The Chicago Maroonvoi. 88, NO. 49 The University of Chicago The Chicago Maroon 1979 Friday, April 27, 1979Murphy expands chargesagainst Manteno and UCActing Public Guardian Patrick Murphy By Jaan Eliasand Jacob LevineUniversity psychiatrists havebeen supervising psychotropicdrug experiments using mentalpatients at Manteno State Hospi¬tal, a suit filed Tuesday by ActingCook County Public Guardian Pa¬trick Murphy charges.The suit, an amended version ofthe one Murphy filed two weeksago, also includes allegations thatlobotomies, sulphur and oil treat¬ments, the use of certain drugs tolower blood pressure, insulinshock therapy, and muscle biop-S. Africa proxiesUC votes both for and against;may divulge summary in springBy David GlocknerThe University has “voted forsome and against some’’ proxyresolutions concerning South Afri¬can operations of companies itowns stock in, according to Univer¬sity Treasurer Mary Petrie.The University has a policy ofsupporting anti-apartheid resolu¬tions sponsored by shareholders ifit determines that the company is“not responding” to questionsabout its South African activities,Petrie said.Petrie refused to disclose thenames of the companies involvedor the number of times the Univer¬sity has rejected management’sadvice to shareholders and votedfor resolutions limiting South Afri¬can activities.“There is a general feeling”among University officials that theinformation should not be madepublic now, Petrie said, because“we have gift problems and otherrelationships” with some of thecompanies whose management theUniversity voted against.A public announcement by theUniversity that it voted against theposition of a company’s manage¬ment would embarrass the com¬pany, Petrie said. But she said theUniversity may release a summa¬ry of its proxy votes after the cur¬rent round of shareholders meet¬ings ends late this spring.The University holds stock inmore than 30 companies that havebusiness interests in South Africa.At least two — Mobil and Exxon —will hold proxy votes on resolutionsto restrict their South Africanoperations.Continental Illinois Bank, an¬other company the Universityholds shares in, voted Monday on aresolution requiring it to publiclyreveal the extent of its investmentsin South Africa and to draft a poli¬cy governing future investments inthat country.According to Petrie, severalother companies the Universityowns stock in either have held orwill hold proxy votes on the issue of South African investment.The University has always votedagainst management’s position oncertain proxy issues, Petrie said,and its conflicts with managementhave not been limited to the SouthAfrican issue.A representative for a New Yorkcorporate watchdog group, theCenter for Corporate Responsibili¬ty, said University PresidentHanna Gray failed to attend a shareholder meeting of MorganGuaranty last Wednesday. Gray isa member of the Morgan Guarantyboard of directors.Shareholders at that meetingconsidered and overwhelminglyrejected a resolution requiring thecompany to disclose the extent andimpact of its investments in SouthAfrica, the representative said.Gray was not available for com¬ment before press time. sies were performed on patients atManteno for experimental pur¬poses since the 1950’s in conjunc¬tion with the University's psychia¬try department. The University,the Illinois Department of MentalHealth, and “unnamed drug com¬panies” are named as codefen¬dants in the suit.The suit also charges that toomuch blood was drawn from pa¬tients at Manteno while hemato¬logy experiments were being con¬ducted.The experiments involved pa¬tients in a ward called Singer VI,commonly known as the ClinicalInvestigations Unit (CIU). Theconsulting psychiatrist on theward is Dr. John Crayton, as asso¬ciate professor of psychiatry at theUniversity.Crayton is quoted in the suit assaying that, the CIU was set up spe¬cifically to study the efficacy “ofvarious psychotropic drugs andtheir mechanisms of actions.” Ac¬cording to the suit, a patient iden¬tified as “James J.” has receivedpsychotropic drugs includingThorizine, Looxitine, Navine,Prlixine. Haldol. Mellaril, and adrug still in the experimentalstage called Butaprerizine.“No curative effect”According to Murphy, there aretwo forms of therapy at Manteno.Either the patient is subjected toabysmal conditions in the wardswith no individual or group thera¬py or he is placed on drugs whichthe suit says “have no curative ef¬ fect but merely chemically re¬strain and tranquilize the patientso that he or she causes no realproblems but also prevent any realopportunity of improvement.”Murphy visited Manteno onApril 17,1979 and said that patientscomplained that they were“stripped naked, tied up in frozensheets and tied to their beds.”Murphy also said that many of thepatients complained of a burningsensation in their stomachs fromthe drugs. The patients also object¬ed to the fact that Crayton only vi¬sited them twice a month. Craytoncould not be reached for com¬ment.Dr. Claude Rousch. superintend¬ent of Manteno, said that he oftensawr Crayton there “repeatedlythrough the week.” Rousch con¬firmed the existence of CIU andDr. Crayton’s role as a consultingpsychiatrist.Unnamed drug companiesAlso listed as defendants in therevised suit are unnamed drugcompanies who provided psycho¬tropic drugs free to physiciansdoing research with them. In thesuit, Murphy charges, “At thepresent time at Manteno (in theclinical investigations unit) drugsof an experimental nature and inexperimental amounts and combi¬nations are being given to patientswho do not understand the natureof the drugs, the nature of the side-effects, and the effects of the ex¬perimentation.”to 2Elton wins SG presidency 496 to 419;slim margin for divestment, no to draftBy Greg MizeraJeff Elton, a second-year Collegestudent was elected president ofthe Student Government (SG)Tuesday. Elton’s Greater StudentInfluence (GSI) slate won most ofthe other top SG positions in a rela¬tively light turnout.Two referenda were included onthe ballot. Students supported amotion for the University to divestfrom corporations which conductbusiness with South Africa by amargin of 490 to 446. while the pro-For referenda results, seep. 3posed revival of the military draftwas opposed by 837 students andapproved by only 238 others.Elton defeated Jeanne Klimczakof the Progressive Action Party(PAP) by 80 votes out of a total of912 votes cast for president. OnlyHadya Shmavonian, the PAP can¬didate for vice-president, prevent¬ed a GSI sweep of upper levelposts. Shmavonian garnered 455ballots to 436 for her opponent, TimSpears.In other contests, John Polster(GSI) defeated Greg Samorajski (PAPJ by 27 votes to win the trea¬surer’s seat. Jeff Leavell (GSI)was re-elected Finance CommitteeChairman by 94 votes over AdamPool (PAP). And GSI’s Jeff Laskywon unopposed in his bid to retainthe position of secretary.As in recent years, most studentsstayed away from the polls. Thenumber of ballots cast for presi¬dent was slightly lower than lastyear's total of 1175. Only the draftreferendum drew more than athousand votes.President-elect Elton attributedhis slate’s victory to superior orga¬nization. “Our unity was reflectedin the things we had to offer stu¬dents,” Elton said. I think we putmore thought and interest into acoherent platform.”Elton said he started his cam¬paign weeks before Klimczak. whodid not have time to build up a sys¬tem of supporters. “It was a veryquiet election and most of the cam¬paigning was done by word ofmouth. That’s where I won,” hesaid.Elton, whose platform was basedon giving students a greater voicein University affairs, warnedagainst hoping for too much toosoon. He restated his plans to pushfor student participation on aca- Photo: John CherneffSG election judges counting ballots.demic review committees and onthe Board of Trustees but claimedthat this would be on an advisorialbasis at first. Voting student repre¬sentatives might be a reality with¬in a few years, he said.Among Elton's other goals is anincrease in campus events throughcooperation between SG and theMajor Activities Board. He envi¬sions a series of concerts to be jointly, sponsored by the twogroups which would raise students'confidence in their representa¬tives’ ability to get things done.“It (SG) has been considered ajoke too long. We hope to build uprespectability by activities, by ser¬vice to students.” Elton is “sure”that the near sweep of the GSI slatewill provide him with the supporthe needs to rejuvenate SG.Murphy makes furthercharges; suit ammendedperiments for six weeks after that, then theapparatus was dismantled and transferredto Argonne National Laboratory.Monaco did not realize the possibility thatradiation had caused his cancer until after asuccessful operation to remove the cancertwo years ago. mand for even the most essential func¬tions.Access to FilesOn May 4, Murphy will seek an injunctionfrom Judge Margaret O’Malley that wouldallow him to examine patient files at Man-teno. Murphy has charged in the past thatmany patient records were hidden in thebasement of Manteno, and the patient’s nor¬mal file was kept separate from the recordswhich detail experimental operations per¬formed upon the patients. Murphy obtaineda temporary restraining order from O’Mal¬ley on April 11 which stopped the Illinois De¬partment of Mental Health (IDMH) fromdestroying any records pertaining to thecase.Since his April 17 visit to Manteno,Murphy has been banned from the groundsof the hospital by the IDMH. Murphy filedsuit on Tuesday to gain access to his wardsat Manteno, and to talk with other patientswho are in need of a guardian. The chargesagainst the IDMH and the University are aresult of visits to Manteno, Murphy says.The original suit, which Murphy amendedon Tuesday with additional allegations, con¬cerned University involvment with IDMH inconducting adrenalectomies on patientswithout proper consent and for researchpurposes only. A University spokesman de¬nied Murphy’s charge that the andrenalec-tomies were improper, saying on April 11that the surgery and the follow-up care was“in the best tradition of medicine.”Hotline to open in the fallA group of University students has estab¬lished a telephone “information, referral,and listening” service to open in the fallquarter of 1979. The service is similar to“hotlines” operated at other campuses andby counseling services.The service has been organized with thecooperation of the dean of students office;E. Spencer Parsons, dean of RockefellerChapel; and faculty members from the de¬partment of human development, the Schoolof Social Service Administration, and thestudent mental health clinic. An advisoryboard of faculty members and professionalcounselors was formed last year and is a consultant to the service.The service will be staffed exclusively bygraduate and undergraduate students andwill operate nightly throughout the academ¬ic year.The staff is now setting up its operationsin preparation for next year’s opening.Teams of professional and student counsel¬ors will interview volunteers during fifthand sixth weeks, and a two-week trainingperiod will begin seventh week.There will be a general informational andrecruitment meeting for those interested inworking with the service on Monday, May 7,at 6 pm in the East Lounge of Ida NoyesHall.Alumnus: UC radiation caused cancerfrom 1Dr. Rousch told Murphy the patients inCIU gave informed consents, according tothe suit. Murphy has charged that since heis James J.’s guardian, James J. was un¬able to give informed consent. Murphy alsoclaims that of the 20 patients in CIU hetalked to, only one knew he was a researchsubject and that person was not aware of theside effects of the drugs he was given.In his amended suit Murphy also detailscomments by Dr. William Gallagher, a'Manteno physician, who assisted Dr. Nath¬aniel Apter, Chairman of the University’sdepartment of psychiatry from 1950-54, inApter’s study of bilateral andrenalectomies.According to the suit, “Genevieve P.,” a pa¬tient at Manteno with fairly good judgmen¬tal capabilities was given a frontal lobotomyand then released to the general populationbecause, according to Gallagher, she was“unsuitable for future research.” After thesurgery, she was totally dependent on com-in 1976 he identified preproinsulin. Boththese molecules are vital to the process inwhich insulin is formed.The Passano Award has been offeredsince 1945. Eight recipients of the PassanoAward have gone on to win the NobelPrize, including Dr. Charles Huggins ofthe University.Dr. Donald Steiner, chairman of the bio¬chemistry department, received the 1979Passano Award for an outstanding contri¬bution to the advancement of science inBaltimore on April 23.Steiner won his prize for research intothe precursors of insulin. In 1966, he dis¬covered and characterized proinsulin andBy Bruce LewensteinResponding to the growng national con¬cern over low-level radiation, a Californiaattorney has filed two $1 million suitsagainst the federal government. He claimsradiation he was exposed to at the Universi¬ty in the early 1940’s resulted in a cancer ofhis colon and a birth defect in his daugh¬ter.Daniel Monaco, 56, claims the radiationoriginated in the laboratory of EnricoFermi, who was experimenting on nuclearfission for the U.S. Army during World WarII. Fermi’s laboratory was located underthe west grandstand of the original StaggField, where Regenstein Library is now lo¬cated., CorrectionA story in Tuesday’s Maroon sayingthat an assaulted member of the SpartacusYouth League (SYL) was selling The Mili¬tant was incorrect. The Young Spartacusis the newspaper of the SYL. The Maroonregrets the error. Monaco, who was studying Japanese inthe Army Specialized Training Program(ASTP), says he used to sunbathe on top ofthe west stands. He says some of the radia¬tion “leaked” up to where he lay.Herbert Anderson, Distinguished ServiceProfessor in the department of physics,worked with Fermi on the experiments anddoubts both that Monaco could have been ir¬radiated by Fermi’s experiments and thathe could trace his cancer to that radiationeven if he had been exposed. “The cancer ismore likely to have developed due to thesun’s rays he got, or it could be from branflakes,” said Anderson.The dates also seem to work against Mon¬aco. He claims he attended the University“during 1943 and 1944.” The ASTP was es¬tablished in April, 1943, according to recordsin University archives, and Monaco’s nameis on a convocation program dated October,1944.But Fermi’s most famous experiment, thefirst self-sustaining controlled nuclear chainreaction, occurred six months earlier on De¬cember 2, 1942. According to Anderson,there was only low radiation during the “20-minute affair.” He said there were some ex-ValuableCoupon!The 4th is free whenyou order 3When you order 4 same-size color reprints of yourfavorite KODACOLORNegatives, you'll pay foronly 3. This couponentitles you to 1 Free It’san offer you wan t want tomiss, but it expires May16, 1979 So you’ll haveto hurry Just stop in formore details, and be sureto bring this couponwith youCOLORPROCESSING•v Kodak Model Camera1342 E. 55th493-6700VALUABLE COUPON-CUT OUT ^ 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 27,28, 298:30 P.M., Sundays at 7:30 P.M.$2.00 general;$1.50 Students andSenior Citizens753-3581Reynolds Club Theatre57th & University2 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 27, 1979Photo: Carol StudenmundAn Action Committee sponsored demonstration for divestmentStudents down on draft,up on divestment Spray paint graffitigets mixed reviewsStudent voters endorsed divestment ofUniversity funds from South African cor¬porations in this week’s Student Govern¬ment (SG) sponsored referenda and op¬posed overwhelmingly bills now beforeCongress to institute a draft.The divestment question, which has po¬larized the University community in re¬cent months, was finally put before the stu¬dent body and many people were surprisedby the result. Roger Horowitz of the SouthAfrica Action Committee expressed plea¬sure over the prodivestment vote but feltthat the small majority (490 to 446) did notaccurately rellect student opinion. Hecited the lack of publicity on the referen¬dum and irregular polling practices as fac¬tors which kep many divestment support¬ers from voting.As to the referendum’s effect on thetrustees, Horowitz doubted it would bevery great. “They’ve ignored a petitionsigned by 2400 people, they’ve ignored de¬monstrations.. . this may increase thepressure on them but I don't think they’lldecide to divest immediately.’’Jeff Elton, the newly-elected SG presi¬dent, said the referendum was not a man¬date from the voters. “Firstly, this was nota random cross-section-only 900 peoplevoted and the result was almost a 50-50split. Secondly, there was an unusualnumber of no opinions’ - that shows there’s a lot of uncertainty on this issue.’’Elton said that as president he hopes tohold several forums and perhaps conduct ascientific poll to discover how most stu¬dents really stand on divestment.The rejection of the draft proposals (837to 238) was expected since voting was dom¬inated by College students who are in theage group affected by the bills. The smallnumber of “yes” votes seemed to comelargely from older graduate students whoare above the 23 year age limit which thebills place on eligible draftees.G.M.Over 1600 anxious high school studentswere offered admission last week to the Col¬lege. Although applications were up by 100this year over last, about the same numberof students have been offered admission thisyear as last.Director of College Admissions FredBrooks said he could not predict how manvstudents would accept admission here.Based on past figures, however, the class of1983 will probably be made up of at least 700students.The College received about 2800 applica- By Abbe Fletman and Sue SartainReaction to graffiti sprayed at over 50Hyde Park locations saying “women rapedhere” was mixed, unanimous only in thatnone of those interviewed wanted to be quot¬ed by name.Many students said the graffiti was an ef¬fective way to attract attention to the prob¬lems'of rape and crime in general in HydePark. Some said the release of crime statis¬tics by a reliable source is desirable. Somesaid they could not support the spray-paint¬ing. calling it “vandalism.” Others ap¬proved of the “guerilla theatre” tactic.One professor expressed concern that thesprav-painting may cause the administra¬tion to be less receptive to a movement oncampus urging the University to releasecrime statistics.Another professor said a demonstrationmight have been more effective in callingadministrators’ attention to the problems ofcrime.Although University adminstrators havedenied that rapes took place at seven on-campus spray-paint locations, few studentshave questioned the accuracy of the graffiti.Most students interviewed considered thegraffiti to be “a statement.”“A woman could have been raped here.” aCollege student said.At the Hyde Park Shopping Center, wheretwo rapes were allegedly committed, aplaza security guard ‘insisted no rapes hadoccurred. “A police squad car parks in frontof University Bank where he can keep hiseye on the whole plaza." said the guard.“It was just some prank. Hyde Park is abeautiful place. I would love to have my kidsgrow up here.” he said.Those property owners and maintenancemen who were left to remove the graffiti be¬moaned the difficulty of washing it off.“I went to the hardware store to see ifthere were some chemicals I could use to re¬move the graffiti.” said a Hyde Park Shop¬ping Center maintenance man. “They hadthe same signs written in front of their storeThey said the only way to get it up was tosandblast it.”One shopper who had recently had herpurse snatched said. “It’s a damn shame”tions this year. The exact number and com¬position of the class of 1983 will not bedefinite until after the May 1 deadline forresponses from prospective students.This weekend recruiting continues withvisits from 180 high school seniors. The firstStudent Schools Committee-sponsored“April Weekend” took place last weekend that students from the University spray-painted the area. “There are plenty of otherways to go about making a point, and thiswill only give people ideas.”But one long-time Hyde Park resident dis¬agreed. “The nerve of the University to saythey’re going to discipline these students.”she said. “They should shut up and releasethe crime statistics.”Curriculum taskforce to meetTwo second-year students in the Collegeare organizing a student task force on edu¬cation in the College. They have called anopen meeting for all interested students tobe held Sundav at 7:30 pm in Ida NovesHall.The task force has obtained the coopera¬tion of Jonathan Z. Smith, dean of the Col¬lege. Smith will determine if the groupmerits support after reviewing Sunday'smeeting.David Shute and Lawrence McNally wereinspired by two resolutions of the Academ¬ics Committee of the Intercollegiate Organi¬zation. the so-called “Little Ten.” The reso¬lutions called for inquiry into the aims andactualities of liberal education.Shute and McNally returned from thefounding conference of the Little Ten at theUniversity of Pennsylvania in Februaryand. together with other conference partici¬pants. have started a chapter on campus. Asummary* of conference reports will be pub¬lished here next week.“We hope that enough students will attendthe meeting to show the Dean that there is agenuine interest in looking at what the Col¬lege curriculum is and what it could be,”Shute said. “This is an opportunity for stu¬dents to make their ideas known and lis¬tened to.”Though the task force will be composed ofstudents, it will take advantage of “all avail¬able resources,’’ including facultymembers, alumni, and adminstrators.Shute said.othersand drew 160 prospective students and about100 parents.Prospective students on the second AprilWeekend arrived yesterday. After attendingclasses, participating in special socialevents, and observing life of the University,the prospective students will depart tomor¬row at 5:30 pm.UC: yes to some, but no toLEGAL - MEDICAL ETHICSCalvert House5735 University288-2311- April 28th - 5:45-8:30 p.m. -"EXPERIMENTAL SUBJECTS ANDSUSPECT CONSENT: mental patients,prisoners, etc."Panel: Norval Morris (Law School)Albert Dorfman (Wyler Children's Hospital)Jack Stotts (McCormick Seminary)Supper will be served RALLY-MAY 1AGAINST THE NEW DRAFTUNCLE SAM WANTS YOU, AGAIN!WE INTEND TO STOP HIM .JOIN USI The l\lew ResistanceStudent* For 4 Libertarian Society11:00 a.m.f Tuesday May 1st,Ida Noyes Hall Library, First Floor (West)Protest Rally and March.For more information: Call 753-3990 (Ask for Mr. Majors)The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 27, 1979 — 3Crime on the streets,crime in theadministrationThe streets of Hyde Park are filled with Uni¬versity security police and lined with white secu¬rity telephones. They also are the site of mug¬gings, assault, and rape to what extent thecommunity may never know.Hyde Park is part of the 21st Police Districtwhich extends from 16th St. to 61st St. and fromCottage Grove Aye. to the Lake. Statistics aboutcrime are compiled on a district-wide basis, andconsequently are not representative of HydePark alone.The 21st District also compiles a “24-hour ac¬tivity report” that details crimes reported andsuspects arrested. The Police share this reportwith University security officers and the Univer¬sity compiles data specific to Hyde Park. But be¬cause the report lists the names of victims. Dis¬trict Commander George MacMahon said hewould not release it to The Maroon or any othernewspaper.MacMahon has agreed to talk with a Maroonreporter on a monthly basis about Hyde Parkcrime. We commend him both for his unwilling¬ness to release the names of victims and for hisopenness. The release of information aboutcrime will lead to a greater consciousness aboutwhere crimes are committed and when. Thisknowledge is necessary if community residentsare to take reasonable precautions against streetcrime.The University policy of keeping crime statis¬tics to themselves leads some people to believecrime does not occurr in Hyde Park, while feed¬ing the fears of others. It encourages the rumormill that makes crime stories more gruesomeeach time they are retold. And it encourages thebelief that the University is more interested inrecruiting new students than in protecting thosealready here.That acts such as the sprav-painting of mes¬sages on sidewalks are necessary to prod the ad¬ministration to take action on serious campusproblems is something we would rather not be¬lieve. We still hope to be convinced it is not so.The Chicago MaroonEditor: Abbe FletmanNews editor: Eric Von der PortenFeatures editor: Claudia MagatPhotography editor: Carol StudenmundSports editor: R. W RohdeAssociate editors: Andrew Patner. Jacob LevineContributing editor: Nancy ClevelandCopy editor: Doug ThomsonBusiness Manager: Suzanne FarrandAd manager: Wanda JonesOffice manager: Leslie WickLayout and graphics: Chris PersonsProduction: David Miller. Peter AdelsStaff: Tim Baker. Curtis Black, David Burton. Leekit Kendall Christiansen, JaanElias, Dav< cJackie Hardy Chris Isidore. Richard Kaye Carol Klam¬mer, Bob Larson. Bette Leash. Bruce Lewenstein. Donaid Link, Dan Loube, Michael; Rabin Andy Rothman.Sue Sartain, Margot Slauson. Howard Suls. CalvinThrilling. Mark Wallach. John Wright4 rne Chicago Maroon Friday. 1; ■ . ' ' V- . * r*<{&*<,<-. i27, 197?m. ' ■ Wm ;'U shLaAs Letters to theA more thanpretentious placeTo the Editor: ;A routine news article in theMaroon of April 17. 1979. especiallycaught my attention. It stated thatfour houses had been given names inthe Shoreland Hotel. They are theJohn Dewey House on the fifth floor,the Albert Abraham MichelsonHouse on the sixth, the Arthur HollyCompton House on the eighth, andthe William Gardner Hale House onthe ninth.Such house naming is curious. Iam guessing that naming houses inthe Shoreland ranks among the Uni¬versity of Chicago’s tendencies tocompartmentalize, to mystify, andto aggrandize. After all. the eighthfloor, for example, is no more thanthe eighth floor. With all due respectto the outstanding scientist forwhom it was named, caling theeighth floor the Arthur Holly Comp¬ton House is so much folderol.This type of pretentiousness is notneeded at the university. There isfar too much of it already.John V. AkardLow libelTo the editor:On April 24. an article appeared inthe Maroon entitled “ *A Woman wasraped here’ sprayed at over 50spots” concerning the spray-paint¬ing of the forceful, shocking mes¬sage on the sidewalks throughoutHyde Park. We applaud this boldmove on the war against rape andwe applaud those responsible for it— possibly Miss Fletman, MissCleveland, and some members ofthe Women's Union.However, we cannot condone theappearance the same day of a signon the Cobb Hall notice board read¬ing ‘Paul Ausick is a rapist.” This islibel of the lowest and most severekind to thus write that AssistantDean of Students Ausick, himself arape victim counselor, is a commit¬ter of this most vile crime. Such anaccusation is as reprehensible as theoffense itself. We can only hope thatthe perpetrators of this libel will beapprehended and prosecuted to thefullest extent of the law.Concerned StudentsAgainst Crime/To the Editor:Ralph Nader and associates arenot the only ones interested in the“pervasive power of the ETS.”(Maroon, April 13) Readers mightnote that the Federal Trade Com¬mission is pereparing a report on thecorrelation between ETS test resultsand an individual's performance.Moreover, certain ETS officials areno longer altogether convinced thattest results are absolutely reliableindicators of performance. For fur¬ther information see the Chronicle ofHigher Education of April 16.Richard C. Holbrook ><=>oV Alb&rt ic?'AbrahamMichelsonl. House,OOOQO OQ^ v.Cf.C Release crimestatisticsTo the Editor:As our ongoing attempts to obtaincrime statistics indicates, we aredeeply committed to the publicavailability of information regard¬ing crime in Hyde Park. The spray-painting of points where rapes haveoccurred was somebody’s frustratedattempt to disseminate this informa¬tion. We commend these people fortrying to bring this important infor¬mation to light. Women’s Union,however, feels that the regular andinstitutionalized release of crimestatistics, to be printed in variouscampus and community publica¬tions, is a much more accurate andfruitful way to realize this goal.University of ChicagoWomen’s UnionGraphic: Chris PersansMarch on Washington against nukesTo the Editor:We ask that you join us in tellingCongress and President Carter thatnuclear power must be stopped.The time to act has never beenmore critical. The Three Mile Islandnuclear reactor accident was notsupposed to happen, according to theexperts. But for several days we allwondered whether hundreds of thou¬sands of people might have to beevacuated from their homes, neverable to return because of radiationcontamination. For several days welistened as the experts admitted thatsafety systems had failed; and thatthey were not sure what to do. For¬tunately, no catastrophe occurred(although significant radiation wasemitted). But we cannot wait untilanother such accident jeopardizesthe lives of millions of people.The American public has not beentold the truth about nuclear power,as the Three Mile Island accident re¬vealed. Nuclear power is far morecostly, and poses greater risks, thanthe government and the nuclear in¬dustry have admitted. Moreover, weknow that it is not necessary to oureconomy: nuclear power contri¬butes only 3 percent of the nation’stotal energy consumpiton. First en¬ergy conservation, then adequatedomestic fossil fuels, and finally thedevelopment of renewable energysources- the various forms of solarenergy: heat collectors, wind, gaso-hol. photovoltaic electricity—canprovide for our nation’s energyneeds now and in the future.Nevertheless, President Carterhas called for a speedup in the li¬censing of more nuclear powerplants. He seems more concernedwith the health of the American pub¬lic.Congress and President Cartermust not be allowed to forget the les¬sons of the Three Mile Island, nor ig¬nore the public’s deep concern aboutnuclear power. This is why we, and1984 fiveyears earlyThe Maroon is the semi-weeklystudent newspaper of the Universityof Chicago We publish on Tuedaysand Fridays. Our editorial and busi¬ness offices are located on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes Hall. 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, Ill. 60637. Phone:"*•We encourage Letters to the Edi¬tor. They must be typed and triple-spaced All letters become propertyof The Maroon. " ^ •*.«SSfe To the Editor:I should have known!The state can’t deliver the mail ontime. It takes twelve years to teachpeople to read on a sixth grade level.It never has time to fix the streets.What has it been doing?It’s been planning for conscrip¬tion. 1984 will be five years early:Arche Spoudaios- * Students for a... Libertarian Society over 60 diverse organizationsthroughout the country, are callingfor a peaceful and educationalmarch in Washington on Sunday.May 6, 1979. to express our opposi¬tion to the development of nuclearpower. Groups will meet on the El¬lipse behind the White House be¬tween 10 am and noon, and themarch to the Capitol for a rally withmany speakers and music. On thefollowing day, people who can re¬main in Washington will meet withMembers of Congress and represen¬tatives of the Administration and therelevant agencies.Unfortunately, time is short. Nor¬mally. marches of this kind areplanned several months in advance,but the need to respond promptly atthis moment requires a differenttimetable. It’s critical that in theshort' time remaining, news of themarch reaches as many students aspossible. We urge you to open yourcampus newspaper to a frank dis¬cussion of this crucial issue andthereby spread the news of themarch.Students must take the lead, asthey have done in every major socialmovement in our country in the pasttwo decades. Students helped launchthe civil rights movement in theearly 1960’s when they travelled tothe South to organize voter registra¬tion drives. Students were deeply in¬volved in the movement to end theVietnam War. Student activismhelped spark the environmental andwomen's movements as well.Students have already been activein efforts to stop nuclear power incities nd counties around thecoum.i v. Now we must join to giveLi. anti-nuclear movement a strongnational presence and politicalfocus. It is time to come to Washing¬ton The situation is similar in somerespects to the mid-1960’s, whenfrom teach-ins and local actionsarose the first national march onWashington against the VietnamWar. In April of 1965, 25,000 peoplecame to Washington, and they re¬turned in ever increasing numbersuntil the war was stopped. On May 6the people will come to Washingtonand promise to return for as long asit takes to stop nuclear power.Please use your editorial voice toencourage students to join in theMay 6 march. We must act to pre¬vent future Three Mile Islands andmajor nuclear castrophies, Wehave enclosed some supplementaryinformation on the march to aidyou. > •Bob ChlopakProject DirectorMay 6 coalitionmrrmr ,^ . . ..., ,.. . "V-— ~ I— —_ViewpointWhat we don’t know about nuclear powerThe following appeared as an editorial inIn These Times, a weekly “independent so¬cialist newspaper, ” in the April 11-17 issue.In These Times is located at 1509 N. Mil¬waukee Ave., Chicago, 60622. Reprintedwith permission.The Three Mile Island nuclear powerplant ventilated public opinion with vitalthings the experts did not know that mayprove more crucial in deciding the futureof nuclear energy than the things they doknow. The experts did not know:• how serious the plant’s malfunctionwas at the outset and just what to do aboutit;• how to prevent radioactive emis¬sions;• that an explosive gas bubble of hydro¬gen and radioactive elements would format the head of the reactor core and preventcoolant water from reaching it;• how to dismantle a contaminated re¬actor;• how to decontaminate the buildingflooded with radioactive water and howlong it will take;• how much damage was done to the re¬actor and how close to a meltdown the corecame;• how much damage the radioactiveemissions will cause in the long run.The experts do know, as University of Il¬linois School of Public Health associatedean Arthur Wolff says, that “no one canpredict what might happen in such a high¬ly complex technology” where there is so“little operating experience, as ... in thenuclear field” and that this “serious nu¬clear accident ... is unlikely to be thelast.” New York Times science writerMalcolm W. Browne tells us that “nothingin a neclear reactor can be regarded asroutine.” The Wall Street Journal (April 5)concedes nuclear power “is of course anintrinsically dangerous technology.”Putting together what we do and don’tknow, it is clear that nuclear energy is farfrom being a source of power sufficientlysubject to human control to warrant itsgeneral use. Indeed, given the large areasof ignorance attaching to crucial aspectsof the nuclear process, it is a misnomer tocall it a nuclear technology — if, as the dic¬tionary tells us, technology is “the scienceof the application of knowledge to practi¬cal purposes: applied science.”The state of knowledge about nuclear en¬ ergy is still too limited to permit of scien¬tific application. Its application is scientif¬ic only in the sense of its still being in theexperimental-guinea pig stage of inquiry.The guinea pigs are the industry workers,the general population, and the surround¬ing environment.This is the case at every stage of the nu¬clear industry, not the least at the wastedisposal process at the end. There, a chim¬ney-junkyard technique has been appliedto an altogether new kind of effusion andwaste. What for other industry is the end ofthe matter (albeit with some polluting ef¬fects), for the nuclear industry is only thebeginning of hundreds of years of radioac¬tive decay with high risk of environmentalcontamination and genetic damageThe nuclear industry, in short, is an ex¬periment in search of, but not yet a usabletechnology.It is unique in being the only industrypermitted to engage in general productionand commercial use while still in the guin¬ea pig stage. It stands as a monument tothe perversion of the American pride in atradition of applied science.So grotesque a perversion can be ex¬plained by the impulse to desperate re¬sponse to growing scarcities of energy sources, and by the millions of dollars ofprofits beckoning. But it is not a rational orprudent approach to energy needsThe Three Mile Island incident made itclear that in a nuclear power plant, even a“minnr” malfunction is a serious “acci¬dent,’ capable of disrupting the economiclife — and the energy supply — of an entireregion and hundreds of thousands of peo¬ple.If the plant’s breakdown goes no furtherthan it has at this writing, it may be ablessing in disguise.It showed how ill-suited private enter¬prise is to controlling nuclear energy. TheMetropolitan Edison Company acted noworse than other private business: It putits stockholders' interests above the publicsafety. Though privately owned, the com¬pany’s losses will ultimately be borne notby the investors, but by the public throughrising rates and tax revenues funding gov¬ernment insurance and rehabilitiation pro¬gramsThe accident showed how inadequateand untrustworthy government regulationof the nuclear industry has been and mayprevent the Carter administration's ill-conceived plan to relax licensing proce¬ dures.It has exposed industry and governmentmendacity. It has revealed the aura of se¬crecy and expertise with which nuclear en¬ergy and weaponry have been surroundedas less a technique for protecting nationalsecurity than for protecting special inter¬ests from public knowledge.It has put the question of nuclear energyback into the political arena where it be¬longs in a democracy.Finally, the accident may provide theoccasion for a general reevaluation ofAmerican energy policy.The country needs to consider whether itis wise to leave its energy supply in thehands of vast private corporations, whichtax the entire economy for use of a scarcecommodity at monopoly prices, and whosepower extends to controlling the regulato¬ry agencies that are supposed to controlthem.Control of energy should be shifted to de¬centralized public bodies subject to thechecks and balances of democratic con¬trols, and mandated to develop the safest,cheapest, and most ecologically efficientenergy sources. A structure similar to theFederal Reserve or Federal Farm Landbank system, with lesser central authori¬ty. might be adapted to the purposeWe need to consider changing directionfrom an automobile, energy-wastefuleconomy to a public transport, energy-con¬serving economy, from fossil and nuclearfuels to solar and other renewable energysources.The place to begin is to replace James R.Schlesinger with someone oriented to solarenergy as head of the Department of En¬ergy, to overhaul the Nuclear RegulatoryCommission with commissioners havingno material or ideological ties to the nu¬clear industry, and to pressure Congress toreject Carter's energy program for asolar-oriented one of its own.Such a program would immediatelyclose down grossly unsafe nuclear plants,suspend construction of those still unfin¬ished. stringently regulate while movingtoward phasing out the others already inoperation, as newly developed, safe en¬ergy sources come on stream. This kind ofenergy program would also require mak¬ing new commitments to ‘melting down”the “America Syndrome” of pursuing pri¬vate short-term gain at the expense of pub¬lic needs and our obligation to posterity.I-House Films Two British Comedy Classics1414e. 59th st. The Lavender Hill Mob 6:30/9:45Lucky Jim 8:oop.m.Saturday, April 28 81.50MIDWEST CONFERENCE ONUNITED NATIONS REFORMHenry Steele Commager, Noted Historian and AuthorHelvi Sipila, UN Assistant Secretary-GeneralAbner J. Mikva, Congressman from Illinois (10th District)and more than 30 others...5 plenary sessions... 10 workshopsSATURDAY-SUNDAY, MAY 5-6y of C. Center for Continuing Education, 1 307 E. 60th St.$25 incl. 2 meals...$l 0 program only...$5 studentsFor registration information, call 427-5409 BLUEGARGOYLERUMMAGESALEKitchen ItemsFurnitureClothesTovsSat. April 28 10-55655S. university Get a group together to seeCommunity Theatre at its bestGROVE PLAYERSpresentMay 4. 5. 6 Friday. Saturday - 8 p.m.Sunday - 7 p.m.A Gothic thriller by Ted Tillerat the theater of Downers Grove South High School63rd St and Dunham Road Downers Grove IllinoisAdmission - $3.00 Students $1.50For travel information and tickets, see orcall "The Count” in Rl C-103 (3-8776)The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 27, 1979 — 5Festival of the Arts presents the Halcvon Repertory Company productionThe TwoFaithful ScribesTHE ARGUMENT OF OUR PLAY:Long ago in Venice were born to Dottore Gratiano two sons whowere twins. One was called Zanetto and the other Tonino. Whilestill infants they were separated one from the other by the cruelways of fate and neither twin suspected the existence of hisbrother.Years later, when they were well-grown, it so happened that—each unbeknownst to the other—both appeared in Verona on thesame day: Zenetto to court Flaminia (daughter of Pantalone) andTonino to win the heart of the beautiful Beatrice.Their actions and what ensued caused much consternation andpuzzlement among Verona’s fair citizenry. All that came to passthereafter our comedy will portray.The Two Faithful Scribes is a commedia dell’arte extravaganzaadapted from Carlo Goldoni’s The Venetian Twins and directed byDarryl Boehmer. It will be presented TIt will be presented Sunday. May 6. 8 p.m. in the Cloister Club of Ida Nove^$2 UC Students, S3 Others Hall.The Gordon J. Laing Prize, 1978has been awarded toSEWALL WRIGHTFOREvolution and the Geneticsof Populations, Volume 3Experimental Results andEvolutionary DeductionsThe Laing Prize is presented each year by the Boardof University Publications to the faculty authorwhose book, published within the last two years,has added the greatest distinction to the list ofThe University of Chicago Press 197719761975197419731972197119701969196819671966196519641963 PREVIOUS WINNERSMarshall SahlinsCULTURE AND PRACTICAL REASONKeith M. BakerCONDORCETEric CochraneFLORENCE IN THE FORGOTTEN CENTURIES,1527-1800Stuart M. TaveSOME WORDS OF JANE AUSTENEdward ShilsTHE INTELLECTUALS AND THE POWERSFHw/JJm W^iunlpkTHE NOTEBOOKS OF FYODOR DOSTOEVSKY,5 VOLS.Herrlee G CreelTHE ORIGINS OF STATECRAFT IN CHINAGerald D. SuttlesTHE SOCIAL ORDER OF THE SLUMLeonard B. MeyerMUSIC, THE ARTS, AND IDEASPhilip FosterEDUCATION AND SOCIAL CHANGE IN GHANADonald F. LachASIA IN THE MAKING OF EUROPE, VOL. 1A. Leo OppenheimANCIENT MESOPOTAMIATang TsouAMERICA’S FAILURE IN CHINA, 1941-50William H. McNeillTHE RISE OF THE WESTBernard WeinbergA HISTORY OF LITERARY CRITICISMIN THE ITALIAN RENAISSANCE6 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 27, 1979Good Seats Still AvailableFor Both ShowsCHUCK BERRYThis Saturday,8:00 and 10:30Mandel HallTickets: MAB $3, $4GENERAL $6, $7Tickets Available atReynolds Club Box OfficeComing May 26... John Prinei — * -J Do You WearGLASSES ?Here's an effective new eye-exercise program that canproduce astonishing results in a very short time. . .The Bettervision Eye Clinic isnow offering a program of eye-exercises that can safety correctmost cases of poor eyesight —sothat glasses or contact lensesare no longer needed. Originallydeveloped by Dr. William H. Batesof the New York Eye Hospital, thismethod has been widely used by theArmed Forces, schools, clinics, andthousands of private individuals, forthe treatment of:• nearsightedness• farsightedness• astigmatism• middle-age sightFor many years it was thought thatpoor eyesight was just bad luck, orsomething you inherit from your parents.Scientists now know that most eyesightproblems are caused by accumulatedstress and tension—which squeeze theeyeball out of shape, and affect themuscles that do the focusing. The resultis the eye cannot form a clear image, andthe world appears to be blurry. In peopleover 40, the natural aging process is alsoan important factor.No matter whatyour eyesight problemthe Bates Method can help you.This is a health care program,and will benefiteveryone who follows it —children, adults, and seniors.It is important to understand thatglasses do not cure a visual problem.They are simply a compensating device—like crutches. In fact, glasses usuallymake the condition worse. Because theymake the eyes weak and lazy, a minorproblem often develops into a lifetime ofwearing glasses. Aldous Huxley—Nobel Author“My vision was getting steadily worse,even with greatly strengthened glasses.To my dismay I realized I was goingblind. On the advice of my Doctor Idecided to try the Bates Method. Therewas an immediate improvement. Afteronly 2 months I was able to read clearlywithout glasses. Better still, the cataractwhich had covered part of one eye forover 16 years was beginning to clear up."Rev. Frederick A. Milos, M.S.“By following the simple exercises givenin this program, I have completelyrecovered my vision. Now I can read forlong periods without my glasses.”Ron Moore—Technician“I originally went to the Clinic to deliversome equipment—and ended up tryingtheir eve-exercise program. I am near¬sighted, and have worn glasses for 15yrs. In just 3 weeks after startingthe program, my eyesight has alreadyimproved to the point where I can nowdrive, do business, and watch T.V.—allwithout my glasses!”movement of the eyeballThe Bates Method corrects pooreyesight by strengthening the eye-muscles and relaxing the eyeball. You dosimple easy exercises that increase yourfocusing power, eliminate eyestrain, andbring your eyesight back to normal.Because the Bates Method deals withthe basic cause of your eyesightproblem, you can expect to see a definiteimprovement in as little as 1 or 2 weeks.Even if you have worn glasses all yourlife—things will become clearer andclearer, and you will have flashes of goodvision as you go through the program,these flashes become longer and morefrequent gradually blending intopermanent better sight—at which pointthe exercises are no longer necessary.We usually find that people whoseeyesight is not too bad can return to20/20 vision in about a month. Even ifyour eyesight is reallv poor, within 2to 3 months you should be able to putaway your glasses, once and for all. Readthese case histories: This program has been speciallydesigned for the individual to exerciseat home. Written in simple non-technicallanguage, it gives you all the guidanceyou need to regain natural healthy visionin just Vi hour a day: illustrated booklet,complete step-by-step instructions, plusspecial charts and displays to ensureyou make rapid progress. The programis fully guaranteed and there's nothingmore to Duy.By following this program, you willsoon be able to see clearly withoutglasses. It's up to you. Ordering theBates Method can be one of the bestdecisions you ever made. So do it now-before you get sidetracked and forget.Fill out the order coupon, attach yourcheck for $9.95 plus $1 for postage andhandling, and mail it to us today!If you have any questions regardingthis program, please call us at(415) 763-6699 Our qualifiedoperator will be glad to help you.The Bates Method can mark a turning point in your life-better eyesight without glasses or contact lenses. Theprogram is guaranteed. Try it for 30 days, and if you'renot fully satisfied, return it for an immediate refund.PLEASE PRINT CLEARLYBettervision Eye ClinicPacific Building,16th & Jefferson,Oakland, CA 94612Allow 1 to 2 weeks tor deliveryCA residents must add 65* sales tai NAMEADDRESSCITYSTATE ZIPThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 27, 1979 — 732286ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELSUNDAY APRIL 2911 A.M. University Religious ServiceJAMES F. WHITEProfessor of WorshipPerkins Theological SeminaryDallas, Texas“FIFTY DAYS OF EASTER”5P.M. Service of the Holy Eucharist Celebrant: TheRev. Charles D. Brown Co-sponsored by theEpiscopal Church Council ( Anglican) Xite Heifetz Hfemoriaf Presents'lin ErctiUu] dfUuankr kDuo ~Ji(oliiylllif Second '\ms6ruci*~ Tfomus K/JyftTXtio-lkidcrsctL%irfotn Sufic^duD~ tbachDuo -HcfftmetetcrtxthSiitraw.Ofirii Beretryt**Wirrst&afbartuhtuistrQ(tola.^fanSUtmMJtnJ^oit^i^ioioncetk•Jeanne $ttuLef*r?QayijlJofa*cm',£?a1iXotflUwCHer -Oboe.Stnucn-dojckson-GlariHct5dtlLfilll$.7{pri\ Z£) 5;50f/W $OHlLC4lApc( frtc M-nJorfl Premiere. * Eye fxaimnations* Contact lenses(Soft Jt Hard)■* Prescriptions filled. OR. MORTONS.MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSContact densesand SuppliesHyde ParkShopping Center15101. SSth363-6363How to finda summer Job.Talk to Manpower.We ve got summer jobopportunities for-temporaryworkers. In factories, ware¬houses. stores... indoorsand outdoors.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*-EMPOOAf*' SE»VC£SAn equal opportunity employerREPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU.ofC.I.D. New andRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,Adoers■ U of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave753-3303Mastercharge and Visa Accepted Northwestern'sTheory a RelativityThis summer accelerate your educationby enrolling in a concentrated course inPhysics, Chemistry, Calculus, French,Spanish, Italian, German or Russian. Youcan earn a full year’s credit (in quarter orsemester hours) in only 8 weeks.There’s also a fascinating selection ofofferings in Arts and Sciences, Education,Music and Speech—to help you satisfygraduate or undergraduate requirements,to let you take courses not available at other times or other schools, or get a headstart on the fall term.Your tuition entitles you to full use of thefacilities at one of America’s most beauti¬ful—and highly regarded—universities.Just call the Summer Session Officetoday at 492-5250 or 492-3748 for ourSummer Bulletin.Northwestern University SummerSession. Relatively speaking, a mostextraordinary—and important—8 weeks.NORTHWESTERNUNIVERSITYSummer SessionFor complete information and bulletin, contact Northwestern University Summer Session2003 Sheridan Road • Room 1-114 • Evanston, Illinois 60201 • 312/492-5250 or 492-37488 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 27, 1979NEXT YEAR'S MAB —iTHE SIXTHNORA AND EDWARD RYERSONLECTURE•Applications for the •1979-80 Major Activities THE INWARDNESS OFMENTAL LIFE 1Board are now availableat the Student Activities by STEPHEN TOULMIN .1n»Office, Ida Noyes Hall. Monday, April 30, 1979, 4:30 p.m. I5IThey are due there The Glen A. Lloyd Auditoriumof the Laird Bell Law QuadrangleMay 7. All positions are 1111 East 60th Streetlopen to University Sponsored bystudents. The Center for Policy StudyThe University of Chicago 1The Pub in Ida Noyes HallNow Has FOOD!The Pub is a great place for Happy Hours (4-6 pm),to meet friends and unwind.Now with fast food grill! You may now enjoy avariety of foods with the best selection oftap beer in Hyde Park ...Pub is open 4 pm-1:30 am \I-F, 7 pm-1:30 Sat.(You must be 21 vrs. or older)The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 27, 1979 — 9CampusMusicChuck Berry: Berry is best known for his posi-tion in the history of popular music: his “May-bellene” (1955) combined country-derived gui¬tar licks and blues-based rhythm into whatwas one of the first expressions of what cameto be known as “rock & roll.” Berry’s Fiftieswork inspired many English artists of the Six¬ties; the Rolling Stones and the Beatles arethe most notable. But Berry's songs are impor¬tant in their own right, and thus the most in¬teresting issue is his undeniable appeal towhite teenage kids. Nobody knows how he didit. but this is one reviewer who intends to findout if he still can. Mandel Hall, 57th and Uni¬versity, Friday, April 27, 8:00 and 10:30 p.m.Some good mainfloor seating is still availablefor the first show; balcony and outside aisleseating remains for the second show. $7-6; $4-3for MAB feepayers, 753-3568.Cathy Heifetz Memorial Concert: An eveningof chamber music presented by the HeifetzMemorial: a “Duo” by Kodaly, “Trio” byAndersen, “Air from Suite No. 3 in D“ by Bach,a “Duo” by Hoffmeister, and the worldpremiere of Thomas Wright’s “My Second Inn¬sbruck.” Beth Bistrow and Chris Berenyi —violins; Barbara Houser — viola; Van Bistrowand Alan Rostoker — violincelli; JeanneSchaefer and David Johnson — flute; RayMueller — oboe; Steven Jackson — clarinet.Tomorrow, April 28. Bond Chapel. 8:30 pm.Free.Lakshmi Shankar: A well-known North In¬dian vocalist said to possess “a brilliant andmelodious voice which encompasses three oc¬taves with ease.” A protege of Ravi Shankar,Lakshmi Shankar has toured with George Har¬rison. She will sing classical North Indianmusic accompanied on the tabla by ArvindDebhakti. Tomorrow. April 28. Ida NoyesLibrary. 8 pm. $3, $2 students.Ray Still: First Chair lecture-demonstrationby Still, oboists for the Chicago Symphony Or¬chestra. This Monday, April 30. InternationalHouse. 8 pm. Free.Liz Baltas and Tom McCracken: Flute recitalof baroque and modern works. Part of the Noon¬time Concert series — bring your lunch. ThisThursday, May 3. Cloister Club of Ida Noyes.12:15 pm. Free.Mostly Telemann: A Collegium Musicuumconcert of works by Telemann, Handel, andVivaldi. Cynthia Schwan, recorders; KathrynDerksen, viola der gamba; Laurence Rosen-wald, alto recorder; Lisa Waitches, harp¬sichord. This Sunday, April 29. Bond Chapel. 8pm. Free.TheatreSecond City: A performance by the im-provisational comedy group’s resident com¬pany. Second City has its roots in Hyde Park;its members enjoy coming down here, said Donde Polio during last year’s visit, because it isthe home of the troupe’s favorite Frenchrestaurant, Valois. This Monday, April 30.Mandel Hall. $3.50, $3 UC students. Tickets atReynolds Club box office.The Waiting Game Three one act plays:Jason Miller’s It's a Sin to Tell a Lie, directedby Larry Philips; Robert Arlt’s The DesertIsland, directed by Mary K. Wall; and SameThing, Only Different, written and directed byChris Koziol. Closes this Sunday, April 29.Reynolds Club Theater, 57th and University.8:30 pm; Sunday at 7:30 pm. 753-3581. $2, $1.50students and senior citizens.Measure for Measure: Shakespeare’s rarelyproduced comedy: the Duke of Vienna beginsenforcing his city’s anti-fornication laws. Thebleakest, yet one of the most compassionate, ofShakespeare’s plays. Directed by NicholasRudall; Maureen Gallagher plays Isabella, thenovitiate, and Keith Fort plays her pro¬miscuous brother, Claudio. Closes May 13. TheNew Theater, Reynold Club. Thursdaysthrough Saturdays at 8:30 pm; Sundays at 7:30pm. 753-3581. $4.50-14; $2.50-12 students andsenior citizens.10 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 27, 1979 “Close your books, get out of your seat/Downthe halls and into the street.”—Chuck Berry:campus music.ArtJackson Pllock: “New Found Works” of theAmerican action painter. Known for its large,paint-splattered canvases, Pollock’s majorwork resembles no one else’s. His early period,however, reveals the influence of Thomas HartBenton, Picasso, and the Surrealists. This ex¬hibit, which collects some of Pollock’s earlywork, is primarily interesting for the light itsheds on his work of the late forties and earlyfifties. Closes next Sunday, May 6. David andAlfred Smart Gallery, 5550 S. Greenwood,Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 am to 4 pm;Sundays, noon to 4 pm. 753-2121. Free.Dan Ramirez: “Works: 1972-1979.” Drawings,paintings on raw canvas, and folded whitepaper constructions — these are among theworks of this Chicago artist on display.Ramirez consciously bases his work on thewritings of Wittgenstein; the best results arebeautiful abstracts in elegant, subdued colors.Closes tomorrow, April 28. The RenaissanceSocity, Goodspeed Hall, 1010 E. 59th. Mondaysthrough Saturdays, 11 am to 4 pm. 753-2886.Free.Lectures“Wuthering Heights” — The Motive forNarration: Lecture on Emily Bronte’s master¬piece by the scholar-critic J. Hillis Miller. ThisThursday, May 3. Swift Lecture Hall, 1020 E.58th. 4 pm. Free.The Inwardness of Mental Life: The sixthNora and Edward Ryerson lecture; given byStephen Toulman, the author of Knowing andActing. This Monday, April 30. LloydAuditorium (in the Law School), 111 E. 60th St.4:30 pm. Free.Philip Gossett: “The Scholar and the PrimaDonna — Reflections on Editing Opera,” a lec¬ture by the chairman of the Music Department,“With Musical illustrations.” This Tuesday,May 1. Woodward Court. 5824 Kimbark. 8:30pm. Free.FilmBy Ethan EdwardsOn The Town (Doc) Directed by Gene Kelly andStanley Donen, who also teamed up for Singin’ InThe Rain. On The Town is a wonderfully sparklingand energetic musical, with Kelly, Frank Sinatra andJules Munshin as three sailors on liberty in NewYork. New York, New York heads the score, whichinexplicably used only two songs from the originalBroadway show by Leonard Bernstein and BettyComden and Adolph Green (of Singin’ In The Rain,The Bandwagon, Auntie Marne, etc ). Athleticchoreography and witty comedy from the sailors’women make this a particularly entertaining late4Q’s musical. Recommended, Friday at 6:45 and 10:15pm in Cobb Hall.Funny Face (Doc) Directed by Stanley Donen. Au¬drey Hepburn works in a Greenwich Village book¬store which is invaded by Kay Thompson, Fred As¬taire and others to photograph a fashion spread.Hepburn is discovered by the fashion crowd andgoes off to Paris to become a top model and fall in love with photographer Astaire. Satirical looks atthe worlds of high fashion, avant - garde philosophyand smug intellectualism; delightful music by Gersh¬win; and beautiful scenes of Paris all contribute tomaking this one of the most stylish and entertainingfilm musicals. Recommended. Friday at 9 pm in CobbHall.Sympathy For The Devil (Doc) Directed by Jean-LucGodard. An abstract pseudo-documentary that pur¬ports to depict the Stones writing, developing andfinally recording the title song. Godard’s montageof studio shots, recordings, interviews and perfor¬mances in “revolutionary” settings (i.e., junkyardswith slogans painted on fences) is interesting onlyfor its exposure of the trial-and-error method usedto develop the ultimate arrangement and instru¬mentation of the hit version of Sympathy For TheDevil. This film demonstrates the limits and eccen¬tricities of Godard's cinematic vision. Friday at mid¬night in Cobb Hall.Dr. Strangelove: or, How I Learned To Stop Worry¬ing And Love The Bomb (LSF) Directed by Stanley Kubrick. A trail-blazing comedy — both in subject and instyle. The good-natured approach to nuclear attackworks surprizingly well, as does the black joke ofmaking the audience root for Slim Pickens and hisbomber crew to trigger the destruction of theworld. What on first viewing seemed to me to be adisjointed narrative looks considerably more coher¬ent and linear, especially after repeated exposureto the vignette story-telling of Robert Altman andMichael Ritchie. The character of Dr. Strangelovewas originally thought to be based on Werner VonBraun. When Henry Kissinger became RichardNixon’s National Security Advisor he used to enter¬tain at parties with his Dr. Strangelove imitations,which he continued until Kissinger became a house¬hold name. What Kissinger failed to realize is thatKubrick claimed to have actually based the charac¬ter on Kissinger after watching him calmly discussnuclear holocaust while plugging a book in the late1950’s. Dr. Strangelove has great comic perfor¬mances by Peter Sellers (as President Muffley, Cap¬tain Mandrake and Dr. Strangelove), Sterling Hay- Elizabeth Baltas andformed Donizetti’s “£Thursday in Reynoldmany noontime conciden (as General Jack Icrisis by sending B-52s ato preserve our precioustion), and George C. Sco7:00 and 9:30 in the LawInteriors (Doc) Direct*is either Woody Allen’sThe dialogue is ersatzManhattan. Somehowseem less silly if it tookthe North Sea with Swsubtitles. I must admitwith an open mind, beeconsistently funny filmsviews about Interiors thworthwhile than corned;Interiors or The Deer Hiedy like Sullivan’s Travearns my sympathy, fomessages delivered wicomic genius. With GenMaureen Stapleton and7, 9 and 11 pm in Cobb IAlice in the Cities andLakshmi Shankar (center) accompanied by tabla (drums), harmoniumed reeded keyboard instrument) and two tambouras (stringed drontpus Music.The Duke (Patrick Billingsle) listens to a requestmade by Isabella (Maureen Gallagher) in CourtTheatre’s current production of Shapkespeare'sMeasure For Measure. I lth Street The*in the Artsi Thomas MacCracken perSonata for flute and Piano”ds Club, one of Fota’s:erts.D. Ripper who triggers theagainst the Russians in orders bodily fluids from fluorida-ott. Recommended. Friday atf School Auditorium,ed by Woody Allen. Interiorsi funniest movie or his worst,z Bergman transplanted tothe whole exercise wouldk place on a remote island invedish dialogue and English; that I did not see this filmcause Allen, who is the onlyunaker today, said in inter-tiat drama is inherently morely. Anyone who thinks thatunter is “better” than a com-vels or even Dr. Strangeloveor he or she prefers simpleith excessive grimness to■aldine Page, E.G. Marshall,[ Diane Keaton. Saturday atHall.Alabama (NAM) Directed by Wim Wenders. NAM is offering two films by amember of the German New Wave that described byNAM as ‘naked reality at the end of a stick. Alice inthe Cities concerns a depressed, almost broke Ger¬man journalist in New York, who find himself re¬sponsible for Alice, a German girl whose mother hasabandoned her. They return to Germany in search ofthe mother. Their relationship develops into onesimilar to that between Bogart and Bacall. More cin¬ematic jokes.” Unseen by this reviewer. Monday at7:30 and 9:30 pm in Cobb Hall.City Listings Begin HereArtThe Art of Being Huichol: A major travelingexhibit of art from the Huichol Indians of theSierra Madres, Mexico: 150 yarn paintings andceremonial objects. Open to public this Wednes¬day, May 2. Field Museum of Natural History,Roosevelt at Lake Shore Drive. Mondaysthrough Thursdays, 9 am to 4 pm; Fridays, 9 amto 9 pm; weekends, 9 am to 5 pm. 922-9410. $1.50;Fridays free.Concept, Narrative, Document: Examples ofa recent trend in photography: storytelling.Works by twenty-one internationalphotographers. Closes May 20. Museum of Con¬temporary Art, 237 E. Ontario. Tuesdaysthrough Saturdays, 10 am to 5 pm; Sundays,noon to 5 pm. 280-2660. Suggested donation.Robo Kaijur: Japanese and American spacetoys. Not for children only. Closes May 11. TheSchool of the Art Institute Gallery, Columbusand Jackson. Mondays through Saturdays,10:30 am to 4:30 pm; Sundays, noon to 5 pm.Free.Harris Deller and George Mason: Twoseparate exhibits featuring the recent work oftwo American ceramicists. Deller is a potter,(temper- Drawing from Anita Miller’s show at Midway Studios whiches);Cam- closes next week.Theater’s performance at the Theater-Music Center of Collumbia Collegeiter. Saturday April 28, 8:00 p.m A video image from Drew Browning’s Stereop-ticon—one of two dances in the Chicago EditingCenter’s Real-Time Properties; City Theater.Symbol of the peyote, sacred cactus of theHuichol Indians; City ArtMason a muralist. Columbia Gallery, 600 S.Michigan. Mondays through Saturdays, 10 amto 5 pm. Free.Claire Zeisler: Bright color, intricate struc¬ture, delightful texture — the fiber art of ClaireZeisler. A 75 year-old Chicagoan, Zeisler andher work have long been recognized — yet thisis her first one-woman show. Closes June 10.The Art Institute, Adams and Michigan. 10 amto 4:30 pm; Thursdays, open until 8 pm; Sun¬days and holidays, noon to 5 pm. 443-3500. $2. $1students; Thursdays free.Marc Chagal: A surprisingly large amount ofChagall’s best work can be found in private col¬lections around this city — this exhibit bringssixty such works together; many have neverbeen publicly exhibited. Opens this Sunday,April 29; closes July 1. Maurice SpertusMuseum of Judaica, 618 S. Michigan. Mondaysthrough Thursdays, 10 am to 5 pm; Sundays 10am to 4 pm. 922-9012.McDonald’s Competition Winners: Thethirty-five best designs for McDonald’srestaurants submitted to the American In¬stitute of Architects — Architects-sponsoredcontest. Many are outrageously funny; mosthave more to do with aesthetics than ham¬burgers; any would be an improvement over thetired design McDonald’s now uses. Closes April28. The Archicenter, 310 S. Michigan. Mondaysthrough Saturdays, 9 am to 5 pm. 782-1776.Free.MusicBlue Monday: Jazz Institute sponsored con¬cert with Sunnyland Slim, Estella ‘Mama'Yancey, Fred Below, and Erwin Heifer. ThisMonday, April 30. Rick’s Cafe Americain. 644N. Lake Shore Drive. 8 and 10 pm. 664-0414. $5;$3 students; two drink minimum.Civic Orchestra: Gordon Peters, conductor;Patricia McCarty, viola soloist. An all-Hungarian program in memory of Tibor Serby:Bartok’s “Four Orchestral Pieces, Opus 12;”Serby's “Viola Concerto” and “AmericanElegy (1945); "Kodaly’s “Dances from Galan-ta.” This Wednesday, May 2. Orchestra Hall,220 S. Michigan. 8:15 or 435-8111. $6 to $1students.The Seven Deadly Sins: Music by Kurt Weill;book by Bertolt Brecht. Rarely produced andnot well known opera-ballet, yet at least as fineas more frequently seen Weill-Brecht collabora¬tions. Directed by Leon Natker; music directedby Bruce Kamsler. The American Women'sTheatre and Quicksilver Theatre. 1101 W.Diversey. 348-1101 or 761-3227. $5.ITheatreReal-Time Properties: “Developing relation¬ships in performance and video” is what DrewBrowning and Annette Bafbier, two members ofthe Chicago Editing Center, say they do. Their Citytools are cameras and videosynthesizers; theirwork is called “Sram Rap,” a science fictionvideo play in which the television is inhabitedby an outerspace voyager. This Wednesday,May 2. Chicago Editing Center, 11 E. Hubbard.7:30 pm. 565-1787. $2.Total Eclipse: The English playwrightChristopher Hampton’s play based on the rela¬tionship of Paul Verlaine and Arthur Rimbaud.Opened last night; open closing date. Old WorldTheater Company, Theater Building, 1225 W.Belmont. Thursdays through Sundays, 8 pm;Sunday matinee, 3 pm. $4.50-$4.Attempted Rescue on Avenue B: Last week ofMegan Terry’s romantic comedy-drama aboutlife amongst the Beats of New York in the latefifties. Closes this Sunday, Arpil 29. Jane Ad-dams Theater, 3212 N. Broadway. Friday andSaturday at 8:30, Sunday at 7:30 pm. 549-1631.$5-$3.Mummenschanz: Three critically acclaimedmimes from Switzerland via Broadway. As dif¬ferent from Marcel Marceau as platinum fromsilver. Extended through June 3. StudebakerTheater, 418 S. Michigan. Performances alldays but Monday: call for times. 435-0700. $15-$8.50.Hail of Bullets: (Baskets, Baptisms, andBullets)” — an ensemble production of once actplays, including three adaptations of B. Travenstories and one original work inspired by Ber¬tolt Brecht. Directed by Thom Goodman.Through April 29. San Quentin DramaWorkshop, 1516 W. Roscoe. Call for times. 327-8511. $3.50-$2.50.DanceJoel Hall Dancers: Featuring the worldpremiere of Paul Sanaardo’s “Territory;” AnnaCzajun is guest soloist. Six performances thisweekend and next. Opens tonight FrancisParker Auditorium, Clark and Webster. April27. 28, May 4, 5 at 8pm: April 29 and May 6 at 3pm. 663-3618. S6-S5; $5-$4 students and seniorcitizens.New York City Ballet: The company ofGeorge Balanchine returns to the AuditoriumTheater for the first time since 1967. Works suchas Jewels, Vienna Waltzes, and The ProdigalSon will be presented; program varies nightly.Last weekend. Auditorium Theater. 70 E. Con¬gress. Evenings at 8 pm; matinees at 2 pm. 922-2110. S22.50-S5.FilmBlazing Saddles (1974) This Mel Brooks com¬edy suffers from some serious lapses of taste insome of its humor. Many of the jokes arechildish and silly, and there is a large propor¬tion of slapstick and sight gags. However, it isan amusing, if rather unsophisticated satire ofthe western, with its cardboard sets, blacksheriff and the famous “eating beans aroundthe campfire” scene. Starts Friday, May 27 atthe Hyde Park Theater, $2.50. 667-3939.The Lavender Hill Mob (1950) CharlesCrichton's fine British comedy stars AlecGuiness and Stanley Holloway as two slightlyridiculous gangsters who almost, but don’tquite pull it off. Based on The Blue Lamp, thisis one of the more popular of the Ealing com¬edies of the 1950’s, which include such films asKind Hearts and Coronets and The Man In theW’hite Suit. 6:30 and 9:45 pm. with Lucky Jim(1957), another of the 1950’s British comedies,this stars Terry-Thomas in a satire of universi¬ty life based on a Kingsley Amis novel. 8pm. atInternation House. Both films for $1.50.There Is No Crisis A British documentarymade by Thames Television (not BBC. the otherone) about the 1976 Soweto riots in SouthAfrica. After the film, Tony Bogues, a jour¬nalist and socialist from Jamaica will discussthe riot (in which over 200 blacks were killed bypolice) and its implications. Friday, May 27, atCross Road International Student Center. 5621S. Blackstone. 8 pm. $1.50.Calendar compiled by Karen Hornick. CityFilm by Victor Sloan.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 27, 1979 — 11»PERSON TOPERSON.... . . that s how we want to reach out to thousands ofChicago alumni for their support — by telephone.So, the University needs your help. And we re will¬ing to pay $4 an hour for your time — a few week¬day evenings each week.If you are mature, reliable and can talk about theUniversity and its needs, we II train you to be aneffective Alumni Telefund Associate.If you re a senior, graduate or professional stu¬dent, you are among those most eligible.Call the Alumni Telefund right now at 753-0893.Or stop and see Gregory Volk at Classics 36, foran application.THE CHICAGOALUMNI TELEFUND At Spin-ItS£»£IncludesI GOT MY MIND MADE UP / WIDE WORLD OF SPORTSI'LL BE DOGGONE / YOU SAY YOU WANT ME TO STAYCRYINGHUE. 57thWe’ve Got Our MindsMade Up!To save you money ontoday's top L.P.’s.Nowthru May 10InstantFunkis speciallypriceda. *4”Spin-ltWhere The Top 50 and MoreAre Always on Sale. 684-1505Faculty and StudentsMay 1 will be the last day Spring quarter books will beon sale. The textbook department will officially close afterthis date.All books that are presently on back order with the pub¬lishers because they were out of stock when the originalorder was placed will be cancelled onTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE12 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 27, 1979Monday, April 30thTHERay Still, OboeCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAFIRST%In a lecture-demonstrationCHAIRInternational House8 pan.Admission free!mukFrenchKitchen3437 West 63rd776-67150|M»n for Dinner5 P.M. Daily.‘I P.M. Sunda*Closed MondjnModerate!* Priced Chicago Guide:"Ealinu at the trenchKitchen, is liki> (I in ini:nilh Julia I hihl\r'4• ^ A A“MiFood of the French CountrysideBeef ^ ellingtonSole en SacCrab DishesCrepesK.xre llenl VI ines. Moderate!* Priced For three years the hues oj the French poetsArthur ‘Rimbdud and Pdul Uerldine ;u>ere tn aTotal Eclipsehitby ChristopherHamptonO mij eternal soul hold fdsl !o desireIn spite oj the night and the dug on fire- RimbaudAdapted and Directed by IDilliam RaffeldPerformed by the Old IDorld Theater Companyat theTheater building 1225 ID. BelmontApril 26 - HTcEiij 20Thurs. - Sun.: 8:00 P.IU. & Sun Utah: 3:00 P.Itl.Admission $4 50 Discount CAPA membersFor information: 327 - 5252Student Group l)i~<ount~.ShimSUMMER DANCE CLASSESFOR MEN AND WOMENWith an Outstanding FacultyMODERN DANCE By Lynda Martha -Choregrapher of Regional Dance Festival and Head of theDepartment of Modern Dance with Giordano StudioFridays • 5:00 Teen Age Dance• 600 Intermediate• 7:00 BeginnersBy Linda Wagnon of Arve Dance Company andStanley Kinberger of Mississippi Regional Dance CoAND DANCE EXERCISE CLASSES Mondav and WednesdaysH a I | rT • 6 00 IntermediatesDALLl I • 700BeainnersBy Gerard Charles -Premiere Dance with Chicago Ballet Co andformerly with Royal Ballet Company, Lonaon• ruesdavs and Thursday Evenings• 600 Intermediates• 700 Beginners7438 E. 57th Street For Information, Call 288-3500The Chicago Maroon — Frfday, April 27, 1979 — 13£ COURT TbeATRe* * S70b S Umver'it\ A\enut* t hiURO. Illinoi'UM>37 7Sl tS81CourtTheatrepresentsThe Marionette Theatre ofPeter ArnottOEDIPUS THE KINGby Sophocles,Monday, May 7THE BACCHAEby Euripides,Tuesday, May 8,8:30 P.M.Reynolds Club Theatre,57th & University$4.50 general and $2.50 forstudents and senior citizens753-3581HEAR AGAIN STEREOSells guaranteed name brand usedand demo stereo components at 40%to 70% off regular prices.THESE ARE OURWEEKLY SPECIALS:PIONEER SX 1010 $275.00DUAL 1226 * 55.00PIONEE PL 12 45.00TANDBERG 1020 219.00HARMON/KARDON 330 99.00SANSUI350A 99.00PIONEER CT 4141 99.00GARRARD SP 25 MK5 79.95NEWBIC 920 29.95TECHNICS SU70100 110.00Complete systems from $75 to $750.60 day trade back privilege. Namebrand components for limited bud¬gets.HEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 N. California 338-7737 TIM MATHFSON SUSAN BLAKELY jACK WARDENA MICHAEL LOBELL PRODUCTION as Harr>DREAMERProduced by MICHAEL LOBELL . Directed by NOEL NOSSECKWritten by JAMES PROCTOR & LARRY BISCHOF • Music by BILL CONTICOLOR BY DeLUXE ® /£®TPGjPMHTJU. GUWUCE SUGGESTED '%Om MATfMAL MAY NOT jg SQTTAIg OALDWfW )’979 HrfNTif TM CINfUGt »0*Starts today at a theatre near you.Check local newspaper for specific theatre listing.A man dreams of winning.A woman dreams of loving.A dreamer dreams of both.jf'Bravo Visconti!DAVID ELLIOTT, Son-Times"Laura \nlonHli...a lusciousGENE SISKEL, Chicago Tribune~QiancarloCjIANNINILauraeANTONKI.LI3KNNIFURQ’NEILLTheInnocentYueurfi* Stisiml K|*"III I>iiiIm4m iiI Miirrii4>iColor Pimn Dv Movie lotiANALYSIS FILM REUEASNG OQKFCMATIOria nr* dNT-17*?cinemAmA’;,- RIReduced pertmf at CerneQe House, marian realty, inc.mREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available-Students Welcome-On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-540014 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 27, 1979Curran leads charging ChicagoBrian Frankel scores the winning goal in the Roachless Wonders’ shoot-out victory overstart your chainsaws for the championship at the Socim Independent League.Racquetmen begin to shineBy Rich McGinnisThe Maroons softball squad served noticeduring the last week of its intention to repeatas small college state champion. Leadingthe charge to the playoffs is pitcher KimCurran, who turned in two spectacular per¬formances in conference play.Last Friday Curran opened the game atNorth Park College by singling and laterscoring on a sacrifice fly by Mary Klemundt,to help Chicago on the way to a 2-0 lead inthe first inning.That was all Curran needed for the win, asshe held North Park to three hits and onerun and notched an incredible 14 strikeouts.Teresa Friend tripled and scored in thesixth for an insurance run and a 3-1 win forChicago.Monday’s game at Trinity started well forthe Maroons when their first three batterswalked and eventually scored. But troublecame in the second when Chicago pitcherAnn Harvilla had some trouble finding theplate. A combination of three hits and fivewalks put Trinity up 5-3. They scored one inthe third and two in the fourth. Chicagochopped away at the lead with two each inthe third and sixth and one more in the sev¬enth, but finally bowed 8-7.Wednesday Curran was pitching againand came up with an even better game thanFriday, while her team’s bats came alive ina 12-0 victory on North Field against LakeForest.After Curran struck out the first two bat¬ters and threw out the third, The Maroonsexploded for six runs, including a two-runsingle by Ruth Eisen and a run scoring trip¬le by Mary Klemundt.Curran’s perfect game was broken in thefourth when Maria Elena Malo’s throw fromshortstop went wide of first base. LakeBy Hack GibsonThe sun has been shining on the Maroons’men’s tennis team. They won three of theirlast four matches to raise their record to 5-3,one of the best starts for the team in recentyears.The old guard and the young—seniorRoger "Rasputin” Lewis and first-year stu¬dent Blair Ewing—have been leading theteam at the number two and three positions,while number one player Bruce Carman hasbeen struggling. Carman was the only casu-laty in the Maroons’ most recent victory, an8-1 triumph over North Central CollegeWednesday.Both Lewis and Carman won theirmatches 6-0, 6-0.The Maroons also scored impressive 7-2and 9-0 wins over the Illinois Institute ofTechnology and Elmhurst College. Rightdown the line, number four Dave "hitch¬hiker” Seropian. number five Ken "Disco” Kohl, and Gerry Mildner have all continuedtheir winning ways.Unfortunately, the Maroons also contin¬ued a tradition of losing big A 9-0 loss to theUniversity of Illinois Chicago Circle lastweek marked the third time the team hasbeen shut out this year.The Maroons will find out how good theyreally are when they travel to the Universityof Wisconsin-Whitewater this weekend, foran eight-team tournament. The competitionat Whitewater is always tough and will in¬clude Ripon College, a team that dealt theMaroons one of this year’s defeats.The Maroons have not fared well at Whitewater in recent years, finishing seventh lastyear. But they could be a surprise this year.As one team member who asked to remainanonymous noted, morale is unusally highthis year: "We really set some goals for our¬selves this year. One is to have a winning re¬cord. the other is to get nicknames for everymember of the team.” Ruggers home tomorrowDespite their 1-2 record, the ChicagoRugby football team is playing quite well.The ruggers were shut out 16-0 by the Chi¬cago Griffins in their most recent effort, butthe Griffins are one of the top couple ofteams in the city. Chicago showed their realstrength a week before when they edgedNotre Dame 11-3.Chicago gains their strength from someoutstanding old talent and some suprisinglygood new talent. The old guard is led byDave Collins and Randy Gustafson, twoblacks who are trying out for the elite all-union (Chicago area) team The new guardis led by some college freshmen who are new to the sport. Chris Gibson and Dave Cal-lans. and Business student Dennis MacNa-mara.The ruggers continue their nine-game sea¬son when they host the Windy City team on a1:00 match on Staff Field tomorrow. Chica¬go won’t be at home again until May 26.when they come back for their last twogames of the season.The team is always looking for newmembers, according to rugger BrooksDexter Interested persons should show upat a practice one of the practices, which areheld on Staff Field Monday and Wednesdayat 4 p.m.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 27, 1979 — 15Forest spoiled the no-hitter in the sixth on atwo out single, but the next batter was Cur¬ran’s ninth strike out victim.Chicago finished its conference seasonwith a record of three wins and one loss, amark they expect will earn them a spot inthe playoffs. If Trinity finishes with a 3-1 re¬ cord, Chicago could be declared a divisionwinner based on total season standings. IfTrinity finishes 4-0, The Maroons should stillget in as a wild card.The Maroons play non-conference gamesat Carthage College tomorrow and atAurora College on Tuesday.IM ReportClose Intramural gamesmark closing socim acition photo by RW RohdeStill Bill, after mutilating Fubar 12-1 inthe opening round of graduate socim playoffaction, overcame a 3-1 halftime deficit tobeat Atlanta 4-3, scoring the final goal withless than 20 seconds to play. The defendingchampions faced There’s the Rub for thegraduate title late yesterday. Results werenot available at press time.There’s the Rub erased Shiller Keep in theother semi-final game. Rub wiped out Be¬havioral Science in first round action, whileShiller Keep edged Squidos. Albaniatrimmed Hercules 2-1 before losing to Bill.In residence league action, Dodd-Meademerged as champions, downing newly-named Compton house 4-1. Dodd-Mead had a much tougher time in their earlier games,edging Henderson 2-1 in the opening roundin a protested shootout after 36 scorelessminutes of play. Dodd-Mead then outscoredShoreland 4-3 to gain the finals. Compton’searlier games were not much easier, as theycame back to beat Upper Flint 3-2 in theopening round in overtime and then beatChamberlain, overtime winners over Brad¬bury, by a 2-1 score.Dodd-Mead will play independent champi¬ons Roachless Wonders for the undergradtitle, the winner to meet the grad champ forthe All-U title. The Wonders beat Rock Is-Softball postponedDue to soggy field conditions, the open¬ing of the intramural softball season hasbeen postponed until Monday. All gamesscheduled prior to the 30th of April will berescheduled, probably for the end of theseason.Participants in the men’s handball dou- land in early action and then edged StartYour Chainsaw, victors over Luntkickers.The Wonders won both games by 1-0 scores,the final victory coming by virtue of a BrainFrankl penalty kick in overtime.Finally, in women’s action, it was UpperWallace taking the title by beating Shorey6-1. Upper Wallace had a tough time earlier,edging Alpha Delta Phi 3-1. Both the Deltsand Shorey blew out their first round oppo¬nents, by respective scores of 6-0 and 8-0.Please not that the opening of the intra¬mural softball season has been postponed(accompanying story).bles tournament and the independent tabletennis tourney should notice that, due to anerror by the intramural office, the tourna¬ments had to be redone and some new pair¬ings resulted. Check Ida Noyes 203 for de¬tails.>Sports< 4I i Ruby's Merit ChevroletSPECIALDISCOUNT PRICESfor all STUDENTS andFACULTY MEMBERSJust present your University ofChicago Identification Card.As Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago you areentitled to special money-savingDISCOUNTS on Chevrolet Parts,Accessories and any new or usedChevrolet you buy from Merit Chev¬rolet Inc.GM QUALITYSfflVICf PARTSGENERAL MOTORS PASTS DIVISION Lt. W/W(, l//W>ht’cji I hut (tmif*(j M hn hruiu,,h '1$**if.'-* I72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, Sat. 9-5 Parti open Sat. 'til NoonTHE EIGHTH HENRY SIMONS LECTURE“KEYNES ANDCHICAGO”By Don PatinkinProfessor of EconomicsThe Hebrew Universityof JerusalemVisiting Professor in theDepartment of EconomicsFord Foundation\ isitin^ Research Professorin the Grauate School ofBusinessWEDNESDAY. MAY 28 p.m.The Glen A. Llovd AuditoriumThe Law SchoolAdmission is free without ticketsThe University of Chicago MEN! WOMEN!JOBS!CRUISE SHIPS.FREICillTKRSNo experience. Highpay! See Europe, Ha¬waii, Australia, So.America. Winter, Sum¬mer!*Send $2.75 toSEA WORLDBOX 61035Sacramento. CA 95825PiwualMatterPick mp sail.M13-MOO1460 E. 53rd ST.% T" VERSAILLES•••• 5254 S. DorchesterWELL M AINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive IV2 and2V2 Room Studios• Furnished or l nfurnUhed• SI89 - S287•4Wa Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. Groak THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOCENTER FOR LATIN AMERICAN STUDIESANDCENTER FOR MIDDLE EASTER STUDIESPRESENTMEXICO’S OIL AND THELESSONS OF THE MIDDLE EASTFirst Session: Monday, April 30,1979, 2:00 p.m.“PETROLEUM POLICY ANT) SOCIAL PROGRESS”PAPER:COMMENTS: ANGEL DE LA VEGA, Director,Graduate School of Economics, NationalAutonomous University of Mexico.JORGE CASTANEDA, Professor ofEconomics, National AutonomousUniversity of Mexico.NASSER SAIDI, Department ofEconomics, University of Chicago.ARNOLD HARBERGER, Professor ofEconomics, University of Chicago.Second Session, Tuesday, May 1,1979,2:00 P.M.“POLITICS AND PETROLEUM”PAPER:COMMENTS:CONFERENCECHAIR:LibraryIda Noyes Hall1212 East 59th StreetChicago, Illinois LORENZO MEYER, Director, Center forInternational Studies, El Colegio de Mex¬icoMARVIN ZONIS, Director, Center for MiddleEastern Studies, University of Chicago.PHILIPPE C. SCHMITTER. Professor ofPolitical Science, University of Chicago.JOHN H. COATSWORTH, Director,Center for Latin American Studies,University of Chicago.PUBLIC INVITEDBOOKSAdamson’sSEARCHING SPIRITAtyeo’sBLOOD & GUTSVIOLENCE IN SPORTSDurrell’sLIVIS, ORBURIED ALIVESirica’sTO SET THERECORD STRAIGHTHarper Library’sPOPULAR READING COLLECTIONnm VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE r72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Op«n Daily 9-9, So». 9-5 Part* open Sal. 'til Noon A THE UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGOCAN’T DISCRIMINATEAGAINST WOMEN.:.FIND OUT AT THELLEWELLYN MOOT COURTFINAL ARGUMENT BEFOREJUDGELUTHER M. SWYGERTU.S. COURT OF APPEALS(CHICAGO, ILLINOIS)JUDGE JOHN C. GODBOLD,U.S. COURT OF APPEALS(MONTGOMERY, ALA.)JUSTICE CHARLES L. LEVINSUPREME COURTOF MICHIGANIn the Law School CourtroomMay 1,1979-8:30 p.m.Tickets on sale at the Law SchoolApril 27,30, May 1and at the doorSeats with briefs $1.50Law School Films Stanley Kubrick’sDR. STRANGELOVEFriday, April 27 7:00/9:30 Law School Auditorium $1.50 I16 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 27, 1979Women lacking opponentsBy RW RohdeThe women’s track team is still havingtrouble finding competition.Coach Marianne Crawford’s women man¬aged to find someone to run against twoweeks ago, but that was it. The womenchalked up 81 points as Vicki Powers (440hurdles, 440), Carole Peterson (Long jump220), Elise Bloom (100 dash), Peggy Culp(High jump;, Cindi Sanborn (1500), JanRossel (3000), and Trish Briscoe '5000) allwon their events. Loyola managed to winthe remaining field events for their 26points, while North Central won the 880 ontheir way to an eight-point total.If that wasn’t bad enough (I mean, win¬ning is great, but what about a little compe¬tition?), two schools cancelled out of themeet, and one of those was the host school. moving the whole affair to Chicago. Cancel¬lations seem to be the rule as much as theexception this season According to Craw¬ford. “Our competition has been unbeliev¬ably negligent.”To make up for such problems, theMaroons have been doing things like run¬ning with the men in their developmentalmeets. Some of it has been fairly producti¬ve, such as a recent occasion where Powersbroke the school record for the women’s 440hurdles with a 72.8 time.The Maroons are going to get some goodcompetition next Wednesday when theytravel to Illinois Benedictine to meet thehost school and a very tough squad fromConcordia in a three-way meet. This shouldprep them for state. That’s assuming theiropponents don’t cancel out.Poetress Diane WakowskiTuesday, May 1A poetry reading byDiane WakowskiIda Noyes Library, 8 p.m.Reception to FollowFor Workshop Information Call 753-3562 ■* ir ) • i f* f* photo by C. StudenMaroon s in play-offSaturday ShowdownThe weather has not been an ally of theMaroon baseball team this year As theyprepare for their showdown with LakeForest which begins tomorrow at LakeForest, they have not played in over a week,having been rained out of three games lastweek. Coach Chuck Schacht is understand¬ably concerned about his team becoming alittle bit stale. Meanwhile. Lake Foresttuned up Wednesdav bv trouncing Trinitv.9-3.The play-off with Lake Forest is fourgames with the winner being the first to winthree. If the teams split the series, an extrainning sudden-death play-off will follow todetermine which team will have the honor ofadvancing to the MCAC Eastern Divisionplay-off on May 5. Last year, the Maroonplay-off hopes were dashed in the first in¬ ning of sudden-death when the lake Forestbase runner, also an All-American hockevplayer, crashed into the Chicago secondbaseman. The Maroons argued fruitlesslythat he should have been called out on inter¬ference. a decision that would have endedthe half-inning without allowing LakeForest's final decisive run to score.This year, the Maroons are hoping tosweep tomorrow's doubleheader behindtheir aces John Bruns and Joe Kinscel be¬cause the pair can only be used sparinglywhen the series concludes on Monday.Ralph Hruban is slated to start Monday'sfirst game. If he can get his hopping fastballover the plate often enough, the Maroonshope the decision about whom to start in thenightcap will be academic.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 “bunaalow" (not a railroad)Kitchen updated but still has a pantry Priced to sell quickly $68,500Northwest Hyde Park - Near 51 Ingleside Completely reconstructed sixcondos. Four already sold New furnace, wiring, roof, kitchens, baths', win¬dows. etc. 2nd floor. $57,000; 3rd floor. $55,000 All six rooms, two bathsCharlotte.Campus Location - 58 Blackstone Will trade up Have spacious six room sun¬ny cond. plus cash. Need at least seven or eight rooms Call CharlotteSpacious Two Bedroom - Formal DR, large L.R Skyline. Shoreline. City¬scapes all from high floor NARAGANSETT (50th & the Lake). Woodburningfireplace Parquet floors, beamed ceiling, new heavy duty wiring Excellentapt., excellent board of directors, excellent building, excellent location. Avail¬able June $79,500 CharlotteCampus Location. 57th and Kenwood Bay windows and wood-burningfireplace Overlooks park Light bright third floor Three freshly decoratedbedrooms, two attractive baths (with showers). Built-in buffet. $74,000KathyProud to Have Guests! 57th and Kenwood Quiet garden setting. Five roomcondo, excellent condition No extra charge for sunshine all day $59,500CharlotteFOR RENT1 bedroom at 4800 Chicago Beach $390 month Garage available extraThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 27, 1979 — 17CalendarFRIDAYPerspectives: Topic: “The Development of Family Rela¬tionships and the Effects of Separation on Children,"guests James Robertson, Joyce Robertson, and MariaPiers, 6:30 am, Channel 7.Crossroads: Free English classes for foreign women,10:00 am.Midway Studios: Art Show-“Anita Miller Drawings,"April 20-27, Midway Studios, 6016 S. Ingleside. Open9-5.Undergraduate Physics Journal Club: "Making Waveswith Fluid Mechanics" speaker Cary O’Brien, 12:30 pm.Eckhart 208. Free pizza.Computation Center Seminar: Introduction to Super-Wylbur, 3:30-5:00 pm, Research Institute 480.Economic History Workshop: "The Role of the Economisin Government Since 1945." speaker A.W. Coats, 3:30pm, SS 106.Arabic Circle: (discussion in Arabic) "Symbolic Disso¬nance and Culture Change in Iraq" speaker Dr. AmalRassan, 3:30 pm. Pick 218.Bizden Size: (discussion in Turkish) "Sociological Analy¬sis of Religious Movements in Turkey and Their Effecton the development of Political Ideology” speakerBekir Aksoy, 3:30 pm. Cobb 104.Dept of Microbiology: "Use of a DNA Fragment of De¬fined Sequence as a Probe for Damage by Carcinogensand chemotherapqutic Drugs and for Repair”, speakerWilliam A. Haseltine. 4:00-pm. Cummings room 101.Lloyd Fallers Memorial Lectures: "Some UnsettledQuestions in Development: Development Planning”speaker, Sir W. Arthur Lewis, 4:00 pm. Swift Com¬mons.Women's Union: Meets 5:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall abovethe Frog and Peach.UC Christian Fellowship: "Being World Christians atUC”, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.Hillel: Shabbat Dinner at the Bayit, 5458 S. Everett, 7:30pm.Coffee House: For Lesbians and gay men, 8:00-11:00 pm.Blue Gargoyle.International Socialist Organization: Film "There Is NoCrisis”, 8:00 pm, Crossroads International StudentCenter.Celebration of the Arts: “Godspell”, performed bymembers of the Lutheran School of Theology at Chica¬ go. 8:00 pm. At the Lutheran School of Theology.String of Pearls: with the Glenn Miller Orchestra, 9:00pm, Ida Noyes Hall.SATURDAYStudents for a Libertarian Society: Anti-Draft Jog."Health May Be Necessary For Your Self-Defense”, 59thand S. University AVe, 6:00 am.Table Tennis Club: Practice 10:00 am — 1 pm, Ida Noyes3rd floor.Compton Lecture Series: "Quarks: The Strongly In¬teracting Particles”, 11:00 am, Eckhart 133WHPK: Opera — "The Knot Garden” by Michael Tippet,1:00 pm.Rugby Club: UC vs Windy City RFC, 1:00 pm, StaggWHPK: Success without College: Comedic Humor,4:00-5:00 pm. Fine Women and Song: Music a Woman CanIdentify With, 5:00-6:00 pm.Calvert House: Joint Program in Legal-Medical Ethics:"Experimental Subjects and Suspect Consent: Mentalpatients, prisoners, children, etc...” 5:45 pm.Crossroads: Saturday Night Dinners, 6:00 pm, $2.00adults, $.75 children.International House Films: "The Lavender Hill Mob”,6:30, 9:45, "Lucky Jim”, 8:00 pm. International House.India Association: Concert by Lakshmi Shamkar, vocal¬ist. 8:00 pm. Ida Noyes Library. Tickets at the door.Celebration of the Arts: Luther College Choir, 8:00 pm,Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago.SUNDAYUniversity Religious Service: 11:00 am, preacher JamesF. White, Sermon: "Fifty Days of Easter” RockefellerChapel.Hillel: Joint Lox and Bagel Brunch with Southside B’naiB’rith Lodge and Hyde Park’s Council for the Jewish El¬derly, 11:00 am, Hillel.Celebration of the Arts: Ministry Through Arts Work¬shop, 1:00-7:00 pm, Lutheran School of Theology at Chi¬cago.Students International Meditation Society: Introducto¬ry Lecture: Transcendental Meditation, Free, public in¬vited, Ida Noyes East Lounge, 3:00 pm.Students for a Libertairan Society: Anti-Draft PosterParty, 3:00 pm, Ida Noyes 2nd floor, Jazz and refresh¬ments. Hillel: Movie — "Operation Thunderbolt”, 7:15 pm and9:00 pm, Kent Hall 107.Tai Chi Club: Meets 7:30 pm, 4945 S. Dorchester (enter on50th).Collegium Musicum: Recorder recital by CynthiaSchwan, 8:00 pm. Bond Chapel. Free.Folkdancers: General level with teaching, 8:30-11:30pm, Ida Noyes Cloister Club.MONDAYStudents for a Libertarian Society: AnarchoCapitalistRun. “Go After The State, Before It Can Come AfterYou.” 59th St. and S. Uniersity, 5:30 am.Perspectives: Topic: "Paradoxes of Education in a Re¬public" guests Eva T. Brann, and James Redfield, 6:30am, Channel 7.Danforth Meeting: 12:00 noon, Wieboldt 409 C.Ha-Sadnah: (discussion in Hebrew) "Israel: ReligionVersus State", 12:00 noon, Cobb 103.Calvert House: Discussion Over Lunch”, David Tracy, Di¬vinity School, 12:30 pm.Regenstein: Exhibit — "The Berlin Collection”. April 24 —Oct.. 10.Men’s Basketball: UC vs. Lake Forest, 1:30 Stagg.Center for Latin American Studies: "Mexico’s Oil andthe Lessons of the Middle East” 2:00 pm, Ida Noyes Li¬brary. «*Men’s Tennis UC vs Lewis Uniersity, 3:00 pm. VarsityCourts.Ultimate Frisbee Team: Practices 4:00 pm, Midway Plai-sance in front of Ida Noyes.Center for Policy Study: "The Inwardness of MentalLife”, speaker Stephen Toulmin, 4:30 pm, Glen A. LloydAuditorium, Law School.Boxing Club Meeting: First meeting of the UC BoxingClub, 7:00 pm, in Bartlett Gym’s trophy room.Hillel: Double Feature of Israeli Comedv "Sallah” in He¬brew with English Subtitles, 7:15 pm, and "The Police¬man” also with subtitles, 9:15 pm, Hillel.Chess Club: Spring Chess Championship, four roundUSCF rated Swiss tournament, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Me¬morial room.Women’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm, at the Blue Gar¬goyle in the Women’s Center 3rd floor, info call 752-5655or 752-5072.Baptist Student Union: Meets 7:37 pm in the 2nd floorEast Lounge of Ida Noyes.2 22 222 2222 22222 222222What's happeningat the University ?The following is the first in an irregularseries to inform our readers on “What’sHappening at the University. ”This gem came to us from the UniversityOffice of Public information:MemoMilk: $6 a gallon.That is the price of fresh milk on St.Lawrence Island, Alaska, in the BeringStrait between Alaska and Siberia, reportsDr. Albert A. Dahlberg of the University ofChicago. Dr. Dahlberg, a dentist and phys¬ical anthropologist, and his wife Thelmawere on the island in March 1979 asmembers of a scientific team studying theEskimos there.Dr. Dahlberg said there was a "terrificwind” blowing on the island when he andhis wife were there, and "it did get up tozero several days.” Some buildings on theisland were buried in snow.Disco dancing is popular among youngEskimos. Liquor is not allowed. A commondrink is coffee If you don’t like $6 a gallonfresh milk, you can drink powdered orcanned milk.The Eskimos live on sea mammals suchas whales. They hunt walrus, which comeout in groups of 20 on the ice. They like tocarve walrus tusks. They use whale ribsinstead of 2 x 4s to build some cave-likestructures The Eskimos live in woodenstructures usually, not in igloos, which aretemporary structures.The Eskimos do not like PresidentCarter, who put restrictions on whaling.Some of them harpooned and burned aCarter effigy.In addition to disco, young Eskimos liketo play basketball. They mostly playamong themselves, but sometimes jour-18 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April ney to Nome to play. The local high schoolbasketball team is called the Siberian Hus¬kies. They have a small band and cheerleaders.Another local sport is snowmobile rac¬ing. First prize is five gallons of gasoline,which is very expensiveThe local residents enjoy watching U.S.TV soap operas, which are beamed tothem by satellite; also the Nome radio sta¬tion supplies them with information ofplane take-offs and estimated plane arriv¬als. They also like rock and roll and guitarmusic, and listen to Yupik-language Eski¬mo programs originating among their kin¬folk in Siberia.An excerpt from the University Re¬cord:"Of the top 1000 business school candi¬dates nationally, many come from affluentbackgrounds. By the time these matricu¬lating students are ready to choose a grad¬uate school, they are not unaware of physi¬cal comforts and accommodations. Whileliving conditions perhaps should not be ofsubstantial concern, I have no doubt thatwe would annually attract to Chicago per¬haps 50 more of these top 1000 candidates ifwe could offer a first-rate, albeit some¬what more expensive, living facility on thecampus. A new business school dormitorywith squash courts, swimming pool, andfirst-rate living quarters could, in my opin¬ion, more than offset many of the negativeconcerns students from across the countrycontinue to express about Hyde Park andthe campus facilities.”Yes, but would they have securityguards to keep the undergraduates fromstoning them ?27, 1979 DOC FILMSGene Kelly, Frank Sinatra and New York CityON THE TOWN(directed by Kelly & Stanley Donen)6:45 and 10:15plusAudrey Hepburn & Fred Astairein Donen’sFUNNY FACE8:30(Now Hepburn’s hep! ... when Audrey rocks, you’ll roll! !Audrey dances and sings for the first time ... to greatGershwin tunes!See the Paris fashions of tomorrow!)and don’t forget our special midnight Marxist musical...The Rolling Stones & Jean-Luc Godard —SYMPATHY FOR THE DEVIL(separate admission charge)Saturday April 28Woody Allen’sINTERIORS7:00,9:00 and 11:00All Films $1.50 Cobb HallCLASSIFIED ADSSPACEVisiting prof, wants furnished room orapt, for May. 955 9782AVAILABLE To Grad S t u •dent/Teacher, 1 1/2 rooms, telephone,private bath, kitchen, desirable location, S140 (Plaza 2-8377).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.Hyde Park deluxe 1 bedrm. Hi-riseapt. lake view w/w carpet Air CondMay l. $360/mo. (288 5940),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 266-5046.Woman grad student or employed per¬son sought to share spacious (3 br.)apt. with one other. Couple possible.Rent $ 125/mo., Call Marjorie, 288 6026evenings. Available May or June.Unfurnished studio apartmentavailable May 1st. 1 block from Co-op.185 month utilities included. 752 2087Live in air-conditioned Little Piercethis summer. Safe; close to campus,stores, 1C. 2 people needed, also 1 forfall. Female non-smokers. 643-6438.Summer sublet room in Apt. $117/mo247-8047 nights.3 bedrm apt available June 1Everything new, 238-7941, 924-4287.Furnished room to sublet in 3 bedrm.apt. w/2 females. June 15-Sept. 15.Dena 955-0321.One bedrm. summer sublet fall optionclose to campus $250/mo. Ellen753 2924/493 0985.Furnished studio apt. to sublet fromMay 7 to August 31. Located nearUniversity Hospitals. Discount of¬fered. Call 752-0477 or 667 1050 afterMay 7. Call only 667-1050 best time tocall 7 a.m. 9 a m. and 5p.m. -11 p.m.Two bedrm. apt. avail. June 15 53rdand Kenwd $230 per mo summersublet w/fall option call 363-3611 or684-1229Deluxe 1 bdrm. turn. apt. with indoorparking included avail. July l at 1400E . 55th. call 667-1191 $400/mo.1 bedroom apt. May 31st on Woodlawn-55th St. $210 Laura 753-1189,South Shore Drive House - apt. Twobedrooms overlooking lake. Freeparking, appt. 978-3979.SPACE WANTEDSummer sublet starting May 1st. or assoon as possible Albert. 791-5486, days,493 3031 after 6.PEOPLE WANTEDOVERSEAS 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. Substitute teachers wanted for daycare center near the university. Ex¬perience with young children helpful.All hours 7:30 6:00. Carole Browning324-4100.Rap group for women. Mondays at7:30 p.m. in the Women's Center, 3rdfloor Blue Gargoyle.Subjects wanted for psycholinguisticsexperiments. Will be paid. To registercall 753-4718.Responsible sitter wanted part timefor 21 mo. girl. Pref. home with otherchildren. 684 3845.Wanted: two students for inventory.Some lifting, 1-2 days work. $3 an hour.Call 753 2360,Normal volunteers, 18-31 yrs. for 8-hr.sex-hormone research project. Compensation. Drs. Rosenfield or Rubin(947-6349).Sailing crew positions open Last year,ACHARAI took second in the Tarten-Ten National competition. This yearwe want first. If interested, call DickFiedlar 489-2700.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS While-U Wait.MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 55th St.493 6700. -Townhouse: 4 Bedrooms, lVj baths,Finished basement with bar. Off streetparking. Private playground 48th andWoodlawn: 93,500 : 538-097710 Speed Bike $90 or best offer. RedRoadway model, new last year,minimal usage Price includes theamazing theft-proof lock (worth $20)!Call 721-5461.NEW Komura 7-element Tele¬extenders in stock. Absolutely betterthan any other tele-extenders in theworld! Stop in and try them. MODELCAMERA - 1342 E. 55th St. 493 6700.NEW Olympus OM-10 in Stock! ModelCamera, 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.New Canon AV-1 in stock! ModelCamera. 1342 E. 55th St. 493 6700.PEOPLE 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.Typing: student term papers,manuscripts. Pick-up and delivery byarrangement. Please call 684-6882.Experienced pa inters I nteriorspecialistsneat, high quality work.Spackling and wall repair atreasonable rates. Free estimate. Call753 8342. Leave message with operatorfor D. Dorfman.SCENESPOTTERY CLASSES small groupslots of attention new daytime groupsforming 624-7568.Do you sometimes feel like dancing?Are you tired of disco or just ready to try something new tor a changeMaybe 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 NoyesTeaching both nights. For more infocall 643 9654Summer Child Care Solution ThinkSunshine! Once again Sojourner Truthwill offer an excellent summer program for 6, 7, 8 yr. olds as well as 3, 4, 5yr. olds. Program includes field trips,arts, crafts, music, sports. Open 7 a m.6 p.m. 538 832518th Century slapstick comedy, "TheVenetian Twins", a comedia del'Artepresented by the Halcyon RepertoryCompany, May 6, Cloister Club, 8p.m., $2 UC students, $3 others. FOTAStephen Toulmin will present the sixthannual Ryerson lecture, "The Inwardness of Mental Life" this Monday,April 30, at 4:30, Lloyd Auditorium atthe Law School! Open to the Public.PERSONALSGOOD HOME WANTED for smallshepherd/collie. Approx 2 yrs. oldhousetrained devoted good watchdog,excellent housedog. Owner leavingcountry. 752-3157.Pregnant? Troubled? Call 233 0305for help. Free test referral.Hi Rachel! Guess who?RDS4. The secret of life in opening upyour heart. It's okay to be afraid don'tlet that stand in your way. Everyoneknows that love is the only road. Aneven bigger chicken with very wetfeet."Miss Grabaloi" please call Mike at752 5835Confidential to Jimmy's • doll face Ilove you and your sparkling flashlight.Is there hope . If so card me the nexttime I come. Luv tall and sexyBeware the Bad French Play Syn¬drome. It could happen to you. Join theWaiting For Godot Study Club NOW.Even though I teem with students Ilead a lonely life. Nobody writes to meBeing a library is a spectator sport.Reg.LOSTAND FOUNDLOST: Cat, female calico, blackorange head and back, white legs andbelly, 6 toes; black spot on nose; vicnWoodlawn and 57th. Reward, 753-2645.INTENSIVEGERMANKarin Cramer PhD native German isteaching a 5 wk. course in preparationfor the German test 2 sections M-F 9-114:30-6:30, call 493 8127FOTABe your favorite character. Here'syour chance to assume a new identity!Crazy Costumes Day Fri. noon Apr. 27Hutch Court. FreeTASKFORCEAll interested undergraduats are in¬vited to a meeting of The Dean's Stu¬dent Task Force on Education in theCollege, Sunday April 29 7 30 p.m. IdaNoyes East Lounge.STARGAZINGEye 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. Eyeball the heavens from atop theEckhart Observatory 11:30 p.m May3. Festival Of The Arts and the UCAstronomy Club. FREESOCCERWomen interested in playing on the UCOURREPUTATIONHAS BEENBUILTPERSON BYPERSONJIMMY’SYoung Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288 2900 tfc-SAKKiflUlCHINESE AMERICANRESTAURANTSpBctallzing InCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M.TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Ord«r« to Tok* Out1318 io«t 63rd MU 4-1062 Thesis, Disert, Manu¬scripts, Incl. Foreignlong, latest IBM Cor¬rective Sel II Type¬writer. Rates based onVol. & Conditions ofdraft. Best EminenceBond Furn. Mrs. Ross,239-5982 bet. 11am& 5 pm. Women's Soccer club (open to all)come to Stagg F ield Tues or Fri 4:30 orcall Mary 955 6509 or Lola 667 8181.BLACKFRIARSFor fun, laughs, good times, see NeilSimon's SWEET CHARITY, the storyof a girl who wants to be loved, MandelHall, May 11,12, and 13, 8 30 pm, $2.00student, $3.00 general. Tickets go onsale at Reynolds Club and Cobb HallMay 7.GAY PEOPLECoffee house for lesbians and gay menFri April 27th 8 00-11 00 at the BlueGargoyle U. Gay/Lesbian Alliance.PROSPECTIVESTUDENTSVisit UC Gay and Lesbian Alliance.Open from noon Fri. Ida Noyes 1212 E59th, rm . 301 753-3274WOMEN'SMAGAZINE LOX ANDBAGEL BRUNCHSUNDAY, April 29 at 11:00 a m atHillel, 5715 Woodlawn. Hillel studentswill host the Senior Members of ourJewish Community in a joint brunchwith the Southside B'nai B'rith Lodgeand Hyde Park's Council for theJewish Elderly.MARK TWAIN"Mark Twain—in Person" a one-manshow starring Joseph Jefferson winnerRichard Henzel, Cloister Club, May 12,8 p.m. $2 students, $3 others. Ticketsavailable in the Reynolds Club box office. Festival of The ArtsTRANSCENDENTALMEDITATIONFree lecture Sun., April 29, 3 p.m. inIda Noyes Memorial Room IRVING—WHEREARE YOU..Iriving: your search is over. I saw youon the C minibus You were eating aspumoni ice cream cone and I wasreading Sartre Contact: LaVerneMensch.FOTA T-SHIRTSThe spectacular FOTA T shirt on salein the Reynolds Club Wednesday May2. Thursday May 3, $3.50.HEYGIRLSDisco Nick's got a 12-inch stick Checkit out!HELLOA pair of red shorts hangs on the hatrack, old and withered newspapers arestrewn about throughout the room.Surrealistic, grotesque pictures lie ondingy yellow walls A lowly reportersits before an ancient typewriter pounding away at delegated assignmentsPrimavera, the women's literarymagazine, needs new staff members.For info call 752-5655. The magazine ison sale in most Hyde Park bookstoresTAICHICH'UANThe UC Tai Chi Club invites you to par¬ticipate in one of its classes either at4945 S. Dorchester (enter on 50th St.)every Sunday at 7:30 p.m. or at theBlue Gargoyle, 5655 S. Universityevery Wednesday at 7 30 p.m. Tai ChiCh'uan, the dance of a longer,healthier life is soft, flowing andballetic. We encourage people whowould not ordinarily exercise becauseof their health to please try Tai Chi.We study all aspects of Tai ChiE veryone is welcomed even if it is onlyto talk about Tai Chi. FLAMINGO APTS.5500 S. Shore Or.Studio & One BedrmFurn. & I nftirn.Short Long Ti-rin Krnt«il»8200 - 8400Parking (tool. restaurant,valet. deli and trail—| tori al inn. ('.arpetin^drajie- inel.752480Q 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 undersigned with the county clerk of CookCo File no. K65194 Moneta FinancingInternational, 29 E. Madison, ChicagoIII. 60602, by David R Burton, 506 StFrancis Rd. Baltimore MO 21204,Peter E Lourenco 417 Sunset Lane,Glencoe IL 60022.FOTAPut on a happy face. Clown around.Let alt those natural clown tendenciesfinally emerge. CLOW DAY Fri. May 4Hi noon Hutch court. Free"INWARDNESSof Mental Life" is the title of the 1979Ryerson Lecture by Stephen toulmin.Monday, April 30 at 4 30 p.m. in LloydAuditorium at the Law School. Thepublic is invitedDIANE WAKOSKIA reading by poetess Diane Wakoski,May 1, Ida Noyes Library. 8 p.mReception to follow No admissioncharge. Festival Of The Arts.SECONDCITYTickets still available for the AnnualUC show, April 30 $3.50 UC ID, $4others Reynolds Club Box Office SNOWED UNDERDuo to Tvping Delavs0relax:Avoid the Rush and Leave the Tvping to Us.We Do:Manuscripts / Theses / DissertationsResumes f Reports / Transcriptions24 Hour Telephone Dictation ServiceEM A KW IK SECRETARIAL SERVICE1B(» West Washington 236-0110Weekends & Evenings 726-3572Houses for saleWHY PAY HIGH TAXES,HIGH PRICES $95,000.Overlooking your ownprivate quiet pond on oneacre. Brick and glass home.Custom- architect-Keckdesigned, newly built.Cathedral planked-oak ceil¬ing, woodburning fireplace.4 bedrms, 2 baths. 2-4 cargarage. Taxes $250. yr. NearMichigan City tollway. 55minutes from campus.HUDSON CO.,Chesterton, Ind.Call Charlotte,Chicago 493-6153 orEd, Chesterton219-926-2178 KENWOOD HOUSE TOUR -SUNDAY, MAY 20th1:00 P.M. - 5:00 P.M.TICKETS. SlO.OO-Sponsored byANCONA MONTESSORI SCHOOLFor Information Call 924-2356Child Care available at the school•Students: $5.00 with valid I.D.HYDE PARK PIPE RND TQBRCCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStuderts under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim'Mon. * Sat. 9 - 8: Sun. 12-5PipesPipe Tobaccos. Imported Cigarettes CigarsSWEET CHARITYMandel Hall May 11,12,13The Chicago Maroon — Friday, April 27, 1979 — 19mmmmK. ■HBHHHMIcttaOQQOPPOQ OOP QO BOO a B B fl B 0 tt ft fl.fi.fl fl ft fl--fl-JLfl.ftft ft fl AftA ft Q fl fl fl fl fl Q fl Q 0 Q fl Q tt fl fl g g fl 0 fl fl fi ft ft flJLftJLflJLJLflJULftJLfl-g B B B B « flB B Q « fl & ft fl-ft-fl-fl fl ft g fl-ftfl« ca WELCOME TO YOURUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTOREServing the Needs ofScholarship and thGeneral Reader eIn addition to a superb literarv selection, we maintain the*following specialcollections and services:The Reference Shelf (our most recently expanded special book section).[ niversity of Chicago Press Books (the University’s own distinguished produc¬ts in both hard and soft cover).The Psychiatric Book Section (a comprehensive selection of titles in this veryactive area of professional literature).The “Family Affair (including our Children’s Department and Cook BookSection - all deserving your scholarly attention).The Special Order Department (serviced bv personnel who specialize in thiswork).Hours for bookstore service areWeekdays 8:00 to 5:00Saturdays 9:00 to 5:00We look forward to seeing von soonStuart BrentManager (General Books)2«3-t fl.fl fl fi fl ftftfl ft ft fl fl fl fl flAfl fl fl flflfl flJLflJLfl Aft fl fl flflfl fl-ftfl-ftfl Aft flflflflOflflflaaflQOOQoooon