Hyde Park crime breakdown on pp. 10 and 11McNamara upheld as Pick choice;dissenters plan May 21 ‘teach-in’' 1 1i wlM T*y|Photo: Abbe FletmanCouncil members leaving Tuesday’s meeting By Jaan Eliasand Abbe FletmanDespite faculty protest andwidespread discontent within theCouncil of the faculty Senate withthe selection of RobertMcNamara, the University willpresent the first Albert Pick Jr.Award for InternationalUnderstanding to McNamara May22. McNamara is the president ofthe World Bank and served asSecretary of Defense during theKennedy and Johnson administra¬tions. .Faculty protest overMcNamara s selection as the reci¬pient of the $25,000 cash prize willcontinue, said Terry Turner,associate professor of an¬thropology. Faculty members areorganizing a “teach-in” that willprobably occur May 21 and are col¬ lecting funds for full page adver¬tisements in The Maroon and aChicago daily newspaper todisassociate themselves from theaward.At least 39 faculty memberssigned petitions protestingMcNamara’s selection and askingfor a review of the procedures usedin choosing the recipient. DonaldMcCloskey, associate professor ofeconomics, said he believes a highpercentage of faculty membersare against the award, but for dif¬ferent reasons.Several faculty members, in¬cluding Bernard Cohn, professor inthe anthropology and historydepartments, have said they willnot attend the dinner on principle,.and several others, includingTrustees Charles Percy and BenHeineman, and chairman of thedepartment of behavioral sciencesNews AnalysisBank actions cause controversyThis is the concluding part in atwo-part series on Robert McNa¬mara and the Pick Award.By Andrew PatnerRobert McNamara’s tenure atthe World Bank has receivedmixed criticism from economistsand political scientists, but it isgenerally believed that his perfor¬mance there has been much betterthan it was at the Defense Depart¬ment. “His heart is in the rightplace,” said George Tolley, profes¬sor of economics. “We’re past theVietnam situation.”Since assuming the presidencyof the World Bank Group in March.1968, McNamara has continued hisenergetic work schedule. The 67-year old McNamara is currentlyon a two-week working tour ofAsia.“He has been a very energeticleader,” said Robert Z. Aliber, pro¬fessor in the Graduate School ofBusiness. “He has done things indevelopment that his four distin¬guished predecessors were unableto do.”Lloyd Rudolph, professor of po¬litical science and an expert on In¬dian affairs, said McNamara’swork with the World Bank is of“wide significance. In promotingeconomic growth he has catered tothe poor in Third World countriesand insisted on income distributionand basic human needs.”“If we do not give this award, weare saying that no one can learn,no one can benefit, ‘once a badapple, always a bad apple,’ ’’ Ru¬dolph said. But McNamara is not without hiscritics, who find both his generalgoals and his specific policies“simple minded.”“His policy has been erratic,”said Terry Turner, associate pro¬fessor of anthropology. “He fo¬cuses on one topic at a time whichhe usually lifts out of any social,economic, or political context."He is devoted to cost account¬ing, an economic ‘body count’which is satisfied with electrifyinga slum or building some lumpen-proletariat housing. His has beenan extension of the same kind ofpositivistic, anti-systematic, naiveVietnam policy. It is exactly thesame kind of thinking applied in adifferent context.”Turner also charges that McNa¬mara is pursuing a policy of “debtbondage,” for the developing coun¬tries in cooperation with the Inter¬national Monetary Fund (IMF).“The World Bank and the IMFhave worked hand-in-glove atkeeping those countries so thatthey gradually lose control of theirsocial policy.”The IMF imposes strict restric¬tions on the countries it lends to. Ittends to limit social spending.andpursues a “tight money” policythat favors conservative govern¬ments. #In order to be a member of theBank, a country must first be amember of the IMF and must meetthe Fund’s economic requirementsfor membership. In addition, dele¬gates and governors of the two or¬ganizations often express the sameeconomic policies, and. in the caseof the United States, both positions Norman Bradbum said they willbe out of town the night of the din¬ner.President Hanna Gray hasreceived at least two letters fromfaculty members protesting theaward and the award procedures.One letter, signed by four juniorfaculty members (See Letters tothe Editor, p. 4), urged the Univer¬sity to rescind the award.A resolution introduced by Coun¬cil member Cohn disassociatingfaculty members from the awardand urging those invited not to at¬tend the black tie dinner inMcNamara’s honor waswithdrawn from considerationbecause of lack of support.McCloskey said. “We want peo¬ple to know that the University didnot give this award to McNamarabut that a small committee did.”Most of the hour-and-a-half clos¬ed door Council meeting Tuesdaywas spent debating the choice ofMcNamara, the reasons for givingsuch an award, and the secrecysurrounding the selection of thePick Award committee.According to several Councilmembers. Gray said the selectionof the award winner was legalunder the University statutes andby-laws. But she reportedlyapologized for the secrecy surroun¬ding the establishment of theaward, the award committee, andits proceedings.One Council member said Graywas “frank” and that Tuesday wasa day he "was proud of the Coun¬cil.”Provost D. Gale Johnson saidGray may make a statementsometime this weekend concerningUniversity awards in general orthe Pick Award in particularCouncil difficultiesCouncil members said there hadbeen difficulty Tuesday discussingthe immediate question ofMcNamara’s selection. Accordingto three Council members, therewas no "serious” discussion ofrescinding the award.The Council position, accordingto one member, was thatMcNamara has already been in¬vited “and we have to go throughwith it.”Council member Bradbum said,“While nobody was very haDpvwith the choice, any alternative togiving the award would have beenworse ”Susanne Rudolph, chairman ofthe political science departmentand a member of the committeethat selected McNamara, saidMcNamara was “a choice 1 couldlive with ”. She said that herperspective of McNamara was “apost-1968 perspective of the man.”to 10are held by W. Michael Blumenth-al. Secretary of the Treasury'.John Maddux, special advisor toMcNamara at the Bank who hasbeen handling all inquiries inMcNamara’s absence, saidcharges of debt bondage are “ri¬diculous. Nobody has to borrowfrom us. They borrow because theywant to.”The Bank functions as a bank oflast resort and lends at ratesslightly lower than commercialbanks to those countries that havebeen denied conventional financ¬ing. The loans are made directly togovernments for periods of 12 to 15years, and are made only to those countries that are considered tohave a good balance of payments.The World Bank Group also in¬cludes the International Develop¬ment Agency that is known as the“soft-loan window” of the Bank Itmakes loans, which often amountto grants, for a 50-year term with a10-year grace period at a nominalthree fourths of one percent inter¬est. These "soft” loans are largelyfinanced by the 30 of the 134member nations that are consi¬dered "developed,” and only the 50least developed countries qualify.to 10Robert McNamara in Asia.Union at Jimmy’s appears to have lostBy Curtis BlackThe results of the April 18 election to havebartenders at Jimmy’s Woodlawn Taprepresented by Local 42 of the Chicago Din¬ing Room Employees, Cooks andBartenders Union (AFL-CIO) are indispute, but it appears the union will lose theelection.The election followed an appeal by ownerJimmy Wilson of the list of eligible voters.Wilson submitted a second list, after retain¬ing the law firm which represented theUniversity during the recent clericalworker’s campaign.By Wilson’s estimation, when settled, thevote will be 10-5 against the union, whileunion sources expect a 7-5 defeat. Severalvotes are in dispute. Pro-union bartendersbelieve the first list would have resulted in aunion victory. A pro-union bartender wasfired following the appeal of the first list,and two anti-union bartenders quit forunknown reasons.Pro-union bartenders, led by Tom Walker,a three-year employee and a University doc¬toral candidate, were seeking hospitaliza¬tion coverage and an end to “arbitrary”work scheduling by Wilson, Walker said.Several bartenders approached Wilson lastsummer to ask for health benefits, andreceived a 50 cent raise and a cut in hours.“Jimmy was mad as hell,” one bartendersaid. Wilson said the proper approach wouldhave been to call a bartenders meeting.Wilson said the health insurance offeredby the union was “not that good.” Heestimated that his full-time employees earnover $3000 more than they would as unionmembers, using the union’s base pay scale.This would have been subject to negotiation,pro-union bartenders said.What he objected to, Jimmy said, was“the way they went about it — everythingthey did was wrong.” He said he learned ofthe union organizing attempt only through aletter from the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). “These kids have lost threethings,” Wilson said, “my friendship, myrespect for them as men, and my trust. Idon’t trust anyone who sticks a knife in myback.”Jimmy claims the union organizers are“destroying my bar.” He says in 31 years hehas helped over 300 University studentsthrough school. “And not one has failed tothank me,” Jimmy said. “These kids arespoiling everything,” he said. “They’redestroying all this kind of help I can give toPhoto: Sue SartainCarl, one of the bartenders at Jimmy’s. students and deserving neighborhood peo¬ple.”Wilson, a member of Local 42 since 1943,had his membership suspended, accordingto Walker. Jimmy said he is still a member.The sign over the bar proclaiming Jimmy’sas a union establishment was taken downfollowing the election.By Eric Von der PortenFour Chicago-area high school choirs, in¬cluding the University High School choirsand the Oak Park-River Forest High Schoolstring orchestra, will perform together withthe Rockefeller Chapel Choir Saturday inthe first University of Chicago InvitationalHigh School Choral Festival.At 8 pm in Rockefeller Chapel, the highschool choirs and orchestra, accompaniedby University organist Edward Mondello,will perform O vos omnes by Tomas Luis deVictoria, Ehre sei dir, Christe by HeinrichSchutz, and Missa Brevis Sancti Joannis deDeo by Franz Josef Haydn. The RockefellerChapel Choir will follow with eight shortselections.The concert is open to the public and freeof charge.Both groups will then reconvene alongwith the Chicago Brass Ensemble to per¬form In Excelsis by Giovanni Gabrieli as afinale.Don V. Moses, director of Choral Ac¬tivities at the University of Iowa, will con¬duct the assembled high school groups.Richard Vikstrom, director of Chapel Musicat the University, will conduct the Chapel Bartenders who supported the union effortare' afraid they will be fired when businessslows down this summer. According toWilson, they are protected by the NLRB. “Iwish they’d quit,” he said. “If they ain’t gotthe guts to quit I can’t force them to.” Thebartenders point out that once the election issettled, they have no protection.Choir.The festival was originated and organizedby Richard Walsh, director of the Universi¬ty High School choirs, as an “educational”experience, he said. “We wanted to let thekids experience the music as it was intendedto be.”Walsh said the instrumental accompani¬ment will reproduce the arrangements in¬tended for the selections and the par¬ticipants will be provided with translationsof the selections the Chapel Choir will per¬form in foreign languages.The Chapel Choir was included to give thestudent participants an opportunity to hearand perform with professional singers andconductors, according to Walsh.The festival will include a full day of ac¬tivities including rehearsals morning andafternoon, tours of campus, and meals in theUniversity dormitories. Vikstrom said partof the idea of the program is to bring highschool students and their parents to thecampus and to “hope some of them will beattracted to the school.”Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, the Dean ofStudents in the University, the Vice Presi¬dent for Public Affairs, and the College Ad¬missions Office are sponsoring the festival.Area HS choirs to performat Rockefeller Chapel2 — Th* Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979Court to hear Manteno dismissal motionBy Jacob Levineand Jaan EliasPhoto: Jake LevineUniversity attorney Harold L. Jacobson.The Museum of Science and Industry is of¬fering field trips to Argonne NationalLaboratory and the Fermi National Ac-CorrectionIn Tuesday’s Maroon, University Vice-President for Public Affairs D.J.R.Bruckner was quoted as saying “wewanted to get the thing out of the hands ofthe press and into the hands of thelawyers”. This quotation was not made byBruckner. We regret the error, andapologize to Bruckner. Circuit Court Judge Marjan Staniec saidWednesdayhe will take motions to dismissthe Manteno lawsuit under advisement. Thetwo motions to dismiss the suit brought byacting county Public Guardian PatrickMurphy, were filed by the University andthe Illinois Department of Mental Health(IDMH).The motions charge that Murphy does nothave proper legal standing to file the suitand that the suit is “insufficient” because itdoes not contain specific cases involving ex¬perimentation on mental patients.Staniec said in court that he doubtscelerator Laboratory on Saturday, May 19.J. Bruce Mitchell, Museum educationassociate, will accompany the group on thethree-hour morning tour of Argonne and thetwo-hour afternoon tour of Fermilab. Buseswill leave from the Museum at 8 am.A registration fee of $10 for non-membersand $8.50 for Museum members reservesspaces for a series of Museum field tripsthat this year will include tours of industrialand chemical plants and a railroad swit¬ching yard.Reservations for the Argonne and Fer¬milab tours must be made at least a week inadvance to allow for federal securityclearance. Minimum age for these trips is16. Murphy’s standing as Cook County PublicGuardian. Murphy was appointed by Gover¬nor Thompson in November, but the nomin¬ation was never seht to the State Senate asrequired by law.“I’m concerned we proceed within thecivil process,” Staniec told Murphy. “Atthis point the court does not believe youhave the legal standing” to bring the suit.In the heated court session Wednesday,University attorney Harold Jacobson andIDMH attorney Allan Grischke also arguedthat Murphy’s suit lacked specific charges.“The claim should be dismissed on thegrounds that the allegations are factuallyunsupported, there are no specific acts men¬tioned, and he (Murphy) fails to demon¬strate that any immediate action is neces¬sary,” Grischke told Staniec.No legal standingAccording to a spokesman for GovernorThompson, Murphy’s name was never sentto the Senate because “it’s insignificant.”Staniec noted in court that the “authority ofthe governor has not been fulfilled.” TheGovernor appointed Murphy while the Sen¬ate was still in session.“I was appointed by the court to representthese people ... I certainly think I havestanding” Murphy said in court. He said hewill provide Staniec with copies of court rul¬ings naming Murphy guardian for each ofthe wards who he says are under his guard¬ianship.Staniec said he will await Murphy’s re¬sponse. “The public has a right to know,”said Staniec. “We don’t want the public tothink there has been a whitewash.” Suit “not well founded”Grischke and Jacobson also attacked thecharges made in the suit. “Mentioningthings that occurred in the ’50’s does notmake a valid complaint. He has failed tostate that there is any kind of harm,” saidGrischke.“The request for relief is not well foundedand the pleadings are not well founded, ” Ja¬cobson told Staniec. “Murphy alludes to thedrugs but there is nothing to indicate thereis anything going on now.“If there is anything else it ought to be putdown.”Emergency reliefMurphy said he came to court seeking toask for an immediate halt to experimenta¬tion done on mental patients at Mantenowithout consent from guardians.“Experimentation is necessary and itshould be continued. However, when we’retalking about the back wards we must see ifthey do have the capacity for informed con¬sents,” said Murphy.Staniec offered to issue a temporary re¬straining order barring the administrationof “non-FDA (Food and Drug Administra¬tion) approved drugs” to mental patients.Both Jacobson and Grischke immediatelyprotested. “That would be very detrimen¬tal,” said Jacobson. Staniec backed down,and instead extended an order already in ef¬fect preventing any alteration of patientfiles at Manteno.The next court session will be held May 23.Lawyers for all parties will file responseswith Staniec next week.Field trips to Argonne, FermilabMOTHER’S DAYNew, Bigger Values!LeCreuset10 pieceWoodHandle Setreg. $161.65now $59>95Demitassereg. $3.00now $1.50OnionSouper/Casserolesnow reg. $3.75$1.75Rombauer’s The Joy of Cooking, paperbackreg. $4.95 now 75$Prices Good Through May 21 -cooleysIn Harper Court • 5211 S. Harper • 363-4477Monday thru Saturday 10-6 • Sunday 12-5:30 Reich resignsOne week before the first anniversary ofthe College Office of Public Information,College PI Director Jonathan Reich resign¬ed. effective May 15."Leaving a job. a home, a family is nevereasy,” said Reich, who made his decision toleave in March.The Office will continue and probably willexpand its activities, said Dean of the Col¬lege Jonathan Z. Smith. A search has beeninitiated for a new director, and the postprobably will be filled this summer.In a two-page letter dated May 5 announc¬ing his resignation, Reich wrote, “I have —and plan to have — no comment on (myresignation) beyond this simple goodbye.”Reich said the office has two objectives:“to let the College of the University ofChicago be better known throughout theland, indeed, the world; and thus to servethe ideals of liberal education. ”A report on the activities of the office willbe completed before May 15. the day Reichleaves the job. College PIPhoto: Carol StudenmundCollege PI Director Jonathan Reich, whohas resigned, effective May 15.r‘No one likes rock more than me’A bureaucratic mix-up left an audienceof 100 and campus-based rock and rollband Radio Free Illinois with 800 pounds ofequipment Tuesday in Hutchinson Com¬mons. but no music.According to Assistant Dean of StudentsPaul Ausick. complaints were lodged lastyear when a rock band played in the Com-V* — ■■■■ mons for the Festival of the Arts NoontimeSeries. Because FOTA did not inform Au¬sick of the concert before Monday, hecould not check with professors in the sur¬rounding buildings, he said, and wasforced to cancel the concert.“No one likes rock and roll music morethan me," he said.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979 — 3EditorialFailing the testFor the past week the members of the facultyand the administration have been tested, andthey have failed that test.At issue was the awarding of a controversialprize to a controversial man. In giving the PickAward for International Understanding to Rob¬ert McNamara, after three hasty and secretmeetings, the selection committee and Universi¬ty administrators have invited the criticism theyhave received.When the Council of the University Senate, theofficial faculty ruling body, met on Tuesday theycould have demanded that the committee’s ac¬tion be explained and the award be recinded.Aparently President Gray was “frank” with theCouncil about the haste with which the awardwas made. But she was equally frank with themin saying this award was a fait accompli. Andthat statement was accepted by all but two of the50 members of the Council.In light of these events, all the noise that facul¬ty and administration members make about thisbeing a “faculty-run” University is shown forwhat it actually is — noise. Gray has shown thatshe is firmly in control. And though she “is theofficial medium of communication between theFaculties and the Board of Trustees, and be¬tween the students and the Board,” according tothe University’s Statutes and By-laws, she failedto perform that function by not keeping any ofthese groups informed about the award. And theCouncil has bowed to her failure.In allowing Gray herself to appoint a commit¬tee to “look at all prizes in a thoughtful way,”IheCouncil has ignored the problems of the momentand has allowed the University to be ridiculed.That McNamara will receive this award still re¬mains shocking. We urge that the award be with¬drawn. If it is to be given, we urge those invitedto the black tie dinner to refuse their invitations.We hope that all opposed to the award will par¬ticipate in a peaceful demonstration at Hutchin¬son Commons and in the“teach-in” that mayprecede it.Professor Susanne Rudolph, one of themembers of the award committee, says she hasa “post-1968 perspective” on McNamara. It isclear that Gray and the other members of thecommittee share this perspective. Such a per¬spective is no perspective at all. In making thisaward, the University denies history itself anddisplays an alarming amnesia on the subject ofthe Vietnam War.But maybe the rest of us just need that“post-1968 perspective.” Maybe the VietnamWar never happened at all. As Gray has said,“This particular award has already beengiven.”Editor: 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: N ancy Clevel and;Copy 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, Lee Chait,Kendall Christiansen, Jaan Elias, Jackie Hardy, Chris Isi¬dore, Richard Kaye, Carol Klammer, Bob Larson, BruceLewenstein, Donald Link, Dan Loube, Greg Mizera, GeoffPotter, Andy Rothman, Sue Sartain, Margot Slauson, How¬ard Suls, Calvin Thrilling, Mark Wallach, John Wright.4 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May u, 1979 Four faculty members urge rescissionThe Maroon has received a copy ofthe following letter to PresidentHanna Gray:Dear President Gray:As members of the faculty and asmembers of a generation sliced openand bled by the Vietnam War, wefeel obliged to add our voices tothose protesting the decision to offerthe first Pick Award for Interna¬tional Understanding to RobertMcNamara.“Who is Robert McNamara?”asked one of our students, neverhaving heard of him. RobertMcNamara is president of the WorldBank. Robert McNamara wasSecretary of Defense from 1961 to1968, years in which he was a chiefarchitect of the Vietnam War.During those years, McNamarawas, in David Halberstam’s words,“intelligent, forceful, courageous,decent, everything, in fact, butwise.” Everything but wise: this is agenerous view. McNamara is anavatar of reason reduced to techni¬que, bureaucracy gone haywire,human beings transformed intobody counts. He pushed for the bom¬bing of North Vietnam and theescalation of the war in the middlesixties; he lied and advocated lyingto the Congress and the Americanpeople in order to prosecute abloody, calamitous, senseless, racistwar.That is part of RobertMcNamara’s past. That past is thecore of our lives. Our sense of whowe are and what kind of human be¬ings we try to be has been shaped byour repudiation of what the Robert‘Tasty,really tasty’To the Editor:I don’t understand what all thefuss is about with this Albert Pickaward. After all, isn’t this theRobert S. McNamara, developer ofthe famous McNamara Semi-Permeable Membrane? This pieceof bureaucratic art, when placedagainst the Seventeenth Parallel,was capable of stopping mostground movement from south tonorth while allowing carefullyselected amounts of men andmateriel passage from north tosouth. It also permitted a clear viewof the color of the local dirt.This initial approach to multina¬tional art was a clear precursor tothe later works Canyon Obstructionand Infinitely Photographed ShowerCurtains and has been recognized assuch by all significant members 01the contemporary art community.For this alone, not to mention hismore recent stuff, McNamaradeserves the plaudits of someone,somewhere. Why not here, and in away that will expose the conceptualfoundations of this University?By the way, if you get a chance tocatch his work-in-progress.Desperate Attempt to Salvage Poor¬ly Conceived Loans RecommendedBy Graduate School of BusinessTechnicians, make sure you drop infor a quick look. Tasty, really tasty.Randy KelleyThe Maroon is the student newspa¬per of the University of Chicago, Wepublish twice a week, Tuesdays andFridays during the academic year.We encourage letters to the editor.They must be typed triple spaceOur offices are on the third floor ofIda Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St.Phone: 752-3263 McNamaras, the “best and thebrightest,” tried to be and were. •The University, in effect, asks usto forget Robert McNamara’s role inthe Vietnam War. That asks us todeny ourselves and our history. Wecannot do this. We urge the Uhiversi-ty to cancel the dinner forMcNamara. Whatever embarrass¬ment might thus be occasioned tothe guest, the Pick family, the selec¬tion committee, or the administra¬tion is nothing compared to thatwhich will befall the University, if itpersists in its resolve to play thehigh priest at McNamara’s shriving.He had his doubtsTo the Editor:As someone who thinks well of Mr.McNamara, I thought I might com¬mit some of my thoughts to paper.Before I do, I would like to agreewith the criticism of those of my col¬leagues who believe the Pick Prizeselection process was insufficient^thought through, and did not inviteadequate participation.I am no admirer o-f MrMcNamara’s role in the Vietnamwar, a war which was destructive toboth Vietnamese and Americansociety. Mr. McNamara, like manvother Americans, was far too slow,in my political judgment, torecognize its disasterous conse¬quence for Asians. It was very latein the day when, toward the end ofthe Johnson administration, he anaafter him Clark Clifford broughthome to the President that his policywas ruinous. As secretary ofdefense, his strategy was to pursue apolicy of containment by supportingthe South Vietnamese governmentas against the Airforce’s and Navy’senthusiasm for rolling back Com¬munism by bombing the north. As hebecame more opposed to the war, hecommissioned the Pentagon papersto examine the failures of the ad-ministration’s strategy. InJohnson’s mind, he was a Trojanhorse for Bobby Kennedy within theadministration, a critic whom heceased to trust for some time beforehe effectively maneuvered him outof the government and saw him kick¬ed upstairs to the World R»nvwnue tnese circumstances makeMr. McNamara a more complex andless culpable figure than theloyalists who shared the President’sillusions, they evidently do not lay torest the doubts of those who think ex¬it preferable to voice. Yet, given thatthe whole Vietnam enterprise wasinitially unwise and ultimately im¬moral, one boggles at declaring asirredeemable all of those, from JohnKennedy through RobertMcNamara, who did not share one’sposition on the Vietnam war. Butwhy is Mr. McNamara worth honor¬ing?one of the most significant issuesof the 1970’s and 1980’s is interna¬tional economic policy and its conse¬quences for the third world. If 1could imagine a positive Americancontribution in the next ten years, itwould include the objective ofrecapitulating in the internationalarena the economic redistribu-tionism which has been attemptedby the western industrialdemocracies. In so far as I see aplausible spokesman for that posi¬tion, one who could speak per¬suasively to western governmentsand publics, Mr. McNamara in hisrole as World Bank president hasbeen that spokesman. While WorldBank credits are fraught with dif- Michael SchudsonAssistant professor,department of sociologyJohn MacAloonInstructor in the SocialScient Collegiate DivisionMartha McClintockAssistant professor,department of behavioralsciencesElizabeth AbleAssistant professor,department of Englishficulties, the Bank has been regard¬ed by most of its clients as being asprofessional and unpolitical as canbe expected of an institution that issupported by industrial capitalistdonors. The overall impact of theBank’s soft loan window, IDA, hasbeen a crucial buttress to manythird world economies.McNamara’s bank is not the Bank of1966-67, which was to a considerableextent the agent of the Americantreasury and American economicpolicy. Non-market and marketeconomies equally appear asbeneficiaries of the Bank’s projects.Under Mr. McNamara, the Bank hasbeen steadily infiltrated by thirdworld economists and third worldconceptions about development. Itspresident has become a spokesmanfor a version of the New Interna¬tional Economic Order, the thirdworld’s slogan for appropriate inter¬national economic relations thatcommand limited support inAmerican business, banking andgovernment circles.The difficulty with this line on Mr.McNamara is that it is likely toreduce the appetite for dinner of yetother colleagues. To some of my col¬leagues the idea of internationalredistributionism and the non-market and/or interventionist im¬plications of the World Bank’soperations are uncongenial. Thatunderlines the difficulty we will ex¬perience in any selection of a can¬didate for the Pick Award. Onewoman’s international understan¬ding will be another’s misunderstan¬ding.Mr. McNamara in his Montrealspeech of 1966 argued that “withoutdevelopment there can be no securi¬ty.” “There is an irrefutable rela¬tionship,” he continued “betweenviolence and economic backward¬ness” and warned that unless thewidening gap between the rich andpoor nations was reversed andbegan to close “the years that lieahead for the nations in the southernhalf of the globe are pregnant withviolence.” President Kennedy calledon the advanced industrialdemocracies to devote one percentof their GNP to third world develop¬ment. The U.S. has done increasing¬ly badly by this measure; todayUS’s effort at about two tenths ofone percent is near the bottom of thelist. There is still need for aspokesman to remind the first worldof its international economic en¬vironment, and to define Westernobligations in a new fashion.Susanne Hoeber RudolphChairman, department ofpolitical scienceLetters to the EditorA fait accompli?The Maroon has received a copy of thefollowing letter delivered before Tues¬day’s Council meeting. The letter is ad¬dressed to Kenneth Dam, spokesman forthe Council of the University Senate.Dear Mr. Dam:The receipt of an invitation to attend adinner at which Robert McNamara is to beawarded the first annual Pick Award forOutstanding Contributions to InternationalUnderstanding is somewhat dismaying.My unease arises form the belief that theprocess of selection and the recipient of theaward reflect a serious departure from thecustom and usage of the University.With regard to the process of selection Ihave been unable either through a searchof Senate Council minutes or questioningof colleagues to find a description of theselection committee, the process ofnomination, nor a description of theaward. While it is my understanding thatthe committee contained facultymembers, there does not appear to havebeen any dissemination of information tothe faculty through appropriate channelsof the nominating procedure, as is the casefor example of honorary degrees.Equally unhappy is the departure fromthe very wise policy of the University togive honors only to tnose wno nave madesignificant contributions to scientific orscholarly knowledge or artistic creation.Mr. McNamara’s virtues may be manybut they do not include any such contribu¬tions.These two departures raise very seriousquestions. How, for example, can it be saidthat the University honors Mr. McNamarawhen the faculty has not been apprisedeither of the committee or the award andwas not a participant in the nominatingprocedure in a formal and systematicfashion. Surely such a procedure opens thedoor to politization of the University, i.e.,in whose name does the University ad¬ministration speak? Does this departurefrom normal usage imply that the facultymust now speak for itself and thus createthe possibility of adversary relations withthe senior administrations of the Universi¬ty?Equally serious are the questions raised by publicly honoring someone who for bet¬ter or worse has been associated withspecific political policies not simply publicpolicies. Clearly this may be viewed as aprecedent for awarding other honors - suchas honorary degrees - to men and womenassociated with political policies. Surelythis can only lead to a situation in whichthe University will become associated asan institution with such policies.In short, is this kind of policy one whichthe University or its faculty must nowcome to accept as a consequence of a fiataccompli?These are questions, it seems to me, thatare quite properly within the competenceof the University Senate to discuss. In¬deed, I think it an obligation of the Councilto discuss these departures and/or to at¬tempt to establish with some precision justwhat are the policies of the University inregard to the procedures and recipients ofhonors given in the name of the University.I thus wish to ask you to raise theseissues in the Council as soon as is prac¬ticable so that the University faculty maybenefit from an open discussion of the im¬plications following from the proceduresand award of this prize.Bernard S. SilbermanProfessor of Political ScienceA different readingTo the Editor:Andrew Patner’s account in the May 8Maroon of Robert McNamara’s relation¬ship to the Vietnam war draws heavily onDavid Halberstam’s The Best and theBrightest. According to Patner’s accountof Halberstam, McNamara “was the chiefimpetus behind the escalation of the Viet¬nam War,” did not display any doubtsabout the war, and “never abandoned therhetoric of the war’s supporters.’’My reading of Halberstam’s book yieldsa different account. It includes the follow¬ing paragraphs from pages 630 to 633:“Of the original architects (of the war),only one man (in 1966) was undergoinggreat change, and yet continued to stay inthe government to fight for his newerdefinition of reality — though in a deeplycompromised way — and that was RobertMcNamara...“McNamara, too. was caught in a trap of his own making. Even as he was feedingmen and materiel into the pipelines, hedoubted more and more their effec¬tiveness. and he was becoming in effect acritic of his own role. If he had had doubtsabout the bombing by January 1966, theywould grow even more during the next fewmonths in the controversy over the bomb¬ing of Hanoi and Haiphong’s petroleumreserves and oil-storage facilities...“In effect from then on, and particularlyin the fall of 1966, he was something of adissenter, but a dissenter operating underconsiderable limits... He began to give upcombat troops to hold dow'n on the bomb¬ings, dissembling to a degree within thebureaucracy so it would not be too obviouswithin the government that he was a dove.“In October 1966, with the military ask¬ing for troop increases which would bringthe American commitment to a minimumof 570,000, McNamara went to Saigonagain. This time his sense of pessimismwas very real; he was convinced that theother side would match us, that in effectHanoi was now waging its own special kindof attrition, psychological attrition,against us, slowing down the pace of thewar slightly, believing that time was ontheir side. He was affected considerablyby reports by one of his own people there.Daniel Ellsberg, whose own gloom wasgrowing and who told McNamara thatmost of the official optimism was false...“McNamara began to be increasinglyappalled by the war itself, what we weredoing with one power, the pain inflicted onthe civilians. He paid particular attentionto stories about the destruction caused bythe bombing. When Harrison Salisbury ofthe Times visited Hanoi at the end of 1966.his articles were violently attacked by theAdministration, particularly DefenseDepartment spokesmen, but McNamarawas fascinated by them and followed themclosely. He and Robert Kennedy had re¬mained close friends and in 1966 theybegan to feed each other’s dissent.McNamara confirming to Kennedy thatthe war was not going well, Kennedy con¬firming McNamara’s impressions of whatthe war was doing to this country. He wasan intriguing man in this period; almost asif there were a split personality caught bet¬ween two loyalties, and more, caught bet¬ween two eras. . . He was able to comeback in October 1966 and report to Johnsonthat things did not look good in Vietnam (‘Isee no reasonable way to bring the war toan end soon’) . . . The word swept throughWashington about his unhappiness; somethought he was being disloyal to Johnson,others began to think he was com¬ing apart. . . His whole ethical andmoral structure made him at ease in thejob at Defense, but when he became a WarSecretary his values were threatened andhe could not come to terms with his newrole...“In despair and frustration over thewar, in 1967 he ordered a massive study ofall the papers on Vietnam, going back tothe 1940s, a study which became known asthe Pentagon Papers. When it was handedin he read parts of it. “You know,” he tolda friend, “they could hang people forwhat’s in there ”Lloyd I. RudolphProfessor.department of political science‘A terrible mistake’To the Editor:We believe that the selection of Robert S.McNamara as the first recipient of theAlbert S. Pick Award for InternationalUnderstanding is a terrible mistake. It is amistake because by commending Mr.McNamara’s present it implicitly con¬dones his past The man and his career,however, stand as a whole.We do not deny the value of recognizingcontributions to international understan¬ding. But by giving this award the Univer¬sity of Chicago not only commends a cer¬tain individual; it also defines what “inter¬national understanding’’ should be.Therefore we must question the concept ofinternational understanding as consistingof transforming an Asian landscape withAmerican technology and capital broughtby U.S. military advisors or financial plan¬ ners.From 1960 to 1968 Mr McNamara servedas Secretary of Defense under PresidentsKennedy and Johnson. In this capacity heled a policy-formulation group at the Pen¬tagon which was responsible for the par¬ticularly inhuman nature of the VietnamWar. By using abstractions such as “cost-benefit’’ and “body count” to measure suc¬cess in the war. Mr. McNamara and ex¬perts like him chose to wage a war oncivilians with the weapons of napalm,chemical defoliants, and saturation bomb¬ing. The persistant use of a technocrat’sjargon and concepts to make sense out of awar whose history and meaning defiedsuch rigid categories insulated Mr.McNamara and planners like him from thehorrors of war. In the effort to root out the“Communist Menace” in Vietnam beforeit infiltrated all of Southeast Asia, Mr.McNamara helped to devise a war thatkilled or maimed a third of the populationof Vietnam by means of the world’s mostsophisticated technology. Only in 1968when the failure of this technologicalstrategy became only too plain did Mr.McNamara leave the Pentagon for his pre¬sent position at the World Bank. Hisresignation was not prompted by a realiza¬tion that U.S. participation in the war wasmorally deplorable. There were no admis¬sions of wrongdoing, no public apologies,no expressions of remorse for the pain in¬flicted upon the peoples of Southeast Asiaand America.We have been told by the selection com¬mittee that their choice was based uponMr. McNamara’s achievements at theWorld Bank. This suggests that an assess¬ment of Mr. McNamara can be made |without any regard to his role in determin¬ing American war policy in Vietnam. Butthis cannot be done. To do so reflects adangerous forgetfulness of our own past,and how in the past we have made amutual history with others. It is a historythat we as Americans should rememberwith anguish and the desire to atone,rather than with the wish to rewrite it bymaking a man whom Bertrand Russelldescribed as a war criminal into a hero.Andrew CharJacquelyn SwearingenThomas A. WilsonPhillip H. WoodruffS. Victor KoschmannAngela RosezitoUnique, interestingand fun diversionTo the Editor:As an organizer of Walpurgisnacht. Iwish to restate our intent, to produce a uni¬que, interesting and fun campus diversion.We certainly succeeded in the first twogoals. Nonetheless, I wish to inform themembers of Women’s Union that we didnot intend to degrade women, nor did weattempt to offend anyoneUnfortunately, members of the Women'sUnion were offended before we began Ourskit was a voluntary sacrifice, and not arape. The distinction was obvious And asmuch as 1 agree with the Women's Unionthat “rape is no joke.” I cannot appreciatethe effects of their spasm- the theft anddischarge of three fire extinguishers; thedisregard for our pyrotechnics, set to passthrough the area where they stood; theirrudeness to organizers who tried to clearthe area for their safety; and the abduc¬tion and molestation of one of our castmembers, and the disruption of much hardwork, well-spent money and some goodlines.Quite frankly, there are many ways tocombat rape. One of them is not toantagonize one’s sympathizers and tocreate the very disorders that permitcrimes uke theft or rape to occur.In closing. I regret to report that a goodevening was marred by a group of narrowminded women who have no desire todiscuss or work their problems out-whether with the administration or otherstudents.Steven T. ThomasPresident,Student Projects CommitteeCo-author Walpurgisnacht Script.The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979 — 5Festival of the Arts presentsEnsemble EspanolThis engagement is supported in part by a grant from theChicago City Arts grant.The Ensemble Espanol is in residence at Northeastern Illinois Universityand is supported in part by the Illinois Arts CouncilDances of SpainRenaissance to the 20th CenturyClassical, Regional, FlamencoAccording to Fred Alexson in theChicago Sun-Times, the ensemble is"Magnificent", keeping the audience"riveted to their seats with a fastpaced, action packed performance."Libby Komaiko Fleming, directorMs. Fleming has studied in Spain andthe U S. with Jose Greco, Nana Lorca,Lola Montes, Manloa Vargas andMaria Alba.Mandel Hall, May 17, 8 pm.,Admission is without ticket andwithout charge.6 — The Chicago Maroon — Frida/, May 11, 1979ViewpointThe fight to organize Jimmy'sGraphic; Chris PersansBy Michael MulhollandUniversity students and Hyde Parkresidents who think of Jimmy’s WoodlawnTap as “one big happy family” and awarm cozy atmosphere in which to escapethe harshness of the outside world are infor quite a surprise.Right now a small but bitter union cam¬paign there is nearing the end of a year¬long losing struggle. Bartenders atWoodlawn Tap and University Room havebeen involved in an attempt to have Local42 of the Chicago Dining Room Employees,Cooks and Bartenders Union (AFL-CIO)recognized as their collective bargainingagent.The April 18 election, which seems tohave resulted in a 7-5 vote against organiz¬ing, is still mired in protests.The grievances which brought on theconflict are lack of benefits, owner JimmyWilson’s work rules, and his general at¬titude toward employees. Furthermore,Wilson’s union-busting tactics in the elec¬tions, according to the dissidentbartenders, have created dissension anddistrust among employees, loweredmorale, and undermined the movement.The pro-union bartenders feel they will befired for their efforts if they are thwarted.Opponents to the union cite the allegedlack of benefits for part-time employeesand increased labor costs to Wilson. Theyalso feel the organizers went behindWilson's back and should have approachedhim first about their grievances ratherthan “undermine his authority.”“Bunk” said Tom Walker, thespokesman for the union hopefuls in a re¬cent interview (which also included RickScanlon, Mike Mastricola, and Jon Beck).“We asked Wilson a year ago aboutbenefits and working conditions. We wereignored. Furthermore, anyone working 8hours a week or more would be eligible forunion benefits, and the extra cost to Jim¬my could easily be written off. Look atwhat the place grosses.” The W'oodlawnTap is the only public drinking establish¬ment between 53rd and 63rd Sts. and bet¬ween the I.C. tracks and Cottage GroveAvenue (except for the Eagle Pub, which is just off 53rd on Blackstone). It is also thetraditional watering hole for U.C.students.Currently, employees at the Tap have nomedical coverage. In the past year, twoemployees suffered injuries thatprevented them from tending bar. W'ith nomedical coverage at all, they were forcedto rely on fellow bartenders to cover theirhours in order not to lose their jobs. “Andthey still lost hours once they returned,”states Walker.Tne organizers feel that work hoursshould be determined by an impartialscheduling system and not at the discre¬tion of Wilson’s whims. Wilson also standsaccused of pitting bartenders against oneanother by having them compete for oneanother’s hours and by passing alongalleged criticisms of one another.But what irks the pro-union employees most is what happened when attemptswere made to rectify the situation. Walkersays “after we first tried to bargain collec¬tively, Jimmy called each one of us in togive us his lines about ‘how tough it is torun a bar’ or ‘why can’t we just be one bighappy family?’” Beck adds that “afterthis effort, a new full-time employee washired as a bartender, resulting in a loss ofhours to three of the bartenders, who justhappen to be pro-union.”Nevertheless, the movement picked upmembers and more momentum, and final¬ly the issue was forced to an election.Wilson brought the names of 11 eligiblevoters to the National Labor RelationsBoard, claiming that part-timers were noteligible (the organizing faction did notwant an 8 hour minimum set for voting).The pro-union people charge that onceWilson realized that even this list would result in a pro-union vote, he appealed tothe board that he had not been representedby counsel and asked to submit anotherlist, which carried 16 names.“He manipulated the second list evenmore, leaving off a pro-union man whileputting on an anti-union bartender, eventhough both started working at Jimmy’sthe same day,” says Scanlon. “He alsotook off David Bates, a pro-unionbartender just recently laid off, ostensiblybecause of the lower drinking age and itsaccompanying 20% cutback in business.Well, of the three other guys businessforced him to “lay off,” two hadn’t workedin months or years.” WTiy, then, has Jim¬my hired a new. full-time bartender? “Oh,he’s not full-time,” states Mastricola, “AllJimmy did was put him on the ‘extra’ list,and give him more than a few of his own(Jimmy’s) hours.”.jyees with weekly hours are on the“regular” list; potential substitutes (ex¬bartenders. part-timers, and so on) makeup the “extra” list. When David Bates waslaid off. his name was taken off both lists.The day of the election Walker protestedjust about every anti-union vote, but so farhas won just three appeals — not enough.For now’, it appears that Wilson’s union-busting tactics have been successful.Rumors of a consumer boycott are currentamong some of the regular customers, andWalker hopes that the blue collar lunch¬time regulars will take notice of what’shappening behind the bar. Nevertheless.Walker and his fellow mavericks are bit¬ter, feeling they have been cheated andlied to. They are also disappointed in theirfellow bartenders who voted against theunion or abstained. Most were part-timerswho barely made the required minimumhours, and of these, four belong to unionsin their full-time jobs and another receivesUniversity benefits. Although TomWalker, Rick Scanlon, Mike Mastricola,and Jon Beck help comprise what wasonce known as "Jimmy’s finest”, compe¬tent and hard-working bartenders duringthe frantic rush hours, these four feel thatonce the summer slowdown comes, w’hathappened to David Bates will happen tothem.Paper Plane RaceCome Fold the Fastest FlyerPaper Plane Race in Hutch CourtNoon, May 15«Festival of the ArtsPaper providedHILLEL BARBECUEAT THE INDIANA DUNESIn Celebration of Lag B’OmerSUNDAY, MAY 20Sign up at Hillel by Wed., May 16COST: $2.00TRANSPORTATIONPROVIDED Majied Secretarial Service2545 East 75th StreetChicago, Illinois 60649Phone: 721-9207 or 734-6185• Rl SIN ESS LETTERS • R ESI M ES . TERM PAPERS . R F.PORTS• M ANTSCRIPTS .DISSERTATIONS •NOTARY Pl'BI.IC. FI N ANCI AL ST ATEM ENTS •CASSETTE TAPE TR ANSCRIPTION• PROPOSALS•DICTATION RY PHONE AVAILABLE• • • Travel Consultant • • •CRUISES * TOURS • GROUPSComplete Travel Arrangements^^^^ZanfaMajie^Progrietor^^^ SNOWED UNDERDue to Tvping Delays'7RELAX!\void the Rush and Leave the Typing to Us.We Do .Manuscripts / Theses / DissertationsResumes / Reports / Transcriptions24 Hour Telephone Dictation ServiceEM A KW1K SECRETARIAL SERVICEIKo West Washington 236-0110V eekends & Evenin&s 726-3572The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979 — 7- -Friends of the Symphony & the Music Department PresentThe CHICAGO SYMPHONY WINDSRay Still, FounderAN ALL MOZART PROGRAMMusic & Refreshment appropriate for a Spring AfternoonStrawberries and Ginger Ale will be served at each tableTickets at Mandel Box Office$3.50 U.C. Students, $5.00 other U.C.I.D., $6.00 General PublicCOLLEGE SENIORS,FACULTY WIVES,*ENROLL IN 1979,START YOUR CAREER IN 1 9 S 0 IMASTER OF SCIENCE IN TEACHING, ELEMENTARY EDUCATIONA THREE-QUARTER PROGRAM DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATIONxxxxxxxxx THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO xxxxxxxxxxx- COURSES COMBINE LATEST RESEARCH FINDINGSWITH PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS° PRACTICE TEACHING IN THE UNIVERSITY LABSCHOOLS- LEADS TO TEACHER CERTIFICATION° HIGH RATE OF JOB PLACEMENT FOR GRADUATESai’I’I.ication:; imif, my aijoust is. for forms or information:.'iccri’tni y, Dept . of R. I neat j on, SMSS Kimbark, Chicago 1L, GOG.37HARPER 1308 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979ASHUM-AMSASeminar Series 1978-79Program in the Arts and Sciences Basic to HumanBiology and MedicineandAmerican Medical Students’ AssociationPresentDr. Irwin RosenbergProfessor, Department of Medicine, University of Chicagospeaking on the topicVitamins:Needs and Hazards-Who Decides?TUESDAY, MAY 15, 1979ATTENTION!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,jj 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 any other time. BLACKFRIARSPRESENTSDirected by Victor SmithChoreographed by Gina KonrathMusic Direction by Peter Burkholder Book by Neil SimonMusic by Cy ColemanLyrics by Dorothy FieldsMANDEL HALL. 830 P.M.MAY 11.12.13$3 00 General $2.00 StudentsTickets on sale at Reynolds Club Box Office and Cobb HallS §Annual Grand SpringPicnic On the QuadsSunday, May 20Noon ’til NightAll musicians welcome - Open MikeCall 493-5577 or 753-3562 for more detailsCharcoal, grills, ice and condiments provided free of charg eFestival of the ArtsA free soda to FOTA T-shirt wearersThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, May if, 1979 — 9McNamarafrom 1But Rudolph said she is ‘very distressedabout the procedures through which theaward was given.” She said that in thefuture the award should be given by a com¬mittee “with more input.”A representative of the Pick Fund, theorganization that supplied the money for theaward, said that “we support the Universi¬ty’s choice if the committee stands behindtheir decision.”A Council member said the funds for theaward were accepted “to honor a deceasedTrustee.” The University did not questionthe propriety of such an award, he said.According to Johnson, the idea of the PickAward came out of discussions betweenUniversity representatives and the PickWorld Bankfrom 1A third agency, the International FinanceCorporation (IFC) is a much smaller entitythat loans to private businesses that have ahigh-development component. Tourism inseveral countries is heavily supported bythe IFC.Jacob Frankel, associate professor of eco¬nomics and editor of the Journal of PoliticalEconomy, said there is criticism of McNa¬mara’s economic principles. “He has intro¬duced into the concept of project evaluationthe notion of distribution of income; deci¬sions are not made on purely economicgrounds.”Frankel said critics of McNamara’s poli¬cies are not opposed to income distributionbut are concerned with McNamara’s effec¬tiveness in that area. “It is a question ofwhether you are going to divide up the pie asit is, or make the pie larger and then divideit. There are some who think that he shoulddevelop ‘efficiency’ and then equity.’“I don’t think he has done such a hot job at family. The award “grew out of considera¬tion for Pick,” he said. “The award was tohonor a man who did a lot for this Universi¬ty.”Committee to be appointedGray said she will appoint a committee toreview guidelines for all University awardswith the exception of honorary degrees. Thecommittee, which has not yet been ap¬pointed. will discuss whether awards can begiven to public figures without committingthe University to a political stance. Thecommittee is expected to report this fall.Asked after the meeting if any actionwould be taken on the McNamara selection,Gray said “this particular award hasalready been given.”McNamara is in Asia until May 20 and isunavailable for comment. McNamara’sspecial advisor said last Friday thatMcNamara will give the $25,000 to adevelopment agency.the Bank,” Frankel said.Still other critics say that economic issuesshould not be the only consideration for theBank's loans.“We get banged over the head abouthuman rights all the time,” Maddux said.The Bank loans to many governments thathave documented numan rights violations.“We are forbidden to make political re¬strictions,” he said.In fiscal 1977, the last year for which fig¬ures were available, Brazil had the greatesttotal of outstanding loans — $3 billion. “Thatis because they are a relatively advancedcountry,” Maddux said. Some of the less ad¬vanced countries, such as Bangladesh andSri Lanka, have only $25 to $30 million inloans.Critics and defenders both agree thatMcNamara runs the Bank firmly and fer¬vently. “He has specific technical notionswhich he pursues fanatically,” said DonaldMcCloskey, associate professor of econom¬ics.Maddux said, “he has introduced a lot ofnew things. If the Bank is going to do some¬thing worthwhile, it is going to be controver¬sial.”primitive art BEGINNING CHINESESummer Coursesafrican sculptures 10 Weeks - June 18 to August 24and textiles INTENSIVE COURSE from 9:00 AM to 12:30 PM, Mon.through Fri. Intro to speaking, reading and writing inmodern Mandarin. Covers the material presented inmost 1st Yr. college level courses. Limit 10 students.Fee $600.tues. - sun. 2 - 6gallery b EVENING COURSE from 6:45 to 9:00 Tues. and Thurs.Intro to basic spoken Mandarin Chinese. Course con¬tinued in fall for those interested in further study.Limit 10students. Fee $225.1645 e. 53rd FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, Call 753-2628 or stopby Dept, of Far Eastern Lang. & Civ., 5736 S. Woodlawnfree admissionP with guest artistMelissa Shiflett. piano Rape up so far in '7921st District crime2ist District Police Commander George McMahan.By Nancy ClevelandCrime statistics showing a beat-by-beatbreakdown of the incidence of seriouscrimes in Hyde Park-Kenwood and the en¬tire 21st Police District for 1978 and the firstfour months of 1979 were released Mondayby 21st District Police Commander GeorgeMcMahan. McMahan promised to releasesimilar crime reports to The Maroon on amonthly basis.According to the figures, which includeonly those crimes reported to the police,there were three homicides, 13 rapes, 23serious assaults, and 69 robberies commit¬ted in the area known as Hyde Park-Ken-wood in the first four months of 1979. Thatarea includes 11 beats between 47th St. and61st St. and Cottage Grove Ave. and theLake.No arrests have been made in the homi¬cide and rape cases.Burglaries (123), auto thefts (134), pursesnatches (23), and thefts from autos (176)are the other “index one” crimes reportedin the police statistics for the first fourmonths of this year.The statistics show that the incidence of ious crimes has declined each yearsince iy/4 both city-wide and in the 21st Dis¬trict. The 13 rapes reported in Hyde Park-Kenwood for this year total nearly half of theentire number (28) from all of last year,however.Of all the reported crime categories, onlyrape shows a marked increase over lastyear.McMahan said a slight rise in homicideand assault city-wide was linked to the se¬vere winter weather. He said he believes theincrease of rape in Hyde Park-Kenwood is astatistical aberration and predicted that theincidence of rape will continue to declinethis year as it has in past years.“We don’t ordinarily have many (rapes)in winter,” McMahan said. “They occurmostly when people are out on the streetsand thrown together.”The incidence of violent crime — and ofrape in particular — has been a pressingissue on the University campus recently asmembers of the Women’s Union have at¬tempted to get accurate crime reports fromthe University administration.Last Friday officials of the South EastChicago Commission (SECC) agreed to re¬lease Hyde Park crime statistics on a regu¬lar basis beginning May 18. Julian Levi,Israeli Coffee ftouseHebrew andl tshFotksonEntertainmentDancing Sing/^FoociFreeSaturdayNHq, May 12-9: OO PMMillet , 5715 WoodlawnI1Z710 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979CAST HT**» STRCCTstatistics releasedFrom open memorandum to all 21st District officers dated March 22,1979Reported Crimes in 21st Police District1974 1978MURDER: 42 28 -14RAPE: 91 50 -41ROBBERY: 1,360 742 -618SERIOUSASSAULT: 467 357 -110BURGLARY: 1,473 752 -721THEFT: 5,193 5,089 -109AUTO THEFT: 1,334 1,186 -148TOTAL 9,965 8.204 -1,761SECC executive director, said the reportswill be either quarterly or monthly and willlist crimes according to specially created“quadrants.”Women’s Union members have requestedweekly reports listing both time and loca¬tion of each crime. They have indicated theybelieve this information will prevent peoplefrom becoming fearful without cause andwill warn people away from particularlydangerous areas at particularly dangeroustimes.Best patrolled“You have in my opinion probably themost heavily patrolled area (Hyde Park) inthe United States,” said McMahan, a 24-year police veteran. He praised the 89-member University security force for“doing a wonderful job.”“Bdt the people here are very susceptibleto crime — many come from areas wherepeople still don’t lock their doors or cars,and you can’t do that anywhere in the citytoday; not in Lincoln Park, and not in HydePark,” McMahan said.“A woman can’t walk into a doorway orhallway with someone following her and ex¬pect nothing to happen. What does happenall too often is that someone puts a screw¬driver or a butcher knife up against herthroat and says, ‘let’s go to your apart¬ment.’ Nobody should let anyone get thatclose,” McMahan said.A two-officer patrol car is assigned toeach beat in Hyde Park-Kenwood, McMahansaid. One sergeant and two tactical (plain¬clothes) officers also patrol the area. Butonly during the third watch (4 pm to 12 mid¬night) are all stations manned.“We could have all 13,000 police in the cityon the streets, and there would still becrime,” said McMahan. “Most of our ar¬rests are made because people see some¬thing suspicious and call 911. We get a calland can make an arrest on the scene thatway.”“Sure, having the cars patrolling discour¬ages some on-street crime, but the publichas to be our eyes and ears. We can’t see ev¬erything as it happens.”21st District profileThe 21st District, comprising approxi¬mately 100,000 people in 5.5 square miles ofland, is “the fifth safest” of the 24 districtsin Chicago, according to McMahan. “It isthe most integrated district in the city,"McMahan said. He has been district com¬mander for the past five years.Stretching from 15th St. to 61st St. andfrom the Dan Ryan Expressway to Lake Mi¬chigan, the 21st District includes China¬town, the Mexican-American communityaround Pilsen, some of the city’s worst high-rise public housing projects, the Illinois In¬stitute of Technology, Michael Reese Hospi¬tal, the University of Chicago, the PrairieShores and Lake Meadows housing com¬plexes, and Hyde Park-Kenwood.McMahan said the 21st District, “unlike the north side, has no gang problem.” Thesouth side’s biggest gang, the BlackstoneRangers, is “totally gone” according toMcMahan, and no new group has replacedit.Most of the former Rangers have eithermarried or settled down, have drifted awayfrom Chicago, are serving time in prison, orare dead, McMahan said.Jeff Fort, a one-time “Ranger bigwheel”according to McMahan, has opened aChurch on 39th St. and Drexel Ave., since hisrelease from prison and “solicits young peo¬ple in the neighborhood to join him,” ac¬cording to McMahan. He said the policehave kept an eye on Fort and have enteredhis group’s church several times withsearch warrants looking for reportedstashes of narcotics or weapons.“We found a gun once,” said McMahan.“But we haven’t gotten any reports oftrouble by the group."Reports and Arrests: Jan 5,1978 - Jan. 3,1979HOMI CIDE RAPE SERIOUSASSAULT ROBBERY BURGLARY AUTOTHEFT PURSESNATCH THEFRCAU1 FT)MrOBeat Rept. Arst. Rept. Arst. Rept. Arst. Rept. Arst. Rept. Arst. Rept. Arst. Rept . \rst. Rept. Arst.2131 0 0 6 0 14 2 36 1 49 14 32 4 42 2 62 62132 3 0 3 0 15 3 28 2 36 4 54 -2. 10 1 112 52133 2 0 5 2 7 3 39 1 44 1 175 2 14 3 224 112134 9 1 0 0 11 3 31 5 45 4 40 2 15 1 77 52136 1 1 2 1 13 2 33 4 24 JL-. 48 -6- . 8 0 33 12141 0 0 2 0 7 3 32 2 35G . 336 13 1 66 52142 1 0 4 1 2 2 29 5 53 9 50 4 18 3 84 OL2143 0 0 3 0 1 0 19 3 31 2 22 4 13 1 28 12144 0 0 0 0 3 0 15 1 .16., 4 -16. Q 4 - 0 22 02145 0 0 2 0 1 0 19 4 14 2 63 0 3 0 9Q —i22146 1 0 1 0 2 0 15 11 14 6 54 3 8 0 79 3ToTaT 9 1 28 4 76 18 -296 39 361 49 587 41 148 12 877 41Reports and Arrests: January 4,1979 - April 25,1979HOMICIDE RAPE SERIASSA ousULT ROBBERY burglary AUTOTHEFT PURSESNATCH THEFRCAU1 FT>M£Beat Rept. Arst. Rept. Arst. Rept. Arst. Rept. Arst. Rept. Arst. Rept. Arst. Reot. Arst. Rept. Arst.2131 2 0 1 0 11 0 9 3 11 0 14 0 7 1 23 12132 —0 ■0 1 0 0 7 2 6 1 12 1 1 0 25 02133 1 0 2 0 3 2 9 3 37 0 40 0 4 0 24 12134 —r~ 0 1 0 2 0 10 8 14 1 11- 0 4 1 11 02136 —r~ 0 2 0 2 0 7 0 6 1 7 0 3 0 8 h-5—2141 —A— —0 ~T~ —1— 3 ~TTH 7 2 7 0 6 1 1 0 9 02142 —0 —r~ 0 0 0 6 5 19 1 e Q 14 02143 —IT" ■0 ”7“ 0 (T“ 0 6 0 9 2 7 0 2J2 10 02144 0 0 0 1 1 4 0 6 0 6 0 1JQh 9 Q2145 0 0 2 ~ir~ 1 0 1 0 5 0 12 0 1 0 19 12146 —<r~ —5“ 0 0 0 T“ 1 1. u . 1 4 0 24 1Total —r~ —r~ TT“ “U~ TT 7 69 24 123 7 132 3 28 2 176 4The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979 — 11CampusArtThe Floating World: “One Hundred andFifty Years of the Japanese Urban Scene.” Wa-tercolors and woodcuts by recent Japanese ar¬tists. Intended to document, through the eyesof artists, the evolution of the Japanese city.Part of the national Japan Today program.Closes May 27. Bergman Gallery, fourth floorCobb Hall. 9 am to 5 pm weekdays. 753-4137.Free.The Berlin Collection: An exhibit of booksand manuscripts purchased in Berlin in 1891 forthe newly founded University of Chicago.Closes in October. Special Collections Corridorof Regenstein Library.Visionary Images: Works by eleven con¬temporary New York artists. Through June 16.Rennaissance Gallery, Goodspeed Hall. Mon¬days through Saturdays, 11 am to 4 pm.753-2886. Free.MusicDaniel Heifetz: Concert by the classical vi¬olinist. who has defined a “great violinist” asone “with an ability to communicate with theaudience and an innate understanding of mu¬sical conception and how it touches the artistemotionally.” Heifetz will also conduct a mas¬ter class on Tuesday at 10:30 am and lecture at1:30 pm in the Ida Noyes Library. Concert thisMonday, May 14. Mandel Hall. 8:30 pm. $6 - $5:$3.50 - $4.50 students.The Chicago Symphony Winds: Founded bySymphony oboist Ray Still, this group will per¬form an all-Mozart program. Strawberries andginger ale will be served to the strains of suchworks as The Magic Flute. This Sunday, May 13.Hutchinson Commons. 4:30 pm. 753-2612. $6; $5with UC ID; $3.50 students. Tickets at MandelHall Box office.Invitational High School Choral Festi¬val: The first of its kind at Rockefeller Chap¬el; the choirs of Kenwood Academy, Francis W.Parker School, Addison Track High School, andDancers of the Ensemble Espanol — CampusMusic.University High School will participate. Don V.Moses, the choral director of the University ofIowa is guest conductor; Richard Vikstrom willdirect the Rockefeller Chapel Choir portion ofthe program. Works by Haydn, Mozart, Vaugh- Williams, and others. Tomorrow, May 12. Rock¬efeller Chapel. 8 pm. 753-3381. Free.Ensemble Espanol: A recent addition toFOTA’s schedule, a performance by this dancegroup from Northwestern Illinois University.Spanish dance — folk, classical, and Flamenco.Supported by a Chicago City Arts Grant. NextThursday, May 17. Mandel Hall. 8 pm. 753-3562.Call for prices.Mark Vandersall: Clarinet and piano duos.Part of FOTA’s Noontime Concert Series —bring your lunch. This Thursday, May 17. Clois¬ter Club in Ida Noyes Hall. 12:15 pm. Free.TheaterMeasure for Measure: Last weekend. Sha¬kespeare’s rarely produced comedy: the Dukeof Vienna begins enforcing his city’s anti-for¬nication laws. The bleakest, yet one of themost compassionate, of Shakespeare’s plays.Directed by Nicholas Rudall; Maureen Gal¬lagher plays Isabella, the novitiate, and KeithFort plays her promiscuous brother, Claudio.Closes this Sunday, May 13. The New Theater,Reynolds Club. Thursdays, through Saturdaysat 8:30 pm; Sundays at 7:30 pm. 753-3581. $4.50 -$4; $2.50 - $2 students and senior citizens.$4; $2.50 - $2 students and senior citizens.Sweet Charity: The annual spring Black-friars mpusical. Music by Cy Coleman, lyrics byDorothy "Fields, book by Neil Simon. Includesthe now classic show tunes, “Hey, BigSpender,” and “If My Friends Could See MeNow.” Directed by Victor Smith; music direct¬ed by Peter Birkholder; choreographed byGina Konrath. who also stars as Charity thetaxi dancer. Tonight, tomorrow, and Sundayonly. Mandel Hall. 8:30 pm. $3, $2 studer.ts.Mark Twain In Person: Richard Henzel, nowtwenty-nine, has been impersonating MarkTwain since high school. We suspect it wasworth it. Tomorrow, May 12. Cloister Club, IdaNoyes Hall. $3, $2 UC students.Little Mary Sunshine: By Rick Besoyan;directed by Michael Hildebrand. Originallyproduced on Broadway in the fifties, billed as“a musical about an old operetta.” Opensnext Thursday, May 17; closes June 3. A courtStudio production in the Reynolds Club The¬ater, third floor Reynolds Club. Thursdaysthrough Saturdays at 8:30 pm; Sundays at 7:30om. 753-3581. $3.50 - $2.50.LecturesLangston Hughes: “The Relationship Be¬tween Autobiographical Fiction and Autobio¬graphy.” Lecture by Richard K. Barksdale ofthe University of Illinois. This Monday, May 14.Social Sciences 122. 4 pm. Free.New Discoveries and Directions in ChinesePainting Studies: Part of the Robert B. MayerSeries on Chinese Art. Lecture by James Ca¬hill. a professor at the University of Californiaat Berkeley. Cochrane-Woods 157. 4 pm. Free.Campus FilmBy Ethan EdwardsFritz the Cat (Doc) Directed by Ralph Baski.This x-rated animated feature loosely basedon the R. Crumb comic strip has lots of music,violence and sex. Fritz is a naive college stu¬dent who finds himself adrift in the bordelloand poolroom world of a stylized black innercity. Just when you think he’s going to makeit, he triggers a riot. My favorite scene is anextremely simple one — a single character insilhouette clicks his fingers in time to a funkyblues song as the rainbow colors change to themusic. The effect is thrilling. This beautifullymade, but flawed film spawned a minor flow¬ering of anti-Disney animated features. High¬ This WeekThe University of Chicago Dance Group will present eight performin;charge. The dances to be performed have been choreographed by stucabove are: front 1-r, Beth Bistrow, Cris Miller, Beth Kofron; rear, Kinly recommended. Friday at 7:15, 9:30 and mid¬night in Cobb Hall.Adam’s Rib (LSF) Directed by GeorgeCukor. Hepburn has never been better andTracy is engagingly gruff in this film about twolawyers married to each other who find them¬selves on the opposite sides of the same case.Hepburn, defending a woman (Judy Holliday)who fires a shot at her filandering husband,argues that if Judy were a man this would beacceptable behavior. The entire film is aboutsex roles with Hepburn and Tracy switchingback and forth between traditional stereo¬types. Finally Tracy wins Hepburn back whenhe uses a “female” ploy, faking tears. The ex¬ceptionally witty script by Ruth Gordon (in herpre-ghoul days) and Garson Kanin says thattrue love comes through equality and equalitycomes when each sex shares traits usually as¬sociated with the other. The film also takes afew choice digs at lawyers such as “Lawyersshouldn’t marry other lawyers, Inbreedingleads to idiots and more lawyers.” Adam’sRibis by far the most charming feminist film evermade. Friday at 7:00 and 9:30 in the Law SchoolAuditorium.The Life of Oharu or Saikaku IchidaiOnna (NAM) Directed by Kenji Mizoguchi.Mizoguchi’s film criticizes feudal Japan whileit depicts social predestination and destiny inthe life of a 17th century prostitute recalling her unfortunate life,problems! Oharu (Kdriven from her homprince (who drives ha son), and sold to ais slow-moving, butat 7:30 and 9:30 in COf Human BondagCromwell. Somersetcrippled medical stlove with a vulgar atfilmed with greatcompetent John Crclogue is excellent, Ithe cast (especiallyto the people in thecony. Still, to see athat made her a starin Kent 107.’ Billy Budd (Doc)Herman Melville’s bnocent boy at sea isthe screen by UstintRobert Ryan and Ttingly competent (Sunday at 9:00 in KeSalt of the Earthbert J. Biberman. Bcast made up of victiThe film is loosely bMexican American zJOHN PRINETickets Still Available-May 26 • 8:30 P.M. • One Show OnlyMandel Hall Box Office: $3/4 MAB — $6/7 Other;wmm mmm.12 The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979 ...........ng dances this coming Tuesday, May 15, at 8 pm in Mandel Hall; there is noidents and by the Dance Group’s director, Elvi Moore. The dancers picturedrsten Wendt, Michele White, Marie Richter, Edith Jaffe, and Marina Iossifides.e. And you think you’ve gotKinuyo Tanaka) is seduced,me, sold as a concubine to aher out after she bears hima brothel. Mizoguchi’s filmit excellently made. SundayCobb Hall.ige (Doc) Directed by John;et .Maugham’s story of astudent (Leslie Howard) inactress (Bette Davis) is here; power by the generallyromwell. Although the dia-the acting is overdone asr Davis) seem to be playing> last row of the second bal-a young Davis in the rolear is a treat. Sunday at 7:30:) Directed by Peter Ustinov,brilliant novel about an in¬is effectively transferred tonov. With superb acting byrerence Stamp and surpriz-direction. Recommended.Cent 107.i (NAM) Directed by Her-Biberman heads a crew andtims of Hollywood blacklist,based on a 1951-52 strike ofzinc miners against Empire Zinc in Silver City, New Mexico. Two strugglesare shown — the union against the mines andthe women for equality with the men, whoconsider women only able to take care ofhomes and children. At the time of its releaseeven serious film magazines (e.g., Sight andSound) denounced the film as communist pro¬paganda, though it won an award in France asthe best film of 1955. Monday at 7:30 and 9:30in Cobb Hall.City listings begin here:ArtMary Jane Min and Thelma Heagstedt: Ex¬hibits of work by two members of ARC — Ar¬tists, Residents of Chicago. Min does metal in¬stallation sculpture and paper collage;Heagstedt experiments with spatial effect inher colorful abstract drawings. Closes May 26.ARC Gallery, 6 W. Hubbard. Tuesdays throughSaturdays, 11 am to 5 pm. 266-7607. Free.Robert Turner: Ritual Vessels: Recent workby the man who, in the early 1950's, institutedthe pottery center at Black Mountain College.On display are containers based on those seenby Turner while visiting “primitive” Africancultures. Closes May 30. Exhibit A, 233 E. On¬tario St. Tuesdays through Fridays, 10:30 am to5:30 pm; Saturdays, 10:30 am to 5 pm. 944-1748. Free.The Art of Being Huichol: A major travel¬ing exhibit of art from the Huichol Indians ofthe Sierra Madres, Mexico: 150 yarn paintingsand ceremonial objects. Closes September 3.Field Museum of Natural History, Roosevelt atLake Shore Drive. Mondays through Thurs¬days, 9 am to 4 pm; Fridays, 9 am to 9 pm;weekends, 9 am to 5 pm. 922-9410. $1.50; Fri¬days free.Concept, Narrative, Document: Examplesof a recent trend in photography: storytelling.Works by twenty-one international photogra¬phers. Closes May 20. Museum of Contem¬porary Art, 237 E. Ontario. Tuesdays throughSaturdays, 10 am to 5 pm; Sundays, noon to 5pm. 280-2660. Suggested donation.Robo Kaijur: Japanese and American spacetoys. Not for children only. Closes May 11. TheSchool of the Art Institute Gallery, Columbusand Jackson. Mondays through Saturdays,10:30 am to 4:30 pm; Sundays, noon to 5 pm.Free.Harris Deller and George Mason: Two sepa¬rate exhibits featuring the recent work of twoAmerican ceramicists. Deller is a potter,Mason a muralist. Through May. Columbia Gal¬lery, 600 S. Michigan. Mondays through Satur¬days, 10 am to 5 pm. Free.Claire Zeisler: Bright color, intricate struc¬ture, delightful texture — the fiber art ofClaire Zeisler. A 75 year-old Chicagoan,Zeisler and her work have long been recog¬nized — yet this is her first one-woman show.Closes June 10. The Art Institute, Adams andMichigan. 10 am to 4:30 pm; Thursdays, openuntil 8 pm; Sundays and holidays, noon to 5pm. 443-3500. $2, $1 students; Thursdays free.Marc Chagall: A surprisingly large amountof Chagall’s best work can be found in privatecollections around this city — this exhibitbrings sixty such works together; many havenever been publicly exhibited. Closes July 1.Maurice Spertus Museum of Judaica, 618 S. Mi¬chigan. Mondays through Thursdays, 10 am to5 pm; Sundays, 10 am to 4 pm. 922-9012.TheaterThe Little Sister: An adaption for the stageof a Raymond Chandler novel by Organic The¬ater founders Stuart Gordon and CarolynPurdy-Gordon. An unusual attempt — the the¬ater has, up to this point avoided Chandler’smysteries, for good reason; his dialogue,while marvelous to read, sounds stagey ifread aloud. That consideration, of course,never daunted eye-oriented Hollywood. TheOrganic has made, reportedly, the best oftheir situation. If nothing else, the Gordonsare courageous. Closes May 27. The Leo A.Lerner Theater, 4520 N. Beacon. Wednesdaysthrough Fridays at 8:30 pm; Saturdays at 7 and10 pm; Sundays at 3 and 8 pm. 728-1001. Call forprices.Statements After An Arrest Under the Im¬mortality Act: Also, Scenes from Soweto. ByAthol Fugard and Steve Wilmer, respec¬tively. Two powerful, disturbing plays aboutracism in South Africa, in a sensitive prod¬uction. Directed by James D. O’Reilly. ClosesJune 10. Body Politic Theater, 2261 N. Lincoln.Wednesdays through Fridays. 8 pm; Saturdaysat 7 pm and 10 pm; Sundays at 2:30 pm and 7pm. 871-3000. $6.50 - $5.Total Eclipse: The English playwright Chris¬topher Hampton’s play based on the relation¬ship of Paul Verlaine and Arthur Rimbaud.Open closing date. Old World Theater Com¬pany, Theater Building, 1225 W. Belmont.Thursdays through Sundays, 8 pm; Sundaymatinee, 3 pm. $4.50 - $4.Mummenschanz: Three critically acclaimedmimes from Switzerland via Broadway. As dif¬ferent from Marcel Marceau as platinum from Citysilver. Extended through June 3. StudebakerTheater, 418 S. Michigan. Performances alldays but Monday: call for times. 435-0700. $15 -$8.50.MusicMother’s Day Dance Commemorating theSecond Anniversary of La Mere Vi-pere: We’re not sure one can celebrate theanniversary of something that no longerexists (La Mere, Chicago’s legendary, grandhome of punk rock, burned down last year).Nevertheless, the effort here is to be appre¬ciated; there really are no rules about thesethings anyway; and the music of the Contor¬tions (of New York), the Dadistics, and Epicy¬cles (both from Chicago) ought to compensatefor the pain caused anyone’s sense of propri¬ety. The Soho Weekly News called ContortionsSam Spade and a woman who is not The LittleSister — City Theater.“the hottest damn band in town;” RobertFripp found them “most interesting.” This Sun¬day, May 13. The D.A.N.K. House, 4740 N. West¬ern. 7:30 pm. $7.Film Score for Live Music: To accompanythe music of flutist Steve Banks, string bassistDan Hart, clarinetist David Noffs, and violinistDan Scanlan, three films will be shown — moreexperimentation in the ever-widening worldof Chicago multi-media. Composed by JeanSousa. Tomorrow, May 12. N.A.M.E. Gallery, 9W. Hubbard. 8 pm. 467-6550.American Chamber Symphony Robert Fris-bie, conductor. First Chicago performances ofJohn Austin’s “Triple Play!” and Philip Kraus’:“A Time of Carols.” Also, works by Bartok,Shostakovich, and Haydn. Tomorrow, May 12.Cathedral of St. James, Wabash and Huron.8:15 pm. 446-3976. $9.50.FilmThe Burmese Harp: A 1956 film by Ichikawa.“Explores the question of individual and col¬lective responsibility for war in a moving andcompassionate portrayal of one soldier’s lifeof expiation, dedicated to burying the dead.”Unseen by this reviewer. Tomorrow, May 12.International House. 8:30 pm. $1.50.Calendar compiled by Karen Hornick.I-House Films1414 E. 59th St. Saturday, May 12 8:30 P.M.The Burmese Harpcoming ... The Godfather Reviewed inThis Week in the Arts $1.50The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979 — 13Sailing Club MeetingSijrn up now for summer rl;i>.»t*s. featuring our new O'Dav JavelinsCome nominate \our ehoiees for the elnh's new offieer>.See Urine s Polynesian Realities: colorful slide> from his South Pacific trip.Wednesday^ May 16 • Ida Noyes • 7:30 P.M.marian realty, inc,REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available-Students Welcome-On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400S3SUMMERSELFSTORAGESPACEat LOW RATES'Located DowntownNear Your Campusfor as low as .$10 per monthYou can have self-storage space for your stereo, T.V.,Books, clothes, bicycles, motorcycles, or other sportsequipment.At DOWNTOWN LOCK BOX a variety of sizes ofstorage are available on a monthly basis at Low Rates.If you don't feel your belongings will fill a small stor¬age space why not split the cost with a room mate orfriend.• You store it, lock it, and keep the key.• Secure, temperature controlled sprinklered andT.V. monitors.• You or your representative have unlimited access toyour space, so you can add or remove articles asoften as you want without additional charge.10% annual discount.• Master Charge or Visa accepted.Open 7 days a week.dlHlluDOWNTOWNLOCK BOX 922-06061333 S. WABASH AVE.Chicago', IL. 60605 KENWOOD HOUSE TOURSUNDAY. MAY 20th1:00 P.M. - 5:00 P.M.TICKETS: $10.00*Sponsored byANCONA MONTESSORI SCHOOLFor Information Call 924-2356Child Care available at the school* Students: $5.00 with valid I.D. Figure Drawing andPainting WorkshopAll levels and individual attentionsStarts June 13 for 10 weeks,Wednesdays, Morning and EveningClasses (3 hours) $65 enrollmentClasses taught by qualified instructor in her studioB.F.A./M.F.A.546 W. WashingtonCall for information 930-9317/446-7183Northwestern’sTheory of Relativity<o y i <-(V J5!'MMFR~YFA f\ ..(kfp'! iThis summer accelerate your educationby enrolling in a concentrated course inPhysics, Chemistry, Calculus, French,Spanish, Italian, German or Russian. Youcan earn a full year’s credit (in quarter orsemester hours) in only 8 weeks.There’s also a fascinating selection ofofferings in Arts and Sciences, Education,Music and Speech—to help you satisfygraduate pr undergraduate requirements,to let you take courses not available atNORTHWESTERN| UNIVERSITY |Summer Sessionother times or other schools, or get a headstart on the fall term.Your tuition entitles you to full use of thefacilities at one of America’s most beauti¬ful—and highly regarded—universities.Just call the Summer Session Officetoday at 492-5250 or 492-3748 for ourSummer Bulletin.Northwestern University SummerSession. Relatively speaking, a mostextraordinary—and important—8 weeks.For complete information and bulletin, contact Northwestern University Summer Session.2003 Sheridan Road • Room 1-114 • Evanston, Illinois 60201 • 312/492-5250 or 492-374814 — Tfte Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979••'• of rr v*M oge^ifO efl iFrom theCheckerboard Lounge and Theresa’sPhil Guy,Junior Wells and friendsFestival of the Arts-the blues-Mandel Hall, May 18,9 p.m.$2 UC students, $3 others-Only One Show-The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979UNDERGRADUATESIMPORTANT NOTICE!WATCH FOR THE SPRING MAILINGFromThe Dean of Students in the CollegeContains Vital InformationIf you do not receive yours in the mailby May 18th, come to Harper 280.Annual registration appointments beginMonday, May 14th, 8:30 A.M., Harper 280.If you are not concerned about closedcourses, please do not rush to make anappointment for the first day. A JEWISH SOCIAL ACTIONAGENDA FOR THE 1980’SSpeaker: Rabbi David SapersteinCo-Director, Religious Action Centerof Reformed Judaism,Washington, DC.Friday, May 11 9:00 P.M.Hillel - 5715 WoodlawntheFrenchKitchen3437 West 63rd776-6715Open for Dinner5 P.M. Daily3 P.M. SundayClosed MondayModeraielv Priced Chicago Guide:"Katina nl KrrnrliKit rlii>n is likr ilininauilli Julia ( hilfl." Computer ModelingIs Easy WithExecucom’s IFPSThe Interactive Financial.Planning SystemNow Available on theGSB DEC ComputerLearn How on May 15,Tues., 12-2 pm in Stuart 104Dr. Bill Cain,Execucom Planning Consultant,will be here from Austin, Texas to conduct the classFor more information, CallSteve Thompson at 753-4872**************************** paper boat racedesign and blow your boat to victoryon the high seas of botany pond Iclasses to enter:fancy Cany type off paper A glue)Impromptu (notebook A newspaper only)max. length - IS" max. beam - 12 " *********♦***************14 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979 {noon * may 15 botany pond 5A. A. Stagg: Portrait of a coach as the grand old manBy Mark Wallach“I may go on forever because statisticsshow that few men die after the age of 100,”Amos Alonzo Stagg said as he neared his100th birthday.This is part three of a five-part series onfootball. Part four will appear two weeksfrom today.Stagg lived for nearly 103 years andcoached for 70 of them. Raised in poverty, abaseball star at Yale, a football coach atChicago for 41 years, he was, at age 81, thecoach of the year at College of the Pacific,where he nearly brought the unknownschool to the Rose Bowl. In 1938, his newteam returned to Chicago and beat his oldteam 32-0, an event the Old Man celebratedby doing a victory jig. At age 85, he becamean assistant coach to his son Alonzo Jr. atSusquehanna College — and signed a ten-year pact. At 96, still coaching at StocktonJunior College, he stayed in shape by run¬ning laps around the fig trees in his back¬yard. More recently, Bear Bryant has been ject of such adulation had said: (in 1927)The books of Horatio Alger were thepattern of success fifty years andmore ago, and there is something ofAlger in my story. His heroes alwayswere born poor, as any hero should be,and arrived at their honest goal by thepractice of three virtues — work,corage, and honesty.A cobbler’s son, the fifth of eight children,Stagg was bom at a time when StonewallJackson was marching on Manassas. As ayouth, he learned to harvest grain and to cuthay with a scythe. ‘‘The Jersey mosquito isno fiction,” Stagg said in Touchdown!‘‘They bred by billions in those salt mead¬ows . . . and stung our half-naked bodiesmaddeningly ... Working in water, we cutholes in our shoes to permit it to come andgo.”At nineteen he went to Phillips ExeterAcademy and a year later, Yale. “Mymother was a brood hen to her children andshe wept at every meal from the day I decid¬ed to go ... My father’s backing, however,kept my spine erect.” The poor boy fromOrange County remembers feeling culture( ^Sports^ >chasing aiagg’s all-time collegiate victorytotal of 309.That broad overview barely begins to de¬scribe Stagg. Those who knew him speak ofhim with unfailing admiration, deep re¬spect, and occasionally, reverence. Remin¬iscing across the reaches of almost a halfcentury’s time, Elmore Patterson, whoplayed for Stagg in 1932, remembers him as“marvelous, friendly and fatherly. He had awarm personality, and took a great interestin his players; he was firm and demandedStagg (in tie) was also the manager of thebaseball teamperfection.” R. C. Scott, who played at Chi¬cago several years after Stagg left, sayspeople thought of Stagg as a “gura or a holyman.” One coach who had recently beencaught doing some illegal recruiting, cameto Stagg’s 94th birthday party and declared,“Jesse James will now break bread with asaint.” On his 100th birthday, Stagg re¬ceived a telegraph from John F. Kennedywhich read: “(Stagg’s) integrity and dedi¬cation to all the goals he has set himself areunmatched.” Stagg himself said simply, “Iwould . . . like to be remembered ... as anhonest man.”In his autobiography Touchdown! the ob- shock in the rich man’s setting — once heturned down a luncheon date because of aself-confessed “inferiority complex.” InStagg’s first year at school he survived in anunheated garret, braving the winter withoutunderwear or an overcoat. His daily rationswere soda crackers until he realized that“stale bread tasted better and went fur¬ther.” Once a friend tried to shake Stagg’shand while hiding some money in the hand.Stagg shook the other hand.When he entered Yale, Stagg had plannedon becoming a minister, but abandoned theidea when he realized, “I stammered ter¬ribly.” He soon became the best baseballpitcher of his era, once striking out twentybatters in a game. He received a profession¬al offer of $4,200 (“which just about repre¬sented the national wealth to me”), butturned it down because, “The whole tone ofthe game was smelly.” Eventually, he gra¬vitated toward football and in his last yearmade Walter Camp’s all-American team asan end. Stagg also met Professor WilliamRainey Harper at Yale, Chicago’s firstPresident and the man who hired Stagg asthe University’s coach and athletic director.The groundwork for a legend was in place.Stagg’s TemperamentCollege football was uniquely suited toStagg’s temperament because it providedan outlet for his uneasy mixture of exuber¬ance and love of discipline. “(Other sports)have no emotional basis as football, nor dothey demand a like physical condition,”Stagg said in Touchdown!. He added, “Nogreat thing ever is accomplished without asustained background of deep feeling.” In1901, he had told the Chicago Daily Tribune,“I liked the roughness and excitement . . .Football was full of vitality. . .” Stagg’s in¬ventive mind led him to develop aspects offootball as basic as the huddle, as funda¬mental as the forward pass, and as esotericas the T-formation. Stagg’s exuberance wasalso carried over toward a love of music: he frequently had his team sing before gamesand once, at a University sing, broke intosobs when his son was awarded an athleticletter. It was probably the uninhibited partof his nature operating in 1894 which in¬duced the 32-year old Stagg to marry an en¬ergetic, 19-year-old Chicago co-ed namedStella Robertson, who he remained marriedto for 68 years.Yet Stagg’s emotional nature was alwaystempered and often repressed by a Spartandiscipline. After reading about ancientSparta, Stagg once remarked that he wasimpressed with their culture, “particularlythe boy who hid a fox in his shirt and neverbatted an eye when the animal bit into hisvitals.” Sam Horowitz, the captain of the ’31team and a Staggman for three years, re¬cently recounted the only conversation heever had with Stagg. Horowitz had just would be nervous about being hit in the headby the opposing center; in practice Stagghad someone hit Parsons in the head so hewould get over his nervousness. SamHorowitz recollects that during one pre¬game meeting in 1930, Stagg read off his listof starters which for the first and only timein Horowitz’ career omitted his name. Anassistant coach started to protest but Staggwithered him with a few imperious wordsand Horowitz, a guard, began the game onthe bench, stewing. “I just sat there gettingburned up like I’ve never been burned up be¬fore or since.” Toward the end of the firsthalf, the left guard, a marvelous physicalspecimen named “Beasty” Beniquez. got in¬jured. Horowitz entered, and played withthe maniacal fury of a man with somethingto prove. (Stagg also had democratic in¬stincts: on ' when a player arrived at prac¬missed a practice and although he had hadpermission, he feared Stagg’s displeasure.Instead, Stagg mentioned that Horowitz hadrecently gone on a date — a violation of anunwritten Stagg rule — and even worse, theyoung lady Horowitz accompanied had beenseen having coffee and smoking a cigarette.“He thought she would have a bad influenceon me,” Horowitz said, and besides Staggdidn’t like his men staying out late on dates.In fact, Stagg contributed $1,000 for chimesin Mitchell Tower so that they could be runat 10:05 as a signal to his players to go tobedA prescriptive letter Stagg wrote to hisson shows the overwhelming influence thatdiscipline had on Stagg’s life:... train yourself to be master of your¬self, of your thought and imaginationand temper and passion and appetiteand of your body. Hold all absolutelyunder your will.The letter provided a rare glimpse ofStagg’s psyche as the sprawling, almost libi-dinal structure of the sentence contrasts ab¬solutely with its tight-lipped content.Discipline was only one method by whichStagg tried to get the most out of hisplayers; preparation and psychology wereothers. Keith Parsons, the center of the ’32team, recalls that Stagg thought Parsons tice in a fancy uniform, Stagg had the teamdive for loose balls, in a mudpile until all theplayers were equally dirty.)Occasionally, Stagg’s sternness and patri¬archal ways distanced him from hisplayers’ feelings. One day after Tom Flinnhad committed a particularly gallingblunder, he remembers Stagg (who didn’tswear) screaming at him, “You jackass,you double jackass, you triple jackass'”Flinn. who has the deepest respect forStagg, recalls, “When I got to be a triplejackass I was in a bad depression.” Itwasn’t, however, as bad as a parallel ton¬gue-lashing he received twelve years laterin World War II. He was driving an army ve¬hicle the wrong way down a one-way streetwhen he ran into General George Patton.“Patton was a little more descriptive thanMr. Stagg.” Flinn recalls.Stagg’s ProfessionStagg and his men did not conceive of hisjob as merely that of a successful footballcoach; instead they felt that he was a spiri¬tual leader of youth. Stagg’s own conceptionof his job was that, “I kept my promise toGod to work with youth (for) as long as I’mallowed to stay here,” and “I felt speciallyFootball to 19The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979 — 17PhotoscourtesyUniversityArchivesEye 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. REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimates; repairsby factory-trainedtechnician.RENTALSavailable withU.ofC.I.D. New andRebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators,AddersU of ChicagoBookstore5750 S. Ellis Ave753-3303Mastercharge and Visa Accepted • Eye Examinations• Contact Lenses Rockefeller(Soft A Hard)• Prescriptions Filled Memorial ChapelMay 13,1979,11A.M.DR. MORTON R.MASLOVOPTOMETRISTSfontnrt Ipikpc UNIVERSITYand Supplies RELIGIOUS SERVICEHyde Park .Shopping Center1510 E. 55th363-6363 Michael King, C.S.M., SuperiorVictoria, Australiai t 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. iGM QUALITYLJS'I SOVCf PARTS ' Ac«v< Thai (rtturCM her linnwith ¥■G2NESAL MOTORS RW3TS DIVISION Lt\l l\tC M hut, • 4? %f ■lrnnirmiTi ■pMER L?CHEVROLI rr arHO72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Op«n Doily 9-9, Sat. 9-5 Part* open Sc:, 'til Noon Im VOLKSWAGENSOUTH SHORE f72nd & Stony Island 684-0400Open Doily 9-9, Sot. 9-5 Ports open Sot. 'til Noon 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.Friday May 11Ralph Bakshi sFRITZ THE CAT7:15. 9:30 and midnight DOC FILMSSaturday May 12Rainer Werner Fassbinder'sMOTHER KUSTERS GOES TO HEAVEN7:15 and 9:30(One to eimimstanees hevonH our eontrol. our Chicago premiere of Fassbinder’s DESPAIRis postponed until further notice. Sorrv.)18 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979a Chicago women strikeoutPhoto by J. WrightStagg and the Maroons... By RW RohdeThe Maroons are going to have to pray forrain.That’s the only way they are going to keeptheir title as state softball champions, a titleinherited from the 1977 squad when lastyear’s state playoffs were rained out.Chicago lost their chance to go to Quincytournament, when they dropped an 8-7 lossto Lewis University last Saturday in theseventh inning. Lewis and Chicago were twoof four schools fighting for three at-largeberths, and Saturday’s game was thedeciding factor in the decision.It was an earlier 8-7 loss to Trinity collegethat made the attempt for the at-large berthnecessary. That loss gave Trinity the divi¬sion title over the Maroons.The Maroons can get some questionablecomfort over the fact that they would havehad a real hard time retaining their titleeven if they had been given the opportunity.The team is fairly young and shallow in thetalent department, a defect that emergedseveral times during the season including a10-0 loss to Aurora, one of the contenders atState. *There is a silver lining to that cloud for the Maroons will be losing only two seniors tograduation, Teresa Friend and Ann Har-villa. While the loss of those two is going tohurt. Chicago can hope to pick-up new- talentand experience before next season.Harvilla showed her value in the finalgame of the season, a 1-0 10-inning loss toGeorge Williams. Harvilla’s superb pitchingwas backed up by some fine defense in¬cluding a triple play that Kim Hammondpulled off almost single handidly. With GWrunners on first and second. ~ Hammondcaught a sinking liner in shallow centerfield, raced in to touch second and thenthrew to first for the third out.The Maroons were faced with a similiarsituation in the bottom of the tenth, with theoutfielders playing shallow due to a strongwind blowing in towards the plate. The winddied down unexpectedly and a solid base-hitcarried over the outfielder’s head to giveGW the victory.The only victory in the week was a 9-4 win<,yer Elmhurst. Even that was taintedbecause there is some suggestion that if theMaroons had won a clearer victory, theym.ght have had a better shot at a wild cardspot.Football from 17called to preach but 1 decided to do it on theathletic fields.” Stagg expressed his credoin Touchdown!:To me, our profession is one of thenoblest and perhaps the most far-reaching in building up the characterof the country . . . Not to drink liquor,not to smoke, not to swear, not to telldirty stories, to shun loose and sillywomen — all these should be theideals of the athletic coach.He told Time magazine in 1958, “I became aChristian and that has made all the dif¬ference.”Robert Reneker, a member of the ’32team, feels that Stagg could inspire his teamas much as his modern counter-parts VinceLombardi and Tom Landry. Keith Parsons,also a member of that team, believes thatStagg’s habits came out of his religiousbackground. “He was a teacher who in¬fluenced people. He sacrificed and devotedhimself (to what he believed in).” Otherpeople, as we have seen, used religious im¬agery in talking of Stagg: they called him“a guru,” “a holy man,” and “a saint.”In keeping with his morality, Stagg said,“I take my football very seriously, but I tryto preserve a sense of proportion.” In 1909,after Chicago had scored a critical touch¬down against Northwestern, Stagg marchedout on the field and announced, ‘‘Gentle¬men, I happen to be on the rules committeeand I believe you have erred in giving usthat touchdown.” During the Maroons skeinof losing seasons, Stagg was involved in astruggle between his “sense of proportion”and his desire to win. Robert Reneker re¬members being surprised in 1931, when inan opening season double-header againstweak Hillside College, Stagg kept his start¬ing team in for the duration of both games.During the late ’20s, several members of theUniversity were concerned that Stagg wasusing injured players. Sam Horowitz re¬members that after he incurred an elbow in¬jury in one game, the doctor told him to“bake it and soak it in the whirlpool.” Yearslater, x-rays revealed an elbow fracturethat never properly healed. The week afterhis injury, Horowitz played in a brace run¬ning from his hand to his shoulder. In thesecond half, he was knocked nearly uncon¬ scious and spent the rest of the game askinghis linemates what to do. Stagg didn’t forcehis men to play hurt, but most were so in¬ured in his macho ethic that they playedwithout questioning pain. Stagg respondedto questions about injuries defensively, withirritation, and with the self-justification thatRobin Lester termed “a life-long habit.”It is unsurprising that in 63 years as HeadCoach (including when he was ’’assistant”to his son at Susquehanna), Stagg developedautocratic ways, often with a strain of mor-alism thrown in. He coached all varsitysports at the University for 21 years and inTouchdown! he declared, “I am the athleticchief executive, answerable to the presidentof the university.” When he proposed such ascheme to Hutchins in 1912, in which his ac¬tions would be answerable only to Hutchins,Hutchins politely rejected the idea andStagg, 70 years old, left the University. As adevout Christian, Stagg once got in a disputewith President Max Mason because he feltthe tennis courts should be closed on Sundayand threatened to resign unless his edictwas obeyed. President Mason coolly repliedthat he would resign unless the courts werekept open. Finally, they compromised,keeping the courts open except between11:00 and 12:30 so that no one would betempted to skip Church.American DreamBecause of his beliefs about discipline,Stagg often preferred to show his genuinelywarm feelings towards others through for¬mal means. His wife Stella at first loathedStagg’s devotion to football, but he soon wonher over and she became known as his “firstassistant.” Stagg, although he rarely, ifever, had intimate talks with his players,cared deeply about them. “I can recall thenames of every first-string man I ever hadand most of the others, too.” His greatestsatisfaction as a coach was “watching myboys turn out well and develop into fine citi- The grand old man in his middle yearsReferencesEllis Lucia Mr Football: Amos Alonzo StaggRobin Lester "The Rise. Decline, and Fall of Intercolle¬giate Football at the University of Chicago ’Pulse Magazine. November. 1938Time Magazine Oct 26. 1958Amos Alonzo Stagg as told to W VS Stout Touchdown'Chicago Daily Tribune Aug 15. 1901Chicago Daily News. Jan 5. 1955Chicago Tribune. Oct 17, 1931zens.” Keith Parsons remembers that hewas honored in a 1957 Sports IllustratedSilver Anniversary salute to football playerswho had become prominent citizens. The 95-year-old Stagg sent him a letter of congra¬tulations from across the country. CoachStagg would undoubtedly be pleased to dis¬cover that of Staggmen I spoke with Rob¬ert Reneker is Chairman of the Universityof Chicago Board of Trustees. Elmore Pat¬terson is Chairman of the Board of MorganGuaranty, Sam Horowitz and Keith Parsonsare prominent lawyers, and Tom Flinn is a purchasing agent at Inland Steel.Although Stagg was happy to see hisplayers become prominent citizens, he wasnot obsessed with money. “Money is damna¬tion,” he once declared and indeed he hadturned down the previously-mentioned base¬ball offer of $4,200, had contributed $1,000for Mitchell Tower chimes, had contributed$3,000 to help finance a field for College ofthe Pacific, and. in a decision reflecting hisdeepest beliefs, he turned down a MGMoffer to make a movie of his life that wouldhave netted him $300,000. (All my life I’vetaught strict amateurism.” he explained).Yet, like any person raised from deep po¬verty, he was keenly aware of the uses ofmoney. In 1905, his salary was $6,000 at atime when the highest paid professor at Har¬vard was making $5,400 and in subsequentyears, his shrewd handling of football fi¬nances netted the athletic department lu¬crative revenues.Amos Alonzo Stagg. far from being readyfor canonization, was delightfully — some¬times painfully — human. His exuberant na¬ture attracted him to the rough and tumbleof football but he preferred to channel thatenergy into an austere, but humane disci¬pline. As a rugged self-made man. Stagglived and espoused the American Dream,the peculiar American belief that hard workwill always result in success. Perhaps,though, Stagg is most refreshing in advisingyouth on how to live well, advice that is im¬plicitly mindful of both exuberance and dis¬cipline. “Live in a way that makes you feel• good, and get your fun out of feelinggood ”It’s official:Kurucz namedfootball coachThomas Kurucz has been officially an¬nounced as the new head football coach forthe Chicago Maroons. While Kurucz wastentatively selected to the post over amonth ago (Maroon April 13). the appoint¬ment was not finalized until recently.Kurucz brings a decade of upper-levelfootball experience to the job including sixyears in various coaching capacities.Kurucz will replace Bob Lombardi whenhe becomes the fifth head football coach inthe history of the University. j-ATTENTIONPRE-MEDSMEETINGTUESDAY, MAY 15th5:00 P.M.HARPER 130This meeting is intended for freshman and sec¬ond year students considering a career in medi¬cine - and especially for all those who plan toapply to medical schools next year: 1980.Preparation for MCAT will be discussed. A panelof students who have “been through it” will bepresent.SPONSORED BY THE OFFICE OF THEDEAN OF STUDENTS IN THE COLLEGEISRAELI-ARAB COEXISTANCEIN THE MIDDLE EASTA WRITER’S PERSPECTIVEYIZHAR SMILANSKY,Writer, Member of Parliament, TeacherSUNDAY, MAY 13, 7:30 P.M.,HILLEL HOUSE 5715 Woodlawn Avenue TRADING POST - choice campus location now. Will consider exchangingour spacious three bedroom apartment and considerable additional cash fora four bedroom (or larger) condo or house Near 58th Blackstone. Charlotte.EAST VIEW PARK - Sunny west wing of the east building group. Six rooms,two baths, Light, airy apt., spacious. $68,500. Charlotte.ONE BEDROOM SIZE NEAR CAMPUS. We have two apartments near 57th.Both in the 50’s. Both super kitchens, lovely wood floors and otherrestoratons. Immediate possession on Kenwood. Fail possession on Kimbark.Charlotte.TOWNHOUSE - Co-op ownership of spacious four bedroom plus panelled rec.rm. Nice patio. Beautiful hardwood floors throughout. Picture windows forplant lovers and sunshine. Near 54th Place & Blackstone. Price reduced to$85,000 IMMEDIATE POSS. Charlotte.LUXURY HI-RISE - Narragansett at 50th & Chicago Beach. Traditional beauty.Apt. has own formal reception hall with beautiful beamed ceilings. Views arespectacular from high floor in all directions. Cosy woodburning fireplace. Intruly excellent condition. Priced in $70’s. Charlotte.INVESTORS ATTENTION!HYDE PARK 7-FLAT Near 55th & Cornell. All systems in excellent conditionExtremely attractive building. Parking in rear. $225,000. For more info callKathy, (eves. 947-0453).NORTHWEST HYDE PARK - Under construction. Six rooms, two baths,. If youbuy now, you gain lower price, $48,000. Everything new! Structural, systems(heating, electrical, plumbing), and cosmetics. This is where Hyde Park isgrowing in value. Near 51st & Ingleside. Watch for our open house weekend ofMay 20 or call for preview app’t.CALL YOUR PERSONAL BROKER,Charlotte VikstromorSales Associate, Kathy Ballard493-0666VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWELL MAINTAINEDBUILDINGAttractive IV2 and2V2 Room StudiosFurnished or Unfurnished$189 - $287Based on AvailabilityAll Utilities includedAt Campus Bus Stop324-0200 Mrs. GroakMEN! WOMEN!JOBS!( iU l-K SIIII'S.KRFU.H HU*No experience. Highpay! See Europe, Ha¬waii. Australia. So.America. Winter, Sum¬mer!*Send $2.75 toSE \ WORLDBOX til nr,Sacramento. C \ !t'>H2.'>FLAMINGO APTS.5500 S. Shore Dr.Studio & One BedrmFurn. & IJnfurn.Short & l<ongTertn Rental**200 - *400Parking. pool. rr*tuur»ini.valet, deli and tran»|M»r>tat ion. Carpeting. drape*,inel.752-3800 ^lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliK1 £ COURT TllCATRE f1 Major Court Studio Production| LITTLE MARY SUNSHINE |; by Rick Besoyan^Directed by Michael HildebrandjfMay 17-June 3 Thurs. - Sun.|= 8:30 pm 7:30 on Sundays!| on June 2-a 2pm matinee only S1 Reynolds Club, 57th & University1 753-3581 !§ $3.00 Thurs. & Sun. & matinee r=$3.50 Fri. & Sat. $1 discount for students*TiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimijiniiiiiiiinniiiniiiniHiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiHEAR AGAIN STEREOSells guaranteed name brand usedand demo stereo components at 40%to 70% off regular prices.THESE ARE OURWEEKLY SPECIALS:SCOTT 477 $185.00PIONEER PL10 49.00AKAIAA 8500 149 00TANDBERG TCD310 199 00TECHNICS SU7I00 109 00DUAL 1229 99.00HARMON KARDON A402 179 00SYLVANIA CR2742 129 00PROJECT ONE MK4A 179 00EPI150 Ea. 65.00Complete systems from $75 to $750.60 day trade back privilege. Namebrand components for limited bud¬gets.HEAR AGAIN STEREO7002 N. California 338-773720 — The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979 *Tn cun fpronrp meetLorello who was injured in the trials. The440 relay of Kahle, Tamura, Pfaller andGordon raced to third place in 45.36, aidedby a ‘season’s best” performance by Gor¬don which moved the team from fifth tothird. The 880 relay squad of Gordon. Kahle,Kohout and Read also took third placehonors with a time of 1:34.52.Chicago’s highest relay placing came inthe two-mile relay in which the cookie-lesscowboys. Nick Dunning, Tom Matiski. Mar¬shall Schmitt, and Dave Green finished se¬cond behind a strong Principia team, timedin 7:49.68. Dunning relinquished the lead tohis Principia rival on the first leg and theirposition was never challerged. despiteGreen’s 1:55.8 anchor.The Chicago sprint mecley team ofJacobsen, Wendel, Goodrich, and Pearsoncaptured sixth place. In the final event ofthe evening, Chicago’s mile relay squad ofHorsthemke, Derse, Janachowski andKohout finished fifth in a strong field.Both Saturday’s and Tuesday’s meetshave hopefully prepared the Maroons toavenge their narrow loss to Carlton in theMidwest Conference indoor championships.The outdoor Conference meet will be heldMay 18th and 19th in Iowa City.Undefeated trackers prep for revengeOn Tuesday, May 8th, a day even EdwardBear might have found a tad too blustery,the Men’s varsity track team finished theirseason of dual meets with a double victoryover Beloit and Concordia Colleges. In ameet most notable for its wind-slowed timesand the aquatic antics of Joe Weiner, theBy Andy RothmanLike everyone else at the University thisweek, the baseball Maroons caught springfever. Opening the final week of the seasonwith their last home game on Tuesday atStagg Field, the Maroons dropped a 10-0decision to Illinois Benedictine College,their sixth loss in a row.Tuesday saw the Maroons, who were‘‘Very, very flat” coming off their disap¬pointing showing in the Lake Forest series,face ‘‘The best pitcher we’ve seen all year,”according to coach Chuck Schact. The pit¬cher was a freshman lefthander namedKebby (not Guidry). All he did was strikeout 16 Maroons out of 21 outs in seven inn¬ings. Chicago managed only three hits in thegame, two by centerfielder Paul Harris.They also had five walks and got at least oneman on base in each inning except the last,but failed to capitalize as Kebby struck outthe side in two innings, and had twostrikeouts in all the others. mighty Maroons pounded Concordia 116-37and Beloit 114 - 39. The victory gave theMaroons an undefeated record in dual meetcompetition for the 1979 indoor and outdoorseasons.‘‘Anything that’s worth doing, is worth do¬ing badly,” quipped Coach Haydon inweek and, after five more off days, in Tues¬day’s game. Schact pointed to the Maroons’lack of hitting as the main factor in their los¬ing streak, even though other things were in¬volved, such as the Foresters, a teamaveraging more than four errors per game,committing only one error in the entire fourgame series against Chicago. As for Kebby,Schact said he thought that, “. . . he mightbe good for seven or eight strikeouts — ourhitters are better than that.” The coach didadmit, however, that. ‘‘Some of the guys aregetting a little too comfortable with los¬ing.”Knowing that they needed to win three outof their last four games to finish the year at.500, the Maroons headed off to RockfordCollege for a doubleheader on Wednesday. reference to tne variable quality of Chicagoperformances as an army of 43 Maroonscaptured all but three first places in bothcontests. Despite windy conditions andanemic competition, a number of Maroonsturned in fine performances. Jim Jacobsenwon the 110 high hurdles in a speedy, if wind-aided, time of 14.6. Bill Horsthemke over¬came the tremendous gale blowing down thehomestretch to post a 51.5 victory in the 440.Other first place finishers were Mike Ax-inn in the mile, Jim Read in the 440 hurdles,Rich Gordon in the 100, Dave Green in the880, Tim Lorello in the 220, and Dave Taylorleading a Chicago sweep of the three mile.Chicago dominated the weight events withKim Johnson winning the shot and Jody Rid¬dle the discus. Pete Wendel took first in thetriple jump and a dumbstruck crowd wasawed by John Grayhack’s third place leap inthe high jump.Last Saturday the Maroons traveled toWisconsin, where they finished fifth in atough 16 - team field at the Beloit CollegeRelays. For the second consecutive year themeet was won by Central College of Iowa.The -afternoon portion of the meetfeatured primarily open field events andrelay qualifying heats. Pete Wendel was theonly Maroon to place in the field events, tak¬ing second in the long jump and sixth in thetriple. For the third year in a row, Chicago’sshuttle-hurdle relay team, with a strongshot at either first or second place, was dis¬qualified in preliminary competition. In theonly running final in the tedious afternoon oftrial heats (for those not on the librarysquad) the Chicago team of thin-clads.Prince, Adamo. Seligman, and Brownromped to and inconsequential, but spirited,finish in the four-mile relay.In the night of relay finals, both PeteSmith and Paul Hart in the open mile, andMike Axinn and Dave Taylor in the openthree mile were overcome by the greed oftheir fleet-footed foes, driven bymaterialistic lust for the watches awardedto the first place finishers in these events.Smith and Axinn both placed fourth, andTaylor sixth, in fine performances.Chicago did well in the sprint area,despite the absence of speedster TimMaroons get spring feverMeanwhile, righthander Joe Kinczel, theMaroons’ number two starter, was gettingrocked for six runs on nine hits in the firstthree innings. That barage included a fivehit, four run outburst in the second.The near two week layoff that theMaroons were forced to take earlier in theseason because of the weather, “. . . reallykilled us,” Schact said. During that spanthere was no batting cage set up in thefieldhouse and the Maroons did not have anyplace to work out. The inactivity took its tollduring the five games in three days lastIM softball startsBelieve it or not, softball finally com¬menced action this week. The season hasbeen revamped to a double eliminationround robin. All games scheduled for Fridayon North Field will be played on the Midwaydue to a scheduling conflict. Call the IM Of¬fice for further details.Socim ended last week with Still Billdefending their title, whipping RoachlessWonders, who had claimed theundergraduate title by beating Dodd/Meqad3-2, by a score of 3-0. A reminder to all thathorseshoes, and volleyball are now' underway.Finally, softball favorite Leading In¬dicators may not be as strong as predicted,according to insider George Oates.“Without Lyle Bums they’re nothing,despite how good Alan thinks he is”. wt ' wpiiH ’ 4■UiUiiauS*1Photo* t>y C. StudenmondThe Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1*79 — 21CalendarFRIDAYPerspectives: Topic: “Petroleum in Mexico and Its Effecton Mexico’s Relationships with the U.S.” guests JohnCoatsworth. Lorenzo Meyer, and Angel de la Vega, 6:30am, channel 7.Crossroads: Free English classes for foreign women,10:00 am-noon.Workshop in Economics and Econometrics: “The Effectsof Unanticipated Inflation on Firms” speaker Cindy Zol¬linger, Stu 106, 10:30 am-noon.Physics Undergraduate Journal Club: “Optical Varia¬tions in Selected Seyfert Galaxies” speaker JoeUlowetz, 12:30 pm, Eckhart 133. Free pizza.Committee in Social Thought: “Teaching the Classics inParis, 1572” speaker Anthony T. Grafton, 2:00 pm. Pick1.Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: “The Latest View ofJupiter’s Atmosphere” speaker Andrew P. Ingersoll,1:30 pm, Henry Hinds Lab. Auditorium.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Arabic Circle (discus¬sion in Arabic) “Fighting Fire with Fire: Abu Tammam sOde to the Burning of Al-Afshin” speaker Suzanne Stet-kevych, 3:30 pm, Pick 218.Economic History Workshop: “The Peculiar History ofFrench Customs of Inheritance” speaker GabrielleBrenner, 3:30 pm, SS 106.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Bizden Size (discus¬sion in Turkish) “Socio-Economic Planning in Turkey”speaker Aytug Izat, 3:30 pm, Cobb 104.Dept, of Political Science: “Thucydides and Aristotle”speaker Prof. Joseph Cropsey, 4:00 pm, Pick 016.Women’s Union: Meets 5:00 pm in Ida Noyes above theFrog and Peach.Hillel: Creative Services, 6:00 pm, Hillel.Law School Films: “Adam’s Rib” 7:00 and 9:30 pm, LawSchool Auditorium.Hillel: Adat Shalom Buffet Dinner, 7:00 pm, Hillel. WHPK: Success Withut College: 4:00-5:00 pm.Karate Club: Meets 7:00-9:00 pm in the dance room ofIda Noyes Hall.UC Christian Fellowship: “World Christian Lifestyle”speaker Andy Dhuse, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Hillel: Lecture-“A Jewish Social Action Agenda for the1980’s" speaker David Saperstein, 9:00 pm, Hillel.SATURDAYCompton Lecture Series: “The Mysterious World ofGauge Bosons,” 11:00 am, Eckhart 133.Table Tennis Club: Practices 10:00 am-l:00 pm, Ida Noyes3rd floor.Tamil Film: “Pennai Cholli Kutram Illai” 4:30 pm, IdaNoyes Library.Crossroads: Presentation and discussion by Rev. JohnDe Beer-“Steve Biko, South African Prophet and Mar¬tyr” 7:00 pm.Rockefeller Chapel: Invitational High School ChoralFestival, 8:00 pm. no charge.International House Film: “The Burmese Harp” 8:30pm.Hillel: Israeli-style Beit-Cafe with live entertainment,dancing, singing, 9:00 pm, Hillel.SUNDAYWHPK: Finest in Rhythm and Blues, 6:00am-midnight.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious Services, 11:00am.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch, 11:00 am, Hillel.Transcendental Meditation Society: Free introductorylecture on Transcendental Meditation program. Publicinvited, 3:00 pm, Ida Noyes.Tai Chi Club: Practices 7:30 pm, 4945 S. Dorchester (enteron 50th).Hillel:Lecture-“Israel-Arab Coexistence in the MiddleEast-A Writer’s Perspective” speaker Yizhar Smilansky,7:30 pm, Hillel.NAM Films: “Life of Oharu,” 7:30 and 9:30 pm, Cobb. Folkdancers: General level with teaching, 8:30-11:30pm, Ida Noyes Cloister Club.MONDAYCrossroads: Free English classes -for foreign women,10:00 am-noon.'Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Ha-Sadnah (discus¬sion in Hebrew) "Amnesty International and the Mid¬dle East” speaker Barnett Rubin. 12:00 noon, Cobb 103.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Lecture-"The Imageand the Word; Verbal and Visual Relationships in Safa-vid Painting and Calligraphy” speaker Anthony Welch,4:00 pm, CWAC 157.Humanities Division: Lecture-“Langston Hughes: Rela¬tionships Between Autobiographical Fiction and Auto¬biography” speaker Richard Barksdale, 4:00 pm, SS122.Child Development Colloquium: “The Development ofDefinitions in Normal and Retarded Children: Somepreliminary results,” speaker Sheldon Rosenberg, 4:00pm, Judd 110.Dept, of Chemistry: "Tunable Laser Spectroscopy: AProbe of The Molecular Mechanism of Ion TransportThrough A Cell Membrane” speaker Prof. Aaron Lewis,4:00 pm, Kent 103.Chicago City Colleges: English as a Second Languageclasses, 4:30-6:30 pm, Ricketts Lab. Free.Karate Club: Practices 7:00-9:00 pm in the dance room ofIda Noyes Hall.Women’s Rap Group: Meets 7:30 pm, Blue Gargoyle inthe Women’s Center (3rd floor). Info, call 752-5655 or752-5072.Chess Club: Meets 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes MemorialRoom.Baptist Student Union: Meets 7:37 pm in the 2nd floorEast Lounge Ida Noyes.Folkdancers: Beginning level with teaching, 8:00-11:30pm, Ida Noyes Cloister Club.Festival of the Arts presents1 8 1“A public lecture of a serio-comic naturewherein passing mention will be made ofmany curious and wonderful things withseveral uncommonly bad jokes thrown inAdapted from the works ofSamuel L. Clemensacsfflo nonSaturday, May 12, 8 P.M. — Cloister Club, Ida Noyes Hall$2 UC Students, $3 Others *GREAT BOOKS FILM SERIES7:15 Of HumOPI BondQQ©, directed by John CromwellSunday, May 11 9 00 Billy Bud, directed by Peter UstinovKent HallDOC members free with pass, $150 othersFriday, May 11, 197VCLASSIFIED ADSSPACE3 bedrm apt available June 1Everything new, 238-7941,924 4287.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 $495747 3851.CON DO-2 BR 2 bath, Univ. Pk on 55;within block of Bank, Co op, 1C, bus;modern bldg, garage sp, 24 hr. sec.garden sundeck, etc, low as smt in¬cluding heat, elec; carpet, 3 AC;panoramic 9 f|. North view, Sept, oc¬cupancy, call 753-1811.LONDON 2 bedroom furnished flatavailable September for academicyear. $325 Royston 4074 Grove,Western Springs, II. 60558.246-1762.2 bdrm apt. on lake nice view availmid/late June 390 mo. 363-0579 after 4pm.One to three female roomates to sharean apartment at 55th and Everett.Kosher kitchen-vegetarians welcomecall Miriam at 752-2159 or 752-24672 bedrms. avail, in modern 3 bedrm.apt. starting end of quarter, overlook¬ing lake and city from 34th flo ofRegents Park $162 mo. each-Beth288-0189.F roommate wanted to share furnish¬ed condo 57th Kenwood. Avail, immed.$175/mo. day 7-6256, eve 684-1436. Askfor Susan.Summer Sublet 3 room furnished apt.May 20-Aug 20 fine location. $165 permonth. Call 288-3216.2 Bedroom Apt. Furnished walk to U ofC Year or Summer Lease accepted.Call 955-6567.Summer Sublet-Spacious 1 bedrm.apt. in secure well-maintained bldg.53rd/Dorche$ter June 15-Sept 15.251/mo. 684-6765.ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2bedrm. apt. near lake on campus -mini bus routes $l40/month-contactMarc-947 0984 evenings.FOR RENT - 6/1, 52nd and Greenwood.1 bedroom. $250-270. 493-7560 after 6p.m. or weekends.Nonsmoker wanted to share large 2-bedroom apt. at 57th and Kenwoodbeginning June 1. Option to take overlease in the Fall. Dennis, 947-6081,days.Summer sublet 190 mo. avail. 6/15 withFall opt 2Vt rm. turn. apt. at 55 andHyde park on C bus route. Call even¬ings. 752-1900x1207.CONDOMINIUMS IN KENWOODGrand old renovated bldg. Fireplaces,sunporches, new kitchens. 3BR, 2BATHS FROM $53,000. 1 BR, FROM$32,000. Model Open 1-3 Sat. and Sun.4720 Greenwood. Sales 248-6400.2 b/rms avail. 7/1 or fall in big hi-riseapt. w/great view. Tennis, sundeck,and lake. Rent negot. Call Allan324-4462 or 7-1720 days. Leavemessage.Summer sublet: Furnished; 1 BR;modern kitchen; laundry in bldg,great view of skyline; on mini-bus rt;mid June-mid Sept; non-smokerspreferred 752-7877.Condo for sale neport bid 1 br lakeview dw swp call 268-5046.1st or 2nd ye grads interested in lowrent and co-operative living: come toGamma Alpha, 5621 S. University, Sun5/13 at 3:00. Our rents average$65/mo. For more info, call 955-2653,Ken or Cathy.Am looking for an apt. for next yr.,near campus. Anything from a 1bedrm. up. Please call Rachel at753-2249 ext. 1203. Leave a message ifI'm not in.PEOPLE WANTEDSUMMER JOBS NOW! WorldCruises! Pleasure Yachts! No ex¬perience! Good pay! Carribean,Hawaii. World! Send $3.95 for APPLICATION and direct referrals toOCEANWORLD, Box 60 1 29,Sacramento, CA 95860EASY EXTRA INCOME $500/1000Stuffing Envelopes-Guaranteed. SendSelf-addressed, stamped envelope toDexter Enterprises, 3039 Shrine PI.LA, CA 90007.JOBS! LAKE TAHOE, CALIF! Fan¬tastic tips! $l,700-$4,000 summerLThousands still needed. Casinos,Restaurants, Ranches, Cruises. Send$3.95 for APPLICATION/INFO toLAKEWORLD, Box 60129, Sacramento, CA 95860Mothers and their infants (age 9 mos.)are needed for an observational studyto be conducted at home. Please call753-4718. ._____8085 Programmer needed for bio exper. Student preferred call Brian261 4075 after 8Hindi teacher needed for adult student. Would like to learn written andconversation. Only qualificationsneeded is ability to teach the languageand speak English. Hours and salaryflexible Will pay well. Call: 565 0109Rap group for women. Mondays at7:30 p.m. In the Women's Center, 3rd floor Blue Gargoyle.Subjects wanted for psycholinguisticsexperiments. Will be paid. To registercall 753-4718.Toddler to share sitting with 2-yr. oldapprox. 3 days/wk. for summer. 57thand Kimbark. Call after 5,493-8672.Males with normal color vision wantedfor color vision experiments.50 hr.for six 1 hour sessions. Call 947-6081,Billings Hospital.We need percussionist for informalshow on June 11-12. Must have own set,be available for rehearals June 4-June9. Can pay small gratuity. Jim241-7721, Bruce 624-1459.Normal volunteers, 18-31 yrs. for 8-hr.sex-hormone research project. Compensaton. Drs. Rosenfield or Rubin(947-6349),Part-time nursery school teacherBegin Sept.-Applicant must have train¬ing and/or experience with preschoolchildren. Send resume to G Stern 5650S. Woodlawn 60637. equal opportunityemployer.Paint and refinish wood inside con¬dominium. Immediate help needed.Approximately 100 hours work. $5.00per hour. Call Steve Diamond 363-7482.Outgoing, sincere individuals areneeded by Citizens for a Better En¬vironment, the Midwest's largestgrassroots environmental group. CBEworks to stop the expanding use ofhazardous chemicals and nuclearpower while researching safe alter¬natives. CBE now has salaried posi¬tions available as canvassers (publiceducation and fund-raising). Good op¬portunity for advancement intomanagement. For interview, call:.CBE. 59 E. Van Buren, Chicago312-939-1985.Babysitter for 2 yr. old girl hrs. andpay flexible call Deborah, 955-2148.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS While-U Wait.MODEL CAMERA 1344 E. 55th St.493-6700.NEW Komura 7-element Tele¬extenders in stock. Absolutely betterthan any other tele-extenders in theworld! Stop in and try them. MODELCAMERA - 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700NEW Olympus OM-10 in Stock! ModelCamera, 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.New Canon AV-1 in stock! ModelCamera. 1342 E . 55th St. 493-6700.Deluxe 1976 Ford Camper conver. Likenew. Used only for Rec-V. Garaged allWinter. 351 V-8 Eng. Sleeps 4. Com¬pletely Equipped Cruise contr. FM-8Track. Many extras. $7900. 747-3851.Furniture sale call 881-8278. Otherhouse items for sale also.For sale: Mahogany dining table, 6chairs, sideboard, side table, $250. Airconditioner, like new, $250. CallMarilyn 753 3486 (day); 752-8019(evening).Piano walnut Everett console.Beautiful condition. $875 eves, ormorn. 947-0331.1978 Pinto. 7500 miles. Parked indoors.Excell, gas mileage, 684-6932 eves.after 7.77 Honda Civic, stick, AM/FM, ex.cond. 25,000 ml. 752-6986 $3500.1970 Dodge Coronet station wagon, only 73,000 miles, air, PE), FM. Notbeautiful but started every day thiswinter. Needs muffler but runs well.$500. 536-0812.1970 DATSUN $600 or best offer. Tom:753-2691 eves and weekends.ZOOM LENS for Canon camerasRokunar 38-90 F/3.5 multi-coated/w/case and filter 1/new $130.753-8549 day, 748 7296 eves.69 Austin American needs motor butbody good $175. Call after 5 p.m.734-1751.Great Books of the Western World (54vol.) Great Ideas (10 vol.) Never used.Best offer 621- 4729 or 955 0707.Rummage sale - May 19, 10 a.m - 5p.m. United Church of Hyde Park.53rd and Blackstone. For Parent Cooperative for Early Learning.SUNNY, SPACIOUS 7-room condo nrBret Harte. Exc. condition. Avail. Ju¬ly. Call 667 0425 eves.Piano, Spinet, $425,344-1590.TOWNHOUSE - V* blk N. of 55th andBlackstone, 3 BR, 1 bath, pnld FR,priv parking, patio to enclosedpark/playgrnd. Lw $70's. Chris at947-1919 (day), 667 8968.2 finished 3 drawer oak sawbuck desks$95 each. 955-8716.3 6x3 bookcases adjustable shelves$100/all $40 each. 955-8716.1974 Chevy Vega Wagon, 24,000 miles,air-conditioning, $950 call 667-4251Check out the new arrival inphilosophy at the Student Coop.Downstairs at the Reynolds Club.PEOPLE FOR SALEARTWORK of all kinds drawingcalligraphy, illustration, hand- addressing of invitations etc. NoelYovovich 493 2399. Astrology: bxplore a new symbolsystem. Charts and classes. AnnWeiser 752 2551.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 evenings. Free pick-up anddelivery. (Hyde Park area)Cartography and graphs professional¬ly drafted. Best possible rates. CallJoe 288-1831 eves or leave message inWalker 100A.Typing: student term papers,manuscripts, pick up and delivery byarrangement. Please call 684-6882Typing done on IBM by college grad;pica type. Term papers, law briefs,theses, manuscripts, resumes, etc.Fast, accurate, reliable, reasonable.Lincoln Park West area. Call 248-1478.CHINESE COOKING with Wendy Gerrick. Full participation-bring onlyyour appetite and enthusiasm. Call538-1324.SCENESINDIA AND AMERICA: An intercultural workshop. Clinton Seely on In¬dian epics, speakers and slides on theIndian immigrant experience; audiovisual curriculum kits. Saturday May12 from 10 am to 12:30 pm, 1-House,1414 E. 59th. Info: 753-4132/4342.Do you stometimes feel like dancing?Are you tired of disco or just ready tctry something new for a change?Maybe FOLK DANCING is for youBring a friend or 2 and check it outMon. night at 8:00 (special beginner'ssession) or Sun. at 8:30 at Ida Noyes.Teaching both nights. For more infocall 643-9654.TECHNOLOGY, CHANGE ANDHUMANISTIC VALUES SYMPOSIUM. Chicago circle, May 18-19.Registratiqn $10 (students: $5) in¬cludes dinner Friday. Details: 996-8527or 538-0708 (Weekend and evenings).SUMMER IN THE CITY FUN forchildren 6, 7, 8 years old as well aspreschollers. SOJOURNER TRUTHannounces registration for its full daysummer program: arts and crafts,swimming, field trips, sports, music,dancing. Open 7 a m. to 6 p.m. 4945Dorchester 538-8325.BALLET CLASSES Intermed. level,but eager beginners welcome. IdaNoyes, Tues/Fri. 5:30-7. Call 752-2551for more info.Grants Proposal Writing Wkshop. Willcover all phases of funds development.Arts/Education. Instructor has nineyrs. exp. $40. Please Call 243-2146.LOST AND FOUNDLost Hudson bay jacket (white withmulti-colored stripes) on st between55th-Law School call Mike Bailey:684 1797.Lost in vie. of Hutch, Tyrolean hat. $20reward to finder, call 751-3709. LostMay 2.LOST since Thurs. May 3, vicn. 55thand Woodlawn. Short-haired tiger cat.Grey, black brown stripes, cream bel¬ly. Full-grown, but small. NamedViolet $25 reward, call 955 6877. If noanswer, call 955-5906 days.LOST: Man's gold signet ring in frontof Field House mid-March. GoodReward, call 753-0191,^LOST: Black compact tape recorderat noon Wednesday on the steps ofHarper. Matsushita brand. Reward of¬fered. Please call 871-6576 evenings.BLACKFRIARSFor fun, laughs, good times, see NeilSimon's SWEET CHARITY, the storyof a girl whq wants to be loved, MandelHall, May 11,12, and 13, 8:30 pm, $2.00student, $3.00 general. Tickets go onsale at Reynolds Club and Cobb HallMay 7.DONATIONSDonate rummage for parent co-opFund Raising sale Call for Pick-up684-6363. Tax deductable. For ParentCo-operative for Early Learning.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 . 55th St . 493 6700DANIEL 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.DANCEA Dance Concert featuring the UCModern Dance Group directed by ElviMoore, May 15, Mandel Hall, 8p.m. Noadmission charge Festival Of TheArtsLOST AND FOUNDNam vets pro or con or silent canyou believe this McNamarathing& Is it finally our time tovoices. If so, contact ThomasWalker 363 0468. GO FLY A KITE!So there's no spring in Hyde Park? Atleast there's wind. Kite flying FOTABeside/Bartleft Gym Fri. May 11.Noon. Free.FOTAAll would-fle Ben Franklin's andfrustrated meterologists-The day ar¬rives to experience the atmosphericconditions. Kite Flying across fromJoe Reg Fri. May 11, noon.JUNIORPROGRAMMER/ANALYSTThe University of Chicago is seeking aJunior Programmer/Analyst to workfull time in the Applications Systemsgroup. The job will include programdevelopment and maintenance on theIBM 370/168 and DEC-20 computers,program advising, and teaching shortcourses and seminars. Applicantsshould have a good knowledge of FOR¬TRAN and familiarity with either JCLor the TOPS 20 command languageKnowledge of research methods in asubstantive discipline is highlydesirable, Jf you are interested in thisposition, please contact Hal Bloom,Manager of Applications System, 5737S. University Ave. (753-8439). TheUniveristy is an affirmative actionequal opportunity employerIRVINGWHERE ARE YOU?Irving: I may have a BIG surprise foryou. Please be patient. Contact: LV.INTENSIVEGERMANKarin Cramer PhD native German isteaching a 5 wk. course in preparationfor the German test 2 sections M-F10-124:30-6:30, call 493-8127.WOMEN'SMAGAZINEPrimavera, the women's literarymagazine, needs new staff members.For info call 752-5655. The magazine ison sale in most Hyde Park bookstores.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. K65557 on27 April 79. Under the Assumed Nameof Computex with place of businesslocated at 5710 Drexel, Chicago IL.The true names and residence ad¬dresses of owners are: Stanley M.Metcalf, 5710 Drexel and Daniel R.Tully, 5429 Harper, Chicago.HYDE PARKWe have 3-bedroom condo homes withnew kitchens and baths, laundry areasin each unit, some with terraces, plen¬ty of closet space and many other ex¬tras. 60,000-72,000.Call H.D Anderson or Cecil Wells955-2850944-7200TRAVIS REALTYHAVE ASTROKEWOMEN'S CREW STROKE T-SHIRTS are available in a wide varie-Young Designs byELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288 2900 ty of colors and sizes On sale atReynolds Club every day at lunchtimeor order by calling 955-5253 (evenings).HILLELBAR-B-QAt the Indiana Dunes on SUNDAY,May 20 Meet at Hillel at 3 p.m. Reservations required by Wednesday, May16. Sign up at Hillel. Transportationwill be provided.PERSONALSPregnant? Troubled? Call 233 0305 forhelp. Free test referral.Thanks for the personal, Harper. Glit¬ter and automation are fun for a while,but without peers you can flip yourstack. I admire your age and ex¬perience. Keep in touch. Reg.THE BLUES ■Phil Guy, Junior Weils and friends,favorites at Theresa's and theCheckerboard Lounge, at UC for oneperformance, May 18, 9 p.m. MandelHall, $2 UC students, $3 others. FOTATRANSCENDENTALMEDITATONFree lecture Sun., May 13, Ida NoyesEast Lounge, 3 p.m.UC DANCEGROUPModern Dance, the UC Dance Group,director by Elvi Moore, Mandel Hail,May 15, 8 p.m. No admission chargeFOTABOOKSALEDSA BOOKSALE continues today inSwift Commons Room, 9-3:30. Saleprices on hundreds of books (Religion,Philosophy, Political Science,Literature, and more) have beenreduced even more since beginning ofsale Most books 75% 90% off!FOTAFestival of The Arts needs volunteers,everything from ushers and ticket-takers to next year's director. If youlike music, film, theater, dance, draw¬ing, painting, photography....Call753 3562 or stop by the FOTA office,RM 218 Ida Noyes YARD SALEFantastic yard sale rain or shinewicker tables, floor lamps, diningroom chairs 4 camping tent lotschildren furniture toys some antiquesmuch more Sat., May 12 9-2 4846 S.Kimbark.ENSEMBLEESPANOLLively Spanish dance, May 16, MandelHall, 8 p.m., no admission chargeFOTA.PICNICAnnual Picnic on the Quads, May 20,noon 'till night, Grills, charcoal, ice,condiments provided. Open mike.CHILDCAREAvailable Sept. 2 full time openings inplaygroup of four young three year-olds Near campus, small home daycare center 684-2820.NEEDAHINDUto serve as a teacher for a puja CallDave at 767-6770.FOTAThe spectacular FOTA T-shirt will beon sale May 15 and 17 in Cobb Hall,May 16 and 18 in the Reynolds Club.$3.50.MARK TWAIN“Mark Twain-in person" a one-manshow featuring Richard Henzel as theold sage himself This Friday night, 8p.m. Cloister Club, $2 UC Students, $3others. FOTA.TEACHSAILINGSailing instructor wanted for summerprogram. Several years of sailing ex¬perience necessary. Call Bruce288-0189HOTLINEFinal Sign-ups today for persons in¬terested in committing their time tothe UC Hotline. Call today 752 5860betw. 5-8 p.m.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.Model Camera1342 E. 55th493-6700VALUABLE COUPON-CUT OUTHYDE PAAK PIPE AND TOBACCO 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.SUMMERJOBSummer quarter12-15 hrs. per weekwork involves compila¬tion of directory of socialservices agencies withvolunteer components inlocal communities. Mustbe eligible for work/studvContact Blue Gargoyle:Trish or Carol: 955-4108The Chicago Maroon — Friday, May 11, 1979 — 23Daniel 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 chargeFestival of the Arts