niversity of Chicagohicagp Maroonv The Chicago Maroon 1979 Friday, May 4, 1979Faculty attack McNamaraaward: forgetful, immoralvV - oft°> \ V”\ By Jaan EliasSeveral faculty members havesharply criticized the selection ofRobert McNamara as the winnerof the first Albert Pick Jr. awardfor Outstanding Contributions toInternational Understanding.Faculty members also critized themethod in which McNamara waschosen.Four faculty members said theyare circulating a petition express¬ing dissatisfaction with the awardand its receipient. Petitions will bepresented Tuesday to the 50-member Council of the FacultySenate.McNamara is president of theB& page studyCollege report to be public soonBy Andrew PatnerThe report of the standing cur¬riculum committee of the CollegeCouncil will be publicly released“by the end of the quarter,” Deanof the College Johathan Z. Smithsaid Wednesday.Committee chairman DavidSmigelskis, associate professor inthe New Collegiate Division, saidthe report is “descriptive ratherthan prescriptive.” Smith describ¬ed the 96-page report as “huge, themost significant report in thehistory of the College.”The report brings to a close thefirst year of a three-year process ofreviewing the College curriculum.“I want it done before I go out,”Smith said.Smith will complete his first five-year term as dean in the summerof 1982.Smith said the review has threesteps. “First we had to make an in¬ventory and study of wrhat is goingon, that is what the committee hasdone with its report. Then^ pro¬cess of discussion in which we willsee if this description is correctand see if we agree with it. Andfinally we have to decide where doDean ofSmith v.Photo: Nancy Tordaithe College Jonathan Z. we go from here.”As part of the review’s first step,the committee which has met sincewinter quarter of 1978 conductedan inventory of the faculty andbudget of the College. Thesereports will not be made public,Smith said. As a part of the cur¬riculum review that will be releas¬ed. the committee interviewed thefaculty of every concentration pro¬gram in the College for severalhours, according to Smith.The committee also includes:• Peter Dembowski, professorand chairman of the departmentof romance languages andliteratures;• Dr. Clifford Gurney, professorof medicine;• Donald Levine, professor ofsociology;• William Martin, associate pro¬fessor of microbiology and senioradvisor of the biological sciencescollegiate division;• David Schramm, professorand chairman of the department ofastronomy and astrophysics; and• Warner Wick, William RaineyHarper Professor in the College.Though their report does notmake general recommendationson the curriculum, it does makeseveral specific ones. Among themare the requirement that studentsdeclare their majors each quarterto assist concentration staffs in ad¬ministering their programs;firmer control over course con¬flicts; and a review of the systemof scheduling courses in Monday-Wednesday-Friday and Tuesday-Thursday patterns.Praise Task ForceBoth Smith and Smigelskis saidthe discussion of this report will bethe most important step in the Col¬lege review. And both stressed therole students could play in thatdiscussion.“A curriculum is a cooperativeventure,” Smith said. “My originalthought was that the committeewould have subcommittees withstudents as members. But thingsdid not work out that way.”Smigelskis said “it is my impres¬sion that comments from studentsand those facultv members that were not interviewed would be ap¬propriate in the discussion pro¬cess.”Smith said he was “delighted”that his Student Task Force onEducation in the College has shown“interest and concern” in the cur¬riculum.“I co-signed the letter (invitingstudents to join the Task Force'and I am utterly in favor of the no¬tion,” Smith said.The next meeting of the TaskForce will be Sunday at 7:30 pm inthe East Lounge of Ida Noyes Hall.All interested College students areinvited. World Bank, an organization thatlends money to developing coun¬tries. From 1961 to 1968,McNamara was the Secretary ofDefense and has been described asthe chief architect of the Viet NamWar policies of the United States.Faculty criticism is aimed atMcNamara’s policies during histenure as the Secretary of Defenseas well as his performance as pres¬ident of the World Bank.The award includes a cash prizeof $25,000 and a sculpture createdby \ irginio Ferrari. It will bepresented to McNamara byUniversity President Hanna Grayduring a dinner in his honor at Hut¬chinson Commons May 22.McNamara was chosen for theaward by a committee appointedby Former President John T. Wil¬son, William McNeill. Robert A.Milliken Distinguished ServiceProfessor in the department of his¬tory, is chairman of the commit¬tee. Other members are: ‘SusanneRudolph, chairman of the depart¬ment of political science; ‘RobertMcCormick Adams, Harold H.Swift Distinguished Service Pro¬fessor in the Oriental Institute:•Chauncy Harris, Samuel N.Harper Distinguished Service Pro¬fessor of geography; »D. GaleJohnson. Provost of the Universityand Eliakim Hastings Moore Dis¬tinguished Service Professor in thedepartment of economics; ‘AkiraIriye, chairman of the departmentof far Eastern Languages and Civi¬lizations; and ‘Robert Ingersoll. Trustee of the University andformer Deputy Secretary of State.John Reilly, president of the Chica¬go Council on Foreign Relationswas the only non-Universitymember of the Committee.Four faculty members called apress conference Wednesday mor¬ning to protest the award. Presentat the meeting were Terry Turnerassociate professor of anthro¬pology. David Easton. AndrewMcCleish Distingushed ServiceProfessor of political science;Donald McCloskey, associate professor of economics; and HarryHarootunian. Max PavleskyDistinguished Service Professor ofHistory and CivilizationsThe professors at the meetingsaid there was “a grass roots"uprising in opposition to theawards. Faculty members at thepress conference said many pro¬fessors are refusing to accept theirinvitations to the dinner and hadexpressed outrage at the an¬nouncement of the award.Easton criticized McNamara sinvolvement in the Viet Nam warMacNamara turned “dovish” atthe end of the war. Easton said, buthe said McNamara never suffi¬ciently explained his part in thewar — a war. from which “we arestill suffering the consequences.”Harootunian echoed Eastonscomments and said the Universitywas participating in "institutionalforgetfulness in presenting theaward to McNamara.to 2Two separate sex assaultsin Hyde Park this weekBy Abbe Fletmanwith Sue SartainTwo women, one of whom is aUniversity student, were sexuallyassaulted in separate incidentsSunday and Monday. Suspectshave not been apprehended foreither assault.A woman was raped at about 6pm Sunday while jogging aloneabout 150 yards north of CornellAve. and Hayes Dr., near theMuseum of Science and Industry,according to Vice-President forCommunity Affairs JonathanKleinbard. The woman suffered abruse on her left elbow receivedduring the struggle, according to apolice report.The second woman, a 22-year oldundergraduate, was assaulted inher apartment on the 5400 block ofWoodlawn Ave at about 2 pm Mon¬day. The assailant wielded a 12-inch kitchen knife, sources said.A 21st District policeman saidThursday that the investigator inthe case may be searching for apattern between Monday’s inci¬dent and some earlier incidents,but that no such pattern has yetbeen established. Police officials said, however,that there is “no doubt” there aresimilarities between Monday’sassault and the assault of a Univer¬sity employee April 1 in her apart¬ment on the 5100 block of KenwoodAve.Sources said the same man whocommitted the assault Mondaymay have appeared in the livingroom of a woman not connectedwith the University on April 17.The man departed from the apart¬ment on the 5000 block ofWoodlawn Ave. when the womanbrandished a kitchen knife.The man who committed theassault Monday was described bya police report as a 20 to 25 year-oldblack male with black hair andbrown eyes, about six feet tall, and160-180 pounds. Sunday s assailantwas described as a 15 to 16 year-oldblack male, about five feet five in¬ches tall.The assault victims were takento Billings Hospital EmergencyRoom. The student was counseledby a member of the Universitydean of students office.A “full investigation” of thecrimes is being conducted, said a21st District policeman Police investigations are a"police matter,” in which Univer¬sity security police play no role.Kleinbard said.After a sexual assault isreported, the University informsthe South East Chicago Commis¬sion which supplies victims withfree legal counsel. Kleinbard said.Police sketch of the April 30 assail¬antFaculty question McNamera’s meritsfromlMcNeill said Wednesday that McNa¬mara’s service as president of the WorldBank was the reason for his selection. Thepart McNamara played in the Viet NamWar is completely separate from the honor,McNeill said.Harris said Wednesday McNamara’s“previous career as a civil servant wascompletely extraneous to the award.”Harootunian said that segmenting a per¬son’s career into many parts is contrary tothe methods in which students are taught.“The question is do we believe what weteach,” he said, “we wouldn’t expect this ofour students.”Harris said McNamara, as president ofthe World Bank, has involved “commonpeople” in economic decision-making pro¬cess. According to Harris McNamara hasencouraged the establishment of commit¬tees in third world countries that identifythe problems of each area and aid the WorldBank in making loan decisions.Criticize World BankMcCloskey said the award was ques¬tionable even if McNamara’s role in the VietNam War is not taken into account. He saidMcNamara’s policies tended to be “simple-minded,” concentrating on one problem at atime without much reflection on the largereconomic picture.Turner said McNamara’s policies aspresident of the World Bank have led to debtbondage of most of the Third W'orld. Ac¬cording to Turner, the World Bank is one ofthe most powerful economic agencies in theworld and McNamara has used the power ofthe bank to enforce a rigid economic modelon the countries of the third world.Turner attacked the manner in whichMcNamara was selected. He said the awardand the committee that chose the award hadbeen shrouded in secrecy. The committee.Turner charged, had not been responsive tothe views of the entire University communi¬ty and characterized the committee as an“in-house administration committee.” Another University professor said that thegrant which made the award possible wasnot announced in the usual manner and thatconsequently University faculty memberswere not aware of the award. The membersof the selection committee, which this pro¬fessor stressed was a presidential-appointed, not faculty-appointed committ-tee, were not made public, he said.McNeill said the committee was rushedinto a decision but had some suggestionsfrom the University community. The com¬mittee considered 14 candidates and in¬vestigated biographies and contributions ofeach before the election.If the award is offered again, McNeillsaid, he hopes a more careful considerationwill be given to the procedure andmethodology in which the award recipient ischosen.Harris echoed McNeill’s statements andsaid that, since this was the first time theaward had been granted, the committee was“groping its way.” In some later period, hesaid, more thoughtful consideration shouldbe given to the procedure of the committee.The award was made possible by a grantfrom the Albert Pick Jr. Fund of Chicago.According to an agreement reached bet¬ween the University and the Pick Fund, theaward could go to a “government official,scholar, journalist, religious leader, writer,concerned citizen, or molder of public opi¬nion who contributed significantly to inter¬national understanding.”Gray said in the press release announcingthe award that it “will be a source of en¬couragement to individuals who are work¬ing for international understanding and in¬spiration to others.”“Wars serve no purpose’ ’Pick, who died in 1977, was well known forhis support of better internationalunderstanding. At the dedication of AlbertPick Hall for International Relations in 1971,Pick said “wars serve no purpose Conquestis no solution. Fairness must be the answerto all problems. We must be able to talk things over as enlightened human beings.’Easton said the award was not in keepingwith the University’s tradition to honor onlythose who had made significant scholarlyachievements. If honors were to be grantedto those outside the academic community,Easton said, the decision should be made inan open manner.The award puts the University in the posi¬tion of becoming a “bag man” for corporateinterests, Turner said. The award was not inkeeping with the style of the University and pulled the University into controversybecause of the nature of the award, he add¬ed.Harris denied that the award is political innature. “The award seeks to honor ac¬complishments and does not in any wayamount to an endorsement of any policy,”he said.Harris also cited the Pulitzer Prize as anexample of a university (Columbia) givingan award to nonacademic people withoutcompromising its academic stature.Toulmin on mental lifeBy Geoff PotterWith the help of sources as diverse asWordsworth, St. Ambrose, Tolstoy, andPhilip Kurland, Stephen Toulmin, professorin the committee on social thought,delivered the sixth annual Ryerson lectureMonday afternoon.His lecture dealt with the workings of thebrain, which, he says, reflects inwardly.The brain does not usually think aloud1 % -•>-*Photo: Mamsie CioltiRyerson lecturer Stephen Toulmin sometimes for fear of hurting others’ feel¬ings, more often to avoid being ridiculed andhaving its own feelings hurt. “If the largerworld of social and moral relations provesstrong and reliable,” Toulmin suggests,“we shall be able to move freely betweenpersonal inwardness and public openness. ..On the other hand, if the public moral worldproves fragile and untrustworthy, inter¬nalization may serve...as an instrument ofdefense.”Toulmin hopes we are not yet in “the con¬dition of human beings for whom there areno longer any effective bonds of communallife.” Unless we reject this sort of “post¬social” world, we will be “driven to takerefuge in the asvlums of our ‘inner lives’, forlack of external openness and publicunderstanding.” We will then live in a“world of masks.”Toulmin used this application of inward¬ness to point out that “the philosophicalclarification of our ideas can still serve.. .asa means of improving our own self-knowledge.”Toulmin joined the University faculty in1973 after teaching humanities at severalAmerican and English Universities, in¬cluding Oxford, Leeds, and Michigan StateHe was chosen this year’s Nora and EdwardRyerson lecturer by alumni and facultymembers.Festival of the Arts presents“A public lecture of a serio-comic naturewherein passing mention will be made ofmany; curious and wonderful things withseveral uncommonly; bad jokes thrown in”Adapted from the works ofSamuel L. ClemensPIPHXPB BPlffiHSaturday, May 12, 8 P.M. — Cloister Club, Ida Noyes Hall$2 UC Students, $3 Others2 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 4, 1979Crime statistics ‘soon’Photo: Carol StudenmundWomen’s Union members who attended Tuesday’s meeting. Lef to right: Greta Hogan,Sharon Pollack, Ben Davis, Ann Lahiff, and Kate Mostkoff. “Little 10” representativesDavid Shute and Lawrence McNally. By Abbe Fletmanwith Sue SartainIn a meeting with five Women’s Unionmembers Tuesday, Vice President for Com¬munity Affairs Jonathan Kleinbard saidcrime statistics will be released “in someform” soon. A likely possibility is to releasethem on a quarterly basis in the UniversityRecord, he said.The statistics probably will not include thelocation of each crime nor the time of day itwas committed. Kleinbard said thestatistics probably will not distinguish be¬tween assault and sexual'assault. accordingCycad collection moves to West CoastBy David BurtonThe condition of the south greenhouse on57th Street near Ingleside Ave. has de¬teriorated so badly that the cycad collectionhoused there, one of the better ones in thecountry, will be given to the Los Angeles Ar¬boretum.. The greenhouse is “in very, very fragilecondition” said Arnold Ravin, Addie ClarkHarding Professor in the departments of bi¬ology and microbiology. “By some miracleit has held up to now. said Manfred Ruddat,associate professor and editor of the Botani¬cal Gazette. “A spring storm could be verydangerous.”In mid-May the Los Angeles Arboretumwill transport the cycad collection at its ownexpense to the west coast. There the collec¬tion will be housed outdoors and will be ondisplay to the public. “Cuttings have beenmade and kept so the University will havethe genotypes.” said Ravin.Cycads are a primitive seed bearing plantthat may bridge an evolutionary gap be¬tween ferns and conifers. The University'scollection was created by Charles Joseph Chamberlain over 50 years ago.The cost of renovating the greenhouse isput at over $500,000. According to Ravin,some faculty members believe “it doesn'tseem wise to put up a 1930’s style green¬house” because there have been many inno¬vations in greenhouse construction sincethen. The greenhouse was built by Lord &Burnham in the late 1920’s.The University has been looking into theproblem for almost a year. A recipient forthe plants has been found but no decisionhas been made on the fate of the greenhouseitself. “We thought we would know lastweek, last month, or last year.” said Rud¬dat. Lynn Bender, a University plannerfrom the Physical Planning and Construc¬tion Office, said a decision has been made“not to rehabilitate the greenhouse.” ButRavin said, “A decision has been made onlyto try to raise money, and that all optionswere being discussed.”The final decision about the greenhouse,according to both Bender and Ravin, lies ul¬timately with the Provost, the President,and the Board of Trustees.Rudat expressed great confidence in theLos Angeles Arboretum's ability to trans-Monday, May 7thTHEChicago SymphonyString QuartetFIRSTIn a lecture-demonstrationCHAIRBreckinridge House8 pmAdmission free! port the plants safely. “These are experts.Nothing will die. They’ve transportedcycads from around the world.” he said.The plants will be moved by truck to Los An¬geles.Certain plants in the greenhouse that arenot a part of the cycad collection wiH begiven to the Mitchell Park Conservatory inMilwaukee, the Chicago Horticulture Socie¬ty in Glencoe, the Oak Park Conservatory,Triton College, and the Brookfield Zoo. to Women’s Union memebers.Women’s Union member Sharon Pollacksaid the type of information Kleinbard saidhe would release is “useless if notdangerous.” Listing crimes without specify¬ing their location or the time of day may on¬ly create paranoia. Pollack said.Kleinbard said Wednesday that crimestatistics should be obtained “from theagencies which collect them." Reports of in¬dividual crimes for the 21st Police District,which extends from 16th St. to 61st St. andfrom Cottage Grove Ave. to the Lake, arepublic information.But, he said, “We are trying to developsomething which we would like to get outsoon.”Kleinbard added that it is the University’sresponsibility to inform communityresidents about crime only when patternsbecome apparent.But, according to Women’s Unionmembers, there was some disagreementTuesday about what constitutes a pattern.While Women’s Union members contendthere are discernable patterns of crime overa long period of time. Kleinbard and Dean ofStudents Charles O’Conoell defined a crimepattern as crimes committed by the sameperson or group within a short space of time.Women's Union members said.‘Rape ’ signs spark painting rashInvisible hands struck again twice Tues¬day night as the words “No Nukes" first ap¬peared on the Henry Moore “NuclearEnergy” sculpture sometime around 11 pmTuesday night and then disappeared by 4am Wednesday morning.According to a source in the Universitysecurity force, a patrolling security officer“noticed at about 2:30 that someone hadsmeared some kind of a white substance onthe Henry Moore statue." He said it was notclear what the substance was but it was not paint and was still wet when discovered.The Chicago Fire Department was sum¬moned to “hose it down.”No one has come forward to claim respon¬sibility for the incident.In a separate incident, the words “a manwas laid here" were painted on thequadrangles near the flagpole Mondaynight. The graffiti, in white spray-paint, wasremoved Tuesday morning by Plant Depart¬ment employees.mmwmNvAlljJJli Uli\l\)Mallory’sBarRestaurantTenth Floor1525 East 53rd StreetHyde ParkChicago. Illinois 60615312 241 5600The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 4. 1979 — 3VEditorialWho will lead?Fifty years ago this fall, Robert Maynard Hut¬chins arrived at the University as its youngestpresident and within a few years he took theUniversity and the academic world by storm. Anoutspoken and controversial man, Hutchinsmade his greatest imprint on collegiate educa¬tion in the United States by acting on a reportprepared for his predecessor, Max Mason, thatrecommended the abolition of the “addingmachine” style education emphasizing coursesand credits, and the adoption of a curriculum ofgeneral education.Combining the Mason Report with the GreatBooks, he developed the Chicago Plan andpresided over a period in the 1930’s and 1940’sthat, if it is remembered no longer as the GoldenAge, was certainly the most exciting the Collegehas ever seen.Sapped of its vigor and style by Hutchins’s suc¬cessor, Lawrence Kimpton, the Collegefloundered for more than a decade until EdwardLevi’s College plan was adopted in 1966.But these reforms really only shored up theKimpton College while creating the CollegiateDivisions, the Common Core, and the SecondQuartet. Today the College is in sad shape onceagain. There is nothing common about the Core,the Divisions reflect undue influence from theirgraduate components, and the New CollegiateDivision has a bleak future at best. Students whohave a clear idea of their career goals becomeearly specializers, and those that do not use theshopping-cart approach in choosing theircourses — all of these ills persisting despite therhetoric of College recruiters and publications.Instead of addressing these failures of the cur¬riculum head on, President Gray has suggestedan increase in the College enrollment to nearly4000 students — this while there are not evenenough professors to teach Western Civilizationand Core courses. And Dean Smith will soonunveil a study which seems as if it will be morelike the Sain Report than a serious proposal forwhat the College could be.The College needs neither a cataloging nor anexpansion. It needs strong and creative leader¬ship to put the University at the forefront ofeducational innovation once again. Gray andSmith have not provided this leadership, or evena challenge towards it. The natives have becomerestless and the students, through the TaskForce on Education, have taken it uponthemselves to make the only noble effort towardsserious reform. We wish them well; but we alsowish they had the support and guidance of thefaculty and administration.Front page newsOn the front page is a story about sexualassault. No matter what kind of coverage TheMaroon gives crime it will always be too little —or too much. The Maroon will be-accused of caus¬ing paranoia by publishing this page one ac-The paper already has been bad-mouthed for notdemanding information about crime.Our concern is not that community residentsknow the names of victims or exact addresses,but that they know general locations, dates, andtimes. The utility of this information is obviousand has already been discussed here. We willcontinue to cover the problem of crime in thiscommunity as long as information is available.And it is up to you — the readers — to ensure thatinformation continues to flow. When you hear ofa crime, tell us. Armed with addresses, loca¬tions, and times, we can persuade the authoritiesto confirm or deny. In the area of crime, youcould be our most valuable source.4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 4, 1979’* .• or Letters to the EditorUniversity matterTo the Editor:As a newspaper written bystudents primarily for students. TheMaroon has an obligation not only toreport the news fairly but to helpserve the best interests of its readers— the students of the University ofChicago. It has become apparentthat The Maroon is failing to live upto these responsibilities.The Maroon’s recent coverage of acharge filed by a student in VincentHouse in relation to yet anotherinter-house prank has been grosslyirresponsible. Charges were madeafter the subject had been closedwithin the disciplinary prerogativesof the University and with thegeneral acceptance of the majorityof the students in the houses involv¬ed. However, not only was a com¬plaint filed, but charges were pur¬sued, and the Chicago police werecalled — by the student, or students,who filed the complaint — to makean arrest which took place during aUniversity conducted class. Fromthe way the articles were written, itbecomes apparent that The Maroonfailed to verify its informationthrough other sources. More im- ,portantly, neither story seems topresent all the information pertinentto the incident. This biased reportingis unethical journalism in its mostdisgusting form.The more fundamental questionarises as to whether publicity of stu¬dent arrests is in the best interests ofthe students of this University. Thiskind of editorial policy indirectlycondones the incriminations madeby a student, or students, who usedmeans that are surely abhorrent tothe students of the University ofGray approvalfrom class of 17To the Editor:We approve President HannaGray’s statement that divestiture isincompatible with the Trustees’fiduciary and legal responsibilitiesto the University of Chicago(Chicago Maroon 3-2-79). TheRepublic of South Africa is doing itsbest to maintain a good governmentand be fair to a heterogeneouspopulation. We are not forgettingthat the collapse of the presentgovernment of South Africa wouldbe a disaster for millions of SouthAfricans, black, white and yellowbut also for the United States ofAmerica. Our opinions are based onstudy of and visits to South Africa.John Huling Jr.Ph.B. 1917(Mrs.) Helen M. HulingEx. 1920 Chicago as a whole. Certainly thetraditional and time-honored prac¬tice of this University has been tokeep the Chicago police out of ourcampus and out of our business. Isthe policy of The Maroon such thatany student or students chargedwith any offense can expect theiridentities to appear in the studentnewspaper? Can these samestudents expect this kind of damag¬ing pre-trial publicity? How doesthis kind of editorial policy serve thebest interests of the students of theUniversity of Chicago?The Maroon by giving publicity tothis incident, has failed to face up toits obligations as a newspaper in twoessential ways. Not only has it failedto practice good journalism, but TheMaroon has ceased as a publicationto serve the best interests of itsreaders. We. as members of the Graphic: Chris PersansUniversity community, are shockedby this irresponsibility.James M. CaseyChris MarkgrafRich NewcombJerrold OlshanChris GayAndy EvanchoEric NordmoeAnna J.L. IngrahamLinda RiskiKatherine GriffithPatrick MoriartyFrank E. ZabalyDavid PakulaJames LeongAnthony Samuel LamantiaJeffrey A. LoebPeter RoppoGrant AndersonShawn HawkRoberts. Lewis Jr.Katherine Baker.Crime reports lackingTo the Editor:A recent Maroon editorial and theappearance of the stenciled message“a woman was raped here” on HydePark sidewalks both raise an impor¬tant question about the amount of in¬formation concerning neighborhoodcrime which students possess. Ithink it is fair to say that crime issomething about which moststudents are quite ignorant. Theyshouldn’t be.Student ignorance stems in largepart from the reticence of the'University and The Maroon on thesubject. I believe that The Maroon’sdecision not to publish accounts ofindividual crimes is not as harmfulas the fact that it has failed topublish a coherent article on crimepatterns. Incident by incident ac¬counts are mainly sensational innature and unless one is a collectorof such accounts, it is difficult to geta broad of the crime picture fromthem.The importance of having such abroad view is implicit in TheEditor: Abbe FletmanNews editor: Eric Von der PortenFeatures editor: Claudia MagatPhotography editor: Carol StudenmundSports editor: R. W. RohdeAssociate editors: Andrew Patner, Jacob Levine,,David GlocknerContributing editor: Nancy ClevelandCopy editor: Doug ThomsonBusiness Manager: Suzanne FarrandAd manager: Wanda JonesOffice manager: Leslie WickLayout and graphics: Chris PersansProduction: David Miller, Peter AdelsStaff: Tim Baker, Curtis Black, David Burton, LeeChait. Kendall Christiansen, Jaan Elias, Jackie Hardy,Chris Isidore, Richard Kaye, Carol Klammer. Bob Lar¬son, Bette Leash, Bruce Lewenstein. Donald Link. DanLoube. Greg Mizera, Geoff Potter, Michael Rabin,Andy Rothman, Sue Sartain, Margot Slauson, HowardSuls, Calvin Thrilling, Mark Wallach, John Wright. Maroon’s editorial statement that“reasonable precautions must betaken to minimize risk.” How canstudents minimize risk when theyaren’t aware of where the riskiestplaces are and when they are theriskiest? Adequate informationallows students to take account ofdifferential risk in the neighborhood,doing more to protect themselveswhen the risk is higher. The Maroonis in an excellent position tominimize the cost of makingstudents aware and I hope it willtake the opportunity to do so.John W. RuserBlood don’t lieTo the Editor: ,Three years in the ivory towershadowWhy i always turn and run?Because i a back country nigger.(How could i forget that?)The skin is “white” butthe blood don’t lie-weeding fieldsunloading freight cars in Rich¬mondslumsliving behind the manor inthe washhouseLook in my eyestell meIn ivory worldwhere a tribeless nigger go?p „ -t. c. fosterNew menus have higher pricesPizzas get 30% more doughThey dump sugar into the tomatosauceThey dump sugar in the salad dress¬ing1 won’t even say anthing about theViewpointRevolution or reaction ? The case of IranThe following was written by the Univer¬sity of Chicago Spartacus Youth League.“In Islamic society, women are not con¬sidered human beings. I remember when Iwas a young girl and went to class to studythe Koran. I was told that if I did not covermy head, I would go to hell and everystrand of my hair would turn into longsnakes.. . It is no accident that when Kho¬meini took power he immediately out¬lawed abortion and imposed the chador.What he is trying to do is control themasses under the ‘Islamic spirit’. The veilis a symbol of women’s oppression underIslam and an instrument of that control.”Fatima Khalil, a near Eastern commu¬nist woman of Muslim origin, is currentlyin the U.S. to sound a cry of alarm over thethreat to the Iranian masses under Ayatol¬lah Khomeini’s new Islamic order. In acoast-to-coast tour sponsored by the Spar-tacist League/Spartacus Youth League(SL/SYL), she is speaking in ten cities in alittle over three weeks. Her message to theAmerican left: the working class mustlead the women, national minorities andpeasants in revolutionary struggle againstthe Muslim clerical reactionaries now inpower in Iranb. The alternative, becomingclearer day by day, is theocratic bar¬barism.Already well before the overthrow of thebloody U.S.-backed shah, the internationalSpartacist Tendency warned that the re¬placement of the hated dictator by the Kho-meini-led opposition would be no gain forthe working masses; that the ayatollah’sforces are anti-working-class Persianchauvinists seeking to return to the Koran¬ic law of the 7th century. Now that the mul¬lahs have won,, our warning has been dra¬matically confirmed as women take to thestreets of Teheran protesting imposition ofthe veil and ethnic-religious minoritiesrise in revolt around the country.Across the U.S. hundreds have already turned out to greet Fatima Khalil’s standagainst turning back the clock of history inIran to the time of Muhammad. Herspeeches have also drawn threats of physi¬cal attacks and disruption attempts fromIranian Muslims and Maoists. Defensesquads composed of dozens of Americantrade unionists have ensured Khalil’s rightto speak to the public.In her forums, Khalil stressed that Kho¬meini has not betrayed — he said veryclearly from the beginning exactly what hewanted. “There are people who claim thatwhat is going on in Teheran today is theIranian February revolution,” she said.“But it has been clear to us from the begin¬ning that Khomeini was in no sense pro¬ gressive.” He said he wanted an “IslamicRepublic” based on the Koran; in his plebi¬scite the people were given only twochoices, either the shah or the Muslimclergy. He tried to win the support of theshah’s army and decreed that only “Isla¬mic soldiers” could be armed. “Today inIran there are Islamic courts. We have notears for the generals and SAVAK tor¬turers who were executed by the mullahs.But why is it that only the mullahs have theright to speak in these courts? Organiza¬tions like the Fedayeen were tortured bythe shah, yet these people are not allowedto speak because they are not part of the“Iranian nation’ according to Khomeini.”Centering her talk on the oppression ofwomen under Islam historically, under theshah and now under Khomeini, Khalil point¬ed out that according to Muslim lawwomen do not have rights as hurrtanbeings:“When they are young they are depen¬dent on their fathers; when they get mar¬ried they belong to their husbands. On alegal basis two women are consideredequal to one male witness. And in the vil¬lages young women — children really —are often exchanged for animals. . .“The Koran says if you show your fingerto a strange man, you have to cut it off. Be¬cause it doesn’t belong to your husbandany more, therefore it doesn’t belong toyou.”The bourgeois revolution meant a greatdeal for women, she stresses — namely,they were considered to be human beings.The basic Islamic law existed under theshahs regime as well. If he gave Iranianwomen the right to work as part of thetoken reforms of his “white revolution” in1963, it was to provide cheap labor. But themullahs want to go backwards to the mid¬dle ages:“After Khomeini took power he said that about 300 women who are married to non-Muslims will be deported from thecountry, and foreign workers from Afgh¬anistan and Arab countries, too. Today inIran if you use alcohol the punishment iswhipping. Khomeini also abolished the 1975Family Protection Act.”As the only real example of the emanci¬pation of women from the medieval op¬pression of the Koran, Khalil pointed to theearly Bolshevik work among women of theSoviet East. Laws against forced mar¬riage, early marriage and polygamy wereactually effective, in contrast to the show¬case reforms of bourgeois nationalists likeAtaturk. And communist women organ¬izers were murdered for their fight againstthe veil. “In those mass meetings whichmany Islamic women took part in,, theyburned their veils. They were the first sup¬porters of the Bolsheviks in CentralAsia.”The Iranian masses today urgently needa Trotskyist vanguard party, capable ofstruggling against the reactionary socialprogram of the mullahs and for a workersand peasant government. In this task, thequestion of women’s oppression will play amajor role. But unless the defiant Iranianwomen find a base of support in a class¬conscious proletarian opposition to themullahs, their militancy will be dissipatedor smashed by the clerical reaction. Onlythe perspective of a new, socialist ordercan show the way forward for the militantwomen in Iran.The Spartacus Youth League will besponsoring a 3-part class series at the Uni¬versity on “Women and Revolution” start¬ing the week of May 21. We urge all in¬terested men and women to attend. Call427-0003 for more information or come toour literature tables in Mandel hallTuesdays and Wednesdays from 10:30 amto 1:00 pm.Festival 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 Sunday, Mav 6. 8 p.m. in the Cloister Club of Ida Noyes Hall.$2 llC. Students. $3 Others- 5The Chicago Maroon — Friday. May 4, 197*Walpurgisnacht exorcisesWinter this yearBy David BurtonThe ancient tradition of Walpurgis Nightwas revived five years ago on this campusto protect Chicago, and the University inparticular, from evil spirits and demonsthat emerge in force the first dark morningof May. Once again the University com¬munity is being asked to help appease thepowers that be. This year, however, there isspecial emphasis on trying to make Old ManWinter happy, encouraging him to tamethose wretched Chicago winters.It all began in the spring of 1974 when D.-J.R. Bruckner, Vice President for Public Af¬fairs, asked Don Quander to look into thepossibility of holding a Walpurgisnacht atthe University. It is done on European cam-nuses. thought Bruckner, so why not here?Walpurgis Nacht has its roots in centralEuropean pre-Christian fertility rites. Itwas popularly believed that on the nightbefore the advent of growing season. May 1.the power of witches was at its height. Thewitches, it was thought, assembled atcrossroads and on mountaintops, arrivingon broomsticks and he-goats to perform evilrites, engage in wild dance and orgies, af¬firm allegiance to the devil, initiate newmembers, and receive assignments for thefollowing year.The best known of these gathering placeswas Broken, the highest peak of the HazMountains, famed as the scene of the wit-Murphy mayseek clientsActing Cook County Public GuardianPatrick Murphy will have access to hiswards at Manteno State Hospital and can of¬fer free legal service to other patients.Judge Raymond Berg ruled Tuesday. TheIllinois Department of Mental Health(IDMH) had filed a suit to bar Murphy fromManteno.A controversial series of suits brought byMurphy against the IDMH. including onenaming the University as a codefendent,came as a result of Murphy’s visits toManteno last month, according to Murphy.The suits charge that patients were used inexperiments without proper consent givenon their behalf.Judge Margaret O’Malley will hear thesuit brought by Murphy against the IDMHand the University on Thursday, May 9 Thecase had been set for today.marian realty, inc.REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available-Students Welcome-On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 ches sabbath in Goethe’s Faust.Fires were lighted to drive away the wit¬ches and to secure a good harvest the follow¬ing fall.Saint Walpurgis (Waldburg) has been ac¬cidentally associated with these ritesbecause one of her feast days Was May 1.Her influence against the demons may wellhave been sought by the common folk.The first Walpurgis Nacht began atBurton-Judson Courts. Kelly Kleiman,leader of the torchlight parade, stood in thecenter of the courts and, not knowing whatto do, began screaming. As she tells it, peo¬ple stuck their heads out their window andtold her to be quiet because they were tryingto study. But eventually people came downand joined the march, which coursed down60th St. Torches in hand, they turned downWoodlawn Ave. as cars screeched to a haltand bypassers gawked, evidently fearing amass invasion from Woodlawn.r many, tne marchers arrived, 500 strong,at Hutchinson Commons. A large bonfirewas lit and dancers, representing thedeflowering of a virgin circled the fire.Lamb, meade, and May wine were offeredto the participants. A giant 15 ft. tall Satarwas knocked over into the fire. Renaissanceflute music floated out from Mitchell Tower,and was drowned out by the RockefellerChapel bells, which someone had begun toring.University security had not been informedof the parade, and was confused. Rumor hasit they got several high administrators outof bed to ask them what to do; in any casethey didn’t do anything.The night ended with a free-for-all inwhich the gardens of Hutchinson Commonswere destroyed and, evidently, some peo¬ple’s clothes got ripped off. It was all in thebarbarian spirit of things.This year the maiden — female, unlikelast year — will be sacrificed to Old ManWinter. If he accepts the sacrifice, Chicago,or at least the University, should be blessedwith a mild winter next year.The ceremony will be preceded by — whatelse? — a disco. There is nothing like amodern twist to an old story. The dance willbe from 10:45 pm to 11:30 pm in HutchinsonCommons. The traditional torchlight paradearound campus will begin there at 11:30 pmupon returning to Hutchinson Commons, theritual will be consumated by the sacrifice ofa virgin to Old Man Winter.All in all, the night promises to be. ifnothing else unusual It is w'orth a shot to atleast try to mellow out the next Chicagowinter Photo: Carol StudenmuncConstruction to allow access to the handicappedHandicapped findingUC much smootherBy David GlocknerIsrael Goldiamond is careful to let peopleknow he is satisfied with the University’s ef¬forts to make the campus accessible to thosein wheelchairs.Although many campus buildings remaininaccessible to him, Goldiamond, who isconfined to a wheelchair, believes theUniversity is moving as fast as can be ex¬pected to make the campus accessible to thehandicapped.It would cost the University “at least’’ $1million to make the campus fully accessibleto the handicapped, according to CalvertAudrain, Director of Physical Planning andConstruction. The University’s currentfinancial difficulties make that moneyalmost impossible to find, he said.But unless the University makes a majoreffort to improve access for the handicap¬ped, it may find itself at odds with theKurland LecturePhilip Kurland, William R. Kenan, Jr.Distinguished Service Professor in the Col¬lege and Professor in the Law School, willspeak on “The Judiciary as Legislature”Sunday night at 8 pm in Pierce Tower. Thediscussion is free and open to the public.Kurland is a well-known expert on con¬stitutional law and has written widely aboutthe role of the judiciary in Americangovernment.Refusenik letter campaignA letter writing campaign to free SovietJewish refuseniks will be held this SunHavat Hillel House, 5714 S. Woodlawn Ave.,from 10 am to 2 pm.Hillel will host a table with aerograms,postcards, and stamps to kick off an inten¬sified effort to free individuals and familieswho have applied for exit visas from theEye 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. U.S.S.R. and been refused permission toemigrate.The names and addresses of the refuseni¬ks, and Soviet government officials, will beavailable at the table. The entire communi¬ty is invited to join in the letter writing cam¬paign. Donations of 22 cents per aerogramand 31 cents per air mail stamp are request¬ed to cover the mailing costs.Also on Sunday, a march in solidarity withIsrael will be held, sending walkers throughthe Jewish institutions of Hyde Park.Walkers will raise funds for the United Jew¬ish Appeal by accepting pledges for certaindonations for miles walked.Thank you,JosephA second year student named JosephSmalley won $5 for correctly locating thegargoyle pictured in The Maroon on Tues¬day. Smalley called at 11:15 am and said,“The gargoyle is on Wieboldt Arch.” That’sthe side facing the Midway. Other guesseswere: the northwest entrance to RockefellerChapel (no such entrance exists), the maindoorway of Rockefeller Chapel, HarperLibrary’s main entrance, the ReynoldsClub, and Bond Chapel. Thank you, Joseph. Department of Health, Education, andWelfare (HEW), which is charged with en¬forcing the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.Regulations issued by HEW two years agounder the authority of the Rehabilitation Actrequire that all University activities be ac¬cessible to handicapped students and facul¬ty members who wish to take part.When it cannot make classes or events ac¬cessible without making structural changesin buildings, the University has until June,1980, to make the necessary changes.Failure to meet the 1980 deadline couldresult in a cutoff of annual federal aid to theUniversity of more than $50 million.However, the requirements of the act andthe University’s ability to comply do notalways coincide, Audrain said. “So far,we’ve been able to meet the specific pro¬blems of students,” but to make all thenecessary renovations before the 1980deadline will be almost impossible, he said.University officials consider a cutoff offederal funds highly unlikely, however.Several problems make it costly for theUniversity to make its buildings accessibleto the handicapped One is the age of manyUniversity buildings At the turn of the cen¬tury, few people survived crippling ac-.cidents and illnesses long enough to usewheelchairs. Because of this, buildings con¬structed during that period seldom hadfacilities for wheelchair access.As a result, doors to many older buildingsare not wide enough to admit wheelchairs,toilet stalls are too narrow, drinking foun¬tains and pay phones are too high, and stepsblock access to other parts of buildings.Modifying all these features while preserv¬ing the architecture of a building is expen¬sive, Audrain said.Another factor making access to the cam¬pus difficult is that many buildings werebuilt with “English basements” because ofthe high water table in the Hyde Park area.English basements, according to Audrain,are only half-buried, with the result that thefirst floor is half a story above ground level.Because of this, ramps and elevatorsmust be installed inside a number ofbuildings in order to provide access to thefirst floor. Audrain cited Cobb Hall as an ex¬ample of a heavily-used building with anEnglish basement.Although there are only five students inwheelchairs presently enrolled, Universityofficials appear unanimous in agreeing thatthe campus should be made more accessi¬ble. They are also in general agreement thatthe University does not have the money tomake changes as fast as federal law re-qures.As a result the University will continue itsslow process of improving access. CurrentUniversity policy is to include facilities forthe handicapped in all new buildings andmajor renovations. Modifications inbuildings not scheduled for renovation aremade as the money becomes available.While the University may be slow in im¬proving access for the handicapped, Goldia¬mond has no complaints about the quality ofthe facilities which are finally buildt-. “Whenthey do things, they do them with class,” hesaid.6 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 4, 1979“Little 10” news reportStudents look at national college needsThe following is an excerpt from a reporton the Intercollegiate (“Little Ten") Con¬ference, held in February at the Universityof Pennsylvania, which was released thisweek by the University representatives tothe Conference, the Intercollegiate Organi¬zation.The full report, some 50 pages long, is in¬tended “to make available the more salientor controversial issues, concerns or opin¬ions’’ raised at the Conference.A more complete account of all the infor¬mation exchanged by the participatingschools — the University, Stanford Univer¬sity, and members of the Ivy League.Academics CommitteeThe Academic advising subcommitteereaffirmed the need for students to receiveguidance from faculty members. Advisingstudents as to their course of study should beseen as a part of the teaching process ... Astudent’s need for guidance when choosing amajor was discussed ... Under a student ad-, vising system, 3rd and 4th year studentswould help 2nd year students choose amajor .. . Students might then make a moreinformed decision about which course ofstudy to pursue. A major weakness of advis¬ing programs at most schools was the lackof advisors to deal with the special academ¬ic problems of women and minority stu¬dents. Some administrators do not advocatethe existence of such support structures,while at the same time not opposing the ex¬istence of special pre-med and pre-law advi¬sors.The General Educational Policy subcom¬mittee examined aspects of the curricula ofthe schools in its consideration of the meth¬ods and goals of a liberal education. A focusof attention was graduation requirements,wherein the educational philosophy of aschool should be expressed . . . Curriculumrevision at many schools appears to be arecognition of the inadequacy of prevalentloose distributional requirements in a liber¬al education . .. The intrinsic beauty of clar¬ity of purpose is not to be taken as a given.In many ways, Chicago came across asthe school which worked most closely andclearly with its definition of itself. A discus¬sion of academic options, however, makes itquite clear that our Ivy League counter¬parts are offered quite more in the range ofwhat students may. as opposed to must,study.The Procedural Concerns subcommitteeinvestigated the mechanics of the individualschools academic programs. The reportbriefly lists practices significantly differentthan those of Chicago. At Harvard, studentspay extra tuition for courses above the stan¬dard load of four only if those courses aretaken to accelerate graduation . . . Manyschools, such as Princeton, Harvard, andPenn, require undergraduates to completetheir degrees in four years or less . . .Almost every school besides Chicago hasa reading period (before exams), as long astwo weeks. Reading periods allow time forstudying, for papers to be completed, andfor independent work ... At several schools,it is considered a violation of academic in¬tegrity for a student’s graded work to be ac¬cessible to other students; for example, thereturn of papers en masse via out-boxes isspecifically prohibited . . . Admiration wasexpressed for Chicago's professed policy ofnot using graduate students in teaching, asis done at all other schools, with undergrad¬uates leading discussion sections at Cornell,Brown, and Harvard . . . Grades lower thana C are not entered onto transcripts at Stan¬ford . . .At all schools besides Stanford and Chica¬go, incompletes range from being very diffi¬cult to almost impossible to get.The Special Education subcommittee dis¬covered that all schools but Chicago andHarvard have formal overseas educationprograms. Problems with Overseas Educa¬tion include financing, academic credittransfer, and cultural counseling .. . Finan¬cial aid should be given to students com¬mensurate to what they would have beengiven at home ... No student should go over¬seas uncertain of the possibility of academiccredit transfer to the home university . . .In field work, Chicago was also deficient. Such experiences can be valuable in educa¬tion, ecology, sociology, pre-law, etc. Ad¬vantages, besides the benefits to the studentinvolved in work experience before gradua¬tion, are an increase in student income, re¬sulting in a lessening of the burden of the fi¬nancial aid office, and a reduction inon-campus class size.Extracurricular Activities CommitteeThe committee discusses both athleticand non-athletic campus activities ... Itwas the area of funding that the Chicago del¬egation found most valuable. Other schoolsat the conference support their student ac¬tivities with an activities fee . . . this systemprovides a large pool of funds for student or¬ganizations, and it makes it explicit that stu¬dent activities are supported by students,and thus should be responsive to their de¬sires ... At this time the only fee assess¬ment at Chicago is the Major ActivitiesBoard fee . . . Student organizations barelysurvive with a $30,000 grant from the Deanof Students . . . The Chicago population, in¬cluding graduate divisions, is similar in sizeto some of the other schools represented atthe conference, and the discrepancy in fund¬ing is astonishing. Brown has over $120,000in funding for student groups, Princeton$90,000, Penn $320,000, and Stanford, whilesupporting things covered by other fundingprograms at most other schools, has $1.3million at discretion . . . Students at Har¬vard solicit contributions from alumni whohave been involved in their organizations.Unlike other schools, Harvard does not fundcampus wide organizations . . .Minority Affairs CommitteeThe committee dealt with a problem mi¬nority students face every day: racism . . .Racism functions on the institutional as wellas the individual level . . . Primary discus¬sion focused on minority concerns consider¬ing admissions procedures, support ser¬vices, and faculty-administrativecomposition ... In admissions, a trendtoward declining black enrollment wasnoted at all the schools. Delegates ex¬pressed concern not only with this decrease,but also with the increase in middle classminority students. It was agreed that notenough of an effort has been made to attractworking class and inner-city minority stu¬dents . . .In minority support concerns, delegatesfelt there is a need for Third World Centerson campuses ... At Chicago it’s difficult toyell about the lack of a Center for minoritystudents when there doesn’t even exist aStudent Center for all students.At each of the universities. *he number ofminorities in tenured faculty and top admin¬istrative positions is minimal. This is themost dismal of minority status assessmentsbecause significant gains in minority rightsare contingent on minority representation indecision making positions.Student Government CommitteeChicago chaired the committee. Threeissues dominated the agenda: • the lack ofstudent interest in and support of studentgovernance structures; • the role of stu¬dent governance structures as a representa¬tive of student concerns and as an agent ofcommunication among students and amongstudents, faculty and administrators; and •the student governance structure’s respon¬sibilities in raising funds and channelingthese funds to student organizations . . .It was seen as a responsibility of studentgovernance structures to increase the roleof students in decision making processes. Aneed exists for more student influence in theaffairs of the University of Chicago. This isnot a radical statement. It is the result of anawareness that students are integral to theuniversity community, and can be givengreater responsibility without adversely ef¬fecting that community ... In order to legi¬timize the role of a student governancestructure as a representative of the studentbody, greater support and interest has to beevoked.The subcommittee on student apathy feltthat progress in this area could best beachieved by answering the question of howto focus in on the concerns of the constituent student body, and how to motivate studentsinto approaching their concerns through astudent governance structure . . . Chicago’swas the most poorly funded student govern¬ment at the conference.Student Life CommitteeThe committee felt that a successful uni¬versity community, comprised of not onlystudents, but also of faculty members, ad¬ministrators, maintenance and functionary-personnel, and the populace around the uni¬versity, should be an acknowledged goal ofall universities . . . Students and othermembers of the community should be ableto learn from each other, and this is of suffi¬cient importance that its realization must bea priority in all actions pertaining to thiscommunity. Chicago appeared to satisfy theabove statement. Social elitism and aheightened class consciousness were report¬ed at Harvard, while at Dartmouth there isconcern about “blatant sexism’’ in its^ad-missions policy . . .A major concern of most schools was alack of quasi-organized social alternativeson campus. Dartmouth especially cited theuse of alcohol as the single most prevalentelement of social activity, with fraternitiesbeing the maior force in its abuse.The committee discussed student centers.They existed at most schools, and the moreeffective were defined to be those thatserved a large number of students as a so¬cial center, recreational facility, “base” formajor organizations, and center for studentservices. Chicago presently operates twostudent “centers,” Ida Noyes and ReynoldsClub. They contain a multitude of studentserv ices, but neither is regarded as either asocial center, recreational center, or ser¬vice center by any large number of studentsChicago’s fraternities, as a living situa¬tion, met with a great deal of admiration atthe conference, especially the concept ofcoed fraternities... The committee felt thatthe university should take an active role inproviding for the off-campus housing of itsstudents.In comparison to other schools, we lackmany health and counseling services thatshould be standard for student services. One such program that the university shouldconsider is the establishment of an infirma¬ry for students. At present, unless a studentis suffering so badly that he needs hospital¬ization, he is sent back to his dormitory orapartment. There is no place where stu¬dents can go and be certain of care and ob¬servation if sick . . . Other institutions hadmore stress-counseling type services. Har¬vard and Penn both had some sort of peercounseling, as well as specific stress coun¬selling services that were well advertisedthroughout the community. There alsoexists a wider range of services such ashealth education, drug and alcohol depen¬dency clinics, sex counseling, and specificsuicide prevention services . . .Our security system was more extensiveand expensive than that of any other school,and it was also the most effective . . .Tuition, Financial Aid, andAdmissions CommitteeThe more the delegates found out aboutthe economics of the situation, the less theyfelt capable of doing about it. Uncontrolledexpenses, such as inflation, wage hikes, en¬ergy costs, etc., are not really worth dis¬cussing here, since they tend to be out of ourcontrol. For controlled expenditures, how¬ever, the problem of determining prioritiesarises . . . The need for student input wasstressed in two areas: fundraising and thebudgetary process . . . The University Re¬cord does a good job of reporting on the bud¬get, and Chicago's tuition increases arevery well explained in relation to those atother schools ... The accuracy of using onlythe Parent’s Confidential Statement for fi¬nancial aid was questioned . . . Energy sav¬ing programs such as those at Brown andPenn, where incentives such as a keg of beerfor the dorm that saves the most energy areawarded, might work at Chicago . . .Womens’ Affairs CommitteeSince the University of Chicago offers fewservices and no support systems to womenmembers, there was very little we couldcontribute to the information exchangedamong the attending schools ... To eradi¬cate the potentials for and the myths aboutrape and sexual assault certain demandsmust be made on each of our universities.These include publicizing and disseminatingcrime statistics, counseling services spe¬cially geared towards sexual assualt vic¬tims. as well as rape victim advocates, anduniversity sponsored or supported self de¬fense classes . . .Chicago was unique in offering no out¬reach programs for women . . . Among ser¬vices offered at other schools are studentadvising, gay counseling, contraceptivecounseling in the dormitories, free day care,a complete referral service, and an adviso¬ry committee to oversee and make recom¬mendations for improving women's healthservices within the University . . .We found that attitudes towards homosex¬uality at each of our universities ran thegamut from public acknowledgement andacceptance at Stanford to open and violenthostility at Dartmouth . . .* In the area of Women's Studies, we foundwe had nothing to contribute to the commit¬tee. although our belief in the need for repre¬sentation of women in the college curricu¬lum was reaffirmed . . . We were the onlyschool that did not have Women's Studies,and where the study of women was not ri¬gorously integrated into the existing curric¬ulum ... A dilemma which the women at allschools faced is whether a conservativewoman faculty member serves the advance¬ment of women in the university over a malefaculty member specializing in women’sstudies ... At next year’s conference, wehope we can be an inspiration to other un¬iversities. the way they were to us thisyear.Chicago's delegates were: Dave Appel.Laura Cottingham. Eric Doppstadt. CherylFeuer. Lauren Furst. Mark Golberg. JennyGurahian. Roger Horowitz, Sean Jordan.Jane Katapong. Ann Lahiff. Jeff Lea veil.Larrv McNally, Pat Medo. Sarah Schulman.Judy Sedaitus. DaveShute. Tim Spears, andSteve Thomas.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 4, 1979 — 7^EX LIBRISIn Its SecondSuccessful Quarter!The Finest100% Columbian Coffee,over 40 varieties of Tea,Natural Snacks, A Plethoraof Pastry, Much Else.A Level, RegensteinM, T, W, Th. 6 pm -11 pmSat. 12 Noon-8 pmSun 12 Noon-11 pm 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 $4 an hour for your time — a few week¬day evenings each week.If you are mature, reliable and can talk about theUniversity and its needs, we II train you to be aneffective Alumni Telefund Associate.If you re a senior, graduate or professional stu¬dent, you are among those most eligible.Call the Alumni Telefund right now at 753-0893.Or stop and see Gregory Volk at Classics 36 foran application.THE CHICAGOALUMNI TELEFUNDfoot) drink Iicentiou#ne#$-S3 TTOalpurgidnacIitfnai f&rni£©unt:Bance'Copchijght parade )i:jiKites nf Spring MIBB30iT£8 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 4, 1979t a. .(4 . 4 iv»tl ii J ii .U .vATvW?2lVA1►™eGrey City**™,The arts and criticism supplement to The Chicago Maroon Special Festival of the Arts issueJ9lUWFestival of the Arts Celebrates 25th yearDaniel Heifetz: pp. 14-15 Fireworks: p. 11 Chuck Berry: p. 17COLLEGEPROGRAMSDAYCOBB HALLMAY 93-6 RM3:00QuantrellAuditorium4:00 & 4:30ClassroomPresentations MastersCollegiate DivisionSpecial presentationby each field ofconcentrationReceptionfor studentsand faarityFind out divisional and concentrationrequirements. Talk to divisional Mastersand faculty members. ATTENTION!ALL JUNE GRADUATESATTENTION!ALL JUNE GRADUATESThe E.R. Moore Company will be atthe Bookstore, Second Floor, from 8:00a.m. to 4:15 p.m. on Monday, May 21,and Thursday, May 24, to accept ordersfor caps and gowns for the June Convoca¬tion.Please place your order at THIS TIMEONLY. We do not have a staff to takemeasurements at anv other time.mmm wmmmmmm mmmmm / mmmSTUDENT HEALTHINSURANCE 1979-80Important NoticeSTUDENTS IN THE COLLEGE — You will be required to make adecision about health insurance for 1979-80 when you pre¬register THIS MONTH.GRADUATE STUDENTS — You will be required to make a de¬cision about health insurance for 1979-80 at AUTUMN REGIS¬TRATION.PICK UP A BROCHURE NOW.Student Blue Cross/Blue Shield Plan BrochuresAvailable at:• Registrar’s Office• Student Health Service• Deans of Students OfficesIf you have any questions about insurance coverage, contact the StudentInsurance Officer at 947-5966, from 9:00 a m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday throughFriday$ theFrenchKitchen3437 West 63rd776-67150|M*n for Dinner5 P.M. Daily3 P.M. SundayClosed MondayModerately Priced Chicago Guide:"Fating at the Frenchkitchen is like timingn itli Julia l.hiltl."10 — The Grey City Journal — Friday, May 4, 19791/vnnuai University Trivia Quiz: In what year was this phototaken?The Arts, Allen Ginsburg in 1970: I Hutch Court Chalk-In, 1971 — before spray paint became the pop-have seen the best minds ular mediumof my generation driven madin the College.Spring, and FireworksThe Festival of the Arts and its wide assortment ofcampus cultural events have traditionally been usedas evidence that at least some people at this univer¬sity take the golden rites of spring seriously. In fact,one year the Festival organizers took Edna St. Vin¬cent Millay’s line, “spring comes like an idiot, bab¬bling and strewing flowers” so seriously that theyrented a plane to fly over the quadrangles droppingdaisies on the happy crowds. Gone too are the dayswhen less flashy extravagances like masqueradeballs, sports car shows or visits from Norman Mailerand William Carlos Williams were typical.This year marks the Festival’s twenty-fifth anniver¬sary, and its organizers are operating under whatmany consider a slim budget, yet FOTA’s originalidea—to call attention to the University community’sinterest and participation in the arts during whatChicago passes off as its nicest time of the year—is stillthe Festival’s ruling spirit.Started in 1954 as the brainchild of the late Gar-hard Meyer, college economics professor, FOTA’s pur¬pose was to simply designate as a festival the manyspringtime activities related to the arts which Wouldtake place anyway, and to invite leaders in the artsto come to the University to enrich those activities.According to Harold Haydon, a University art profes¬sor who always keeps a sharp eye on campus arts, by Richard Kayethe Festival was “a bringing together and a designa¬tion to mark the presence of living art.”A number of the activities, such as exhibitions, lec¬tures, and theatre, were consistently going onthroughout the year. Others, such as the poetryreading contests and competitions for writers wereannual spring quarter events. To these the Festival ofthe Arts committees added several special affairs, ormany depending on the interest, energy, and fundsavailable each year.Most people will remember 1970 as being FOTA’sbest year, and it is no little coincidence that the yearwhich brought some of the more illustrious figures inFOTA’s history — Ginsburg. Edward Albee, Studs Ter-kel and Ken Kesey — was also the year in which FOTAworked under its highest budget: $30,000. This yearFOTA has a budget of approximately $20,000. FOTAlost $10,000 when the Alumni Association rescinded apromised grant this January. Acting Alumni Associa¬tion Director Peter Kountz said then that the granthad not been approved by Vice-President for Aca¬demic Resources Jonathan Fanton because of a lackof funds. The funds which were intended for FOTAwere used to cover in part the cost of twelve recep¬tions held around the country for alumni to meetPresident Gray. One of the results of the budget cut¬back was the cancelation of comedian David Stein¬ berg's contract with FOTA, which, together with Dan¬iel Heifetz’s appearance would have cost the Festival$8,000. ,The history of FOTA has not been free oj^ontro-versy. The first Festival of the Arts was launchedjwith$1,000 from the. University, and it was immediatelydesignated as an event which “from now on will be atradition.” Only a year later, the student and^acultycommittee in charge of FOTA decided that trW. Uni¬versity was funding the annual festival less out of acommittment to the arts than an interest in exploit¬ing them for their publicity value. The committee re¬fused to accept University money for a few months,but then concluded that any money should be wel¬come. Independent fund-raising continued, reachingits high point when Peter Rattrer of the Festival suc¬cessfully appealed to faculty, trustees, alumni andfriends of the University for a windfall budget oneyear. In 1966 there was no Festival because of acampus draft protest, and the only event of culturalimport was a campus performance of Measure forMeasure.Measure for Measure is back again this year, andso are the draft protests. And this year the spring¬time festival that is FOTA may be the only way forstudents to know that it is spring. The weather cer¬tainly isn’t telling.in 1975 pie-off.An Original Musical About the Business SchoolThe Importance of Being EagerMay 10.11,12 8:00 p.m. Ida Noyes TheatreTickets on sale at Reynolds Club Box Office and in Cox Lounge. General^ Admission $2.50The Grey City Jou»ma! — Fndav. May 4. \9^° — 11* . \ * .»* - - '* A. « .. m * ii t ' ii*fi TiSi ^ "n ifdtrftiiW'' ilfitftiMfai limit LU^yfciMi. BMSjjLi't Jtjjje College of tfjc ©nibersitp of CijicagoINAUGURAL LECTUREbyROBERT R. WILSONPeter B. Ritzma Professor in the CollegeThe International Assaulton the AtomTUESDAY, MAY 8, 19794:00 P.M.Social Sciences 122 1126 East 59th Street THE COLLEGETHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPresents a Public LecturebyStanley CavellWalter M. Cabot Professor of Aestheticsand the General Theory of ValueHarvard University■*PURSUITS OFHAPPINESSA READING OFTHELADYEVEFriday, May 4,19793:30 P.M.Quantrell Auditorium Cobb Hall 209Admission FreeIn conjunction with Mr. Caveil’s lecture there will be freeDublic screenings of The Lady Eve (Preston Sturges, 1941)in Cobb Hall 425 on May 1, 2, and 3-7:30 p.m.Black Friars Presents SWEET CHARITYMay 11,12,13-8:30 P.M.Mandel Hall$3 General Reynolds Club Box Office May 7IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII. 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 you»S« KJKCOLORPROCESSING. Kodak Model Camera1342 E. 55th493-6700VALUABLE COUPON-CUT OUT The College QuarterlyINQUIRYseeks undergraduateessays for its spring 1979issue. Submit essays soonat Ida Noyes checkroom.For information, callAdam Schulman at955-6033orJuitae Lee at753-3777 CLOWN DAYFOTA NOONTIMEClown around campus,this Friday,May 4.12 — The Grey City Journal — Friday, May 4, 1979From Teresa’5Checke,boa.dto»"9e anPVxW Gvrt ’AUO'°r MJe\'str\e o<*s me V>\uestfa"> Oi>WW»nde po**9A8.9P-^neShO*^«\\i ooe ^S2VJC swde^sFes' *rt» A Small SaleWe have a small quantity ofhigh quality remaindersgoing on saletoday.Please come into browse(and to buy).University of Chicago BookstoreGeneral Books (first floor)We accept Visa and Master ChargeChe Hniotrsitu of ChicagoTHE SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SERVICE ADMINISTRATIONPRESENTSThe Third SOCIAL SERVICE REVIEW LectureSocial Justice: Ideas and ActionThe Roots of the Settlement HouseMovement in AmericaBYJ. DAVID GREENSTONEProfessor, Dopartmont of Political ScienceTUESDAY, MAY 8, 19794:30 P.M.SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SERVICE ADMINISTRATION969 East Sixtieth StreetThe Grey City Journal — Friday, May 4. 1979 — 13An interview with D‘Even classical music can be placed on theDaniel Heifetz, 28, an exciting and extraordinaryyoung violinist, will perform pieces by Brahms andRavel and other composers at Mandel Hall on May 14as part of the Festival of the Arts program. The singleperformance will be at 8:30 p.m., and tickets are $3.50and $4.50 for students and $5 and $6 for all others.Heifetz will also give a master class on May 15 at10:30 a.m., which will be open to auditors. He will de¬liver a lecture that same day at 1:30 p.m. in the IdaNoyes Library.A graduate of the Los Angeles Conservatory ofMusic and the Curtis Institute of Music, Heifetz beganplaying the violin at the age of six, and at 20 wonfirst prize at the Merriweather Post Competition inWashington, which resulted in a solo appearancewith the National Symphony Orchestra. Heifetz hasperformed throughout the United States, Canada,Central and South America and Europe with the Phi¬ladelphia Orchestra, Cleveland Orchestra and theLos Angeles Philharmonic.The following interview was conducted by telephoneby Philip Borgnes while Mr. Heifetz was in Canada onApril 30th of this year. Philip Borgnes is a third-yearanthropology student in the College and the classicalmusic coordinator of the Festival of the Arts.How did you become involved in music?Heifetz: When I was little I saw someone playingthe violin on television, and I raised hell until myparents brought home a fiddle for me. I took to itinstantly. My older brother plays the piano and myyounger brother plays the cello. We began havingfamily musicales together — playing chamber musictogether. It was great fun. But I hated to practice,and I suppose that brings up the question of whatparents should do with children who want to quit amusical instrument.What made you want to continue?Heifetz: Well, what happened was that my fatherwould sit me down and tell me in a very adult waytjiat one of the tragedies of life was to look back andto wish you could have done something, only to real¬ize that there wasn't actually that much you wouldhave had to sacrifice to have accomplished it. And so,as an insurance policy for myself, they convinced meto keep at the violin. I never practiced much at agenine really, and even then only in a minimal way. Myparents figured that perhaps later in life I’d enjoyplaying in the doctor’s symphony, with friends at aparty, or in chamber music. My parents never pushedme, but instead found a proper balance between en¬couragement and pressure.So at first you played simply for enjoyment?Heifetz: Yes, but for some reason I was better at itOn Tuesday May 8, at 8pm in Breasted Hall of theOriental Institute, Andrew Porter will deliver a lec¬ture entitled “The Composer as Scenic Designer.’’ Hispresentation will include slides. Mr. Port was educat¬ed and has taught at Oxford. For fifteen years he wasmusic editor of the London Financial Times and hascontributed numerous articles to such journals asOpera. He has written several important transla¬tions of opera libretti, including a widely performedversion of Wagnner’s Ring of the Nibelung. Since 1973Mr. Porter has been the music critic for The NewYorker. He is generally recognized as ore of the fore¬most reviewers and scholars in music today.The lecture is presented as part of the WilliamVaughn Moody series, and is public and withoutcharge.On Wednesday, May 9, the Visiting Committee ofthe Music Department is sponsoring a forum on“Judging Music.’ The panel will include Paul Hume ofthe Washington Post, Donald Henahan of the NewYork Times, and Nancy Mallitz of the Cincinnati In¬quirer. The forum will be at 4pm in Breasted Hall, andis al^b public and free of charge. — Bruce ShapiroThe Grey City Journal - Friday. May 4. 1979 than I should have been considering the smallamount of practice I did. People who listened to mewere constantly telling my parents to put me in a con¬servatory or put me on television, but my parentstold them to get lost. After all, they didn’t want meexposed as an exceptionally brilliant, talented child.They preferred me to have a well-rounded back¬ground and a normal childhood and not to be so high¬ly-geared to one area at such an early age. So Istayed in public school, had the routine of a normalkid, but still played better than I should have played.And thank God my parents had this idea, because itgives you so much more as a person — this well-round¬ed background — when you’re an artist. It gives you amuch better perspective on life. At sixteen, I decidedto find out once and for all where I stood and how-much talent I had and where it would take me.Up to that point were you studying other instru¬ments other than the violin?Heifetz: No, I was just studying the violin and goingto public school, although I’d started at the Los An¬geles Conservatory on a part-time basis, taking har¬mony and chamber music classes. At the age of six¬teen everything changed, however. I auditioned atCurtis and Efrem Zimbalist accepted me as his stu¬dent. At that point I realized I had something whichwas my responsibility to develop and to see where itwould take me.Did you have any idea of what you were getting into,the long years of study and work, when you enteredCurtis?Heifetz: No idea at all. It was frightening, because Icould sense my life changing at this moment. But Icontinued to practice all day without having any ideaof what the life of the concert artist demanded orany of the activities I’m now so involved in.Did your attitude about music change when you werein a place as competitive as Curtis?Heifetz: No, maybe because my parents kept meout of the music world in terms of being a competi¬tive little kid. I isolated myself at Curtis, and alwayshave felt that if you’re good there’s always a placeAndrew Porter, music critic of The New Yorker for you no matter how many people are at the top.So I was never very preoccupied with competition. Itwas being at Curtis which inspired me, really — thetotal music atmosphere was a real revelation to mesince I was never before really involved in music.Being in Curtis, in Philadelphia; walking down thestreet and hearing people practicing their musicthrough their apartment windows — all of this waspart of what I considered a tremendous atmo¬sphere.Did you find other students at Curtis to be very com¬petitive? Did you find them overly concerned withmastering technique while ignoring musical ideas?Heifetz: Yes, to both your questions. And today,too, there is an overemphasis on technical virtousity,perhaps because of the advent of recording. In re¬cordings you do it over and over again, splicing therecord until there’s a perfect performance. And thenpeople come to concerts expecting the same perfec¬tion, which is of course impossible. There are so manyfabulous technical musicians today who can stand upand play something but not speak deeply to themusic. We’re at a stage when technical perfection ismandatory, and since it’s taken for granted that amusician has it there are so many people who areoverly concerned with it.How do you prepare for a concert? Is the audience atype of mirror to what you play, that is, do you re¬spond to an audience’s reaction or do you simplypresent a musical idea and reflect later?Heifetz: It’s both. I’m very aware of the interplaybetween the audience and myself in terms of the vi¬brations going on between us. I come out on stagewith my conception and present it. And the sponta¬neity of the moment has a great deal of influence onthe outcome of the musical idea.When you play a piece frequently, do you do it in thesame way each time or do you find yourself changingit a lot?Heifetz: It’s different at each performance. When Iplay a piece, it reflects where I am and who I am atthat performance. For example, I was with somefriends earlier this evening and I picked up the fiddleto play a piece. It was played to reflect a certainmood and feeling at that particular moment. Later inthe evening, friends said “Hey, Danny, take out thefiddle and play for us again.” They were just curiousto see how I would play the same piece, and it trulywas a very different performance. It’s this way at aconcert. There are some basic things which serve as afoundation, but there’s a high degree of feeling thatgoes into a performance which is a reflection of thespontaneity of the moment.How do you approach a new work?Heifetz: I approach all works — even the famousones that I’ve heard and never played — in the sameway, at least initially. First, I work out exactlywhat’s on paper, doing it very, very precisely as I at¬tempt to figure out what the intentions of the com¬poser are. And while I'm doing that I immediatelyand instinctively start hearing different ways ofdoing it. After I feel secure in knowing what’s writ¬ten I look deeper to see what’s written between thelines.In order to find musical ideas.Heifetz: Yes, musical ideas. And I’m not afraid tomake slight changes in tempi or in dynamics. I feelthe performer goes hand in hand with the composerto make the music come alive. Maybe I’m old-fash¬ioned in that I don’t believe in doing things verbatim,or as the humble servant of the composer, so tospeak. And the composers of the pieces I play who7 never practiced much at age nine. My parents thought thatperhaps later in life I'd enjoy playing with friends at a party. ’Music Critic Andrew Porter to lecture9aniel Heifetz, violinistlevel of an emotional common denominatorare alive and who I speak to generally show an ap¬preciation for what I, as a performer, bring to thepiece. I really don’t think they would be happy with aperformer who sat back and simply copied everymarking that was written on the paper. But one’s in¬terpretation does have to stay within the bounds ofgood taste, and it’s a very delicate balance which hasto be followed. You can’t really prescribe it.So performing a composer's music is really an evolu¬tionary process that goes from the composer to theperformer to the audience, and maybe back to theperformer, and perhaps to the composer, for possiblechanges.Heifetz: Exactly. In order to make it live. And whenI teach I usually do just what’s written with my stu-) dents. There are so many degrees of loud and soft, ofcrescendo, that the basic problem with students isthat they don’t do what’s on the paper. For example,I with Bach I've discovered that if students would dorhythm precisely they would realize that there’s re¬ally very little to be done. It takes a very subtle handto bring out the flow and architecture of’ thephrases.Most of the time a student brings me a Bachwork it’s so out of line rhythmically that it’s a realeye-opener for them to see that when I do exactlywhat is on the page, with only slight variations, themusic speaks beautifully.So one has to have a firm foundation with notes asthe music is printed and then add interpretation andembellisment.Heifetz: Yes, it’s like with a modern painter. A mod¬ern painter who doesn’t have the technique to painta perfect replica of a table and chair is, in my opin¬ion, not worth his salt. And the same thing goes formusicians who play pieces in a musical way a littlesubconsciously, because that’s the easiest way to doit.What makes a good or great violinist today?Heifetz: An ability to communicate with the audi¬ence and an innate understanding of musical concep¬tion and how it touches the artist emotionally. It’salso the artist’s ability to express their emotion in anintense way, and to zero in on the emotions of thelistenee.Can this be taught?Heifetz: Not really. I don’t think these aspects of agreat composer can be learned or taught.* It’s theability to project one’s experience to others. Music asI conceive of it is based on a basic emotional commondenominator. I’ve taken my violin into prisons, hospi¬tals, and poverty areas. I’ve tried to make my workmore relevant to society and not just the concerthalls. I’ve walked into a prison as the only white per¬son in the whole place and told them I wanted to playsoul music. They said “Great!” until I said, “I don’twant to play black soul music or Spanish soul musicbut Jewish soul music.” And they wanted to knowwhat I was talking about. So I said, listen fellows. I'ma Jew, my mother was a Hitler refugee and most of myrelatives were killed by the Nazis. I told them that themusic of one persecuted minority group can be relatedto the situation of any other minority group. And oneblack prisoner raised up his fist and cried, “Right on,brother!” When he said that I proceded to play a piececalled “The Negun” by Ernst Bloch. It’s a legitimatepiece which has as its main themes and motifs theJewish experience in the European ghettoes. I playedto this audience of black and Spanish-Americanprisoners — most of whom had never seen or heard aviolin before — and when I finished some of the big,husky guys in the front row were crying. I then playeda gypsy piece, some Ravel, and some Brahms, and theplace was filled with bravos and standing. The wardentold me it was a bigger response than the one JohnnyCash and some popular singers had received at theprison. And it showed me that you need no musicalsophistication or education to understand and to get atthe musical experience. Even classical music can be*placed on the level of an emotional commondenominator. That’s one of the most exciting lessonsI’ve learned in my entiere musical careerThe Grey City Journal — Friday, May 4. 1979UdcutoM StudmSUMMER DANCE CLASSES FOR MEN AND WOMENWith An Outstanding FacultyBeginning June 1 8MODERN DANCE By Lynda Martha -Choreographer of Regional Dance Festival and Head of theDepartment of Modern Dance with Giordano StudioFridays* 5:00 Teen Age Dance• 6:00 Intermediate• 7:00 BeginnersBy Linda Wagnon ofArve Dance Company andStanley Kinberger of Mississippi Regional Dance Co.AND DANCE EXERCISE CLASSES Monday and Wednesdays• 6:00 Intermediates• 7:00 Beginners• Mornings, 10:00 and NoonBALLETBy Gerard Charles - Premiere Dance with Chicago Ballet Co. andformerly with Royal Ballet Company, LondonTuesdays and Thursday Evenings• 6:00 Intermediates• 7:00 Beginners1438 E. 57th Street For Information, Coll 288-3500 Bike Trip — May 12Call John Hardis at 363-5269Climbing Trip — May 12Call Cary O’Brien at 753-3755, Rm. 201Caving Trip — May 19Call Peg Smith at 94 7-0148Now in paperbackCARLOSCASTANEDA'Sgreat bestsellerTHE SECOND RINGOF POWERA new and startling chapter inone of the great journeys ofenlightenment of our time—and a vision of the world ofthe full-fledged sor¬cerer. “Moves withvivid, eerie force.”—San FranciscoChronicleFROM SIMON AND SCHUSTER Don’t leave school without it.Now that you’re going out into theworld, you’re going to need theAmerican Express*Card. It’s indis¬pensable, for vacations or business.But don’t wait, because we’vemade it easier to get for graduates.All you need is a $10,000 job (orthe promise of one). It’ll be tougherlater, so look for this display in theStudent Center and other locationsaround campus.The American Express Card. Don’tleave school without it.16 — The Grey City Journal — Friday, May 4, 1979A visit to Madame Tussaud’sMeasure for Measureby William Shakespeareat Court Theatrethrough May 13.by Bruce ShapiroMeasure for Measure may have a peculiar relevan-ace for a time when the Supreme Court censors thebroadcast of dirty words and the drinking age israised to twenty-one. The play has something to dowith an ayatollah named Angelo who assumes thegovernment of Vienna. His police becomes a rovingvice squad; he rigorously enforces severe lawsagainst prostitution and other carnalities, even de-,manding the death of a young noble convicted of for¬nication. But he finds he can only compromise right-ousness with his own sexuality in lechery and pettyblackmail. Fortunately, before things get too uglythe old, liberal Duke, who had abdicted to Angelo,returns in disguise, straightens things out, and meetsour compassionate justice.Measure for Measure is a difficult play. Shake¬speare grapples with serious issues of honor andjudgment in the sometimes inadequate form of Eliza¬bethan farce. A problem play like this needs strongand thoughtful direction. Nicholas Rudall’s Court The¬ater production is often elegant, but lacks dramatipfocus. The production is studiously “classical”—fromthe recorder music to the tights to the self-consciousgestures and posturing. Characters are identifiedwith one physical trait or mannerism; the disguisedDuke skitters about with his head down; Claudiohefts his hands like hams; Angelo stares into space.This physical reductionism robs the characters of their richness. It is, most of the time, wax-museumShakespeare.Shaw once remarked that it is a pity those wholove the sound of Shakespeare seldom go on thestage. If speech is clear and well-phrased, Shake¬speare’s language has unequalled immediacy and po¬tency. Sadly, most of the major members of the Courtcast seem to have ears of unalloyed tin. Patrick Bi-lingsly’s Duke spits his lines so fast, with such prosaicabandon, that many phrases are incomprehensible.Elbow and Pompey force a cockney as convincing asbad Monty Python imitation. Larry McCauly’s Angeloaffects classical speech by shortening vowels andsoftening r’s. (He reminded me of Tony Curtis in TheBlack Shield of Falworth: “yondah lies the castle ofmy foddah.”) Shakespeare’s words are deprived oftheir cutting edge and poetic resonance.McCauly’s portrayal is the weakeast link in theproduction. He expresses neither the severity, northe confusion and weakness, nor the irrational ven¬ality of this complex character. The actions of theother characters all center on Angelo; without astrong, definitive performance, the core falls out ofthe drama.With Maureen Gallagher’s Isabella, though, thewaxworks comes alive. Her speech is clear and unaf¬fected; she acts with passion and grace, defining pre¬cisely and movingly the conflict between sisterhoodand Sisterhood, between love and honor. She some¬times even ignites the rest of the cast: enough to re¬mind us that if we scrape away the layers of culturalembalming Shakespeare still can be made to sing;and enough to make us dissatisfied with an eveningat Madame Tussaud’s.No encores! Mark Twain,Forget and forgive. This is not difficult when properlyunderstood. It means that you are to forget inconve¬nient duties, and forgive yourself for forgetting. Intime, by rigid practice and stern determination, itcomes easy.There are times when one would like to hang the wholehuman race and finish the farce.In Paris they just simply opened their eyes and staredwhen we spoke to them in French! We never did suc¬ceed in making those idiots understand their ownlanguage.The proverb says that Providence protects childrenand idiots. This is really true. I know it because I havetested it.It is a pity that we cannot escape from life when we areyoung.A cynic ‘In PersonFrom the works of Mark Twain, Chicago actor Rich¬ard Henzel will combine “many curious and wonder¬ful things with several uncommonly bad jokes” onMay 12 in a public lecture called Mark Twain in Per¬son. Henzel created his characterization as a highschool student in rural Ohio, and spent ten years res¬tructuring his act before he brought it to Chicago in1977. As a result of the critical acclaim he received forhis act, he has toured the United States with it andhas performed for Queen Elizabeth.Mark Twain in Person will begin at 8:00 p.m. in IdaNoyes Hall. Tickets are $2 for University students; $3for others. For information, call the FOTA office at753-3562.Too Much Monkey BusinessChuck Berry performed before two near-capacity au¬diences last Saturday night in Mandel Hall, and sinceeveryone seemed to enjoy him and his music tremen¬dously, the event must rank as MAB’s latest feat. Theonly disappointment was the .brevity of both shows, abrevity compounded by Berry’s tacit refusal to playencores. Both audiences loved him, and he seemed torespond in kind; it seemed an encore was in the mak¬ing, especially as Maybellene, his most famous song,had not been played. Yet Berry did not return, raisingthe suspicion that Berry enjoyed us less than we hadthought.Berry started both shows with Roll Over Beethovenand finished both with Reelin' and Rockin ’; and amongsome half-dozen others, both audiences heard Rockand Roll Music and Johnny B. Goode. These foursongs are some of Berry’s better-known compositions,and in a sense he was obligated to play either them orothers of the same kind; Mabellene, You Can't CatchMe, or Memphis (which Berry did play during the se¬cond show) could have worked in the same way. The re¬maining songs of each show were more personalchoices; Carol, for example, was Berry’s concession toa particular photographer he met before the first show.Another more personal selection during the firstshow was Wee Wee Hours a soft, slow blu®c song whichBerry introduced as "the first song I ever record¬ed.” Wee Wee Hours has never received much atten¬tion, and may not in fact be a particularly good com¬position, but Berry's desire to play it rather thanMaybellene, his second composition and the source ofhis fame, was significant. In effect Berry attempted toavoid the popular conception of his contribution to~ock and roll, and given rock and roll’s debt to bluesperformers like Berry, the song deserved to be heard.But some members of the audience evidently came ex¬pecting to hear rdck and roll exclusively, and as a con¬sequence the reception of Wee Wee Hours lacked anysemblance of interest or respect: catcalls and com-mpnts were audible from the start of the song. Berrynever finished it; hindered also by what seemed tooquick a tempo!Berry had not rehearsed with the Mellow'Fellows), he launched straight into Johnny B. Goode.The second show opened on a more fervent note thanthe first had ended; Big Twist and the Mellow Fellowswere enthusiastically received. By the time Berry tookthe stage, playing a song as slow and reflective as Wee Business: In each of Monkey Business's seven versesBerry expresses his exasperation with life's hassles:Same thing every dayGettin' up goin' to schoolNo need to be complainin'My objection’s overruled —Ahh!Too much Monkey Business <3x)I don't want your botheration —get away pleeselToo much Monkey Business for meeeee.The meaning may not have been apparent at the time,but it now seems as though Berry was venting his per-§OcoC*6K*C$Chuck Berry’s Wee Wee Hours at Mandel Hall: You say, but yet I wonder, if your love was ever true.Wee Hours was out of the question. Berry did not try asecond time — he may have deferred to what hethought was an entirely proper manifestation of thetrue rock and roll spirit, or he may not have consideredthe affair an issue at all. In either case the ommissiondid not keep one misguided fan from mounting thestage and jamming a hat upon Berry's head. Berryflicked the hat off and seemed to ignore the incident,but after finishing the song iRock and Roll Music),Berry countered in the next. Too Much Monkey sonal frustration with the audience as he performedthis lesser-known song. *One — some think the only — objective of rock androll is fun, and to that end it invites a degree of au¬dience participation unknown in other kinds of art. Buteveryone must have fun. and enthusiasm can becomebothersome to both performers and that part of the au¬dience that respects the performer’s wishes. Those whodo not listen to everything miss something: and rockand roll, however much it may be, is not everything.’The GiriijHCky;Journal Friday. May 4. 1979 —j!7CampusArtJackson Pollock: Last weekend. “New Found Works" ofthe American action painter. Known for its large, paint-splattered canvases. Pollock’s major work resembles no oneelse's. His early period, however, reveals the influence ofThomas Hart Benton. Picasso, and the Surrealists. This ex¬hibit, which collects some of Pollock’s early work, is pri¬marily interesting for the light it sheds on his work of thelate forties and early fifties. Closes Sunday. May 6. Davidand Alfred Smart Gallery, 5550 S. Greenwood. Tuesdaysthrough Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 4p.m. 753-2121. Free.The Floating World: "One Hundred and Fifty Years of theJapanese Urban Scene.’’ Paintings and drawings by recentJapanese artists. Part of the Japan Today program. ClosesMay 27. Bergman Gallery, fourth floor Cobb Hall. 9 a.m. to 5p.m. weekdays. 753-4137. Free.New York Images: As yet unseen by this reviewer. Opensthis Sunday, May 6. Renaissance Society, Goodspeed Hall.Mondays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. 753-2886.Free.MusicRadio Free Illinois: Rock music performed by on-campusband. The Pub; tomorrow night, 9:30 to 12:30. You must be 21years or older, sez the City Council.University Composers’ Concert: Original musical works byUC students David Fencl, Paul Fulton, Daniel Galay, PaulGoldstein, Jim Hebda, and Margaret Mudge. This Sunday,May 6. International House Auditorium, 1414 E. 59th St. 8p.m. Free.Nicholas Mikelakis: Classical guitar. Works by Sanz, Bach,Ponce, and Villa-Lobos. Today, May 4. Ida Noyes’s thirdfloor theater. 8 p.m. Free.Electronic Music: Concert by the UC Electronic Music Stu¬dio. This Sunday, May 6. International House Auditorium.Robin Hamilton and Company: Woodwind quintet con¬cert. Part of FOTA’s Noontime Concert Series — bring yourlunch. This Tuesday, May 10. Cloister Club of Ida Noyes.12:15 p.m. Fr^.Emilio Cruz: Cruz, the multi-media artist whose work Mo-meostasis was seen last quarter at the Blue Gargoyle, re¬turns to the Gargoyle tonight for a “Poetry and Music Ritu¬al’’ entitled The Dream Construction Co.Tonight's performance is promising. Cruz, primarily a vi¬sual artist who has repeatedly proven himself competent athighly ambitious and imaginative projects, has this time li¬mited himself to (or focused on) two media, music and thespoken word. Joining Cruz on percussion and his wife PatCruz on vocals are Cloris Bordeaux, piano, Lorenzo BojackMcWhite on bass trumpet and Kelton Young on reeds. TheSanctuary of the Blue Gargoyle. 5655 S. University, at 8 PM,admission S3.50.TheaterMeasure for Measure: Shakespeare's rarely producedcomedy: the Duke of Vienna begins enforcing his city’s anti¬fornication laws. The bleakest, yet one of the mos* compas¬sionate, of Shakespeare’s plays. Directed by Nicholas Ru-dall; Maureen Gallagher plays Isabella, the novitiate, andKeith Fort plays her promiscuous brother, Claudio. ClosesMay 13. The New Theater, Reynolds Club. Thursdays,through Saturdays at 8:30 p.m.; Sundays at 7:30 p.m.753-3581. $4.50-$4; $2.50-82 students and senior citizens.The Marionette Theater of Peter Arnott: Classical Greekdrama performed by the marionettes and the voices of Pro¬fessor Arnott. Oedipus the King, this Monday, May 7; TheBacchae, this Tuesday, May 8. Reynolds Club Theater, 57thand University. 8:30 p.m. 753-3581. $4.50, $2.50 students andsenior citizens. Children under twelve not admitted.Feiffer’s People: “An evening of sketches and observa¬tions’’ compiled by Jules Feiffer from his Village Voice car¬toons. Feiffer’s targets range from politics to social man¬ners. Directed by Libby Morse. This weekend only. CourtThe Grey City Journalthe arts and criticism supplement to the MaroonEditor; Nancy CrillyManaging editor; Melinda CoreyArt editor: Richard KayeTheater editor: Bruce ShapiroThis Week in the Arte editor: Karen HornickProduction: David MillerStaff: Curtis Black, Ethan Edwards, Steven Feldman,Richard Goldstein, Charles Stone.IS — The Grey City Journal — Friday, May 4, 1979(J .. i* vf f-1 / — firm oL VjiO \»i 0 '*{in Tom Poole as the mask of Arlecchino in Two Faithful Scribes — see Campus Theater.Theater, third floor Reynolds Club. 7:30 p.m. $2, $1.50students.The Two Faithful Scribes: On-campus performance by thenorthside commedia dell’arte Halcyon Repertory Company.Based on Carlo Goldoni’s Venetian Twins; directed byDarrtl Boehmer. This is Halcyon’s current production, run¬ning through May 19 at 615 W. Wellington (977-1739). ThisSunday, May 6, only. Cloister Club, Ida Noyes Hall. 8 p.m.753-3562. $3.50.The Little Elephant Is Dead: An Exhibition of Images: FirstUS performance of Japanese writer Kobo Abe’s play by hisown theater group. Tonight, May 4. Mandel Hall. 4 p.m. and8 p.m. 7533-3567. $5.VLecturesBlack Autobiography: Lecture by Houston A. Baker, anEnglish professor at the University of Pennsylvania. Sub¬ject: “Black autobiography and its role as an art form inexpressing the aspirations of Black Americans." Baker haswritten The Journey Back, a critical work soon to be pub¬lished by UC Press. Today. May 4. Social Science 122,1126 E.59th. 4 p.m. 753-4432. Free.The Composer as Scenic Designer: Lecture by The New Yorker music critic, Andrew Porter. This Tuesday, May 8.Breasted Hall in the Oriental Institute. 8 p.m. Free.On the AirThe Dick Cavett Show: Guest: Our president, Hanna Gray.This Monday, May 7. 10 p.m. WTTW—Channel 11.Campus FflmBy Ethan EdwardsA Streetcar Named Desire: Directed by Elia Kazan. A feli¬citous adaptation of Tennessee Williams’ grim play abouttenement life in New Orleans. Vivian Leigh won an Oscarfor her portrait of a neurotic aristocrat gone to seed visit¬ing her sister who has married a beer-drinking, working-class boor, Stanley Kowalski, played in the Method style byMarlon Brando.It is said that in rehearsal, Kazan forced Brando to repea¬tedly climb up and down a rope while reciting his lines.Brando’s inevitable fury at this treatment brought out thesmoldering anger Kazan wanted for the part of StanleyL-in the ArtsOur friend RufusKowalski. Kazan’s style is very stagey, which is understand¬able considering his East Side theatrical background, and AStreetcar Named Desire looks like it was shot on a stage.Kazan (a consummate director of actors, even if his masteryof Hollywood technology was incomplete) created a direc¬torial style that was both influential and popular with 50’saudiences. The multiple Oscar-winning film has fixed thegeography of New Orleans and the characters of StanleyKowalski and Blanche DuBoise firmly in the American con¬sciousness, as can be attested to by viewers of Sleeper andSaturday Night Live. Highly recommended. Friday in CobbHall at 7:15 and 9:45.Wild River (Doc) Directed by Elia Kazan. Kazan experi¬ments with the classical visual style of John Ford withmixed results, but his own eye for good drama is evident inthis tale of a Tennessee Valley Authority official (Montgo¬mery Clift) who tries to convince an elderly Jo Van Fleet tosell her land for a dam project. Clift romances her grand¬daughter (Lee Remick) while he battles for progress in asmall town in the late Depression era. Recommended. Fri¬day in Cobb Hall at midnight.Violette: (Doc) Directed by Claude Chabrol. The plump,but sexy Isabelle Huppert (The Lacemaker) plays 18-year-old Violette Huppert who was tried for poisoning herparents in 1933. The use of a historical event to hang thefilm on allows Chabrol great leeway to tell the story in hisown circuitous way, to comment on middle class life and toset a beautiful 1930’s atmosphere. This effectively enig¬matic film brought praise from the various critical factionsthat had been arguing over Chabrol for the last decade.fSaturday in Cobb Hall at 7:15 and 9:30 p.m.Candy: (LSF) Directed by Christian Marquand. Althoughbased on the amusing novel by Terry Southern, theamorous adventures of Candy (Eva Aulin) are here depictedwith a complete lack of taste and style. The film is supposedto be sexy and funny in a light-hearted way, but instead itcomes off as simply heavy-handed. This film represented aneffort by a major Hollywood studio to make a daring sexcomedy, but, since it was studio —made it turned out to be sotame that it only got an R rating. Marlon Brando, RichrdBurton, Walter Matthau and Ringo Starr appear in this tur¬key written by the usually humorous Buck Henry (HeavenCan Wait; The Graduate). Saturday at 7 and 9:30 p.m.Wizards: An animated fantasy concerning the perpetualstruggle between good (magic) and evil (technology) someten million years in the future. Ralph Bakshi, perhaps thegreatest animator working today, pits Avatar, the goodmagic wizard, against his evil twin Blackwolf, a pseudo-Nazi technocrat. The epic features a host of unwordlybeings created by Bakshi. Animated fantasy at its best. Sun¬day, May 6. Kent 107. 6:30, 8:15 and 10 p.m.I Never Promised You a Rose Garden: (Doc) Directed byAnthony Page This 1977 film stars the remarkable KathleenQuinlan as a masochistic adolescent who improves with thehelp of a psychiatrist played by Bibi Anderson. An old-fash¬ ioned film, Rose Garden is a sort of 1970’s Miracle Worker.Sunday in Cobb Hall at 7:15 and 9:30 p.m.The Battle of Cable Street: (NAM) Directed by Michael Ra-biger. Rabiger himself will be present to show and discussthis film about the politcal climate surrounding the streetbattle that took place when the fascist Blackshirts attempt¬ed to march through the Jewish section of East London in1934. Unseen by this reviewer. Another film by Rabiger willalso be shown. Monday in Cobb Hall at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.Madame Bovary (Doc): Directed by Vincente Minnelli.James Mason plays Gustave Flaubert, defending his 19thcentury novel against obscenity charges, and JenniferJones is Emma Bovary, the hopelessly romantic, fantasizingheroine of the book. The film is quite faithful to the bookbut fails to capture the painstaking care with which Flau¬bert selected each word of his lengthy novel. For example,young Emma’s room is finely detailed in accordance withthe written description, but it is impossible to visually takein all this detail in the few seconds of film exposition allot¬ted. Madam Bovary is worth seeing, however, for the bril¬liant surrealistic waltz sequence which represents for Emmathe culmination of her fantasies. Minnelli's fluid camera isin full flower. Monday in Kent 107 at 7:15 p.m.Les Miserables (Doc): Directed by Riccardo Freda. Thisrarely shown Italian version of Victor Hugo's novel is one ofmore than a dozen attempts to render this long and compli¬cated story of the French Revolution. Unseen by this re¬viewer. Monday in Kent 107 at 9:30 p.m.City listings begin here:ArtThe Art of Being Huichol: A major traveling exhibit of artfrom the Huichol Indians of the Sierra Madres, Mexico: 150yarn paintings and ceremonial objects. Closes September 3.Field Museum of Natural History, Roosevelt at Lake ShoreDrive. Mondays through Thursdays, 9 a m. to 4 p.m.; Fridays,9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; weekends, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 922-9410. SI.50:Fridavs free.Robert Turner: Ritual Vessels: Recent work by the manwho, in the early 1950's, instituted the pottery center atBlack Mountain College. On display are containers based onthose seen by Turner while visiting “primitive” African cul¬tures. Closes May 30. Exhibit A, 233 E. Ontario St Tuesdaysthrough Fridays, 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.: Saturdays. 10:30a.m. to 5 p.m. 9^*4-1748. Free.Robo Kaijur: Japanese and American space toys. Not forchildren only. Closes May 11. The School of the Art InstituteGallery. Columbus and Jackson. Mondays through Satur¬days. 10:30 a.m, to 4:30 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m.Free.Harris Deller and George Ma§qn: Two separate exhibitsfeaturing the recent work of two American ceramicists.Deller is a potter. Mason a muralist. Through May. Colum¬bia Gallery. 600 S. Michigan Mondays through Saturdays. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Free.Claire Zeisler: Bright color, intricate structure, delightfultexture—the fiber art of Claire Zeisler. A 75-year-old Chica¬goan, Zeisler and her work have long been recognized —yetthis is her first one-woman show. Closes June 10. The ArtInstitute. Adams and Michigan. 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Thurs¬days. open until 8 p.m.; Sundays and holidays, noon to 5p.m. 443-3500. S2, $1 students: Thursdays free.Marc Chagall: A surprisingly large amount of Chagall'sbest work can be found in private collections around thiscity—this exhibit brings sixty such works together; manyhave never been publicly exhibited. Closes July 1. MauriceSpertus Museum of Judaica, 618 S. Michigan. Mondaysthrough Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, 10 a.m. to 4p.m. 922-9012.MusicThe Seven Deadly Sins: Music by Kurt Weill; book by Ber¬tolt Brecht. Rarely produced and not well known opera-ballet, yet at.-least as fine as more frequently seen W’eill-Brecht collaborations. Directed by Leon Natker; musicdirected by Bruce Kamsler. The American Women's Theatreand Quicksilver Theatre, 1101 W. Diversey. 348-1101 or761-3227. $5.Ch: ago Chamber Orchestra: Conducted by Dieter Kober.Pianist Douglas Montgomery, a teacher at Julliard and awell-known recitalist, will solo. Program: Handel’s “Concer¬to Grosso in B-flat major. Op.3, No. 2," Schubert’s “Sym¬phony No. 4 in C minor, 'Tragic,’ D.417," and Mozart's “PianoConcerto No. 21 in C major, K.467.” This Sunday, May 6. TheCathedral of St. James, Huron and Wabash. 922-5570. FreeCall for reserved seating.Leontyne Price: Concert by the great soprano resche¬duled from January 13. This Sunday, May 6. The Auditorium,50 E. Congress. 3 p.m. 922-2110. Call for prices and ticketavailability information.Los Angeles Philharmonic: Directed by the successor toZubin Mehta, Carlo Maria Giulini. This Wednesday, May 9.Auditorium Theater, 50 E. Congress. 8 p.m. 922-2110. Call forprices and ticket information.TheaterTotal Eclipse: The English playwright Christopher Hamp¬ton’s play based on the relationship of Paul Verlaine andArthur Rimbaud. Open closing date. Old World TheaterCompany. Theater Building, 1225 W. Belmont. Thursdaysthrough Sundays, 8 p.m.; Sunday matinee, 3 p.m. S4.50-S4.The Struggle, Us: Written and directed by Ernest Rayford.'A children's play, dealing with the interaction and devel¬opment of children in a peer group.’’ All proceeds will gotowards the Workshop's planned journey to Lincoln Center.This Sunday, May 6, only. Kuumba Workshop, 2222 S. Michi¬gan. 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. 842-2500. $3.50.The Glass Menagerie: Directed by H E. Bacchus. Openingof a new production of Tennessee William's wistful drama.The most poetic of Williams’s works, and perhaps the mostlikely to endure. Opens this Thursday, May 10; closes June24. Steppenwolf Theater Company, 770 Deerfield in High¬land Park. Thursdays at 8 p.m.; Fridays and Saturdays at8:30 p.m.; Sundays at 7 p.m. 433-5080. S6-S5.DanceJoel Hall Dancers: Featuring the world premiere of PaulSanaardo's “Territory:" Anna Czajun is guest soloist. Sixperformances this weekend. Closes Sunday. Francis ParkerAuditorium, Clark and Webster. May 4, 5 at 8 p.m.; May 6 at3 p.m. 663-3618. $6—S5-S4, students and senior citizens.Wallflower Order: Performance by a successful women'sdance collective. Their last Chicago concert, said a Readercritic, “expanded and altered my perception of the poten¬tial of dance itself." Tomorrow, May 5. MoMing. 1034 W.Barry. 8 p.m. 761-8765. $5.FilmJapanese Films: A month-long “Japan Today” filmseries at the Art Institute includes two science-fictionmovies. Atragon and Rocketship along with an exhib¬it of Japanese and American science-fiction toys.Atragon at 5:30 p.m. and Rocketship at 7:30 p.m. onFriday. And Dodes’ka-den: a 1970 color film by AkiraKurosawa, one of the finer films of the director whois more popular in the West than he is in his owncountry. Saint Xavier College, 3700 W. 103rd Street.7:30 p.m. on Friday. $2. Also in the Art Institute’sseries is Battleship in Outer Space and Destroy AllMonster^ th^Satttrdav. BattJbehlp'is at.5:30 and De»*stroy at 7:30 p.m.The Grey C’tv Journal — Friday. May 4. 1979 — 19Mon.May 75:ooH.Pk.Theater5238 S. HarperPierce Hall Pierce Hall-Master’s ApartmentPolitical ForumLecture SeriesPhil Kurland,Professor,The College andThe Law School Freetickets:/at R,C.ai m.:ilBoxOfficeGO FOR PINE IN MAYOUR LARGE SELECTION OF PINE NOW ON SALEDESKS, DRESSERS, BOOKCASES, CHESTS & MUCH MORE10% to 15% OFFtt The Judiciary as a Legislative Body”May 6,1979Sunday Night 8:00 P.M.Pierce Hall Pierce HallMaster’s Apartment■ 6f/. oSli South University Ave. NEW TOWN • 2631 N. CLARK • CHICAGO • 248-0540HYDE PARK • 1365 E. 53rd • CHICAGO • 288-6200OAK PARK *1036 W. LAKE • VILLAGE MALL • 386-5200OPEN 7 DAYS • DELIVERY AVAILABLE' *** ***IK VISA20 — The Grey City Journal — Friday, May 4, 19794Kent 107May 7 GREAT BOOKS FILM SERIESMadame Bovary Les Miserablesdirected by Vincente Minnelli directed by Recardo Freda7:15 DOC members free with pass; others $1.50 9:30HEAR AGAIN STEREOSells guaranteed name brand usedand demo stereo components at 40%to 70% off regular prices.THESE ARE OURWEEKLY SPECIALS:PIONEER PL10 $49.00SHERWOOD S8900 159.00MARANTZ 110 85.00SCOTT S15 Ea. 55.00TECHNICS RS630T 159.00TANDBERG TCD310 199.00DYNACO PAT4 59.00PIONEER TX 8500-2 149.00GARRARD 0-100 99.00EPI 150 Ea. 69.00Complete systems from $75 to $750.60 day trade back privilege. Namebrand components for limited bud¬gets.HEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 N. California 338-7737 1Spring Cleaning?Sell Some Books! tCASH FOR BOOKS iNew Arrivals:Science Fiction,’78 BrittanicaPowell's RnokstonI.VM K. :>7th St.II.VV77XO'i a .in .11 p.m.Kvrrvda\ Powell’s BookstoreWarehouse1020 S. W a hash. Xth floor.141-074 XNew Warehouse Hours:10:30-5 Thur.-Sat. Special Deskand Chair SetSingle Pedestal Metal Deskwith Walnut Plastic Topwith Matching Steno Chair —Specially priced at$95.00Bring your own trailerC BRAND > EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8600 Commercial Ave.Open Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:00For the Month of April, we are openSaturdays 8:30-4:00RE 4-2111A COURT ThCATRC5706 S University Avenue Chicago, Illinois 60637 753-3581presentsThe Marionette Theatre ofPeter ArnottOEDIPUS THE KINGby SophoclesMonday, May 7THEBACCHAEby EuripidesTuesday, May 88:30 P.M.Reynolds Club Theatre,57th & University$4.50 general and $2.50 forstudents and senior citizens753-3581 REPAIRSPECIALISTS -on IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU. of C. I.D. New andRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave753-3303Mastercharge and Visa Accepted CHICAGOLAND'S KELLY GIRLPROUDLY PRESENTS“the.Kelly Girl j5yndrome_JStarring STUDENTS & TEACHERSD«dic«ted SECRETARIES-TYPISTS-CLERKSA team of heroic men and women discover a potentially dangerousemployment situation and rescue Chicagoland businesses with theirskills and talents, while earning top salaries and bonuses."Kelly Girl Temporaries to theRescue Again"— Ken Vement, Kelly News'Another Smashing Success forKelly Girt"— E. Z. Cash, Kelly Gazette TheKeByGiiTPeopleprimitive artafrican sculptures and textilestues. - sun. 2-6gallery b1645 e. 53rd KLI3SERVICESNOW SHOWINGat Kelly Offices all over Chicagoland. Call or Come in SOON.For the office in your neighborhood call:CHICAGO786 1250 SOUTH SUBURBS233 1005WEST SUBURBS654-4060 NORTH SUBURBS729 2040An Equal Opportunity Employer m/fRALPHBAKSHFS ANIMATED SPECTACULAR... *1.50WIZARDS!SUNDAY. MAY 6 KENT 107 6:30.8:15. 10:00The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 4, 1974 — 21*.£,.UV • < : f 7INEXT YEAR'S MABApplications for the1979-80 Major ActivitiesBoard are now availableat the Student ActivitiesOffice, Ida Noyes Hall.They are due thereMay 7. All positions areopen to Universitystudents.BISHOP BRENT HOUSEThe Episcopal Church Council at The University of ChicagoThe Episcopal (Anglican) Center atThe University of Chicago5540 S. Woodlawn AvenueFr. Charles Brown, Chaplain753-3392SUNDAY WORSHIPMay 6,Confirmation & Holy Eucharist5p.m.Rockefeller ChapelThe Bishop of ChicagoMay 13,20, 27Holy Eucharist5p.m.at Bishop Brent HouseMonday - Friday9:00a.m. Morning Prayer5:00 p.m. Evening Prayer5:15 p.m. Holy EucharistThursdayNoon Eucharist at Bond Chapel • Eye Examinations0 Contact Lenses(Soft & Hard)0 Prescriptions FilledDR. MORTON R.MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSContact lensesand SuppliesHyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363MEN! WOMEN!JOBS!aUlSKSHIP.WKKH.HTKKSNo experience. Highpay! Set* Kurope. Ha¬waii. Australia. So.America. Winter. Sum¬mer!*Send $2.7.r> toSK A WORLDBOX 61035Sacramento, CA 05825HYDE PRRK PIPE RND TQBRCCO SHOP1552 E. 53rd - Under IC tracksStudents under 30 get 10% offask for “Big Jim’:Mon. - Sat. 9 -8; Sun. 12-5PipesPipe Tobaccos. Imported Cigarettes Cigars, FLAMINGO APTS.5500 S. Shore Dr.Studio & One BedrmFtirn. & I nfurn.Short A l.onu Term KentnU8200 - 8400Parking rc«.taiirant.valcl. deli and tran--(Nirlation.«lra|»e> incl.752-3800 CSlea/ <£>s/a/e' <tooy.312 / 493-0666MEMBER MULTIPLE LISTING(Shoreline South MLS)EAST VIEW PARK CONDO(54th next to the lake) on the sunny east side, three exposures, six rooms, twobaths. All rooms spacious, in fine shape. Floor plan “bungalow” (not a railroad).Kitchen updated but still has a pantry. Priced to sell quickly. $68,500.Come to Open House Saturday, May 5,1:00 - 3:00. Northwest Hyde Park-Near 51 Ingleside. Under construction six condos. Four already sold. Newfurnace, wiring, roof, kitchens, baths, windows, etc. 2nd floor, $57,000; 3rdfloor, $55,000. All six rooms, two baths. Charlotte. Ask about the discountqualifications.Trading Post - Campus Location - 58 Blackstone. Have spacious six roomsunny cond. plus cash. Need at least seven or eight rooms. Call Charlotte.Heritage Splendor - Luxury Spacious Two Bedroom - Formal DR, largeL.R.. Closet space galore, Skyline, Shoreline. Cityscapes all from high floor.NARAGANSETT (50th & the Lake). Woodburning fireplace. Parquet floors,beamed ceiling, new heavy duty wiring. Charlotte. Price in $70’s.Campus 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. In the $60’s.Kathy.Proud to Have Guests! 57th and Kenwood. Quiet garden setting. Five roomcondo, excellent condition. No extra charge for sunshine all day. $59,500.Charlotte.Investors attention. Call Kathy. Seven flat near 55th Cornell.Newport Rental - Cheery, sunny high-above-it-all one bedroom apt. lookingat the Lake. Special reduced rate to UC area people, $365 00 mo.Uri ids ofthe Symphony and the 'Music Department presentRaij Still and the Shwayo Mhnds Snyemblean all "Mozart prapzunSunday. 'May \l JJO 7VMHutchinson CommonsMusic and refreshments appropriate jar a spnruj afternoonJid&ts at Mandel 'Bov Office350 students, 500 other- UC.T3S, (>tV cjeneral publicEXPERIENCEDSECRETARIES and CLERK/TYPISTSWhy hassle with Loop traffic?WORK IN HYDE PARK!SECRETARIES...with one to 2 years experience, strong stenography, Dicta¬phone, and organizational skills —you can. .. .CLERK/TYPISTS...with one to 2 years experience, solid typing and organiza¬tional skills; highly-visible position with public contact — you can. . .WORK AT HYDE PARK BANK!We have a super salary and benefits package and were convenientlylocated in the heart of Hyde Park (near I.C., CTA, shopping centers, and more!For your interview and more information on job duties,coii Personnel 752 46oo Hyde Park Bank& Trust Company1 525 E. 53rd Street, Chicagoequol opportunity employer m f22 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 4, 1979The fall of football: Why Chicago isn’t a jock schoolBy Mark WalachThis is part // of a five-part series on thehistory of football. Part III will appear nextFriday.This is part II of a five-part series on the his¬tory of football. Part III will appear nextFriday.During the 30 years in which the Universi¬ty had no football team, it was a point ofhonor among Chicago students that theywere too busy living the life of the mind tohave time for something as frivolous as foot¬ball. In 1939, after the University had abo¬lished football, one educator praised Chica¬go President Robert Maynard Hutchins forhis “courageous defense of the Universityand its true function.” Hutchins had beenperceptive enough to realize that the Uni¬versity’s “true function” was not in stayingin a league in which the Maroons had beencreamed by scores of 85-0 and 61-0.After the team won their last Big Ten titlein 1924, their demise occurred with startlingrapidity. After winning 84% of their gamesfrom 1921 to 1924, they won only 14 confer¬ence games in their last 15 years and hadonly one winning season (1929). In eight ofthose seasons they won two games or less.Perhaps the simplest way to understandthe football team’s precipitant trip towardoblivion can be gleaned from the pages ofthe school yearbook. In 1925, reviewing thelast Big Ten championship, Cap & Gown de¬voted 22 pages to football. In 1940, the year¬book chronicled the Maroons’ ultimate sea¬son in four. The ’25 yearbook reserved itschoicest descriptions for the climactic gameof the season against Red Grange’s Illinoisteam, at tie:It was a struggle which kept the sup¬porters of both elevens in a frenzy ofexcitement bordering on insanity.The 1940 edition commented soberly,While scoring only 37 points againsttheir opponents 308, Chicago won twogames out of eight, both of themagainst opponents who play the samebrand of football as the Maroons did.(emphasis added)Chicago football had become past tense.The myth about what brought about allthese terrible seasons might go somethinglike this: In 1931, a year after he arrived onhis White Charger, Robert Maynard Hut¬ chins instituted his academically-rigorous“New Plan.” Since good football playerswere obviously too dumb to be able to be ad¬mitted to such a prestigious institution, theteam went to pot. Several studies of theperiod lent credence to the theory when theyshowed that football players had poorerGPAs than their non-playing peers.Unfortunately, for the myth-makers, themyth has one serious flaw: The team hadbeen losing for six seasons before the “NewPlan” was instituted, losing during a periodwhen entrance standards were only slightlystiffer than in the Maroons’ glory years.The administration cannot be blamed forthe Maroon’s demise. In fact, from 1906,when the Maroons were one of the country’sbest teams, until 1930, when they had be¬come has-beens, the administration’s atti¬tude toward the team changed very little. Inthe era of football greatness, President Jud-son had written: “all suspicions of profes¬sionalism shall be eliminated; in short, thatamateur sports may be what they purport tobe, the sports of amateurs.” In 1925, theyear the Maroons began their decline, Pres¬ident Burton believed there was “a legiti¬mate place for athletics, and even for spec¬tacular games.” If anything, the twostatements indicate an increased dedicationto big-time college football.From 1925 to 1930, the University contin¬ued its policy of giving Stagg autonomy ofhis “Department of Physical Education andCulture.” Stagg had been turning out win¬ning teams for 33 years and the administration assumed he would continue to do so.They illustrated that by adding about 28,000seats to Stagg Field with provisions to addmore if necessary. Additionally, the schoolcontinued the quintennial baseball trips tothe Orient, a journey which required theparticipating athletes to miss the entirespring quarter. To be sure, some adminis¬trators were abashed at these lavish provi¬sions but they soothed their consciences byturning down a quixotic proposal to build anew stadium somewhere “south of the Mid-wav.” (in Georgia?) Clearly, the adminis¬tration’s commitment to Stagg and his pro¬gram was as firm as ever.So why did the team begin to lose0 Quitesimply, an incredible growth of organizedsports took place in the 1920s, and while theMaroons were running in place, all the otherBig Ten schools increased their efforts to ob¬tain top athletic talent. Most of the schoolsadded a Physical Education major whereathletes could further their scholarships bytaking up challenges such as basket-weav¬ing. Chicago continued its traditional poli¬ cy of not having such a program. As TomFlinn,. a member of the ’32 team said in arecent interview, “We didn’t have anyschool of Physical Education where youcould send ’em to do push-ups.” (Anotherdisadvantage of Chicago was its relativelyhigh tuition of $300, the tuition of Michiganand Wisconsin was $130.)As the competition for top athletes grewkeener, illegal recruiting increased. Big TenCommissioner John Griffith said, “We ailknow... that some persons in the conferencecolleges are practicing dishonesty in thematter of giving inducements to athletes.”Meanwhile at Chicago, entrance standardshad risen slightly and Stagg and Chicago ad¬ministrators followed the increasing confer¬ence regulations strictly.The sports boom also extended down tothe high schools. As they began to sponsortheir own athletic events, they felt Stagg’strack meets interfered with their ownevents and they asked him to stop. Themeets had always been an excuse for Staggto dazzle prospects with city tours, dances,trophies, and tales of past triumphs and heresponded by calling his opponents “jeal¬ous” of his meets, but finally abandoned themeets reluctantly as criticism increased.Stagg’s advancing age was also a factor inhis diminished ability to recruit. He hadalways dominated the athletic department,at one time serving as coach of every var¬sity sport. At age 65 in 1927. he suddenlyfound his recruiting methods outdated, buthad neither the tremendous energy it takesto go on endless recruiting trips, nor the as¬sistants to do it for him. At a time whenNorthwestern had alumni scouting up pros¬pects and Notre Dame's Knute Rockne hadpeople from all over the country sendinghim scouting reports, Stagg seemed contentto let his recruiting efforts flounder.The series of losing seasons was self-per¬petuating. In 1927. after two losing seasons,attendance began to drop and in 1931. theTribune headlined an article about a gamebetween Chicago and Indiana, “PrivateBattle”: nearly 50,000 Stagg Field seatswere empty. As a crowning, though perhapsunintentional insult, Stagg began writing aweekly, nationally syndicated column inwhich he sometimes predicted that theMaroons would lose.By the time the 70-year old Stagg waseased out in 1932 and Clark Shaughnessey,respected as a brilliant tactician, was in¬stalled, the Maroons had been hopelesslyoutdistanced by their more aggressive con¬ference opponents. In Hutchins’ University,the academic demands further increasedentrance standards, resulted in the Maroonsobtaining even fewer quality players, andwidened the gap between the ability of theMaroons and their conference foes. TomFlinn remembered those hard-bitten re¬cruiting days when freshmen couldn’t playon the varsity (although he exaggerates hisnumbers):In my freshman year (1931) thev broueht in about 60 or 70 guys on atwo-year scholarship. We (the fresh¬men) beat the varsity every time weplayed. . . Bingo! I’d say 70% of thoseguys flunked out (after their fresh¬man year).”In recent interviews, former Maroonplayers, to a man, expressed the balancethey felt existed between football and aca¬demics. Jay Berwanger, the first HeismanTrophy winner in 1935 and a player whoteammate Flinn considered a “better line¬backer than (Dick) Butkus,” summed upthis balance succinctly when he said, “Iliked Mr. Stagg. I liked the survey courses”.He implied, however, that he missed the ex¬citement — and the rewards — of big-timefootball. He didn’t go into pro ball becausethey “weren’t paying any money” and hisone regret was that he hadn’t played in anera when he could cash in on his football tal¬ents.The surest indication that the Maroons’football fortunes were doomed came in 1936when they lost a recruiting battle to signquarterback Frankie Albert, later a star inprofessional football. One insider who re¬quested anonymity explained that Albertwas set to matriculate to the University,until his brother Ward, a lineman who didn’tget along with Shaughnessey. told him not tocome. Albert settled on Stanford, who in1940, in an exquisite irony, hired fresh-out-ofwork Clark Shaughnessey. That year, thepair led Stanford to a Rose Bowl triumph.During the Christmas break of 1939. theUniversity announced it was abolishing foot¬ball. Jim Davenport, the team’s star half¬back. recalls being astounded and outraged,having been prepared for the team to play inan easier league but not for Hutchins' finaldraconian measure. Indeed, the Universityhad considered playing easier competitionbut feared that Chicago would be “associat¬ed with the smaller schools in scholarshipand educational rank.” Davenport felt thestatement was “pretty damned hyprocriti-cal.” considering that Hutchins had alwaysbelieved the school’s football prowess to beunrelated to the acuity of its scholars.Initially, the reaction to the move was lessthan reasoned. One alumnus told the Tri¬bune:... the sophomoric decision of theBoard of Trustees in abolishing foot¬ball ignores the Bill of Rights and sin¬cerely flatters both Stalin and Hitler.But the sports editor of the Chicago DailyNews became convinced after a campusvisit that “the majority of the undergradu¬ates do not care a whoop about football.”Perhaps people should have been fore¬warned about football’s ill-fated future in1931. when a philosophy debate starringMortimer Adler attracted more people thana varsity basketball contestFootball to 25The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 4, 1979 — 23Sports\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. 1GM QUALITYSOVICf PACTS kcr/i That (traitC \l herhnituith Ajki.GENERAL MOTORSBARTSDIVISION Ct\l l\tCM HuhbtCHEVROLET72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Daily 9-9, Sot. 9-5 Parts open Sat. 'til Noonm VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Oaily M, Set. 9-5 Ports open Sat. 'til NoonCOURT ThCATKCCourt Studio presentsFEIFER’S PEOPLEBased on the drawings of Jules FeifferDirected by Libby MorseMay 4 and 5 at 8:30May 6 at 7:30Reynolds Club Theatre,57th & University753-3581 Thesis, Disert, Manu¬scripts, Incl. Foreignlang. latest IBM Cor¬rective Sel II Type¬writer. Rates based onVol. & Conditions ofdraft. Best EminenceBond Furn. Mrs. Ross,239-5982 bet. 11am& 5 pm.Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288 2900VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDAttractive 1 Vi and2 Vi Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$189 - $287Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. Groak DOC FILMSFriday May 42 by Elia KazanMarlon Brando, Vivien LeighinTennessee Williams’A STREETCARNAMED DESIRE7:15and9:45Montgomery Clift inWILD RIVERmidnight(no separate admission)Claude Chabral’sVIOLETTE(The Story of an Extraordinary Crime)7:15 and 9:30Sunday May ®Anthony Page’sI NEVER PROMISED YOUA ROSE GARDEN7:15and 9:30All Films $1.50 Cobb HallSaturday May 5ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELSUNDAY • MAY 6 • 11A.M.11 A.M. University Religious ServiceE. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the Chapel“GOD’S WILL AND HUMAN FREEDOM”5 P.M. Service of the Holy EucharistCelebrant: Bishop James W. MontgomeryCo-sponsored by the Episcopal ChurchCouncil (Anglican).The classical guitar ofNicholas Mikelakis8p.m.Friday, May 4Ida Noye’s ThirdFloor Theater • Free XM-SM*-'**CHINESE AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing InCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M.TO 6:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9:30 PM.Orders to Take Out131R loft 63rd MU 4-1062 GOLD CITY INNgiven * * * *by the MAROONOp#vt DollyFrom 11:30 a.m.to feOO p.m.5223 Harper 493-2559(near Herpar Court}Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.)"A Gold Mine Ot Good Food”Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Foodtf COURT TbeATKC570b S University Avnuif / Chicago ItUnon W)b37 / 75J-J581Open discussions ofMEASURE FOR MEASUREAfter the performances on April 26and May 10In Reynolds Club LoungeDiscussions will begin about 10:50 P.M.David Bevington and Mark Ashin,discussion leadersPerformances are through May 1324 The Chicago Maroon - Friday, May 4, 1979EricVonderPorten <Tennismen feel wet around WhitewaterBy Hack GibsonThe news was mostly b?.d for the Chicagomen’s tennis team in a five-day whirlwind ofplay starting last Thursday. Only placingtwo men in the finals of the eight-team Uni¬versity of Wisconsin-Whitewater tourna¬ment kept things interesting as the teamtook fourth place in the Friday-Saturdaytournament.In other action, the Maroons dropped a 9-0decision to Alma College (of Michigan) lastThursday — their fourth loss and theirfourth shutout — and a 7-2 decision to LewisCollege Monday.The two losses evened their score at 5-5.While the fourth place finish at Whi¬tewater was one of the Maroons’ best show¬ings in recent years, coach Chris Scott saidhe was disappointed because “We should’vetaken third.” The tournament was won byOshkosh, Whitewater placed second, andMilwaukee came in third, only two pointsahead of the Maroons.Lake Forest College tied Chicago forfourth. Of the last five Chicago players on thecourts, Scott noted, only second seed RogerLewis won his match. Victories in any of theother four matches could have given theMaroons third place, Scott said.Foul weather forced the tournament in¬side onto hardwood basketball courts Fri¬day. The usual order of play was reversedas a result: doubles matches were played onFriday and singles on Saturday. Both thefirst team of Bruce Carman-Roger Lewisand Blair Ewing-Gerry Mildner picked uptwo points for the Maroons by winning theirfirst round matches before dropping thenext two. The third seed team of Ken Kohl-Jeff Johnson added one point by winningtheir first consolation match and then losingin the consolation finals. tThe singles matches were played outdoorsin sunny and warm 45 degree weather.Ewing apparently thought it was warmenough, playing what Scott called “the bestsingles we played in the tournament” andwinning his first two matches before losingin the third-seed finals.Mildner added another four points to the team’s total as he reached the fifth-seedfinals before going down to defeat.Lewis added.two points by winning hisconsolation round, and Kohl picked up onepoint for a consolation victory, while sixth-seed Johnson asked to be left out of thisarticle.Most of the team should be ignored afterthe defeats to Alma and Lewis Colleges.There were some fine matches, especiallyThursday when Carman, fourth seed DaveSeripian, and Mildner all took their oppo¬nents to three sets but couldn’t pull out vic¬tories. The long string of shutouts was final¬ly broken Monday when Lewis breezed to aneasy victory over his Lewis College oppo¬nent and the second doubles team ofMildner-Ewing scored a victory.The tennis schedule is rapidly windingdown. A triangular meet with Beloit andLake Forest Colleges is scheduled for today,with the Maroons playing at 11:00 and 4:00.Another triangular — this time withLawrence University and Cornell College —is scheduled for tomorrow, with theMaroons playing at 10:00 and 4:00. Roger LewisBoth triangular meets will be played onthe Maroons home courts at 55th St. andEllis Ave.The season will close next weekend as theteam travels to Cedar Rapids and MountVernon, Iowa for the conference champion¬ship tournament hosted by Coe College.Bruce CarmonFootball from 23Despite rhetoric to the contrary, Hutchinshad not actively tried to dismantle the foot¬ball team. As Secretary of Yale Universityhe had frequently attended football gamesand as late as 1938, Solly Sherman, who laterquarterbacked in the Chicago Bears 73-0victory over the Washington Redskins in1941, recalls Hutchins giving the footballteam pep talks: “He was an overpoweringintellectual but with us he was gentle.”(Gentle pep talks? No wonder the teamlost.) In general, though, Hutchins wasmerely following the strategy of all Univer¬sity President after superfan William Rain¬ey Harper died in 1906: the football programwas an autonomous unit that would succeedor fail without interference from the Univer¬sity. Hutchins’ “New Plan,” finally, hadless to do with the Maroons football fortunesthan the emergence of Big Ten football. Ifthe conference had remained on a competi¬tive level equivalent to the pre-1925 era, theMaroons would probably still have a suc¬cessful football team in the Big Ten.Throughout the history of the footballteam, the University has frequently mani¬pulated the players for its oWn self-interest.In 1894, Stagg risked the team’s life in orderto use it to “advertise” the University. In1905, the team survived the violence and“privileges” crises largely because of itsphenomenal record which soon assured theUniversity of lucrative revenues. Likewise,in 1939, the Trustees’ decision — spurred byHutchins — to abolish the football team hadlittle to do with the team’s best interestwhich would have been to drop down into aless competitive league. Instead, Hutchinsused the team’s abolition as a dramaticsymbol of the University’s increasing com¬mitment tQ academic excellence.ReferencesRobin Lester “The Rise, Decline, and Fallof Intercollegiate Football at the Universityof Chicago, 1890-1940.Cap & Gown. 1925 and 1940.CorrectionFrom 1906 to 1924, the Maroons played 78%of their games at home, not 90% as Tues¬day’s Mar.Qpn reported.” Do nice guys finish last?Foresters down Maroons in fourBy Mark WallachThe Maroons had a stranglehold on des¬tiny. They were ahead 4-3 in the secondgame of their four-game play-off series withLake Forest with but one inning left to play,one inning away from taking a commanding2-0 lead in the series. In the first game, sup¬ported by Carl Herzog’s 2-run single, JohnBruns had pitched a game for the ages, oneof the masterpieces of the Maroons’ 88-yearhistory. He had needed only 52 pitches,thrown only 10 balls out of the strike zoneand came within one out of a perfect game.That a Lake Forest batter had finallysnapped the hushed crowd’s suspense with aclean single to right before Bruns closed thematter did little to mar the accomplish¬ment.Nursing a 4-3 lead in the second game, theMaroons took the field with a “Let’s hold’em” attitude. It didn’t work. Before the in¬ning was over, the tense team had thrownthe ball around with the swashbucklingcarelessness of drunken sailors loosed for aSaturday pick-up game. Kinczel threw wild¬ly on a pick-off play moving the tying runinto scoring position. Shakur Bahadur thenmade a throwing error that allowed the go-ahead run to score. Funally, Scott Jansenstood frozen with the ball as the Forrestersexaulted a double steal with the lead runnerscoring after Jansen didn’t react to hisbreak for the plate. “It was the only funda¬mentally bad inning we’ve played allyear,’’Coach Schacht said.He added, “We went into the inning think¬ing we had the game in the bag. We felt real good. But when they tied the game, wethought we had lost the game and we hadn’t.We threw the ball around ... I think we didchoke up. frankly.”Asked if the loss affected the Maroonspsychological state for Wednesday’s double-header, Schacht replied, “Definitely. Defin¬itely. Definitely. Lake Forest would havehad to have won three games on Wednesday— the two regular games and sudden-death.That’s very difficult. We’d have been looser,more relaxed. And it’s always easier to playwhen you’re ahead. Instead, some of theguys were thinking, “What do we have to doto win?’ ”The Maroons took the field at Lake ForestWednesday behind the tired arms of Kinczeland Bruns. Again, the Maroons surged intoa 3-1 lead after Paul Harris rocked a bases-clearing double.It was in the bottom of the seventh (andlast) inning that the Maroons began to thinkthey were snakebit. The Lake Forest dia¬mond is a monument to free spirits: besidesa bumpy infield, they have a spacious leftfield, a right field that’s 340 feet down theline and an outfield fence that curls in at theright centerfield mark to a distance of only316 feet from home plate. At any rate. LakeForest used their home field advantage tothe utmost when with one out and two on, thebatter hit a ball over the right centerfieldfence. Lake Forest: 4 Maroons: 3.In the second game, Bruns again took themound, trying to perform a modem versionof “Iron Man” McGinnity (he had alsopitched two innings of Monday’s secondgame). Powered by Jeff Foreman’s three- run homer, the Maroons took the inevitablelead. 5-2. before Lake Forest caught up withBruns’ exhausted deliveries. (Schacht saidhe hadn't started the fresh-armed RalphHruban because the Maroons wanted toavoid wildness “at all costs.”) An error byShakar Bahadur (who according to Schachtplayed “the best two games he’s everplayed for us”), contributed to a bushel ofForrester runs. Down 8-5 in the seventh, theMaroons rallied for a run before their play¬off hopes ended with long fly outs by Fore¬man and Greg Bedell.In a nifty bit of scheduling genius, theMaroons were forced to play a Tuesdaygame against George Williams, a gametransferred to Stagg Field because on Tues¬day morning, ducks were swimming on theGeorge Williams' diamond. It was a goodhard-hitting batting practice type of gamewon by GW 9-5. although it didn’t compareto last year's 19-18 extravaganza won byGeorge Williams. Still, GW was treated tothe tosses of Jeff Foreman, usually the rightfielder, and the Maroons emptied theirbench, playing a low-key game before theconclusion of their Lake Forest confronta¬tion.After the Lake Forest series, like manyMaroon coaches in the last few year. CoachSchacht was left trying to explain and un¬derstand why his team had once again comeup short in the big game (or series).“It goes back to pitching. We need fourbona fide pitchers. That would take the bur¬den off John and Joe and the team wouldplay more relaxed, knowing their not play¬ing behind tired arms ... We were hurt bynot getting men in scoring position with lessthan two outs but in Wednesday's double-header we played well. We never missed acut-off. We never threw the ball aroundThat’s what's so frustrating . .. It’s just onething each game.”Schacht paused in his analysis. “Some¬times we’re just too nice guys. We just won tgo out and bury a team.”Softball rescheduledDue to the monsoon weather and poordrainage on the Midway, the intramuralsoftball season has been in a state of con¬tinuous postponement which has forced ashortening of the season.Because of the many delays. 1M directorRosalie Resch has decided to go to adouble-elimination format. New scheduleswere made up by the lm department thisweek and were expected to be readysometime today.Any questions should be directed to theintramural office in room 203. Ida MoyesHall.photo by J. Wri^JThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 4, 1979 — 25CalendarFRIDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Technology and Ethnic Cultures inthe U.S.” guests^Arthur S. Parsons. Henry Rutz, HowardSmokier, and Seth L. Wolitz, 6:30 a.m., Channel 7.Crossroads: Free English Classes for foreign women, DOC Films: “A Streetcar Named Desire," 7:15 and 9:45P-m., “Wild River," midnight, Cobb.Hillel: Lecture by Mr. Jerrold Green “The Iranian Revo¬lution: Prospects for Israel and the Jews of Iran," 9:00p.m., Hillel. University Composers’ Concert: Original work by U of Cstudents, 8:00 pm. International House Auditorium.Folkdancers: General level with teaching, 8:30-11:30pm, Ida Noyes Cloister Club.Calvert House: Less formal Mass at Calvert, 10:00 pm.10:00 a.m. - noon.Economics Workshops: “Stock Returns and Inflation: ADisaggregated View” speaker Tom Kutzen. 10:30-12:00noon. Stu 216.Undergraduate Physics Journal Club: “Group Theory,SU (2), SU (3), and all That” speaker Charles Whitmer,12:30 p.m.. Eckhart 208. Free pizza.Humanities Collegiate Division: Free screening of “TheLady Eve.” 1:00 p.m., Cobb 425.Society for Social Research: 56th Annual Spring Insti¬tute “Sociology as a Science" sessions 3-5 p.m., Ida NovsHall, panel 7r30 p.m., International House. Info call3-2969.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Arabic Circle (discus¬sion in Arabic) "Legal Aspects of Doing Business in theMiddle East” speaker Taher Hilmi, 3:30 p.m., Pick 218.Economic History Workshop: “Dutch Migration to theUSA: A Census and Analysis” speaker Robert Swieren-ga. SS 106. 3:30 p.m.Divinity School and Chicago Theological Schools: Lec¬ture: “China and America in 1984“ speaker Dr. Ross Ter¬rill, 4:00 p.m.. Swift Lecture Hall.Salisbury Geography Circle: “Time and Place: a prob¬lem in awareness" speaker Yi-Fu Tuan, 4:15 p.m., PickHall 319.Women’s Union: Meets 5:00 p.m., Ida Noyes Hall abovethe Frog and Peach.Calvert House: Barbecue and volleyball, 5:30 p.m.. $1.00charge.UC Christian Fellowship: Potluck dinner. 6:00 p.m. Inter¬national Student Panel discussion. 7:30 p.m.Karate Club: Meets 7:00-9:00 p.m.. in the dance room ofIda Noyes Hall.Hillel: Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner. 7:00 p.m., Hillel. SATURDAYSociety for Social Sciences: 56th Annual Spring Institute“Sociology as a Science" Sessions 9-5 p.m.. Ida Noyes,Dinner 6:15 p.m., Ida Noyes, Keynote Address 8:00 p.m.,Ida Noyes, titled "The Hierarchy of the Sciences?” Infocall 3-2969.Compton Lecture: “The Interactions of Quarks and Lep¬tons,” 11:00 a-m., Eckhart 133.Smart Gallery: Exhibit-“Jackson Pollock: New FoundWorks,” March 14-May 6.WHPK: "Success Without College: comedic Humor,”4:00-5:00 p.m. “Fine Women and Song: Music a WomanCan Identify With” 5:00-6:00 pm.Law School Films: “Violette”, 7:15 and 9:30 pm, Cobb.Pub: Live Music, Radio Free Illinois. 9:30-12:30 pm. Youmust be 21 yrs. or older.SUNDAYWHPK: Finest in Rhythm and Blues, 6:00 am-midnight.Rockefeller Chapel: Udniversity Religious Services,11:00 am. E. Spencer Parsons. Sermon: “God's Will andHuman Freedom.”Hillel: 2nd Annual Walk with Israel. Meet at RodfeiZedek Cong., 5200 Hyde Park Blvd., 8:00 am, Hillel par¬ticipants.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch, 11:00 am, Hillel.Rockefeller Chapel: Service of the Holy Eucharist, Cele¬brant. 5:00 pm.Hitchcock Films: “Wizards”, 6:30, 8:15, and 10:00 pm,Kent 107.DOC Films: “I Never Promised You a Rose Garden”, 7:15and 9:30 pm, Cobb.Tai Chi Club: Meets 7:30 pm, 4945 S. Dorchester (enter on50th St.). MONDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Coal Resources in an EnergyScarce Future” guests Ray Hinchman, Donald Johnson,and Stanley Zellmer, 6:30 am, Channel 7.WHPK: Wake up and Stay awake with WHPK Rock. 6:30am - 4:00 pm.Crossroads: Free English classes for foreign women,10:00 am - 12:00 noon.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Ha-Sadnah (discus¬sion in Hebrew) “The Social Bases of the Iranian Revolu¬tion”, 12:00 noon, Cobb 103.Danforth Meeting: “Microcosm and Macrocosm: Keats’‘To Autumn’ and the Uselessness of Literary Study”,12:00 noon Wieboldt 409C.Special Resource Analysis Seminar: “Nuclear Nonproli¬feration”, speaker Dr. Kathleen Amiri, 12:45 pm, 1313 E.60th St.Chicago City Colleges: English as a Second LanguageClasses, 4:30-6:30 pm, Ricketts Lab.Karate Club: Meets 7:00-9:00 pm in the dance room ofIda Noyes.Amnesty International: Meeting, 7:00 pm, at Interna¬tional Crossroads Center. All are invited to attend.Chess Club: Meets 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes Memorial room.NAM Films: "The Battle of Cable Street”, 7:30 and 9:30pm, Cobb.Women’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm at the Blue Gar¬goyle women’s center, 3rd floor. Info call752-5655 or752-5072.Baptist Student Union: Meets 7:37 pm in the 2nd floorEast Lounge of Ida Noyes.Folkdancers: Beginning level with teaching, 8:00 - 11:30pm, Ida Nouyes Cloister Club.26 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 4, 1979Daniel Heifetz, Classical Violinist8:30 pm Mandel Hall. May 14$3.50/ $4.50 students. $5/$6 othersMaster class Tuesday, May 15 -10:30 amOpen to AuditorsLecture 1:30 pmBoth in Ida Noyes LibraryAdmission is without ticket or charge.Festival of the ArtsCLASSIFIED ADSSPACE Apt. sale-couches, chairs, beds, tables,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 6400.3 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.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.Park Forest House for Rent. Prof orstudent with family. 1C station near. 4Bdrms. Fm-Rm Garage Cent. air.Range. Carpet. Drapes. No Pets.Avail. June 1. Lease. Deposit *495.747-3851.Female grad student wanted to shareunfurnished 3 bdrm. apt. overlookinglake. Avail. June or July. Call 538-6159or 753-8149,Huge, sunny 1 BR apt. by the Lakeavailable for summer sublet. *250 +util. 643-9059.AVAILABLE to Grad Student/teacher(male only) l'/j rooms, telephone,private bath, kitchen, desirable loca-tion, *140, (PL 2-8377).Clear, large rooms. Kitchen. Quiet nonsmokers. From *175. 363-3458.Sublet 2B-room apt. in NE Hyde Park.Avail. June 1 Fall Option *289 Neg.Campus Bus on Lake 684-3550.SPACE WANTEDResponsible married couple seekshousing July 1-Dec. 31. Housesitting,643-2283.U of C student will babysit in return forroom/board in Hyde Park this sum¬mer. Ref. available. Clarice. 753-2233rm. 425.PhD student and editor wife want tohouse sit for summer. We will takegood care of your home. During work¬ing hours, Cbll Roberta at 236-2615.After 6:00, call 271-0296.Apartment or house to sublet wanted,June to December or Shorter, walkingdistance to University. Professor andwife, no children or pets. Prefer twobedrooms. Call 753-2969 days or241-5839 evenings.PEOPLE WANTEDRap 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.Typist for large camera ready copyms. to work in campus ofc. Start lateMay. 753-3765. ”Left and Righthanders needed forstudy on brain organization. Toregister call 753-4735.EASY EXTRA INCOME *500/1000Stuffing Envelopes Guaranteed. SendSelf-addressed, stamped envelope toDexter Enterprises, 3039 Shrine PI.LA, CA 90007,Full/part time dining room positions.Apply in person 3-5 pm. Mon-WedMallorys Restaurant 10th fl. HydePark Bank bldg.SUMMER JOBS NOW! WorldCruises! Pleasure Yachts! No ex¬perience! Good pay! Carribean,Hawaii, World! Send *3.95 for APPLICATION and direct referrals tcOCEANWORLD, Box 60129Sacramento, CA 95860.The Chicago Counseling ancPsycholotherapy Center, 5711 SWoodlawn, needs couples married orunmarried, straight or gay who arewilling to talk about their interper-s o n a Iissues and feelings for weekly sessionsuntil mid-June with a psychotherapistin-training. Participation should notbe seen as psychotherapy or as asubstitute for psychotherapy, althoughparticipants may find it a useful experience. Participants will neither bepaid nor charged for their sessions.Call Lee at 684 1800JOBS! LAKE TAHOE, CALIF! Fantastic tips! *1,700 *4,000 summer!Thousands still needed. Casinos,Restaurants, Ranches, Cruises. Send*3.95 for APPLICATION/INFO toLAKEWORLD, Box 60129, Sacramento C A 95860FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS Whlle U Wait.MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 55th St.493 6700..NEW Komura 7-element Teleextenders in stock Absolutely betterthan any other tele extenders in theworld! Stop in and try them MODELCAMERA 1342 E. 55th St 493-6700NEW Olympus OM 10 in Stock! ModelCamera, 1342 E 55th St 493 6700 etc. *0-99-tel-288-0092-New Canon AV-1 in stock! ModelCamera. 1342 E. SSth St. 493 6700Full Size Violin, newly refurbished,good tone *200. Newly rehaired bow*30. Call 753-3751 rm. 318. Leavemessage.Used 230 Mattress box spring sets forsale twin size 39x80 in. A great buy at*25.00 the set or two sets for $40.00.Beds are sold as is, cash and carry on¬ly. Sale dates are May 6th from 3:00p.m. to 6:00 p.m. and May 8th and 9thfrom 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. TheCenter For Continuing Education 1307E. 60th St.Deluxe 1976 Ford Camper conver. Likenew. Used only for Rec-V. Garaged allWinter. 351 V-8 Eng. Sleeps 4. Com-Dletely Equipped Cruise contr. FM-8Track. Many extras. *7900. 747-3851.Dylan's latest, "Live at Budokan,"*13.98 list, now *8.75 at the Student Co-op, downstairs at Reynolds Club.Piano walnut Everett console.Beautiful condition. *875 eves, ormorn. 947-0331.MISC. lumber (2x4's, shelving, etc.),trim, and molding (some oak antique),wallboard, sml swing doors, Ige. metalsink-cabinet, kindling wood, flagstone,wood cabinet, 8'x8' *30, white moderndresser, mirror, nightstand *50. Ige.buffet, Kenmore sewing mach. and at-tachments*30.947-0331 eves.Rummage sale-May 19, 10am-5pmUnited Church of Hyde Park. 53rd andBlackstone.Furniture sale call 881-8278. Otherhouse items for sale also.PEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK of all kinds-drawingcalligraphy, illustration, hand- ad¬dressing of invitations etc. NoelYovovich. 493-2399.Experienced painters, interiorspecialists, neat, high quality work.Spackling and wall repair atreasonable rates. Free estimate. Call753-8342. Leave message with operatorfor D. Dorfman.Astrology: Explore a new symbolsystem. Charts and classes. Ann Ar-duavid. 752-2551.CHINESE COOKING with Wendy Ger-rick. Full participation-bring onlyyour appetite and enthusiasum. Call538-1324.Excellent, accurate typist with collegedegree will type themes, term papers,and theses as well as letters, resumesor whatever your typing needs. Workdone quickly and neatly at veryreasonable rates. Call Wanda at684-7414 Frefe pick-up anddelivery.Mother of 15 month old wishes to carefor 2 other children weekdays; mealsand regular outdoor activities plann-ed. 955-8788.Typing: student term papers,manuscripts, pick up and delivery byarrangement. Please call 684-6882.SCENESPOTTERY CLASSES small groupslots of attention new daytime groupsforming 624-7568.Walpurgisnacht is food, drink, andgood times! We'll dance at 10:45,parade at 11:30, and try to satisfy OldMan Winter in midnite rites. All this onSat., May 5 in Hutch Court.Do you sometimes feel like dancing?Are you tired of disco or just ready totry something new for 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 Noyes.Teaching both nights. For more infocall 643-9654SUMMER CHILD CARE SOLUTIONSojourner Truth Center is now accep¬ting registration for its summer program tor children 3 years to 9 years:swimming, field trips, arts and crafts,music, dancing. Open 7 a.m. • 6 p.m.,4945 S. Dorchester. 538-8325 for information.Bawdy, crude, infantile and vulgar,commedia dell'Arte, the original im-provisational comedy of the 12th Century lives again in the Halcyon Repertory Theater's production, "The TwoFaithful Scribes," May 6, 8 p.m.Cloister Club, *2 UC students. $3others. Festival of The Arts.PERSONALSPregnant? Troubled? Call 233 030£forhelp. Free test referral.Hit there Mary L. Pastori!Sometimes I get so lonely I fantasizeabout getting so many recall requestson the same day that I get wasted andride the stack elevators up and down,up and down. RegReg, your cosmopolitan air makes melong for the thrill of being a megalibrary, and yet I take pleasure in mytea stained refectory tables and thequiet, friendly students reading atthem. Can a library find fulfillment inSimplicity? Harper. Lucky 13HAPPY 19th BIRTHDAY on May 7th.May this one be the best ever. Sorry Icouldn't get Lauren Bacall to jump outof a cake for you I. *-42To Disha and Annik-Thanks for thebirthday surprises! They wereexcellent and delicious besides. Love,the Third Little Pig.LOST AND FOUND5 keys and ring lost in front of IdaNoyes on jogging path. If found, pleasecall 684-4075 around 5.Lost: Black cat Vic. 54th and Everettsilver tag #83250 white patches neck,stomach. Reward. 493-3647. ARTISANS 21 RROAR!Special opening for Mothers Day Sat.May 5 from 10-2 in the First UnitarianChurch at 57th and Woodlawn. Allkinds of handcrafted gifts for yourfavorite mother. Regular hours areThurs. and Fri. 11-2 and Sun. 12-2.TEACHERSWANTEDJewish Sunday school needs ex¬perienced teachers for grades 1-9. Jobbegins October 1979. Call 752-5655 or324 0352. Monster Baby wants just one kiss, lit¬tle DMARK TWAIN"Mark Twain in person" a one-manshow featuring Richard Henze),"Highly Recommended!" says IrvKupcinet of the Sun-Times. 8 p.m.,May 12, Cloister Club. *2 UC Students*3 others. Tickets available in theReynolds Club box office. Festival OfThe Arts. CHILDCARECAR WASHINTENSIVEGERMAN TOMORROW Ida Noyes parking lot 9a.m. - 4 p.m. *1.25 per car. to benefitthe Little Ten.DONATIONSKarin Cramer PhD native German isteaching a 5 wk. course in preparationfor the German test 2 sections M-F 9-114:30-6:30, call 493-8127.BLACKFRIARSFor fun, laughs, good times, see NeilSimon's SWEET CHARITY, the storyof a girl who wants to be loved, MandetHall, May 11,12, and 13. 8:30 pm. *2.00student, *3.00 general. Tickets go onsale at Reynolds Club and Cobb HallMay 7. Donate rummage for parent co-opFund Raising sale. Call for Pick-up684-6363. Tax deductable.YEARBOOKAfter a long absence the Cap andGown isback....but only 500 copies willbe printed. Don't be caught without acopy, order your copy now. Call753-2249 ext. 3428 or 1414 or 955-4437.WIZARDS!WOMEN'SMAGAZINEPrimavera, the women's literarymagazine, needs new staff members.For info call 752-5655. The magazine ison sale in most Hyde Park bookstores. HOTLINEFOTAPut on a happy face. Clown around.Let all those natural clown tendenciesfinally emerge. CLOWN DAY Fri.M a y 4Hi noon Hutch court. FreeLICENTIOUSNESSWhat's better on a Saturday nite?Meet at Hutch Court at 10:45 to dance,torchlight parade around campus at11:30 followed by Special midnightceremony. It's Walpuregisnacht andit's this Sat. May 5!IRVING—WHERE ARE YOU....Irving: You're just too good to betrue. Can't take my eyes off of you-ou.Contact. LV ALASKAYOUR KEY TO A CAREERIN THE SUNBELTApply now for summer and. fall, call or write Graduate Schoolof Management,University of Dallas, Irving Texas 75061(214)438*1123 ext. 277MBA2nd Hand TunesQuality Used RecordsJaz/.-Classical-Rock-Disco-Evervthini!We Buy Used Records1701 E. 55th St. 684-3375OPEN 12-6:30 7 I) \ YS \ \\ EEKNEW FOCUS ON THE FALASH A:THE PLIGHT OFETHIOPIAN JEWRYPROF. ROBERT HESS, Associate Vice-Chancellor for Academic Affairs,Prof, of History, Univ. of Illinois,Chicago Circle CampusTUESDAY, MAY 8th. 7:30 P.M.HILLEL FOUNDATION. 5715 WOODLAWN PARDESPardes Institute of Jewish Studies,Jerusalem, a coeducatonal programfor serious study of Torah combiningtraditional atmosphere of a BeitMidrash and intellectual freedom andsecular disciplines of the University.INTERESTED? Meet the Director,Rabbi Levi Lauer, at Hillel, 5715 S.Woodlawn, WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, at12:30 p.m. WANT AN APPOINT¬MENT? Call 752-1127. Available Sept. 4 full time opening* inplaygroup of four young three-year-olds Near campus, small home daycare center. 684 2820.ADMINISTRATIVEASSISTANTNORC has two openings for alert,energetic individuals in the Personnel-Payroll department and in Data Pro¬cessing Duties include typing of let¬ters and memoranda, xeroxing, andmaintenance of billing and office filingledger system. Must have excellenttyping skills and experience must in¬dicate ability to exercise sound judgement and good time management 37Vihours. U of C campus. Call Steve Ar-mato at 947 2558. AN EQUAL OP¬PORTUNITY/AFFIRMATIVE AC¬TION EMPLOYERDANCEIt's better than drugs! Sunday May 6,Kent .107 *1 50 "WIZARDS" greatanimated fun 6:30, 8:15,10:00p.m. MINOLTA DEMOSat. May 12, 10:00 a.m. - 4 p.m. Stop inand see the new Minolta XG-1 andXD-5 cameras. Special prices for thisDemonstration Day MODELCAMERA, 1344 E. SSth St. 493-6700.DANIEL HEIFETZClassical violinist Daniel Heifetz, May14, 8:30 p.m Mandel Hall. *3.50/*4.50students, *5/*6 others Ticketsavailable in the Reynolds Club Box Of¬fice Festival Of The Arts. A Dance Concert featuring the UCModern Dance Group directed by ElviMoore. May 15, Mandel Hall, 8 p.m. Noadmission charge. Festival Of TheArts.COMING SOONPhil Guy, Junior Wells, and friendsplaying the blues in Mandel Hall.ARTISANS21ARTISANS21Wanted: people wilting to committheir time to the operation of the U.C.information and counselling hot-line.Please leave name and number at753-4200 or 752-5360, 5:30 • 7:00 p.m.Anyone who knows people, has connections for jobs etc. in Alaska please call753-2240, ask for Sascha (rm 1024) orCarol (rm 1001).LEGAL NOTICENotice is hereby given, pursuant to"An Act in relation to the use of anAssumed Name in the conduct or tran¬saction of Business in the State," asamended, that a certification was filedby the undersigned with the CountyClerk of Cook County, file No. K65557on 27 April 79. Under the AssumedName of Computex with place ofbusiness located at 5710 Drexel,Chicago IL. The true names andresidence addresses of owners areStanley M. Metcalf, 5710 Drexel andDaniel R. Tulty, 5429 Harper, Chicago. 1 SNOWED UNDERDue to Typing Delavs0RELAX!Avoid the Rush and Leave the Typing to Us.We Do:Manuscripts / Theses / DissertationsResumes / Reports / Transcriptions24 Hour Telephone Dictation ServiceEM A KWIK SECRETARIAL SERVICE180 West Washington 236-0110Weekends & Evenings 726-35722L,Hi JonARTISANS 21 gallery and shop is hav¬ing a special opening for MOTHER’SDAY This SAT., MAY 5th from 10-4 in theFirst Unitarian Church at 57th andWoodlawn.Come see all kinds of hand-craftedjewelry, ceramics, macrame, pillowsand paintings by local artisans. Stopin to buy or just to browse. Tea andcookies will be served.Our regular hours are Thurs.-Fri. 11-2and Sun. 12-2.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 4, 1979 — 27Tickets: $3, $4 - MAB fee payers$6, $7 - NON-MAB fee payersTickets go on Sale Monday, May 7 at 9:30 a.m.LIMIT - 2 tickets per I.D., four tickets per person.May 26,1979- 8.30 p.m.at Mandal HallMajor Activities Boardis proud to presentJOHN PRINE