Janowitz urges compromisefrom 1“I was not opposed to the Vietnam War atthe outset. But I was teaching in the Chicagoschools at the time and as the War went onthree of my students were killed. All I canremember now are the “box scores” thatran in the paper of how many boys were kill¬ed and the pictures of the body bags beingunloaded from the transport planes. Wellnow I have two teenage boys of my own andall I can say is that this time we will be withyou when you protest. Enough is enough,let’s never let it happen again.”Some opponents of the draft, includingCongressman Pete McCloskey (R-Cal.),who fought against the Vietnam War in Con¬ gress, and Morris Janowitz, Lawrence A.Kimpton Distinguished Service Professor inthe Department of Sociology and the Col¬lege, and an expert on military affairs,favor a comprehensive national service is acompromise.“There is no political base and nojustification for a return to conscription,”Janowitz said last week.“Suggestions for a revival of the draft arepolitically infeasible and counter¬productive. Young people would feel depriv¬ed of equal treatment. Equal treatment isessential. That is why the draft failed.“National service helps the society andhelps the individual to find himself in theprocess of maturation,” Janowitz said. Janowitz is not a supporter of the Mc¬Closkey Bill, however. “We can’t pass anyform (of national service) tomorrow,” hesaid.Janowitz says that national service is the“long run” alternative, something that hebelieves the nation must aim for in the nextten years.“Over the next five years the all volunteerarmy has to be. must be. made to work.”Janowitz does not believe that any of thebills will be passed this year, and he pointedto the potential power of the resistancemovement.“Young people will have a veto powerover any plan and that will come as a greatshock to the national leadership.”1THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE DIVISION OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCESpresents theLloyd Falters Memorial LecturesbySIR W. ARTHUR LEWISJames Madison Professor of Political EconomyPrinceton UniversitySOME UNSETTLED QUESTIONS IN DEVELOPMENTWednesday, April 25Swift Commons, 4:00 pmFriday, April 27Swift Commons, 4:00 pmTuesday, May 1Social Sciences 122, 4:00 pm INCOME DISTRIBUTIONDEVELOPMENT PLANNINGENTREPRENEURSHIPThe public is cordially invitedAdmission is free ! Kitchen3437 Vi es! 63rd776-6715<)|M»n for Dinner3 P.M. Daily3 P.M. SundayClosed MondayModerate!* Priced Chicago (.aide:"h'nlinft at I hr h'rvnvhkit rhi’ii in likr ilininumill Julia (.hihi."yZmMX":,.:...; - . uEditorialThe quiet and theinconsequential and...In the recent past, when students tired of tak¬ing pot shots at dormitory food and the ChessClub, they generally turned to Student Govern¬ment (SG). But while in the past SG has beenloud and inept, this year it has been quiet and in¬consequential.As usual, there is no perfect candidate for theSG presidency, but one is clearly more compe¬tent than the other. Not only does Jeff Elton haveideas, energy, and organizational abilities, hehas been one of the few SG committee chairmento call any meetings this year, let alone completea project. Because he has kept his enthusiasm inan atmosphere of total apathy and because hehas been able to inspire at least a small numberof committee members to work as hard as hedoes, he has our support.We would hope, however, that Elton would beas concerned as the other presidential candidate,Jeanne Klimczak, is about “feedback” fromstudents. That there has been no mechanism forcriticism and suggestions indicates that SG hasbeen more of a playground for would-be politi¬cians than an instrument of student action or aforum for student opinion.Monday and Tuesday, students will have achance to voice their opinions as well as to deter¬mine next year’s SG officers and assemblymembers. Students are asked to vote on areferendum on University investments in cor¬porations and banks that do business in SouthAfrica. This referendum promises to indicate thestudents’ position on what is probably the mosthotly debated issue on campus. We urge all tovote....the willingand the weakThe imminent demise of the Politics,Economics, Rhetoric, and Law (PERL) pro¬gram has shown that the students are willing butthe professors are weak.PERL and its parent, the New Collegiate Divi¬sion (NCD), are attractive drawing cards thatbring many students to campus. Despite increas¬ing student interest in the PERL program, it hasbeen unable to attract more than the bare min¬imum of instructors and administrators. CharlesWegener has headed PERL for 11 years. Lastyear, faculty members gave up an unsuccessfulsearch for an NCD master, settling with CollegeDean Jonathan Z. Smith filling in as permanentacting master.When the few who are committed to inter¬disciplinary programs such as PERL give themthe attention they deserve, or when after over adecade of service faculty members decide tomove on, the programs inevitably fail.If the College is to provide innovative pro¬grams for its students, all faculty members musttake an interest in helping to develop and expandthese programs. If the College wants to provideinnovative programs, faculty apathy must end.Editor: Abbe FletmanNews editor: Eric Von der PortenFeatures editor: Claudia MagatPhotography editor: Carol StudenmundSports editor: R. W. RohdeAssociate editor: Andrew Patner, Jacob LevineStaff: Tim Baker, Curtis Black, David Burton, Lee Chait,Kendall Christiansen, Jaan Elias, Dave Glockner, JackieHardy, Chris Isidore, Richard Kaye, Carol Klammer, BobLarson. Bette Leash, Bruce Lewenstein, Donald Link.Dan Loube, Michael Rabin, Andy Rothman, Sue Sartain.Margot Slauson, Howard Suls, Calvin Thrilling, MarkWallach, John Wright. Letters to the EditorWant facts on crime Yes on divestThe Maroon has received a copy ofthe following letter to Vice-Presi¬dent for Community Affairs Jonath¬an Kleinbard.Dear Mr. Kleinbard,In anticipation of our meeting withyou. Women's Union has carefullyconsidered the questions surround¬ing the release of crime statistics.To facilitate discussion, we wouldlike to inform vou of our oDinions onboth the need for the publication ofcrime statistics, as well as what wefind to be the most accurate w'ay ofdoing this.We want to see a bimonthly list ofcrimes committed in the areabounded by 63rd St., Cottage GroveAve., 47th St., and the lake. The listshould be published in The Maroon,The Chicago Journal and The HydePark Herald. The crimes should bebroken down into the following clas¬sifications: murder, rape, sexual as¬sault. assault, battery, domestic vio¬lence. burglary, and vandalism ofwhite security phones.Each crime listed should be ac¬companied by the date, time of day,address, name of building (if univ.owned), whether the incident oc¬curred on the street or in the resi¬dence, and the sex of the victim. Thelistings of individual crimes shouldbe followed by a coded map indicat¬ing which areas have the greatest in¬cidence of violent crime.We feel that many good reasonsexist for embarking upon a programof publishing crime statistics. It hasbeen done successfully at manyother schools, including Yale Uni¬versity. We also feel that the univer¬sity is in the best position to obtainand compile these statistics. It hasboth access to the data as well as fa¬cilities to compile it, so that accura¬cy will be assured.The publication of crime statisticswill prevent students from having todepend on rumors as a source of in¬formation. It is difficult to be realis-To the Editor :I would like to thank the StudentGovernment Finance Committeeand particularly Jeff Lea veil, thechairman, for their difficult workthis past year.It is the Finance Committee’sfunction to study budgets and allo¬cate funds to student organizationsranging from Blackfriars to WHPK.However, for the past several yearsthe amount of money made avail¬able to the Finance Committee bythe Dean of Students has remainedconstant. During that same timeperiod the demands on the budgethave increased dramatically. Infla¬tion has eroded the base and therehas been an increasing number ofstudent organizations seeking fund¬ing.While faced with this problem of asteadily shrinking budget. StudentGovernment and the Finance Com¬mittee made the decision to investsix thousand dollars of its annual$30,000 budget for construction of theEx Libris coffeeshop in Regensteinlibrary. That decision was madewith the full understanding that theFinance Committee would have toseverely cut the budgets of nearlyevery student organization. Campusgroups were hurt this year, but theinvestment in Ex Libris is returningan estimated $10,000 a year. The re¬turns from the coffeeshop should re¬lieve the long term stress placed onthe budget and provide the opportu¬nity for increased campus activity infuture years.I believe the committee per¬formed well this year, making toughdecisions on where the budgets tic about the crime problem in HydePark if we do not know its true ex¬tent. We believe the lack of availableinformation about crime increasesthe paranoia and vulnerability ofuniversity students. If we have littleknowledge of how crimes actuallyoccur, we are more likely to be vic¬timized by them. The availability ofaccurate crime statistics wouldmake fruitful discussion of crime inHyde Park both easier and more re¬alistic. Hopefully, this will encour¬age more victims to report crimesand facilitate the apprehension ofperpetrators.The publication of the addresseswhere crimes occur will be of the ut¬most importance. We are aware thatpoor building security contributes tothe incidence of crime. We hope thatthe publication of addresses willpressure landlords to upgrade thesecurity in their buildings.Violent crime in Hyde Park is aproblem of great concern to all resi¬dents. We all want to feel safe in ourown community. Our opinion is thatthe publication of crime statisticswill be an important step toward theeradication of crime in Hyde Park.We are looking forward to a fruit- -ful discussion of this matter with youon Tuesday, May 1.Sincerely yours,University of ChicagoWomen’s Unionwould be cut. Jeff Leavell did an ex¬cellent job chairing the committee ina difficult time.Jeff is running for reelection and Ibelieve we should support him. Hisintegrity, his knowledge of the fi¬nances of student organizations andthe problems they face, and theknowledge and experience gainedfrom his membership on the gov¬erning board of the coffeeshop makehim the best candidate for the job.Stephen KehoeTo the Editor :Wednesday night at twenty min¬utes past eleven the driver of the Dminibus entered the A bus and lit upa cigarette. Just before eleven-thirtyhe lit up another and, returning tothe D bus with cigarette in hand, wasrequested to extinguish the ciga¬rette. The conversation went likethis:PASSENGER: Would you please putout that cigarette? I have asthma.BUSDRIVER: What?PASSENGER: Would you please putout that cigarette? I have asthma.BUSDRIVER: Why don’t you moveto the back?PASSENGER: That wouldn’t reallyhelp. The bus will get smoky. . .BUSDRIVER: I’ll be through in aminute.Obviously the busdriver was un¬sympathetic to a polite request. Alsoobvious is the driver's ignorance ofor decision to ignore the rule whichprohibits any smoking while on the To the Editor:The Student Government electionson Monday and Tuesday have takenon a greater significance this yearas, for the first time, students willhave an opportunity to express anopinion on the issue of divestment.The University’s holdings in cor¬porations that do business in SouthAfrica have generated much debatewithin the University community.The referendum on divestment canbe a formal reflection of the growingpro-divestment, anti-apartheid stu¬dent sentiment. This sentiment wasshown by the more than 1000 stu¬dents who wore arm bands last weekto protest the University’s invest¬ment policy, and by those who par¬ticipated in the divestment demon¬stration outside the “State of theUniversity” address. The issue of di¬vestment is too vital to be neglectedwith the usual apathy that accom¬panies Student Government elec¬tions.We urge students to vote “yes” fordivestment. The unparalleled bru¬tality of the South African regime’sapartheid system is universally con¬demned. Investment in corporationswhose activities in South Africa sup¬port that system is a morally ques¬tionable policy for a university. TheUniversity cannot claim neutralityas long as it maintains this invest¬ment policy. Simply by their pre¬sence in South Africa through invest¬ment, loans, and the export oftechnology, those corporations helpto perpetuate this system of racistoppression. The University’s argu¬ment that a “responsible” share¬holder can effect change in SouthAfrica contradicts all available evi¬dence and is, at best, an insult to theoppressed people of South Africawho want freedom, not tokenchange. Divestment is the most ef¬fective way for the University tocontribute to this cause of freedom,to concretely state its opposition toapartheid and to corporate presencein South Africa.Student Government has placedthis issue on the ballot on its own ini¬tiative. A strong “YES” vote will bea powerful statement to the trusteesthat students want the University todivest now. Regardless of the out¬come of the referendum, activityand discussion on the issue will con¬tinue. All interested people are invit¬ed to the next meeting of the ActionCommittee on South Africa on Tues¬day, April 24, at 7:30 in Ida NoyesHall.University of Chicago Action Com¬mittee on South Africaminibus. Enforcement of the nosmoking rule is a good idea; no onecan honestly doubt the perils of sec¬ond-hand smoke, particularly withina small unventilated area (all win¬dows were closed at the time). Thedriver who smokes within the mini¬bus obviously doesn’t care whetheranyone else smokes on the bus. Ihave been in the D minibus withthree people smoking at once (thedriver and two passengers). I havespoken to the Ombudsman. I havewritten to the person in charge of theminibus service. While I have repea¬tedly been assured that smokingwithin the minibus is not permitted,I have seen no great changes in thesmoking habits of some busdrivers.I hope this letter serves as a re¬minder that smoking on a small busis not simply a nuisance, not merelya bad smell. To many people it is avery real health hazard.Richard D. DreiserThanks for the memoriesLighting up on the bus4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 20, 1979ViewpointEgalitarianism and ConscriptionBy Bruce MajorsLibertarians are not primarily con¬cerned with human equality, but withhuman liberty. Neverthe less, libertariansare opponents of political inequality — in¬equality arising not from the voluntarychoices of individuals, but instead arisingfrom the violation of individual rights,especially the extinction of human libertyby state power.One cannot understand politics withoutseeing through it — that is, without under¬standing libertarian class analysis, and li¬bertarianism in general.We are coming to a point in time wherethe state is threatened. Mass produceddaily newspapers identify, even in car¬toons, the fact that states manipulatemoney supplies, to provide themselveswith income, and that this creates inflationwhich we all must face, as the state buysall the goods and services on the market,and leaves powerless individuals to squab¬ble over the rest, using the newly createdmoney supply to bid up the price of thegoods that are left. Quasi-libertarians, likeMargaret Tocher, come closer to theseats of power. Quasi-libertarians likeRobert Nozick, Milton Friedman, or Fre-derich Hayek, honored with academicawards once reserved for state syco¬phants. A Libertarian Party candidate iselected to a state legislature (Dick Ran¬dolph, Alaska), while a Libertarian Partygubernatorial candidate receives 400,000votes (Ed Clark, California, 1978). Re¬ferenda and amendment to limit and cuttaxes and state spending, and to balancestate budgets, find enthusiastic supportamong the populace, as does deregulationin academia. The United States empirebegins to crumble in Viet Name and Iran,and it becomes obvious that Americanforeign policy is not an attempt to stop thespread of monolithic communism but anattempt to justify the ravenous hunger ofour monolithic corporate statism athome.New sources of state income must befound. The discontented must be regiment¬ed to still the forces of rebellion against thecorporate state. Citizens who challenge es¬tablishment “liberalism’' and its ideolo¬gues’ dream of being gods and goddessesto a helpless, clodding. American peasant¬ry who will love them in return, must bepunished. The ideal of free, happy, inde¬pendent, competent individuals must beobliterated, lest it challenge the precari¬ous self-esteem of Washington and aca¬demic cocktail chasers. Conscription is theperfect solution.So the state will tax bodies, lives andtime, if it can’t tax income and property.The European “welfare” states can con¬tinue the idiotic economic policies of pro¬tecting the established enterprises fromcompetitiort, and buying votes with moneystolen from the voters in the first place,since the United States will bail them out,and pay for their defense in bodies, if not indollars. And so the Pentagon and its keptcorporations will be free of the fear of un¬employment or a loss in income, as there ismore money spent on military bases andweaponry, with which to train the new con¬scripts, or as there is more money spent onthe war that all that new human fodderand the continuation of the current Ameri¬can empire will invite. And so — as in thewake of Proposition 13, the “liberals” threatened to cut teachers from thepayrolls, in order to punish the “mob” oftax protestors, rather than cut the enor¬mous administrative bureacracies so“necessary” to education — they will nowconscript the young into emptying bedpansin hospitals, at low wages, rather thanabolishing involuntary mental inhospitali¬zation, legalizing midwifery, chiropracticand non-Western medicine, abolishingentry restrictions and advertising prohib¬itions, and other state interventions thatraise the price of health care. Only oneblind to the class interest of “liberal” pro¬fessionals and bureaucrats would fail tosee why their representatives are workingfor conscription in Congress today.But the “liberals” are even now capita¬lizing on the fact that the public has beenblinded by “liberal” ideology, by makingegalitarian arguments for the draft. Sincethe Hyde Park community is much more“liberal” than it is libertarian, I would liketo analyze the consequences of nationalservice, on the euqality of women, gaysand lesbians, racial minorities, an poorand working class people, in the areas ofcivil rights and liberties, foreign policy,and the economy.It should be immediately obvious that, ifthere is a draft, gays and lesbians will besubjected to two years of psychological“testing and treatment,” investigationand classification. They will not be treatedwell if they werve in the military, sincethey are viewed as being unstable and pla-qued with uncontrollable lust when in thepresence of Russian agents. So they willprobably be herded up to serve at home in“social” service. But such service alwaysinvolves dealing with helpless people (asdefined by the state): the sick, the peopleimprisioned in mental hospitals, the re¬tarded, children, the poor and unem¬ployed. Given the responses of politiciansin the past, can we expect the state to letgays and lesbians anywhere near “help¬less” persons they might “rape” or “solic¬it,” or unformed people they might be“role models” for? Where will gays andlesbians serve? In prisons and jails? And ifso, on which side of the lock?It should also be clear that for women,and to a greater extent, racial minorities,the volunteer army is an option used inbargaining against state created povertyand unemployment, and state institution¬alized prejudice. As long as an army is50% women and 40% black, women andblacks will have to be representedthroughout its hierarchy. The only way toescape this is to dilute the concentration. Ifwomen and blacks are not present at alland high levels, and in large numbers,then in the current society we can predictthat they will not be treated equally. Andone’s military record and promotions willaffect one’s future employment opportuni¬ties. So far we have considered only the in¬ternal aspect of “natural service’s” influ¬ence on civil rights and liberties. If weconsider that it will be a pervasive “patri¬otic” and regimenting force, and a toolmaking war both easier and more likely(since it will sustain the expense of contin¬ued American intervention and global em¬pire), we must realize that without war,and even more with it, any movement crit¬ical of the status quo will be under pres¬sure. Unions don’t strike and feministdon’t march when it endangers “NationalSecurity.” In terms of foreign policy, an“unegalitarian” army is just what Ameri- Graphic: Chris Persansca needs. A 50% black army won’t fight toprotect a South Africian state that seizesblack people’s land, and then taxes them,while telling them where to live, work andgo to school. (The volunteer army may bethe main reason why we aren’t there now.)A 50% female army won’t fight to protectThird World chauvinist states. (Like SaudiArabia, where clitoridectomies have offi¬cial sanction as a “proper punishment.”)In terms of economics, a volunteer armymust offer wages at least as good as thosethey can find elsewhere. A conscripted na¬tional service has people locked in. regard¬less of what it pays, and regardless of whatinflation does to wages while you are serv¬ing time. Even worse, national servicewould require new state expenditures forhousing, food, training and weaponry forthe conscripted, with taxation and thestate printing press stealing resourcesfrom the market, making future privateemployment hard to find. And when theUnited State entered its next war with itsnew cannon fodder, the Pentagon would bethere, with a bigger budget, spendingmoney on high-technology, capital-inten¬sive weapons systems that do not employmany people in their production, and thatdo not feed anyone once they are produced.(The process of war itself, of course, helpsno one in the economy, since it is simplythe destruction of skills, intelligences andwealth.) Increasing state spending, withor without war. will create inflation; thestate will print more money which willthen be used to bid up the prices of goodsand services on the market. The inflationwill hurt everyone on fixed incomes (likethe conscripted*, and everyone who savestheir wealth in money (most smallsavers), while everyone who saves theirwealth in land or capital will simply see itsprice rise. It will also hurt everyone who isnot of the state, by inflating them intohigher income tax brackets. The moneywill also enter the economy at specificplaces, especially if it is money not printedbut created through the Federal ReserveBanking system as accounts to buy state bonds or loan to business.Some businesses, receiving the newmoney before it has traveled through theeconomy and bid up prices everywhere,will experience it as an increase in de¬mand for their product, or as a loan (lowerinterest rates). When this happens theywill expand production, perhaps hiringnew workers or perhaps buying capitalgoods. W'hen the “new” money has trav¬eled throughout the economy, bidding upall prices, including those of the services ofworkers or capital goods, the expansion ofproduction is no longer profitable, andbusiness must contract. Recession and un¬employment result. Some of the capitalgoods cannot be used for any other prod¬uction processes, no matter what pricetheir owner wishes to sell them for. So fac¬tories and machinery idles and ecays. Thispermanent economic loss to society doesnot help disadvantaged economic groups.Powerful institutions, those which arefirst in line at the points in the economywhere new money regularly enters, contin¬ually receive these increments in incomebefore their cost of production is bid up.They are then unnaturally (as defined by amarket) profitable enterprises. And profit¬able enterprises, that have some form ofincome competitors cannot cut into, canafford not to cut cost; they can afford totake profits in an unfinancial form. Theycan be lazy. Or they can hire employees onsome basis other than competence. Since itis plausible to think that powerful institu¬tions may offer elite emloyment, if theyhire employees on the basis of prejudicethen elite employment (with its concom-mittent high wages) will go to white, male,heterosexual, Ivy League graduates. Thestate spending conscription entails will re¬sult in lower wages for the groups seekingequality. War time Israel, with quotas ofwomen conscripts, shows the averagewomen’s wage to be that of 43% of a man’sthough pre-war Israel showed an averagewomen’s wage of 63% of a man’s.The current “liberal’s” claim that con¬scription will result in equality is based onthe application of the “dog food” theory ofhumanity to everything in sight: every in¬stitution must have 12% of those and 50%of these if the recipe is to come out right. Itis also based on a belief that the “liberals”corporate statism achieves something ofvalue, with that serving as a rationaliza¬tion for forcing people to serve the cor¬porate state. But given the institutionalrealities of our day — realities that “liber¬als” are responsible for — the volunteerarmy is very much a force for equality,and conscription is very much the oppo¬site. And given the realities of all time thestate cannot produce anything of valueBruce Majors is a second year student inthe College.ReferencesFrederich Hayek, The Road to SerfdomGabriel Kolko. Railroads and Regulation, The Triumphof ConservationM.N. Rothbard. For A New LibraryMartin Anderson. The Federal Bulldozer“Blacks demand probe of property taxbias’” Chicago Tribune. Sunday, April 15,1979. final edition, p. 1, 12.Ayn Rand. Atlas ShruggedMurray Rothbard. America’s Great De¬pressionNora Ephron. Crazy SaladJ There are still tickets left for... STRING OF PEARLSfeaturingTHE GLENN MILLER ORCHESTRAat the Reynolds Club Box Office 9:00 P.M.FRIDAY, APRIL 27IDA NOYES HALL$5.00 UC Students$12.00 UC Alums, Staff and FacultyThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 20, 1979 — 5Patner defeats two in Maroon electionPhoto: Tim BakerEditor-elect Andrew Patner After heated debate on two constitutionalamendments and pointed questioning of thetwo eligible candidates. Maroon staffmembers elected Andrew Patner editor ofthe 1979-1980 Maroon.Patner defeated Jaan Elias on the firstballot of the 29 staff members present. In hispre-election speech. Patner called for amore open Maroon administration thatwould include more frequent staff meetingsand open discussion of editorial policy. Hestated his philosophy of the editorship as“not imposing my ideas on anybody, butchallenging our writers and our readers todo the best that we and they can do.”During the question and answer periodPatner and Elias revealed differences intheir approach to news and arts coverage.Patner vowed to cover both campus and. community news with separate editors forthe two areas while Elias said that he sawcommunity coverage as incidental to a cam-dus newspaper. Patner also said he would work out anagreement for editorial autonomy for theeditors and staff of the Gray City Journaland the Chicago Literary Review. Elias saidhe would reserve editorial control over theircontents if he felt it was necessary. Patneralso said he felt campus events should be afirst priority in any arts coverage and thatmusic criticism should be increased.This was the first contested Maroon elec¬tion in two years with both of the last twoeditors, incumbents Abbe Fletman and 1977-78 editor Jon Meyersohn. having run unop¬posed. Elias and another unsuccessful can¬didate, Nancy Cleveland, sought to amendthe Maroon constitution to permit their can¬didates. Elias’s amendment to lower theMaroon experience requirement from fourto three quarters was successful, but Cleveland’s attempt to waive the 2.0 gradepoint average requirement for this electionalone failed.Patner, a second-year humanities studentin the College, is currently an associateeditor of The Maroon. He is a native of HydePark and graduated from Kenwood PublicHigh School where he was editor of theschool paper. He served as an staff assistantto the late Congressman Ralph H. Metcalfein Washington in 1977 and has been active innumerous political campaigns. He sings se¬cond tenor and likes to wear hats.After draining the customary bottle ofchampagne, the staff adjourned to WingWah Restaurant in Chinatown for ap¬propriate festivities.Patner and his staff will assume office onJune 15.■Betty Freidan to speak tonight FIORIMUSICALI IBetty Friedan, noted feminist and author,will speak today on “The ERA: A NationalPriority.”The proposed Equal Right Amendment,which would be a constitutional guaranteeof equality for women and men. has becomea national issue for many organizations.Friedan’s appearance in Chicago is part of anew national campaign for ratification.Friedan. a former Peorian. has gained na¬tional acclaim as a leader of the women’smovement. Her book. The Feminine Mysti¬que, is often heralded as the book that beganthe modem feminist movement. Additional¬ly, Friedan was the founder and first presi¬dent of the National Organization forWomen and convenor of the NationalWomen's Political Caucus. In 1975. Friedanwas named Humanist of the Year by the Girl Scouts of America. The book. ItChanged My Life, is Friedan’s most recentcontribution to the cause of women’srights.The event, co-sponsored by the UniversityFeminist Organization and the National Or¬ganization for Women, will take place atKent Hall. Room 107, 1020 E. 58th St., at 7:00pm. Tickets will be available at the door for$1.50.Friedan’s speech will be followed by awine and cheese reception with her at Illi¬nois State Representative Barbara FlynnCurrie's home, 5650 S. Harper Ave. The re¬ception, open to the public, will be held be¬tween 8:30 pm and 10 pm. Donations of $5.00for students and $7.50 for others are request¬ed for the reception.Proceeds for both events will go to theERA Ratification Project. in concert of Baroque musicSaturday. 4pril 27. 5:30 p.m.Breasted Hall in theOriental Institute58th & University 4 ve.Fr**c & < )|m*ii to I he Public ■■■STUDENT OMBUDSMAN, 1979-1980The University is now seeking applicants for the post of Student Ombudsman. The Om¬budsman’s term of office will not begin until Autumn 1979. He or she will be expected towork with the 1978-1979 Student Ombudsman through the remainder of the academic year.Applications from individual students are welcome, as are recommendations from in¬dividual students or other student groups. They should be in letter form and must be sub¬mitted to the Office of the Dean of Students in the University by Friday, May 4th. Theyshould indicate the candidate’s academic area and level, number of years at the University,and relevant experience and other special qualifications for the position of Ombudsman.Letters of recommendation from other students or members of the faculty or staff will behelpful.Applicants will be interviewed by a student-faculty committee; the appointment will bemade by the President.The Student Ombudsman is a part-time salaried official of the University who is also aregistered degree candidate. He is appointed by the President to serve in addition to theregular organization of the University in cases of which there are allegations of specific un¬fairness or inefficiency. The Ombudsman writes a quarterly report, published in theUniversity Record, in which he gives a general account of his activities and makes suchrecommendations as he may deem appropriate.DEADLINE: MAY 4, 19796 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 20, 1979Winter quarter report.Ombudsman tells what irks whomOmbudsman Gail HankinsAs Ombudsman I am often asked whatkinds of problems my Office handles, what Ican do for students, and how I view my roleas Ombudsman. These questions suggestthat while University students know of theexistence of the Ombudsman’s Office, mosthave only a vague idea of when the Ombuds¬man can be instrumental in solving a prob¬lem, or when they should go to the Ombuds¬man (i.e., what level of frustration theyshould reach before seeking help). Studentsshould feel free to come to the Ombudsmanwhenever they are getting nowhere with aproblem or if they feel they are expendingtoo much time and energy on it. They shouldalso come, if they believe a University poli¬cy is unfair and want to discuss it with some¬one who might be able to do somethingabout it. Over the past eleven years aboutthree-fourths of the cases brought to theOmbudsman have been resolved to the stu¬dent’s satisfaction.Of course, some students prefer to workout their own problems. I have no objectionto this. In fact, students should try to solvetheir problems before soliciting the Om¬budsman’s aid. However, if the problem hasdragged on for several weeks or if it in¬volves challenging a University policy, Irecommend at least dropping by my officeto discuss it.How do I view the role of the Ombuds¬man? I see it as one of problem-solver, tro¬uble-shooter, and mediator. Depending onthe situation, I can either try to straightenout the problem for the student, suggestchanges in University policy, point outareas of dissatisfaction which demandstudy, investigate a “problem area,” or actas a mediator between a student andmember(s) of the faculty or staff. In otherwords, the nature of the problem deter¬mines my role. During the past two quartersthe problems have ranged from those thatcan be resolved in an afternoon to thosewhich take weeks of investigation and nego¬tiation, from the trivial to those with graveimplications.For these reasons and because this is thefirst time the Ombudsman’s quarterly re¬port has appeared in The Maroon, I have de¬cided to devote the remainder of my reportto a survey of the problems handled by theOmbudsman and the Assistant Ombudsmanlast quarter. In the first two sections I pres¬ent some of the simpler problems while inthe last four I discuss some of the moreserious problems we encountered.But before I go into this, I should explainwhy I requested The Maroon to publish thisreport. Traditionally, reports by the StudentOmbudsman have appeared only in the Chi¬cago Record. Because the Record is pub¬lished at irregular intervals, there is some¬times a considerable delay between the timethe Ombudsman submits the report and thetime it is available to the University com¬munity. With each passing week the reportloses topicality and consequently some of itsimpact. In addition, it is my impression thatthe Record is not as widely read by students,or even faculty, as The Maroon. Thus, bypublishing the report in The Maroon as wellas in the Record, the Ombudsman can re¬port more directly and efficiently to the Uni¬versity community. I would like to see thisbecome standard practice.During the Winter Quarter the Office ofthe Student Ombudsman handled a total of55 cases involving 67 students. The casestouched upon many aspects of campus life,ranging from academic problems to prob¬lems involving housing, the bus service, andextra-curricular activities. In addition, wereceived numerous requests for informationor direction that did not require any inves¬tigation.Some of the grievances were the result ofadministrative error; others, of the stu¬dent’s inability to prod some sector of theUniversity into action on his or her behalf.Sometimes students asked us to find out therationale behind a University policy, and ina few cases students sought aid in challeng¬ing a policy that they consider ed unjust. Administrative ProblemsMany examples of this type can be cited.One student had not been able to ascertainwhy his library privileges had been blocked.A married couple had tried for weeks in vainto get the Married Student Housing Office todo something to stop the flow of water seep¬ing into their kitchen. Another student re¬peatedly received threatening letters fromthe government demanding repayment ofher loan even though she had filed a defer¬ment form on time. Yet another student hadnot received her loan payment for severalmonths, first because her file had been lostand subsequently because the amount allot¬ted had been changed. Another student hadbeen erroneously billed by the hospital twoyears ago. In each case we were able tosolve the problem to the student’s satisfac¬tion.Informational QueriesSome students came to us to find out thewhys and wherefores of University policiesthat they felt were unfair. The following areexamples of the more interesting inquirieswe received. “Why does Career Counselingand Placement charge a fee of $5.00 for eachset of credentials sent out after the firstthree?” Because this fee covers the highand increasing operating expenses of the of¬fice. “Why can’t University of Chicago stu¬dents use the reading room at the ChicagoTheological Seminary without paying?” Be¬cause the University and CTS no longerhave arrangements for reciprocal libraryaccess and have no expectation of re-estab¬lishing them. CTS students cannot use Re-genstein without paying either. Why are somany of the machines that vend tamponsand sanitary napkins always out of order(particularly in Cobb Hall)?” Because theyare often vandalized and are expensive torepair. “I need to develop some photo¬graphs. Is there a darkroom I can use?” Thedarkroom in Ida Noyes Hall can be reservedby individuals for a three-hour period bycalling Ida Noyes.Bus ServiceAfter the exceptionally severe winter itshould be no suprise that the most populartarget of criticism this quarter was the busservice. Both the minibus and daytime ser¬vice were disrupted. The unavoidable prob¬lems resulting from impassable and oftenicy streets were exacerbated by the long¬term construction on Hyde Park Boulevardand, to a lesser extent, by the change in thecompany running the minibus service.Often a student who came to report a partic¬ular problem would also share his general impressions of the bus services, notingareas where there was need for improve¬ment (even under good conditions) and sug¬gesting what could be done to make thingsbetter.As the complaints came in, we passedthem on to A1 Herbster, Superintendent ofGrounds and Transportation. Usually, Mr.Herbster and his staff were fully aware ofthe problem and were already seeking a so¬lution. While Mr. Herbster appreciated thefeedback from the student body about theweather-related problems, he was more in¬terested in complaints about incompetentbus drivers and about chronic delays result¬ing from the unwieldiness of the long busroutes. In the case of the bus drivers, stu¬dent grievances received by this officeaided Mr. Herbster in considering the com¬pany to fire several drivers or to replacethem on U of C routes. Student grievancesalso brought to light an apparently unneces¬sary duplication in the “B” and “C” mini¬bus routes which was eliminated by shorten¬ing the “B” route. Finally, with theencouragement of the Ombudsman’s Office,Mr. Herbster was able to persuade the Cityto Open Hyde Park Boulevard at Dorches¬ter, a move which significantly improvedthe bus service.Student HealthComplaints about the Student Health Ser¬vice generally do not pertain to the attitudeof the attending physician or to questions ofprofessional competence. Most are con¬cerned with insurance coverage, billing, orrelated administrative matters. But thereare occasions when the complaint focuseson the physician. During the past twoquarters we received three complaintsagainst one physician, and these I referredto the Director of the Student Health Ser¬vice. On his advice, I discussed them per¬sonally with the physician whom I found re¬ceptive to what I had to say.Visits to the doctor are by their naturehighly personal and sometimes involve deli¬cate problems. It goes without saying thatthe physician’s demeanor should be reas¬suring and that the patient should obtain thebest care and the most reliable advice asquickly as possible. Because a doctor’s re¬sponse to a personal problem can color thestudents perception of the University’s atti¬tude toward students in general, a sense ofdelicacy and propriety is in order. If stu¬dents find their experience at the StudentHealth Clinic unsatisfactory, they shouldnot hesitate to inform the Director of Stu¬dent Health either in person, by letter, orthrough the Ombudsman so that the situa¬ tion can be ameliorated. At the StudentHealth Clinic as well as in all other sectorsof the University, it is important that stu¬dents be made to feel that their best inter¬ests are cared for.Academic MattersI would like to discuss two complaints in¬volving academic matters. The first con¬cerns the assignment of students to thevarious sections of a popular common corecourse. Initial assignments are made duringpre-registration on a first-come, first-served basis. Because some instructors aremore popular than others, their sections fillup quickly. Later, at the beginning of eachquarter, a few students petition to changesections. Reassignment is made accordingto an established departmental policy. It isimportant for students to understand thecriteria upon which reassignment is madeand to feel that they are being treated fairly.For these reasons the College should be will¬ing to furnish a written statement of thesecriteria should it be requested by the stu¬dent.The second complaint concerns an in¬structor’s obligation to inform his class ofhis grading standards. Regardless of themethods he uses, the instructor should ex¬plain both his grading procedure and hisstandards of evaluation at the beginning ofthe course and adhere to them throughout.Students must be able to understand the sig¬nificance of any evaluation of their ho¬mework. tests or papers in the context oftheir total grade.Recreational FacilitiesThe department of Physical Educationand Athletics closed the track at the HenryCrown Field House to individual runnersfrom 4 to 5:30 pm weekdays during most ofthe Winter Quarter in order that the Univer¬sity of Chicago intercollegiate track teamscould practice. This inconvenienced manystudents, members of the faculty, and staff,who favor late afternoon for their workouts.They were obliged to rearrange their sched¬ules — often not an easy task — if theywished to continue to use the facility.Alternatives to the track in the FieldHouse, of course, do exist. There is a shortertrack in Bartlett Gymnasium. It is also poss¬ible to run around the first floor of the FieldHouse on the concrete or around the gymna¬sium in Ida Noyes Hall when it is not in use.And one can always run outdoors. However,to most runners only the out-of-doors repre¬sents an acceptable alternative to the excel¬lent track in the Field House. And theweather this winter eliminated this possibil¬ity for all but the heartiest souls.There was much grumoling about the De¬partment’s decision. One student came tome to discuss the issue. As a result of thisconversation. I communicated the wide¬spread discontent to the Director of recrea¬tional facilities, the Dean of Students, andthe President. On his own initiative the stu¬dent collected more than 700 signatures in 30hours on a petition requesting the facultyBoard of Athletics and Recreational Sportsto reopen the Field House track to in¬dividuals during the hours in question. Theboard turned down the petitionThis problem will recur each year unlessthe University can provide its independentrunners with an alternate, comparable fa¬cility. The Athletic Department is aware ofthis need and hopes that funds will be avail¬able for a second indoor running surface.According to the plans, this two-or three-lane track would be installed in the corridorof the first floor of the Field HouseIn the last few years the interest in sportshas steadily increased on this campus TheUniversity needs alternative recreationalfacilities to accommodate individual ath¬letes when its main facilities are being usedfor organized inter collegiate or intra muralsports. The current fund-raising effort bythe University deserves the support of theentire University community.Gail J. HankinsFriday, April 20, 1979 — 7The Chicago MaroonHEX WAIT A MINUTE BOYS,...HERE'STHE LATEST. TASTE FORECASTCLICK'CLICK BAD NEWSCREAMED UVER/yocK.1A BUPWEISER?YEAH??WATCH THE TASTEBUDS (IN ACTUAL COMMERCIALS) ON "SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE/"8 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 20, 1979AUDITION FORMANKINDEA CYCLE OFFIVE ENGLISHMYSTERY PLAYSSunday April 221-5 P.M.Monday April 237-10 P.M.In TheReynolds Club Theatre5706 S. UniversityFor More InformationCall Jim at 753-3581Performances in Late MayA Production of theChicago RenaissancePlayers The 5th AnnualTribute toBlack CreativityAll students interested in pernforming must either attend theOrganization of Black Studentsmeeting in Ida Noyes at 7:30 p.m. onTuesday, April 24 or contactCharles Knight at 753-3751.HILLELGRADUATE STUDENT MIXERUniversity of Chicago - NorthwesternUniversity of Illinois - CCINTERNATIONAL HOUSEHOMEROOMSATURDAY, APRIL 21,9:00P.M.BEER MUNCHIES MUSIC * COURT TllCATRCCourt Studio presentsTHE WAITING GAME“It’s a Sin to Tell a Lie”by Jason Miller,Directed by Larry Phillips“The Desert Island”by Roberto Arlt,Directed by Mary K. Wall“Same Thing, Only Different”Written and Directed by Chris KoziolApril 20, 21,22 and 27,28, 298:30P.M., Sundays at 7:30P.M.$2.00 general;$1.50 Students andSenior Citizens753-3581Reynolds Club Theatre57th & UniversityGREAT BOOKS FILM SERIESGreat Expectations,April 267:15 and 9:30 P.M. directed by David LeanQuantrell Auditorium, Cobb HallDOC members free with pass; others SI 50Pierce Hall Pierce HallPolitical ForumLecture SeriesRichard M. Daley, Jr.DemocraticState Senator“Chicago Politics”April 22, 1979Sunday Night 7:30P.M.Pierce Hall Pierce Hall5514 South University Ave. STUDENT GOVERNMENTSPRING ELECTIONSCHEDULED FORMONDAY, APRIL 23,TUESDAV, APRIL 24POLLING PLACESWILL BE OPEN THEFOLLOWING TIMES:WOODWARDPIERCEBURTON-JUDSONSHORELANDCOBBREYNOLDSBUSINESS SCHOOLLAW SCHOOL MON., TUES.MON., TUES.MON., TUESMON., TUES.N., TUES.MON., TUES.MON.TUES. d-75-75-74-610-1210-1210-1210-12THE FOLLOWING QUESTION WILL ALSO BE ON THEBALLOT:CONGRESS IS CURRENTLY CONSIDERINGLEGISLATION TO REINSTATE MANDATORYREGISTRATION FOR THE DRAFT. WHICH OF THEFOLLOWING BEST DESCRIBES YOUR STANCE ONTHIS ISSUE?I SUPPORT MANDATORY REGISTRATION FOR THEDRAFT.I OPPOSE MANDATORYDRAFT. REGISTRATION FOR THEI HAVE NO OPINION ON THIS ISSUE.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 20, 1979 — 9Campus This WeekArtJackson Pollock: “New Found Works” of the American ac¬tion painter. Known for its large, paint-splattered can¬vases, Pollock’s major work resembles no one else’s. Hisearly period, however, reveals the influence of ThomasHart Benton, Picasso, and the Surrealists. This exhibit,which collects some of Pollock’s early work, is primarily in¬teresting for the light it sheds on his work of the late fortiesand early fifties. Closes May 6. David and Alfred Smart Gal¬lery, 5650 S. Greenwood. Mondays through Saturdays, 10 am “Baroque Chamber Music.’’ Bring your lunch. Cloister Clubof Ida Noyes Hall. 12:15 pm. Free.UC Brass Society: Concert tomorrow, April 21. Bond Chap¬el. 9 pm. Free.FOTA Events: “Prevailing Winds,” a concert performanceby the Woodwind Quintet. This Sunday, April 22. Ida NoyesHall. Free. Recital: Julie Burrall, lyric soprano: Diane McCul-logh, mezzo soprano; William Epstein, piano. This Tuesday,April 24. Ida Noyes Library. 8 pm. Free. Thomas Stark: Violinrecital. This Thursday, April 26. Ida Noyes Library. 8 pm.Free.Fiori Musicali: Concert of Baroque Music. Tomorrow, AprilMichael Cox as the Prince of Darkness — see Campus Theater.to 4 pm; Sundays, noon to 4 pm. 753-2121. Free.Dan Ramirez: “Works: 1972-1979.” Drawings, paintings onraw canvas, and folded white paper constructions — theseare among the works of this Chicago artist on display. Ra¬mirez consciously bases his work on the writings of Wittgen¬stein; the best results are beautiful abstracts in elegantsubdued colors. Closes April 28. The Renaissance Society,Goodspeed Hall, 1010 E. 59th. Mondays through Saturdays,11 am to 4 pm. 753-2886. Free.Carol Burch-Brown: Drawings by a Chicago MFA graduate.The sources of Brown’s pencilled abstracts are the texturesof nature — rocks and the bark of trees. Closes April 24. Berg¬man Gallery, Cobb 418. 9 am to 5 pm weekdays. Free.MusicBerg, Brahms, and Mozart: Chamber music performed byPatrick Gallagher, piano, and Jim Jacobsen, clarinet. WithJoe Claude, oboe; Gary Mermel, horn; and Barbara Schu¬bert, bassoon. This Sunday, April 22. International HouseAuditorium, 1414 E. 59th. 8 pm. Free.Contemporary Chamber Players: Ralph Shapey, musicdirector. With Elsa Charlston, soprano, and Morey Ritt,pianist. Two works commissioned by the Fromm Music Foun¬dation at Harvard: Gerald Levinson’s “Light Dances/StonesSing,” and George Perle’s “Concertino for Piano and Winds”(premiere). Also, Elliot Carter’s “A Mirror on Which toDwell,” and Igor Stravinsky’s “Suite from L’Histoire du Sol-dat.” Tonight, April 20. Mandel Hall, 57th and University,8:30 pm. Free—with ticket. Contact Concert Office, 5835 Uni¬versity.Lexington String Quartet: Michael Jinbo, Beth Bistrow,Den McDonald, and Van Bistrow perform works by Haydn,Schubert, and Janacek. Tonight, April 20. Bond Chapel. 8 pm.Free.Jeff Dean and Company: Part of a series of chamber musicconcerts sponsored by FOTA and the Music Department.10 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 20, 1979 21. Breaseted Hall in the Oriental Institute, 58th and Uni¬versity. 5:30 pm. Free.LecturesBernard Shaw and Women: Sponsored by UC press andCritical Inquiry. Lecture by Michael Holroyd, the biographerof Lytton Strachey and Augustus John. Holroyd is presentlyat work on the authorized biography of Shaw. This Wednes¬day, April 25. Harper 130.5 pm.Theoretical Systems and Analytical Choices: Music De¬partment lecture by Joel Lester. Today, April 20. RegensteinLibrary 264. 4 pm. Free.TheaterThe Waiting Game: Three one act plays: Jason Miller’s It'sa Sin to Tell a Lie, directed by Larry Philips; Roberto Arlt’sThe Desert Island, directed by Mary K. Wall; and SameThing, Only Different, written and directed by Chris Koziol.Opens tonight, April 20; closes next Sunday, April 29. Rey¬nolds Club Theater, 57th and University. 8:30 pm; Sundaysat 7:30 pm. 753-3581. $2, $1.50 students and senior citiftP."*Measure for Measure: Shakespeare’s rarely producedcomedy: the Duke of Vienna begins enforcing his city’s anti-fornicaton laws. The bleakest, yet one of the most compas¬sionate, plays in the canon. Directed by Nicholas Rudall;Maureen Gallagher plays Isabella, the novitiate, and KeithFort plays her promiscuous brother, Claudio. Closes May 13.The New Theater, Reynolds Club. Thursdays through Satur¬days at 8:30 pm; Sundays at 7:30 pm. 753-3581. S4.50-S4; $2.50-$2 students and senior citizens.Dracula, Prince of Darkness; Lost in the Funhouse: Laffsand hijinks from the guys of Lower Rickert — the third annual musical comedy of the Bernox Players. Written by MichaelCox and Mark Bernstein; directed by Cox and Noreen Mar¬riott. Tomorrow, April 21, and Sunday, April 22. Ida NoyesTheater. 8 pm. $ .50—proceeds will go to Court Theater’sbuilding fund. Free to residents of Woodward Court.FilmComes a Horseman (Doc). Directed by Alan J. Pakula. Thewestern is surely dead when the year’s best western is thisplodding exercise in true grit. Jane Fonda stars as a rancherwho enlists the help of drifter James Caan in fighting offrobber-baron Jason Robards. The pace may drag a bit, butthe scenery is pretty and Fonda makes a fascinating pro¬tagonist. If Pakula weren’t trying so hard to avoid the feelingof a Hollywood western, he might give the audience somepleasure. Friday at 7:15 and 9:00 in Cobb Hall.Barbarella (Doc). Directed by Roger Vadim. Jane Fonda is afemale Buck Rogers of the 41st century in this film, adaptedfrom a popular French comic strip and directed by Fonda'sex-husband. The special effects aren’t terribly accomplishedby Star Wars standards, but Jane Fonda's costumes are a lotmore interesting than Princess Leia's, and they get torn offher nubile body with astounding frequency. Lots of fun,especially for exposing the pre-feminist Fonda. Friday atmidnight in Cobb Hall.Madame Rosa (NAM). Directed by Moshe Mizrahi. This filmwas last year's surprise winner of the Academy Award forBest Foreign Film. A Paris streetwalker raises a cute littleArab boy to have love and respect for Jews. Unfortunately,Mizrahi’s good intentions do not make a very good film. AsRoger Ebert quipped, “This film is so much in favor of thehuman race that it almost makes you want to take sides."Saturday at 7:30 and 9:30 in Cobb Hall.Kings of the Road (Doc). Directed by Wim Wenders. Othercritics have noted that Wenders again displays his con¬siderable talent for pure imagery, and again gives us arelatively slow-moving film filled with oneiric sequences. Un¬seen by this reviewer. Sunday at 8:00.One Sings, the Other Doesn’t (NAM). Directed by AgnesVarda. One of the more interesting woman directors workingtoday tells the story of two women whoring their way acrossthe south of France, where they attend est seminars andrediscover true love. Unseen by this reviewer. Sunday at 7:30and 9:30.Laughter in Paradise (LSF). Directed by Mario Zampi. EvenMario Zampi’s leaden direction doesn’t ruin this obscure butphenomenally funny British comedy. A rich man dies andconditions his heirs’ inheritances on performing varioustasks tailored to their shortcomings. For example, a gigolomust marry the first woman he speaks to, a timid bank clerkmust rob his own bank, a crime novelist must be imprisonedfor committing a crime, and a woman who treats her servantsAn example of the ceramic work of Harris Deller now ondisplay at the Columbia Gallery, 600 S. Michigan. Mondaysthrough Saturdays, 10 am to 5 pm.badly must hire herself out as a domestic. I’ve always thoughtthat this film would be a great candidate for a remake. WithAlistair Sim and newcomer Audrey Hepburn. A real crowd-pleaser. Recommended. Sunday at 8:30 at the Law School.The Decameron (NAM). Directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini.Pasolini appears 83 the painter Giotto in several episodesfrom Baccaccio’s Decameron. As with most of Boccaccio’sstories, the plots are comic and sexual in nature. With FrancoDitti, Ninetto Davoli and Angela Luce. Monday at 7:30 and9:30 in Cobb Hall.c in the ArtsJ*'! City listings begin here:>yes*rs TheaterThe Little Sister: Directed by Stuart Gordon. The OrganicTheater is the best known of Chicago’s many small theaters,and part of its success is due to its skill in adapting Ameri¬can literature to the stage. This production is the first at¬tempt ever, anywhere, to stage a Raymond Chandler mys-rhe tery novel. The play was written by Stuart Gordon and;his Carolyn Purdy-Gordon, who also acts as three of the womenher in the detective Philip Marlowe’s life: Orfamy Quest, Do-off lores Gonzales, and Mavis Weld. Continues through May 27.but Leo Lerner Theater, 4520 N. Beacon. Wednesdays through>ro- Fridays at 8:30 pm; Saturdays at 7 and 10 pm; Sundays at 3ing and 8 pm. 728-1001. $9—$6.50.ime Holiday: By Philip Barry. When Holiday played on Broad- the musical comedy is still a happy, happy show indeed.Book by Thomas Meehan; music and lyrics by CharlesStrouse and Martin Charnin respectively. Closes June 9.McCormick Place, E.23 and the lake. No performances onMondays; call for times. 791-6000. $15—$6.50.Hail of Bullets: “(Baskets, Baptisms, and Bullets)” — Anensemble production of one act plays, including three adap¬tations of B. Traven stories and one original work inspiredby Bertolt Brecht. Directed by Thom Goodman. ThroughApril 29. San Quentin Drama Workshop, 1516 W. Roscoe. Callfor times. 327-8511. $3.50-$2.50.Freud Slipped Here: The new Second City Review. Accord¬ing to their PR release “Id’s really happening this time . . .”Open. Second City, 1616 N. Wells. Tuesdays through Thurs¬days and Sunday at 9 pm; Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 and11 pm. 337-3992. $5.50—$5.00; discounts for students. Improvi-sational sessions follow all performances except Friday. April 29. Auditorium Theater, 70 E. Congress. Evening per¬formances at 8 pm; matinees at 2 pm. 922-2110. $22.50 - $5.FilmJapanese and American-Science Fiction Films This seriesbegins with two classics of the genre from the 1950’s, Ino-shiro Honda’s The Mysterians, and William Cameron Men-zies' Invaders From Mars, which is presented in an uncut ver¬sion. The Art Institute of Chicago; Friday at 7:30 p.m.German New Wave, Aguirre, the Wrath Of God and Heartof Glass. Two of Wernor Herzog’s films. Aguirre is consi¬dered Herzog’s masterpiece, and it takes place in deepest,darkest Amazon, where one man’s attempt at dominatingan entire continent becomes a steaming, visionary epic. Fri¬day at 7 pm and Saturday and Sunday at 4 and 8 pm. Heartof Glass is at 9 pm on Friday, 6 and 10 pm Saturday, andis aitedla'shedlotoffun,’ atilmforttle?iy-Asthe!S.''her:on-s aUn-;nes:ing■ossand7:30venbutandousjoloerknedtntsonlys;htithrdmles>'scoid Patricia McBride and Helgi Tomasson in “Other Dances", one pro¬duction of the NYC Ballet — see City Dance. Jacques d’Amboise in “Union Jack", a work Sara Leland of the NYC Bullet in “The Concert’’ — see City Dance,performed by the New York City Ballet — seeCity Dance.way in the late twenties, a very young Katherine Hepburnstarred as the ingenue. Her character's personality — witty,sensitive, and breathlessly sensible — became Hepburn’spublic persona. Barry, also the author of another Hepburnplay, The Philadelphia Story, was a master of a now anti-'quated form — the comedy of manners. Directed by Tony Tan¬ner; Lindsay Crouse stars in the Hepburn role. Closes May13. Goodman Theater, 200 S. Columbus Drive. PerformancesTuesdays through Sundays; call for times — they vary.443-3800. $10—$8.50.Mummenschanz: Three critically acclaimed mimes from“Lulie J. II" a terracotta mural by the ceramicist GeorgeMason. This and other works now on exhibit at the Colum¬bia Gallery, 600 S. Michigan. Mondays through Saturdays, 10am to 5 pm.Switzerland via Broadway. As different from Marcel Mar-ceau as platinum from silver. Closes April 29; StudebakerTheater, 418 S. Michigan. Performances all days but Mon¬day; call for times. 436-0700. $15—$8.50.Annie: When it opened in Washington in 1977, just afterthe inauguration of Jimmy Carter, critics interpreted Annieas a manifestation of a new National Optimism. The newN.O. idea is now in the lobby, enjoying intermission, but ArtClaire Zeisler: Bright color, intricate structure, delightfultexture — the fiber art of Claire Zeisler. To macrame whatpaint by numbers are to Van Gogh originals. A 75-year oldChicagoan. Zeisler and her work have long been acclaimed —yet this is her first one-woman show. Closes June 10. The ArtInstitute, Adams and Michigan. 10 am til 4:30 pm; Thursdaysopen until 8 pm; Sundays and holidays, noon to 5 pm.443-3500. $2, $1 students; Thursdays free.Marc Chagall: Question: Who’s the greatest living artistin the entire world? Probably not Chagall, but an incrediblenumber of wealthy Chicagoans would inexplicably disagree(witness the brouhaha surrounding the second-rate FirstNational Plaza mosaic and the new, very gaudy, stainedglass at the Art Institute). A lot of Chagall’s best work canbe found in private collections around the city — this exhibitbrings sixty such works together; many have never beenpublicly exhibited. Opens this Sunday, April 22; closes July1. Maurice Spertus Museum of Judaisa, 618 S. Michigan. Mon¬days through Thursdays, 10 am to 5 pm Sundays, 10 am to 4pm. 922-9012.McDonald's Competition Winners: The thirty-five best de¬signs for McDonald’s restaurants submitted to the AmericanInstitute of Architects - sponsored contest. Many are outra¬geously funny; most have more to do with aesthetics thanhamburgers; any would be an improvement over the tireddesign McDonald’s now uses. Closes April 28. The Archi-center, 310 S. Michigan. Mondays through Saturdays. 9 amto 5 pm. 782-1776. Free.DanceMexican-American Festival of the Arts: A day celebratingthe Mexican artistic renaissance of the 1930's and 40's. AnnaSokolow, a dancer, participated in that renaissance and willbe present to discuss her memories of such artists as DiegoRivera and others. Members of the Chicago Moving Com¬pany will perform works by Sokolow in an open rehearsal.Tomorrow, April 21. Chicago Dance Center. 2433 N. Lincoln.3:30 pm — film about Sokolow; 7 pm — dance performance;other events throughout the day. 929-7416. Film is free;dance is $4.New York City Ballet: The company of George Balanchinereturns to the Auditorium Theater for the first time since1967. Works such as Jewels. Vienna Waltzes, and The Prodi¬gal Son will be presented: program varies nightly. Closes Sunday at 6 pm, and this single movie nearly closed DocFilms first quarter when it played to an audience nearly assomnolent as Herzog's cast, which was hypnotized duringthe course of the film. Facets Multimedia. 1517 W. Fullerton.281-9075.Minnie and Moskowitz John Cassavetes directed andacted in this movie about an impulsive jockey (or did thatman on the telephone at Facets say jock?) who falls in loveand lust with lovely Gena Rowlands, who is a librarian (or isthat jockey) who wears dark glasses. Together they do funthings like see Bogart movies and visit the horse races. Un¬seen by this reviewer. Friday at 7 and 9, and Saturday at 4.6. 8 and 10 pm.Coming Home With Jane Fonda and John Voight at theHyde Park Theatre, Harper Court.MusicMusic from Chicago VI: A concert of contemporary-chamber music by Chicago area composers John Austin, Rob¬ert B. Carl, John Melby, Salvatore Martirano. Sever Tipei,and Phil Winsor. Performed by three members of the Uni¬versity of Illinois Contemporary Chamber Players: PaulZonn. Wilma Zonn, and Tipei. This Sugday. April 22. ChicagoPublic Library Cultural Arts Center, 78 E. Washington. 3 pmFree.Music of the Baroque: A performance by chorus, orches¬tra, and soloists of Handel's Samson Based on John Milton’sSamson Agonistes, the work will be presented in a form asclose to the operatic as unstaged Baroque music can come.Directed by Thomas Wikman; Elliott Golub is concertmaster.This Tuesday, April 24. United Church of Hyde Park. 53rd andBlackstone. 8 pm. 643-9386. Call for prices and ticket avail¬ability.Da Capo Players: “Da Capo" is the practice of repeating awork or performing two pieces by the same composer onone program. Using prerecorded miscellaneous sounds asbackground for their performances on traditional instru¬ments. this group has originated electronic da capo. Davi-dovsky’s “Synchronisms No. 2“ will be performed twice — be¬fore and after intermission. Other works include those ofCrumb, Druckman. Sollberger. and Thome. Tomorrow. April21. Thorne Hall. Lake Shore Drive and Superior. 8:15 pm664-1596. $6, $3 students.Calendar compiled by Karen Hornick with Richard Kaye andBruce ShapiroThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 20, 1979 — 11StudentCo-op Bookstore The University of ChicagoDepartment of Musicand theFromm Music Foundation at Harvardpresent theCONTEMPORARYCHAMBER PLAYERSof The University of ChicagoRALPH SHAPEY, Music DirectorTHE CO-OP OFFERS YOU THE BEST PRICESIN HYDE PARK FOR YOUR USED BOOKS. 9,30-6 WEEKDAYS10-5 SATURDAYBOOKS ON ALL SUBJECTS - SOCIALSCIENCES. HUMANITIES, MATH & SCIENCESAT UP TO 50% OFF LIST. DOWNSTAIRS ATREYNOLDS CLUBTHE CO-OP CONTINUES TO BRING YOU THE BEST IN BUDGET-PRICEDMUSIC. PRICE INCREASES ARE ON THE WAY, HOWEVER, SO BUY THATALBUM YOU'VE BEEN WANTING NOW AND BEAT THE INCREASES. with ELSA CHARLSTON, Soprano and MOREY RUT, PianoGerald Levinson • ’Light dances stones singGeorge Perie • ’Concertino for Piano and Winds (Premiere)Elliott Carter * A Mirror on Which to DwellIgor Stravinsky • Suite from L'Histoire du Soldo,‘CeMKtdeeed by »b# Prem*» foundationFRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1979 • 8:30 P.M.MANDEL HALL, 57th & University AvenueAdmission is free with ticketALL ALBUMS DISCOUNTED 35 - 40% For free tickets, send request and a self-addressed stamped envelope to the Concert Office, 5835 University Ave.,Chicago 60637.SINGLE, JEWISH AND LIVINGIN HYDE PARKAn AFTERNOON of WORKSHOPS and DISCUSSIONSEXPLORING the ISSUES and INTERESTS of theJEWISH SINGLE ADULT. AGES 25 - 45:LEGAL and FINANCIALPSYCHOLOGICAL and SOCIALRELIGIOUS and COMMUNALSUNDAY, APRIL 22,12:30 - 6:00 P.M.KAM-ISAIAH ISRAEL CONGREGATION1100 Hvde Park Blvd.FEE: $10.00THE PROGRAM OF THREE WORKSHOPS WILL BEGIN AT 12:30 with brunch andwill conclude with a wine and cheese hour at 5:00P.M. (all food is kosher). Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288 2900 ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELSUNDAY • APRIL 2211 A.M.University Religious ServiceLARRY L. GREENFIELDDean of Students & Assistant ProfessorDivinity School“... but some doubted.”5P.M.Service of the Holy EucharistCelebrant: The Rev. Charles D. Brownco-sponsored by theEpiscopal Church CouncilSTUDENT LOANCANCELLATIONImportant Notice to Graduate Students& Students in The CollegeAll Spring Quarter Loan checks whichhave not been picked up from the StudentLoan Center by Thursday, April 26 willbe cancelled.Student Loan CenterHaskell 312Hours 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. PRE LAW MEETINGDiscussion of LSAT and other informationfor students planning on applying toLaw Schools next AutumnTuesday, April 243:30P.M.Harper 130Sponsored byOffice of the Dean of Studentsin the College12 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 20, 19794*,GOLD CITY INNgiven * * * *by the MAROONOpen DoilyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9j00 p.m.5228 Harper 493-2559(amt Hmrpmr Court)Eat more for less.(Try our convenient toke-out orders.)A Gold Mine Ot Good Food”Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Pork's Best Cantonese FoodYOM HAS A 0 AHCOUNCIL OFJEWISH ORGANIZATIONSinHYDE PARK -KENWOODHOLOCAUST MEMORIAL SERVICEA COMMUNITY MEMORIALSERVICE FOR THE VICTIMS OFTHE HOLOCAUSTMONDAY, APRIL 23, at 7:30 P.M.CONGREGATION RODFEI ZEDEK5200 S. Hyde Park Blvd.'Bravo Visconti!*DAVID ELLIOTT, Son-Times“l.auru \iiton<‘lli...a luscious bod\...*‘GENE SISKEL, Chicago TribuneCjlANC'ARLOCjIANNINIL ai ra•Antonki.liJenniferO’NEILLTheInnocent\ iNitarfi’s Siisiml K|i«4 n I >u«Im4m'i«I Mnrringi'Color PiinR Dv Movie labANALYSIS FILM RELEASING CORPORATIONa ne« nue t—rwitn mw cotuawtJIMWPTIirU ilChicago atulFILrln Michigan New SHcwinqReduced parting at Carriage HouseSAN DIEGO CITY SCHOOLSCONDUCTING INTERVIEWS FORQUALIFIED TEACHERS IN THEFOLLOWING FIELDS:Elementary (K-6)Bilingual (Spanish & Asian lanpiafies)Seeondary (7-12)MathemaliesEnglishBilingual capabilities in most subject areasSpecial EducationSpeech ami Hearin<i ( \phasia)Learning Hamlicap|>e<lRepresentalive on eampus April 23. Forinformation and/or appointment eontuetMr*. Baleitis at 753-3282.\N KOI M.OPPORTl NIT\ F.MPI.OYKK WE CARE ABOUT YOU!JON MAR CORP.7227 S. STONY ISLAND, CHICAGO, IL 60649493-2600Secretarial Service(The Personalized Professional Service)TYPING XEROX COPIESLetters - Manuscripts - EnvelopesTheses - Resumes - StatisticalTRANSCRIBING Cassettes - TapesNOTARY PUBLIC*- Conference Room Available -PROMPT EFFICIENT ACCURATE £ COURT TheATReS70bstlnivwrtv Avenue ( h«ago. Illinois«Jbi7Open discussions ofMEASURE FOR MEASUREAfter the performances on April 26and May 10In Reynolds Club LoungeDiscussions will begin about 10:50 P .M.David Bevington and Mark Ash in,discussion leadersPerformances are through May 13NAVY OFFICER.YOU GET RESPONSIBILITY THE MOMENTYOU GET THE STRIPES.A lot of big corporations offer you a bigtitle. But how many offer a young collegegraduate a really important job?As a Navy Officer, you don’t haveto wait to do a job that counts. We giveyou one as soon as you’ve earned yourcommission. A job with responsibility forthe lives of others, and for millions of dollarsof complex equipment. A job that requiresskill and leadership. A job that Navy Officershave been doing proudly for 200 years.If that’s the kind of job you’re lookingfor, speak to a Navy recruiter. You’ll findthat Navy Officers have unequalledopportunities in fields like Nuclear Power,Aviation, and Engineering.Or call toll free 800-841-8000. (In Georgia, toll free 800-342-5855.) Early responsibility.It’s what being a Navy Officer is all about.NAVY OPPORTUNITY 8698| INFORMATION CENTERJ P.O. Box 2000, Pelham Manor. N.Y. 10803□ Send me information on Career Opportunitiesin the Navy (0G).| □ Call me at (Area Code)I NAMEFirst (Please Print) LastADDRESSCITY STATE ZIP| DATE OF: Birth tCollege GraduationtUniversity ♦ GPA, CN 4/9NAVY OFFICERS GET RESPONSIBILITY FAST.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 20, 1979 — 13/THE MAJOR ACTIVITIESBOARD PRESENTSCHUCKBERRYAPRIL 28TWO SHOWS!!!8 P.M. AND 10,30 P.M$3, $4, MAB FEE-PAYERS, $6, $7 GENERALTICKETS GO ON SALE NEXT WEEK ATREYNOLDS CLUB BOX OFFICE14 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 20, 1979lit!I" ilMWilfiiW'lfiiin***^{.&.%&..xtifSiHi Fundamentally, the Maroons are betterBy Mark WallachThe rhythms of baseball allow it. but thelaws of probability certainly don’t en¬courage it. Last Saturday, the Maroonsswept a doubleheader from Chicago Stateby the improbable scores of 2-1 and 18-17. Johnny < Bruns > something. We’ve beenwaiting three years for a pitcher like him.”Then there’s Carl Herzog who hasn’t beenhitting well, so he’s hitting to right to advance the runner. Kven Trott, our power hit¬ter. is hitting to right. Winklereid andSportsThe first game was a briskly played,scoreless contest until the sixth inningwhen, after a State error, a bases-loadedJeff Foreman single chased home two runsto give John Bruns his second victory, amasterful six-hitter.The second game, which lasted con¬siderably longer than the Boston Marathon,featured pitchers who acted as if the strikezone was low and in the dirt. Together, thetwo teams combined for 30 walks, includingone wayward hurler who issued 12. Insteadof a scoreless tie in the late innings, theteams were tied at 16 entering the finalframe. Fittingly, the State pitcher issuedtwo bases-loaded walks to boost theMaroons to an 18-17 triumph.The rest of the Maroons’ week was morepredictable. On Monday they lost 5-2 to aChicago Circle team that Coach ChuckSchacht considered the toughest Maroon foein three years. The next day Chicagooutclassed a weak Niles team 5-2, the sameNiles team that had earlier received a 35-1thumping from Illinois Benedictine.The Maroons, with a 5-2 mark, have achance to surpass the record of the bestMaroon team in recent memory, the ’75team that went 11-7. For the upperclassmenwho have suffered through the losingseasons of the past two years, this seasonholds out a rare promise. It’s a time, theyhope, when attitude, talent, and clutch playwill finally complement each other.So far. Schacht is particularly delighted Bahadur, each fighting for the third basejob, are supporting each other. In the past,we haven’t had as many enthusiasticplayers.”Part of the early-season success can be at¬tributed to Schacht’s insistence on fun¬damentals. After reviewing last year’spractices, which were frequently spentsimulating possible game situations,Schacht decided it was better to have morehitting and fielding practices. “You buildconfidence by good execution,” he says.Most of all, though. Schacht is trying toprepare his team mentally in order to avoidthe “choke syndrome” that has plagued somany other Chicago teams. “Sometimes in¬telligent athletes can think too much. Wewant them to just react.” With properpreparation, that reaction will automatical¬ly be correct.The team is determined to force the op¬position to earn its runs as a result of hits. The Maroons figure that d the oppositionscores as a result of walks, errors, or mentallapses, they haven’t really earned theirruns. “If a good hitter is only going to suc¬ceed on 3 of 10 chances, let’s make him dowith the team’s attitude. “In baseball, it’seasy to get engrossed in your ownstatistics,” he said. “But we have anunselfish group In the Chicago State game(the 2-1 victory) our bats got a little quietBut the guys told each other, “We oweit.” says Schacht. So far, the Maroons havebeen only moderately successful, forcingtheir opponents to score 12 of their 38 runssolely as a result of hits. At the same timeSchacht tells his own hitters to put the ball inplay on the theory that if the other team isforced to handle the ball enough, eventuallythey’ll mess up. In short, the system, whichis based on pitchers who don’t walk manybatters, is a challenge to the opposition:“We re better fielders than you. and we llprove it.”Finally, Schacht encourages a positive at¬titude specifically designed to easepsychological stress. He emphasizes hittingbecause an early lead often takes pressureoff the pitcher and the entire club. “If youhave to come from behind all the time it’s amental strain.” He also tells his infielders toremember that they are throwing to a baserather than throwing out a runner. Believ¬ing the throw has to beat a runner cancreate anxiety. Schacht also favors the term“mistake” rather than “mental error.”“It’s a broader term.” he sayd. “and a morepositive one.”Schacht, who played college baseball atArizona State and Monmouth College,received a first-class baseball education All photos by J. Wr iqhtfrom Bobby Winkles and Jim Wasem. Late¬ly, his team has been doing some first-classplaying of its ownIM ReportAbsolutely no cleats: A softball previewIntramural Top 10Softball Top Tenpoints1. Leading Indicators <3) 482. Breckinridge (1) 443. Dead Popes (1) 424. Summarv Judgements 345. Psi U 316. Sammy Walker 257. Divinity Dogmatics 208. The Wacks Go To College<Fear and Loathing on TheSoftball Trail) 159. Hitchcock 510. Cunning Stunts 4Votes; Diamondhead, Laughlin 4, Tufts,The Nads of Coulter Your Mother. DucksDon’t Suck, Harper Hall By Howard SulsIt’s that time of year again, of rainoutsand muddy fields, and the soft squish of ballmeeting bat. As softball begins next week,many will be surprised that no cleat of anykind are allowed because of poor field condi¬tions. Also, the maximum arc on a pitch hasbeen extended from ten to fifteen feet. Withthat in mind let’s turn to this year’s preview.This year’s odds-on favorite is the LeadingIndicators, with Alan Burns back in whatmay be his final season. In the graduateMaroon division, their competition will mostlikely be Laughlin 4 and Bup o 'er Goov.Breckinridge, last year’s undergraduaterunner-up, is the favorite in the undergradu¬ate league this year. Their stiffest competi¬tion should come from Lower Rickert andUpper Flint in the red league, but these boyshave been practicing since March, so theywill be ready. In other undergraduate races,look for Hitchcock and Psi U to battle it outin the blue league, and Lower Hint andTufts in the green league. In the indepen¬dent league, Sammy Walker is back to de¬fend their title, but look for a real three team brawl between them and Ducks Don'tSuck, and The Wacks Go To College (Fearand Loathing On The Softball Trail).In other graduate leagues. Summarv Jud¬gement is the preseason favorite in the white league; however, watch for CunningStunts and possibly Diamondhead In theyellow league things are up for grabs be-IM Report to 17Oarswomen set for seasonBy Lina GoodeTo open their spring racing season, theWomen's Crew will travel to Madison onApril 28th to compete in the Midwest Row¬ing Championships at the University ofWisconsin. A lightweight four and afreshman four will represent the club at thisfirst major event.The team is looking toward the unusuallylong (2000 meters Madison races) as warm¬ups to the rest of the season. It promises tobe a strong competitive year, despite stiffchallenges from row ing programs with well-established boat clubs, state-supportedbudgets, and large team rosters.The crew's most experienced oarswomenare rowing in the lightweight four categorythis year, a classification in which thewomen must average 125 lbs., with no oneexceeding 130 lbs This weight category isadvantageous for Chicago oarswomen, ac¬cording to club president and lightweightfour stroke Susan Urbas. because of the sizeof the women on the team.“The alternative is to compete in an‘open’ category, which at the larger, na¬tional level regattas means competingagainst athletes who weigh upwards of 155pounds and often stand six feet tall,” Urbassaid. “Given the limited training facilitiesavailable to us. there is no way a generallysmaller team like UCWC can overcome thecompetitive edge that (such) additionalweight and height confer."She feels that if the team can stay hungryfor it. the chances are very good that theycan duplicate the success of the 1976 seasonin which UCWC placed fifth at the NationalChampionships in the lightweight fourcategory.The women also show much potential inthe novice (freshman) category, aclassification for oarswomen w ho have row¬ed competitively for one year or less. “The coaching.” Urbas said. “We have been very-impressed by the determination they havedisplayed thus far. If we can get them intotop physical condition, they should bringhome some medals this vear.”In preparation for the spring racingseason, ten members of the team travelledto Tennessee over spring break to make upfor “on the water” training time lost to abrutal winter and boat club problems.The oarswomen rowed at the Universityof Tennessee twice a day. working on bodyand blade technique as well as “set”, thecrucial perfect balancing of the boat in thewater. The enthusism and cooperation of theUniversity of Tennessee Rowing Club gaveChicago an excellent opportunity to ac¬complish in a week what at home wouldhave taken a month, considering the timeand distance constraints on regular morn¬ing workouts. Urbas explained that this iswhy the nation's top competitive crewstravel to Florida and Texas every year atspring break to trainThough UCWC has not been able to rowsince the end of October when the Cityprematurely closed the Lincoln Park BoatClub and thereby spoiled plans to par¬ticipate in a major regatta in Tennessee inNovember, team members pursued landtraining during the winter months. Theyhave been working out every morning sinceNovember in Bartlett Gymnasium on theweight machines and stairs, along with run¬ning at the Crown Field House track. Thesedaily winter workouts were complementedwith frequent weekend trips to the Universi¬ty of Wisconsin boathouse in Madison, whichoffers an'indoor rowing tank and the dreadof all rowers, ergometersThe hardships and workouts have only-whetted the crew's appetite for the com¬petitive season And nothing, but nothing,beats an oarswoman's appetitenovices have responded extremely well toThe Chicago Maroon — Friday. April 20, 1979 — 15^/uzf/o/fe ty/iAA/xasri/Real Estate CompanyServing Hyde Park And South Shore 493-0666MEMBER MULTIPLE LISTING(Shoreline South MLS)EAST VIEW PARK CONDO(54th next to the lake) on the sunny east side, three exposures, six rooms, twobaths. All rooms spacious, in fine shape. Floor plan “bungalow” (not a railroad).Kitchen updated but still has a pantry. Priced to sell quickly. $68,500.New Listing: Skyline, Shoreline, Cityscapes all from high floor NARAGAN-SETT (50th & the Lake). Woodburning fireplace. Parquet floors, beamedceiling, new heavy duty wiring. Excellent apt., excellent board of directors,excellent building, excellent location. Available June. $87,000. Charlotte.New Listing: CAMPUS LOCATION. 57th and Kenwood. Bay windows andwood-burning fireplace. Overlooks park. Light bright third floor. Three freshlydecorated bedrooms, two attractive baths (with showers). Built-in buffet.$74,000. Kathy.Five room condo, 57th and Kenwood. Quiet garden setting, excellent condi¬tion. No extra charge for sunshine all day. $59,500.FOR RENT1 bedroom at 4800 Chicago Beach. $390 month. Garage available, extra.House near 57th and Harper for 15 mos. fully furnished. Begins June 15.Super coach house in Kenwood, two bedrooms, air conditioning, everythingnew - $400.00. STANLEY H. KAPLANFor Over 40 Years The Standard ofExcellence In Test Preparation.MCAT* DAT- LSAT. 6RE • GRE PSYCH • 6RE BIO • 6MAT! PCAT • OCAT • VAT • MAT • SAT| MTKXUL MEDICAL BOARDS - VQE - ECFMGI FLEX'NAT! DENTAL BOARDSPODIATRY BOARDS • NURSING BOARDSFlexible Program* and Hour*Sfcn&y-H.KAPLAN Visit Any Center And See forYourself Why Wt Mike Th* DiftareociMmiOmiI C**t*rSSS Madlaon Am.N.Y. 10022 (nr. M Ot) TEST PREPARATIONSPECIALISTS SINCE 1*3*Centers in Mai or US Cities PoeCoHiCOToronto Cenete & U|»no SwtzerlendI■ CHICAGO CENTERB 6236 N. CLARKI CHICAGO, ILLINOIS■ 60660I (312)764-5353IV.S. V. SUBURBAN39 S! Lagrange rd.SUITE 203LAGRANGE, ILLINOIS.60525(332)352-5840 SPRING, SUMMERFALL INTENSIVESCOURSES STARTINGTHIS MONTH:SAT—-4 WK/MCATGRENEXT MONTH:GMAT—LSATFor Inter matron About Otter Con ton Sn More Than 80 Ma»ot US C»t»aa & AbroadOUTSIDE N.Y. STATE CALL TOLL FHEE: 800-223-1782 M How to finda summer job.Talk to Manpower.We’ve got summer jobopportunities for officetemporaries. Typists, stenos,receptionists, and more.Work as much as youwant. Or as little. It’s upto you.There’s a Manpower officealmost anywhere you’respending the summer. Stopin and we ll plan a jobschedule for you.©MANPOWER*TEMPORARY SERVICESAn equal opportunity employer.THE CENTER FORLATIN AMERICAN STUDIESPRESENTSROBERT MEANSProfessor of Law at the University of Texaswho will speak on“THE DEVELOPMENT OF CORPORATELAW AND LEGAL INSTITUTIONS:THE MEXICAN VARIANT”Monday. April 23 Pick 218 3 00PM •Eye Examinations FLAMINGO APTS.•Contact Lenses 5500 S. Shore Dr.(Soft & Hard) Studio & One Kedrin•Prescriptions Filled Furn. & Cnfurn.Short X I,ohj» Tvrm KrntiiUDR. MORTON R. MASLOV $200 - $400OPTOMETRISTS Parking pool. restaurant.Serving the UniversityCommunity for over 40 years. valet, deli ami trail:—Hyde Park Shopping Center (Mutation. Carpeting1510 E. 55th dra|>e* inel.363-6363 752-3800 TWO LECTURESBY PROFESSOR RITA GROSSProf, of Comparative Studies inReligion, Univ. of Wise. - Eau ClaireAPRIL 20 “stePs Toward Feminine Imagery8.30P.M. of Deity in Jewish Theology.”SATURDAYAPRIL 218:00P.M. ‘‘Hindu Female Images of God:A Religious Resource.”HILLEL FOUNDATION, 5715 WOODLAWN AVENUE•f In response to huge popular demand... 1, an ADDITIONAL DISCO CLASS is scheduled for Wednesday ;if evenings at 10:15. Sign up and pay ($8.00) IMMEDIATELY j•’... at Ida Noyes 210.(before 4:30). tSpecial Deskand Chair SetSingle Pedestal Metal Deskwith Walnut Plastic Topwith Matching Steno Chair —Specially priced at$95.00Bring your own trailer( BRAND >EQUIPMENTASUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:00For the Month of April, we are openSaturdays 8:30-4:00RE 4-2111 REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates: repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU. of C.l.D. New andRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave753-3303Mastercharge and Visa Accepted Houses for saleWHY PAY HIGH TAXES, HIGH PRICES?$95,000. Overlooking your own private quietpond on one acre. Brick and glass home.Custom-architect-Keck designed, newlybuilt. Cathedral planked-oak ceiling, wood-burning fireplace. 4 bedrms, 2 baths, 2-i;>car garage. Taxes, $250. yr. Near MichiganCity tollway, 55 minutes from campus.THE HUDSON CO., Chesterton, Ind.Call Charlotte, Chicago 493-6153 orEd, Chesterton 219/926-217816 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 20. 1979Chicago nine split pairBy Rich McGinnisand RW RohdeAfter literally dropping a non-conferencegame to Illinois State University on Mon¬day, the Maroon softball squad came backto squeak out a 22-0 victory over St. Xavieron Wednesday in their first conferencegame of the season.Monday’s game was a see-saw battle. Illi¬nois State fired the first salvo, scoring threeruns in the top of the first inning and thenholding the Maroons scoreless in the bottomhalf. The second inning looked even worseas State scored six runs before Kim Curranstruck out ISU’s last batter.The strikeout seemed to ignite theMaroons. Chicago scored five in the bottomof the inning and then held State scorelessfor the next three innings behind Curran’spitching while adding another five in thethird and three in the fifth. Janet Torrey andKim Curran led the hitting attacks, Torreywith an RBI-single in the second and athree-RBI bases-loaded double in the third.Curran doubled Torrey home and added an¬other RBI in the fifth when she singled inMaria Elena Malo.ISU came back in the top of the sixth toscore four runs off Curran before firstbase-man Ann Harvilla traded spots with Curranand whiffed the last batter. Malo was Chi¬cago s only answer to the State rally, knock¬ing a solo home run to deep center to put theMaroons up by one. State iced the game inthe top of the seventh, but not without a lot ofhelp from the Maroon defense. Chicago’s in¬experience became evident as the squadmade several fielding errors and countlessmental errors while ISU circled the basesfive times. The Maroons mustered one morerun in the seventh to ice the game.Wednesday’s game was a little morepleasant. While there is only so much onecan say about a 22-run output (like “theother team didn’t have a pitcher’’), theMaroon defense had some really fine playsbehind the three-hit pitching of Harvilla topreserve the shutout.The victory added some needed confi¬dence to the young squad, giving them achance to get game experience in a lowpressure situation.Chicago will get more experience todaywhen they travel to North Park College for another conference game. The Maroons fin¬ish out their conference schedule with anaway game at Trinity on Monday and ahome game against Lake Forest nextWednesday at 4:00 on North Field.IM Report from 15\tween Abnormal Deviations, Dead Popes,Divinity Dogmatics, and The Nads ofCoulter. My pick is the Dead Popes, but Di¬vinity may be real tough. In the orangeleague the favorites are South Side Hit Men,Your Mother, and Harper Hall.This year’s most exciting race should bein the open rec gold league with See YourFood and Fat City Nine challengingJimmy’s but Megabyters and Delegation ofPower could play an important role in thatdivision race. In the maroon league thingsare wide open, with the return of the Pen¬guins, Medici, and McCormick Seminary,ABA Bar Stools, and Nads II while in thewhite league Sid’s Kids, the Grays, and Tortfeasors should be at each other’s throats.Undergraduate coed blue favorite Breck¬inridge should prevail over Lower Rick-ert/Upper Wallace in the white league.Open rec coed has the Penguins. ABA BarStools, McCormick Seminary, Messer’s Me¬morial, and Drink Like Fish.Other action had Paul Cylinder win theall-U badminton title, besting graduate JimFill, after defeating Chris Scott 13-15, 15-5.15-6 for the Undergraduate title. In socimaction Chamberlin faces Henderson for theblue league title, Bradbury clinched thewhite title, Upper Flint clinched in the redleague with their two victories last week,while most of the other races are up forgrabs. There’s the Rub should give Still Bill,inactive last week, a good fight for the grad¬uate title, and Roachless Wonders and StartYour Chainsaw should be a good game forthe Independent title.Socim ResultsUndergraduate BlueAlpha/Delta Phi 1 0Henderson 3 0Chamberlin 4 3Chamberlin 6 0WhiteBradbury 3 0 FishbeinAlpha/Delta PhiThompson NorthAlpha Delta PhiLower Rickert IHMmSpA smm-Photo: John WrightDodd/Mead 3 2 Psi UDodd/Mead win ff DudleyRedUpper Flint 3 1 HitchcockUpper Flint 3 0 Shoreland 9Independent RedLunt Kickers 2 1 Rock IslandRoachless Wonders 9 0 Rock IslandWhiteStart Your Grey CityChainsaw 7 1 RollersGraduate WhiteAlbanid 3 1 BhvSci ClubSquidos 1 0 BhvSci ClubMaroonThere’s the Rub 5 2 Shiller KeepThere’s the Rub 2 0 HerculesHercules 2 0 FubanWomens WhiteUpper Flint 3 2 SnellRedShorey 2 1 Alpha Delta PhiUpper Wallace win ff Bradbury/FishbeinWith the first sighting ui uucks on l*u<eMidway 5. formerly known as softball fieldMidway 5. this signifies the beginning of in¬tramural duck hunting season. When askedfor comment IM Director Rosie Resch re¬plied. “Well. I thought duck hunting was agood idea, something for the students to do to relieve tension. Anyway it is a compro¬mise between the pacifist Administrationand the people who have been pressing thisoffice for intramural geek shooting sea¬son. ’’Permits can be obtained from the IM Of¬fice for $6.50, and hunting is only permittedwith 12 gauge shotguns. This controversialruling means that graduate physics will not.repeat, will not be allowed to use their heat¬seeking missiles and their Surface-to-Air(SAM) missiles. All entry fees will be usedto buy trout for next year's proposed LakeMidway fishing tournament.!»;| TwUuj ike (Kqumk...lommm•»ike imfi!YOUR KEY TO IA CAREERIN THE SUNBELT^pply now for summer ancfall, call or writeGraduate Schoolof Management,University of Dallas,Irving. Texas 75061(214) 438-1123 ext. 277MBA nitnniintti//|.- in!iiininni.-^.inintmnuiWoodwind QuintetPrevailing WindsBassoon, Piccolo.Flute, Oboe. Clarinet.HornWorks by Hindemith.Milhand. Arnold. Reicha4 [>.m. — Ida Noyes Library'FREE-.toSNOWED UNDERDue to Tvping Delays0RELAX!Avoid the Rush and Leave the Typing to Us.We Do:Manuscripts / Theses / DissertationsResumes / Reports / Transcriptions24 Hour Telephone Dictation ServiceE\1 A KWIK SECRETARIAL SERVICE1H0 West Washington 236-0110Weekends & Evenings 726-3572 LEXINGTONSTRINGQUARTETMichael JinboBeth BistrowDan McDonaldVan BistrowperformsHavdn St^iubertJanacekFriday. April 20 8 PMBond Chapel Free NOVELSGALORE!Missed TrainsChamber MusicSelf DiscoveryFaithful RuslanMark Coffin, U.S.S.The Pigeon Project& lit tire fromII NRI’KH I.IBK \KVSeopci.AK rf \m\<;COI.I.KCTIO\ THE MAN IN THE GLASS BOOTHScreenplay by Arthur Hiller. StarringMaximilian Schell, Lois Nettletonand Luther Adler.TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 7:30 P.M.Hillel Foundation, 5715 Woodlawn Ave.Admission: $1.00Hillel Affiliates$1.50 OthersHEAR AGAIN STEREOSells guaranteed name brand usedand demo stereo components at 40%to 70% off regular prices.TIIFSF. ARE OURWEEKLY SPECIALS:DYNACO FM5 SI 19.00SCOTT 477 IKo.OOPIONEER SX 6X0 159.00EPl 150 69.00 EASHERWOOD TlftflA 110.00EADYNACO A 25 39.00AIWA 6300 145.00BSR 710X 69.00SANSl’1.150 A 95.00PIONEER SX424 S9.00Complete systems from $75 to $ 750.60 day trade back privilege. Namebrand components for limited bud-gets.HEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 N. California 338-7737The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 20, 1979 — 17CalendarPerspectives: Topic: ‘‘World Patterns of DevelopmentAssistance” guests, Norton Ginsburg, Daniel Dzurek,and Robert Aliber, 6:30 am, Channel 7.Crossroads: Free English classes for foreign women.10:00 am.Dept of Economics: Workshop- ‘‘Equilibrium Term Struc¬ture: Empirical Methodology”, Terry Marsh, Stu 216,10:30 am-12:00 noon.Bizden Size: (Discussion will be in English) “Jewish Lifein Turkey”, speaker Rabbi Rifat Sansino, 12:30 pm, Clas¬sics 19.Physics Undergraduate Journal Club: “Tests of Astro-physical Theories Using Gamma Ray Astronomy”,speaker Steven Matz, 12:30 pm, Eckhart 208, Freepizza.Smart Gallery: Exhibit-”Jackson Pollack: New FoundWorks”, March 14-May 6.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “High Pressure Crys¬tal Chemistry of Oxides and Silicates”, speaker RobertHazen, 1:30 pm, Hinds Lab Auditorium.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction to DEC-20,3:30-5:00 pm, Research Inst. 480.Arabic Circle: (discussion in Arabic) ‘‘Development ofArabic Language Teaching Over The Last 20 Years”,speaker Prof. Carolyn Killean, 3:30 pm, Pick 218.Economic History Workshop: “Karl Polanyi and the Bir¬mingham School: Markets or Not in the Third World?-speaker John Latham, 3:30 pm, SS 1°6.Calvert House: Mass with Communal Anointing of theSick, 5:00 pm.Women’s Union: Meets 5:30 pm in Ida Noyes above theFrog and Peach.University Feminist Org.: Presents Betty Freidan, 7:00pm, Kent 107.Karate Club: Practices 7:00-9:00 pm in the dance room ofIda Noves Hall.DOC Films: “Comes A Horseman” 7:15 and 9:30 pm,“Barbarella" midnight, Cobb,barella” midnight, Cobb.India Association: Sitar Concert by Som Majundar, 8:00pm. I-House home room. Tickets at the door.Lexington String Quartet: Performs Haydn, Schubert,Janacek, 8:00 pm, Bond Chapel. FREE.Hillel: Lecture by Prof. Rita Gross: “Steps Toward Femi¬nine Imagery of Deity in Jewish Theology”, 8:30 pm, Hil¬lel.Contemporary Chamber Players: Ralph Shapey, MusicQirector. Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm. Free with ticket, infocall 753-2612.SATURDAYTable Tennis Club: Practices 10:00 am-l:00 pm. Ida Noyes3rd floor.Compton Lecture: “Leptons: The Little Ones?”, 11:00 am,Eckhart 133.UC Rugby Club: UC Rugby Club vs. Chicago Griffins, 1:00pm Stagg Field.WHPK: Success Without College: Comedic Hour,4:00-5:00 pm. Fine Women and Song: Music a Woman canIdentify With, 6:00-6:00 pm.Crossroads: Egyptian Evening at 7:00 pm, EgyptianMovie “The Woman-Student”.NAM Films: “Madame Rosa”, 7:30 and 9:30 pm, Cobb.Bernox: Presents “Dracula: Prince of Darknes”, 8:00 pmIda Noyes Hall.Hillel: Illustrated Slide Lecture by Prof. Rita Gross:“Hindu Female Images of God: A Religious Resource,8:00 pm, Hillel.Hillel: Hillel Graduate Student Mixer at InternatinalHouse. 9:00 pm. midnight.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Services, LarryL. Greenfield, 11:00 am.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch, 11:00 am, Hillel.Public Forum on Condos: To help formulate citizen’s rec¬ommendation for laws to convert condominiums, 2:00pm, 615 W. Wellington.Rockefeller Chapel: Service of the Holy Eucharist-Cele-brant. 5:00 pm.BCRDLS Film: “The Magic Christian”, 7:30 and 9:30 pm,Kent 107.Tai Chi Club: Practices 7:30 pm, 4945 Dorchester (enteron 50th St).NAM Films: “One Sings the Other Doesn’t”, 7:30 and9:30 pm, Kent.DOC Films: “King of the Road”, 8:00 pm, Cobb.Chamber Music: Berg, Brahms, and Mozart. 8:00 pm, I-House. Free.Law School Films: “Laughter in Paradise”, 8:30 pm, LawSchool Auditorium.Folkdancers: General level with teaching, 8:30-11:30pm, Ida Noyes Cloister Club.MONDAYPerspectives: Topic: “The Dangerous Combination:Parental Stress and Child Need” guests, Dr. KatherineChristoffel, Cordelia Twitty, and JoAnne Swilley, 6:30am, Channel 7.WHPK: Wake up and stay awake with WHPK Rock. 6-30Betty Friedanspeaking onERA: A NATIONAL IMPERATIVE am-l:30 pm.Crossroads: Free English Classes for foreign women,10:00 am.Bon Tempo: Renaissance music will be sung near Quad¬rangle circle for Shakespeare's birthday.Social Service Admin.: Media Center presents a behav¬ioral film festival, 12:00 noon in E-l. 5 films on behavior -alism will be shown.Ha-Sadnah: (discussion »n Hebrew) “Promotion of lsrae-li-Egyptian Peace: The Next Step”, speaker Dr. AaronAuerbach, 12:00 noon, Cobb 103.Danforth Meeting: April 23rd meeting postponed toApril 30.Calvert House: “Discussion over Lunch”, 12:30 pm, Dr.John Madden speaking.Latin American Studies: “The Development of Cor¬porate Law and Legal Institutions: The MexicanVeriant”, speaker Robert Means, 3:00 pm, Pick 218.Ultimate Frisbee Team: Practices 4:00 pm on the Mid¬way in front of Ida Noyes.Chicago City Colleges: English As a Second Languageclasses, 4:30-6:30 pm, Rickett’s Lab. Free.WHPK: Classical Music, 6:00-9:30 pm.Hotline: General meeting and Introduction. 2nd floorEast Lounge, Ida Noyes Hall, 6:00 pm.Calvert House: Bible Study at Woodward Court, 7:00pm, Room 3205.Karate Club: Practices 7:00-9:00 pm in the dance room ofIda Noyes Hall.UC Chess Club: Spring Chess Championship, four roundUSCF rated Swiss tournament, begins 7:30 pm Ida NoyesMemorial room.Women’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm, Women’s Center,3rd floor Blue Gargoyle. Info call 752-5655 or 752-5072.Hillel: Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Holocaust Me¬morial Service at Rodfei Zedek Congregation, 5200Hyde Park Blvd., Meet at Hillel 7:3 pm.NAM Films: “Decameron”, 7:30 and 9:30 pm, Cobb.Baptist Student Union: Meets 7:37 pm, in the EastLounge 2nd floor Ida Noyes Hall.Folkdancers: Beginning level with teaching, 8:00-11:30pm, Ida Noyes Cloister Club.i Ruby's Merit ChevroletSPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor oil STUDENTS ondFACULTY MEMBERS 1University of ChicagoKelt Hall RB. 107, 1020 E. 58th St.7:00 p.a. FrL, April 20th, Ada. *1.50 at doorWine 1 Cheese Reception with Bettyat hoee of State Rep. Barbara Flyn Currie5650 S. Harper 8:30p.e. - I0:00p.a.•7.50 Donation Students *5.00 Just present your University ofChicago Identification Cord.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.SUNDAY all proceeds to ERA Ratification ProjectWHPK: WHPK’s finest in Rhythm and Blues, 6:00 am-INTERNATIONAL HOUSE at theUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOpresentsA RECITAL OF INDIAN CLASSICALDANCES OF SOUTH INDIABharata Natyam and KuchupudibySrimati RajamaniSrimati Padmini Durrand their Student Miss ThuyWednesday. April 25. 1979 at 8:00 p.m.International House Asserr.1414 East 59th StreetChicago, Illinois 60637ADMISSION FREE SUMMER JOBS!All Office SkillsForTemporaryJob AssignmentsSTIVERS TEMPORARYPERSONNEL, INC.Chicago 332-5210 Ford City 581-3813Elmwood Park 453-3380 Oak Brook 654-0310Evanston 475-3500 Randhurst 392-1920Schaumburg 882-8061Also Denver, Indianapolis, Kansas City,Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Minneapolis.Natick. MA, Philadelphia, St. Louis,St. Paul. White Plains, NY CHEVROLET72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, Sat. 9-5 Farts open Sat. 'til NoonVOLKSWAGEN iSOUTH SHORE M72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Opan Daily f.f. Jo». 9-5 fort, open Sat. til Noon t18 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 20, 1979CLASSIFIED ADSSPACEVisiting prof, wants furnished room orapt, for May. 955-9782AVAILABLE to Grad Stu-dent/Teacher, 1 1/2 rooms, telephone,private bath, kitchen, desirable loca¬tion, $140 (Plaza 2-8377).*25.00 REWARD FOR GARAGE Loca-tion between 55th and 58fh, Harper andKenwood. Call Day: 753 3675. Night:241-6305.FOR SALE: Indiana Dunes. Spectacular view on dunetop overlookingLake Michigan and Indiana DunesPark. 1300 sq. ft. completely remodel¬ed 1975. Central air. Fireplace. 5 ap¬pliances. Quick possession. 568,000.Call Renard at Callahan Realty.219-926-4298.CONDOMINIUMS IN KENWOODGrand old renovated bldg. Fireplaces,sunporches, new kitchens.4 BR, 3 BATHS FROM *65,0003 BR, 2 BATHS FROM $53,0001 BR, FROM $32,000.Model Open 1-3 Sat. and Sun. 4720Greenwood. Sales 248-6400.HOUSE WANTED: 3-4 br. to rent orlease beg. June. Call 955-7405 or752-4791. Keep trying!Hyde Park deluxe 1 bedrm. Hi-riseapt. lake view w/w carpet Air Cond.May 1. $360/mo. (288-5940).Nice room, own entrance and bathavailable now, good location, call955-7083.Apt. for rent-7 rooms 4 bedrms., largekitchen, great location. Avail. May 15for 1 year-rent 450. Will consider laterstarting date 667-3716 after 5:30 p.m.Cond. for sale in HP Newport bldg. 1bedroom lake view. Call 268-5046.Near campus-room and private bathfor rent for a male. $10/mo. Call DO3-2521.Pleasant apartment - Hyde Perk and55th. May or June. About *200. Call667-3361 evenings or weekends.Charming mod. yr. round cottage InInd. Dunes overlooking lake, sleeps 6,available for one summer month.Reas. rent. Refs. reqd. Shown by appf.Phone wkdays 9 to 5. H Y 3-0200.Woman grad student or employed per¬son sought to share spacious (3 br.)apt. with one other. Couple possible.Rent S12S/mo.; Call Marjorie. 288-6026evenings. Available May or June.PEOPLE WANTEDBabysitter - 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/yearround Europe, S. America, Australia,Asia, Etc. All Fields, *500*1200 mon¬thly. Expenses paid. Sightseeing. Freeinfo. Write: IJC, Box 52-11, Corona DelMar, CA 92625.Part-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.Subjects wanted for psycholinguisticsexperiments. Will be paid. To registercall 753-4718.Wanted: Musical group to play in alounge. Contact Jim at 523-6597.Substitute teachers wanted for daycare center near the university. Ex¬perience with young children helpful.All hours 7:30-6:00. Carole Browning324-4100.Wanted: Female bartenders.Jim, 523 6597. CallRap group for women. Mondays at7:30 p.m., in the Women's Center, 3rdfloor Blue Gargoyle. Zionist Youth Movement has paidleadership positions available. Ex¬perience with children preferred. Call676-9790.Hebrew speaking youth groups atelementary and junior high levelsneed leaders - decent pay call 676-9790.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS While-U-Wait.MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 55th St.493-6700.Apt. 6A, 5000 Cornell Ave. Furniture,appliances and assorted householditems for sale, Saturday, April 21, 9a.m.-5p.m.l pr. size 10 Brooks soccer cleats wornonce! Over *30 new, *20. Call 753-8342,rm. 923. Leave number.1978 Ford Pinto 20,000 hwy. mis. 8mths. old. FM rustproofing mint con¬dition. 363-2529 late.FOR SALEBY OWNERSCENESEye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know the differ¬ence between advertised cheapglasses or contact lenses and com¬petent professional service.Our reputation is your guaranteeof satisfaction. Apologies to those who expected a cof¬feehouse this weekend. Interveningconflicts... UCGala.SINGLE, JEWISH, AND LIVING INHYDE PARK (Aoe 25-45). The HydePark/Kenwood Council of JewishOrganizations is sponsoring a SinglesConference on: Sunday, April 22,12:30-6:00 p.m. K.A.M. Temple 1100Hyde Park Blvd. The day will beginwith brunch, leading Into discussionsfacilitated by professionals coveringthe Legal/Financial,Psychological/Social, Religious/Communai topics of being single. The con¬ference will conclude with a wine andcheese hour (all food is kosher). Forregistration and information pleasecall Irene Gordon at 363-2770.Pottery classes - mysteries of the pot¬ter's wheel revealed , along with hand¬building beginner and advancedlevels. Call Marianne Hammett538-6717.MATH MINUSFEAR GROUPAt Blue Gargoyle Thursdays 6-8:30pm. April 26. Call 536-4709 or 624-0595for more info.HOTLINELike new king-size hide-a-bedw/corner table and love seat, Expandodin. table w/6 Stackmore chairs, ig.new uphol. foam rubber L-shaped liv.rm. set, glass and wrought iron brkfst.set, walnut and black leather swivellounge chair and ottoman, end tables,air conditioners, lamps, odd chairs,pictures, many other items. All mustgo, moving. Call J.R. Wolf, PL2-1900for appt,tPEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK of all kinds-drawingcalligraphy, illustration, hand- ad¬dressing 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.FOREIGN STUDENTS: I will readyour term paper or thesis and correctall English errors. ExperiencedEnglish teacher. Reasonable rates call477-1639, until 9:30 p.m. Volunteers wanted to organize andstaff night-time information andlistening service. Interested? Call753-4207 days or 752-5860 evenings.PERSONALSPregnant? Troubled? Cali 233-0305for help. Free test referral.I think it's great that all you peoplecome procrastinate in my coffee shop.I love to Hear snatches of all the crazyand interesting conversations. Reg.——GOOD HOME WANTED for smallshepherd/collie. Approx. 2 yrs. oldhousetrained devoted-good watchdog,excellent housedog. Owner leavingcountry. 752-3157.Tent for rent. All need not apply. In¬quiries accepted now. The little oldtentmaker.FOODWomen) En|oy spring this year. Self-defense classes for women begin Mon¬day 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.COME TO THE SCHOOLS FAIR andmake an informed elementary schoolchoice for your child. Sunday, April 22,2:00 Teacher Center, 53St. YMCA.POTTERY CLASSES small groupslots of attention new daytime groupsforming 624-7568.Summer Child Care Solution ThinkSunshine! Once again Sojourner Truthwill offer an excellent summer pro¬gram for 6,7,8 yr. olds as well as 3,4,5yr. olds. Program includes field trips,arts, crafts, music, sports. Open 7a m.-6p.m. 538-8325.RUMMAGE SALE at the BlueGargoyle, 5655 S. University. Satur¬day, April 28, 10:00 a m.-5:00 p.m. Kit¬chen supplies, Furniture, Clothes,Curios.Do you sometimes feel like dancing?Are you tired of disco or just ready totry something new for a change?Maybe FOLK DANCING is for you.Bring a friend or 2 and check it outMon. night at 8:00 (special beginner'ssession) or Sun. at 8:30 at Ida Noyes.Teaching both nights. For more infocall 643 9654. The Pub in Ida Noyes now has a varie¬ty of fast servlet food available. From4 p.m. • midnight.LOST AND FOUNDFound: Pocket knife near 58th andKimbark. Phone 955-2441 eves, anddescribe. Found April 9.Found: small Bengy-type dog. Firstseen last Oct. on quads. To identify,call 324-4399.LOST: Large black male cat. Vic. 54thand Everett. Silver bell and tagsaround neck. "Meows'' a lot. Sim-mons, 493-3647.LEGAL NOTICENotice is hereby given pursuant to "Anact in relation to the use of an assumedname in the conduct or transaction ofbusiness in the state" as amended thata certificate was filed by the under¬signed in the county clerk of CookCounty File no. K65194. MonetaFinancing-International, 29 E.Madison, Chicago, Illinois 60602, by:David R. Burton and Peter E. Lourenco.LOX AND BAGELBRUNCHWe're back with the first lox and bagelbrunch of the Spring Quarter-Sunday,April 22, 11:00 a m. Hillel Foundation.5715 Woodlawn.YEARBOOK be printed. Don't be caught without acopy, order your copy now. Call753 2249 Ext. 3428 or 1414or 955-4437.BACKGAMMONMARATHON64 hours of continuous play bymembers of Compton House(Shorelend 8). Action begins on Fri¬day, April 20 at 8:00 p.m. and con¬cludes on Monday, April 23 at 12:00noon. Donations are to go to CancerResearch at Billings Hosplal. Dona¬tions made per game or per hour. Call7529459.HOUSE REPAIRCarpentry Painting Yard and treework etc. If you need any of these donethis summer call 955-5372, Low rates,Experienced, U.C. Students.ONLY A LIMITEDNUMBEROFTICKETS LEFTFaculty and Staff tickets almost soldout for "String of Pearls." Limitednumber of tickets stilt available atReynolds Club box Office - 753-3580, forthe Glenn Miller Orchestra, April 27,1979. Ida Noyes Hall.FOTAFESTTop Chicago performers, live in IdaNoyes, Friday April 20—tonight9 p.m.Mighty Joe Young and his blues band,a favorite at Wise Fools Pub, FaithPillow, jazz vocalist, a popular attrac¬tion at Orphans, the Reification Co., animprov comedy group, plus a disco. Tosee and hear quality entertainmentlike this elsewhere would cost over *10,but Festival Of The Arts FOTA bringsit to U of C for *3.50.GETSASIFIEDLearn to use SAS (Statistic AnalysisSystem). This 6 session course is forusers who already know anotherstatistical package. Come to Computa¬tion Center before April 26 to register.Call 753-8400 for information. Classstarts April 30. Computer time provid¬ed. Cost . *25 TAI CHI CH'UANThe UC Tai Chi Ch'uan Club is laun¬ching a spring recruitment programfor its classes every Sunday at 7:30,4945 S. Dorchester (enter on 50th St).Please come for a free introductoryclass of the soft, slow, graceful,balletic Tai Chi. We study themedicinal, theraputic practical,spiritual and other aspects of Tai Chi.All are welcome.FOTAFEST"Help Festival Of The Arts celebrateits 25th anniversary," says ChicagoMagazine, it's FOTAFEST, topChicago performers filling Ida Noyesthis Friday, Mighty Joe Young and hisblues band, jazz vocalist Faith Pillow,the Improv comedy group ReificationCo., plus a disco. $3.50 UC ID. *4others,9p.m. to l a.m.FRIENDS OFTHE PUBOur dear Pub may be trouble CityCouncil's recent action has decreasedthe volume of business considerably.All those interested in keeping ourdear Pub open come to the Pub im¬mediately. Sorry: you must be 21 yrsor older 493-7810. Nancy Gaia. ED.* ;NOONTIMEHow quick are you? Can you keep upwith the best minds in the world?Match wits with the creme de lacreme. A spelling bee, Monday noonHutch Court Festival Of The Artsnoontime series.HOTLINE MEETINGAll welcome to introductory meetingLearn more and volunteer. Ida NoyesHall, Monday April 23rd, 2nd floor,East Lounge, 6.00 p.m.WOMEN'SMAGAZINEPOETRYA Poetry Magazine w/art NOW TAK¬ING WORK FOR SPRING ISSUE.Undergrads invited to submit poems,prose, photos, and artwork. Also an¬nouncing our first annual poetry con¬test. Theme is things you'd like to telleveryone Deadline for all work isApril 27. Leave works in Ida NoyesCloakroom. For more infor call Primavera, the women's literarymagazine, needs new staff membersFor info, call 752-5655. The magazine ison sale in most Hyde Park bookstoresSPACE WANTEDResponsible U of C student will babysitin exchange for room and board thissummer. References available,experience sitter. Call Richard684-2108 afternoons and evenings. InHyde Park only.SUMMERCH1NESEBeginning Chinese. Intensive summercourse in Mandarin. Speak, read,write. Cover material of most firstyear college courses. Mornings, Mthrough F, 10 wks. Fee *600.00 Non- in¬tensive evening course also availableContact: Cheng Yang Borchert FELC753-2628, 493-6420TmUuj gout Coue.ttMMtm ike iwxldWOODWINDQUINTET ■Take your choice*The Prevailing Winds’ a woodwindquintet recital Sunday, April 22. IdaNoyes Library, 4:00 p.m. FREE.PROSPECTIVESTUDENTSVisit UC Gay and Lesbian Alliance.Open from noon Fri. Ida Noyes 1212 E.59th, rm, 301. 753-3274.SPELLING BEEMonday, noon in Hutch Court.Can you spell?Are you a bee? HYM PfVKK1S52 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim’Mon. • Sat. 9 - 8; Sun. 12 - 5PipesPipe Tobaccos. Imported Cigarettes Cigars.Jisculpture from new guineatues. - sat. 2 to 6324-3088gallery b1645 e. 53rdAfter a long absence the Cap andGown is back... But only 500 copies willJIMMY’Sisn’t listed yet on theNational Registerof Historic Places, but |it does have apedigree.MEN!WOMEN!JOBS!( RI ISK SIlirs.KKKK.HTKRSNo experience. Highpay! See Kurope. Ha¬waii. Australia. So.America. Winter, Sum¬mer!*Send S2.75 toSEA WORLDBOX 61035Sacramento, CA 95825 fM-SAWNWCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSp0<lalltlng inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO S:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12TO 8:30 P.M.Orders to Toke Out131S Eott 63rd MU 4-1061 marian realty, inc.REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available-Students Welcome-On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 YUM! YUM!OdOtB YOU* COLLECTION OrCHOCOLATE SWEET00THILLUSTRATED GOURMET BECtPESA taOuKM Hxd*, of tr.*, aoumewou*tnaaandinjA avenm -aooaa mx* ®an»V»v»a Buoacwc an« Owni Iyour mane* to men i Hanma o> aauK i incSocofata dauans ho» car yoc -a**'ONLY $3 98Oor I aafay' Omar (oaay1°'aa*« ado !% awaa u w Na*Su»a Sano cftac* ex Tonav omm »TISHOMINGOBox 37 Maa Vo* 'OOOtVERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive 1 Vs and2V2 Room StudiosFurnished or V nfurnishedS189 - $287Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. GroakThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 20, 1979 — 19Help Festival of the ArtsCelebrate its 25thAnniversary!— CHICAGO MagazineMighty Joe Youngand his blues band...always a favorite at Wise Fools Pub, and last sum¬mer a Hit at Chicago Fest...One of Chicago s finestbiuesmen. Faith Pillowjazz vocalistAfter popular appearances at Wise Fool's Pub, Or¬phan's and Chicago Fest, one of Chicago s risingfemale stars.Plus - - -A DISCOThe Reification Co.Spontaneity at its best. You might have been one ofthe lucky ones to catch their packed U of C showtwo years ago, if not, here s your chance to see thisfunny, funny group. comedy troupApril 20 9 p.m.- 1 a.m.Ida Noyes Hall$3.50 WITH U.C. I.D. $4.00 OTHERS